Millions of travelers are making their way home during the last two days of the week-long National Day holiday, which began on Thursday.
Tens of thousands are playing a key role in the research and conservation of China's migratory species, as Chen Liang reports
Number of trips to domestic hot spots is also on the rise
Tying the knot as an undergraduate has been legal for 10 years in China, but this has brought a series of challenges, report Zhao Xinying in Beijing and Tan Yingzi in Chongqing
Chinese pharmacologist Tu Youyou, now 85, became China's first medicine Nobel laureate when it was announced she was one of three scientists awarded the 2015 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for their work in developing effective drugs against parasitic diseases.
Chinese police are making great efforts, including assigning more officers and improving security facilities, to implement requirements of the Ministry of Public Security during the National Day holiday.
Following a spate of uncivilized behavior related to the tourism market, the Palace Museum has blacklisted 2,500 visitors since June for misbehaving, part of an effort aimed at protecting ancient relics as well as restoring market order by eliminating illegal vendors and ticket scalpers.
China hopes the United States will scale back activities that may cause misunderstandings, and respect China's core interests, a senior Chinese naval commander has said.
An Indonesian minister said late Thursday that negotiations are underway between Indonesian and Chinese consortiums to build a high-speed rail system linking Jakarta and Bandung, capital of West Java province.
On a visit to the Palace Museum, also known as the Forbidden City, in Beijing recently I entered through the western gate and unexpectedly walked into a building site.
Yu Zhengsheng, China's top political advisor, said on Thursday that long-term stability and security are the top priorities in the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region. He stressed that counterterrorism will be the focus of the local government's work.
China's box-office chart has seen new records set frequently in recent months. The latest big high - this year's first three-quarters raking in more money than all of 2014 - has sparked predictions that 2015 will roar all the way to 40 billion yuan ($6.25 billion).
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