Current Location: Home » Full Text Search
Your search : [ author:YU CHANG] Total 351 Search Results,Processed in 0.082 second(s)
-
221. Commune-run Economy Spells Prosperity
ECONOMIC ENTERPRISES owned by the Changshih people's commune in northern Kwangtung province, which not quite two years ago were in their infancy, are now in the rapid growth of adolescence. They
Author: CHANG TAO and TING HSING-JEN Year 1960 Issue 8 PDF HTML
-
222. City Girl Turns Farmer
THREE YEARS AGO Wang Pei-chen, now 24 years old, graduated from senior middle school in her home city, Tientsin. It was just at the time the Communist Party issued a call for young intellectuals to
Author: CHANG KE and YANG CHING-HSIUNG Year 1960 Issue 11 PDF HTML
-
223. Rivals Help Each Other - For More Steel
Last year, Chinese steel mills of various sizes and types competed for national red banners in their respective categories. These emulation contests played a big part in raising output all over the
Author: CHANG CHIEH and CHOU YUNG-KANG Year 1961 Issue 2 PDF HTML
-
224. The Giant Panda
THE FAMOUS giant panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca) is found only in the mountains of southwest China. It has inhabited the earth for at least 600,000 years, but was not entered in world zoological
Author: WANG SUNG and LU CHANG-KUN Year 1973 Issue 5 PDF HTML
-
225. Three Big Peninsulas
THE winding coast of China's mainland forms many peninsulas. The three biggest are the Liaotung Peninsula in Liaoning province, the Shantung Peninsula in Shantung province and the Leichow Peninsula
Author: CHANG LAN-SHENG,CHAO CHI Year 1974 Issue 4 PDF HTML
-
226. TIBETAN PEOPLE MOVE FORWARD
TIBET used to be regarded as 'mysterious land.' When people talked about it, they thought of towering snow-covered mountains, vast and interminable grasslands, reincarnated Buddhas and lamas skilled
Author: LI YU-I Year 1952 Issue 5 PDF HTML
-
227. FACTS ON THE CHINESE PRESS
ON a cool autumn afternoon in Peking in 1952, journalists of 17 nations met with their Chinese colleagues for a friendly discussion on the Chinese press. Most of the guests were delegates to the
Author: HU YU-CHIH Year 1953 Issue 1 PDF HTML
-
228. OLD MUSEUM COMES ALIVE
BEHIND Tien An Men, from which Chairman Mao Tse-tung reviews demonstrations of our joyful, liberated people on the national holidays of new China, stands the colossal Wu Men Gate. The courtyard of
Author: WANG YU-CHUAN Year 1953 Issue 1 PDF HTML
-
229. Railways Forge Ahead
OLD CHINA never had a national railway system. If one were to draw a line on the map from Manchouli in the Northeast to Kunming in the Southwest, one would find that the country to the west of it was
Author: WANG YU-CHI Year 1953 Issue 6 PDF HTML
-
230. WHY OLD CHINA COULD NOT INDUSTRIALIZE
CHINA today is well launched on her planned transformation from a predominently agricultural country to an industrial one. The Chinese people have dreamt of such a change for a century. But until the
Author: WANG CHING-YU Year 1953 Issue 6 PDF HTML