Thursday, March 27, 2008

Learn Chinese online - China's single children feel lonely?

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China's single children feel lonely?

www.chinanews.cn 2006-03-03 14:06:23

A teacher is helping her student repair the sweater zip. (File photo)

Chinanews, March. 3 �C What can present single children do if they are
isolated from television and internet? To Shi Yingjie, a senior high
school student in Shanghai, she could hardly find anything else
interesting but staring blankly, reading some books, shopping, making
phone calls, or sleeping. She felt "depressed," "mentally painful," and
even "hates the guy who does the survey on her." When the survey finally
ended, Shi indulged herself in television and internet. Once, she even
played online games until five in the morning.
Shi Yingjie and 23 other students in Shanghai recently participated in a
survey jointly organized by the Shanghai Zhabei Party Propagating
Committee and the Fudan University School of journalism. The activity
wants to find out what children can do when they are not allowed to watch
television or play online games in a week's time. Children under survey
were divided into three groups, those who cannot watch television, those
who cannot play online games and those who cannot do either of them.
"I am so sad to find that I could hardly do anything if I don't watch TV
or play games," said one of the students later. A week is not long,
however, for these students, they might experience a "lifetime" challenge
because most of them like watching TV or playing games during the spare
time.
Lu Ye, professor of the Fudan University school of journalism and also
tutor of the PhD students, help organized the activity. After reading
students diaries of the one week, she found several problems: most
children did not do many outdoor activities or play with their mates;
there is lack of public equipments or public places for children to play;
and students should cultivate more hobbies.
All children that took the survey are the only son or daughter in their
family. An American friend once told Lu that the biggest difference
between Chinese children and American children was that American children
like to play outside while Chinese children do not; Chinese parents often
scold their children while American parents seldom do so.
The American woman said she had moved to many places in the U.S. and
every time she moved, her child could quickly adapt to the new
environment. What is the secret? "When her child takes a basketball out,
other children will soon come to play together," Lu explained, "for
Chinese children, however, they spend most of their time playing at home
by themselves, playing piano, do some reading or painting, etc, as their
parents told them to do so."

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Learn Chinese - Shandong's female tax officials

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Shandong's female tax officials

www.chinanews.cn 2006-03-01 16:44:31

The taxpaying service center of Zichuan District Local Taxation Bureau in
Shandong's Zibo City was crowned provincial model unit of women
civilization on Feb. 28, 2006. It is learnt that female employees
constitute 80% of the center's total, taking charge of taxpayers in
10,000-odd households in urban and suburban areas.

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Learn Chinese - Pupils learnt about scenic spots

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Pupils learnt about scenic spots

www.chinanews.cn 2006-02-28 14:44:47

Nearly 100 pupils a primary school affiliated in Anhui Province visited
the Wanfota (ten-thousand-Buddha pagoda) Park and learnt about the
architectural structure and protection of this pagoda, which was
initially built in the Song Dynasty (960-1279AD) and is now a "key
cultural relic under key preservation of Anhui Province," on Feb. 26.
This educational activity with a theme of "learning about scenic spots
and love our hometown" aimed to teach and help pupils to understand,
learn about and cherish scenic spots and historic sites around them, as
well as arouse their passion to love their hometown and the motherland
since childhood.

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Chinese School - Luncheon at filial festival

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Luncheon at filial festival

www.chinanews.cn 2006-02-27 13:41:52

The "luncheon on the 29th day of the first lunar month", which was hosted
by CPC Fuzhou Municipal Committee's civilization office, was held in
Fuzhou Hotel on Feb. 26. Besides inviting 200 seniors to taste the
"congee on the 29th day of the first lunar month" and some Fuzhou snacks,
relevant authorities also offered subsidies and gifts to the elderly
living in welfare houses. The 29th day of the first lunar month, which
falls on Feb. 26 this year, is the unique traditional "piety day" among
Fuzhou folks and is also known as "filial festival." The festival
reflects the traditional filial culture of Chinese people.

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Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Chinese Mandarin - Blind children got special gifts

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�� Blind children got special gifts

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Blind children got special gifts

www.chinanews.cn 2006-02-24 14:29:36

Blind children in Qinhuangdao School for Special Education got special
gifts on Feb. 21, the second day after their new semester began. A truck
packed with wall calendars and 100 million pieces of Braille paper
arrived at the school that morning. Before the Spring Festival, the
school told the society that blind children lack paper for their studies
and Braille paper is very expensive, attracting numerous citizens to
donate their old wall calendars.

