Word: tsiang
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Tingfu F. Tsiang, Chief Chinese Delegate to the United Nations, will speak on "Formosa and the Peace and Freedom of Asia," at 8 p.m. tonight in Paine Hall. William Y. Elliott, Leroy B. Williams Professor of History and Political Science, will introduce Tsiang. The talk is under the auspices of the Harvard U.N. Council...
...while dressing each morning. Secretary General Trygve Lie, a ponderous, uncomfortable figure in blue, his hand plunged deep inside his coat, seemed a Falstaff, cast, under protest, as Napoleon. Yugoslavia's Ales Bebler, presiding, wore a sleepy, slit-eyed look of boredom. Nationalist China's T. F. Tsiang sat with the uninterested look of one who had known all along what was coming, and finally appeared to be dozing. All except Tsiang had held such high hopes of Wu's visit to Lake Success. They would make a deal with Mao's agent. They would reassure...
...Tsiang's appearance will be part of a program of speakers sponsored by the Council that will include Sir Gladwyn Jebb, Dr. Ralph Bunche, and Sumner Welles...
Early last week Dr. Ting-fu Tsiang, Nationalist China's representative on the U.N. Security Council, lost patience with Russia's Jacob Malik. The Russian representative, snapped Dr. Tsiang one day last week, "spends much of his superabundant energy in trying to prove to us that black is white and that white is black." Malik's retort made spectators grin: Tsiang's reference to black & white was "an insult to 14 million Negroes in the U.S." He added heavily: "White men, too, may have a black conscience and a black soul...
...Said Tsiang: "We in China divide . . . imperialists into two categories: the ocean devils and the land devils. Among the powers which came over the seas, in the first place, were Spain and Portugal; then came The Netherlands, Great Britain and France; still later came Germany and Italy. The one country which came to exploit and conquer Asia over land was Russia . . . The United States of America did not participate . . . The policy of the United States in the Far East was based on sound United Nations principles 50 years before these principles were embodied in the Charter of the United Nations...