Word: chu
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...Intrigue. Nationalist China reached to Washington to make its charge. The accused: Lieut. General Mao Pang-chu, 47, a fellow villager (Fenghua in Chekiang province) of Chiang Kaishek, stationed in the U.S. since 1943 as chief of his government's aviation procurement. The accusation: in the past five years, Mao 1) failed to account for almost $20 million in aviation procurement funds placed at his disposal, 2) protected disloyal staffmen and 3) spread rumors undermining the prestige of Nationalist China...
...blood purges and stifling of thought, take pride in the fact, attested by many observers, that under them the ancient oriental custom of "squeeze" is largely abolished and corruption has disappeared. Last week, however, Peking's People's Daily reported the short, gay life of one Chen Chu-hung...
...occasion. A new opera, the theme of which was the Communists' famed "long march," opened at the Peking People's Art Theater. At a rally in Peking, spotlights lit up giant portraits of the Red pantheon, including Mao Tse-tung, Liu Shao-chi, Chou Enlai, Chu Teh, Marx, Engels, Lenin and Stalin. Said Liu: "Our party is the greatest, most glorious and most consistently correct party in the history of China. As Comrade Mao has said, 'The victory we have so far achieved is only the first.' " Planes roared overhead and scattered leaflets on the crowd...
...Communist wavelengths. But as the weekend ticked away the silence was broken only by discouraging sounds. The Peking radio slapped at Ridgway for acting like "a victor calling upon the other side to surrender." A few more hours passed; a still more disturbing noise: the words of General Chu Teh, commander in chief of all Red Chinese forces. "Unless American aggressors are withdrawn from Korea," he said, "there is no way out." Was that to be the enemy's answer...
...following consists of excerpts from a letter sent by Chao-Chu Chi '52, formerly of Eliot House, to some of his friends at Harvard. After living in this country for ten years Chao returned to his home in China last summer. The CRIMSON publishes this letter in the belief that it is of general interest to Harvard students...