Current Location: Home » Full Text Search
Your search : [ author:LIN LU] Total 397 Search Results,Processed in 0.076 second(s)
-
321. Private Schools Make a Comeback
Higher education has traditionally been a privelege reserved for China's most gifted students. Since the new market economy calls for a well-educated work force, however, private schools are
Author: staff reporter LU HUI Year 1993 Issue 8 PDF HTML
-
322. Music-Loving Get Their Fill
It's the most popular station in Beijing - the 24-hour music, culture and call-in Beijing Music Radio.AFTER WORK the first thing Xiao Liu does is to turn on his radio, which is always set at 94.5 MHz
Author: staff reporter LU HUI Year 1993 Issue 10 PDF HTML
-
323. Giving Pupils a Break
Reform of the school system relieves pupils from having to take entrance exams to get into key junior middle schools - but not everyone is happy with the change.EARLY IN the morning, as adults sleep
Author: staff reporter LU HUI Year 1993 Issue 10 PDF HTML
-
324. China's Great Gastronomical Revolution
What made traditional Chinese cuisine so great was not the simple fact that people in the Middle Kingdom like to eat, but that they like to eat well. Today, after years lost in the culinary wilderness
Author: staff reporter LU HUI Year 1994 Issue 4 PDF HTML
-
325. Baby Maomao Sues Her Father
WHEN MAOMAO was only three months old, she took her own father to court. Needless to say, this caused a sensation in Shanghai, where her father lived.Actually, "Maomao" was only a temporary name for
Author: CAO YONG'AN and LU BIN Year 1994 Issue 4 PDF HTML
-
326. Senior Citizens in Shanghai: An Investigation
For those entering their "sunset years," every moment counts, which is why it is important to find out what is needed to make those moments worth living.SHANGHAI IS home to 2,058,-000 people over the
Author: CHEN XINXIN and LU JIANMIN Year 1994 Issue 7 PDF HTML
-
327. Children Without Parents
The new and sudden affluence in China was bound to have its victims, those with no place in the fast-paced society of today. The weakest and saddest among these are homeless, parentless children, of
Author: staff reporter LU HUI Year 1994 Issue 9 PDF HTML
-
328. The Personnel Market in China
"Headhunters" in search of top-grade administrators and executives are making their appearance in China - without, at the moment, making much "headway." The old system is still too firmly in place.A
Author: staff reporter LU HUI Year 1994 Issue 10 PDF HTML
-
329. Yantai and Weihai, Shandong's New Economic Powerhouses
Shandong, which used to be one of the poorest areas in China, is pinning its hopes for prosperity on two of its coastal cities. So far, the province seems to have made the right choice.IT LOOKS as if
Author: staff reporter LU HUI Year 1995 Issue 2 PDF HTML
-
330. Ancient-Coin Collector Lang Taifu
Chinese today all seem to be obsessed with money, as any cynic will tell you, but China Today is very pleased to present a man whose obsession is a healthy one.ONE OF the photos in this month's issue
Author: LU RONGZHANG & NIE XIAOLING Year 1995 Issue 6 PDF HTML