Saturday, 31 July 2010
CHI-CHI ZHANG Associated Press Writer= TANGJIALING, China (AP) — Liu Jun sleeps in a room so small, he shares a bed with two other men. It's all the scrawny computer engineering graduate can afford in a city so expensive that the average white-collar professional can't afford to buy a home. A dim fluorescent bulb hangs from the ceiling of the 180-square-foot (17-square-meter) room on the fringes of Beijing. The floor is littered with cigarette butts, dirty laundry and half-eaten paper bowls of...
Full Story: The Guardian
 


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