Woon and his fellow poets continued to publish poetry journals throughout the 70s, and for the issue on January 1st 1977 they changed the name of the journal from 天狼星 Sirius, the name they started using back in Malaysia, to 神州 Shenzhou, which literally means "the land of God," a euphemism for China. This was because Woon and his brother ended up parting from each other due to ideological conflicts, leading to Woon establishing 神州詩社 Shenzhou Poetical Society with his 黃昏星 Huang Huen-Xing、廖雁平 Liao Yan-Ping、周清嘯 Zhou Qing-Xiao and Fang. In the preface for this issue, Woon continued to discuss the problematic of the Western-Chinese, modern-classical bianries, theorizing a comparative literary framework that questioned those binaries and urged his contemporaries to write about 我們身邊的生活,我們每天所耳聞目見的,更迫切的問題 "our daily lives and the more urgent problems that we see and hear every day" (4). It is important to note that this issue was published through a commercial publisher 故鄉出版社 rather than self-published. This demonstrates the rapid growth in scale of the journal and the society, which was the main reason why the KMT government eventually worked to disintegrate them.