New China News Agency, Peking, March 27. During the movement of learning from Ta-chai in agriculture, the hsien committee of the Chinese Communist Party, Yün-meng hsien, Hupeh Province, has made serious efforts to carry out the Party's policy of preserving cultural relics. Recently, with the support of units in charge of cultural relics in this province, and in conformance with the basic construction of farmland, twelve tombs dating from the late Warring States period to the Ch'in dynasty were excavated at Shui-hu-ti in this hsien. In one of the tombs more than 1,000 bamboo slips from the Ch'in dynasty were unearthed. The main contents of these slips are Ch'in laws and documents. This is another important find of our country's work in cultural relics and archaeology, and follows the discovery of bamboo slips at Yin-ch'üeh-shan [in Shantung] and of books written on silk at Ma-wang-tuai [in Hunan]. The new finds provide important materials for the study of the historical experience of the Ch'in dynasty in promoting and implementing the Legalist line and imposing the dictatorship of the landlord class over the slave-owning class.