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Everyone a Soldier. For months, Peking-watchers have been expecting a drastic social upheaval. Since November, China has writhed under a purge of "antiparty monsters" that has swept away many high-ranking party officials, journalists and artists. Peking propagandists have been praising Mao to the skies, whipping up much the same frenzied atmosphere as that preceding the 1958 leap. Mao himself added a mysterious element by disappearing from public view for six months and reappearing only...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Red China: Another Leap? | 8/12/1966 | See Source »

Last week an editorial in Peking's People's Daily explained that Mao had withdrawn from public view to "provide the scientific answer to the question of how to prevent the restoration of capitalism." The answer: "Turn everyone into a soldier." People's Daily exhorted the army "to turn China's factories, rural communities, schools, trading undertakings, service trades, and party and government organizations into great and truly revolutionary schools like the liberation army itself." How the army would go about providing the schools has not yet been spelled out. Perhaps the army, with its highly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Red China: Another Leap? | 8/12/1966 | See Source »

Revolutionary Meals. The call to take on expanded tasks was not limited to the army. While the main job of workers remains in industry, Mao has called on them to study military affairs, culture and, whenever possible, engage in agricultural production. Though the peasants' main task remains farming, they too should study military affairs, politics and culture and, if possible, "collectively run small plants." In addition to being a teacher, the army can engage in farming and "run some small or medium-size factories...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Red China: Another Leap? | 8/12/1966 | See Source »

...spur the nation, Mao clearly wants to re-create the spirit of Yenan, where he and his followers in the 1930s holed up in caves and nurtured the revolution that was later to overrun the country. In Yenan, intellectuals served as peasants, peasants as workers, workers as soldiers. Mao's great fear is that young Chinese who, in his words, "have never fought a war or seen an imperialist," will fail to inherit the fiery revolutionary zeal that marked his early followers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Red China: Another Leap? | 8/12/1966 | See Source »

...Mao is spreading his zeal in a particularly unpalatable way. In the past few months, the regime has been pushing a program to get the populace to eat an occasional "revolutionary meal" or "bitter-herb meal," made up of unhusked rice, wild-grown vegetables and leaves-the type of food that Mao and his fellow revolutionaries sometimes subsisted on during the Long March and the years in Yenan...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Red China: Another Leap? | 8/12/1966 | See Source »

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