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lyguo
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4Â¥2010-02-28 10:35:15
luxinweijj
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ysm56789(½ð±Ò+1):¹ÄÀøÓ¦Öú 2010-02-28 08:52
lyguo(½ð±Ò+50): 2010-02-28 10:32
ysm56789(½ð±Ò+1):¹ÄÀøÓ¦Öú 2010-02-28 08:52
lyguo(½ð±Ò+50): 2010-02-28 10:32
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·¿¼ÛÉÏÕÇ The ever-rising price of property in China has become cause of worry for an increasing number of people, shows a survey. Despite the measures taken last year to cool down the overheatedreal estate market, fewer people now believe that the prices would stabilize in the near future. Only one-fifth of the 2,582 people polled by China Youth Daily's social research centre, sina.com and ePanel Marketing Research & Consulting Co were confident that the government's steps would check the trend. Their percentage was 60 in a similar survey conducted only two years ago. The poll results announced yesterday showed another significant change: instead of blaming real estate investors for raising the prices to earn huge profits, as respondents had done two years ago, more people now blame the government's vulnerability in macro-control measures for the malaise. The rising demand and the concurrent raising of prices by investors are to blame, said Bao Zonghua, president of China Real Estate and Housing Research Association. "And the macro-control measures need time to take effect." Almost all the respondents said there was a "bubble" in the real estate market, with nearly half being certain that it would burst in 10 years. But almost 40 percent believe that the "bubble" would never burst. A whopping 80 percent believe that real estate prices would continue to rise this year, and 30 percent fear it would do so at a greater pace. »òÕßÕâÑùд Topic:Booming House price affect College student Thesis: The fast moving economic of our country need college student elite themselves. I.Reasons for continuely raising price of house. A,Population B.Economic improvment; C.Strong and steady social surroundings. 2,It cause affects to college students,so we must do: A.Acquire more knowledge; B.Becoming more practical; C.Changing our job-selecting minds 3,Conclusion: Only we chang ourselves can we meet the social needs and have a happy life. ¹ØÓÚÂÛÎijϮµÄûÓÐÕÒµ½£¬×Ô¼ºÐ´µÄˮƽ²»Ò»¶¨ÓÐÄãͬѧ¸ß£¬¾Í²»ÏÖÁË |
2Â¥2010-02-27 19:14:53
ysm56789
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lyguo(½ð±Ò+60):²»´í£¬¶¼ÊǸßÊÖ£¬Ð»Ð» 2010-02-28 23:50
ÎÒÀ´°ïÄã²¹ÉÏÁíÒ»¸öÂÛÎÄØâÇÔ°É£¡![]() Chinese academics have long been accused of stealing the ideas of others, but pinning specific charges on offending professors used to be difficult because of lax intellectual property rights laws and a culture of impunity. Now, the Internet has made it harder for plagiarists to hide their crimes, and many universities are beefing up their policies in an effort to discourage the practice. Last month, Zhou Ye Zhong, a professor at Wuhan University in central Hubei Province and a prominent adviser to the Communist Party, was accused of copying large sections of a book by Wang Tiancheng, a former Peking University professor who spent five years in jail during the early 1990s for trying to form an independent political party. The discovery was made after excerpts of Zhou's work were widely published on Chinese websites. Zhou has not been disciplined. A recent survey of 160 academics by the China Daily, an English-language, government-owned newspaper, found that 60 percent said they had plagiarized some part of their work. In summary, a number of high-profile plagiarism cases among professors have roiled the academic world in China, shedding new light on a practice that has been quietly plaguing the country's university system. It is a time for all the researchers and government to take action now and reduce any further academic corruption. |

5Â¥2010-02-28 13:30:27













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