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There's a video accompanying the story which I'm sure at least a reader or two of this blog would find interesting. So click the link if you want that.
BEIJING — Clad in knee-high leather boots, spandex shorts and asports bra, Xiao Yan struck a pose two feet off the ground, her headglistening with sweat and her arms straining as she suspended herselffrom a vertical pole.
"Keeping your grip is the hardest part," she said. "It's really easy to slide downward."
Ms. Xiao, 26, who works as a supermarket manager, is one of a growingnumber of women experimenting with China's newest, and mostcontroversial, fitness activity: pole dancing.
"I used to take anormal aerobics class, but it was boring and monotonous," Ms. Xiaosaid. "So I tried out pole dancing. It's a really social activity. I'vemet a lot of girls here who I'm now close friends with. And I like thatit makes me feel sexy."
A nightclub activity mostly consideredthe domain of strippers in the United States, pole dancing — but withclothes kept on — is nudging its way into the mainstream Chineseexercise market, with increasing numbers of gyms and dance schoolsoffering classes.

"Any physical activity that goes for longer than say two minutes would be a beneficiary of something like Viagra just like the normal blood doping drugs are."
What's startling is when you compare China's enthusiasm with America's complacency.CHINESE people are overwhelmingly satisfied with the direction of their country, a Pew Centre survey published yesterday shows.
The survey results, which rank China first among 24 nations, point to an enormous gulf between domestic and Western perceptions of China that has widened in the aftermath of the Tibet riots and troubled Olympic torch relay. China's country satisfaction rating soared to 86 per cent from 48 per cent in 2002.
Analysts said the results should not be dismissed merely as Chinese people saying what the Government wanted them to say.
"Even if you take away 10, 15 per cent for that kind of bias you still have a very strong result," said Susan Shirk, a professor of political science at the University of California and a former deputy assistant secretary for China in the US State Department.
The results are a vote of confidence in the administration of the President, Hu Jintao, and the Premier, Wen Jiabao.
The Pew survey is an important source of political information because China does not have democratic elections, opinion poll surveys or free media reporting on political issues.
It was conducted after the Tibet riots in March but before the Sichuan earthquake in May - both of which generated an increase in patriotism across mainstream China.
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27 | 68 | 5 | ||||
Here is a map highlighting China's other border disputes:China and Russia have signed a treaty settling a long-running territorial dispute along their border.
The pact - signed in Beijing by the two countries' foreign ministers - marks the end of a dispute which has been going on for 40 years.
The area saw armed clashes between the two sides during the Cold War.
Correspondents say the deal is the latest sign of warmer ties developing between Russia - a big energy exporter - and China, a big energy consumer.
The border between China and Russia is 4,300 km (2,700 miles) long, and the latest treaty resolves a dispute over the eastern part of the border.
According to Chinese reports, Russia will return all of Yinlong island (known in Russian as Tarabarov) and half of Heixiazi island (Bolshoi Ussuriyasky) to China.

It's sad to think, but Xi'an's nightlife is probably just as good as Beijing's now. (Actually, Xi'an's nightlife is fine by me. It's not excessive, like Beijing or Shanghai's, and therefore makes it easier for me get away from going out too much. There are some pretty wicked places to go when I do want to go out though.)BEIJING (Reuters) - Heavy-handed security measures to ensure the Beijing Olympics pass without incident are threatening to choke the cultural life from the city and leave Games tourists cold, Beijing bar and club owners said on Friday.
Staff at several night spots near Beijing's Workers Stadium, venue for Olympic soccer qualifiers, were clearing out their bars on Friday after police ordered shut-downs three days before a mandated deadline.
"I didn't like the way they went about closing everybody, it would have been better if they had stuck to the date they told us," a manager at one of the venues told Reuters.
"I don't think we'll get any compensation. There's no point asking for it, you just hope that they'll offer some," said the manager, who requested anonymity.
Beijing, which has declared terrorism to be the greatest threat to the Games, has also come down hard on local entertainment venues, demanding that owners attend anti-drug seminars and conduct searches of patrons.
