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| As children sit tests, it's exam blues for parents |
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 A mother prays while her child sits the national college entrance examination yesterday in Tianjin, North China on June 7, 2005. More than 8.6 million Chinese middle school graduates across the country attended this year's college entrance exam Tuesday. The number is 1.44 million more than that of 2004.(newsphoto)
 High school students walk out of an exam building after finishing the first exam in Qingdao, east China's Shandong province, June 7, 2005. Chinese cities are diverting traffic, suspending construction and banning street hawking to reduce the stress on high school students as they begin gruelling national college entrance exams on Tuesday. (newsphoto)
 Parents wait outside a school in Xi'an, Shanxi Province June 7, 2005. (newsphoto)
 Parents wait outside school as their children take the national college entrance exams in Fuzhou, capital of east China's Fujian province, June 7, 2005. Chinese cities are diverting traffic, suspending construction and banning street hawking to reduce the stress on high school students as they begin gruelling national college entrance exams on Tuesday. Students and parents across China view the exam as the key to a competitive future, but few students will actually make the grade. (newsphoto)
 Police in Lanzhou, capital of Northwest China's Gansu Province, set up a traffic sign to ban street hawking near a school on June 7, 2005. (newsphoto)
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