Kalzang Rinzin knows every stone in the ruins of the Guge kingdom, a 10th century realm that existed in what is now Ngari prefecture in the western part of the Tibet autonomous region.
American companies still expect revenue to grow in China, and the country remains a priority market despite the challenges of a slowing economy, according to the US-China Business Council.
The China General Chamber of Commerce USA kicked off its 10-year anniversary celebration activities with the unveiling of new photo exhibitions that document US-China cultural and business exchange, timed as a preamble to President Xi Jinping's first state visit to the US later this month.
Did Chinese explorers roam North America thousands of years before Columbus got there? A self-taught investigator says he has proof, and some top experts agree with him, Chris Davis reports from New York.
Zhang Meifang,deputy consul general of China in New York, and representatives of New York's Chinese communities pose for group photos with participants of the Qipao Flash Mob-Meeting China held by ICN TV Network at Times Square in New York on Thursday.
Luo Linquan, Chinese consul general in San Francisco, on behalf of the Chinese government, awards medals to WWII veterans, on Thursday.
Benjamin Wey, a Chinese-born Wall Street financier, was indicted on Thursday for engineering so-called Chinese "reverse mergers" and then manipulating stock prices to earn millions of dollars in illegal profits.
One of China's largest state-owned automakers said Thursday it has opened a technology research center in California's Silicon Valley and is teaming up with US electric-car startup Atieva to develop electric vehicles for China and global markets.
More than 20 Chinese enterprises in Southern California teamed up with local food banks on Tuesday and Wednesday to help support hunger relief in the region, as part of their “Community Day” drive.
A Chinese man and his daughter were arrested Wednesday morning in Los Angeles County in connection with an immigration fraud scheme in which Chinese nationals paid tens of thousands of dollars to be “married” to US citizens.
A research paper from two economists at the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City suggests that if China’s economic downturn intensifies, money that would have gone to investments on the mainland may be diverted to the United States.
Shipping bankruptcy strands ships, roils maritime cargo industry