Monkey King: Heroes Are Back earned 300 million yuan ($50 million) at the box office in the first three days after its release, setting a new record for a Chinese animated movie. Comments:
A "sex video" believed to have been recorded in a fitting room of a clothing store in Beijing's Sanlitun area has gone viral on social media after being posted online on July 14. Police have started an investigation into incident. Comments:
Mitsubishi Materials Corp will apologize to former prisoners-of-war from the United States this weekend in Los Angeles for forcing them to work as slave laborers during World War II, said the Simon Wiesenthal Center which is hosting the closed-door event. This is the first time it has made such an apology. The Japanese Embassy in Washington has denied the Japanese government's involvement. Comments:
There has been a lot of talk recently about the Chinese government becoming involved in the country's stock market: An odd charge to level at China, to say the least. Just look at what takes place around the world. Indeed, it is in the so-called developed economies that we see the most frequent and most aggressive market intervention by governments.
The pace and scope of innovation in China has begun to increase. How has this happened, and why is it happening now?
The thought of summer vacation thrills students. But for parents, it could be a source of worry. One of the main concerns of parents is whether their children should attend special classes during vacations. This decision, however, should not depend only on parents or students.
The long-term and comprehensive nuclear agreement reached on July 14 between Iran and P5+1 - China, the US, Russia, France, the UK plus Germany - should be applauded for opening a new channel of peace for not only the Middle East, but also the whole world.
For the global economy that is teetering on the brink of its slowest annual growth since the 2008 global financial crisis, China's 7 percent economic growth in the first half of this year can hardly be satisfactory.
With some of this year's 7.49 million university graduates set to be recruited as civil servants, public perception that it is the best way to enjoy a good life has once again surfaced.
A court in Guangzhou, South China's Guangdong province, has ordered a Chinese telecom carrier to compensate a 75-year-old man, who lost 480,000 yuan ($77,300) in a telecom fraud case two years ago, as it failed to show the swindler's real caller ID. The verdict is reportedly the first of its kind in the country. Comments:
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