Read On

I'll believe that there's a fair share of anti-western sentiment going around China right now. And lord knows the visas have been problems for tons of foreigners. But I can't say I've encountered anything like this article describes though.
HONG KONG -- Brad Eddington arrived in Shanghai on a whim seven years ago and fell in love with the place. He got a job teaching English to kindergartners at a private school, an apartment in the trendy French Concession district, and a girlfriend. And even though he was on a visitor's visa he had to renew every year, he considered China his new home.That changed this month. After several frustrating weeks of trying to negotiate China's new visa policies, getting exiled to Hong Kong and failing to gain permission to reenter the mainland, Eddington gave up.
Thousands of other foreign residents are also finding China far less hospitable than it once was because of visa restrictions tightened ahead of the Olympics and reported increasing hostility toward outsiders.
"I thought things would get easier the longer I stayed, but it's the opposite," said Eddington, 36, an Australian. "China's a different place than when I first came." The controversy over Tibet and the Olympic torch relay "may have surfaced feelings that had long been there" about foreigners.
Coffee still has a ton of room for growth in China. None of my Chinese friends drink coffee on a regular basis. In fact, most think I'm quite strange for wanting to begin my work day with a cup of coffee.
Starbucks in Xi'an
July 16 (Bloomberg) -- Starbucks Corp., the world's largest coffee-shop chain, will expand in China after announcing plans to close underperforming U.S. stores and slash jobs.The chain's changes will affect Starbucks' China operations ``more positively,'' the Seattle-based company's Greater China President Wang Jinlong said in an interview today in Hong Kong. ``There will be more innovation, more new products, more resources, not only investment.''
U.S. consumers are spending less on so-called affordable luxuries like gourmet coffee as they face a contracting economy and record gasoline prices, forcing Starbucks's biggest closures and job cuts in its history, announced on July 2. The company will close 600 U.S. outlets and eliminate 12,000 jobs, slowing its domestic expansion after doubling in size in four years.
Starbucks will instead turn to China, Canada, the U.K. and Japan for growth.
Starbucks expects to gain as more-affluent Chinese are drawn to gourmet coffee. There are now 100 million middle-class consumers in China and this may grow to 200 million by 2020, Wang said today at the Retail Asia Congress in Hong Kong. Retail sales in China gained 21.6 percent in May, close to the fastest pace in nine years.
A UNIVERSITY student was arrested for fabricating and spreading online rumors about an earthquake by police in Shaanxi Province, Xinhuanet.com reported.Thankfully, life has resumed back to normal in Xi'an. There are no longer any tents outside anywhere and I haven't received an earthquake text message in weeks.
Jia Zhipan, 23, a native of Shandong Province, allegedly hacked into the Shaanxi Province Earthquake Administration's Website on May 29 and released a fake notice that read: ``A serious earthquake will hit Shaanxi and other places in the country at 11:30pm tonight,'' the report said.
Although the computer major deleted the fake notice 10 minutes later, the hoax created a public panic, the report said.
During the 10 minutes the notice was posted, it was read a total of 771 times and about 100 residents called the administration to inquire about the earthquake, the report said. Some residents started to take precautions on their own, which disturbed public disorder for a short period of time, the report said.
Read On
I've said it many times on this blog already: China is mortgaging its future and its future generations for its unprecedented economic growth.BANGKOK, Thailand — Children born after the closure of a coal-burning plant in China had 60 percent fewer developmental problems, a study released Monday suggests, giving ammunition to those who argue the country should embrace cleaner sources of energy.
The study in the peer-reviewed Environmental Health Perspectives journal found that after the coal plant was shut in the midwestern city of Tongliang, pregnant mothers living in the area had far less exposure to pollutants and their children showed significantly fewer delays in developing motor skills such as muscle coordination by the age of 2.
"This study provides direct evidence that the Chinese government's action to shut down a polluting power plant had measurable benefits on the development of children," said Frederica Perera, lead author of the study and the director of the Columbia Center for Children's Environmental Health in New York.
"These findings have major implications for environmental health and energy policy in China and elsewhere," she said.
Read On
It's hard to imagine the suffering people in Sichuan Province are going through. It sounds as if they have quite the fighting spirit and good attitude about the bad hand they've been dealt though. Lots of inspiring stuff going on down there.
