Anna Chao Pai

Last updated
ISBN 978-0070480933)written for nonscientists to inform them of the rising importance of the science of genetics for the general population. It was published in a second edition in 1985 ISBN 0-07-048094-X. In 2009, she authored a science fiction novel, "Choices" about genetic engineering ISBN 978-1-4349-0339-6, Dorrance Publishing Co., Inc., under the pseudonym, A.C. White. In 2019 autobiography "From Manchurian Princess to the American Dream" was published by iUniverse.

Awards and recognition

Related Research Articles

Bai Chongxi Chinese general

Bai Chongxi was a Chinese general in the National Revolutionary Army of the Republic of China (ROC) and a prominent Chinese Nationalist leader. He was of Hui ethnicity and of the Muslim faith. From the mid-1920s to 1949, Bai and his close ally Li Zongren ruled Guangxi province as regional warlords with their own troops and considerable political autonomy. His relationship with Chiang Kai-shek was at various times antagonistic and cooperative. He and Li Zongren supported the anti-Chiang warlord alliance in the Central Plains War in 1930, then supported Chiang in the Second Sino-Japanese War and the Chinese Civil War. Bai was the first defense minister of the Republic of China from 1946 to 1948. After losing to the Communists in 1949, he fled to Taiwan, where he died in 1966.

Pai Hsien-yung Taiwanese writer (born 1937)

Kenneth Hsien-yung Pai is a Chinese writer from Taiwan who has been described as a "melancholy pioneer". He was born in Guilin, Guangxi at the cusp of the Second Sino-Japanese War. Pai's father was the famous Kuomintang (KMT) general Bai Chongxi, whom he later described as a "stern, Confucian father" with "some soft spots in his heart." Pai was diagnosed with tuberculosis at the age of seven, during which time he would have to live in a separate house from his siblings. He lived with his family in Chongqing, Shanghai, and Nanjing before moving to the British-controlled Hong Kong in 1948 as CPC forces turned the tide of the Chinese Civil War. In 1952, Pai and his family resettled in Taiwan, where the KMT had relocated the Republic of China after defeat by the Communists in 1949.

Bai Ling Chinese actress (born 1966)

Bai Ling is a Chinese-American actress known for her work in the films The Crow, Nixon, Red Corner, Crank: High Voltage, Dumplings, Wild Wild West, Anna and the King, Southland Tales, and Maximum Impact, as well as TV shows Entourage and Lost. Notably, she won the Best Supporting Actress awards at the 2004 Hong Kong Film Awards and the 2004 Golden Horse Awards in Taiwan for her role in Dumplings.

Sweet Briar College Private womens college in Sweet Briar, Virginia, US

Sweet Briar College is a private women's college in Sweet Briar, Virginia. It was established in 1901 by Indiana Fletcher Williams in memory of her deceased daughter, Daisy. The college formally opened its doors in 1906 and granted the B.A. degree for the first time in 1910. It nearly closed in 2015 but was saved by donations and legal actions by alumnae.

Na Ying Chinese female singer

Na Ying is a veteran Chinese singer and musical judge. She is known for her prominent roles as a judge on Chinese TV singing shows such as The Voice of China. She transferred to the show Sing! China until 2017.

Baihao Yinzhen

Baihao Yinzhen, also known as White Hair Silver Needle, is a white tea produced in Fujian Province in China. Silver Needle or Bai Hao Yin Zhen or usually just Yin Zhen is the Chinese type of white tea. Amongst white teas, this is the most expensive variety and the most prized, as only top buds of the camellia sinensis plant are used to produce the tea. Genuine Silver Needles are made from cultivars of the Da Bai tea tree family. There are other productions that look similar with downy leaf shoots but most are green teas, and as green teas, they taste differently and have a different biochemical potency than the genuine white tea Silver Needle. It is commonly included among China's famous teas.

The politics of Sichuan Province in the People's Republic of China is structured in a dual party-government system like all other governing institutions in mainland China.

Bai (surname) Surname list

Bái is the pinyin of the surname , meaning the colour white. Some people with this name are of Mongol origin.

Bianca Bai Taiwanese actress and model

Bianca Bai is a Taiwanese actress and model.

Bai Zijian is a Chinese footballer of Korean descent who plays for Heilongjiang Lava Spring in the China League One.

