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It claims to be the country's largest Chinese newspaper. The Australian Chinese Daily was first published in Sydney on 19 March 1987. [2] The Australian Chinese Daily was founded on 19 March 1987 by the entrepreneurial Chinese immigrant Sandra Lau. Her vision then, which remains at the core of the publication today, was to bridge the gap and ...
Sydney Chinese Daily: 1688 ri bao: Sydney: Chinese News and Media Group Group: 2015 to date: The Chinese Times: Xin shi dai bao: Sydney: Chinese Times: 2000 to date: The Tung Wah News: Sydney: Young Fong: 1898 to 1902: The Tung Wah Times: Sydney: Lean Fore for the Tung Wah Times Newspaper Co: 1902 to 1936: Chinese Post: Tung Hua shih pao ...
Epoch Times (broadsheet Chinese weekly, subscription English weekly) Vision China Times (Chinese weekly) Herald Sun (tabloid daily) Leader Community Newspaper group publishes 20 local news titles covering metropolitan Melbourne; Melbourne Observer (tabloid weekly) [7] Sameway Magazine (Chinese weekly) The Australian Jewish News (weekly)
In Asia's equity markets Japan's Nikkei jumped 1.7% while rises in Sydney and Seoul offset selling in Hong Kong and China to lift MSCI's broadest index of Asia shares outside Japan about 0.7%.
Vision China Times Australia is a Chinese language newspaper owned by the Vision Times Media (Australia) Corporation Pty Ltd. Vision China Times Australia was established as a weekly newspaper in Australia in July 2006, [citation needed] based on a widely-read overseas Chinese news website, secretchina.com, which was launched in 2001 in the United States and is known as Vision Times or ...
LONDON/SYDNEY (Reuters) -The U.S. dollar was poised for a big weekly gain on Friday, towering near one-year highs as a hawkish turn from the Federal Reserve chief sent short-term Treasury yields ...
The Hang Seng Index, which tracks large stocks in Hong Kong and mainland China, fell 9.4% today after China's National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) held a press conference that ...
2CR released its series of proprietary receivers in 1995. The popular models in use today are the CR-88 and the 'digital receivers'. Apart from tuning into 2CR broadcasts, they can also be set to 2AC (another citizen's band Chinese radio channel), with the new digital receivers also tuning to local community radio stations in various languages. 2CR's frequency is locked into 152.075 MHz and ...