*FIVE year plans, *INDUSTRIAL productivity, *PRODUCTION (Economic theory), *POPULATION, ECONOMIC conditions in China -- 1949-1976
Abstract
The author comments on Red China's Five-Year Plan. According to the plan, national output will have gone up by 51.1%, while industrial production has been ordered to increase by 98.3%. However, China, for all its 600 million people, is still far from being a first-class power even if every goal were reached exactly. There is a difference between having the power to oppress 600 million people and the power needed to convert latent energy into growth which marks a first-class power.
*MILITARY science, *STRATEGIC planning, *COMMUNISM & international relations, UNITED States armed forces
Abstract
The article comments on the interest of the U.S. military on the strategic island of Formosa. The beautiful island has more than seventy airfields just 150 miles from the coast of the communist China. Formosa has mills to press camphor and refine sugar, factories to produce cloth and paper and aluminum, canneries to pack fish and fruit and hydroelectric plants to power the island.
*INTERNATIONAL relations, *COMMUNISM, FOREIGN opinion of the United States
Abstract
The article focuses on a discussion on U.S. policy toward China held in October 1949. The Department of State has acknowledged Red China on its White Paper. According to Lawrence K. Rosinger of the Institute of Pacific Relations, there is a stake to be won in considering China's public opinion. The experts can be excused for taking little consideration of the public opinion of the U.S. because it was not included in the department's agenda.
The article focuses on the ruling of the court on the case between a major in one of the British regiments stationed, who apply for a transfer, and with his commanding officer who was stationed in Hong Kong, China. On the day before the major's transfer, there was a parade and review in which the commandant reached the major and found that he was wearing a green paper nose. However, the major admitted that he wore a false nose, and he was acquitted.
Published
1931
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