Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Malaysia holds "My Lovely Mum" contest on Mother's Day

Nordaliya, 38 years old from Kuala Lumpur, poses after she won the champion during "My Lovely Mum" contest in Serdang of Selangor State, Malaysia, May 10, 2009. A shopping mall held the contest to celebrate the Mothers Day. (Xinhua/Chong Voon Chung)


Nordaliya, 38 years old from Kuala
Lumpur, poses after she won the champion during "My Lovely Mum" contest in
Serdang of Selangor State, Malaysia, May 10, 2009. A shopping mall held
the contest to celebrate the Mother's Day. (Xinhua/Chong Voon
Chung)
Photo
Gallery








Nordaliya (C) poses with the runner-up Hew Pin Yik (R) and the 2nd runner-up Tai Yen Tiang (L) after she won the champion during "My Lovely Mum" contest in Serdang of Selangor State, Malaysia, May 10, 2009. A shopping mall held the contest to celebrate the Mothers Day. (Xinhua/Chong Voon Chung)


Nordaliya (C) poses with the runner-up
Hew Pin Yik (R) and the 2nd runner-up Tai Yen Tiang (L) after she won the
champion during "My Lovely Mum" contest in Serdang of Selangor State,
Malaysia, May 10, 2009. A shopping mall held the contest to celebrate the
Mother's Day. (Xinhua/Chong Voon Chung)
Photo Gallery


China vows severe penalties in college-admissions ID fraud case

by Xinhua writers Fu Shuangqi and Wu Jing


BEIJING, May 12 (Xinhua) -- The Ministry of Education pledged Tuesday to severely punish those involved in a scandal in which a former police officer sent his daughter to college under the name of a classmate.

This was the ministry's first response to the scandal, which became public after media reports last week.

Luo Caixia, 23, from central China's Hunan Province, was the victim of an identity fraud by the family of her high school classmate Wang Jiajun.

Wang's family allegedly used Luo's national ID card number, applied using her name to Guizhou Normal University, intercepted the admissions letter and enrolled their daughter in her name in 2004.

Luo herself, unaware of the scheme, enrolled at Tianjin Normal University a year later.

"The ministry has ordered local education administrators to cooperate with the police for a quick, effective investigation," a senior ministry official who declined to be identified told Xinhua.

"This was a major infraction of the rules by Wang and others involved, and the incident was a malicious one that seriously hurt Luo Caixia," the official said.

The investigation was still going on, she said. "Education officials who are found violating the rules will receive severe punishment and handed over to prosecutors if they broke the law."

Wang Zhengrong, Wang Jiajun's father, has been detained on allegations that he helped his daughter enter college by stealing the other girl's ID.

He was held on suspicion of forging official documents, certificates and seals, according to the team of officials from the disciplinary, police and education authorities in Hunan Province.

Wang Zhengrong was the head of a township government in Shaodong County when he allegedly committed the ID theft in 2004 and later served as commissar in the public security bureau of neighboring Longhui County.

Zhang Wendi, class advisor to both girls when they were in high school, was also under investigation for allegedly facilitating the ID theft.

The ministry official also said that a senior teacher, Tang Kunxiong, at Guizhou Normal University was found to have helped Wang Jiajun get the admission letter.

"Tang has broken our rules and people like him will receive severe punishment accordingly," she said.

Luo, still in college, first noticed something was wrong this March after she applied for a bank card in Tianjin. She was told by a clerk that her ID card had already been registered with the photo of another girl, who looked like her high school classmate Wang.

Wang Jiajun, meanwhile, had graduated and was working in the southern metropolis of Guangzhou.

"Once the investigation ends, Luo's problems will be solved," the ministry official said.

Wang's degree had been revoked, she added.

The incident reflects loopholes in the education system, said Li Qiang, dean of School of Humanities and Social Sciences at Tsinghua University.

The two Wangs would not have succeeded if everything was ruled by law, Li said.

"The incident happened in 2004. It is less likely to happen no was we adopted a nationwide database of college enrollment in 2005," said the official.

Now, students can apply for college, follow the enrollment procedure and check the results on website http://gaokao.chsi.com.cn. Authorities and universities can doublecheck the enrollments on line as well.

"The ministry welcomes the public and media to supervise the work and report such cases. We will investigate every case and publicize the results," the official said.

Liu Xiang teaches quake students to run hurdles ahead of quake anniversary

Special Report: 1st Anniversary of Wenchuan
Earthquake









Chinese hurdler Liu Xiang waves a flag at a primary school in quake-hit Beichuan county, southwest China's Sichuan province, Monday May 11, 2009.(Xinhua Photo)
Photo Gallery


CHENGDU, May 11 (Xinhua) -- Chinese hurdler Liu Xiang
Monday visited students in a primary school in Beichuan County, a hard-hit area
in last year's devastating May 12 earthquake, and showed them how to run
hurdles.

