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1. World Economy Submits to Strain
Economically speaking, 1985 took its toll on many countries. The Western nations saw their economic upturn rapidly losing momentum; the Soviet Union and most other East European countries again
Author: Pu Shan Year 1986 Issue 4 PDF HTML
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2. Health Work in Kweichow
KWEICHOW Province, in southwest China, was once notorious as the "land of malaria." That was before liberation, when malaria accounted for 70 per cent of the cases of infectious diseases registered
Author: PU KEH Year 1962 Issue 30 PDF HTML
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3. How China Popularizes Education
HUNDREDS of millions of people are receiving an education in New China. Last year 93 per cent of all school-age children were in school. Junior middle school education is universal in almost all the
Author: Chun Pu Year 1975 Issue 29 PDF HTML
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4. France, US Differ On European Defence
The 13th summit meeting of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), which closed on November 8, 1991 in Rome, expanded the political function of the organization, maintaining its leading
Author: Pu Qihua Year 1992 Issue 2 PDF HTML
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5. No Longer Foes, But Still Vigilant
The Russian Federation, the major republic of and successor to the disintegrated Soviet Union, has borne the brunt of the United States' diplomatic drive in the former Soviet area since Gorbachev's
Author: Pu Qihua Year 1992 Issue 21 PDF HTML
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6. How Did China Count The People?
With a population unparalleled in size, China last year conducted a census similarly unmatched for its massiveness. Among the nearly 200 censuses conducted worldwide around the year 2000, the one by
Author: Wu Pu Year 2001 Issue 19 PDF HTML
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7. Weather Men on the Farms
EVERYBODY talks about the weather. In China today millions are doing something about it, are studying it with an eye to more precise weather forecasts as an immediate aid to agriculture. The
Author: HO SHAN Year 1959 Issue 9 PDF HTML
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8. SUNSHINE AFTER RAIN
Tuesday, March 10In March in Lhasa it is already too warm to wear a fur coat. At dawn the cadres just slip on sweaters when they go outdoors to do their daily morning exercises. Usually at this time
Author: SHAN CHAO Year 1959 Issue 18 PDF HTML
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9. GROWING MORE TEA
CHINA, one of the world's biggest growers of tea, produced 26 per cent more in 1958 than in 1957. Last year alone, the area of her tea plantations expanded as much as during the entire First
Author: HO SHAN Year 1959 Issue 22 PDF HTML
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10. More Silkworms, More Silks
THE outlook for silkworm breeding this year is more than good. Most silkworm breeding areas in China reported bigger output of spring cocoons. The national total surpassed last year's spring crop by
Author: HO SHAN Year 1959 Issue 32 PDF HTML