Word: taipei
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...gorges of the Kialing River. He went to Formosa in 1948 as a member of a good-will mission just before Communists seized control of Nanking's National Central University, where he was teaching, refused to return to the mainland, is now chairman of the art department of Taipei's Provincial Teachers College...
...been a constant clamor to oust Chiang and to seat Communist China in the U.N., only 18 non-Communist nations have recognized the Red regime in Peking. But 44 nations have diplomatic relations with Nationalist China, and where there were four embassies in Chiang's capital of Taipei in 1949, there are now 16. The last major nation to switch recognition from Chiang to the Reds was Egypt, which did so in May 1956 during Nasser's early flirtation with the Communists. In the last two months the Nationalists have won recognition from three previously uncommitted nations-Jordan...
...much at his weekly news conference in reply to a double-barreled question about 1) the "durability" of U.S. relations with the Chinese Nationalists on Formosa, and 2) the "possibility" of reopening U.S.-Red Chinese trade. U.S.-Formosan relations, said the President, "are unchanged as a result [of the Taipei riots] as of this moment, and so far as I know, no one has suggested any change." As for trade with Peking, the embargo against it is a matter of "law" and "so long as that law is on the books, of course, that is that."* Correspondents quickly noted that...
...Nationalist Chinese capital of Taipei on Formosa. Kishi was met by a crowd of more than 600, whisked off from the airport in a 15-car motorcade to the official guest house, which housed the Japanese Governors-General in Japan's prewar days as ruler of Formosa. Kishi presented Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek with two embroidered silk comforter covers (a standard Japanese wedding gift), received in turn from the Gimo two grass bed mats and a decorative ship model fashioned from pale pink seashells. The old enemies got along quite well...
...people feels or where it is going. Such pips often come at the oddest moments. A smartly dressed, tart-tongued Chinese career woman from Hong Kong brought Coates a pair of knitted socks after a business trip to Formosa. Asked the surprised Coates: "You knitted them in-in Taipei?" Quipped she sardonically: "Of course, dear. In Taipei everybody knits-nothing else to do." Watching the sacred wooden temples of Nara, 8th century capital of Japan, Author Coates senses the painstaking, frustrating drive towards perfectionism in the Japanese soul, virtually the only high civilization ever to record and preserve its architectural...