The doctor’s sign is perched on top of a great mound of roadside rubble that was a three-storey house before the Sichuan earthquake of May 12.
Incredulous, we clamber up the fallen masonry. On the far side a doctor has set up a makeshift surgery beneath a canvas awning in what was once his garden.
Long Shifu is 62. He lost his brother, brother-in-law and everything he owned in the quake. He, his wife and widowed sister-in-law live in another tent. His only medicines are what he managed to retrieve from the ruins of his home, but for two months now he has been treating his patients for free.
“This is a skill I learnt from childhood. People need me,” he said. Suddenly he burst into tears — a brief lowering of his guard after so much fortitude.
There is nothing exceptional about Dr Long. A similar spirit pervades Jiulong, a once-beautiful farming town that sits amid lush green ricefields at the foot of steep, forested mountains. The earth is so rich, locals say, that even chopsticks stuck in the ground grow into trees.
Hundreds, probably thousands, of its 11,000 inhabitants — nobody knows exactly how many — are now buried in that earth. Hardly a building was left standing after the quake.
But in the two days that The Times spent in Jiulong there was no bitterness or self-pity to be found — just an astounding determination to rebuild and recover. Here, and throughout an earthquake zone several times larger than Wales, we found the very best of that uniquely Chinese fusion of collective action and individual enterprise — of communism and capitalism.
It's common to see dog meat available in many different types of restaurants. I've learned the characters for dog meat - 狗肉 - and see them pretty regularly when out and about.China has ordered dog meat to be taken off the menu at its 112 official Olympic restaurants in order to avoid offending foreign visitors.
Restaurant workers are advised to "patiently" suggest other options to diners who order dog.
Any restaurant found violating the ban would be black-listed, the state-run Xinhua news agency reported.
Dog - known as "fragrant meat" - is eaten by some Chinese for purported medicinal properties.
The ban, issued by the Beijing Catering Trade Association, forbids all designated Olympic restaurants from offering dog and urges other food outlets to remove the meat from menus.
Considering how rampant China's counterfit DVD markets are, I'd say that this is a pretty good haul so far.BEIJING (AFP) — The Hollywood blockbuster "Kung Fu Panda" has broken box office records for animated films in China, raking in 135 million yuan (19.6 million dollars) in its first three weeks, state press said Tuesday.
The film is the first cartoon feature in China to surpass 100 million yuan in box office receipts, the Beijing News said, citing distributor Huaxia.
The comedy portrays a bumbling panda who goes on to become a martial arts star.
Although Chinese critics have praised the film for its story-line and animation, its producer DreamWorks has been criticised for seeking to cash in on China's national treasure, the panda bear.
That picture from yesterday looks awful. It's hard to believe that the pollution index is within what is considered safe. As the article goes on to say, those pollution numbers that have been officially released could very well be fudged.
A Chinese paramilitary policeman stood guard before the Water Cube and National Stadium, which were shrouded in smog in Beijing Tuesday
BEIJING -- Just one month before the Aug. 8 opening ceremony of the Beijing Olympics at the city's new National Stadium, numerous hurdles remain for organizers. Among the biggest: Worries about persistent pollution cloud the horizon, prompting the closing of scores of factories.While the primary Olympics sports venues are completed, the rest of the city is a frantic construction site. The downtown station of a new airport railway is unfinished. New subway lines have just started trial runs for opening before mid-July. A major redevelopment of a historic district near Tiananmen Square is shrouded in billboards and construction dust.
Preparations for the Olympics often involve a last-minute sprint, and Beijing may well finish preparations on time, as officials have promised. Still, the amount of work left to be done is impressive -- perhaps most significantly when it comes to pollution, a concern that literally hangs over Beijing.
The past few weeks have had an especially noxious combination of unusual heat, rain and stifling smog. In the 20 days up to Monday, air quality averaged 87.75, according to the government's air-pollution index, a 500-point scale. That is just within what China considers safe -- though double typical levels seen in developed cities in the West. Six days were close to or above levels that China considers mildly polluted, when outdoor activity for the young and old or sick should be reduced.
