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#Yuan Longping
yourtongzhihazel · 1 month
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Traveling out of any major or mid-size city on the HSR system in China, once you leave the bustling city center, you'll travel through miles upon miles of rural farmland. In China, agricultural is nearly entirely dominated by cooperative farming. Every "village", or a cluster of several farm houses, serves as a hub for the several hundred square kilometers of farmland each coooeraytive operatrs. These agricultural hubs serve as tenporary gransries and logistics centers from which all farming activities are held. During my visit in mid june, the early grain harvest was coming in. Traveling on the HSR, the countryside was adorned with billowing red flags flown from the tractors and harvestors of the cooperatice farms. Inside each cooperative, farmers would bring tgye harvest to a central location to be logged and divided up. A portion would be sold on the market while the rest wiuks go inro rhe national grain reserves. Inside these coorperatives, large red banners advertising and promoting rhye anti-corruption campaign would adorn the walls, encouraging farmers andnlocals to repoet any suspicious or corrupt avtivity to the local COC branch office.
The national grains reserves among other measures is how the CPC eliminated famines from China. Comrade 袁隆平 (Yuan Longping) and his contemporaries and colleagues helped slay one of the horsemen of the apocalypse--famine--by devising a breed of rice which is hardy to drought conditions and yielded high grain output; a technology which China exports to other degeloping nations as a part of BRI and other developmental projects. Additionally, national economic policies which seek to drive down rhe cost of grocies also greatly secure food security for the vast vast majority of the population.
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x1hehaoyu · 2 years
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STATS
Full Name: 何浩宇 Hé Hàoyǔ
何 meaning ‘carry the load’
浩宇 meaning ‘vast universe’
Rank: 中尉 Zhong wei / 1st Lieutenant
Age: 40
Birthday: Nov. 2, 2068
Nationality: Chinese (People’s Republic)
Gender: Male
Preferred Pronoun(s): He/him
Sexuality: Gay
Religion: Atheist, with some Daoist beliefs
Languages: Xiang/Changshanese (native dialect)
Fluent in: Mandarin, Russian, Arabic
Conversational in: Urdu, Vietnamese, Korean, Japanese, Persian
RELATIONSHIPS
Birth Order: Youngest of four
Parents: 孙霞 Sūn Xiá (mother) and 何俊杰 Hé Jùnjié (father)
Siblings: Three sisters –
玉尔 Yu’ér, the eldest
丝雨 Sīyǔ, the middle
语汐 Yǔxī, the youngest
Family: 何国华 Hé Guóhuá, paternal grandfather and primary caretaker growing up
Significant Other(s): N/A
Children: N/A
PHYSICAL TRAITS
Eye Color(s): Brown
Hair Color(s): Black
Height: 183cm
Body Build: Lean, tough muscle
Notable Physical Traits: Covered in beauty marks, scars on his shoulders and across his back, healed gunshot wound below his ribcage
SKILLS
Compassion: 8/10
Empathy: 9/10
Creativity: 4/10
Mental Flexibility: 7/10
Passion/Motivation: 6/10
Education: 3/10
Stamina: 10/10
Physical Strength: 10/10
Battle Skill: 9/10
Initiative: 10/10
Restraint: 8/10
Agility: 7/10
Strategy: 8/10
Teamwork: 7/10
Musical-Rhythmic Intelligence: 4/10
Visual-Spatial Intelligence: 8/10
Verbal-Linguistic Intelligence: 5/10
Logical-Mathematical Intelligence: 6/10
Bodily-Kinesthetic Intelligence: 10/10
Interpersonal Intelligence: 6/10
Intrapersonal Intelligence: 2/10
Existential Intelligence: 7/10
Naturalistic Intelligence: 9/10
HEADCANONS
A set of values or a moral compass can’t be defined by a single event, a parable, a fragment of a memory. But one story Haoyu’s grandfather told him in passing, when he was a little boy, lives in the back of his mind, in every decision he makes.
They were in a hospital waiting room, Haoyu cradling the arm he fractured, trying to ride his big sister’s bike. They sat in hard chairs opposite a glass-paned wall, ooking down at a busy road, cyclists cutting through throngs of pedestrians with delivery bags on their backs, hitting up against the flowerbed-curbs of their carless city. His grandfather had a misty, far-off look in his eyes – the kind he always got when he was thinking about a long, long time ago. Haoyu asked him what he was thinking about; he remembers the way his grandfather smiled down at him, how his eyes crinkled in the corners. He was thinking about the days after Yuan Longping died.
Haoyu was seven, and had just learned about Yuan Longping in one of his Young Pioneer classes. He proudly rattled back Yuan’s biography – famous Chinese agronomist, Hunan Province’s Vice Chairman for nearly three decades, Father of Hybrid Rice. He developed rice that could feed an extra 70 million people a year. Over his lifetime, it helped feed one-fifth of the world’s population. Even until the day he died, he never stopped trying to fight world hunger. Very good, his yéye told him, mist making way for a hint of humour. He died in the very hospital they were waiting in. And many, many years ago, when his yéye was a little boy, no older than him, he was down in that promenade, back when there were still cars on the street. There were no cars that day, paths only clearing from ambulances through the mourning masses, handing out flowers and bowls of rice outside the hospital.