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Chinese Mandarin - Family planning mechanism for floating population

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�� Ming Dynasty Mausoleum forbids automobiles

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Family planning mechanism for floating population

www.chinanews.cn 2006-02-22 16:17:57

The policy and regulation department under the National Population and
Family Planning Commission of China revealed on Feb. 21 that innovation
of the family planning management and service mechanism for floating
population is listed as a key mission of 2006. China has 140 million
floating population at present, which is a challenge against its
traditional management mode and service mode for population and family
planning. Pictured: a migrant woman with two kids on the street of Ningbo
City

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Chinese Mandarin - Trendy flowers in bottles

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�� Rural pupils exempted from tuition fee

�� Migratory birds vied for food

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Trendy flowers in bottles

www.chinanews.cn 2006-02-21 16:22:36

A girl was displaying roses in small bottles which just came into the
market in an accessory shop in Shandong's Jinan City on Feb. 20, 2006. It
is learnt that this type of flowers grow in small glass bottles filled
with nourishing gel and will blossom in three to four months. Water or
nutrition from outside is not needed. This accouterment is quite popular
among a large group of young ladies.

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Chinese School - 1,000-meter "wall" full of kites

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1,000-meter "wall" full of kites

www.chinanews.cn 2006-02-20 15:51:53

Stalls selling kites were orderly lined up around the Guangming Square in
Shandong's Zaozhuang City on Feb. 18. Those kites hung up extended over
1,000 meters like a wall, becoming a beautiful backdrop in the city.

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Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Learn Mandarin online - Zhaoqing riot police busy with training

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�� Zhaoqing riot police busy with training

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Zhaoqing riot police busy with training

www.chinanews.cn 2006-02-17 15:00:00

The riot police of Zhaoqing Public Security Bureau have started their
2006 crew training recently, which covered playing the T-shaped staff and
the long staff, baton and shield exercises, obstacle course, climbing and
long-distance running. This training emphasized the drilling of how to
handle various kinds of emergency cases involving a considerable group of
people, as well as riot defense and anti-terrorism drilling.

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Chinese Online Class - Colored clay figurines

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�� Colored clay figurines

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Colored clay figurines

www.chinanews.cn 2006-02-16 14:58:43

Wang Nanxian, a colored clay figurine artist from Jiangsu's Huishan
County, showed techniques of Huishan colored clay figurines at the
exhibition on achievements of intangible cultural heritage protection on
Feb. 15. She also displayed three categories of her works including a
statue of Buddha, a coarse work of Da A Fu which features a plump child
holding a green lion, and an elaborate work which depicts Overlord of
Conqueror Xiang Yu. Huishan clay figurines are a national cultural
heritage and Da A Fu is reputed as a folk painted sculpture with oriental
characteristics.

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Learn mandarin - Ren Hui wins bronze in women's 500m speedskating

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�� Wang Manli wins silver in women's 500m speedskating

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Ren Hui wins bronze in women's 500m speedskating

www.chinanews.cn 2006-02-15 11:08:35

Ren Hui of China reacts after winning the bronze medal in the women's 500
meter speedskating during the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy on
Tuesday, Feb. 14, 2006.

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Learn Chinese - China gets pairs silver, bronze

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China gets pairs silver, bronze

www.chinanews.cn 2006-02-14 13:52:51

Zhang Dan and Zhang Hao (Back) from China perform to win the silver medal
in the figure skating Pairs Free Skating at the Torino 2006 Winter
Olympic Games in Turin, Italy February 13, 2006.

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Monday, March 24, 2008

Chinese language - Intangible cultural heritage of China shown

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Intangible cultural heritage of China shown

www.chinanews.cn 2006-02-13 09:56:46

Girls perform tradtional dance during a show about the intangible
cultural heritage of China in Beijing February 12, 2006. The exhibit,
which will last till March 16, shows the effort that China launched to
protect the intangible cultural heritage.

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Chinese Online Class - Spring Festival's revival mirrors China's rising soft power

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Spring Festival's revival mirrors China's rising soft power

