While depictions of these long-eared animals are everywhere as Year of the Rabbit begins, what the creature represents as a totem is as fuzzy as its fur.
As I gazed at the ink-wash that was the night sky over Malaysian Borneo's rainforest, I lamented its silence and its monochrome.
I'm trying to get anyone who bites to bet the world will end in 2012.
Spring Festival this year saw my wife Ellen and me traveling back from Australia to Tianjin.
On the corner of two busy roads in Tianjin stands my first place of residence in China.
When I left home to start a two-decade foray in Asia, all I owned fit in one suitcase.
The government will encourage the nation's public cultural facilities to let in visitors free, in an experiment intended to make high culture available to a wider public.
It is nothing glorious, but it is worth celebrating. The Ministry of Science and Technology has finally decided to recall a prestigious prize it awarded in 2005 to former professor Li Liansheng of Xi'an Jiaotong University. The thesis on scroll compressor design involved serious plagiarism, the award was unjustified and the economic benefits the professor claimed for the design were untrue, according to an official statement by the ministry.
Spring Festival distinguishes itself by celebrating not only a new calendar cycle but also the fecundity and life heralded by the start of spring.
Those harboring doubts about micro-blogging should now be convinced that micro blogs can play an effective role in mobilizing society for a just course.
Amy Chua's Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother - Why Chinese Mothers are Superior - has sparked a debate over Chinese-style parenting.
Looks like it is going to be an interesting new Year of the Rabbit for me.