Li Hongzhong Chinese politician

Li Hongzhong is a Chinese politician, serving as Communist Party Secretary of Tianjin and a member of the 19th Politburo of the Communist Party of China. Born in Shenyang, Li spent much of his early career in Guangdong province, including as mayor, then party secretary of Shenzhen. He was transferred to Hubei province in 2007 and would go on to serve as Governor and party secretary there.

Bai Baihe Chinese actress

Bai Baihe is a Chinese actress. She was among the highest paid film actresses in China. She is best known for her roles in such films as Love is Not Blind, Personal Tailor, Monster Hunt and Go Away Mr. Tumor.

The 5th National Congress of the Kuomintang was held from 12–23 November 1935 at Nanking, Republic of China.

Li Chongxi is a former Chinese politician. From 2013 to 2014, Li served as chairman of the Sichuan Provincial Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, a mostly ceremonial legislative consultation body. Prior to that, Li served as the deputy party secretary of Sichuan province. Li Chongxi has been linked to disgraced former Politburo Standing Committee member Zhou Yongkang.

The Greater Bai or simply Bai languages are a putative group of Sino-Tibetan languages proposed by Zhengzhang, a linguist, in 2010, who argues that Bai and Caijia are sister languages. In contrast, Sagart (2011) argues that Caijia and the Waxiang language of northwestern Hunan constitute an early split off from Old Chinese. Additionally, Longjia and Luren are two extinct languages of western Guizhou closely related to Caijia.

Bai Yun is a Chinese regional politician from Shanxi province. She was the Communist Party Secretary of Yuncheng between 2012 and 2013. Bai was the first female official of provincial-ministerial rank to be investigated for corruption after the 18th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party. At the time the investigation against her was opened, she was serving as a member of the Shanxi Provincial Party Committee and the Head of the United Front Work Department of Shanxi Province. She was expelled from the Party in 2015 for abuse of power and accepting bribes.

Li Jia is a former Chinese politician from southwest China's Sichuan province. She was investigated by the Communist Party of China's anti-graft agency in November 2014. At the time of her investigation, she was serving as the Communist Party Secretary of Ziyang, and First Secretary of the party organization of the Ziyang Military District.

Chia-ying Yeh

Florence Chia-ying Yeh, also known as Ye Jiaying, Jialing (迦陵), and by her married name Chia-ying Yeh Chao, is a Chinese-born Canadian poet and sinologist. She was a scholar of classical Chinese poetry. She taught for twenty years at the University of British Columbia (UBC), and has been Professor Emerita since her retirement in 1989. She is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. After retiring from UBC, she has been teaching at Nankai University in Tianjin where she is the founding Director of the Institute of Chinese Classical Culture.

Su Bai

Su Bai was a Chinese archaeologist and bibliographer who served as the first head of the Department of Archaeology of Peking University from 1983 to 1988. Known for his pioneering research in the archaeology of Buddhism, he won the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Chinese Archaeology Association in 2016.

Xuemei Bai (白雪梅) is a professor for Urban Environment and Human Ecology at the Australian National University. She was the winner of the 2018 Volvo Environmental Prize, and is an elected fellow of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia.

References

  1. 1 2 3 "白崇禧后人白先忠访问沈阳" [Bai Chongxi's descendant Bai Xianzhong (Pai Hsien-chung) visits Shenyang]. Overseas Chinese Net. 2005-08-05. Retrieved 2015-07-11.
  2. "Anna Chao Pai (b. 1935)". Smithsonian Institution Archives . Retrieved 2014-01-09.
  3. American Men and Women of Science . Gale. 2003. p. 109. ISBN   978-1414433004.
  4. 1 2 3 Laurent, Darrell (2008-05-11). "Sweet Briar speaker, grad have China links". Winston-Salem Journal . Retrieved 2014-01-09.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Anna 'Chips' Pai '57 to Speak at 99th Commencement". Sweet Briar College. 2008-02-15. Archived from the original on 2015-07-13. Retrieved 2014-01-09.
  6. "'小诸葛'白崇禧有几个儿子" [The several sons of 'Little Zhuge' Bai Chongxi]. Shangdu News. 2014-12-17. Archived from the original on 2015-07-12. Retrieved 2015-07-11.
  7. 1 2 "Chinese history lessons with the Pais, English Griggs' Scout memories". DavidsonNews.net. 2010-04-08. Archived from the original on 2015-05-29. Retrieved 2014-01-24.
Anna Chao Pai
Anna Chao Pai (b. 1935) (6891504099).jpg
Pai as a predoctoral student at Albert Einstein College of Medicine
(photo: Smithsonian Institution Archives)