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中国人喝咖啡,一点都不崇洋媚外_Kopi

中国人喝咖啡,一点都不崇洋媚外_Kopi
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Salt marsh fairy circles go from rings to bullseyes to adapt to stress

Quan-Xing Liu The most famous so-called fairy circles are grass-ringed patches of barren earth found in Namibia and Australia. Their lesser-known cousins – transient rings of plants found in Chinese salt marshes –could help explain why these patterns naturally form and may be indicators of ecosystems resilient to climate change. Previous research has shown that some self-organising patterns in nature provide insights into ecosystem resilience. But transient ones that change shape over time – for example, from spots to rings and then to concentric rings – haven’t been studied as much as persistent ones like fairy circles that mostly stay the same.

China issues fresh warnings on studying in Australia

China issues fresh warnings on studying in Australia Xu Keyue Published: Feb 05, 2021 02:07 PM Updated: Feb 05, 2021 09:03 PM Photo:VCGChina’s Ministry of Education (MOE) issued a fresh warning on studying in Australia due to the recent anti-Chinese attacks in the country and the serious COVID-19 pandemic, a move that experts believe is prompt and necessary for the safety of Chinese students and also a result of the damaged and deteriorating China-Australia relations.  In the announcement issued on Friday, the MOE warned Chinese students to make a full risk assessment and consider carefully whether to go or return to Australia to study. 

Shanghai s cinephiles once secretly loved Hollywood Now Chinese films dominate its silver screens

Shanghai s cinephiles once secretly loved Hollywood. Now Chinese films dominate its silver screens Alice Su © (STR/AFP via Getty Images) People in Wuhan, China, watch a movie last July on the first day of the reopening of cinemas after the coronavirus outbreak. (STR/AFP via Getty Images) Young couples in cashmere coats and surgical masks stood recently in neon light outside the Cathay Theater, its art deco facade a remnant of the Shanghai of nearly a century ago, when a wave of cinemas arose amid a city run by gangsters and colonialists. If you were an expat back then, it was a romantic time of intrigue in a town carved into French, British and American sectors. If you were Chinese, you were a second-class citizen in your own land. There were few more defining symbols of who was on top than in Shanghai s movie houses, where the indelible notions of the West high society and capitalism played out in black and white.

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