The summer weather may have been unbearably hot at times, but even this has not deterred many people from exploring the nooks and crannies of Shanghai through walking tours.
In the eyes of a layperson, carving oracle bone inscriptions might seem quite a boring job, as it is slow and meticulous.
One summer night in 2022, pianist Luo Wei was taking a walk in the garden near her home. The music playing on her phone was ambient and random.
Imagine that on your first trip to a foreign country as a teenager — be it Italy, Greece or Germany — and you are tasked with performing a play for a local audience in their language.
A scorching summer evening and people gather at roadside restaurants, order spicy crayfish and bottles of ice-cold beer, enjoying their meal and a good time with friends.
On an overcast, windy morning in late July, standing in the arid Gobi Desert of Dunhuang city, Northwest China’s Gansu province, was a test in its own right; the air was dry and hot. What greeted the eye was nothing but an endless wavy terrain formed by sand and rocks.
In 1990, when the 11th Asian Games was going to be held in Beijing — the first time a Chinese city hosted the event — the flame was lit at the foot of the Nyainqentanglha mountain in Tibet by a 15-year-old Tibetan girl named Dawa Yangzom.
"Can I ask a big favor?" Prince Albert II of Monaco asked a young Chinese craftsman standing behind a booth with various dough figurines on display.
A special table tennis match was held at Shenyang Jianzhu University (SJU) in Shenyang, Northeast China's Liaoning province, on July 18.
At present, tree-hugging — together with city walking and walking dogs for other people — have become the latest ways for youngsters to heal themselves.
Young people play a vital role in promoting world progress and global sustainable development, and the China Daily Model United Nations Conference (CDMUN) offers a platform that helps youth grow into upcoming talents of international communication.
On July 13, the Beijing Public Security Bureau announced that it has punished nine ticket scalpers who snapped up a number of free tickets to the National Museum of China and sold them to tourists.