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Now showing items 201-220 of 762

    • Gaokao 

      Hacker, Randi (Center for East Asian Studies, University of Kansas, 2012-11-05)
      Broadcast Transcript: The gaokao, or national college entrance exams, are ferociously competitive here in China. Students are under great pressure to study and get a good score because spaces are limited in the top ...
    • Filial Piety in China Redux 

      Hacker, Randi (Center for East Asian Studies, University of Kansas, 2012-11-28)
      Broadcast Transcript: "The 24 Paragons of Filial Piety" is a sort of extreme parent-care manual. Written 600 years ago, the book features tales like the one of the son who sat awake all night without his shirt to draw ...
    • Goebbel's Violin 

      Hacker, Randi (Center for East Asian Studies, University of Kansas, 2012-11-21)
      Broadcast Transcript: Once there was a Japanese violin prodigy named Nejiko Suwa. Born in 1920, Suwa made her debut in 1939, in Paris, just one year before the Nazis invaded. In 1943, while in Berlin, she received a ...
    • Gangnam Style 

      Hacker, Randi (Center for East Asian Studies, University of Kansas, 2012-10-14)
      Broadcast Transcript: Gangnam Style has taken the teen culture by force. The music video has gone viral and the song's creator, a dude who goes by the name of Psy, has achieved world fame with his crazy horse dance. It's ...
    • Chinese Era Names 

      Hacker, Randi (Center for East Asian Studies, University of Kansas, 2012-11-07)
      Broadcast Transcript: As if keeping track of the more than 20 Chinese dynasties weren't hard enough, scholars of Chinese history also have to keep track of "era titles," arbitrarily assigned names given to a set of years ...
    • Peas Prize 

      Hacker, Randi (Center for East Asian Studies, University of Kansas, 2012-09-19)
      Broadcast Transcript: The winners of the Ramon Magsaysay Awards were recently announced but, unlike that prize they give out in Sweden, they didn't make much of a splash in the world news pool. Ramon Magsaysay was a popular ...
    • SOV 

      Hacker, Randi (Center for East Asian Studies, University of Kansas, 2012-09-12)
      Broadcast Transcript: "Agree with you the council does. Your apprentice Skywalker will be." Yoda said that. So here's my question: Was Yoda Mongolian? His syntax says yes. Syntax, as you already know, refers to the arrangement ...
    • Whoops! Wrong Flag 

      Hacker, Randi (Center for East Asian Studies, University of Kansas, 2012-09-05)
      Broadcast Transcript: North Korea has a long-standing and deeply-rooted feeling of distrust in, well, pretty much the rest of the world. An accident at the preliminary women's soccer match between Colombia and North Korea ...
    • Shaman Revival 

      Hacker, Randi (Center for East Asian Studies, University of Kansas, 2012-08-29)
      Broadcast Transcript: Thirty years ago, the chances of finding a cow's head impaled on a trident while people danced around it to bring good luck to fisherman here in South Korea were pretty darn small. But these days, ...
    • Men and Parasols 

      Hacker, Randi (Center for East Asian Studies, University of Kansas, 2012-07-22)
      Broadcast Transcript: Parasols or higasa, have long been the stronghold of women here in Japan, who have used them for hundreds of years to protect their skin from tanning. At long last, higasa have achieved the crossover ...
    • Bunker Bar 

      Hacker, Randi; Greene, Megan (Center for East Asian Studies, University of Kansas, 2012-08-15)
      Broadcast Transcript: Lin Biao had a secret cave in the mountains near Beijing. Here, he ran the Chinese military and oversaw propaganda campaigns, including the Cult of Mao, a part of China's Cultural Revolution, a dark ...
    • New York Haiku 

      Hacker, Randi (Center for East Asian Studies, University of Kansas, 2012-08-08)
      Broadcast Transcript: Haiku might just be considered the national poetry style of Japan. Its disciplined form restricts writers to a scant three lines of 5, 7 and 5 syllables each. In a novel, modern twist, it was recently ...
    • Song Dynasty Tale 

      Hacker, Randi; McMahon, Keith (Center for East Asian Studies, University of Kansas, 2012-08-01)
      Broadcast Transcript: It's been said that a cat may look at a king and, a story from 12th Century China shows that a cat may make or break a king also. Gaozong was the 10th emperor of the Song Dynasty. In 1129, his only ...
    • Urine Eggs 

      Hacker, Randi (Center for East Asian Studies, University of Kansas, 2012-07-25)
      Broadcast Transcript: In spring, a young man's fancy turns to thoughts of urine-soaked eggs. You heard that right. Here in Dongyang, China, eggs boiled in the urine of 10-year-old boys are a considered a delicacy of spring. ...
    • Fugu Deregulation 

      Hacker, Randi (Center for East Asian Studies, University of Kansas, 2012-07-18)
      Broadcast Transcript: Fugu is back in the news. Fugu, you might remember, is that poisonous blowfish that the Japanese have been playing a sort of culinary Russian roulette with for centuries. Fugu prep was an art form: ...
    • Whiskey International Airport 

      Hacker, Randi (Center for East Asian Studies, University of Kansas, 2012-07-11)
      Broadcast Transcript: From Wrigley Field to Verizon Stadium, we've grown quite used to seeing company names on public venues. As if any further proof were needed that it's a corporate world, here's a story from China. Two ...
    • Ancient Chinese Kitchens 

      Hacker, Randi (Center for East Asian Studies, University of Kansas, 2012-06-04)
      Broadcast Transcript: Few people don't love Chinese food: The delicate flavors; the bite size pieces; the flavorful sauces; the healthful spices. Well, here's at least one reason why Chinese food is so good: they've been ...
    • Wii 

      Hacker, Randi (Center for East Asian Studies, University of Kansas, 2012-05-02)
      Broadcast Transcript: It had to come to this. You know it did. Sega, the Japanese video game maker that brought you Sonic the Hedgehog has developed a new hands-free video game. No. You don't control it using your mind or ...
    • Umami 

      Hacker, Randi (Center for East Asian Studies, University of Kansas, 2012-03-25)
      Broadcast Transcript: The four basic tastes: salty, sweet, sour and bitter were good enough for Democritus, Plato and Aristotle but not, apparently, for Escoffier in France or Kikunae Ikeda in Japan. Ikeda was a chemist ...
    • Occupy Men's Toilets 

      Hacker, Randi (Center for East Asian Studies, University of Kansas, 2012-04-18)
      Broadcast Transcript: Traditionally, public protests in China resulted in death or imprisonment. A recent event in Guangzhou indicates that this has changed. Due to a standard that requires a one-to-one ratio of women's ...