getting imported cheese and canned soups in Guiyang: Youyou Baking 优优烘焙 (Youyou Hongbei), in 25th fl apt/store in Dayingpo, northern part of Guiyang

store in Guiyang with foreign brand food products–cheese, soups, imported butter, etc – from a 25th fl  apt/store

store name: Youyou Baking 优优烘焙 (Youyou Hongbei), tel: 86-189 8511 3035, email: 32634666@qq.com,  http://q.weibo.com/1150041, website: http://youyouhongbei.taobao.com/shop/view_shop.htm?user_number_id=651370963&ssid=r11, youyouhp.taobao.com, address: 贵阳市大营坡营通花园E座2单元2507号, Room 2507, Unit 2, Bldg E, Yingtong Garden, Dayingpo, Guiyang

Nov 2013 photo is of store owner with expats in Guiyang hungry for a taste of home. From right: Yaacov Ben-David (a Canadian/Israeli/Iranian biologist researching cancer drugs at the Guizhou Medical Plants Botanical Garden / Key Laboratory of Chemistry for Natural Products of Guizhou Province under Chinese Academy of Sciences, from Toronto),  Jack Porter (Guizhou Normal University, from Michigan), Hal Wolowitz (Guizhou Finance and Economics University, from New York City), Ray Mahoney (Guiyang American-Canadian International School, from Kentucky).

Kennedy Assassination

The Discovery Channel is on Channel 142 here in Guiyang and it featured the “New Information” recently released from the national archives after 50 years.  It was about the same stuff I remember from 50 years ago.  I suppose there are a lot of Chinese that don’t know what happened 50 years ago.  It is amazing how I was only age 12, and I still have it burned into memory, better than what happened to me last week.

Today I wonder how the world would have been different if there hadn’t been the cynical hatred that led to the killings of the 1960s (Bobby and Jack Kennedy, MLK et al). Would we have stayed in Vietnam? Would there have been race riots? I think about the Rolling Stones  “Sympathy for the Devil”  lyrics about “Who Killed the Kennedys?”. Well does it make sense to wonder what it would be like to live in a world without tornadoes, floods, earthquakes, and hurricanes? Hatred is a force of nature.

Living in a foreign country doesn’t take away the feelings of being an American. It accentuates many feelings.  We are protected from the day to day grind  of 24 hour news, but we have more time to ponder what is it like to be a citizen of the USA and a citizen of the World. Well this is an emotional time for all of us old farts I guess . . .

The Trouble with Rats Update #3

 

Well I have bowed to requests and removed one picture of a rat. After all my experiences with rats I get kind of a warm fuzzy feeling when I see a dead rat, or even a live one that is hopelessly trapped. So my perspective is a little different. This blog about living in Southwest China is supposed to cover what life is really like, what we struggle with, what we like.  So this is the definitive story on rats, at least in my life.

Mickey

http://www.tourguizhou.net/the-trouble-with-rats/

http://www.tourguizhou.net/the-trouble-with-rats-update-1/

http://www.tourguizhou.net/the-trouble-with-rats-update-2/

I haven’t seen a rat in my place for over a month now. I think the problem is solved. I have a macho mentality on many issues here in China.  “I can handle it” is my attitude and it works for most things. A little over  month ago I caught two rats, large ones, and drowned both of them. Then I called the “Waiban’s office” (Foreigner Boss) and told them that this was out of control and needed to be taken care of. I am a teacher at Guizhou Normal University of Guiyang, and the school is responsible for providing suitable housing. A day later a worker came by and we put a new secure plastic tube on the kitchen sink drain, where we figured they were coming in. It worked, for a few days.  Another rat came up and ate the soft plastic of the tube and came through the hole in the pipe.  I never caught that one.  He left right after he invaded.

I got the worker back the next day and we put a screen device in the plumbing to stop the rats from getting to the soft pipe inside the home. Problem solved.  No more mice or rats. I learned something. When dealing with a health and safety issue, it is probably a good idea to ask for help sooner, rather than later.

I’ve learned some interesting things that may be useful for people in my position:
1) Rats tend to stay in the kitchen area, wherever there is food . . . crumbs, etc.
2) The squeak of a rat sounds a lot like the chirp of certain kinds of birds.
3) Last week I found a bag of rice that was on top of the fridge.  It had a hole in it. So if you think you have a rat in your kitchen, don’t just look down at the floor. Rats can be up high too, even above your head, wherever there is food.

