Jun 27

Ma Wen, Most Wanted Chinese Playing Cards’ Ace of Hearts, China’s head of National Bureau of Corruption Prevention fired 12 Communist Party officials “for dereliction of duty and misuse of earthquake relief.” This from Robert Vance, a Blogger in China posting the CNN ’s article.

China Declares War on an Old Nemesis

\\ tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

Jun 23

Our sister site Beijing Rummy has images of poker hands, with examples from the best combination to the weakest combination. They are of course using cards from the Most Wanted Chinese Playing cards deck.

Example of the best hand in Poker, the Royal Flush.

\\ tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Jun 21

Majikthise did some excellent reporting on Efraim Diveroli and Michael Diveroli. Two guys who were caught selling illegal Chinese arms to the US military. What a couple of dummies.-These guys are not in our Most wanted Chinese Playing Cards deck.

\\ tags: , , , , , , ,

Mar 22

21 Tibet ‘protestors’ are on a list of most wanted by the Chinese, but they do not have a playing card and they are not in our poker deck.

Here is an exerpt from USA Today:

Shown under the heading of “Lhasa Public Security Bureau’s Wanted List of Criminal Suspects,” the 21 people are accused of endangering national security, and cited for beating, smashing, looting and arson. One suspect is shown wielding a long sword and another is a mustached man who had been shown on news programs slashing another with a foot-long blade.

\\ tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Jan 02

Yuan Hongwei is a most wanted Chinese smuggler, but he does not have a playing card in our poker deck.

Here is an excerpt from a Time magazine article:

ABRO Industries learned early on that it was facing an audacious challenger. In 2003 Timothy Demarais, vice president of the South Bend, Indiana-based industrial adhesive manufacturer, says he walked into the Canton Trade Fair in Guangzhou, China, and found that his company’s product line — and his company’s identity itself — had been knocked off by a Chinese firm called Hunan Magic Power, also known as Magpow. When Demarais attempted to have the impostor kicked out, he says, Hunan Magic Power chairman Yuan Hongwei produced documentation that he claimed showed his company had the right to use the trademark ABRO. He had even copied ABRO’s labeling, including one sample card with a photo of a woman applying epoxy to a bicycle. The woman, it turned out, was Demarais’ wife. After Demarais pulled out another photo of his wife from his wallet, the trade fair officials booted Hunan Magic Power. “How blatant can you be when you steal my wife’s picture for your card?” asks Demarais.

\\ tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,