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Page 1: Feb Bul 2016 - acfsnsw.org.au · February 8, 2016 . This is the reason that some people confuse their Chinese zodiac signs. The first day of the Chinese astrological year is the first
Page 2: Feb Bul 2016 - acfsnsw.org.au · February 8, 2016 . This is the reason that some people confuse their Chinese zodiac signs. The first day of the Chinese astrological year is the first

2

President's Report

What a wonderful event to end 2015! We had 85 members

and friends attending our Christmas party lunch at The Eight

Restaurant, including our special guests our beloved Patron

Professor The Honourable Dame Marie Bashir, Chinese

Consul General Mr Li Huaxin and three of his Consuls, and Ms

Amy Rae representing Mr Jian Sun of China Travel Service.

The food was delicious, goodwill abounded, and everyone

loved the beautiful speeches given by Dame Marie and HE

Mr Li Huaxin.

Thank you to all who donated items for our fun raffle/auction

- especially to Mr Li Huaxin for the beautiful books on China,

The Metropolitan Orchestra for the tickets to their first

concert in 2016, and to David and Mary Kelly for their

legendary Christmas ham. Thanks to the hardworking

Committee members and auctioneer Contessa Hajinikitas

and thanks to all present for making it such a success. The

event raised over $1400, our best ever, and will really help

the Society.

I hope all members enjoyed the past festive season and will

enjoy the Chinese New Year celebrations still to come.

Wishing you all a happy, peaceful and healthy 2016.

Margaret Yung Kelly, President, January 2016

Christmas lunch with special guests Dame Marie Bashir,

Patron of ACFS, and HE Mr Li Huaxin, Consul General of the

PRC in Sydney.

Donations

Many thanks to the following for their kind donations:

Dr Tony Goh & Leng Tan, Verne Caradus, Thomas Kwok, A

Lee, D J Moroney & Mrs M Moroney, NB & WR Capper, John

Jackson, William Lee, A S Adcock, Julie Wong, Y Skinner,

Robyn A Evershed, Kenneth Brock, Marilyn Hillery.

Vale

Vale to Arthur Locke Chang, who will always be remembered

and celebrated as a founding member of Australia-China

Friendship Society NSW. Our sincere condolences to Anne

and the Chang family.

Vale

VALE to Paul Ward, who passed away on 29th December

2015. Paul was a senior lecturer in criminology at Sydney

University Law School for 25 years before he retired. He will

be remembered for his passion for cryptic crosswords,

puzzles, sudoku, classical music and opera. Paul and his wife

Yvonne Khoo, very active longstanding members of ACFS,

participated in many of our overseas tours. We offer our

sincere condolences to Yvonne and family.

March Meeting – Book Launch by Dr Richard Wu

You are invited to the launch of ‘Falling and Flying: Poems on

Ageing’, edited by Judith Beveridge and Dr Susan Ogle,

illustrated by Dr Richard Wu, on Monday, 21/3/16, at 6 pm.

The special guest speaker is Professor The Hon. Dame Marie

Bashir AD, CVO. Richard will be also give a brief PowerPoint

presentation and display samples of the paintings. Please

RSVP to Margaret Kelly, on 9810 4298, by 2nd of February.

WHEN: Monday 21 March, 6pm

WHERE: Kolling Auditorium, Level 5, Kolling Bldng, Royal

North Shore Hospital

ALL proceeds from sales at the launch will go directly to the

Penney Ageing Research Unit at the Royal North Shore

Hospital.

Falling and Flying:

Falling and Flying: Poems on Ageing - is the

first collection of its kind to be published in

Australia. The editors have selected a

broad range of Australian poems which

explore the universal experience and

effects of ageing. Whether the poets are

witnessing themselves or their parents and

friends succumb to the years, they speak

with great precision and insight into illness, frailty, death,

loss, grief and retirement as well as the joys and the wisdom

that late maturity can bring. There is humour as well as

sadness in this fine and important collection, which includes

the work of some of Australia's best loved poets, a volume to

be cherished by readers of any age.

