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231. Old Plays: A Treasury Reopened
THERE was great excitement among true devotees of Peking Opera, who know and love its stories as if they were part of their family history, over a recent revival of a historical favourite called Yang
Author: LIU YI-FANG Year 1957 Issue 2 PDF HTML
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232. 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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233. Foreign Students in China
ALMOST all the foreign students I met at Peking University, Asian, African or European, told me the Chinese language was hard to learn. The amazing thing was they all said it in fluent Chinese.
Author: LIU YI-FANG Year 1957 Issue 10 PDF HTML
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234. A Steel-Worker's Life is Saved
IT WAS two o'clock in the morning. The strident clang-clang of a bell broke the silence as a white-painted ambulance sped through the slumbering streets of Shanghai and pulled up before the doors of
Author: LIU CHEN-KUN Year 1958 Issue 10 PDF HTML
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235. Artists Go to the People
EARLY this spring the students of the Chekiang Art Academy in Hangchow went to the countryside to live and work as farmers for several months. In the past when they had gone out for a day or two of
Author: LIU YI-FANG Year 1958 Issue 11 PDF HTML
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236. PEOPLE'S COMMUNES: A NEW STAGE
NEARLY all China's rural households have entered into a new form of social organization. This is the people's commune, created by the amalgamation of a number of farm cooperatives in the same area.
Author: LIU YI-HSING Year 1958 Issue 12 PDF HTML
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237. 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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238. How China Gets High Farm-Yields
FOREIGN FRIENDS visiting China keep asking how it was possible to double grain and cotton output in 1958. Because such a thing seems impossible to them, they also cannot see how we can be so bold as
Author: LIU JUI-LUNG Year 1959 Issue 4 PDF HTML
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239. New Films Recreate Events of the Revolution
CRITICS' acclaim for the Peking Film Studios as producer of four out of the seven best colour films, released during the national anniversary celebration, was a surprise to the entertainment world.
Author: LIU YI-FANG Year 1959 Issue 11 PDF HTML
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240. Workers Help Set Their Own Targets
ONE OF THE REASONS why China's workers can keep increasing production in a continuous leap forward is the feeling of responsibility on the part of every individual that the factory's production
Author: LIU HSIEN-HUANG Year 1959 Issue 12 PDF HTML