Word: kaishek
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...Chinese people, he said, have arisen. "The Chinese people, who victoriously overthrew the rule on China's mainland of Japanese imperialism, and of American imperialism and its lackey Chiang Kaishek, will certainly succeed in driving out the United States aggressors and recover Taiwan [Formosa] and all other territories that belong to China ... As a result of the victories of the great Socialist October Revolution of the Soviet Union, of the anti-Fascist second World War, and of the great revolution of the Chinese people, all the oppressed nations and people of the East have awakened and organized themselves...
...about a quarter of the U.S. investment in Mexico, and much of the U.S. China investment was in hospitals and schools. Ironically, many U.S. traders in China falsely denounced by the Communists as the mainspring of "U.S. imperialism," joined with the liberals and the Communists in tearing down Chiang Kaishek. Few of the U.S. China traders ever had any drive toward imperialism or any sense of the real nonimperialist meaning of the Open Door policy, as explained by the late Henry Cabot Lodge. Said he, prophetically: "We only ask that we be admitted to this great market [China] upon...
...meeting tonight, Arthur N. Holcombe '06, Eaton Professor of the Science of Government, will speak on "Bi-partisan Aspects of Foreign Policy." Holcombe, who was special advisor to Chiang Kaishek from 1927 to 1930, will probably center his attention on the present Chinese communist crisis in Korea...
Russia and China could not agree within a year-the U.S. assumed they would not-the U.N. General Assembly would make the decision. Similarly, if these four nations could not agree on what to do about Formosa and Formosa's best-known inhabitant, Chiang Kaishek, that too would be put up to the veto-free U.N. General Assembly...
Shrieks & Secrets. Journeying to China in 1927, "Kalty" interviewed Chiang Kaishek, "an altogether charming human being" at a back province Buddhist monastery. The generalissimo, says Kaltenborn, "was clearly pleased that we had come so far to see him," and sent a breakfast of "California oranges and . . . San Francisco chocolate drops." Mussolini was pleased, too. "He even treated us as important guests by rising from his chair and advancing to the front of his desk while we covered the interminable distance . . . across the immense room." When Il Duce had trouble with English words, recalls Kaltenborn, "I would tentatively suggest one. Several...