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"My husband prefers the action movies, the more violence, the better, and I think it's kind of a male thing," she said to a sympathetic response from the host. "Just take me to a movie, let me sit there and watch people shoot each other, and I don't find that relaxing at all," Clinton said. "I prefer the comedies, the romances, those kinds of movies. So we take turns. When I go to one of his movies, I shut my eyes a lot and listen to the music and the soundtrack. "And when he goes to one of my movies, he falls asleep a lot," she said. "So it works out pretty well for us." But Tuesday wasn't all interviews. At China's National Performing Arts Center, a massive, gleaming egg-shaped dome near Tiananmen Square, Clinton presided over the first meeting of a committee that will help oversee a program, known as "100,000 Strong," to send 100,000 American students to study in China over the next four years. "This relationship must extend beyond the halls of government to our homes, businesses and schools," she said. "We need Chinese and Americans of all ages, professions and walks of life to connect and collaborate."
Before being serenaded by Chinese and American exchange students with short musical performances, including Chinese opera, Clinton said the state of ties between the U.S. and China would shape much of how the world's approaches the 21st Century. "What we do or fail to do together will impact the lives of people in our countries and many others," Clinton said. "Our success will be based on how well we understand each other, respect each other, trust each other and are open to learning from each other."
[Associated
Press;
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