www.chinanews.cn 2006-02-10 15:51:37

Chinanews, Feb. 10 - For 12-year-old Wang Qingyu who was born and raised
in Beijing, the sound of firecrackers and colorful temple fair folk
customs and culture made up an extremely exciting Spring Festival this
year. Beijing instituted a ban on fireworks and firecrackers in downtown
areas one year before he was born, but lifted the ban this Spring
Festival.
During the seven-day Spring Festival holiday, Wang's family, headed by
his father, made sacrifice to their ancestors, gave out lucky money in
red envelopes, paid Chinese New Year visits to their relatives and
friends, and enjoyed temple fairs like numerous other Beijing residents.
The family had great fun experiencing a variety of interesting Spring
Festival customs and praying for blessings and good luck.
During this Spring Festival holiday, Beijing arranged 123 sessions of 19
assorted temple fairs, the most in the past ten-odd years. Acrobatics,
clay figurines, paper-cut works, Spring Festival pictures, floats and
other ancient folk art items created a sumptuous, delicious cultural
feast, and the hustle and bustle of crowds matched the hoopla of
carnivals in western countries. Wang, who is fond of Mickey Mouse
decorations and McDonald's hamburgers, was captivated immediately.
"Many traditional Spring Festival customs treasured in my memory were
picked up again this year. They not only created a novel Spring Festival
for children, but also stirred up the long forgotten excitement of the
Chinese New Year for me," said Wang's father, who works in a social
sciences publishing house.
Over 1,000 channels of around 200 TV stations were broadcasting Spring
Festival-themed programs almost round the clock. No matter in evening
parties, interviews, themed programs or news, the imposing red and yellow
blotted out the sky and the land as the traditional dominant hues of
festivity and auspiciousness. At present, China has more than one billion
TV viewers.
Owing to introduction of mobile phone messaging, the internet and other
new technologies, traditional Spring Festival customs have added many
items of fashion, attracting numerous young people. For the moment, China
has more than 300 million mobile phone users and over 100 million
internet users.
It is reported that about 200 cities of various sizes lifted firecracker
bans this Spring Festival and resumed the custom to add to the festive
atmosphere of the holiday. In TV programs, people dressed in cheongsam
and contemporary Chinese-style costumes are frequently spotted.
Wan Jianzhong, executive director of China Folklore Society and
Supervisor of Ph. D candidates with Beijing Normal University, said that
Spring Festival is China's most important traditional festival that is
condensed from the ancient culture of its people. It cognizes, ascertains
and preserves the Chinese people's cultural identity and serves as the
emotional identification power to hold together a family, an ethnic
group, a society and a country.
In recent years, exotic cultures have deeply affected many young Chinese
people, building up walls and widening gaps between them and traditional
Chinese festivals such as Spring Festival. According to Yuan Jixi, vice
dean of the Chinese studies school of Renmin University of China, the
renaissance of Chinese culture is indispensable for the rejuvenation of
China. As a critical ligament to bear the weight of a spiritual home,
traditional culture will eventually win recognition and development of
its value, and the situation has improved at present.
After being at the bottom of a dreary valley for many years, the
atmosphere of celebrating Spring Festival, the most important traditional
Chinese festival, has become rich and palatable once again and is drawing
the attention of many people. In the eyes of most Chinese, this is not
only a token of the renaissance of traditional culture of an ancient
oriental country, but also a tangible testimony that China's soft power
is rising. Soft power, which includes the influences of culture, value
and policies, is an organic composition of comprehensive national
strength just like hard power.
Compared with past years, this Spring Festival is of extraordinary
significance, for it is more than a festival of the Chinese people, but a
gala that is celebrated by more and more people around the world.
Upon the Spring Festival of the Year of the Dog, many big names in the
political arena of western countries sent holiday greetings to local
Chinese people in succession, and some even sent letters of Chinese New
Year greetings to Chinese government leaders and the Chinese people.
On Oxford Street in downtown London, young Chinese super voice girl Li
Yuchun and London Mayor Ken Livingstone jointly lit up the specially made
Chinese lanterns, and several hundred bright red lanterns immediately lit
the way from Oxford Street to bustling Chinatown in the Soho district of
central London.
British Prime Minister Tony Blair said in his letter of Chinese New Year
greetings to London's Chinese Chamber of Commerce that Spring Festival
has reached far beyond the Chinese community and is becoming a festival
that is celebrated by an increasing number of people. Spring Festival
also gives people a chance to review the Chinese community's
contributions to UK's prosperity and cultural and social diversity.
In the US, more and more cities are prepared to follow the lead of New
York City as in the year before last and make Spring Festival a legal
public celebration. In Australia, there are unprecedented large-scale
celebratory activities for Chinese New Year that last even longer than
those in China. Governors, mayors, councilors and numerous ordinary
Caucasians are enthusiastic about Chinese customs, and the mainstream
English media even publish special articles on the Year of the Dog. In
Canada, local Chinese are even allowed to hold their Spring Festival
party at Parliament Hill, where the country's center of power is located.
Analysts pointed out that on the surface this is merely a cultural
phenomenon. Actually, it has a profound economic and political
background. Respect for a country's culture is inseparable from its
elevated economic strength and attractiveness of its culture.
For the rest of the world, China's image is that of the dragon and the
panda. Spring Festival values family, fosters reunion, wishes for
prosperity and good luck, and embodies the national spirit of peace,
harmony and cooperation. As a conscientious large country, China has
taken an active part in international affairs and won the respect and
trust of the world.

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Learn Chinese - Folk-custom cultural festival

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Folk-custom cultural festival

www.chinanews.cn 2006-02-09 13:59:25

An artist shows traditional folk cultural performance, blowing sugar into
various shapes, attracting numerous tourists in Qicheng cultural relics
scenic spot in Henan's Puyang City on Feb. 7. The first folk-custom
cultural festival was held on the spot to celebrate the traditional
Chinese Lantern Festival, making urbanites have their eyes wide open.

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Learn Chinese - Turpan farmers ready for spring plowing

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�� 99,999-yuan Valentine's Day set meal

�� Spring Festival charter flight ends

�� Training during snowfall in Beijing

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Turpan farmers ready for spring plowing

www.chinanews.cn 2006-02-08 15:13:10

A few farmers were purchasing agricultural machines in the Xinjiang
Turpan Agricultural Machine Co. on Feb. 7th. After the Spring Festival,
various agricultural machine dealers in Xinjiang's Turpan enjoyed red hot
sales. Farmers were crowding around to buy agricultural machines to get
ready for spring plowing and planting.

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