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Tibetans on Tibet
Wangdui, male, was born in 1949 in Lhasa. He joined the PLA in /969, and was given a job as a Tibetan language translator in the Central People's Radio Broadcast-ing Station. He graduated from the Journalism Depart-ment of the Beijing Radio Broadcasting College and is now chiefofthe Tibet Office of the China Radio International.-- I Am an Eyewitness to Tibet

Yexei Xerab, male, was born iin 1927 in Lhasa. He started work in 1959, and served as an art editor with the Tibet Daily from 1961 and 1988. He was involved with the preparatory work for the founding of the Tibet Federation of Literary and Art Circles; and served as vice-president of the Tibet Association of Fine Artists in 1979; became a member of the Chinese Association of Fine Artists in 1980, a member of the Sino-Japanese Association of Fine Artists in 1982, a council member of the China Association of Calligraphers in 1983, honorary chairman of the Tibet Branch of the China Association of Calligraphers in 1984. He passed the appraisal of the National Academic Title Appraisal Committee to win the academic title of ¡°senior editor¡± in 1987. He retired in 1988. --My Art Belongs to the People

Gyiayang was born in Yadong in 1943. From 1951 to 1952, he worked as a household servant in Bhutan. In 1956, he started to work and was sent to study in the Central Iustitute for Nationalities in Beijing. When he graduated in 1963, he worked as a narrator in the Tibet Hall of the Beijing Cultural Palace for Nationalities. He worked as a narrator in the Tibet Revo-lutionary Exhibition in 1970. In 1971-1972, he worked for the Tibet Educa-tional and Translation Administration. In the ensuring three years, lie studied archaeology in the Depart-ment of History' of Shaanxi Northwest University. From 1975 to 1986, he served as deputy director of the Tibet Cultural Relics Manage-ment Committee. From 1986 until now, he has served as deputy director of the Tibet Cultural Commission and director of the Tibet Cultural Relics Administration. --Protection of Cultural Relics in Tibet
Lobsang Gunggar was born in 1938 in Lhasa. He started work in 1954, and graduated from the Northwest Institute of Nationalities in January 1957. From 1957 to 1978, he taught Tibetan an conducted research in the Department of Ethnic Languages of the Central institute of Nationalities in Beijing, and later was promoted to be the deputy director of the Tibetan Lan guage Teaching and Re search Office of the institute From the end of 1978 to early 1985, he worked for the Teaching Material Compiling Office of the Tibet Autonomous Region, serving as a chief editor ~, many textbooks for middle and primary schools. Since March 1985, he has been serving as director and later Party secretary of the Audio Visual Education Hall of the Tibet Autonomous Region. -- Audio-Visual Education Develops Apace in Tibet
Cering Como was born in August 1949 in Lhasa. She studied in the No.1 Primary School there from 1956 to 1962, and in the Lhasa Middle School from 1962 to 1969; worked in the Renqen gang Township, Maqu, Doilungdeqen County; Lhasa from 1969 to 1971. Until 1978, she then taught in the Ngari Prefec-tural Middle School. She was transferred to the Tibet Women '5 Federation, and, beginning in May 1998, she served as its vice--chairperson. She was elected a deputy' to the Lhasa Chengguan District People's Congress. In 1998, she was elected a deputy' to the 8th National Congress of the Chinese Women. -- Women's Rights and Interests Improve Today
Baima Nazin was horn in 1967 in Lhasa. She entered Lhasa No.1 Primar~' School in 1974, and the PLA Art College in Beijing in 1979. When she graduated in 1981, she was enrolled bv the Art Troupe of the Politi-cal Department 9f the PLA Tibet Military Area. She was demobilized and started work as a reporter for the Tibet People's Radio Station in 1982. She became an edi-tor and host of the Snow Lotus in the Air program of the Literary' Section of the Tibet Radio Broadcasting Station in 1991, and an edi-tor and host for the Special Feature Section of the Tibet TV Station in 1995. In 1999 she started to work for the Association of Writers at-tached to the Tibet Federa-tion of Literary and Art Circles. --Seeking the Perfection of Art
Puncog Cering was born in 1937 in Lhasa. He taught in the Tibet Communist Youtli League School in Xianyang. Shaanxi Province in I 958, worked in the Tibet Archives in 1963, served as director of the History and Culture Research Institute ~f the Ti-bet Teachers' Institute and later deputy director of the Compilation and Transla-tion Bureau of the Tibet Au-tonomous Region in 1978. He was promoted to be deputy secretary general of the CPPCC Tibet Commit-tee in 1986, and became president of the Tibet Acad-emy of Social Sciences in 1992. He has now retired, but is still engaged in re-search work. --Unveiling the Mysterious libetan History

Chilai Qoizha was born in 1938 in Lhasa. He was di-rector and editor-in-chief of the Tibet People's Publish-ing House. From 1992 to 1998, he served as the direc-tor of the Tibet Museum, and president of the Tibet Asso-ciation of Folklore. He has retired. --Tibet Museum and I