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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
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- 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.
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- 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."
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- 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."
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- 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."
-