The DPP's Taipei mayoral candidate Lee Ying-yuan (李應元) yesterday announced his educational white paper. He used the occasion to reiterate his opposition to a return to the practice of staging joint college entrance exams.
"The [old-style] joint exams had received a lot of criticism over the past few decades. We cannot go back on [the road of] educational reform," said Lee at a press conference held to announce his educational policies.
Lee's remarks yesterday came in apparent contradiction to the educational policies advocated by his opponent, Taipei Mayor Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九).
PHOTO: GEORGE TSORNG, TAIPEI TIMES
On Friday, Ma announced his educational white paper, proposing to merge the old-style practice of joint exams into the current Diversified Enrollment Scheme (多元入學方案).
"Such an education policy [proposed by Ma] would only make the whole education matter even more complicated," said Lee, criticizing Ma for failing to deliver on his education policy campaign promises made four years ago. Ma promised to increase the city's education budget and fully subsidize private high schools' non-tuition expenses.
Lee pledged to strengthen the curriculum on local culture and mother tongues, simplify the high-school enrollment process and give free lunches to elementary school students who subscribe to the school lunch program.
Aside from announcing Lee's education policies, his team yesterday also launched a new TV commercial that is aimed at Taipei's Hakka community.
Later yesterday afternoon, Lee also took part in a three-hour street procession with President Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁) who shared an open-topped jeep with Lee, asking voters to support Lee's mayoral bid. The campaign team drove through the city's Wanhua, Wenshan, Da-an and Chungcheng districts.
The street procession marked the third weekend in a row that Chen took part in events promoting Lee's candidacy.
According to Peng Tien-haw (彭天豪), a spokesperson for Lee's campaign, Chen will not share the same stage with Lee again until the last week before the Dec. 7 election.
According to his team, Lee decided to cancel his original evening plan to visit nightmarkets and meet voters in a bid to prepare for today's debate.
Ma's camp cancelled the campaign activities that he was scheduled to attend last night after a city councilor was shot to death in a Taipei restaurant.
His team says he decided he would rather stay in close contact with police officers investigating the crime.
A tropical depression in waters east of the Philippines could develop into a tropical storm as soon as today and bring rainfall as it approaches, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said yesterday, while issuing heat warnings for 14 cities and counties. Weather model simulations show that there are still considerable differences in the path that the tropical depression is projected to take. It might pass through the Bashi Channel to the South China Sea or turn northeast and move toward the sea south of Japan, CWA forecaster Yeh Chih-chun (葉致均) said, adding that the uncertainty of its movement is still high,
TAIWANESE INNOVATION: The ‘Seawool’ fabric generates about NT$200m a year, with the bulk of it sourced by clothing brands operating in Europe and the US Growing up on Taiwan’s west coast where mollusk farming is popular, Eddie Wang saw discarded oyster shells transformed from waste to function — a memory that inspired him to create a unique and environmentally friendly fabric called “Seawool.” Wang remembered that residents of his seaside hometown of Yunlin County used discarded oyster shells that littered the streets during the harvest as insulation for their homes. “They burned the shells and painted the residue on the walls. The houses then became warm in the winter and cool in the summer,” the 42-year-old said at his factory in Tainan. “So I was
THE TOUR: Pope Francis has gone on a 12-day visit to Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, East Timor and Singapore. He was also invited to Taiwan The government yesterday welcomed Pope Francis to the Asia-Pacific region and said it would continue extending an invitation for him to visit Taiwan. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs made the remarks as Pope Francis began a 12-day tour of the Asia-Pacific on Monday. He is to travel about 33,000km by air to visit Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, East Timor and Singapore, and would arrive back in Rome on Friday next week. It would be the longest and most challenging trip of Francis’ 11-year papacy. The 87-year-old has had health issues over the past few years and now uses a wheelchair. The ministry said
Discounted 72-hour Taipei Metro passes are to be offered to China Airlines passengers until Feb. 28 next year, the airline announced today. China Airlines passengers may present their boarding pass for a discount of up to 34 percent when buying a Taipei Metro 72-hour unlimited travel pass. The offer is available to international travelers on international flights bound for Taipei. Within seven days of arrival, travelers can present their boarding pass, passport and proof of flight payment at an EZfly counter in Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport or Taoyuan MRT Taipei Main Station to obtain the discounted passes, the airline said. One 72-hour pass