The "talent supermarket" has not only attracted more young people to return home to start businesses and find jobs, but also boosted local economic development and injected new vitality into rural vitalization.
A top body in science and technology — the World Laureates Association High School League — which consists of China's leading high schools, was established in Shanghai recently to boost the appeal of science, as well as to achieve enhanced sci-tech self-reliance and strength.
A recent forum was held in Beijing to address topics on youth empowerment through equipping students with sustainable development competency.
The talent show "Campus" invited 20 dance clubs from higher education institutions to go through rounds of competitions.
Buoyed by robust Spring Festival holiday ticket sales, China's 2023 box office hit 10 billion yuan ($1.48 billion) on Tuesday, the earliest date the milestone figure has ever been reached.
The sci-fi blockbuster The Wandering Earth II has not only raked in a whopping box office, but also aroused much attention on science and technologies that appeared in the movie, including space elevators, quantum computers, and nuclear fusions.
BEIJING, Jan 30 (Xinhua) -- Chinese people celebrating the Spring Festival this year have been treated to several movie blockbusters that display cultural confidence, with a distinctive Chinese spirit that resonates deeply with audiences.
A 3,000-year-old bronze vessel is now on show in Harbin, Heilongjiang province, at Hu Ying: New Age, Different Fate, an exhibition lasting through April 1. The artifact was added to the National Museum of China's collection and was displayed for public viewing in 2018. The object stands as a fine example of the casting of ceremonial bronzes in ancient China and relevant rituals and hierarchy of the time.
Imprint, an exhibition now ongoing at Tsinghua University Art Museum, reviews the evolution of jewels and aesthetics throughout the 20th century.
Wildlife returns as patrols ensure the protection of a scenic national park in Qinghai.
Yuxian's paper-cutting has a history stretching further than the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644). The art form developed from the tradition of pasting up paper-cuts to bring good fortune to the family, as well as to decorate windows.
To master paper-cutting, 68-year-old Liu Jinglan has been practicing for six decades. She is an inheritor of Baotou-style paper-cutting, named after the city in Inner Mongolia autonomous region where it originated.