IN BRIEF (Page 2)
Updated: 2012-08-24 08:26
(China Daily)
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A young musician performs near the Super Brand Mall in Shanghai. Provided to China Daily |
Society
Legit status for performers
Street performers in Shanghai will soon be able to play their fiddles, drums and guitars and create art and crafts without being bothered by the police or urban management officers.
The city plans to launch an administrative system that will allow street performers to show their talents legitimately. "We'll be the first city in China to open arms to street-side performers," said Luo Huaizhen, a playwright who for the last eight years has urged the Shanghai People's Congress to allow street performers.
On Aug 20, the city's cultural administration decided to conduct a trial operation of street performers management. The Shanghai Municipal Administration of Culture, Radio, Film and TV plans to select some public areas where the performers can set up.
Leisure
Lhasa tops happiness list
Lhasa, the city of sunlight, topped an annual survey of residents' sense of happiness in Chinese cities.
The capital of the Tibet autonomous region has been ranked top in the survey conducted by China Central Television for five consecutive years.
In this year's list, Lhasa was followed by Taiyuan, capital of Shanxi province, Hefei, capital of Anhui province, Tianjin, Changsha, capital of Hunan province, and Hohhot, capital of the Inner Mongolia autonomous region.
The capital cities where residents have the most leisure time include Guiyang, Haikou, Guangzhou, Hangzhou, Lhasa, Chengdu and Chongqing.
Around 100,000 households from 104 cities were polled for the survey.
The results showed income level most affected people's sense of well being (55.5 percent), followed by health (48.9 percent) and quality of marriage or love life (32 percent).
Legal
Superstitions are out of luck
Beijing has vowed to prohibit the avoidance of "unlucky" numbers, normally deemed to include 4, 13 and 14, in the registration of addresses, an official with the city's quality watchdog says.
The numbers of storied buildings, units and door plates should be coded and registered in numerical order, and no skipping or selective use of numbers should be allowed, said Zhou Qiaolin, an official with the Beijing Municipal Administration of Quality and Technology Supervision.
She said the prohibition will be included in a criterion for the setting of building nameplates and door-number plates, which is to be implemented on Sept 1. Many Chinese prefer to avoid the number four because it sounds almost exactly like the word for death in Mandarin. For this reason, some are willing to pay extra fees to register car plates or phone numbers with the number eight because it sounds similar to the words for "making a fortune".
Labor
Unions target firms over wages
About 95 percent of Fortune 500 companies operating in China will have collective wage bargaining by the end of 2013, a senior union official said.
Approximately 80 percent of the 4,100 enterprises set up by Fortune 500 companies in China had introduced collective bargaining by the end of 2011, said Zhang Jianguo, director of the collective contract department at the All-China Federation of Trade Unions. The target that the federation set in 2011 - 95 percent of Fortune 500 companies to have trade unions to carry out collective wage talks by the end of 2013 - could be reached.
Zhang said in some places the target had already been accomplished.
China Daily
(China Daily 08/24/2012 page2)
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