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Mao Bangchu

Mao Bangchu or Mow Pang Tzu (Chinese: 毛邦初; also transcribed as Mow Pang Tsu, Mow Pong Tsu, or Mow Pang Chu; 5 March 1904 – 22 June 1987) was a high-ranking military officer in the Chinese Chiang Kai-shek government. He was the main figure in an embezzlement scandal that pitched him against the Taiwan government in the early fifties. The charges and countercharges of fraud and misappropriation of millions of dollars, ensuing legal battles, and John-le-Carré-like plots involving private detectives, Mexican prisons, night-club dancers, US Congressmen, suspicious deaths, and the US Supreme Court, were covered in over 2,000 articles published in the US, China, Australia, India, and many other countries around the world.

Mao Bangchu
毛邦初
Mao Bangchu in 1943
Personal details
Born(1904-03-05)5 March 1904
Shanghai, China
Died22 June 1987(1987-06-22) (aged 83)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Spouse(s)Wong Ay Chua
Agnes Kelly (1951–1956)
AwardsMedal of the Kuomintang (1944) Legion of Merit (1945)
Military service
Allegiance Republic of China
Branch/service Republic of China Air Force
Years of service1927–1952
Rank Major General (1940–1949) Lieutenant General (1949–1952)
Commands Republic of China Air Force
Battles/wars

Early life edit

Mao Bangchu was born in Shanghai, China, in 1904. His ancestral hometown is Fenghua, Ningbo, Zhejiang Province. His mother was the older sister of Mao Fumei, the first wife of Chiang Kai-shek, and mother of Chiang Ching-kuo.[1][2] Chiang Kai-shek, the leader of the Republic of China between 1928 and 1975, was born in 1887 in Xikou, a town approximately 30 kilometers (19 mi) southwest of downtown Ningbo. Mow Pang Tzu's father worked for Standard Oil in Shanghai.[2]

Military career edit

Mao graduated from the 3rd class of China's Whampoa Military Academy in 1927. The academy was established in 1924 by the Kuomintang (KMT) with funds and support from the Soviet Union. Soviet officers initially focused their teaching on basic infantry topics and provided special classes for artillery, engineering, communication, logistical and machine gun units. After this basic training, Mao was sent to Moscow and Italy where he received additional flying training.[3] When he returned to China, he became Chiang Kai-shek's personal pilot and distinguished himself during the Northern Expedition that substantially increased Chiang's and the KMT's sphere of influence.[4] During the Northern Expedition, Chiang and his followers, including Mao, decided to purge the KMT of its communist wing.[5] The Shanghai Massacre of 12 April 1927, during which KMT's left wing members, students and worker union members were purged, heralding the beginning of the Chinese Civil War.

Further enhancing his standing with Chiang Kai-shek, Mao commanded the air assaults on a rebellious, heavily-fortified city in the Fujian Province, in 1934.[6][7] The successful assault proved crucial for Chiang's ground forces to take control of the city.[8] Subsequently, as member of the National Government Aviation Committee, Mao was sent to the United States to explore the purchase of new airplanes for the Chinese air force. While he attend an airshow in Miami, Florida,[9][10] he met Captain Claire Chennault, who let a demonstration by the Army Air Corps. Impressed by his skills, Mao invited him to come to China.[6] On 25 May 1940, Mao was promoted to major general, and in 1941 he helped Captain Chennault to established the 1st American Volunteer Group (AVG) of the Chinese Air Force.[1][6] Under the leadership of Chennault the AVG successfully engaged the Japanese air force on many occasions and became famous as the so-called "Flying Tigers." The Flying Tigers were also instrumental in establishing an alternate supply route over "The Hump," a connection between Burma and southern Chinese cities, such as Kunming and Chengdu.[11][12] Mao was part of a group of pilots that sought suitable routes through the very difficult terrain of the Himalayas.[13] The first recorded flight over what later became the Hump route from Dinjan, Burma, to Kunming, China, was performed by Xia Pu, a pilot of American citizenship from the China National Aviation Corporation in November 1941.[11][14]

Air Force Procurement Officer edit

In 1942 Mao was assigned to the U.S. to establish the Chinese Air Force Office in Washington, DC and was placed in charge of aviation procurement activities.[15][16] Over the years he was entrusted with over $50,000,000 (worth about half a billion dollars in 2015)[17] for the purchase of military aircraft and supplies.[18] On 14 August 1944, Mao was given the Medal of the Kuomintang, and in August 1945, President Harry Truman awarded him the U.S. Legion of Merit "for exceptionally meritorious conduct in the performance of outstanding services to the Government of the United States from February 1943 to August 1945."[19] Subsequently, he was promoted to lieutenant general of the Republic of China Air Force. In May 1945, Mao was appointed as a member of the Sixth Kuomintang Central Executive Committee. He eventually became the national government's representatives in the United States Aviation Committee and the United Nations Security Council.[20] In 1949 his wife, Wong Ay Chuan (also known as Pauline), and five of his six sons (Van, Maurice, Donald, Harry and William) joined General Mao in Washington, DC, where they lived in a diplomat residence on 32nd Street, N.W. in the Woodley Park neighborhood. His oldest son, David, who served in the Chinese air force, stayed in Taiwan.[18]

