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1. Hainan to Adopt More Special Policies
The first session of the Seventh National People's Congress, which just closed, granted Hainan Island the status of province and made it China's largest special economic zone.CPC Central Committee
Author: Yang Xiaobing Year 1988 Issue 18 PDF HTML
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2. For the Sake of Tomorrow
Children are the hope of tomorrow. In China children are receiving increasing attention and their training is seen as an important part of the modernization drive. The All-China Women's Federation,
Author: Yang Xiaobing Year 1988 Issue 22 PDF HTML
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3. Trade Unions: A Major Force for Reform
The 11th National Congress of the All-China Federation of Trade Unions (ACFTU) opened in Beijing on October 22. It should prove of great importance in mobilizing China's working class to play their
Author: Yang Xiaobing Year 1988 Issue 45 PDF HTML
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4. One Academy, Two Systems
Since 1982, the Chinese government has stressed continually that science and technology have primarily to serve the national economy. Because of this, China's major scientific research institution,
Author: Yang Xiaobing Year 1988 Issue 49 PDF HTML
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5. Countering the Surge in Population
During the first quarter of 1989, China faces the grim prospect of its population hitting 1.1 billion. In response, a new family planning publicity campaign is being launched across the country.Since
Author: Yang Xiaobing Year 1989 Issue 11 PDF HTML
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6. NPC Session on Reform and Opening
The Fifth Session of the Seventh NPC Congress was begun in Beijing on March 20. The question of how to further push the development of reform and opening up, a national issue, was one of the main
Author: Yang Xiaobing Year 1992 Issue 12 PDF HTML
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7. China: The First Taste of Affluence
WANG, a hospitable Fangshan County peasant living on the outskirts of Beijing, is no longer worried about having to entertain people who drop in on his family nothing but a cup of tea. Today, he
Author: YANG XIAOBING Our Correspondent Year 1984 Issue 43 PDF HTML
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8. Rural Child-Rearing Outlook Changes
THE days when China's peasants sought to make their fortune by having as many children as possible are gone. The rise of specialized households and rural industries has taken away much of the
Author: XIAO MU and YANG XIAOBING Year 1985 Issue 16 PDF HTML
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9. Hengshan: Battle Against Poverty Is On
With more money to spare, Chinese peasants are now buying tractors, motorcycles and expensive consumer goods on a rural market once dominated by small commodities and crude farm tools. But the gap
Author: YANG XIAOBING Our Correspondent Year 1985 Issue 27 PDF HTML
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10. School for Parents Tries to Curb Crime
CRIME survey of the capital of Gansu Province for the first half of 1984 put forth some surprising results: More than 83 percent of the convicted offenders were younger than 25 years old, and most of
Author: YANG XIAOBING Our Correspondent Year 1985 Issue 47 PDF HTML