Word: jun
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Outside the sandbagged government office building, hundreds of women queued up to try to identify the bodies of 16 fallen rebels displayed in open coffins. The corpse of a Protestant minister, Moon Jun Choi, was also found in a small building where the rebels had deposited thousands of their weapons. Hospitals, meanwhile, were overcrowded with wounded; some had been shot in the legs because the paratroopers had been ordered to aim low and avoid killing if possible...
...Japanese not only are more dependent on foreign energy supplies than any other of the major allies, they are also isolated from their partners by geography, time zones and even language. The Japanese claim that they are by nature reluctant to speak out boldly on issues. Says Jun Tsunoda, director of Tokyo's Center for Strategic Studies: "We are brought up in a tradition of civility. We don't like to say blunt things...
...said in the last three years, there were only one to four scripts in the competition while this year there were seven. Another contender in the competition, Jun Makihara '79 said the Pudding "will encourage practically anybody to write a script...
...Jun Katsuki '80, a native of Japan, had more unusual cravings. She said she misses dishes such as raw fish and octopus tentacles and complains that the rice is not sticky enough here...
...American diplomacy too much of a one-man show. Says a Democratic adviser to several Presidents: "When you personalize foreign policy to the extent he has, you must be prepared to rise with success and descend with failure. You live by the sword and you die by the sword." Jun Tsunoda, who advises the Japanese government on U.S. affairs, makes the same point. "Diplomacy in today's complex world is too big a job for one man to handle in person...