 

Biomed Research is moving to China

Guizhou Province has tremendous biodiversity and is attracting basic research.  Yaacov Ben-David recently moved from Toronto to Guiyang, China: The following was taken from www.Chinadaily.com.cn and published on 10/22/2013.
Back to nature for answers
By Sun Yuanqing ( China Daily )

Updated: 2013-10-22A Canadian medical scientist has moved to China in the hope of discovering a cure for cancer using a mix of Western and Eastern medical practices.

Yaacov Ben-David is an internationally renowned molecular biologist and he recently put down roots in Guizhou province in Southwest China, a place he believes the next generation of cancer cures will come from.Yaacov

With its ample resources of traditional Chinese medicine and specialists with the knowledge of how to extract pure compounds from natural herbal remedies, Guizhou is only a step away from finding the ultimate cure, Ben-David says.

“They develop compounds from TCM but there is no one here to find the functions against the disease, particularly cancer. That is my expertise. I saw the match between me and this group,” he says.

Based on TCM natural cures and ethnic medicines, Guizhou’s pharmaceutical industry totals 20 billion yuan ($3.27 billion) a year. It is now seeking driving forces through further research and innovation, and part of the effort is to attract overseas professionals.

“Yaacov Ben-David makes up for what we lack the most, preclinical models for diseases, especially cancer. These models will help us select the right compounds against cancer,” says Luo Heng, a researcher in Ben-David’s tumor pharmacology research team at the Key Laboratory of Chemistry for Natural Products of Guizhou Province under Chinese Academy of Sciences.

At a time when Western academies are suffering budget cuts, China is trying hard to attract more academics and entrepreneurs from abroad. In late 2011, the government initiated the One Thousand Foreign Experts Project, to invite more specialists into the country in the next 10 years.

Successful candidates get a subsidy of up to 1 million yuan from the central government and scientific researchers can get 3 to 5 million yuan in research allowances.

As a key foreign expert brought in by Guizhou this year, Ben-David is also applying for the project with his team in order to obtain stronger support for their project.

The group already has 2 million yuan from the provincial government as startup funding and another 5 million yuan to build the largest international laboratory in Guizhou. This kind of support would not have been possible back in North America given the current economic situation, he says.

“It is very hard to find funding in Canada at the moment. My work was not moving ahead any more because there is no funding. There are too many scientists who cannot find government support,” he says. “Also, you need chemists, people who can provide compounds and modify them for you. I didn’t have that opportunity at home.”

Born in Iran, Ben-David received his PhD in Molecular Immunology from the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, Israel in 1987. He later served as a professor of medical biophysics at the University of Toronto and senior scientist of molecular and cellular biology at the Sunnybrook Research Institute.

He successfully isolated several cancer genes responsible for the induction and progression of leukemia. He also identified the mechanisms of these cancer genes – knowledge which can be used for the clinical treatment of the cancer.

In the last five years, he has focused on how to develop compounds and drugs against cancer, as he wanted to transfer his work from the lab to the hospital.

Ben-David first visited the laboratory in Guiyang through an introduction by Yang Meili, one of his researchers in Canada who happened to be a former student of Hao Xiaojiang, director of the laboratory.

When he saw how Chinese chemists were working to develop the wide range of flora in Guizhou for the use of TCM, he saw his niche.

“I am the biologist and they are chemists. They develop compounds from TCM and there has to be somebody to understand their functions. I thought it would be a very good opportunity to collaborate.”

Apart from the financial and team-building support in China, there are also opportunities for breakthrough discoveries as few studies have been done about natural compounds extracted from TCM.

“When I was in North America, everything I used was already known. Here everything is locally sourced and not yet categorized yet. It’s all novel and unique,” Ben-David says. “They told me that there are 55 compounds that have not been characterized yet. This is amazing.”

As TCM is still not widely accepted globally, he hopes his research can change that.

“The potential is very high. Not many studies have been done about TCM. And not many scientists in the world have access to these compounds. I am hoping to collect all these and collate them in a data library that more people can have access to.”

Yang Jun contributed to the story.

 

Khan Academy

The Khan Academy was featured on the CCTV English News channel. The News showed how a high school in California uses the Khan Academy for their students to improve math scores. The students at this California school had aggregate student scores in math at about 300th in the State. In a two year period, the students of this school raised math scores to the 11th in California. The newscast started out explaining how the US students are falling behind their counterparts in other industrialized countries.They have used the web site, www.khanacademy.org to catch up on math. The teachers of that school were interviewed on their roles as teachers. They said that the teachers have become coaches, helping students with specific questions, rather than standing in front of the class.

