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111. A Village by the Lhasa River (III)
In the third instalment of our series on life in the Tibetan village of Xiangga, Zhang Wei and Yang Xiaobing discover how greater links with the outside world have brought many changes in cultural
Author: Our Staff Reporters Zhang Wei and Yang Xiaobing Year 1989 Issue 13 PDF HTML
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112. A Village by the Lhasa River (IV)
In the fourth of reports on the Tibetan village of Xiangga, Yang Xiaobing and Zhang Wei discover how the rapid development of transportation and other sidelines has brought a remarkable rise in
Author: Our Staff Reporters Yang Xiaobing and Zhang Wei Year 1989 Issue 14 PDF HTML
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113. A Village by the Lhasa River (V)
In Xiangga, villagers welcome the government's policy of promoting religious freedom. At the same time, their new prosperity allows all of them, with the exception of a few poor families, to enjoy
Author: Our Staff Reporters Yang Xiaobing and Zhang Wei Year 1989 Issue 15 PDF HTML
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114. A Village by the Lhasa River (VI)
In the sixth of our reports from Xiangga, Zhang Wei and Yang Xiaobing look at education. Over the last 30 years, basic schooling facilities have been established in the village, but teaching resources
Author: Our Staff Reporters Zhang Wei and Yang Xiaobing Year 1989 Issue 18 PDF HTML
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115. A Village by the Lhasa River (VII)
For the villagers of Xiangga, inflation and shortages are the major problems - compounded by Lhasa's separatist riots. In the seventh report from this village on the outskirts of the Tibetan capital,
Author: Our Staff Reporters Zhang Wei and Yang Xiaobing Year 1989 Issue 19 PDF HTML
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116. Eastern Hebei Opens to the World
Hebei Province is shaped liked a crudely cast horseshoe. From coastal Cangzhou in the south, it sweeps inland to the west, curving north around Tianjin and Beijing, and then west back to the sea. Its
Author: Our Staff Reporters Yang Xiaobing and Feng Jing Year 1989 Issue 23 PDF HTML
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117. Juvenile Delinquency
Juvenile delinquency in China is a new social problem which first began to attract notice in the 1970s and has now aroused the attention of the people's governments at all levels, departments
Author: Guo Jie & Our Staff Reporter Yang Xiaobing Year 1989 Issue 32 PDF HTML
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118. Archives: A Helping Hand to Modernization
Prior to 1979 work on archives in China was neglected. Various closed records were not open to the public.Times have changed. Since the CPC Central Committee and the State Council decided to resume
Author: Our Staff Reporters Wu Naitao and Yang Xiaobing Year 1991 Issue 43 PDF HTML
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119. China Fights Bureaucracy in Earnest
Deng Xiaoping, chairman of the CPC Central Advisory Commission, recently called for firm action against bureaucracy which has been a persistent problem. In his 1980 speech entitled "On the Reform of
Author: Our Staff Correspondent Li Ning Year 1987 Issue 44 PDF HTML
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120. Curbing Capital Construction
One of the major reasons for the severe overheating of the Chinese economy has been the enormous surge in capital construction - the building and equipping of large-scale projects such as factories,
Author: Our Staff Reporter Li Ning Year 1989 Issue 6 PDF HTML