Scandal edit

In the early fifties, Mao became entangled in an embezzlement scandal that was covered in great detail in major US and Chinese newspapers.[21] The Chiang Kai-shek government of the Republic of China alleged that Mao failed to account for $19,440,000[4] (equivalent to about $180,000,000 in 2015)[22] and removed him from all official positions at the UN.[23] General Mow responded that the charges were only brought in retaliation for his discovery of corruption in the inner circles of the Chiang government.[24][25][26] Ambassador Wellington Koo recalled in his memoirs that at the heart of the matter were strong personal animosities between General Chou, who was leading the Chinese Air Force, and General Mao, who "always felt that he should have been the commanding general of the air force."[27] (Madame Chiang Kai-shek had accused both generals as early as 1938 of corruption and was dismayed they had not been punished more severely.[28] Similarly, in 1943, American General Joseph Stilwell, a military adviser to Chiang during World War II, strongly criticized Chiang and his generals for what he perceived as their incompetence and corruption.[29][30]) Koo furthermore found proof that Mao had diverted large sums of government funds into his own accounts in the US and around the world, which include $2,000,000 in United States Treasury bearer bonds.[27] Fearing extradition to Taiwan and possibly execution, General Mow did not appear in court as ordered,[31][32][33] and instead fled to Mexico in January 1952.[34][35][36] Initially he flew to San Antonio, TX with his assistant Frances Yuan, who later detailed the journey in a congressional hearing.[37] Subsequently, he flew to Tucson, AZ, took a bus to the border town of Nogales, AZ, and eventually arrived in the resort town of Cuernavaca, approximately 50 miles to the south of Mexico City. The first weeks he stayed with Oliver Kisich, a friend and nightclub entertainer from San Francisco. Mao went on to buy 250,000-Peso villa, hired 4 servants, and arranged for his secretary, Agnes Kelly, a "tall, blonde, ex-showgirl," to join him. When he attempted to obtain a Mexican passport under the cover name of Carlos Gomez Lee Wong, his identity was discovered, and Mexican authorities arrested him for illegal entry into their country.[18][38][39][40][41]

 
Mow Pang Tzu defending himself in Mexican Court.[42]

A protracted legal and political battle ensued during which Taiwan sought an extradition of General Mow from Mexico, and the recovery of $6,400,000 million in US courts. General Mow never disputed that he embezzled the funds. He claimed to be a "patriot, preserving all the millions for the people (of China), when they should cast off their present government."[18][42] Richard O'Connor from the Coronet Magazine commented, "Meanwhile, he spread plenty of their money around as a highly unofficial ambassador of good will." It was reported that the Chiang Kai-shek government hired John Broady,[26] an infamous private investigator,[43][44] to find and recover the missing funds, and to extract General Mow from Mexico. The attempt of removing Mow from Mexico failed, and an attempt to bring some of the recovered security notes to New York ended with the shooting death of Clarence Sopman, a Broady associate, near Mexico City.[18] In the end, General Mow was imprisoned in the Black Palace of Lecumberri, in a prison cell next to Leon Trotsky assassin Ramón Mercader, from 1951 until 1955.[45] Allegedly he paid $350 per month to have "luxury" prison housing, including a valet, cook, and weekly conjugal visits by Agnes Kelly.[18][46]

 
Cover of Transcript of Congressional Hearing HRG-1952-SJS-0024 concerning the General Mow case.[37]

The Mow case also became a proxy battle in the political fight over US support for Communist China under Mao Zedong or National China under Chiang Kai-shek.[47][48] In the late forties opinions in the US were split about who should be considered the true representative of the Chinese people, the communist government on the mainland, or the government in Taiwan (which was referred to as "Formosa" at that time). Many considered the Formosa government inapt and deeply corrupt;[29][30] and Mao Zedong, even though a communist, was considered a powerful ally against Japan and Russia.[49] The Korean War, which started in June 1950, seemed to settle the question in favor of Chiang Kai-shek.[50] Consequently, Republicans, such Congressman Walter H. Judd and Senator William F. Knowland strongly supported Taiwan's position. On the other hand, liberal democrats used the case to label Mow as "principled hero" and attacked the Chiang Kai-shek government.[51] A congressional hearing was convened during which France Yuan, Mow personal assistant, and Col. Hsiang, Mow's right hand, were called to testify.[37] Hsiang defended General Mow forcefully, but was not helped by the fact that his wife and children had fled to Communist China.[52] In the press the liberal Drew Pearson from the Washington Post wrote many articles to defend General Mow,[53][54][55][56][57] while the conservative columnist James Westbrook Pegler tried to discredit Pearson, by linking him to the embezzlement scandal. Apparently Pearson had indirectly received $60,000 from funds misappropriated by Mow.[58][59][60]

 
Mow leaving the Black-Palace prison in Mexico City, 24 May 1955.[61]

