Citations:Dongcheng

English citations of Dongcheng

  • [1976 August 15, L. Chen, “No room for love in Maoist world”, in Free China Weekly[1], volume XVII, number 32, Taipei, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 3:
    The story of the hapless young lovers[...]The two of them—workers at two neighboring factories in Peiping’s Tungcheng district—had been close since childhood and decided that they were old enough and good enough to get married. They went to the district office for registration but were told that they should first get permission—letters of introduction for marriage registration—from their work units.]
  • [1978, Daily Report: People's Republic of China[2], numbers 232-241, Foreign Broadcast Information Service, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 12:
    The former Tungcheng District bicycle flywheel plant (now under the Peking Municipal First Bureau of Light Industry), without asking permission from the Peking Municipal Revolutionary Committee, last July privately signed an []]
  • 1981, Laurence J.C. Ma, “Urban Housing Supply in the People's Republic of China”, in Urban Development in Modern China[3], Boulder, CO: Westview Press, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 236:
    In Beijing’s Dongcheng District where 560,000 residents live, some 936 neighborhood stores, restaurants, health clinics, nurseries, and cultural and educational centers have been established.
  • 2009 January 2, Gan Tian, “Learning Peking-opera pieces”, in Beijing Today[4], number 396, →OCLC, page 11:
    Dongcheng Wenhuaguan, the culture museum in Dongcheng, acting like an events organizer, also has a similar group that meets every Saturday.
  • [2012 March 28, ““Neighbourhood Lifestyle” Pentahotel Beijing Debuts In Dong Cheng District”, in Hospitality Net[5], archived from the original on 21 June 2012[6]:
    Pentahotel Beijing's "neighbourhood lifestyle hotel" concept combining fuss-free contemporary comfort with style, debuts in Beijing's Dong Cheng District, providing a hub of casual relaxation and fun for guests, local residents and area visitors.]
  • 2015, Stephen Brewer, John Rambow, Caroline Trefler, editors, Fodor's Beijing[7], 5th edition, Fodor's, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 50:
    The soul of old Beijing lives on throughout Dongcheng District, where you'll find the city’s top historic sites and idyllic hutong worth getting lost in.
  • 2022 May 1, “Beijing tourist sites empty in Covid-stalked public holiday”, in France 24[8], archived from the original on 01 May 2022[9]:
    Beijing so far has reported over 300 cases under the current wave, and authorities on Saturday banned city-wide dining services starting Sunday to May 4 -- an attempt to curb infections during a holiday that is typically an annual peak consumption period.
    "It will have a definite impact on sales," a restaurant employee surnamed An told AFP, as she scanned for customers around Beijing's Dongcheng district -- home to historic attractions like the Forbidden City.
  • 2022 September 3, 愚工 [Yu Kung], “China shuns friendliness of KMT”, in Julian Clegg, transl., Taipei Times[10], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 03 September 2022, Editorials, page 8‎[11]:
    The KMT’s act of self-humiliation is reminiscent of what happened in 1948, when it was being buffeted by the storm of the Chinese Civil War.
    In January of that year, a group of KMT members established the Revolutionary Committee of the Chinese Kuomintang (中國國民黨革命委員會), which supported the CCP’s call, as one of its “May Day slogans,” to establish a democratic coalition government.
    In so doing, the committee sent a friendly message to the CCP.
    Today, the committee is a subordinate organization of the CCP, with its headquarters on humble Donghuangchenggen S Street in Beijing’s Dongcheng District (東城).