Zimmer Foundation for China, for Tongren city, Guizhou prov.

 

from www.zimmerfoundation.org/about/index.php

The Zimmer Foundation for China was established to implement holistic programs to improve the economic and spiritual conditions in rural Guizhou. The Zimmer Foundation is a US 501(c)(3) tax exempt organization established in memory of Rev. & Mrs. Gerald R. Zimmer who served in China 1936-1948.
Rev. & Mrs. Gerald R. Zimmer were Educators who, in the middle 1930s decided they wanted to be missionaries and went to China to preach and teach. They went to a very remote area in the interior, to a small town of Tongren. There they lived with the people, learned their language and customs and worked to improve their situation.

They saw a need for teachers and help to found the Tongren Teachers College, which has since grown to be a full fledged university; Tongren University. The same desire Rev. & Mrs. Zimmer had to support needy students with scholarships is being carried on today with the generosity of people like you.

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The Zimmer Foundation initiated a scholarship program in 2004 that supports the major cost of education for students annually for the second, third and final years at Tongren University. Now, over twenty students have been provided scholarships. It was our vision that at least two students will be added each year over a ten year program. Many donors have allowed us to exceed our visions of the scholarship program. The selection of the students is based upon their academic achievements and financial needs. The student’s family is identified with an income at or less than the poverty level established by the Tongren prefecture officials.
In villages of rural China, many students are the first of their family to complete college. Zimmer Foundation has arranged to financially support specific students with financial needs. The eligibility for receipt of such scholarships is first year college students with academic excellence who come from very poor families. Often these are children of farmers whose annual income is less than $264 USD. The families earn below the declared poverty level defined by each county.

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Peace Corps China blog : My Life as a Complex Adaptive System

The Zimmer Foundation

2010 November 8, Posted by sky

This a short post tonight because it is so late, but I have a great story to tell. Since I arrived in Tongren, I have heard about a man affectionately called “uncle Stan.” His parents were missionaries in China and helped set up a hospital as well as the first church in Tongren. Several years ago, uncle Stan set up a foundation called the Zimmer Foundation. Its mission is to improve the quality of life in rural China, specifically by investing in education. The foundation sponsors a scholarship fund that relieves the financial burden that many of the students, who come from remote farming villages, face at Tongren University.

I had the pleasure of meeting uncle Stan today and I must say that he is quite an amazing man. I found out that he was born in Tongren and lived here for 5 years before moving to America. He had a long, illustrious career with IBM and since he retired has dedicated his life to helping people in his “hometown”.

His story and what he is doing is extremely inspirational and I wanted to include the link to his foundation’s website for you to have a look. Hooray for good people!  zimmerfoundation.org/index.php

(taken from Sky Lantz-Wagner’s blog, skylantzwagner.blog.com/2010/11/08/the-zimmer-foundation/ )

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Measurable holistic services provided to needy students
1. Over 30 University Scholarships in rural China
a. Goal of minimun two each year
b. Meet total tutition and board for three years
c. Regular visits; banquets, outtings
2. Encouragement to local church
a. Regular visits and updates
b. Provision of Bibles and study materials
c. Provision of furnishing and church needs
3. Outreach to Local orphange
a. Encourgment to orphans
b. Visitation by scholarship students
c. Medical support
d. Collaboration with other NGOs

(from Stan Zimmer’s LinkedIn page,http://www.linkedin.com/profile/view?id=35057346&authType=NAME_SEARCH&authToken=uZSq&locale=en_US&srchid=1285106101376488877548&srchindex=3&srchtotal=5&trk=vsrp_people_res_photo&trkInfo=VSRPsearchId:1285106101376488877548,VSRPtargetId:35057346,VSRPcmpt:primary )

 

Chinese saying mentioning Guizhou: Qian Lv Ji Qiong (The Donkey Has Exhausted Its Tricks) – 黔驴技穷 : 黔 qian = Guizhou

from (from chinese.hm68.com/index.php/chinese-idioms/17-the-donkey-o… ; history.cultural-china.com/en/38History2824.html ;mychinaconnection.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/guizhou-… ; dictionary.kaide.net/char/9ed4/%E9%BB%94 ;www.nciku.com/search/zh/detail/%E9%BB%94/32354 ) ; uploaded at:  http://www.flickr.com/photos/98531730@N02/9517232920/in/photostream

karst geological formations: Those weird hills!