Haoyu asked his yéye why so many of them were out there mourning. Did they all know him? Was he a famous celebrity? Sort of, his yéye replied. He was a national hero, and a local one. They all knew his face, learned about him in school, just like Haoyu did. But they weren’t just mourning for Yuan Longping. They were weeping for every brother and sister, every mother and father, every daughter and son they didn’t have to mourn, because of the work he did. It was a celebration of life, of his life and every life he’d saved, every belly his rice filled. And for each of the tens of thousands of people who mourned him that day in Changsha, all across China, was another ten million people whose life he’d saved, who would never know his name.
He scrunched up his nose, and shook his little head. It seemed an unimaginable disrespect to him. He asked how his yéye could say that so calmly, such an undeserving end to Yuan Longping’s memory. His grandfather told him, he thinks, the moral to this whole story: not knowing is a very precious luxury, one that is very rare and has a high cost. But it’s worth it, for people to live without the memory of fearing starvation, to never know the feeling of a gnawing, days-old hunger. They hadn’t had that in China, his yéye told him, for decades even before he was born. Very few people had the chance to give that gift to the world – but, as far as his yéye was concerned, it was the greatest honour one could achieve, to give it.
His yéye was one of those people. An engineer, who helped hundreds of cities all over the world introduce the ‘Marshy City’ flood management-water reclamation system; first to Bangladesh, then to Mexico City, and on, and on, and on. It would have been ad infinitum, if he’d had his wish. But funding dried up for this kind of project, as the priority became building desalination plants, a necessary but extremely limited stopgap. His yéye had opposed China’s participation in building them, and was ostracized for a time in the Party. By the time they changed course, he’d retired, already caring for Haoyu’s eldest sister. So he faded into obscurity, a footnote in history. His family and friends mourned when he died, but not the whole nation, and certainly not the world. It, too, was a celebration of life. Haoyu’s yéye lived to be 101. You could see a procession of red making its way through the city, all the people who his life touched directly. He cried as he witnessed his grandfather’s cremation, and he knew he would miss him for the rest of his life, but his heart wasn’t heavy. It couldn’t be. It was lifted up by all the hearts that didn’t skip a beat, didn’t ache at all, who’d never know of his grandfather’s death but whose life went on thanks to him.
He always wondered if he could be the special type of person to lead a life like that, to die like that. Soaring through space, he’s less sure than ever.
Haoyu’s parents came home when he was ten. They were strangers to him at first. His sisters remembered them a little bit more – Yu’er, the eldest, remembered them the most. She was seven when they left. Siyu was five, and Yuxi was three. His yéye tried to make it easier on all them, telling them stories, putting them on video calls together, and it did help, but there were difficulties in adjusting that he couldn’t do anything about. There was a distance between them that would take a long, long time to close. Haoyu wanted to close that gap, to grow close to his parents, much more than his sisters did – they were older, they did so much of their growing up without them. They had already processed the loss of their parents, had experienced the grief, had integrated it into themselves in a way Haoyu never had to. For Haoyu, on the other hand, he had never lost his parents. The man who raised him, his yéye, was still standing beside him, and that made it easy for him to integrate them in.
It became a lot harder to try with his parents after his yéye died. It wasn’t their fault, of course, he was a very old man, and died happy, surrounded by his family. But Haoyu moved out of his yéye’s apartment, and into a larger one assigned to their full, proper family unit. It wasn’t as though he thought his parents took him away from his grandfather, or wanted to replace him. He didn’t resent not knowing them, not being as close to them as he was to the man who raised him. Even at twelve years old, he knew it wasn’t… reasonable. Holding anger at his parents for leaving him wasn’t reasonable, wasn’t rational. Not when he knew why they had to go. He told himself, over and over, those first few weeks in that new bed, that he had no right to be angry at anyone. It would be selfish for him to resent innocent people, innocent victims of terrible climate disasters, for ‘taking his parents away’. It would be selfish of him to hold his parents’ sacrifice against them, when they were out there, saving the lives of so many good people, people who deserved to live just as much as he did. It wasn’t reasonable. Feelings rarely are, though, least of all in a twelve year old boy.
He learned to process it in the only way he could, without reaching outwards, without seeking help. He buried any traitorous feelings, anything that felt selfish or unreasonable, rationalized it away as so far beyond his control or influence that it wasn’t worth worrying about. In times of crisis, emotions had to be set aside – very convenient when the world he was growing up in seemed to be tumbling deeper and deeper into unending crisis. As he grew up, plodding onwards into the future, desperate to just grow up and start serving his real purpose, he grew colder, closed-off, guarded. He wrapped himself up to protect his tender heart, vulnerable and ready to bleed, tortured by the world’s suffering. If he allowed his grief for humanity to swallow him, he wouldn’t be able to help anyone.
