Current Location: Home » Full Text Search
Your search : [ author:CHU TEH] Total 104 Search Results,Processed in 0.086 second(s)
-
1. My Mother
This story first appeared in the Liberation Daily in Yenan on April 5, 1944. We are reprinting it in memory of its author Chu Teh (1886-1976), a great revolutionary fighter and proletarian
Author: CHU TEH Year 1977 Issue 10 PDF HTML
-
2. Making the Red Soil Fertile
PASSENGERS on trains entering Kiangsi province are immediately struck by the sturdy green crops, neatly laid-out orchards and tea plantations thriving on stretch after stretch of russet-coloured
Author: PEI TEH-AN Year 1963 Issue 4 PDF HTML
-
3. Making A Perilous River Navigable
Water-borne transport over the 305-kilometre stretch of the Wuchiang River within southwest China's Szechuan province is no longer the perilous venture it was in the past. Through all four seasons of
Author: TEH NING Year 1965 Issue 1 PDF HTML
-
4. Boxwood Carvings of Children
MANY boxwood carvings which portray the new life of China's children have been created in the last year or two by folk artists in the coastal provinces of Kiangsu, Chekiang and Fukien. The mental
Author: CHU PEI-CHU Year 1966 Issue 4 PDF HTML
-
5. Health For All The People
Anyone familiar with the so-called medical services and medical work in old China would be extremely surprised to see what great strides in public health have been made in the two brief years since
Author: LI TEH-CHUAN Year 1952 Issue 1 PDF HTML
-
6. THE CHILDREN'S OWN THEATRE
Applause and cheers filled the Lyceum Theatre in Shanghai. The curtain had rung down on the last act of the play "Little Snowflake," presented by the Children's Theatre of the China Welfare
Author: JEN TEH-YAO Year 1952 Issue 1 PDF HTML
-
7. Millions Get Free Medical Aid
BY 1949, when the entire mainland of China had been liberated, free medical service had already been in existence for a long time in the old liberated areas. Immediately afterwards it was extended to
Author: LI TEH-CHUAN Year 1953 Issue 1 PDF HTML
-
8. ISLAND FISHERMEN PROSPER
Winds blow waves into silver caps, We fishermen are busy folk; Our masts and nets a pattern form, As boats put out to sea. Each haul of fish means clothes and food, We sail as the full moon shines;
Author: YANG KUANG-TEH Year 1953 Issue 4 PDF HTML
-
9. Running A City District
LAST autumn and winter, elections to local people's congresses took place throughout China. Since then the congresses have met, chosen local people's governments, and begun to exercise their
Author: YANG KUANG-TEH Year 1954 Issue 4 PDF HTML
-
10. The Yungli Company: Pioneer of Chemical Industry in China
THIS is the story of one of China's pioneer chemical plants. It tells how a small group of technicians and businessmen in old China, of whom the author of this article was one, fought against all
Author: HOU TEH-PANG Year 1955 Issue 3 PDF HTML