NEWSPlus Radio

【专题】慢速英语(美音版)2015-03-17


Listen Later

This is NEWS Plus Special English. I'm Liu Yan in Beijing. Here is the news.

A new set of guidelines is unveiled to regulate China's vast museum sector, but experts say more needs to be done.

In China, finding a museum has seldom been a problem. But other than the big and established ones, many fail to be taken seriously by visitors because they don't have the resources to manage their collections or haven't been officially registered as museums.

Now, change is afoot. Chinese Premier Li Keqiang set the course to make the country's museum sector less chaotic. He has signed China's first regulation of museums. The law is effective on March 20.

The new rules demand all museums to have collection reservation areas, complete management systems and approval documents.

Cultural officials hailed the law as a great breakthrough because it provides equal status to State-owned museums and private ones. The two are no longer treated differently in terms of duties, qualifications, financial support or supervision.

China had 4,000 registered museums by the end of 2013. Among them, 800 were privately owned.

All the museums together attracted more than 600 million visitors in 2013.
This is NEWS Plus Special English.

Beijing's big Chinese-character slogans and banners have been criticized as creating confusion about the city's international image. The slogans and banners are seen at many intersections and subway stations.

Adding to the confusion are many foreign-language signs, mostly in English. Many of the signs appear with grammatical mistakes, wrong information or words that might be misunderstood.

An official for China's overseas Chinese-language teaching program, Xu Lin is among the country's political advisers who were meeting in Beijing. Xu says slogans and banners in public places stem from the political campaigns half a century ago. They are usually ideologically charged and don't fit Beijing's current identity as an open, dynamic international city.

She says China's image depends heavily on Beijing. The city is host to more than 100,000 foreign residents, 4 million overseas visitors, and many multinational corporations and international businesses.

She says Beijing should make rules and offer guidance regarding posters and banners in public places. She suggested the city should phase out those that are highly ideological or confusing.

You are listening to NEWS Plus Special English. I'm Liu Yan in Beijing.

The world's biggest tourism trade fair is under way with a workshop on Chinese outbound tourism in Berlin, Germany.

The discussion at the international tourism fair focused on China's "second wave of outbound tourists", and their new destinations and consumption patterns.

Panelists from Europe and Asia exchanged views on the issue of "how can established destinations react, and what will the future of Chinese outbound tourism look like".

Last year, the number of Chinese tourists traveling abroad increased by 20 percent year-on-year to 110 million.

The United Nations World Tourism Organization, based in Madrid, Spain, says China is the world's largest outbound market since 2012.

During the recent Chinese Lunar New Year holiday last month, 5 million Chinese visitors travelled to Thailand, Japan, the United States and Europe.

That's around 10 percent more than during the previous year's festival.
The tourism sector in European countries is paying greater attention to Chinese tourists' shopping habits and consumption. At 12 of its retail outlets across Europe, London-based McArthurGlen Group launched a series of promotions during the Spring Festival holiday. It advertised on Chinese social media and provided discounts in its stores.

In New York, the high-end department store Bloomingdale's put up decorations featuring a giant Chinese coin towering above a blanket of red flowers.

This is NEWS Plus Special English.

Historical photos depicting the life of the earliest Chinese immigrants in the United States are on display at an art center in Houston's Chinatown.

The exhibition is organized by a local Chinese community group. It features the life of the immigrants who worked as coolies, or laborers, and their descendants.

The first wave of Chinese Americans came to the United States during the latter half of the 19th century. They were mostly from south China's Guangdong Province. The immigrants helped build the first transcontinental railroad, worked in the southern plantations after the American Civil War, and participated in setting up California's agriculture and fisheries.

Those first generations of Chinese Americans made their due contribution to the American society but often suffered discrimination and humiliation.

In 1882, the United States Congress passed the Chinese Exclusion Act. The law prohibited immigration from China for the following decade. The law was extended 10 years later and eventually lasted for more than 50 years.

The U.S. House of Representatives passed a resolution in 2012, apologizing for the discriminating laws and the unjust treatment the Chinese American laborers received.

In May last year, the Chinese immigrants who worked on the transcontinental railroad were honored, by being included in the U.S. Department of Labor's Hall of Honor in Washington, D.C.

More than 12,000 Chinese laborers are the first Asian-Americans to be introduced into the Hall since its creation in 1988.
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

NEWSPlus RadioBy NEWSPlus Radio

  • 3.3
  • 3.3
  • 3.3
  • 3.3
  • 3.3

3.3

7 ratings


More shows like NEWSPlus Radio

View all
Speak English with ESLPod.com - Learn English Fast by ESLPod.com

Speak English with ESLPod.com - Learn English Fast

2,557 Listeners

IELTS Energy English 7+ by Lindsay McMahon, Jessica Beck, Aubrey Carter

IELTS Energy English 7+

422 Listeners

潘吉Jenny告诉你|学英语聊美国|开言英语 · Podcast by OpenLanguage 英语

潘吉Jenny告诉你|学英语聊美国|开言英语 · Podcast

440 Listeners

All Ears English Podcast by Lindsay McMahon and Michelle Kaplan

All Ears English Podcast

2,310 Listeners

Daily Easy English Expression Podcast by Coach Shane

Daily Easy English Expression Podcast

838 Listeners

FM49830 by FM49830

FM49830

4 Listeners

LaimingLuo by LaimingLuo

LaimingLuo

1 Listeners

凹凸电波 by 凹凸电波

凹凸电波

430 Listeners

雅思口语IELTS English2025 by 英语口语家森Jason

雅思口语IELTS English2025

25 Listeners

一席英语·脱口秀:老外来了 by 一席英语

一席英语·脱口秀:老外来了

47 Listeners

英语每日一听 | 每天少于5分钟 by 晨听英语

英语每日一听 | 每天少于5分钟

6 Listeners

姜思达 by 姜思达

姜思达

234 Listeners

高效磨耳朵 | 最好的英语听力资源 by 英语磨耳朵

高效磨耳朵 | 最好的英语听力资源

63 Listeners

声动早咖啡 by 声动活泼

声动早咖啡

295 Listeners

天真不天真 by 杨天真本真

天真不天真

286 Listeners

English Learning Podcast by EnglishPod

English Learning Podcast

46 Listeners

沉浸式学习背景音乐 | 学习工作专注力集中轻音乐 by 云边书静社

沉浸式学习背景音乐 | 学习工作专注力集中轻音乐

1 Listeners