When he was seventeen, Haoyu took the entrance exams for university. All of his older sisters had scored well, gotten into top-tier univerisities. He was never as academically talented as they were, but he was a hard worker, dedicated, with clear goals in mind. He wanted to be an engineer, like his father and grandfather. He wanted to get into the PLA’s Engineering Corps, and save lives like they did, and from where he was standing, the best way to do it was following in their footsteps as directly as he could. He lived to serve, after all. But you don’t get to choose your assignments, nor do you get to choose your limitations, and Haoyu just wasn’t good enough. He wasn’t smart enough, not to compete with the brightest minds in all of China – nearly two billion people, he didn’t stand a chance. But his score devastated him. It felt like all his dreams were crushed, that he didn’t have a future. He wouldn’t be able to do nearly enough, not without the kind of education and training he had planned for. His parents had never seen him in such a depressed state, not even after his yéye died. It broke their hearts – especially his mother’s. She saw a bright, intelligent young man, who so desperately wanted to serve his people. He reminded her of the best cadets that came up under her, and she had to do something to ensure his potential wasn’t wasted. So she pulled some strings with her connections in the government, called in every old favour she had, and got him into the second-best military academy in the country. It wasn’t what he was hoping for, but it was much better than anything he could’ve gotten himself, and it was the best she could offer him without raising any of his suspicions on the nature of his admission. When he got the letter in the mail, he was overjoyed. It was the happiest his parents had ever seen him, such a drastic departure from his emotional state just days prior. He could never know he didn’t do it himself.
He struggled terribly, trying to adjust to the academy. He wasn’t prepared, and knew it the moment he set foot on campus. But by some miracle, he had gotten this opportunity, and wasn’t planning on wasting it. So he worked harder than anyone to prove himself worthwhile. He got up earlier, pushed himself harder, went to bed later, and did it again, and again, and again, until he graduated top of his class. Even when he started, it was evident that he wouldn’t be doing any kind of engineering, or physics, or even logistics. He didn’t have the mind for that. But he shone, working with his fellow cadets. His dedication to service – or at least his dogged persistence – provided inspiration and motivation for his peers. Whenever he noticed someone slipping behind – and he was always the first to notice – he worked double-time to bring them up to speed, without letting his own duties fall to the wayside. It garnered him a lot of support; it was known across the academy that, despite his intimidating demeanour, anyone could ask Cadet Hé for help, and he’d do all he could to help them.
He graduated third in his class – very good, considering he wasn’t qualified to be in that class in the first place. He started his enlistment right after graduation, only taking the time to go home and tend to his grandfather’s grave in-between, desperate to get started on his work. Haoyu took to service like a duck to water. Most of their deployments, regardless of branch, had to do with climate response and resource management. He spent too many years playing rent-a-cop for caravans of water trucks, driving through endless deserts across the Asian continent, or on construction sites halfway across the world, guarding precious materials from desperate thieves, never wanting to fire a shot. It didn’t feel like he was helping anyone, but he did it anyways, because those were his orders – and he had to realize that sometimes his orders came first. His job came first. Even when he didn’t like it. If anything, it was especially true when he didn’t like it – it was the truest test of his loyalty to command. In-between these hired gun assignments, he found himself trekking through the last remaining rainforests, through dried up canyons and unimaginable dust storms, delivering supplies or paving roads for caravans of refugees. That was brutal work, a lot harder than sitting in a truck waiting for someone to try and climb some fence, but it was so much more rewarding, he responded better. He worked harder, when he could feel there were lives on the line, and his superiors took notice.
A decade into his career, Haoyu was assigned to military intelligence – specifically as a Chinese liaison to the UEMIDA Anti-Water Trafficking Task Force. The water black market had ballooned in previous decades, and was starting to account for major, catastrophic losses to the shared global water supply. It was a high-stakes position, of utmost importance, with an ability to help others far beyond anything he’d done before – he was a good hired gun, but he was even better at this.
It helped, how close he was to his unit. The task force was made up of soldiers from every corner of the world, but soldiers are soldiers are soldiers, and Haoyu knew just how to get along with them, as much as they knew how to get along with them. It was hard work, challenging and diverse, unravelling money laundering schemes and searching through endless shipping manifests, trying to string together a picture of the trade on a conspiracy board that would rival the most devoted paranoiac’s work. He was on this task force for years, eventually commanding his unit, taking lead on raids of agua barons’ estates, re-patriating their ill-gotten treasures. Haoyu found himself taking a quiet satisfaction in that part – it wouldn’t undo the harm they caused, nothing could, but at the very least, they wouldn’t get to enjoy it.
Such high level work brought danger, though. Haoyu was neither idealistic, nor naive, and had an understanding of corruption, how it operated on every level. He’d come face-to-face with it time and again in the AWTTF; usually in the form of crooked guards, logistics managers, border guards, all turning blind eyes or pocketing bribes. Sometimes it ran deep, and there were entire veins he had to dig out. But there were very few times he encountered corruption that ran higher than he was able to deal with. Not because it didn’t exist, but he learned it was often too well-buried, or too well-integrated for him to penetrate – and, only once, because he’d be signing his death warrant if he even tried.