In 1955 a Mexican Court barred the extradition of General Mow, and he was freed from prison.[61][62][63][64][65] However, a US Appeals Court upheld a lower-court ruling that General Mow owed the Republic of China $6,368,503 plus interest and costs.[66][67][68][69][70][71][72] Trying to collect all the funds proved to be difficult, even though a good amount was recovered. For example, $810,000 were seized by court order in Los Angeles.[73][74] Two $100,000 treasury bonds turned up in Chicago,[75][76] and a $1,000,000 treasury bill was recovered when a Beverly Hills business man tried to cash it in California.[77] A settlement between the Republic of China and Mow was reached in 1958.[27][78][79] The settlement negotiated by ambassador George Yeh called for the return of about $1.5 million in Treasury notes still held in Swiss bank accounts. In exchange, General Mow was cleared of all charges and was allowed to keep $200,000 (equivalent to about $1,700,000 in 2015) for future living expenses. For the next 10 years he lived in Mexico, where he allegedly fathered 2 more children. In the mid-sixties General Mow returned to the US and settled in Los Angeles.[80] His sons Harry C.C. Mow and William C. W. Mow, President and CEO of the famous apparel brand Bugle Boy, supported him until his death in 1987.[81] A detailed account of the scandal, up to the settlement in 1958, was aired on Chinese TV on 15 May 2015.[79]

Certain aspect of the case are still of legal relevance today. For example, General Mow defended his position by claiming that Chiang Kai-shek was not the rightful president of Taiwan and hence could not have ordered him to come back or file a lawsuit on behalf of the Chinese people in US courts. The Supreme Court ruled that it is within the purview of the US President, represented by the State Department, to approve ambassadors and recognizes foreign governments.[82] At that time the State Department had provided a letter to the court stating that Chiang-Kai-Check is the recognized president of Taiwan, and Wellington Koo the recognized ambassador of Taiwan in the US. The Supreme Court recently affirmed this general position, when it struck down a law enacted by Congress, but opposed by President Obama, that would let American citizens born in Jerusalem have Israel listed in passports as their country of birth. Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote in his majority opinion, citing among other sources to the ruling in the Mow case, that recognizing foreign governments is "the President's exclusive power."[83][84] Another more complex issue arose over the legality of countersuits against a foreign government that has immunity, but brings a suit in an American court. For example, in this case, General Mow had countersued Chiang Kai-shek for defamation and the National City Bank of America, sued by the Republic of China for not releasing funds deposited by General Mow, countersute the Republic of China for recovery of lost funds. The courts held that such countersuites are only narrowly allowed if they directly impact the matter put forward by the suing foreign government.[85][86][72] Many of the rulings in this case have been cited in subsequent cases and are frequently discussed in modern law textbooks.[87][88][89]

Family edit

Mao had a younger brother, Mao Yingchu (Chinese: 毛瀛初), who was born in 1911.[2][90] He had a similar military career as his older brother, becoming a pilot in the Nationalist Air Force of China and rising to the position of commanding officer of the 23rd Pursuit Squadron of 4th Pursuit Group of the Chinese Air Force by 1937. He saw combat at the Battle of Shanghai, Nanking, Wuhan, Xuzhou during the Second Sino-Japanese War, becoming an ace-fighter pilot.[91] In June 1938, he married Zheng Xiuzhen, which whom he would later have two sons and two daughters. Later in the war, he served as an attaché at the Chinese embassy in Washington DC, United States. In 1946, he graduated from the US Staff and Command College at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, United States. He retired from Republic of China Air Force service in 1968 at the rank of lieutenant general. Between 1969 and 1981, he was an official at the Civil Aviation Authority, and subsequently became the Chairman of the Board of the Hawley & Hazel Chemical Company. He died in Taipei, Taiwan, in 2000.

Mow Pang Tsu was married to Pauline Mow. They had six sons. When the war with Japan broke out in 1937, the family moved to Chongqing, which had become Chiang Kai-shek's provisional capital. As a general's family they "lived lavishly, in a large house guarded by a squad of soldiers."[81] By the end of the war with Japan, in 1945, the family was living in Chengdu from where they undertook a long boat journey down the Yangtze River to Shanghai in 1946. At that time, the city was still held by Chiang's forces, but Communist troops were starting to encircle the city. By 1948, Pauline and her 6 sons were evacuated from mainland China to Taiwan, together with some 2 million people, consisting mainly of members of the ruling Kuomintang, intellectual and business elites, and soldiers. In March 1949, the family briefly returned to Shanghai to board the last Pan Am flight to the U.S. before the city fell to the Communists.[81][92] (The oldest son, David, was a pilot in the National Chinese Air Force, and stayed in Taiwan. He was killed in Vietnam flying cargo for China Air Transport into Saigon in support of the US war efforts, in 1974.) After General Mow had fled to Mexico in early 1951, Pauline and her sons had to vacate their diplomatic housing in Washington, DC, and settled in Great Neck, New York. Without the support of General Mow, unable to return to Taiwan, not willing to move back to mainland China under communist control, and not being American citizens, the family struggled. They opened a Chinese restaurant, the Yangtze River Cafe, to provide some income.[81] Luckily several of the Mow brothers had already been enrolled in a private boarding school (Riverdale Country School in Riverdale, NY), which agreed to waive the enrollment fees once the family fell on hard times. Growing up under these difficult circumstances, which were detailed by Van C. Mow in a 2005 lecture,[93] Pauline managed to send all of her sons to college.