Dr Susan Ogle is a Clinical Associate Professor of Medicine

and geriatrician at Royal North Shore Hospital, Sydney and

has recently completed a Masters of Medical

Humanities. Susan has been interested in medical education

for many years, using literature (stories and poetry), patient

and family narratives and role play. She is co-editor

of Reflection, the humanities section of the Australasian

Journal on Ageing. Her poetry has been published in literary

and medical journals.

Judith Beveridge is the author of six volumes of poetry, most

recently Devadatta's Poems and Hook and Eye. She is the

poetry editor of Meanjin and teaches poetry writing at

postgraduate level at the University of Sydney. She has won

many prizes for her poetry including the Philip Hodgins

Memorial Medal and the Christopher Brennan Award. Her

work has been studied in schools and universities and has

been translated into several languages.

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Dates for your Diary:

ACFS Regular Activities

Qigong: Every Wednesday, 10am, Sydney Mechanics' School of Arts, 280 Pitt Street, Sydney, exercise class $15. Call Miranda

Ho on 0402 918 383

Mandarin: Every Tuesday. General Language class 10.30am-12noon in our ACFS Rooms, $17. Contact Mark Seeto, ph. 0417

691 988 or email: [email protected]

ART -ANCIENT AND MODERN

Xmas is always a busy time but those members who didn't

get along to our last two, end of year invitations to free

events, missed two related but quite dissimilar artistic and

cultural treats.

These events also both related wonderfully to Dr Richard

Wu's end of year talk (which I missed, but heard about) on

understanding ancient Chinese social models when

deciphering oracle bone and bronze writings.

These two little gems were a roundtable presentation by,

and discussion with, visiting Professor Shui Tao at Sydney

University on the excavation of bronze-age sites in the Altay

Mountains and the sublime exhibition of Chinese Buddhist

painting in cinnabar and ink by Zou Pingchao at the China

Cultural Centre in Castlereagh Street.

Kaye and I first "sat in" at the packed seminar room at the

Old Teacher's College on 2 December to hear about that spot

on the planet where East Kazakhstan, Russia and Mongolia

meet Xinjiang, China to hear about, and see photos of,

archaeological discoveries in stone hewn grave sites from a

variety of periods containing all manner of memorial objects,

some, of great beauty and artistic originality.

Just two days later, we visited the China Cultural Centre to

admire an exhibition of modern brush painted illustrations of

the lives of arhats (those Buddhist saints sufficiently

advanced to qualify for “extinction” who purposely chose to

remain as they were to assist others achieve enlightenment).

Each famous example hung individually on the walls, but

each of these were then jointly depicted in a very long scroll

on a long trestle table (maybe 20 m long, or more), the

figures linked in a single chain, collectively.

By both displays (viewed by walking around the hall, or

sidling along the table on which the single scroll lay, the artist

had succeeded in seemingly effortlessly displaying

“peacefulness” and the personal behaviour necessary for the

achievement of lasting social harmony.

Art that can move any of us to desire social not just, (or as

well as) personal improvement is great indeed. If you missed

either of these quite separate but moving ‘illustrations’ make

a note to watch for their repetition on a future occasion.

Pete Bannister, December 2015 - 賓賓賓賓 彼彼彼彼 得得得得

PS: For the Bronze Age excavation site area, the University of

Oregon has an excellent array of pictographs, burial

arrangements and revealed artefacts at

www.mongolianaltai.uoregon.edu . Many of the images are

reminiscent of – Anazazi sites in New Mexico and Arizona.

THE YEAR FOR THE MONKEY

2016 is year of the Red Monkey. .

The Chinese name of 2016 in the Chinese Horoscope

calendar is . Chinese apply Five Elements (Metal,

Water, Wood, Fire and Earth) into the Chinese

calendar. is in the Fire group. The color of Fire is

connected to Red. is the calendar character

corresponding to Monkey. Therefore, 2016 is the Red Fire

Monkey year.

2016 is the 4713th Chinese Year. According to Chinese

Horoscope calendar, the first day of Red Monkey is on

February 4, 2016. This day is not the Chinese New Year Day.

Most of Internet Chinese horoscope sites use Chinese New

Year Day to determine the Chinese zodiac sign, which is

wrong. Chinese New Year Day of Red Monkey Year is on

February 8, 2016. This is the reason that some people

confuse their Chinese zodiac signs.

