When Peking Opera piece Cao Cao and Yang Xiu premiered at Tianjin People's Theater in 1988, it caused a sensation, thanks to top artists Shang Changrong and Yan Xingpeng's engaging performances.
China said it will encourage and attract private investment to help build more general aviation airports, to provide more comprehensive services such as public transportation and social services, and further promote the growth of the sector.
Beijing-based Sinosteel Group Corp Ltd said it would bring more advanced metallurgical technologies to the African continent, speeding up the use of technological new materials while providing more EPC services in African countries.
Toymaker The Lego Group said it plans to accelerate its expansion in China, building on the strong foundation of double-digit revenue growth in the first half of the year.
NXP Semiconductors, the world's top chip maker for the auto industry, is ramping up resources to tap into the internet of things and smart vehicle opportunities in China, where local consumers are highly responsive to new technologies.
Consumer electronics giant TCL Corp has set up a research and development center in Poland with a focus on artificial intelligence research, as part of its broader push to expand presence in the European market.
Despite its money-losing business and lofty valuation, Meituan-Dianping, the online food review and delivery company, has attracted big-name early investors to its IPO that could raise as much as $4.4 billion.
Charlie Yao, CEO and president of Yuhuang Chemical Industries Inc, a wholly owned subsidiary of Shandong Yuhuang Chemical Co Ltd, wanted to build a $1.85 billion methanol production facility on 1,200 acres of farmland in St. James Parish, Louisiana.
Guangzhou Development District in South China's Guangdong province has streamlined its services for the registration and completion of investment projects so that the process now takes no more than 34 days from beginning to end.
Shares of photovoltaic firms rallied sharply in Hong Kong on Monday, in response to the European Commission's ending of restrictions on sales of solar panels from China starting from midnight.
A Chinese-invested phosphate fertilizer plant, which is believed to be the first such plant in East Africa and marks the first phase of a 2.8 billion yuan ($410 million) industrial park in Uganda, is scheduled to start operations on Oct 23.
Beijing-headquartered conglomerate China Poly Group Corp is planning to provide more remote and rural areas in Africa with clean and affordable solar power and quality-verified off-grid lighting and energy products.
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