Harry C.C. Mow, who was born in 1930, "became the father figure for his four younger brothers" when General Mow fled the US in December 1951.[94] He received a PhD degree in electrical engineering from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) in Troy, NY, in 1959. He married shortly following his graduation, and in 1963 moved with his family to Southern California. There he worked for the RAND Corporation, a nonprofit "think tank" of the U.S. Air Force, in Santa Monica. During the real estate boom of the late 1970s and 1980s, Harry left RAND and formed Century West Development Inc. As CEO and chairman of the board he led the developed of many real estate projects in the greater Los Angeles area and across the country. At the same time Harry became also a partner and member of the board of directors of the King's Seafood Company. He went on to become a member of the boards of directors of the UCLA Hospital, Preferred Bank of LA, and the Center for the Partially Sighted. He died on 1 March 2005, in Malibu, CA, leaving behind his wife, two daughters and two sons.

Donald Mow was born on 22 August 1932. After the family moved to the US in 1949, he attended Riverdale Country School and graduate in 1952.[95] He received a bachelor's degree in architecture from RPI, in 1956.[96] He went on to work for several architectural firms in New York City and was involved in the construction of the TWA terminal at JFK airport. Eventually, he became a self-employed architect with an office in Pleasantville, NY. He lived in Briarcliff Manor, NY for over 20 years. When he died on 16 February 2015 in Beijing, China, he was survived by his ex-wife Shirley Lau Mow and two sons, Douglas and Christopher, as well as his granddaughter, Jessica Mow.

William C. W. Mow was born on 18 April 1936 in Hangzhou, China.[80][81][97][98] After graduating from Riverdale Country School in 1955,[99] he earned a BSEE from Rensselaer Polytechnic, MSEE from Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn and a PhD degree in Electrical Engineering from Purdue University in 1967.[100] He became famous as the founder and CEO of Bugle Boy Industries, a clothing company especially known for its brand of denim jeans. During the 1980s sales approached $1 billion, making Bugle Boy one of the largest privately owned apparel companies in the United States. In the late 1990s the company started to struggle and in 2001 declared bankruptcy.[101] In 1999, William donated part of his fortune to Riverdale Country School, the school that had helped the family in the early 1950s. In turn, the school named their Main Building on Hill Campus William C.W. Mow Hall.[102]

 
Van C. Mow at the Univ. of Miami, 2014.

Van C. Mow was born as the 5th son on 10 January 1939 in Chengdu, China. Like his three brothers before him, Mow also got his BS degree from RPI. In addition he pursued a PhD in applied mechanics and applied mathematics. Subsequently, he became one of the earliest researchers in the field of biomechanics, was elected President of the Orthopaedic Research Society and, in 2000, became the founding chair of the Department of Biomedical Engineering at Columbia University. Following a highly public dispute with the Dean of the Engineering School, Mow stepped down from his position in 2011.[103][104] He is one of the few scholars who have been elected to both the National Academy of Engineering (1991) and the National Academy of Medicine (2015). In 2005, Van Mow donated material related to his father's efforts in the China-Burma-India Theater to the Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics Aviation Museum,[105][106][107] forgoing the Republic of China Air Force Museum in Taipei, Taiwan.[108]

The youngest son, Maurice Mow, received a degree in civil engineering from RPI, in 1963. He went on to become the Chair of the Department of Civil Engineering at the California State University at Chico. Under his leadership civil engineering students achieved unprecedented successes in regional and national student competitions. Dr. Mow has also played a significant role in forging numerous corporate partnerships that have resulted in greater employment for graduates.[109] He retired in 2003.[110]