The first day of the Chinese astrological year is the first day of

the Tiger Month (Start of Spring). The Tiger Month begins

around February 4, each year. If you were born before

February 4, then you should check Your Chinese Zodiac

Sign first before reading your 2016 Chinese zodiac forecast.

Monkey is the 9th animal in 12 zodiac signs. Monkey is after

8th Sheep and before 10th Chicken. Monkey is the animal in

the first of Metal Cycle. Monkey, Chicken and Dog are in the

cycle of Metal. Our Chinese horoscope prediction combines

the theory of Five Elements, the relationships between

animal signs and the image meaning of I-Ching hexagram.

The prediction for 2016 Year of Monkey is based on your

birth year, the Chinese zodiac signs. We have different

forecasting method for 2016 using your entire Chinese

astrology birth chart, which is required your birthday and

birth time. You can find the hyperlink in the end of the

prediction.

According to Chinese Five Elements Horoscopes, Monkey

contains Metal and Water. Metal is connected to gold. Water

is connected to wisdom and danger. Therefore, we will deal

with more financial events in the year of the Monkey.

Monkey is a smart, naughty, wily and vigilant animal. If you

want to have good return for your money investment, then

you need to outsmart the Monkey. Metal is also connected

to the Wind. That implies the status of events will be

changing very quickly. Think twice before

you leap when making changes for your

finance, career, business relationship and

people relationship.

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Chinese Garden Chamber Music 2016

Five highly renowned master instrumentalists from

China performing in collaboration with top Australian

musicians in the unique setting of The Chinese Garden of

Friendship

JOIN US......to hear some of the finest musicians in

China for a breathtaking evening in the beautiful

surroundings of the Chinese Garden. A truly cross

cultural program including contemporary Chinese

works with arrangements by John Huie, also

featuring Australian chamber music artists Jane

Rutter and Rowena MacNeish.

Utilizing the entire garden as the performance

area, this wide, open air stage is transformed into

an acoustically and visually stunning concert

experience.

MUSICIANS

Wang Tao - pipa

Gu Xiaoyan - gu zheng

Chen Hongyu - zhong ruan

Lv Tingting - erhu

Zhu Wei - dizi

Jane Rutter - flute

Rowena Macneish - cello

Hugh Frazer - double bass

John Huie - Artistic Director

TICKET: $65 (Additional fees may apply)

General Admission (seating will be allocated on

the evening of each concert)

HOSTED BY: China Cultural Centre (Sydney)

SUPPORTED BY: Sydney Harbour Foreshore

Authority

PRODUCED BY: Chinese Chamber Music Company

PROUDLY SPONSORED BY: China Construction

Bank

CATERING PARTNER: Golden Century Seafood

Restaurant

14th February 2016

7.30pm – 9.30pm

TICKETING ENQUIRIES:

China Cultural Centre in Sydney Tue to Sat

(10am -1pm, 2pm-5pm), Tel: 02 82283058 /

Email: [email protected]

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5

Buying Clothes in Shanghai

A short story by Snow Dodgson

I arrive at Tiantong Lu station via line number 10, and am immediately swamped by the crowd of people going to

Qipu Lu. No matter whether one is in the buildings or on the streets, Qipu Lu is always full of people, full of shops.

I am leaving the station through exit number 2 which gives direct access to the main Qipu Lu shopping hub and

overwhelmed with stylish bags, shoes, pants, dress, suits… everything marked at half the price one would normally

see. I am also overwhelmed with the yells and chatter of people bargaining.

I see a pair of tall black boots that I fancy. I walk into the shop and I am immediately welcomed with "hello meinu!,

this is Shanghai street talk meaning young female person, it doesn’t really mean "beautiful young woman" which is

the correct Mandarin translation). These boots would look great on you. “The shopkeeper shows me to a seat then

bends down to help me fit the shoes. I feel like a queen. I really like these boots, so I ask “how much?”

With a smiling face he says “180 yuan. “

“ppfffttt! Are you stealing from me?

“ohhh meinu! I gave you a special price! This is the last pair and they looks so good on you! 180 is the price that I buy

them for..! And…”

“100”

“oh meinu! How can I do business!”

