Current Location: Home » Full Text Search
Your search : [ author:MA HSUEH-LIANG] Total 89 Search Results,Processed in 0.074 second(s)
-
1. MINORITY LANGUAGES OF CHINA
THE vast territory of China is inhabited by people of more than sixty different nationalities. Apart from the Hans, who comprise well over nine-tenths of China's population, there are more than 40
Author: MA HSUEH-LIANG Year 1954 Issue 3 PDF HTML
-
2. A Script for the Miao People
ONCE, says an ancient tale, the ancestors of the Miao people had a written language. But when they moved out of the east into the west, crossing a huge river, writing was lost. To this day the Miaos
Author: MA HSUEH-LIANG Year 1957 Issue 7 PDF HTML
-
3. New Scripts for Minorities China's
OF the 50 or so national minorities in China, less than half had written languages before the liberation. Even the written languages that existed were often inadequate and used by only a small number
Author: MA HSUEH-LIANG Year 1962 Issue 8 PDF HTML
-
4. Making New Farm Implements
EARLY in 1949 when I was working in a farm machine plant in the U.S.A., I saw a report in the papers which filled me with excitement. It told of a new state-owned farm machine factory, set up near
Author: MA CHI Year 1954 Issue 1 PDF HTML
-
5. OUR FIRST HARVESTING COMBINE
TWO years ago I described inthis magazine how our factory was making simple animal-drawn farm implements (China Reconstructs, January-February, 1954). Since then, not only has agricultural production
Author: MA CHI Year 1955 Issue 12 PDF HTML
-
6. "Give Us Machines," Say the Farmers
THAT machines can do more work than men is a simple truth. Nevertheless, until a couple of years ago the question whether mechanization would be of immediate advantage to China's agriculture was
Author: MA CHI Year 1958 Issue 7 PDF HTML
-
7. JUMPING OVER CENTURIES
A GREAT social transformation is going on in China's south-westernmost province, Yunnan. Among its people, nearly six million belong to more than twenty different minority nationalities. These have
Author: MA YAO Year 1958 Issue 7 PDF HTML
-
8. A FIGHTING SONG IS BORN
The composer Hsien Hsing-hai (1905-1945), with his contemporary Nieh Erh (1912-1935), laid the foundations of revolutionary music in China. The son of a fisherman, he worked his way through music
Author: MA KO Year 1963 Issue 5 PDF HTML
-
9. Songs Play Their Part in Revolution
SINGING revolutionary songs is a part of the Chi- nese people's cultural life. In factories and on farms, in army camps, schools and offices, millions of people- have formed choruses. Besides
Author: MA KO Year 1965 Issue 6 PDF HTML
-
10. Paintings of the Times
THE great changes over the past 25 years and China's growing prosperity can be clearly seen in art works featured in a new national exhibition. These themes are also prominent in a second show of
Author: MA KE Year 1975 Issue 1 PDF HTML