He’ll never forget that day. They’d spent months chasing down this Turkish agua baron, selling glacial run-off to Germany, shipped to illegal Ethiopian coffee plantations to provide authentic coffee, a nearly unobtainable luxury, to Europe’s elite. Liquid gold for anyone who got their paws on the water throughout the transaction. This particular scheme had been almost impossible to unravel, and he’d had to fight like hell for approval to do the raid in the first place, but he’d finally gotten it. He’ll never forget those luscious, emerald-green fields of grass. Not astroturf, real grass. Dewy from the sprinklers that’d been running until they’d arrived, helicopter leaving deep claw marks in the front lawn. He’ll never forget the satisfaction he felt when he saw the baron pull a gun on him, how the trigger felt under his finger as he sent his target sprawling, syrupy-red blood pooling on the putting green.
There are things from that day that he must forget. The feeling of cold, clammy skin as he searched for a pulse. The sinking feeling as his eyes rose above the baron, and met the eyes of the Chancellor of the UEG, sipping Turkish coffee, leaning on the back of the golf cart. He averted his eyes as soon as he realized, pointed at the dewy, sticky grass beneath him. He didn’t make a move to acknowledge them, he didn’t offer a salute, completely disregarded procedure. .He didn’t mention the Chancellor’s presence in his report. He wasn’t stupid, and he wasn’t suicidal. He knew the score – enough to know when to leave well enough alone.
(That doesn’t mean he didn’t think about it. Consider his options. He considered an officers’ coup, gestured at it to his best friend in the unit – who told him, quite bluntly, that if he said anything like that again in her presence she would be forced to arrest him on charges of treason. Going to the media was a non-starter; even if they did ran it, there was no way they could protect his anonymity as a whistleblower. Under the UEG, he had no shelter. He slaved over the details, considered every possibility. There were none. He was out of options. It was a familiar feeling.)
He kept his head down after that, and put in for a transfer a few months later. He’d been hoping to return home to China, maybe get a teaching post at his alma mater if he was lucky. But that wasn’t what happened. Haoyu suspected it was a twisted kind of reward, a thank-you note from the Chancellor themself for his discretion. He was transferred to the Dasshutsu Project. It was a reward, and a punishment. A way to get rid of him – permanently, if the track record was to be trusted. So even after the Chancellor had finished their term, their legacy would be secure. And he would back to sitting around in a very fancy kind of truck, guarding very expensive things from space rocks with a very big gun.
It was later explained to him that he was, actually, an ideal candidate for the role. He was an expert survivalist, spent years building refugee camps and remote research labs in the harshest conditions on Earth, was an expert marksman with more field experience than more soldiers in a mostly-peaceful Earth, was a long-serving soldier with unquestionable dedication in service of humanity. And, as far as rent-a-cops go, he was no dummy. This was where he’d always been headed, his handlers assured him, even if he didn’t know it. Like a good soldier, Haoyu decided to go ahead and believe them. He threw himself into his training wholeheartedly – he wouldn’t be as smart as the bookworms on the mission with him, but that wouldn’t stop him from being a damn good astronaut.
He believes he’s meant to be on this mission, but looking down at his beloved Earth from space, he can’t help but think he’s abandoning his mission. That there’s nothing out there for them, not really – even if there is somewhere to go, the suffering masses won’t be on the first ships. He’d rather be helping all the people who’d inevitably refuse to leave, or would be left behind when the last ships take off, not enough money or connections to make the list. At the same time, though, something about the vast expanse of space is… freeing. For the first time in a long time, it feels like he might have options. Not yet, but they don’t feel far away. Haoyu is going to do what a soldier does: use his elements to his advantage. He is going to use his lughead-camoflauge to hide his power, so he can bide his time, and find the right opportunity. He isn’t sure what that means yet. Maybe, when all the facts present themselves, it’ll be carrying out his mission faithfully. It might be something else. He might die out here, in space, virtually alone, but he’s going to make his life count. He’ll do whatever he can to stop the suffering.
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jessicacourtney577 · 4 months
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Draw Between Guizhou Jielian and Qianhun Football Fan Club in Local Amateur Match
On the evening of June 25th at 9:20 PM, the 21st round of the first match of the Guiyang Amateur Football League B Division concluded at Linquan Football Field. This match was hosted by Guizhou Online Sports and guided by the Guiyang Olympic Sports Center with cooperation from the Guiyang Olympic Events Operation Center. The match ended with a 2-2 draw between Guizhou Jielian and Qianhun Football Fan Association. Guizhou Jielian players Longping and Wang Tao, as well as Qianhun Football Fan Association players Zhang Zhihao and Leng Xiaoyi each scored a goal. Guizhou Jielian player Yicaihua received a yellow card warning. Guizhou Jielian Starting Lineup: Goalkeeper: 1-Yang Shuai 11-Longping, 8-Zeng Li (substituted by 30-Zhang Kun in the 15th minute), 7-Wang Tao (substituted by 80-Yicaihua in the 60th minute), 16-Wu Tingwen (substituted by 9-Liu Jiaring in the 46th minute), 20-Yang Mingsheng, 88-Liu Weinpeng, 35-Kong Weichao, 22-Cai Lin, 18-Yuan Chi, 24-Chen Xin Qianhun Football Fan Association Starting Lineup: Goalkeeper: 88-Zhang Yong 8-Yang Han, 4-Han Tianyu, 7-Zhang Zhihao, 12-Liu Zihou, 17-Fan Ling (substituted by 21-Tang Honglin in the 76th minute), 26-Jin ZengGuo, 45-Yang Yang, 66-Liu Wei, 72-Leng Xiaoyi, 98-EMMANUEL Qianhun Football Fan Association player 7 Zhang Zhihao was selected as the best player of the match.
