Along with other 30 foreigners, Wilma O'Sullivan had come to Beidaihe, a summer resort in Hebei Province, to escape from the intense summer heat. With members of so many races, her summer tourist group seemed to resemble a miniature United Nations.
Owning an exquisitely handmade folding fan, especially one featuring refined paintings and calligraphy by famed literati, was a status symbol in ancient times. Today, a small population of fan fanatics still cherishes this tradition. And members of this clique flood the home of 75-year-old fan-making master Xu Yilin, in the Taohuawu area of Suzhou, in East China's Jiangsu Province.
A delegation of young Chinese from the art world have recently wrapped up a weeklong visit to France where they toured several cities and took part in a music festival.
A photographer shoots the world's first camera exhibited at the Capital Museum of China in April with a state-of-the-art digital camera, marking a stark contrast between the antique and the modern. As part of the Sino-French Cultural Exchange 2007, the exhibition "A French Innovation: Birth of Photography" showcased 117 related historical items and photos. It was jointly sponsored by the Capital Museum of China, the Paris municipal government, the French Culture Center and the Nicphore Nipce Museum. Wen Zhao
Editor's note: The French Chamber of Commerce and Industry in China (CCIFC) plays a key role in helping French companies tap into business opportunities in China. Its president Annick de Kermadec shares with China Daily her opinions on related issues, reports Liu Baijia.
Few of the thousands of tourists to Longsheng County of Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region would realize that their presence is actually endangering the magnificent landscape of terraced fields they enjoy. With a population of 167,000, of whom nearly 80 percent are ethnic minorities of Miao, Yao, Dong and Zhuang, Longsheng received 235,000 sightseers in 2006, according to Yang Tongming, head of the county.
CANCUN, Mexico: Mexico's Caribbean coastline is glowing, one-and-a-half years after the devastation wrought by Hurricane Wilma.
Heavily pregnant Chongqing policewoman Liu Liu leaves office for a yoga institute nearby. Although Liu's husband offers her a lift, the 30-year-old insists on getting there by foot. After changing, she strokes her ball-like belly tenderly, saying: "Hi, my little baby, let's do yoga together."
In China, the first prenatal yoga class was launched in October 2003 by the pregnancy gym at Shanghai's No 1 Women and Infants' Health Center, focusing on 16 to 37 weeks moms-to-be.
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