Pepsi to market smartphones and accessories in China only
Pepsi is working with a licensing partner to bring a line of mobile phones and accessories to China in the next few months.
Read MoreShould English be taken out of China’s gaokao?
Gu Mingyuan, president of the Chinese Society of Education, told an education forum that English would be taken out of the national college-entrance exam, in a new reform plan to be implemented in 2017, which triggered a debate about learning English.
Read MoreCoal mines in China attach more importance to life safety
Focus on China's coal mines, last year 931 miners were killed in coal-mine accidents. It was the 12th year in a row in which the death toll reportedly fell.
Read MoreInfluences of the cyber subculture on Chinese language
Cyber subculture refers to the popular cyber culture, a kind of marginal culture characterized by its unique aesthetics and value.
Read MoreHuge contrasts in the ways how America and China see the world
For China and America have profoundly different ways of looking at the world. I see five big contrasts.
Read MoreChina becomes the biggest global investor in green technology
China is worried about climate change, and is now the biggest global investor in green technology.
Read MoreJD.com opens its first U.S. office in Silicon Valley
The e-commerce company, JD.com, one of China's largest with 118 million active users, opened its first office in Silicon Valley.
Read MoreChinese students bring new business to urban economy in U.S.
Libby Tyler, Urbana's economic development director, said the increase in international students has definitely fueled a lot of development in Campustown and elsewhere.
Read MoreWhy are Chinese so fanatically interested in ‘China’s Mona Lisa’?
Unlike most visitors, this small army had come with only one goal: to see "Along the River During the Qingming Festival," an early 12th-century painted scroll considered so iconic that it is often called "China's Mona Lisa."
Read MoreDanWatch: Chinese students forced into internships in HP and Dell factories
According to an investigation released this week, thousands of Chinese students sent by their schools to the assembly lines of some of the world's biggest electronics manufacturers in China to make servers .
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