Word: yung
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...still be the Chairman, but Chou has emerged as China's unquestioned chief executive officer, ruling the country through what amounts to a working coalition of old-line-and old-aged-party bureaucrats and army officers. In Peking, Chou works in tandem with Army Chief Huang Yung-sheng, 65, an earthy, untraveled man who has little in common with the urbane, sophisticated Premier...
Indeed, one graduate of the Harvard Law School suggested that the very presence of the pro-war speakers on campus was an incitement. "Bringing in pro-warriors to a militantly antiwar campus," wrote B. Ko-Yung Tung, "logically results in disruption. Therefore, it is the pro-war speakers and their sponsors who... provoked the resultant disruption." (CRIMSON, April...
...argument often invoked by defenders of free speech violations is the argument that no one is entitled to use his free speech in order to yell "Fire" in a crowded theater. In B. Ko-Yung Tung's very sympathetic letter to the CRIMSON, this line of reasoning is offered as one possible defense of the pro-war Teach-in heckling. Mr. Tung writes that, since "bringing in pro-warriors to a militantly anti-war campus logically results in disruption," it was the pro-warriors themselves who provoked the disruption...
...military dominates the Revolutionary Committees that rule at the province and district level. Army officers occupy deputy posts in several of Peking's ministries and hold eleven seats on the ruling 21-man Politburo. The fastest-rising man in China is Army Chief of Staff Huang Yung-sheng (TIME, Aug. 24), who now ranks fifth on official lists. Some radicals, by contrast, have fallen from power, particularly those who gathered around Mao's wife Chiang Ching. Among those conspicuously absent from the National Day parade: Politburo Members Hsieh Fu-chih and Chen Pota, both powerful proponents...
...visit to Peking used to be an airport greeting by Premier Chou En-lai and the "cordial conversation" with Chairman Mao Tse-tung. Now there is a third. In recent weeks, ranking visitors from Rumania and North Korea have met not only Mao and Chou but also General Huang Yung-sheng, 64, Chief of Staff of China's People's Liberation Army. Last week when the heads of state of South Yemen and the Sudan came to town, Huang acted as co-host with Chou, who has accorded the general a rare compliment. Said Chou...