Liu, 25 and once the world champion of 110-meter
hurdling, made his visit to Sichuan Province to mark the first anniversary of
the disaster, which falls on Tuesday.

The gold medalist in the Athens Olympic Games in 2004
had a physical education class with students of Ping'an Hope Primary School on a
40-meter-long and 4-meter-wide aisle between the school's prefabricated
buildings.

Surrounded by about 100 pupils, Liu spoke about various methods for running hurdles and demonstrated how to do it right for the pupils in about 20 minutes.








Chinese hurdler Liu Xiang shows quake zone pupils how to hurdle at a primary school in Beichuan county, southwest China's Sichuan province, Monday May 11, 2009. (Xinhua Photo)
Photo Gallery




Liu also showed students how to do standard leg lifts
when he saw some of them were not doing well enough.

He said it would not be a show of hurdling before his
visit to the school.

"It is a memorable experience for children, even for
me, to have these lessons with a world champion," said Luo, a teacher at the
school.

Liu said before leaving that the time with the
children was too short and promised to return.

Liu has been in training since he returned to
Shanghai in March after three months in the United States, where he underwent
surgery on his right ankle tendon in December.

His right ankle injury forced him out of the 2008
Beijing Olympic Games despite high hopes for a gold medal in his home country,
and the world is now waiting to see his comeback on the track.

The worst quake in decades left 68,712 people dead
and another 17,921 missing in southwest China.











Chinese hurdler Liu Xiang shows quake zone pupils how to hurdle at a primary school in Beichuan county, southwest China's Sichuan province, Monday May 11, 2009.(Xinhua Photo)
Photo Gallery

China begins rebuilding quake-devastated Qiang minority group museum

MAOXIAN, Sichuan, May 12 (Xinhua) -- Reconstruction of a museum of the
ancient ethnic group Qiang, which was devastated in the massive earthquake a
year ago, began here Tuesday.

With an investment of 138.68 million yuan (20.3 million U.S. dollars), the
new museum would cover 4 hectares with a floor space of 10,000 square meters,
said Wang Defeng, director of the culture bureau in Maoxian County, Sichuan
Province.

Work will be finished in two years, after which all the collections that
belong to the museum but were transferred to the provincial capital Chengdu
after the quake will return, along with800 items collected during the past year.

Among the 87,000 people killed or missing in the quake, about 30,000 were
from the Qiang minority, or 10 percent of the ethnic group whose history
stretches back at least 3,000 years.

The Qiang are famous for their unique language, customs, arts and religious
beliefs. They are also known for their stone homes, often three or four stories
tall. About 80 percent of the Qiang people are in the quake-hit areas of
Maoxian, Wenchuan, and Beichuan counties.

During the quake, the museum in Maoxian was seriously damaged and 1,013
items from its collections were destroyed or damaged.

Shan Jixiang, director of the State Administration of Cultural Heritage,
said the rebuilding of the museum was an important step in preserving the Qiang
culture. Shan said the museum was the largest cultural facility under
construction in Aba Prefecture, which administers Maoxian and Wenchuan.

More than 10,000 local residents, dressed in traditional costumes, attended
the ground-breaking ceremony.


Special Report: 1st Anniversary of Wenchuan
Earthquake




Lincoln Center celebrates 50th anniversary

BEIJING, May 12 (Xinhuanet) -- New York's famed
Lincoln Center celebrated its 50th anniversary Monday with Aaron Copland's
"Fanfare for the Common Man."


The artistic and political extravaganza began in the
newly renovated Alice Tully Hall, which reopened in February after a
159-million-U.S. dollar, 22-month renovation.

Trumpet players from the Juilliard School of Music
performed in front of the hall as hundreds of guests streamed inside.

The center was built as the first major cultural
complex in the United States and has become the world's largest performance
center.

The brass section of the Philharmonic, the nation's
oldest orchestra, performed Copland's work under the baton of its new music
director, Alan Gilbert. The program also included Gilbert conducting the
Juilliard Orchestra playing the overture from Mozart's "The Marriage of Figaro."

Violin virtuoso Itzhak Perlman performed the final
movement from Mendelssohn's "Octet in E-flat, Op. 20" with alumni from the music
program he founded.

Others participating in ceremonies included among
others New York's Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Governor David Paterson, and
performers such as violin great Itzhak Perlman, jazz trumpeter Wynton Marsalis.

(Agencies)