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71. Chinese Kites – Infinite Variety
I AM 86 years old and have spent seventy years of my life, making kites and flying them. I was apprenticed to the trade as a boy. During the four years I spent with my master he taught me how to make
Author: WEI YUAN-TAI Year 1958 Issue 3 PDF HTML
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72. Conquering the Taklamakan Desert
TAKLAMAKAN in the Uighur language means "Go in and you won't come out". That is what people have called the great desert, twice the size of Britain, which stretches over 460,000 square kilometres of
Author: YUAN HSIU-JUNG Year 1959 Issue 7 PDF HTML
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73. Traditional Instruments for New Music
FAR BACK into history and pre-history stretches the succession of musical instruments fashioned by the people of China. Created by her different nationalities, they possess distinct characteristics
Author: LI YUAN-CHING Year 1960 Issue 1 PDF HTML
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74. The Mother
THE DEPARTMENT in the government office where I worked several years ago was headed by a woman named Feng Chi. When speaking to her, we young fellows who made up most of the staff addressed her as
Author: Wang Yuan-Chien Year 1960 Issue 6 PDF HTML
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75. A Communne Builds Its Chemical Factory
LAST JULY at the Tuanchia commune of Tali county, Shensi province, a young man about 20 years old was speaking to a gathering of some three hundred. He wore a blue striped shirt, and gesticulated
Author: WANG TSUNG-YUAN Year 1961 Issue 2 PDF HTML
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76. More Raw Materials for Light Industry
THE continually rising purchas-ing power of China's six hundred fifty million people has brought an almost unlimited demand for consumers' goods. It began as people shed their rags and bought new
Author: CHANG SHU-YUAN Year 1962 Issue 1 PDF HTML
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77. HIGHER EDUCATION IN CHINA
CHINA'S modern higher education began at the end of the nineteenth century. After the gates of feudal China were burst open by the fire from British gunboats in the Opium War (1840-41), the country
Author: CHOU PEI-YUAN Year 1963 Issue 2 PDF HTML
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78. TIMBER WITHOUT PLUNDER
THE FORESTS in the north-eastern part of Inner Mongolia have often been likened to a vast foam-flecked sea-a dense growth of larches broken occasionally by patches of towering white birches, rising
Author: YUAN HUNG-TSO Year 1963 Issue 6 PDF HTML
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79. THE GEOGRAPHICAL FEATURES OF CHINA
CHINA stretches across the southeast sector of the great Eurasian land mass, her coasts washed by the Pacific, the world's biggest ocean. Her land frontiers run for 15,000 kilometres, from Korea in
Author: KAO YUNG-YUAN Year 1963 Issue 6 PDF HTML
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80. TRAFFIC POLICE AND BUS DRIVERS
WHEN crossing the street, please walk inside the pedestrian zoneand look out for cars," I often hear bus drivers and conductors warn their passengers as they alight.A genuine friendship has grown up
Author: CHI CHEN-YUAN Year 1964 Issue 6 PDF HTML