written about Guilin, but applies to Guizhou’s karst as well:   “Guilin’s most renowned feature is its dramatic karst terrain. Rising sharply at odd angles, limestone peaks look like giant teeth growing out of the green plain. Karst topography is characterized by many caverns and sinkholes that form by the dissolution of limestone or other carbonate rocks. Florida and Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley are good examples of where karst can be found in the United States. However, the topography looks completely different from that in China, thanks to conditions that exposed China’s karst and eroded its softer limestone faster. The specific conditions for forming the magnificent topography of Guilin “are fourfold,” according to Ray Beiersdorfer, a geologist at Youngstown State University in Ohio. “First, you need hard, compact carbonate rock. In Guilin, it’s Devonian limestone. Secondly, you need strong uplift, in this case provided by the collision of India with Asia to form the Himalaya. Third, you need a Monsoon climate of high moisture during the warmest season. Finally, the area must not have been scoured by glaciers, which this region wasn’t.”

Two types of karst landscapes predominate in Guilin: fenglin or peak forest (isolated towers) and fengcong or peak cluster (linked-base towers). The two types may have evolved sequentially from peak forest to peak cluster, or they may have evolved simultaneously. Beiersdorfer described this landscape, which he saw during a recent visit to China: “China in general and the Guilin area specifically boasts some of the most spectacular karst topography in the world.” ” (from www.geotimes.org/apr07/article.html?id=Travels0407.html )

Karst
Huge areas of China’s Southwest comprise visually spectacular landscapes featuring karst – weathered limestone formations. In China, limestone has been created from fossilized prehistoric sea floor sediments, brought to the surface by geological upheavals. The exposed alkaline limestone is then eroded by naturally-occurring acidic rain. Above ground, this results in anything from closely packed “stone forests,” poking a few meters skywards, to the huge conical hills covering half of Guizhou, and the tall, elegant pinnacles around Guilin. Underground, percolating water and subterranean rivers carve out long, interlinked caverns, hung with oddly shaped rock formations.
Karst formation
Southwest China’s thick and fractured pure limestone has led to a dramatically eroded landscape. The warm wet climate speeds up the weathering of limestone by acid rainwater and chemicals in rotting plants.
1. Surface streams lose water to cave systems developing in the limestone. Surface drainage is diverted down sink holes to below the water table.
Karst landscape
This cut-away artwork shows an idealized karst landscape, with all the features shown together. Karst topographies usually have a thick layer of cave-ridden limestone, and then, depending on the area’s geology and the age of the formation, a few of the features shown here.
Fenglin karst, which translates as peak-forest karst, is characterized by peaks that rise near vertically, like trees, 100 to 250 feet (30 to 80 m) above the surrounding flat floodplains. These dramatic tower-like karsts are found in and around the city of Guilin.
1. Surface streams lose water to cave systems developing in the limestone. Surface drainage is diverted down sink holes to below the water table.2. Peaks develop from the land left after erosion by the streams. The cave system gets larger as fast-moving subsurface streams bore through the limestone, and the water table drops.3. Much of the limestone has eroded past the caves down to a layer of shale. Limestone peaks remain, many fractured with small, waterless caves.
Caves that open out into large halls filled with stunning limestone formations are found throughout karst areas. Minerals deposited by losing streams and water drainage create the strange shapes.
Fengcong karst, or peak-cluster karst, differ from the straight-sided fenglin. Their peaks are more cone-shaped and one hill meets the next across a depression or doline. Superb fengcong landscape can be seen near the small town of Xingping.
The Li River cuts through an impressive variety of karst hills. Cruises start in Guilin with fenglin, which gradually give way to dense fengcong.
Stone forests, such as Shi Lin outside Kunming, are karst formations created by the retreating waters of ancient seas, and wind and rain erosion.
Fenglin karst, which translates as peak-forest karst, is characterized by peaks that rise near vertically, like trees, 100 to 250 feet (30 to 80 m) above the surrounding flat floodplains. These dramatic tower-like karsts are found in and around the city of Guilin.
Caves that open out into large halls filled with stunning limestone formations are found throughout karst areas. Minerals deposited by losing streams and water drainage create the strange shapes.
Fengcong karst, or peak-cluster karst, differ from the straight-sided fenglin. Their peaks are more cone-shaped and one hill meets the next across a depression or doline. Superb fengcong landscape can be seen near the small town of Xingping.
The Li River cuts through an impressive variety of karst hills. Cruises start in Guilin with fenglin, which gradually give way to dense fengcong.    from (http://www.chinaspree.com/china-travel-guide/china-guizhou-guangxi-tours.html )

