VIENNA - There will be "an extremely excellent orchestral landscape in China", with the increasing number of talented musicians coupled with a strong public interest, Daniel Froschauer, chairman of the Vienna Philharmonic, says in an interview.
A new app enables film-lovers to view movies showing in cinemas without having to physically visit the theater.
Hogwarts will hit the big screen again this month, with Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald, the second film of the titular spin-off franchise that's also a prequel set 70 years before the Harry Potter stories.
Clouds of dust swirl in the air as innumerable wildebeests throw themselves into the Mara River as they try to cross its surging waters without falling prey to crocodiles lurking under its surface. This is just one scene from the vast herds of the grazing antelopes' annual migration from the Serengeti National Park in Tanzania to the greener pastures of the Maasai Mara National Reserve in Kenya.
Zhang Yixing didn't sleep well the previous night. Although you can detect his lack of rest, the 27-year-old pop singer-songwriter, clad in a white T-shirt and a pair of loose pants, vibrates with energy and cheer as he talks about his third studio album, Namanana, which was released on Oct 19.
It happened when they were drinking coffee on a sunny morning in Taipei. "This is Chyi Yu. Oh my God," Zhang Xiaohou and Qin Hao said to each other.
In biology classes at the High School Affiliated to Renmin University of China in Beijing, students don't use pictures, videos or even microscopes to learn about the structure of blood cells in circulatory systems.
Yuan Quance, a student of the Emerald City Branch of Beijing Primary School, began to learn programming by using Scratch - a coding tool developed by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology - more than four months ago.
The Ray Wu Prize 2018 was recently awarded to 10 PhD candidates from China and Singapore for excellence in life-sciences research.
Feng Zikai, the late writer, painter, music educator and translator, is among modern China's most celebrated cultural figures.
A panda and a beaver join together as the two central images on the wall of a tennis court at the Canadian embassy in Beijing, created on Oct 20 by a group of four graffiti artists from Wuhan, Hubei province, with a Canadian counterpart who's based in Beijing.
Over a century ago, author Liu E described Jinan in his novel, The Travel Journal of Lao Can, as a place where "springs bubble in every yard, and weeping willows surround every household".
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