梅州医院上避孕环需要多少钱-【梅州曙光医院】,梅州曙光医院,梅州轻度宫颈炎症状治疗,梅州什么时间做人工流产,梅州人流和药流哪种好,梅州怎么能让私处更紧致,梅州处女膜修复术时机,梅州急性尿道炎应该如何治疗

BEIJING, May 4 (Xinhua) -- China and Japan "contacted" and exchanged views on the East China Sea issue in Beijing on Tuesday, said a statement from the Chinese Foreign Ministry."The two sides exchanged views on relevant issues, considered the contact beneficial and agreed to continue to maintain contacts and make joint efforts," said the statement.This was the first director general-level, or bureau chief-level, contact since the two countries reached principled consensus on the East China Sea issue in June 2008.
BEIJING, May 21 (Xinhua) -- The growth of China's electronic products industrial value-added output topped 18.2 percent in April year on year, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) said Friday.The rate was 1.3 percentage points lower compared with March, but the ministry did not give detailed figures in the statement posted on its website.The industrial value-added output of the sector rose 21.7 percent in the first four months year on year, the statement said.China's combined exports of electronic goods rose 24.4 percent in April year on year to 267.8 billion yuan (39.2 billion U.S. dollars).Exports of integrated circuits and color TV sets grew 64.4 percent and 54.6 percent, respectively, in the period.

BEIJING, May 10 (Xinhua) -- China's Health Ministry on Monday vowed to ban smoking in all its offices in four months, part of an arduous campaign to curb public smoking around the country.Yang Qing, director with the ministry's community health department, told reporters that hospitals, clinics and other medical institutes nationwide should follow suit to impose strict smoking ban by 2011."No Smoking" signs will be placed in the ministry's conference rooms, lavatories, car parks and stairways while a designated smoking area will be set up outside the office building, the official said.He said the ministry also bans its employees from giving tobacco as gifts -- a rooted tradition in China's office culture. Employees who break the ban will be punished, while those who quit smoking in a year can expect cash rewards.Though Yang did not elaborate how hospitals and clinics under the ministry's supervision should go tobacco-free, it is widely believed that similar policies will be imposed soon among the country's medical institutes.Data from the ministry show China has more than 350 million smokers, mostly men influenced by a macho culture. Doctors with smoking habit have become a prime target of China's tobacco control campaign.Yang said smoking should be banned in all public venues, workplaces and public transport vehicles by 2011, according to the World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, which took effect in 2005.It was signed by the Chinese government in 2003 and ratified by the country's top legislature in 2005. National and local governments ramped up anti-smoking campaigns in recent years, but these were not effective as expected because no strict laws are in place, observers said.Yang said the ministry is now coordinating with the country's lawmakers to push for such legislation.
SHANGHAI, June 5 (Xinhua) -- Cities should facilitate interaction and provide spaces so people can bond, says Chui Huili, director of the Taiwan Pavilion at the Shanghai World Expo.The Taiwan Pavilion, a transparent cube with a huge globe suspended in its center, consists of three layers: a dome-screen cinema showcasing scenes from Taiwan, a platform to "fly lanterns" -- a traditional way to pray for luck, and a huge tree made of bamboo, providing shade for people to sit, chat, taste Kung Fu tea and listen to folk music."Though the Taiwan Pavilion is relatively small, what makes us stand out is that the whole trip is accompanied by guides and we allow in only 40 visitors at most each time, making it possible for each visitor to enjoy their time and space the fullest, in the 20-minute tour," Chiu says.The pavilion, 650 meters wide and about 24 meters high, is mainly made of steel and glass, with the outlines of the island's iconic mountains painted on the facade and water from Taiwan's Sun Moon Lake forming a pool, Chiu says.An elevator first takes you to the third floor for a dome-screen film showcasing tourist attractions in Taiwan including Sun Moon Lake, Ali Mountain and Jade Mountain. Chiu calls it their "future cinema" as spectators could watch three-dimensional images without wearing 3D glasses and get the feeling they were walking in a film.The second floor provides a multimedia lantern-flying ceremony for at most 40 visitors. They can select "wishes" through touching screens and trigger off LED lanterns that light up the center globe. The wishes favored by visitors include "love and peace," "best wishes come true" and "happiness and health."Spiraling down the pavilion, you come to the last stop: a huge banyan tree made of bamboo knitted together. There a Taiwan artist will play the guqin, a traditional musical instrument, while visitors sit chatting and sip Kung Fu tea."The third floor represents technology. The second floor is about cities' application of technology or the connection between technology and cities. But all these should serve the most important things in cities: people's hearts," Chiu says.Chiu believes cities should facilitate interaction between people. "Most villagers keep a big tree in front of their houses in traditional rural Taiwan, providing places for villagers to drink tea, chat and sing or listen to folk songs," Chiu says."Similar places are necessary in cities to bond people together," he says.Zhao Qiang, a visitor from Kaifeng in Henan Province, says, "I felt like I was really walking through Taiwan's sceneries in the dome-screen film ... It was terrific. I will definitely take my family to go sight-seeing in Taiwan after the visit."Zeng Heng, a visitor from Taiwan, queued for almost three hours before entering the Taiwan Pavilion. "The Taiwan Pavilion is small and the most exquisite of all 12 pavilions I've visited. The sky lantern allows visitors to interact with the culture," Zeng says.Chiu believes the Taiwan Pavilion can boost tourism in Taiwan and serve as a remarkable platform for cross-Strait peoples to understand each other better through interaction and exchanges.The Shanghai Expo, opening on May 1, had received 10 million visitors as of midday Saturday, the event's organizers said.
BEIJING, May 6 (Xinhua) -- Beijing police have refuted a rumor that a school attack occurred Thursday morning at a primary school in the city.An Internet post said an attack was carried out at Xiwang Primary School at around 9 a.m. in Sibozi of Beijing's Changping District and the police evacuated all the students on campus."There is no such school in Sibozi. And we never received a report of a school attack," said a spokesman with the Beijing Municipal Public Security Bureau Thursday afternoon.The police have launched an investigation into the source of the rumor, said the spokesman.The rumor came after a series of recent school attacks in China's Fujian, Guangdong, Jiangsu and Shandong provinces.
来源:资阳报