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19th June 2009
imhere whereru
Library - From: April 3, 2009. Living in China. Shenzhen Library Visit
Thanks for your reply. I did not mean I had a bad experience at the library. I was just describing what happened to me. I assumed foreigners were given special treatment beacuse I din't see anyone else leaving a deposit when checking out books. If I did not understand someting, I am sorry. The books I tried to donate were like new. No one asked their titles. No one looked at them. That is why I thought there was a translation problem. My books were in much better condition than 99% of the books on the shelves. Since I wrote the post I have discovered a book exchange club. The members meet from time to time and trade foreign language books. A great idea!!
19th June 2009
Meteor
Shenzhen Library as I know! - From: April 3, 2009. Living in China. Shenzhen Library Visit
In my opinion, I do not think "Foreigners are given special treatment at the Shenzhen Library. It seems that foreigners have a bad habit of leaving the country with library books." In fact, all the readers, Chinese or Foreigners, who want to check out oversea books are asked to leave a deposit of 200 yuan. It is simply because those books are much more expensive than those books published inland China and most of the oversea books do not have more copies. It has nothing to do with the habit of the foreign readers. And for book donations, as I know, Shenzhen library accepts book donations for those books it does not have. So, perhaps, you'd better make it sure through the net whether they had the books or not before you donate your books. And the library does not accept material in poor physical condition. Like many other libraries, Shenzhen library has the right to decide whether to use those books or not. Wish you a better experience in Shenzhen library! Meteor
5th June 2009
imhere whereru
Thank You Again - From: June 2, 2009. Living in China. No Library Today.
Thanks for taking the time and trouble to explain this to me. Now I understand.
5th June 2009
sophie
- From: June 2, 2009. Living in China. No Library Today.
On longer life goods it usually has a production date then it will say how long it is good for. But on fresh goods, like milk it only seems to have the date it was made, so you need to guess how long it is edible for! I do not know why, I guess maybe one factor is because a lot of Chinese people buy fresh stuff everyday from the market, cook and fry it. They do not rely as heavily on a fridge and freezer as we do in the west.
4th June 2009
imhere whereru
Thank you - From: June 2, 2009. Living in China. No Library Today.
I appreciate your comment.Thank you. My qusetion is how can you tell if someting is too old to be sold? And I am refereing to every product, not just milk.
4th June 2009
sophie
- From: June 2, 2009. Living in China. No Library Today.
In China the date is the date of production, not expiration date. So the milk was safe!
3rd June 2009
imhere whereru
Use Your Brain - From: June 1, 2009. Living in China. Another Month Begins.
Your comment makes no logiocal sense.
2nd June 2009
Unknown
You need to use your brain - From: June 1, 2009. Living in China. Another Month Begins.
If the food expires, why does the store sell them? Therefore, the data on the food is when the food is manufactured, not the day when the food expire. Try to learn some Chinese, and then make your comments. Otherwise, you will be very misleading.
19th March 2009
imhere whereru
Reply - From: Buddhist Temple Visit
I do not speak Chinese, but as best I can tell it is the temple at the Fairy Lake Botanical Garden . I believe it is Liantang.
14th March 2009
dilemma
- From: Buddhist Temple Visit
.....i've never been that temple.in ShenZhen?.. or the countryside?i live in GuangZhou


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