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  83. ^ "U.S. top court backs Obama, invalidates Jerusalem passport law," by Lawrence Hurley, REUTER-Politics, Monday, 8 Jun 2015.
  84. ^ "The Jerusalem Passport Case," The New York Times, 9 June 2015, p. A22.
  85. ^ 348 U.S. 356, 75 S.Ct. 423, 99 L.Ed. 389, The NATIONAL CITY BANK OF NEW YORK, Petitioner, v. The REPUBLIC OF CHINA et al., No. 30., Argued 9 Nov. 1954. Decided 7 March 1955. Rehearing Denied 18 April 1955. [2]
  86. ^ 208 F.2d 627, REPUBLIC OF CHINA et al. v. NATIONAL CITY BANK OF NEW YORK, No. 44, Docket 22773. United States Court of Appeals Second Circuit. Argued 10 November 1953. Decided 8 December 1953. [3]
  87. ^ Court-Listener Webpage[dead link]
  88. ^ "Sovereign Debt: Genesis - Restructuring - Litigation," by Mauro Megliani, Springer; 2015 edition (22 November 2014), ISBN 1401300529
  89. ^ International Law Reports (Volume 22), by Hersch Lauterpacht, Cambridge University Press (1 January 1994), ISBN 052146367X, p. 532
  90. ^ "Aces of the Republic of China Air Force", by Raymond Cheung, http://ww2db.com/person_bio.php?person_id=936
  91. ^ Gustavsson, Hakans. "Biplane Fighter Aces - China - Mao Ying-Chu". Biplane Fighter Aces - China. Mao Ying-Chu was a native of Fenghua County in Chekiang. His older brother Major General Mao Pang-Chu (also known as P. T. Mow and Peter Mow) was Combat Commander of the Chinese Air Force during the war... Mao Ying-Chu ended the war with at least 4 biplane victories and a total of 5.
  92. ^ Los Angeles Times, "Back to His Future," by Evelyn Iritani 28 September 1997
  93. ^ VC Mow, "How to Succeed in America as a Chinese Researcher: A personal journey from the abyss to day light," Plenary Honorary Lecture at the International Chinese Hard Tissue Society (ICHTC) Meeting, Washington, DC, 20 February 2005.
  94. ^ "Mow Family Ties Run Deep at Rensselaer," Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Alumni Magazine, Summer 2005.
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bangchu, this, chinese, name, family, name, pang, chinese, 毛邦初, also, transcribed, pang, pong, pang, march, 1904, june, 1987, high, ranking, military, officer, chinese, chiang, shek, government, main, figure, embezzlement, scandal, that, pitched, against, taiw. In this Chinese name the family name is Mao Mao Bangchu or Mow Pang Tzu Chinese 毛邦初 also transcribed as Mow Pang Tsu Mow Pong Tsu or Mow Pang Chu 5 March 1904 22 June 1987 was a high ranking military officer in the Chinese Chiang Kai shek government He was the main figure in an embezzlement scandal that pitched him against the Taiwan government in the early fifties The charges and countercharges of fraud and misappropriation of millions of dollars ensuing legal battles and John le Carre like plots involving private detectives Mexican prisons night club dancers US Congressmen suspicious deaths and the US Supreme Court were covered in over 2 000 articles published in the US China Australia India and many other countries around the world Mao Bangchu毛邦初Mao Bangchu in 1943Personal detailsBorn 1904 03 05 5 March 1904Shanghai ChinaDied22 June 1987 1987 06 22 aged 83 Los Angeles California U S Spouse s Wong Ay ChuaAgnes Kelly 1951 1956 AwardsMedal of the Kuomintang 1944 Legion of Merit 1945 Military serviceAllegiance Republic of ChinaBranch serviceRepublic of China Air ForceYears of service1927 1952RankMajor General 1940 1949 Lieutenant General 1949 1952 CommandsRepublic of China Air ForceBattles warsSecond Sino Japanese War World War II Burma Campaign China Burma India Theater Contents 1 Early life 2 Military career 3 Air Force Procurement Officer 4 Scandal 5 Family 6 ReferencesEarly life editMao Bangchu was born in Shanghai China in 1904 His ancestral hometown is Fenghua Ningbo Zhejiang Province His mother was the older sister of Mao Fumei the first wife of Chiang Kai shek and mother of Chiang Ching kuo 1 2 Chiang Kai shek the leader of the Republic of China between 1928 and 1975 was born in 1887 in Xikou a town approximately 30 kilometers 19 mi southwest of downtown Ningbo Mow Pang Tzu s father worked for Standard Oil in Shanghai 2 Military career editMao graduated from the 3rd class of China s Whampoa Military Academy in 1927 The academy was established in 1924 by the Kuomintang KMT with funds and support from the Soviet Union Soviet officers initially focused their teaching on basic infantry topics and provided special classes for artillery engineering communication logistical and machine gun units After this basic training Mao was sent to Moscow and Italy where he received additional flying training 3 When he returned to China he became Chiang Kai shek s personal pilot and distinguished himself during the Northern Expedition that substantially increased Chiang s and the KMT s sphere of influence 4 During the Northern Expedition Chiang and his followers including Mao decided to purge the KMT of its communist wing 5 The Shanghai Massacre of 12 April 1927 during which KMT s left wing members students and worker union members were purged heralding the beginning of the Chinese Civil War Further enhancing his standing with Chiang Kai shek Mao commanded the air assaults on a rebellious heavily fortified city in the Fujian Province in 1934 6 7 The successful assault proved crucial for Chiang s ground forces to take control of the city 8 Subsequently as member of the National Government Aviation Committee Mao was sent to the United States to explore the purchase of new airplanes for the Chinese air force While he attend an airshow in Miami Florida 9 10 he met Captain Claire Chennault who let a demonstration by the Army Air Corps Impressed by his skills Mao invited him to come to China 6 On 25 May 1940 Mao was promoted to major general and in 1941 he helped Captain Chennault to established the 1st American Volunteer Group AVG of the Chinese Air Force 1 6 Under the leadership of Chennault the AVG successfully engaged the Japanese air force on many occasions and became famous as the so called Flying Tigers The Flying Tigers were also instrumental in establishing an alternate supply route over The Hump a connection between Burma and southern