I start to walk out of the shop.

“hey hey! 120!! 120 and no lower!”

I didn't look back “90!” I could hear above the din of the shopping street as I walked away shaking my head. “no no

no”

I walked into other shops to look around. It is winter here and the fashion style on the streets of Shanghai Is high

boots, stockings and thick skirts.

About half of an hour went by. I am about to walk into another shop and I hear hurried footsteps from around the

corner. The shopkeeper with the tall black boots has come running to find me.

“Meinu, Meinu… 90yuan”

“80”

“OK..” “come back and get them.”

I love those boots. I have worn them every day since I bought them

Qipu Lu is a fun place to shop, it is known throughout China for being the best place in Shanghai to bargain.

Bargaining at Qipu Lu is a game. I buy what I fancy for a cheap price. The word Qipu Lu is not a Chinese word, it is a

local approximation of the English word "cheaper". (Lu means street.) Before China’s entry into the WTO Qipu Lu

was famous for selling counterfeit fashion items. Now Qipu lu is a collection of competitive local fashion businesses

and is a magnet for cash-strapped young people in Shanghai, the fashion capital of China.

The ACFS Bulletin

is kindly

sponsored by:

Ph: 1300 764 224; email: [email protected]

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7

ACFS 2015 Xmas Party Dame Marie Bashir speaking at our Xmas party

about her love of China and the Chinese people.

Dame Marie spoke of her first visit to China,

working with barefoot doctors in poor rural areas

Dame Marie Bashir with ACFS President Margaret

Kelly

Rare book donation by HE The Consul General, Li Huaxin

HE Li Huaxin, Consul General of the Peoples Republic

of China, with ACFS member Gina Kelly

Murray Block, winner of the much-coveted ham!

Page 8: Feb Bul 2016 - acfsnsw.org.au · February 8, 2016 . This is the reason that some people confuse their Chinese zodiac signs. The first day of the Chinese astrological year is the first

China's historic quest for a peaceful rise

Jean-Pierre Lehmann

China is the first new great global power to emerge in over a century.

It is receiving a great deal of unsolicited advice in the process, notably, then US Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick's

2005 admonition to Beijing that it should be a "responsible stakeholder". (Note: that was two years after the invasion of Iraq!)

It was logical, therefore, that the Chinese should ask how the preceding emerging great powers got there. One result of the

inquiries was a brilliant 2006 CCTV series, The Rise of the Great Powers.

The series begins with Portugal in the 15th century, the first great global seaborne power with an empire stretching from

Brazil, across the Atlantic, to both West and East Africa, through to the Indian Ocean with an outpost in Goa and, thence, to

the Western Pacific in Macau. Following Portugal, the series describes the rise of the next eight great powers: Spain, the

Netherlands, Britain, France, Germany, Russia, Japan and the United States.

One major conclusion is that not a single one of the nine could have been described as a responsible stakeholder in their rise

to global power: In every case, conquest, destruction, enslavement, executions, looting and the like were the order of the day.

The rise of Mr Zoellick's own country, the US, entailed slavery, the genocide of native American Indians, wars and territorial

acquisitions (notably from Mexico), the control of neighbouring countries in the Caribbean through the expulsion of other

powers, the imposition of the Monroe Doctrine declaring Latin America a US sphere of influence, culminating in the Spanish-

American war whereby Washington acquired Puerto Rico (plus Guam and the Philippines) and Spain was expelled from Cuba.

In his compelling book, Asia's Cauldron: The South China Sea And The End Of A Stable Pacific, Robert Kaplan draws an

intriguing parallel between US perspectives on the Caribbean in relation to its national security, and China's on the South

China Sea.

Arguably, the most relevant chapter of the CCTV series is that on Britain. It was Britain that woke China from its slumber and

forced it, screaming and kicking, into the modern age. Imperial China, which, just before the outbreak of the first Opium War,

corresponded to over 30 per cent of global gross domestic product (GDP), was almost certainly unsustainable.

The system was obsolete and violent peasant risings had been raging for decades. But it is the manner in which Britain

behaved that remains for China and Britain - and for the rest of the planet - a deep moral quandary. As the totally illicit opium

trade caused economic and social ravages, the Chinese pleaded with Britain to be a responsible stakeholder.

