Martin Luther King Jr's "I have a dream" speech has to be one of the most inspiring but overused speeches of all time. Nowhere is this truer than among English learners in Beijing.
There's been quite a bit of hand-wringing over the decline and fall of the Nanluoguxiang scene. It's a pity, but so are death and taxes, and all three are equally inevitable. The half-life of a city hot spot lasts at most two years, and Nanluoguxiang is well past its 2006-08 heyday. In any event, the passing of Nanluoguxiang bodes no lasting harm to Beijing's cultural identity.
On A kick that kicked back Imagine the pedestrian is your mother
A top private institution gears its English classes for people who want to go overseas
Lin Lei, 24, a graduate student in civil engineering at Beijing Jiaotong University, said his language skills really clicked once he enrolled in a course offered by the New Oriental Education and Technology Group.
Direct competition between private English schools and public universities does not exist, said Yao Yazhi, a lecturer of English at Beijing Jiaotong University.
It is still something of a surprise to see a man in a nail salon. But Zhou Xingyu, 31, has been a nailist for nearly a decade and is now a partner in a nail salon in Tuanjiehu area. He also works as a nail-art tutor at fashion schools and sometimes appears in fashion magazines such as Xinwei demonstrating the latest nail trends. Sitting at a table covered with nail kits and in front of a shelf full of colorful polishes, he massages a client's fingers, before creaming, smoothing and designing the nails. His dream is to have his own nailist training salons.
His shoe repair stand has been in place for 20 years
Suzhou native Chen Gang: Conventions can create new 'economic miracles'
Suzhou, a city with over 2,500 years of history, is expected to dazzle millions of visitors to the Shanghai Expo 2010 with its distinctive s ancient town and modern urban development.
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