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ebcworldwide619 · 2 years
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Guide of MBBS at Yichun University China – EBC World Wide
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Introduction to Yichun University
Yichun University City houses the Yichun University Jiangxi Province. Since ancient times, Yichun is called "the land Jiangnan Jiali", and "the prosperity cultural relics". It is the home to China's first group of ecological pilot towns, national green model, and national gardens cities, as well as China's top tourist spots and national health areas. Yichun has beautiful scenery and is easy to get around. The Hurui Expressway serves the city, as well as Hangchang High-speed Railway. The railway also runs through it. From all directions, Mingyueshan Civil Airport may be reached.
Yichun College was established in 1958. It was the predecessor of Yichun University. The Ministry of Education approved Yichun Teachers College, Yichun Medical College, and Yichun Medical College for full-time public college status in January 2000.
Campuses at Yichun University
The headquarters, north campus, and new campuses of Yichun University are all located in the same area. They are spread over an area of 2020.64m. 17860 students work full-time. There are 1,414 teachers, workers, and other workers. 1003 of these teachers are full-time. There are more teachers holding higher professional titles than 43.27%. And there are more full time teachers than 74.88%. Yuan Longping (academician of Chinese Academy of Engineering), director of National Hybrid Rice Research Center, and Chen Xianhui are two of more than 100 senior specialists.
The school's reputation has been improving over the years as a school that runs schools. The Academic Degrees Committee, State Council approved the school in October 2011. It was designated "Serving National Special Needs Project", a unit that confers a Bachelor's Degree to help train master's candidates. The first Jiangxi Province transformation was approved at the start of 2015. Our school was selected as one of the ten pilot Universities. In 2017, the school was awarded the Ministry of Education's certification as a clinical medicine professional. It is also home to the Ministry of Education's only pilot school for the first batch of artificial Intelligence college in Jiangxi Province. He was awarded the advanced provincial comprehensive administration unit, and has served as the advanced unit in energy conservation, family planning, and letters for many decades.
Colleges at Yichun University
Yichun University is home to 18 colleges. They cover education, medicine, agronomy, law, economics, management, and law. There are four key laboratories in each province, four provincial key labs (engineering centers and key bases), and one provincial cultural-arts science key research centre. One provincial collaborative innovation center is also available.
Since the inception of Yichun University the school has been hard at work to improve the quality and reputation of its schools. Except for those who were previously specialists, special enrollment was cancelled in 2018. There are 74 undergraduate degrees. There are 2 national specialties and 8 provincial specialties. 5 national "excellent talents educational training programs" and 5 provincial "excellent talent education training programs" are available. There are five national comprehensive reform pilots. There are also one major and four provincial comprehensive Reform pilots. There are 1 postdoctoral station, and 2 academician spots. Over the last five years, he was awarded more than 10 provincial teaching accomplishment awards. This includes 91 provincial-level research projects on teaching reform, twenty quality sharing courses at the provincial level, and 40 textbooks that help students from all regions of the country. In the subject competition, 23 international awards were presented, including 45 national premier prizes and 183 provincial prime prizes.
Research Centers at Yichun University
Yichun University supports scientific research, strengthens schools, and pays attention feedback and scientific research. There are 10 scientific platforms, which include the Collaborative Innovation Center 2011. Over the last five year, the average teacher research grant has been more than 40,000 Yuan. 56 national scientific research programs, including the National Natural Science Foundation Project (NSF) and the National Social Science Fund Project (NSF), have been completed. Over 1,000 types have been granted. Nearly 1,100 core journal articles, 120 monographs (translated), and research in biomedicine as well as aesthetic medicine have reached domestic advanced levels.
Yichun College has the longest history and is the largest west-based undergraduate college. It has been a major institution of higher education since 1899. The university insists that the idea of "locally applied, open, and transparent" be implemented, and that it cultivates five talents. Yichun College has taught Chen Xianhui to be an academician in the Chinese Academy of Sciences, as well as a Yangtze River Scholars Program special faculty. Hongbo, Liu Jun (National Excellent Teacher), and many other people from all walks of life demonstrated the strength as well the foundations to run schools.
