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1. The Final Assault on the World's Highest Peak
On May 24 and 25, three Chinese mountaineers, Wang Fu-chou, a young geologist from Peking, Chu Ying-hua, a lumberjack from Szechuan, and Gonpa, a Tibetan P.L.A. man, in a magnificent effort forced
Author: KUO CHAO-JEN Year 1960 Issue 23 PDF HTML
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2. The Climb to the Top of the Earth
THE three Chinese mountaineers who battled their way up to the summit of Mount Jolmo Lungma on May 25, added a brilliant page to the annals of world mountaineering. They exploded the myth about the
Author: KUO CHAO-JEN Year 1960 Issue 23 PDF HTML
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3. The Climb to the Top of the Earth
This is the concluding instalment of the full story of the Chinese mountaineering expedition's climb of Mount Jolmo Lungma, the world's highest peak. The first instalment appeared in our last issue.
Author: KUO CHAO-JEN Year 1960 Issue 24 PDF HTML
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4. Conquering Shisha Pangma
HIDDEN in the mountain fastness of Tibet little information existed about Mount Shisha Pangma when the decision to organize an expedition to climb it was taken. Its height had been calculated
Author: KUO CHAO-JEN Year 1964 Issue 22 PDF HTML
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5. What the Central People's Government Has Done for Tibet
THE quelling of the rebellion in Tibet has cleared the way for the building of a new, prosperous Tibet. The bulk of the Tibetan population hails this prospect with open arms. As the direct
Author: TSUNG CHAO-JEN Year 1959 Issue 22 PDF HTML
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6. The Ula System and Taxation in Tibet
THE system of serfdom in Tibet includes, among other forms of exploitation, the notorious ula system and innumerable tax levies. The kasha (the former local government of Tibet), monasteries and the
Author: TSUNG CHAO-JEN Year 1959 Issue 23 PDF HTML
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7. LIFE IN THE LOKA AREA
SOUTH of the Tsangpo River and southeast of Lhasa lies the Loka area. In its green valleys are broad rivers, extensive fields of qingke barley, flax and rape, and tree-girt villages; on the mountain
Author: TSUNG CHAO-JEN Year 1959 Issue 32 PDF HTML
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8. The Unmourned Ending of A Cruel System
LHASA today, cleared of the rebels, is alive with the hum of hopeful human activity. Here people are busily carrying away debris and rubbish from the streets, there people are growing vegetables in
Author: KUO KUNG Year 1959 Issue 21 PDF HTML
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9. NEW DAY IN LHASA
LHASA in June is warm and gay. And this summer, what with all the many changes that have taken place since the quelling of the rebellion in spring, the people are in a mood for merry-making. Recently
Author: KUO RUNG Year 1959 Issue 26 PDF HTML
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10. Loka Takes On a New Look
THE fields on either side of the road from Lhasa to Chetang, an important town in the Loka Special Administrative Region, were full of busy people as we motored along. The qingke barley and wheat had
Author: KUO TING Year 1962 Issue 2 PDF HTML