In an impassioned letter to Queen Victoria just prior to the outbreak of hostilities, commissioner Lin Zexu appealed to her

better moral self to intervene so the heinous trade could end. Lin pointed to the flagrant double standards (a recurrent theme

among risen Western great powers) in noting: "I have heard that the smoking of opium is very strictly forbidden by your

country; that is because the harm caused by opium is clearly understood. Since it is not permitted to do harm to your own

country, then even less should you let it be passed on to the harm of other countries - how much less to China!"

Queen Victoria never replied to the letter, except in the form of gunships in the first Opium War, followed by a second

offensive from 1856 to 1860, in which the French joined the British, culminating with the looting of the Old Summer Palace in

Beijing - somewhat comparable to the Chinese looting the British Museum and the Louvre.

If the Portuguese seaborne empire is the first chapter in the rise of the great powers, the Opium War is the first chapter in

China's century of humiliation. By the year of liberation (1949), its share of GDP had plummeted to 4 per cent, while in the

process there were incessant foreign military invasions, as well as the moral injury of the treaty ports, the coolie trade and

other forms of humiliation.

Though China, unlike India, was not colonised by a single imperial power, in the words of Sun Yat Sen, it was a "poly-colony"

with multiple countries helping themselves to bits and pieces of Chinese territory in what were called "spheres of influence".

In looking back over the past 500 years, it is clear that the narrative of the peaceful rise of a great power has never been

written. Every single rising power from Portugal to the US has been bellicose, brutal and at times barbaric. It was after they

had caused disorder that they sought to impose order - their order. If China wants a model of a responsible stakeholder, the

fact is that it does not exist.

The term "China's peaceful rise to great power status" was coined by Chinese thought leader Zheng Bijian in 2005. The future

of humanity very much depends on whether, as it rises to become a great global power, China will behave with the same

ruthless cynicism and cause as much misery and mayhem as its nine predecessors, or whether it will break the pattern and

tear asunder the great-power-rising paradigm by rising peacefully.

It's a tough challenge, especially, I repeat, as there is no precedent, no guidebook one can take off the shelf, no historical

mentor one can turn to.

Whether China ultimately succeeds or fails will, of course, greatly depend on China, but it will also depend on the attitudes

and acts of the existing and erstwhile great powers. Western sermons are not helpful. To construct a better and more peaceful

world, a collective constructive approach is quintessential. As is a degree of humility on the part of the Western powers (and

Japan). They should recognise that they did not rise peacefully and, indeed, as they rose, China was abused. This might go

some way in avoiding a Chinese syndrome of revenge.

A first concrete step in that direction might be for Queen Elizabeth, before she leaves the throne, to apologise to China on

behalf of her great-great-grandmother, Queen Victoria, for her rudeness in never having properly replied to Lin Zexu's letter. A

small act of this nature could have a huge impact.

- The writer is emeritus professor of international political economy at IMD, Switzerland and visiting professor at the University

of Hong Kong. This article first appeared in the South China Morning Post.

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Australia China Friendship Society

澳澳澳澳 中中中中 友友友友 好好好好 協協協協 会会会会 NSW INC. Invites you to join our ACFS- Spirit of the Long March to experience the historical route of military retreat from South-North into West undertaken by the Red Army of the Communist Party of China; the 14 nights/15days tour takes from Guangzhou then to Jinggangshan-Jiujiang-Lushan-Nanchang-Changsha Shaoshan-Ningxiang-Yueyang-Xi’an-Yan’an, Guangzhou.

We have been able to obtain for members and friends this specially priced tour, organised by

CHINA TRAVEL SERVICE (AUST.) PTY. LTD. (Licence No. 2TA001849)

The tour will depart from Sydney on 12 October 2016 and arrive back in Sydney on 26 October 2016. Please complete the attached booking form and return to Ms Amy Rae, China Travel Service (Aust) Pty. Ltd Sydney Office, Level 1, Suite 3 -7, 650 George Street, Sydney 2000 as soon as possible to secure your place on this fabulous tour.

