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TIME: Almanac 1990
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1990 Time Magazine Compact Almanac, The (1991)(Time).iso
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time
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100289
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10028900.032
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1990-09-18
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FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
Sometimes an interruption is worth a thousand words. Taking
the train from Shanghai to Shandong province, Michael Kramer shared
a four-bed sleeping compartment with a middle-aged factory official
clad in a blue Mao suit. As the man explained to Kramer why only
foreigners and very important bureaucrats were allowed to travel
in such accommodations, the door opened and in strolled a young
Chinese man in a yellow Lacoste shirt, loaded down with boxes of
stereo equipment. Absorbed in the music crackling through the
headphones of his Walkman, the budding entrepreneur remained
oblivious to Kramer and the very-important-bureaucrat, who talked
late into the night about the changes sweeping the country.
The trip was part of a five-week, 4,000-mile journey across
China by special correspondent Kramer for this week's cover story.
His reflections accompany our 27-page gallery of photographs from
the new book A Day in the Life of China. Says Kramer: "I saw a
great people whose lives could be so much better if their political
system was less oppressive."
Accompanying Kramer for part of the journey was Beijing
reporter Jaime A. FlorCruz. A graduate of Peking University,
FlorCruz has reported on China for TIME for nine years. When he
visited the U.S. for the first time last month, he found himself
constantly fielding questions about last June's student massacre
in Beijing. Even a Broadway night out offered no respite. "I took
my wife to see the play Les Miserables," he says. "Watching the
portrayal of the French students at the barricades, I was thinking
of the wide-eyed youth in Tiananmen Square."
Publishing executive David Cohen, who had produced similar
books on the U.S. and on the Soviet Union with Rick Smolan,
dispatched 90 photographers throughout China one day last spring.
Months of planning went into the project, which was sponsored by
Eastman Kodak, Nikon, Northwest Airlines, BankAmerica, Holiday Inn
and Federal Express. Says TIME picture editor Michele Stephenson,
who helped supervise the project in Beijing: "As fate would have
it, A Day in the Life of China captured a portrait of this
sprawling nation hours before the beginning of the student revolt."