About Yichun University
Yichun University has a national student practice base as well as two provincial talent-training model innovation zones and three provincial experiment teaching demonstration centres. Yichun University is well-known for its organic combination between the first and second classes. There are more than 90 student associations. Numerous innovative entrepreneurial platforms, such as Shangneng Creation Space, College Student Entrepreneurship Incubation Center, and Tiangong Chuangke Space, were created. 19 projects have been completed. 532 internship bases, out of-school innovation practice and demonstration basis. Provincial Party Committee Education Working Committee and Provincial Department of Education have listed our universities innovative and entrepreneurial incubator bas as one of the top ten Jiangxi University Students Innovation and Entrepreneurship DemonstrationBases.
Yichun University was first to abandon "Belt and Road", and instead embrace the path of international learning. In order to promote international education, he worked with universities and research centers from almost 20 countries, including the United States of America, Canada, Australia, Australia, and Russia. Teachers and students will have access to high-quality education resources from other countries through the implementation project. Currently, there are 401 students at the school, most of whom are involved in clinical medicine education.
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Cabbage Seeds Market Size Industry Analysis
The Global Cabbage Seeds Market is a specialized statistical study that focuses on market development and expansion opportunities. Market evaluation and special inspection are also covered in the core portion. The research report's main purpose is to provide crucial competition data, current market trends, market potential, growth rate, and vital alternative perspectives. The study includes a market split, item classifications, data, and statistics, as well as an overview of the company.
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The Cabbage Seeds Market will change significantly from the previous year. Over the next five years, will register a CAGR in terms of revenue, and the global market size will reach USD in millions by 2028.
Cabbage belongs to the Brassicaceae family, which includes the genus Brassica. B. oleracea varieties include broccoli, collard greens, brussels sprouts, kohlrabi, and sprouting broccoli, among other cruciferous vegetables (also known as cole crops). B. oleracea var. oleracea, popularly known as colewort or field cabbage, is the source of all of these. Selection resulted in cultivars with varied traits, such as huge heads for cabbage, large leaves for kale, and thick stems with flower buds for broccoli, which evolved over thousands of years into those seen today.
The Major Players in the Cabbage Seeds Market Include:
Monsanto, Syngenta, Limagrain, Bayer Crop Science, Bejo, Enza Zaden, Rijk Zwaan, Sakata, VoloAgri, Takii, East-West Seed, Nongwoobio, Yuan Longping High-tech Chemical & Materials, Denghai Seeds,Jing Yan YiNong
Request a free sample copy or view the report summary @:
https://introspectivemarketresearch.com/request/6114
Market has segmented the global Cabbage Seeds market on the basis of type, application, and region:
By Type:
·         Early Maturing Variety
·         Medium Late Maturing Variety
·         Bagged
By Application:
·         Food
·         Leather & Textile
·         Semiconductor & Electronics
The Cabbage Seeds study details the request area, which is farther broken down into sub-regions and countries/ regions. This chapter of the report includes information on profit prospects in addition to request share in each country and sub-region. The request share and growth rate of each region, country, and sub-region throughout the cast period are bandied in this chapter of the study.
By Regional Outlook (Revenue, USD Billion, 2017 – 2028)
North America (U.S., Canada, Mexico)
Europe (Germany, U.K., France, Italy, Russia, Spain, Rest of Europe)
Asia-Pacific (China, India, Japan, Southeast Asia, Rest of APAC)
Middle East & Africa (GCC Countries, South Africa, Rest of MEA)
South America (Brazil, Argentina, Rest of South America)
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https://introspectivemarketresearch.com/discount/6114
The Cabbage Seeds market is segmented by type and application. Growth between segments over the period 2022-2028 provides accurate calculations and forecasts of revenue by type and application in terms of volume and value. This analysis can help you expand your business by targeting eligible niches.
Covid-19 Impact and Recovery Analysis on Industry:
The COVID-19 pandemic has had devastating effects on several industry verticals globally. To constrain the number of cases and slow the coronavirus spread, various public health guidelines were implemented in different countries across the globe. COVID-19 protocols ranging from declaring national emergency states, enforcing stay-at-home orders, closing nonessential business operations and schools, banning public gatherings, imposing curfews, distributing digital passes, and allowing police to restrict citizen movements within a country, as well as closing international borders. With the growing vaccination rate, governments are uplifting the protocols to give a boost to the stagnant economy. Like other industries, Cabbage Seeds Market have experienced slowdown the growth, however market is expected bounce back as restrictions are being lifted up by governments across the globe.
Key Questions Answered in This Cabbage Seeds Market Report
1.      How much revenue will the Cabbage Seeds market generate by the end of the forecast period?
2.      Which market segment is expected to have the maximum market share?
3.      What are the influencing factors and their impact on the Cabbage Seeds market?
4.      Which regions are currently contributing the maximum share of the overall Cabbage Seeds market?
5.      What indicators are likely to stimulate the Cabbage Seeds market?
6.      What are the main strategies of the major players in the Cabbage Seeds market to expand their geographic presence?
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Key Reasons to Purchase:
·         Gained an analysis of market insights and a comprehensive understanding of the Global Cabbage Seeds Market and commercial environment.
·         To mitigate development risk, the production process evaluates key problems and solutions.
·         Recognize the driving forces and impediments that have the biggest influence on covid-19 in the Cabbage Seeds market, as well as its worldwide market.