Please make cheque deposit of $350.00 payable to CHINA TRAVEL SERVICE

The balance of the tour costs is payable by 20 August 2016 and a meeting of tour members will be held about two weeks prior to departure. Travel Insurance is essential. CTS (Amy Rae Tel: 02 9372 0081) can arrange it at special

minimal cost or you can make your own arrangement. Book as soon as possible

DON’T MISS OUT!!

Tour Leader is ACFS committee member Ms Miranda Ho (Budiman)

Tel: 0402 918 383 Email: [email protected]

Tour Inclusions: Tour Exclusions:

*Twin share room at 4 star hotels *Travel Insurance *Fully inclusive tour with breakfast, lunches and & dinners *Personal expenses *Transfers, tours including admission fees *All airfares with airport taxes and fuel surcharges *Chinese Visa Fee * Fully escorted tour by local English speaking guides *Tipping *Travel bag

Tour Cost: $4750 per person on twin share basis Land only cost: $4450pp (From/Ends: Guangzhou)

Single Room Supplement: $850

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Spirit of the Long March Tour 15 Days

Guangzhou-Jinggangshan-Jiujiang-Lushan-Nanchang-Changsha

Shaoshan-Ningxiang-Yueyang-Xi’an-Yan’an

12 October, Day1 Sydney-Guangzhou

Take an overnight flight from Sydney to Guangzhou on China Southern Airlines CZ302 at 2215 to Guangzhou.

13 October, Day2 Guangzhou-Jinggangshan (L/D)

Upon arrive in Guangzhou at 0500, you will need to clear the airport formalities and connect to CZ3945 at 0845 to

Jinggangshan, Jingganshan is a country level city in Jiangxi province known as the birthplace of the People’s

Liberation Army, and the "cradle of the Chinese revolution". After lunch, transfer to hotel for some rest then visit

the Revolution Museum in the afternoon.

Hotel: Jinyuan Hotel or similar

14 October, Day3 Jinggangshan (B/L/D)

This morning, we will visit the Huangyangjie Post,

Baizhuyuan Garden, and the relic of Mint, Red Army

Hospital, and Rainbow Falls. You can also take a

view of Wuzhi Mountain from there. Afterwards,

transfer to your hotel.

Hotel: Jinyuan Hotel or similar

15 October, Day4 Jinggangshan-Jiujiang (B/L/D)

Today, we will continue our visit in Jinggangshan,

the Beishan Martyrs Cemetery and Ciping Red Army

Camp- Mao Zedong's former residence. After our

visit to the Yicuihu Garden, we will take a train ride

to Jiujiang.

Hotel: Shanshui Hotel or similar

16 October, Day5 Jiujiang-Lushan (B/L/D)

This morning, we will take the coach to Lushan (approx. 3 hours). We will visit the popular attractions in Mount Lu

such as the Huajing Garden, Jingxiu Valley, the Immortal Caverns, Meilu Outhouse and so forth.

Hotel: Lushan Hotel or similar

17 October, Day6 Lushan-Nanchang (B/L/D)

In the morning, visit Sanbaoshu scenic area and

Lushan Museum. Then coach to Nanchang (approx.

2 hours).

Hotel: Qixing Business Hotel or similar

18 October, Day7 Nanchang-Changsha (B/L/D)

In the morning, visit the Site-Memorial of the

August 1 Nanchang Uprising and Jiangxi Province

Museum. Then take high-speed train to Changsha.

Hotel: Xinwei Huatian Hotel or similar

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11

19 October, Day8 Changsha-Shaoshan - Ningxiang-Changsha

In the morning, coach to Shaoshan, which is the hometown of

Chairman Mao. Visit Chairman Mao’s Former Residence, Bronze

statue of Mao Zedong, the Library and Mao Zedong Memorial

Museum. Move on to Ningxiang. Visit Liu Shaoqi Former

Residence Huangminglou. Afterwards, return to Changsha

by.coach.

Hotel: Xinwei Huatian Hotel

20 October, Day9 Changsha- Yueyang-Changsha (B/L/D)

This morning, coach to Yueyang. Visit the Dongting Lake and

Yueyang Pagoda. Move on to Liuyang and visit the Former

Residence of Hu Yaobang. If time permits, explore the

Huangxinglu Walk Street on your leisure.

