Papke, who is from the Bonifatius Hospital in Lingen of Germany, has
Parcel select is the last-mile service that gets packages across the finish line to customers’ homes. It’s one of several price increases across USPS’s business that will take effect Jan. 27, 2019, if approved by regulators. The financially troubled institution says the “new rates will keep the Postal Service competitive while providing the agency with needed revenue.”
Patients consult medical workers at Tongji Hospital affiliated with the Tongji Medical College of Huazhong University of Science and Technology, in Wuhan, Central China's Hubei province. [Photo provided to chinadaily.com.cn]
Pakistan could again be eligible next year for CSF.
Pan Suiming, a professor at the Institute of Sexuality and Gender at Renmin University of China, argued that China's '90s generation-people 19 to 28-is actually more sexually active than their predecessors.
Pang Chaoran, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of International Trade and Economic Cooperation, said the shortened negative list is in line with laws and regulations, dynamically reflecting changes in the domestic regulatory system. "It will help to stabilize the expectations of market entities on China's policies and yield high development dividends."
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Passengers board a high speed train in Cangzhou, Hebei province. Temasek's recent major investments in China include the Beijing-Shanghai High-Speed Railway. [Photo/Xinhua]
Passengers board a flight bound for Chongqing at Fuyang Xiguan Airport in Anhui province on Monday. [WANG BIAO/FOR CHINA DAILY]
Pang Jiangqian, the bureau's spokeswoman, said the production value of Beijing's high-technology industries accounted for 23.7 percent of the city's total GDP in the first half. Research and development fees of large and medium enterprises in the first five months increased 5.1 percent year-on-year. There were 11,000 new high-tech enterprises established in Zhongguancun High-Tech Park from January to May, increasing 84.7 percent year-on-year.
PARIS-Their heroic quest to bring down fugitive Nazis such as the "butcher of Lyon" is widely known. But there's a lot more to the steely, yet unassuming, married duo of Nazi hunters Beate and Serge Klarsfeld, and a new exhibition in Paris is looking to tell that tale.The French capital's Shoah Memorial is hosting the world's first-ever exhibition into their story. Using personal archives, including previously unseen video, Beate and Serge Klarsfeld, Fighters for Memory seeks to explain the couple's fight to a new generation. It runs through April 29.The aim of the exhibition, say the organizers, is to show how Beate, 78, and Serge, 82, did much more than hunt Nazis, as is often portrayed in the media and in a 1986 film starring the late Farrah Fawcett. Notably, the devoted husband-and-wife team, married since 1963, played a pivotal role in understanding the horrors of the Final Solution in occupied France."Yes, parts of their story are known," curator Olivier Lalieu says. "But we are showing that they are not just Nazi hunters... Serge is a historian and pioneer in the writing about the persecution of Jews. They added much to our understanding of what happened during the Holocaust."The exhibition's timing was chosen carefully, coming five decades since Beate gained international attention for exposing the Nazi ties of West German Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger in 1968, and four decades after the publishing of Serge's book, Memorial of the Deportation of French Jews.Objects steeped in memory add fresh color to their story, such as the lock that Beate used to chain herself to a La Paz bench in a famed 1972 protest against the "butcher of Lyon", Klaus Barbie.The exhibition also seeks to shed light on the personal dimension to Serge Klarsfeld's fight against impunity for perpetrators of the Holocaust. A French Jew, he managed to escape the Gestapo in Nice in 1943. His father, Arno, was captured and deported to the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp, where he died.During an interview, Serge Klarsfeld solemnly located his father's name on the wall at the Shoah Memorial. It lists the names of 76,000 Jews who were deported from France as part of the Nazi plan to eradicate Jews of Europe."We must continue fighting every day," he says.The couple hopes that future generations can take something away from their activism against extremism and hatred and quell the rise of the far right."Young people will perhaps find an example in what we did, hopefully in this retrospective," Serge says.As for the media attention, they're used to it following the movies, a myriad documentaries and a swathe of articles.The real emotion, according to Serge, is being present at the Shoah Memorial and alongside the millions of documents it houses that the Nazi-hunting couple relied on to carry out their investigations and protests around the world.Those archives, bristling with vital information, helped the Klarsfelds among other things bring justice to former Nazis Kurt Lischka, Herbert Hagen and Ernst Heinrichsohn, who were convicted in Cologne in 1980 over the deportation and murder of 40,000 French Jews."We always paid homage to the memorial because they helped us with archives. And today, it is the memorial that pays homage to us when we are old," Serge says, looking to his wife.