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11. From Hovels to Flats
PEKING, a city dating back to the ancient times, had been the imperial capital of a number of feudal dynasties since the 12th century. A tiny number of bureaucrats and landlords lived here in luxury
Author: Our Correspondent Li Lien Year 1973 Issue 49 PDF HTML
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12. A Promising Young Generation
Are China's 200 million young people a lost generation, victims of the gang of four who will never make a contribution to the development of the country? Or are they full of promise and eager to work
Author: Our Correspondent Li Ming Year 1981 Issue 30 PDF HTML
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13. Worker Education
Upgrading the educational level and technological expertise of China's entire work force is a vital factor in the drive for modernization. In the past few years a number of innovative efforts in this
Author: Our Correspondent Li Ming Year 1981 Issue 41 PDF HTML
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14. Popularizing Science in China
Popularizing science is important to China's modernization drive. The following reports focus on China's recent accomplishments in this field. - Ed.Organizations and ActivitiesTHE low scientific and
Author: Our Correspondent Li Ming Year 1982 Issue 9 PDF HTML
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15. Work-Study Programmes in Primary and Middle Schools
IN China many primary and middle schools have small on-campus factories or workshops (making paper flowers, assembling electronic parts, etc.) or plots of land outside the school campus where groups
Author: Our Correspondent Li Yongzeng Year 1982 Issue 45 PDF HTML
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16. Private Schools in Beijing
BANNED in the middle of the 1960s, private schools of various disciplines have begun to reappear in Beijing in recent years.The state runs most educational undertakings, but the number of educational
Author: Our Correspondent Li Yongzeng Year 1983 Issue 17 PDF HTML
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17. When Leaders or Professionals Retire
Retirement is a relatively new concept in China, where before liberation people worked until they dropped because if they stopped working, they stopped eating.Recent provisions for pensions and other
Author: Our Correspondent Li Rongxia Year 1983 Issue 19 PDF HTML
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18. China's Rubber Miracle
For generations, agricultural specialists all over the world agreed that it was impossible for rubber trees to survive above the latitude of 17 degrees north. However, China's successful rubber
Author: Our Correspondent Li Yongzeng Year 1983 Issue 32 PDF HTML
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19. Priority to Developing Energy
SINCE the founding of the People's Republic in 1949, China has seen its total generation of electricity grow 76.2-fold to 32.700 million kwh in 1982, ranking sixth in the world. This rate of growth
Author: Our Correspondent Li Haibo Year 1983 Issue 45 PDF HTML
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20. Nature Parks: Preserving An Irreplaceable Heritage
VISITORS pause at the gate to a wildlife park in Australia to read the sign: "Here is the animal kingdom's greatest enemy." Their gaze shifts upward into the mirror fastened above the accusing words.
Author: Our Correspondent Li Yongzeng Year 1983 Issue 47 PDF HTML