·         Explains the market strategies adopted by each major institution.
·         Understand the Cabbage Seeds Market's future view and forecast.
·         In addition to standard structure reports, we also offer custom studies tailored to specific requirements.
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garyzhuzyc · 2 years
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Today is the first anniversary of Yuan Longping's death. His presence saved China from hunger, which had been overcrowded in the last century. Let us remember greatness and pass on grief. https://www.instagram.com/p/Cd2lr8VOLFs/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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pujarathod · 2 years
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Cabbage Seeds Market Size| Global Industry Analysis and application
The Global Cabbage Seeds Market is a specialized statistical study that focuses on market development and expansion opportunities. Market evaluation and special inspection are also covered in the core portion. The research report's main purpose is to provide crucial competition data, current market trends, market potential, growth rate, and vital alternative perspectives. The study includes a market split, item classifications, data, and statistics, as well as an overview of the company.
The Cabbage Seeds Market will change significantly from the previous year. Over the next five years, will register a CAGR in terms of revenue, and the global market size will reach USD in millions by 2028.
Cabbage belongs to the Brassicaceae family, which includes the genus Brassica. B. oleracea varieties include broccoli, collard greens, brussels sprouts, kohlrabi, and sprouting broccoli, among other cruciferous vegetables (also known as cole crops). B. oleracea var. oleracea, popularly known as colewort or field cabbage, is the source of all of these. Selection resulted in cultivars with varied traits, such as huge heads for cabbage, large leaves for kale, and thick stems with flower buds for broccoli, which evolved over thousands of years into those seen today.
The Major Players in the Cabbage Seeds Market Include:
Monsanto, Syngenta, Limagrain, Bayer Crop Science, Bejo, Enza Zaden, Rijk Zwaan, Sakata, VoloAgri, Takii, East-West Seed, Nongwoobio, Yuan Longping High-tech Chemical & Materials, Denghai Seeds,Jing Yan YiNong
Market has segmented the global Cabbage Seeds market on the basis of type, application, and region:
By Type:
·         Early Maturing Variety
·         Medium Late Maturing Variety
·         Bagged
 By Application:
·         Food
·         Leather & Textile
·         Semiconductor & Electronics
The Cabbage Seeds study details the request area, which is farther broken down into sub-regions and countries/ regions. This chapter of the report includes information on profit prospects in addition to request share in each country and sub-region. The request share and growth rate of each region, country, and sub-region throughout the cast period are bandied in this chapter of the study.
 By Regional Outlook (Revenue, USD Billion, 2017 – 2028)
North America (U.S., Canada, Mexico)
Europe (Germany, U.K., France, Italy, Russia, Spain,     Rest of Europe)
Asia-Pacific (China, India, Japan, Southeast Asia, Rest     of APAC)
Middle East & Africa (GCC Countries, South Africa,     Rest of MEA)
South America (Brazil, Argentina, Rest of South     America)
The Cabbage Seeds market is segmented by type and application. Growth between segments over the period 2022-2028 provides accurate calculations and forecasts of revenue by type and application in terms of volume and value. This analysis can help you expand your business by targeting eligible niches.
Covid-19 Impact and Recovery Analysis on Industry:
The COVID-19 pandemic has had devastating effects on several industry verticals globally. To constrain the number of cases and slow the coronavirus spread, various public health guidelines were implemented in different countries across the globe. COVID-19 protocols ranging from declaring national emergency states, enforcing stay-at-home orders, closing nonessential business operations and schools, banning public gatherings, imposing curfews, distributing digital passes, and allowing police to restrict citizen movements within a country, as well as closing international borders. With the growing vaccination rate, governments are uplifting the protocols to give a boost to the stagnant economy. Like other industries, Cabbage Seeds Market have experienced slowdown the growth, however market is expected bounce back as restrictions are being lifted up by governments across the globe. 
Key Questions Answered in This Cabbage Seeds Market Report
1.      How much revenue will the Cabbage Seeds market generate by the end of the forecast period?
2.      Which market segment is expected to have the maximum market share?
3.      What are the influencing factors and their impact on the Cabbage Seeds market?
4.      Which regions are currently contributing the maximum share of the overall Cabbage Seeds market?
5.      What indicators are likely to stimulate the Cabbage Seeds market?
6.      What are the main strategies of the major players in the Cabbage Seeds market to expand their geographic presence?
Key Reasons to Purchase:
·         Gained an analysis of market insights and a comprehensive understanding of the Global Cabbage Seeds Market and commercial environment.
·         To mitigate development risk, the production process evaluates key problems and solutions.
·         Recognize the driving forces and impediments that have the biggest influence on covid-19 in the Cabbage Seeds market, as well as its worldwide market.
·         Explains the market strategies adopted by each major institution.
·         Understand the Cabbage Seeds Market's future view and forecast.
·         In addition to standard structure reports, we also offer custom studies tailored to specific requirements.
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solarpunks · 2 years
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China Plans to Feed 80 Million People With ‘Seawater Rice’
Jinghai district in northern China is hardly a rice-growing paradise. Located along the coast of the Bohai Sea, over half of the region’s land is made of salty, alkaline soil where crops can’t survive. Yet, last autumn, Jinghai produced 100 hectares of rice.