Chinese cities such as Kunming and Chengdu 11 12 Mao was part of a group of pilots that sought suitable routes through the very difficult terrain of the Himalayas 13 The first recorded flight over what later became the Hump route from Dinjan Burma to Kunming China was performed by Xia Pu a pilot of American citizenship from the China National Aviation Corporation in November 1941 11 14 Air Force Procurement Officer editIn 1942 Mao was assigned to the U S to establish the Chinese Air Force Office in Washington DC and was placed in charge of aviation procurement activities 15 16 Over the years he was entrusted with over 50 000 000 worth about half a billion dollars in 2015 17 for the purchase of military aircraft and supplies 18 On 14 August 1944 Mao was given the Medal of the Kuomintang and in August 1945 President Harry Truman awarded him the U S Legion of Merit for exceptionally meritorious conduct in the performance of outstanding services to the Government of the United States from February 1943 to August 1945 19 Subsequently he was promoted to lieutenant general of the Republic of China Air Force In May 1945 Mao was appointed as a member of the Sixth Kuomintang Central Executive Committee He eventually became the national government s representatives in the United States Aviation Committee and the United Nations Security Council 20 In 1949 his wife Wong Ay Chuan also known as Pauline and five of his six sons Van Maurice Donald Harry and William joined General Mao in Washington DC where they lived in a diplomat residence on 32nd Street N W in the Woodley Park neighborhood His oldest son David who served in the Chinese air force stayed in Taiwan 18 Scandal editIn the early fifties Mao became entangled in an embezzlement scandal that was covered in great detail in major US and Chinese newspapers 21 The Chiang Kai shek government of the Republic of China alleged that Mao failed to account for 19 440 000 4 equivalent to about 180 000 000 in 2015 22 and removed him from all official positions at the UN 23 General Mow responded that the charges were only brought in retaliation for his discovery of corruption in the inner circles of the Chiang government 24 25 26 Ambassador Wellington Koo recalled in his memoirs that at the heart of the matter were strong personal animosities between General Chou who was leading the Chinese Air Force and General Mao who always felt that he should have been the commanding general of the air force 27 Madame Chiang Kai shek had accused both generals as early as 1938 of corruption and was dismayed they had not been punished more severely 28 Similarly in 1943 American General Joseph Stilwell a military adviser to Chiang during World War II strongly criticized Chiang and his generals for what he perceived as their incompetence and corruption 29 30 Koo furthermore found proof that Mao had diverted large sums of government funds into his own accounts in the US and around the world which include 2 000 000 in United States Treasury bearer bonds 27 Fearing extradition to Taiwan and possibly execution General Mow did not appear in court as ordered 31 32 33 and instead fled to Mexico in January 1952 34 35 36 Initially he flew to San Antonio TX with his assistant Frances Yuan who later detailed the journey in a congressional hearing 37 Subsequently he flew to Tucson AZ took a bus to the border town of Nogales AZ and eventually arrived in the resort town of Cuernavaca approximately 50 miles to the south of Mexico City The first weeks he stayed with Oliver Kisich a friend and nightclub entertainer from San Francisco Mao went on to buy 250 000 Peso villa hired 4 servants and arranged for his secretary Agnes Kelly a tall blonde ex showgirl to join him When he attempted to obtain a Mexican passport under the cover name of Carlos Gomez Lee Wong his identity was discovered and Mexican authorities arrested him for illegal entry into their country 18 38 39 40 41 nbsp Mow Pang Tzu defending himself in Mexican Court 42 A protracted legal and political battle ensued during which Taiwan sought an extradition of General Mow from Mexico and the recovery of 6 400 000 million in US courts General Mow never disputed that he embezzled the funds He claimed to be a patriot preserving all the millions for the people of China when they should cast off their present government 18 42 Richard O Connor from the Coronet Magazine commented Meanwhile he spread plenty of their money around as a highly unofficial ambassador of good will It was reported that the Chiang Kai shek government hired John Broady 26 an infamous private investigator 43 44 to find and recover the missing funds and to extract General Mow from Mexico The attempt of removing Mow from Mexico failed and an attempt to bring some of the recovered security notes to New York ended with the shooting death of Clarence Sopman a Broady associate near Mexico City 18 In the end General Mow was imprisoned in the Black Palace of Lecumberri in a prison cell next to Leon Trotsky assassin Ramon Mercader from 1951 until 1955 45 Allegedly he paid 350 per month to have luxury prison housing including a valet cook and weekly conjugal visits by Agnes Kelly 18 46 nbsp Cover of Transcript of Congressional Hearing HRG 1952 SJS 0024 concerning the General Mow case 37 The Mow case also became a proxy battle in the political fight over US support for Communist China under Mao Zedong or National China under Chiang Kai shek 47 48 In the late forties opinions in the US were split about who should be considered the true representative of the Chinese people the communist government on the mainland or the government in Taiwan which was referred to as Formosa at that time Many considered the Formosa government inapt and deeply corrupt 29 30 and Mao Zedong even though a communist was considered a powerful ally against Japan and Russia 49 The Korean War which started in June 1950 seemed to settle the question in favor of Chiang Kai shek 50 Consequently Republicans such Congressman Walter H Judd and Senator William F Knowland strongly supported Taiwan s position On the other hand liberal democrats used the case to label Mow as principled hero and attacked