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81. Driving Back the Deserts
In issue No. 43 we published two articles on the Inner Mongolian Autonomous Region and how the Party's policies towards the minority nationalities are being carried out there. Beginning with this
Author: Our Correspondents Kao Yun and Hsiang Jung Year 1977 Issue 44 PDF HTML
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82. A Livestock-Breeding Commune
CRASSLANDS cover more than two-thirds of the total area of the Inner Mongolian Autonomous Region, offering excellent pastures for raising livestock. There are altogether 163 people's communes in the
Author: Our Correspondents Kao Yun and Hsiang Jung Year 1977 Issue 46 PDF HTML
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83. Mongolian Population: From Sharp Decline to Steady Increase
WHAT impressed us most, during our tour of the Inner Mongolian pastoral areas, were the children and adolescents of the Mongolian nationality. There were great numbers of them. This is a major change
Author: Our Correspondents Kao Yun and Hsiang Jung Year 1977 Issue 47 PDF HTML
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84. Soviet Revisionists: Sordid Salesmen of Reactionary Western Culture
SO-CALLED "Western culture" is nothing but imperialist culture, which is most reactionary, decadent and vicious. With the imperialist system heading for total collapse, its culture, like the sun
Author: HUNG TSIN-TA,NAN HSUEH-LIN Year 1968 Issue 44 PDF HTML
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85. The Decisive Factor in War Is People, Not Things
WHAT decides the outcome of a war? People or weapons? Herein lies the basic difference between proletarian military thinking and bourgeois military thinking, and between Marxism-Leninism-Mao Tsetung
Author: Hung Tung-pin, Chi Yung-yao Year 1969 Issue 50 PDF HTML
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86. Peking to Lhasa
This is the first in a series describing the Tibet Autonomous Region, its big leap from feudal serfdom to thriving socialism and its many-faceted development. - Ed.WE flew to Lhasa, capital of the
Author: Our Correspondents Hsi Chang-hao and Kao Yuan-mei Year 1975 Issue 25 PDF HTML
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87. Meeting People in Lhasa
The first of this series of reports appeared in issue No. 25. It described what these correspondents saw en route to Tibet and their impressions of Lhasa's new city proper and industrial development.
Author: Our Correspondents Hsi Chang-hao and Kao Yuan-mei Year 1975 Issue 26 PDF HTML
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88. Great Changes
The first part of this article appeared in issue No. 28. It dealt with the peaceful liberation of Tibet in 1951 and the quelling of the armed rebellion launched by the traitorous Dalai clique in 1959.
Author: Our Correspondents Hsi Chang-hao and Kao Yuan-mei Year 1975 Issue 29 PDF HTML
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89. In a New Industrial Area
LINCHIH is a newly built industrial area. Leaving Lhasa which is about 3,600 metres above sea level, our jeep headed east over mountainous terrain along the Szechuan-Tibet Highway. After going up a
Author: Our Correspondents Hsi Chang-hao and Kao Yuan-mei Year 1975 Issue 30 PDF HTML
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90. Tibetans and Hans Are Members Of One Family
WE met a woman cadre of Tibetan nationality whom people call by a Han name - Kang Ying. We came to learn how this woman in Linchih County in the Tibet Autonomous Region had come by this name and this
Author: by Our Correspondents Hsi Chang-hao and Kao Yuan-mei Year 1975 Issue 38 PDF HTML