Citations:Shenyang

English citations of Shenyang

  • 1958 August 7, Robert Westgate, “China's Industrial Target: To Overtake Britain in 15 Years”, in The Iron Age[1], volume 182, number 6, page 43:
    The northeastern city of Shenyang has become one of the country's chief machine building centers and plants there include one for making pneumatic mining tools and three for various types of machine tools. Also in Shenyang is a new plant that builds blast furnaces and openhearths, with the destination of Anshan.
  • 1975 January 5, L. Chen, “Bomb planted by Wang Hung-wen?”, in Free China Weekly [自由中國週報]‎[2], volume XVI, number 1, Taipei, →ISSN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 3, column 2:
    We are reasonably sure that Li is still alive in Shenyang, but there is no denying that he is now a very questionable figure.
  • 1976, William Brugger, Democracy & organisation in the Chinese industrial enterprise (1948-1953)[3], Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, page 168:
    I know of no industrial unit outside Lushun and Talien that was able to conclude a contract of such comprehensiveness as the glass factory and even in Shenyang where production was rapidly restored and where there were many advanced industrial enterprises, it was felt that the Lushun-Talien model was too comprehensive and of too high a standard to serve as a model for its own collective contracts.
  • 2015, Yeonmi Park, Maryanne Vollers, “Kidnapped”, in In Order to Live: A North Korean Girl's Journey to Freedom[4] (Non-fiction), Penguin Books, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 169:
    Shenyang is a sprawling industrial and financial center, the largest city in northeastern China, with a reputation as the region’s crime capital. The city was overrun with violent gangs and controlled by corrupt public officials who were regularly purged by the government in Beijing, only to be replaced by new ones. The developers Hongwei knew in Shenyang were all gangsters, and when they weren't making shady deals, they were spending their nights in private gambling parlors.
  • 2017 July 15, “Liu Xiaobo's widow Liu Xia is free, Chinese authorities claim”, in EFE[5], archived from the original on 15 July 2017[6]:
    Authorities in Shenyang, where Chinese Nobel Peace Prize laureate Liu Xiaobo died, claimed Saturday that his widow Liu Xia is free, although her closest friends say she is under surveillance and that they have been unable to contact her.
    "The Chinese government will protect her (Liu Xia's) legitimate rights in accordance with the law," Shenyang information office spokesperson Zhang Qingyang said at a press conference, as cited by local media reports.
  • 2022 August 30, Vivian Wang, “Lockdowns in China, and North Korea, Deal Double Blow to Bridge City”, in The New York Times[7], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 2022-08-30, Business‎[8]:
    China’s continuing strict coronavirus controls have battered local economies across the country. But Shenyang has endured a double blow. Just 150 miles from the North Korean border, it is suffering not only from the restrictions in China, but also from those imposed by the even more isolated country next door.