For those who are not familiar with Khan, he is a former hedge fund manager who started his online school by doing videos to help his niece learn math. The videos went viral on the internet and gave him inspiration to be an online teacher. His simple 10 minute segments allow students to go at their own pace. Good students are not held back by slower students, and slower students are not embarrassed by asking a “stupid” question in class. There is more information at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khan_Academy .

The CCTV news is full of substance and can be very entertaining. It has an incredibly pro-China posture, which is no surprise. It frustrates expats with news stories like Chinese People competing in Salsa Dancing in Argentina and other incredibly fluffy stories. The coverage of the Khan Academy is extraordinary in this country of test driven schools. Teachers complain here that they don’t have time to enrich classes because everything has to be geared toward passing the middle school exam (to get into the best high schools) and the college entrance exam (for admittance to a university). I don’t know if the Chinese language news is the same as the English Language news. Reporting of innovative education techniques seems to be a recognition of the need for change in China. I can’t help but notice that this message is cloaked in reporting on the limitations of the US education system.

The Khan Academy was noticed by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, as well as the Google Corporation. With funding from these sources, the Khan Academy was able to ramp up it’s platform and serve a worldwide student population. The offerings range from math and science to history. This system requires self-motivated students and may render conventional teaching techniques somewhat obsolete. We may be in at a three tiered education system: students who want to learn, those who must be forced to learn, and those who don’t.

The Shutdown and Default Threat

The USA’s inability to govern in a coherent way is embarrassing to all Americans living in China (if not all Americans). Unlike many Americans, I don’t blame this on the politicians, but rather the people themselves who, in a democracy, are charged with self government. The loathing expressed by our politicians for each other is inspired by a sympathetic loathing from the general public.  I have noticed the loathing of Bush, mostly by democrats, and a similar loathing by republicans of Obama. This feeling runs wide and deep in America, from the highest office in the land to the lowest of local politicians. I used to be a township supervisor.

The Wausau Daily Herald recently ran an opinion piece titled:

“Why China’s Communist Party loved the shutdown:”  by: Mark C. Eades, an American writer and educator based in Shanghai.  See:  http://www.wausaudailyherald.com/article/20131020/WDH06/310200116/Why-China-s-Communist-Party-loved-shutdown-column?nclick_check=1 

In a nutshell he states: Washington chaos hurts democratic ideals that appeal to young Chinese.

So what difference does it make if Chinese young people believe in democratic ideals or not?  I think Mr. Eades is trying to point out that with media of today, other people are listening to the machinations of our democracy. A more salient question to this expat is: “Does it matter whether AMERICANS, young or old, believe in democratic ideals?”

For those who can’t read between the lines, it is foolishness to claim a liking for democracy while condemning anyone (“politician”) who stands forward to run for office. We should stop worrying about undermining a possible future democracy in China and start demonstrating  through our actions, that high idealism which we preach to others.

 

Record Eagle Newspaper

The Traverse City (TC) Record Eagle, my hometown paper, has agreed to publish this blog www.tourguizhou.net on their web site.  I am looking forward to working with them and telling my friends in TC about the expat lives here in Guiyang, Guizhou, China.

I am a real estate appraiser in Traverse City, and maintain a company called “Certified Appraiser, LLC” .  My personal appraisal activity has dropped to about zero, as I have lived in Guiyang for several years now and refer old clients to qualified appraisers.  I am currently teaching English at Guizhou Normal University, here in Guiyang. I remain interested in TC, having spent twelve years as Township Supervisor of East Bay Township (1980-1992).

The subject of my blog is to chronicle our  day to day lives here in China. We are often quizzed by Chinese about the US. I have many friends in local government here in China and can’t help but compare the two systems.  Also, I remain active in TC issues and will comment from time to time on issues that remain close to my heart.

We encourage all expats to contribute here, however, only my posts will  be published in Traverse City.  Exceptions can be made for occasional guest blog contributions.

Bill’s Hot Air Balloon Ride (Memories)

These are photos near Manistee that Bill Richardson took from his hot air balloon. This is the countryside that Jack and Bill come from. Jack is now in Guiyang and Bill went back.

Memories of Northern Michigan #1 Tahquamenom

[mappress mapid=”6″][mappress mapid=”4″][mappress mapid=”4″][mappress mapid=”2″][mappress mapid=”2″]Photos by Bill Richardson in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan