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- GRAPEVINE, Page 21Let a Hundred Snickers Blossom
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- By DAVID ELLIS/Reported by Sidney Urquhart
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- The eight-line poem seemed innocent enough. Its themes of
- homesickness and patriotism clearly appealed to the conservative
- editors of the overseas edition of the People's Daily, where it
- appeared two weeks ago: "I miss my distant home/ Never will I
- give up my aspirations to serve my country." But hidden within
- these traditionalist sentiments, attributed to Zhu Haihong, a
- student studying in the U.S., was a subversive message. When the
- Chinese characters are read diagonally from upper right to lower
- left, a slap at the country's repressive and unpopular Premier
- becomes clear: Li Peng must step down to appease the people's
- anger. The secret slogan is the talk of Beijing. Meanwhile,
- enraged government officials have launched an investigation into
- the "political accident."
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