Hotel: Xinwei Huatian Hotel

21 October, Day10 Changsha (B/L/D)

This morning, coach to Yuelu Mountain. Visit Yuelu Academy, Juzizhoutou, Statue of Youth Mao Zedong, Pozi

Street and Snack Street where you can try some Hunan cuisine

Hotel: Xinwei Huatian Hotel or similar

22 October, Day11 Changsha-Xi’an-Yan’an (B/L/D)

In the morning, take an early flight CZ3721 at 0810 to Xi’an. Xi’an is considered as a Shrine of Chinese Revolution. It

became the center of the Chinese Communist revolution from 1936 to 1948. We will visit the Xuanyuan Temple

then continue our journey to Yan’an, where the Chinese communists celebrated as the birthplace of the

revolution.

Hotel: Yan’an Yinhai Hotel or similar

23 October, Day12 Yan’an-Xi’an (BLD)

Visit Yan’an Revolution Museum, Zaoyuan Revolution

Relics, and Yangjialing Revolution Relics. Move on to

Nanniwan. The Eighth Route of Red Army carried out

the famous Production Campaign. Then coach back to

Xi’an. Enjoy a Tang Dynasty Show after dinner.

Hotel: Grand New World Hotel or similar

24 October, Day13 Xi’an- Guangzhou(((( (B/L/D)

Today’s tour highlight is to visit the greatest

archaeological discovery of the last century, where

the Terracotta Warriors were interred with the

Emperor Qin Shi Huang more than 2000 years ago. Included are the Circle Vision Movie and Bronze Chariot. Later,

visit the Terracotta Warriors and Horses Museum; follow by the Xi’an Art Ceramic and Lacquer Ware Factory then

transfer to airport for flight CZ3212 at 1735 to Guangzhou.

Hotel: Landmark Hotel or similar

25 October, Day14 Guangzhou-Sydney((((B/L))))

In the morning, visit Zhongshan Memorial Hall, Xiguan (Westside Mansion of Guangzhou) where you can find the

big old houses which belonged to rich businessmen of Guangzhou in the past. Continue our visit to Zhujiang New

City. After enjoy a nice Yumcha lunch, you will have some free time for last minute shopping before being

transferred to the Guangzhou airport for your flight CZ325 at 2105 to Sydney.

Overnight flight 26 October, Day15 Sydney. Morning arrive in Sydney at 09:05am.

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If undeliverable return to: ACFS NSW Inc. Suite 524 368 Sussex Street SYDNEY NSW 2000

PP No 235387/00014

The Australia-China Friendship Society is a non-profit organisation, run completely by volunteers. It was founded in the early 1950s to promote friendship and understanding between the peoples of Australia and China.

In keeping with that objective we engage in the following activities:

� We hold regular meetings each month at which we hear speakers who have expert knowledge about China. � We organise tours to China and other countries, at the lowest possible cost. � We host delegations from China. � We conduct classes in the Chinese language and organise language, painting, cultural and other specialist tours

in China. � We organise excursions and social occasions for members and friends. � We raise money to support the education of disadvantaged children in China’s poorer areas.

Membership is open to anyone who supports our aim of promoting friendship and understanding between Australians and Chinese.

DISCLAIMER: The views expressed in articles published in the Bulletin are not necessarily those of the ACFS.

Australia-China Friendship Society NSW Membership Application Form

To renew your membership or to join, please complete this slip and send it in with your cheque or postal order. Donations welcome!

$30 Individual member

$35 Family

$25 Concession (pension/student)

Donation $________________

Post to the Secretary, ACFS, Suite 524, 5th floor, Pacific Trade Centre, 368 Sussex Street, SYDNEY, NSW 2000 Direct Deposit: Commonwealth Bank BSB number 062 099; Account Number 1021 3918 – Please make sure you indicate your name!

(Please PRINT!) Mr/Mrs/Ms…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………

Address …………………………………………………………………………………………..……....Postcode…………… Telephone……………………..……..………Email………………………….………………..….……Date……………….…

□ Renewal □ New Member

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