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TIME: Almanac 1990
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1990 Time Magazine Compact Almanac, The (1991)(Time).iso
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100289
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10028900.004
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1990-09-18
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NOSEC, Page 30A Day in The Life . . .. . . Of ChinaBy Howard G. Chua-Eoan
What is a single day to a nation that has lived through more
than 1 million days? For China, April 15, 1989, promised to be
nothing out of the ordinary. Yet it would prove to be portentous.
Editorials in that morning's newspapers sounded Malthusian alarms
at the news that China's population had officially reached 1.1
billion. A devastating forest fire raged in Inner Mongolia,
destroying precious woodlands. More tales of bureaucratic
corruption bubbled up. And Hu Yaobang, the reformist Communist
Party leader ousted two years before, died at age 73. By nightfall,
students, inspired by Hu's liberal views, began covering walls with
posters denouncing the system that deposed him. Over the next 50
days, first a few demonstrators and then hundreds of thousands
would occupy Tiananmen Square and paralyze the regime, which struck
back the only way it knew how -- with the army. It all began on
April 15.
Just as he had done for projects on the U.S., Japan and the
Soviet Union, David Cohen dispatched 90 photographers to capture
a 24-hour period in the People's Republic. A Day in the Life of
China, due Oct. 1 from Collins Publishers ($45) and presented here
in a 27-page selection, aimed simply to be a snapshot of an ancient
country trying to come to terms with modernity. Coincidence would
have it chronicle April 15, the day China began to tremble.