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...Calif. 46 Daniel Bennett LB Sherborn, Mass. 47 Tom Richerson CB Kirksville, Mo. 48 Brent Wilkinson LB Mt. Vernon, Ohio 49 Bill Solomon MG New Castle, Pa. 50 Scott Collins LB Elmhurst, Ill. 51 Dave Fanikos C Lynnfield, Mass. 52 Charlie Godinez C McAllen, Texas 52 Glen Philpott DB Canton, Mass. 53 Larry Bean LB Somerville, Mass. 54 John Keenan LB Salem, Mass. 55 Bob Joyce LB Weymouth, Mass. 55 Mike Murray C Lexington, Mass. 56 Jerry Garvey MG Plainville, Conn. 57 John Gibbons LB Holyoke, Mass. 58 Dennis Ineman C Fort Wayne, Ind. 59 Sam Jensen C Bloomington...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Roster | 9/17/1984 | See Source »

...collection is the Wursthaus (4JFK St.), smack on the Square. In the restaurant, you can order cheeseburger mit French fries and eggs mit bacon, and even a rare customer quickly learns that the 'Haus has about as much to do with Hamburg as the Kong has to do with Canton. Go only if a nice cold Heinie just...

Author: By Michael W. Hirschorn, | Title: Dad's Passport Mom's Birth Certificate | 6/24/1984 | See Source »

...outskirts of Canton, the ballads of Country Singer Kenny Rogers boom across a small store where four youngsters are huddled over a Space Invaders screen. In the streets of Peking, long-haired young men in dapper trenchcoats walk arm in arm with girlfriends in high heels. Near by, in neon-lit consumer emporiums, grizzled countryfolk peel off huge sheaves of banknotes to buy TV sets to take back to their villages. The Jianguo Hotel is a replica of the Holiday Inn in Palo Alto, Calif. Not far away, Maxim's de Pékin serves haute cuisine at $70 a head...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: China: Capitalism in the Making | 4/30/1984 | See Source »

...befits such grand expectations, the post-Mao leadership has also overhauled the structure of China's relations with the world. From the Daqing oilfields in the north to Canton in the south, from Shanghai in the east to sooty Lanzhou in the west, 1,600 foreign specialists are working to boost China's economy. Some 128 American firms have offices in Peking; this year trade between the U.S. and China will amount to $5.5 billion, a fiftyfold increase since 1972. Ten years ago, almost no Chinese were allowed to go overseas; today there are 10,000 students...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: China: Capitalism in the Making | 4/30/1984 | See Source »

Visions of riches have drawn Americans to China ever since the first U.S. ship arrived in Canton precisely 200 years ago this summer. Last week that ancient quest continued. Led by Treasury Secretary Donald Regan, a 34-member delegation journeyed to Peking in hopes of boosting commerce with the world's most populous country. Said William Clarke, the Peking-based representative of the privately run National Council for U.S.-China Trade: "The mood is good. This should be the crunch year in China trade...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: New Life for an Ancient Dream | 4/2/1984 | See Source »

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