Chen Weihua is the Chief Washington Correspondent of China Daily and Deputy Editor of China Daily USA. He is also a columnist, with a particular focus on US politics and US-China relations.
Giant panda Bao Bao was a star at the Smithsonian's National Zoo before she left for China on Feb 21. And it turns out that she is also a star back in China.
One of my friends felt quite upset recently when asked by an American whether there is Wi-Fi in China.
No one could have foreseen this just a little more than four months ago: The next meeting for the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) will be held in Chile's capital Santiago after the withdrawal of the United States and with the participation of China.
People who are concerned about China's relatively low favorability rating among Americans may breathe a sigh of relief from the latest Gallup poll.
The National Zoo was extremely crowded on a sunny Sunday with people coming to say goodbye to giant panda Bao Bao.
The United States may like to keep its dominant position, but the rise of other parts of the world looks like an irreversible trend, as predicted in the latest report by consulting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC).
When Barnes & Noble closed its downtown Washington store in the Thurman Arnold Building on Jan 2, 2016, the sadness was evident in the community as it lost the national chain's only local outlet.
An editor and writer at China Daily USA in New York, William Hennelly is a print and digital media veteran. He previously was managing editor of TheStreet.com financial news website in New York, and has worked at daily newspapers in New Jersey. Hennelly is a journalism graduate of Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana.
General manager of China Daily USA's San Francisco bureau. Based in the Bay Area, she covers a wide range of topics including corporate news, Silicon Valley innovation, US-China cooperation in various forms and profiles of interesting personalities, as well as overseeing office operations.
A copy editor and writer with China Daily USA in New York, Chris Davis is a graduate of the University of Virginia and served two years as a volunteer with the United States Peace Corps in Kenya.