On April 22, 2015, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, one of the oldest and most prestigious honorary societies in the US and a leading center for independent policy research, announced its newly elected members.
Hong Kong will experience a lackluster luxury retail performance over the three-day May Day holiday that starts on Friday, and the city might be gradually losing its allure as the region’s shopping paradise, according to an analyst.
Chance, or "luck", has played an important role in many breakthrough scientific discoveries, and Lady Fortune was up to her old tricks again recently as she helped produce one of the country's most important zoological discoveries of the decade — the world's newest monkey.
China voiced its opposition on Thursday to "any interference by regional outsiders" in disputes between the country and its neighbors.
China North Railway and China South Railway companies reportedly are looking at acquiring a controlling stake in Bombardier Inc's railway unit, but Canada could act to block a sale to gain political support in the company's home province of Quebec, according to a former Canadian diplomat in China.
A group of young people from Canada recently took an unforgettable train ride through China's Guangdong Province.
A photo exhibition featuring more than 500 pictures from the Anti-Japanese War will be held in New York on Aug 15, commemorating the 70th anniversary of the war's end.
China Construction America, or CCA, opens its Latin American Regional Headquarters in Panama City on Tuesday, marking a new milestone in the company's 30-year history of offering superior construction and real estate services in the Americas.
China needs to reconstruct its cultural foundations in order to develop into the innovation economy it is striving to become, according to a distinguished Chinese professor speaking at the China-US Business Forum on Finance and Innovation held at the New York Public Library on Wednesday.
Asian-American community leaders express annoyance at Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's speech at the US Congress on Wednesday and said the new defense guidelines might bring instability to the South China Sea.
Outside the US Capitol on Wednesday, a congressman told a survivor of the "comfort women" era to remain calm.
When Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe stepped into the well of the US Capitol on Wednesday, reminders of his country's World War II-era military aggression were right outside. Abe instead chose to focus on future military matters - an enhanced alliance with the United States.
Shipping bankruptcy strands ships, roils maritime cargo industry