Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

Tag Contributor Date Subject Type Collection Series Specific Item Type Time Period

177 results

  • quotations I'd like to--so Tung Shao Ping [Deng Shoa Ping], Zhouen-Lai [Zhou Enlai], Mao Tse Tung, they had to have more stronger relations, commercial and other with the United States in order to be in a better partnership to go back into the big LBJ
  • quotations I'd like to--so Tung Shao Ping [Deng Shoa Ping], Zhouen-Lai [Zhou Enlai], Mao Tse Tung, they had to have more stronger relations, commercial and other with the United States in order to be in a better partnership to go back into the big LBJ
  • -- was "great empty talk.'.' A few isolated cases of double-talk might be passed over without resulting in an ideological purge, but frequent and more explicit challenges of the Party line could not . It is the official line that the thinking of Mao Tse-Tung
  • quarters was raided a year later and closed, the pe·rsonnel joined Mao Tse-tung's soviet in Kiangsi. Mao continued to hold .the chairmanship ot the party during the soviet's existence and became the central figure in the Communist Party after the conference
  • - - .. REVOLUTION.. IN PAHT ICULAR HAS PF.FN l"i Ur. H STRENGTHENED. , EV EN . ADl"lITTING THAT THOUGHT OF MAO TSE-TUNG AND SOCIALIST STRUCTURE MAY BE CONSIDERED MOST SUITABLE TO CHINA, OUR JAPAN IS CAPITALIST COUNTRY. OF COURSE . THERE ARE \/ AfH OUS DEFECTS
  • ON DISCOVER INVENTING, CREATING, A,NDAt>VANC/1G. • IN ACCO~DANCE WITH THIS T[ACH~NG BY CHAIRMAN MAO,THE CHINESE PEOPLE• S t.I BERATION ARMY t BROAD ;SECT IONS Ofi WORKERS ANDF'UNCT IONARIES, AND SCI£"TISTS ANDTECHNICIANS ~AVESET THEMSELVES (WORDINDISTINCT
  • -- I -- 25 same type of approach almost, you might say, that Stalin had toward Mao Tse-tung back in the days of the Chinese civil war. They sort of wanted the communist side to win, but they didn't want them to be able to say in effect that they were do
  • . they forever. either. Minister On the He said other that that this However, hand, we should would Chiang not be be MAO Tse-Tung may not unduly live hasty will too with not much longer respect Communist China lest we create Communist
  • ; postwar Rome characterized; the Italy-Yugoslavia border issue; the Marshall Plan; transfers to China in 1948; evaluates the communist movement in China; Chiang Kai-shek evaluated; the issue of aid to Mao Tse-tung; the communist occupation of Nanking
  • for that function. When I mentioned earlier the émigrés--as you may know, on the Taiwan scene, which was recent history, there was the whole third-force phenomenon. Somebody has to talk to the third force, which was neither Chiang Kai-shek nor Mao Tse-tung
  • , and study communism. Boy, that's the Bible. If the Christians made their people study the Bible, the way the Communists study the doctrines of Marx and Lenin and Mao Tse-tung and so on, all right. G: Did you have any--did you do any medical practice while
  • somewhat apart. There are a few folks down here who might take the occasion to make a display of a non-segregated gathering, which might lead to some misunderstanding and criticism.” Peking is chosen as the capital of Communist China by Mao Tse-tung. 3/26
  • principal areas-time and cost. They appear convinced that both factors- are now working in their favor. Time: America appears impatient to end the war. We think in terms of weeks and months. Hanoi thinks in terms of years and decades.* • Mao Tse-tung long
  • r 1966, mainland Chinese laborers work ing along the China•Hong Kon3 border held der.ionstratiOn$ emphasizing the tho\1ght of Mao Tse-tung , and in December local leftist labor unions stepp~d up their efforts to wrest con­ cessions froLa e;;.ployers
  • ~!. HOP£YOU,LADY8IRD AN~RESTOF YOU~FA~ILYAREIN VERY GOODJlEALTll. · WITH VARN PERSO~AL REGARDS, • _· MOHA~MAO AYUSKKA~ENDINNERQUOT£ TM! PP.ESIDE~T ~OULD3E GLAOIF YOUKINOLY TRANS~IT THIS NESSAGE ro PR£3I)E;\~T JOHNso;q AS QUICKLY' AS POSSI3tE. WITHxn10 R
  • of the country as it is now, but when Mao Tse-Tung dies, that may change. Then they may be more amenable to getting back into international circles than they are now. M: Does the likelihood of agreement increase with the achievement of parity in arms race
  • very important? P: Ideology, Marxism-Leninism enroute to Asia underwent a sea change that emptied it of its content. This is true in China, too--Mao Tse-tung's little red book sort of thing. In Moscow if you master Marxism- Leninism you
  • ] Prince Sihanouk Mao Tse Tung MILITARY LEADERS, PRE WW II, Cromwell, Oliver MILITARY LEADERS, Napoleon COMMANDERS IN CHIEF, Eisenhower, Dwight D. Johnson, Lyndon B. Kennedy, John F. Nixon, Richard M. Roosevelt, Franklin D. Wilson, Woodrow GENERAL MILITARY
  • by those in Hanoi and Peking who want to see if the "protracted war" theories· of Mao Tse-tung will work. If these theories hold in Vietnam, they unquestionably will be ap­ plied elsewhere, and we shall have to confront them again and again. The Communists
  • by those in Hanoi and Peking who want to see if the "protracted war" theories· of Mao Tse-tung will work. If these theories hold in Vietnam, they unquestionably will be ap­ plied elsewhere, and we shall have to confront them again and again. The Communists
  • are such leaders as there is some light at the end of Red China's Mao Tse - tung, that tunnel. President Sukarno of Indonesia, Elsewhere, the Administration Ghana's Ex-President Kwame ~ees heartening signs. Nkrumah, Algeria's former Prer g atists Coming In mi~r
  • must contend with the effect of a diplomatic ruptu,re on deliveries through China to Hanoi, a ·s well as on current Soviet maneuvers against Peking in the international Com­ munist movement. 2. Opposition to Mao Continues Our Consulate General in Hong
  • came to birth, under Mao Tse-tung and Chou En Lai. So I guess that was the biggest thing that was happening abroad, but also in Hungary Cardinal [József] Mindzenty was being convicted of treason and sentenced to life imprisonment. And finally NATO
  • that their advice was, "Don't go too far too fast or China will enter the war, just like Korea." think this held us back to a great extent. And I I feel sure that until the time that President Nixon went to Peking and made some assurances to Mao Tse-tung
  • of his colleagues to criticize President de Gaulle as an individual. He suppressed all temptations to attack de Gaulle personally, and you won't find in the public record anywhere personal attacks by President Johnson on men like Kosygin, or Mao Tse-tung
  • , by makinc these ill• appear as riet8. Other publications _red ~ook, entitled er periotical which were found in practically every raid was a small, "QUOTATIONS FROM CHAIRMAN MAO TSE TUNG"and a booklet c ilea "THECRUSADER", published by ROeERT F