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11. Don't Mess with This Office Worker
I NEVER THINK of myself as an office worker, although I do in fact work in an office every day. This might be because I am a devotee of yiquan and practice it every chance I get.My lifelong love
Author: SHANG JINTANG Year 1987 Issue 12 PDF HTML
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12. From Beacon Towers to Fiber-Optic Communications
FIBER-OPTIC communications is a new force in China's post and telecommunications. In the middle of the '70s China began to research this new technology and in the '80s achieved great progress in both
Author: SHANG CUIYUN Year 1990 Issue 12 PDF HTML
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13. Award-Winning Chinese-American Poet
Born in China, but writing in English, Stephen Shuning Liu was overwhelmed to receive an American government creative-writing award. SHANG RONGGUANG, staff reporter for Beijing Review, tells his story
Author: SHANG RONGGUANG Year 1993 Issue 5 PDF HTML
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14. Home Again: Strange Intimacy
Two years away and Beijing was a changed world for this returnee. She describes her feelings of the familiar and unfamiliar: "strange intimacy."WHEN MY two-year stay in the United States was close to
Author: SHANG RONGGUANG Year 1993 Issue 10 PDF HTML
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15. LANTERN SLIDES FOR MASS EDUCATION
MORE than 200 million people in China attended lanternslide or filmstrip showings in China in 1951, and last year the figure was higher. This method is used widely to spread scientific knowledge and
Author: KU SHU-HSING Year 1953 Issue 2 PDF HTML
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16. Master-Grower of Chrysanthemums
THE newly-painted red doors opened and an elderly man came out to greet me. This was Liu Chieh-yuan, Peking's most famous gardener. He greeted me in a quiet pleasant voice. His eyes, behind
Author: KU SHU-HSING Year 1954 Issue 5 PDF HTML
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17. SOUTH CHINA'S NEW PORT
MORE THAN eight hundred years ago, the famous Chinese poet Su Tung-po (A.D. 1036-1101), who had offended the reigning emperor, was banished from court and sent to the southernmost part of China - "to
Author: HWANG KU-LIU Year 1957 Issue 2 PDF HTML
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18. Ancient China- Origins to Unification
AS LONG AGO as 2500 B.C. or thereabouts, the ancestors of the Chinese people began to establish themselves on the alluvial plain between the middle and lower reaches of the Yellow and Yangtze rivers.
Author: CHOU KU-CHENG Year 1958 Issue 9 PDF HTML
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19. China's Early Middle Ages
THE thousand years from the political reform of Wang Mang in the first century A.D. to the middle of the tenth century may be called the early middle ages of China, in which feudalism reigned
Author: CHOU KU-CHENG Year 1958 Issue 10 PDF HTML
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20. China's Later Middle Ages
AFTER more than 70 years of divided rule, China was reunited under the Sung dynasty when the last of the ten separate kingdoms was vanquished in A.D. 976. The founder of the new dynasty, Chao
Author: CHOU KU-CHENG Year 1958 Issue 11 PDF HTML