the Chiang Kai shek government 51 A congressional hearing was convened during which France Yuan Mow personal assistant and Col Hsiang Mow s right hand were called to testify 37 Hsiang defended General Mow forcefully but was not helped by the fact that his wife and children had fled to Communist China 52 In the press the liberal Drew Pearson from the Washington Post wrote many articles to defend General Mow 53 54 55 56 57 while the conservative columnist James Westbrook Pegler tried to discredit Pearson by linking him to the embezzlement scandal Apparently Pearson had indirectly received 60 000 from funds misappropriated by Mow 58 59 60 nbsp Mow leaving the Black Palace prison in Mexico City 24 May 1955 61 In 1955 a Mexican Court barred the extradition of General Mow and he was freed from prison 61 62 63 64 65 However a US Appeals Court upheld a lower court ruling that General Mow owed the Republic of China 6 368 503 plus interest and costs 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 Trying to collect all the funds proved to be difficult even though a good amount was recovered For example 810 000 were seized by court order in Los Angeles 73 74 Two 100 000 treasury bonds turned up in Chicago 75 76 and a 1 000 000 treasury bill was recovered when a Beverly Hills business man tried to cash it in California 77 A settlement between the Republic of China and Mow was reached in 1958 27 78 79 The settlement negotiated by ambassador George Yeh called for the return of about 1 5 million in Treasury notes still held in Swiss bank accounts In exchange General Mow was cleared of all charges and was allowed to keep 200 000 equivalent to about 1 700 000 in 2015 for future living expenses For the next 10 years he lived in Mexico where he allegedly fathered 2 more children In the mid sixties General Mow returned to the US and settled in Los Angeles 80 His sons Harry C C Mow and William C W Mow President and CEO of the famous apparel brand Bugle Boy supported him until his death in 1987 81 A detailed account of the scandal up to the settlement in 1958 was aired on Chinese TV on 15 May 2015 79 Certain aspect of the case are still of legal relevance today For example General Mow defended his position by claiming that Chiang Kai shek was not the rightful president of Taiwan and hence could not have ordered him to come back or file a lawsuit on behalf of the Chinese people in US courts The Supreme Court ruled that it is within the purview of the US President represented by the State Department to approve ambassadors and recognizes foreign governments 82 At that time the State Department had provided a letter to the court stating that Chiang Kai Check is the recognized president of Taiwan and Wellington Koo the recognized ambassador of Taiwan in the US The Supreme Court recently affirmed this general position when it struck down a law enacted by Congress but opposed by President Obama that would let American citizens born in Jerusalem have Israel listed in passports as their country of birth Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote in his majority opinion citing among other sources to the ruling in the Mow case that recognizing foreign governments is the President s exclusive power 83 84 Another more complex issue arose over the legality of countersuits against a foreign government that has immunity but brings a suit in an American court For example in this case General Mow had countersued Chiang Kai shek for defamation and the National City Bank of America sued by the Republic of China for not releasing funds deposited by General Mow countersute the Republic of China for recovery of lost funds The courts held that such countersuites are only narrowly allowed if they directly impact the matter put forward by the suing foreign government 85 86 72 Many of the rulings in this case have been cited in subsequent cases and are frequently discussed in modern law textbooks 87 88 89 Family editMao had a younger brother Mao Yingchu Chinese 毛瀛初 who was born in 1911 2 90 He had a similar military career as his older brother becoming a pilot in the Nationalist Air Force of China and rising to the position of commanding officer of the 23rd Pursuit Squadron of 4th Pursuit Group of the Chinese Air Force by 1937 He saw combat at the Battle of Shanghai Nanking Wuhan Xuzhou during the Second Sino Japanese War becoming an ace fighter pilot 91 In June 1938 he married Zheng Xiuzhen which whom he would later have two sons and two daughters Later in the war he served as an attache at the Chinese embassy in Washington DC United States In 1946 he graduated from the US Staff and Command College at Fort Leavenworth Kansas United States He retired from Republic of China Air Force service in 1968 at the rank of lieutenant general Between 1969 and 1981 he was an official at the Civil Aviation Authority and subsequently became the Chairman of the Board of the Hawley amp Hazel Chemical Company He died in Taipei Taiwan in 2000 Mow Pang Tsu was married to Pauline Mow They had six sons When the war with Japan broke out in 1937 the family moved to Chongqing which had become Chiang Kai shek s provisional capital As a general s family they lived lavishly in a large house guarded by a squad of soldiers 81 By the end of the war with Japan in 1945 the family was living in Chengdu from where they undertook a long boat journey down the Yangtze River to Shanghai in 1946 At that time the city was still held by Chiang s forces but Communist troops were starting to encircle the city By 1948 Pauline and her 6 sons were evacuated from mainland China to Taiwan together with some 2 million people consisting mainly of members of the ruling Kuomintang intellectual and business elites and soldiers In March 1949 the family briefly returned to Shanghai to board the last Pan Am flight to the U S before the city fell to the Communists 81 92 The oldest son David was a pilot in the National Chinese Air Force and stayed in Taiwan He was killed in Vietnam flying cargo for China Air Transport into Saigon in support of the US war efforts in 1974 After General Mow had fled to Mexico in early 1951 Pauline and her sons had to vacate their