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1. PO CHU-I: PEOPLE'S POET
POPULAR, bitter and lyrical, the poet Po Chu-i (772-846 A.D.) is no stranger to people outside China. For over a thousand years, his name has been inseparably connected with Chinese poetry, which is
Author: KWEI CHEN Year 1953 Issue 4 PDF HTML
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2. CHINA'S POET - FARMER, TAO YUAN-MING
AMONG English-speaking people, Tao Yuan-ming (A.D. 356-427) is much less well-known than the celebrated Tang dynasty poets Tu Fu, Li Po and Po Chu-i, who lived three hundred years later. The English
Author: KWEI CHEN Year 1956 Issue 9 PDF HTML
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3. How about Private Enterprise?
THE target of effort for the whole Chinese people, as defined in our Constitution, is to "guarantee that China can in a peaceful way banish exploitation and poverty and build a prosperous and happy
Author: YUNG LUNG-KWEI Year 1955 Issue 9 PDF HTML
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4. First Five - Year Plan: Victory Ahead of Time
CHINA is ending the fourth year of her First Five-Year Plan (1953-57). But already the targets set for the full period have been reached or surpassed for many important industrial products -
Author: YUNG LUNG - KWEI Year 1956 Issue 12 PDF HTML
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5. FOR EIGHT YEARS - NO INFLATION
THE ugly word "inflation" has recently come to the fore again in the columns of the world's press. The August 2 issue of U.S. News and World Report featured an article entitled "Why Inflation Sweeps
Author: YUNG LUNG-KWEI Year 1957 Issue 12 PDF HTML
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6. The First "Hundred Schools"
LET a hundred schools contend" is China's present watchword for building a new socialist culture, through the fruitful clash of ideas in science, philosophy and art. The phrase itself, however, dates
Author: YANG HSIANG-KWEI Year 1958 Issue 3 PDF HTML
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7. A GALAXY OF LOCAL INDUSTRIES
THE CHINESE PRESS, which often uses poetic imagery when talking about the most matter-of-fact things, says that local industries are springing into being "like stars coming out in the evening sky".
Author: YUNG LUNG-KWEI Year 1958 Issue 8 PDF HTML
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8. Industry Leaps Ahead
THIS YEAR China's steel production is expected to reach 10 million tons, 90 per cent more than last year's. In 1959 it will be over 20 million tons. Such a rate of growth far outstrips any set in a
Author: YUNG LUNG-KWEI Year 1958 Issue 10 PDF HTML
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9. Revolution of 1911: the Monarchy Falls
THE REVOLUTION of 1911 drove out the Ching dynasty and destroyed the 2,000-year-old monarchic system in China. It was the first bourgeois-democratic revolution in Chinese history.After the
Author: LIU KWEI-WU Year 1959 Issue 3 PDF HTML
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10. ECONOMIC ACHIEVEMENTS
IN 1949, having driven out the three enemies of China's democratic revolution - the imperialists, the feudal landlords and the bureaucratic capitalists - the Chinese people, led by the Communist Party
Author: YUNG LUNG-KWEI Year 1959 Issue 10 PDF HTML