images uploaded at: http://www.flickr.com/photos/98531730@N02/9455307987/in/set-72157634969798328 and http://www.flickr.com/photos/98531730@N02/9458080460/in/set-72157634969798328/

Jax Tea Party – video about living in Guiyang and teaching children English at a private school, Jack Porter, 2011

See Jack (John S. Portman,johnsporter@gmail.com) tell about his time in China.  Video viewable direct on Youku, title: “BNC_Jax_Tea_Party_121008 ” , v.youku.com/v_show/id_XNDYwMjI0NDg4.html

caption: This is a video about living in Guiyang and teaching children English at a private school.  This movie was made a couple years ago when I worked for the Tian Tian English School 田田英语.

Also viewable on this website: www.tourguizhou.net/category/jack/page/3/(embedded at the bottom of the page).

high speed trains from Guiyang to Chengdu, Guiyang to Guangzhou – in a couple of years

High-speed ralway network in South China

The joint testing and commissioning of Guilin-Liuzhou high-speed railway  

ChinaRailwayHighspeed.svg

images from http://www.flickr.com/photos/98531730@N02/9516188476/in/set-72157634956626472/ , maps from http://baike.baidu.com/view/4766536.htm?fromId=2693963&redirected=seachword and http://baike.baidu.com/view/1961893.htm

Guiyang-Guangzhou high speed rail to open this December
2014-09-16 05:54:30 [english.cqnews.net/html/2014-09/16/content_31993802.htm]
The construction of the Guiyang-Guangzhou high speed rail has come to an end and its debugging is being carried out to make sure the line is put into operation by the end of the year, the Guiyang-Guangzhou high speed rail scheduling conference was told.

It is expected that the standard speed of the Guiyang-Guangzhou line will be 250 km/h. With a total length of 857 kilometers, the high speed rail will start from north Guiyang, stopping at Longli, Duyun, Danzhai, Rongjiang, Congjiang, Guilin, Gongcheng, Hezhou, Zhaoqing, Sanshui and Foshan, to arrive at its terminal Guangzhou.

There are 21 stops in total, and 8 stops among them are inside Guizhou province.

After completion, the duration from Guiyang to Guangzhou will be reduced to only 4 hours, from as long as 20 hours before.

Tunnels will carry more than 80 percent of the Guiyang-Guangzhou high speed railway. And for convenience, a 3G and 4G network will cover most of the tunnels.

Source: China Daily

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Guiyang–Guangzhou High-Speed Railway – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia [en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guiyang%E2%80%93Guangzhou_High-Spee…]

Guiyang-Guangzhou High Speed Railway is a major trunk route selected in the 11th Five Year Plan by the Chinese government. It will allow a fast link between the South-West Chinese provinces of Sichuan,Chongqing, Guizhou and Guangxi to the economic power houses of China in Guangdong and Hong Kong. It will allow for a massive reduction travel time between Guiyang and Guangzhou from 22 to 4 hours.

The 857 km route of this railway is more direct than current routes. This is due to the exceptionally difficult and mountainous terrain, making this high-speed project very expensive to construct. Project cost is estimated at 85.8 billion RMB (USD$12.6 billion).[1] This means 209 tunnels are required over the length of this route, some being in excess of 14 km in length.[2] It will pass through the major tourist destinations of Guilin and Yangshuo in Guangxi province with its unique karst landscape.

Construction commenced in 2008 and is expected to take 6 years to complete.