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Taipei Times


Title Filter     Display # 
# Article Title Author Hits
141 Proper way of constitutional reform Yao Meng-chang 姚孟昌 309
142 KMT, TPP test limits of democracy The Liberty Times Editorial 519
143 Remembering the Tiananmen spirit Taipei Times Editorial 463
144 Building on growing ties with Japan Chiu Chih-wei 邱志偉 412
145 Power grab disguised as ‘reform’ Taipei Times Editorial 439
146 Will Taiwan become Hong Kong? Chen yu-hsin 陳雨鑫 524
147 Opposition confused about bills Chang Bao-yuan 張葆源 415
148 Cast the democracy vandals out Liu Shih-ming 劉熙明 364
149 Law in Taiwan, the US and Germany Huan Tong-shong 黃東熊 365
150 Thousands protesting cannot be wrong Taipei Times Editorial 272
151 Taiwan’s ‘Chinese Taipei’ problem Sasha B. Chhabra 377
152 From Tsai Ing-wen to William Lai Tommy lin 林逸民 313
153 Taiwan and the international order Taipei Times Editorial 393
154 KMT buys into manipulation of Ma The Liberty Times Editorial 337
155 What’s truly special about Taiwan William R. stimson 287
156 The TRA at 45: The path forward Lin Tzu-yao and Cathy Fang 林子堯 282
157 Building an ‘island of resilience’ The Liberty Times Editorial 367
158 Japan-Taiwan preparation lacking Robert D. Eldridge 295
159 Ma muddying the waters Taipei Times Editorial 360
160 Partners can help over-stretched US Taipei Times Editorial 314
 
Page 8 of 145

Newsflash


History and civics teachers yesterday protest in front of the Ministry of Education in Taipei to back calls for it to postpone implementation of new high-school curriculum guidelines.
Photo: Wang Min-wei, Taipei Times

The six cities and counties governed by the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) are uniting to refuse to adopt the Ministry of Education’s plan to revise the national high-school curriculum, which they said ran counter to regulations, customary procedures and the historical truth, the party said yesterday.

A meeting of the party’s Central Standing Committee drew up three countermeasures against the ministry’s textbook outlines that critics say are an attempt to “de-Taiwanize” the nation’s history, DPP spokesperson Lin Chun-hsien (林俊憲) said.