Known as “seawater rice” because it’s grown in salty soil near the sea, the strains were created by over-expressing a gene from selected wild rice that’s more resistant to saline and alkali. Test fields in Tianjin—the municipality that encompasses Jinghai—recorded a yield of 4.6 metric tons per acre last year, higher than the national average for production of standard rice varieties.
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China has been studying salt-tolerant rice since at least the 1950s. But the term “seawater rice” only started to gain mainstream attention in recent years after the late Yuan Longping, once the nation’s top agricultural scientist, began researching the idea in 2012.
Yuan, known as the “father of hybrid rice,” is considered a national hero for boosting grain harvests and saving millions from hunger thanks to his work on high-yielding hybrid rice varieties in the 1970s. In 2016, he selected six locations across the country with different soil conditions that were turned into testing fields for salt-tolerant rice. The following year, China established the research center in Qingdao where Wan works. The institute’s goal is to harvest 30 million tons of rice using 6.7 million hectares of barren land.
Article goes on to speak about rising sea levels and how salt-tolerant rice will have big implications for coastline countries in the coming decades.
China Plans to Feed 80 Million People With ‘Seawater Rice’
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mindblowingscience · 3 years
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Yuan Longping, a Chinese scientist who developed higher-yield rice varieties that helped feed people around the world, died Saturday at a hospital in the southern city of Changsha, the Xinhua News agency reported. He was 90.
Yuan spent his life researching rice and was a household name in China, known by the nickname "Father of Hybrid Rice." Worldwide, a fifth of all rice now comes from species created by hybrid rice following Yuan's breakthrough discoveries, according to the website of the World Food Prize, which he won in 2004.
On Saturday afternoon, large crowds honored the scientist by marching past the hospital in Hunan province where he died, local media reported, calling out phrases such as: "Grandpa Yuan, have a good journey!"
Continue Reading.
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xz1005fanblog · 3 years
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2021-05-22 Condolecences for Yuan Long Ping, China's father of modern hybrid rice
Yuan Long Ping passed away at the venerable age of 91. He was considered a hero for his contributions to the creation of hybrid rice, which solved China's rice shortage problem. He was the recipient for multiple United Nations awards.
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yourtongzhihazel · 3 months
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I miss yuan longping
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breakingnewsworld · 3 years
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Hsi discovery of Nan-you No. 2, led to a rise in China’s rice production from 5.69 billion tonnes in 1950 to 19.47 billion tonnes in 2000, for the first time transforming China into a grain surplus country.
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krapalm · 3 years
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Yuan Longping ชายผู้อุทิศตนเพื่อสังคมและความเป็นอยู่ที่ดีของมนุษยชาติ
China.org.cn รายงานข่าวเชิดชูคุณงามความดีของคุณ Yuan Longping เมื่อวันที่ 22 พฤษภาคมที่ผ่านมา Yuan Longping นักวิทยาศาสตร์ชื่อดังของจีน ที่มีส่วนช่วยให้ผู้คนนับไม่ถ้วนหลุดพ้นจากความหิวโหย ได้เสียชีวิตแล้ว นับเป็นความโศกเศร้าเสียใจของชาวจีนหลายราย โดยมีสื่อต่างชาติรายงานข่าวการเสียชีวิตของชายผู้นี้ด้วยเช่นกัน Yuan Longping ได้รับการขนานนามเป็น “บิดาแห่งข้าวลูกผสม”…
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newswrote · 3 years
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China’s ‘father of hybrid rice’, who revolutionised agriculture, dies at 91 -- Worldnews/NewsWrote
China’s ‘father of hybrid rice’, who revolutionised agriculture, dies at 91 — Worldnews/NewsWrote
His discovery of Nan-you No. 2, led to a rise in China’s rice production from 5.69 billion tonnes in 1950 to 19.47 billion tonnes in 2000, for the first time transforming China into a grain surplus country. Yuan Longping, a Chinese agricultural scientist whose breakthroughs in hybrid rice brought food security to China and transformed agriculture worldwide, died on Saturday aged 91. Mr. Yuan,…
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iwan1979 · 3 years
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He helped China cultivate the high-yielding hybrid rice needed to feed nearly one-fifth of the world's population.. Read more at straitstimes.com.
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erikacousland · 3 years
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Live: Farewell, Yuan Longping, 'father of hybrid rice' - YouTube
Yuan Longping, the globally renowned Chinese agronomist known for developing the first hybrid rice strains, died at 13:07 BJT on Saturday at the age of 91. He has helped China work a great wonder -- feeding nearly one-fifth of the world's population with less than nine percent of the world's total land. Join for the special program to bid farewell to the father of hybrid rice, the man who brought millions out of starvation, the man who devoted over 50 years of his life to scientific research and changed the world with hybrid rice.
I meet him once, 10 years ago, in a elevator. People recognized him, greeting and grateful thanks to him. So he look around and smiling to everyone. When he look at me, his eyes reminds me my grand parents.
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