The Socialist Education Movement (Simplified Chinese: 社会主义教育运动; Traditional Chinese: 社會主義教育運動; pinyin: Shèhuìzhǔyì Jiàoyù Yùndòng, abbreviated 社教运动 or 社教運動), also known as the Four Cleanups Movement (Simplified: 四清运动; Traditional: 四清運動; pinyin: Sìqīng Yùndòng) was the movement launched by Mao Zedong in 1963 in the People's Republic of China. Mao sought to remove what he believed to be "reactionary" elements within the bureaucracy of the Communist Party of China, saying that "governance is also a process of socialist education." The Movement, whose goal was to cleanse politics, economy, organization, and ideology, was to last until 1966.
Reference
The Socialist Education Movement (http://past.people.com.cn/GB/shizheng/252/5301/5302/20010612/487072.html), People's Daily website, in Simplified Chinese
Thus, some waste cleanup projects are not feasible candidates for privatization.
Four of those studies are now underway, and others will be initiated under the multi-year plan developed by JIEE researchers.
Exercises allow the students to understand, and question, how the risk is characterized, predict ground water movement of the solvent, and develop a feasible plan for managing the risk to humans.
In the mid-1960s, this section was scheduled for full rehabilitation and widening, as demonstrated by the four-lane road built to the Crestline Bridge from San Bernardino.
However, the proposed widening of Highway 18 to four lanes all the way to Big Bear was stopped cold when an earthquake fault was discovered while rebuilding the Crestline Bridge for the road-widening project.
The Old Fire of 2003 burned all the railings and overheated the rocks on the mountainside as the fire jumped the road and burned into the Skyland, Horseshoe Bend and Arrowhead Highlands areas, threatening the entire community of Crestline numerous times.