diplomatic housing in Washington DC and settled in Great Neck New York Without the support of General Mow unable to return to Taiwan not willing to move back to mainland China under communist control and not being American citizens the family struggled They opened a Chinese restaurant the Yangtze River Cafe to provide some income 81 Luckily several of the Mow brothers had already been enrolled in a private boarding school Riverdale Country School in Riverdale NY which agreed to waive the enrollment fees once the family fell on hard times Growing up under these difficult circumstances which were detailed by Van C Mow in a 2005 lecture 93 Pauline managed to send all of her sons to college Harry C C Mow who was born in 1930 became the father figure for his four younger brothers when General Mow fled the US in December 1951 94 He received a PhD degree in electrical engineering from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute RPI in Troy NY in 1959 He married shortly following his graduation and in 1963 moved with his family to Southern California There he worked for the RAND Corporation a nonprofit think tank of the U S Air Force in Santa Monica During the real estate boom of the late 1970s and 1980s Harry left RAND and formed Century West Development Inc As CEO and chairman of the board he led the developed of many real estate projects in the greater Los Angeles area and across the country At the same time Harry became also a partner and member of the board of directors of the King s Seafood Company He went on to become a member of the boards of directors of the UCLA Hospital Preferred Bank of LA and the Center for the Partially Sighted He died on 1 March 2005 in Malibu CA leaving behind his wife two daughters and two sons Donald Mow was born on 22 August 1932 After the family moved to the US in 1949 he attended Riverdale Country School and graduate in 1952 95 He received a bachelor s degree in architecture from RPI in 1956 96 He went on to work for several architectural firms in New York City and was involved in the construction of the TWA terminal at JFK airport Eventually he became a self employed architect with an office in Pleasantville NY He lived in Briarcliff Manor NY for over 20 years When he died on 16 February 2015 in Beijing China he was survived by his ex wife Shirley Lau Mow and two sons Douglas and Christopher as well as his granddaughter Jessica Mow William C W Mow was born on 18 April 1936 in Hangzhou China 80 81 97 98 After graduating from Riverdale Country School in 1955 99 he earned a BSEE from Rensselaer Polytechnic MSEE from Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn and a PhD degree in Electrical Engineering from Purdue University in 1967 100 He became famous as the founder and CEO of Bugle Boy Industries a clothing company especially known for its brand of denim jeans During the 1980s sales approached 1 billion making Bugle Boy one of the largest privately owned apparel companies in the United States In the late 1990s the company started to struggle and in 2001 declared bankruptcy 101 In 1999 William donated part of his fortune to Riverdale Country School the school that had helped the family in the early 1950s In turn the school named their Main Building on Hill Campus William C W Mow Hall 102 nbsp Van C Mow at the Univ of Miami 2014 Van C Mow was born as the 5th son on 10 January 1939 in Chengdu China Like his three brothers before him Mow also got his BS degree from RPI In addition he pursued a PhD in applied mechanics and applied mathematics Subsequently he became one of the earliest researchers in the field of biomechanics was elected President of the Orthopaedic Research Society and in 2000 became the founding chair of the Department of Biomedical Engineering at Columbia University Following a highly public dispute with the Dean of the Engineering School Mow stepped down from his position in 2011 103 104 He is one of the few scholars who have been elected to both the National Academy of Engineering 1991 and the National Academy of Medicine 2015 In 2005 Van Mow donated material related to his father s efforts in the China Burma India Theater to the Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics Aviation Museum 105 106 107 forgoing the Republic of China Air Force Museum in Taipei Taiwan 108 The youngest son Maurice Mow received a degree in civil engineering from RPI in 1963 He went on to become the Chair of the Department of Civil Engineering at the California State University at Chico Under his leadership civil engineering students achieved unprecedented successes in regional and national student competitions Dr Mow has also played a significant role in forging numerous corporate partnerships that have resulted in greater employment for graduates 109 He retired in 2003 110 References edit a b The Last Empress Madame Chiang Kai shek and the Birth of Modern China by Hannah Pakula Simon and Schuster 3 November 2009 pp xvi 285 286 612 613 a b c Mao Yingchu s Web Biography Mussolini recibe a la mission de la aviacion militar sovietic Tambien recibio a la mission aeronautica china La Vanguardia Spain 10 August 1934 p 24 a b Chiang Aide In U S Recalled To Account For 19 440 000 New York Times 22 August 1951 pp 1 and 4 A Nation state by Construction Dynamics of Modern Chinese Nationalism by Suisheng Zhao Stanford University Press 2004 ISBN 0 8047 5001 7 pp 96 109 114 121 a b c Chennault Claire L 1949 Hotz Robert ed Way of a Fighter The Memoirs of Claire Lee Chennault PDF 1st ed G P Putnam s Sons pp 36 a 29 b 39 41 58 62 64 75 90 107 c ASIN B0007DZ3D4 Archived from the original PDF on 18 November 2015 O Conne John F 16 April 2007 The Effectiveness of Airpower in the 20th Century Part One 1914 1939 iUniverse p 203 ISBN 978 0595430826 The Flying Tigers Chennault s American Volunteer Group in China PDF Office of Air Fore History CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform 22 February 2015 p 6 ISBN 978 1508575740 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Brilliant Reception Honors General Mow Miami Herald 11 January 1935 Army Air Armada Opens Miami Meet The New York Times 11 January 1935 p 11 a b Xiangping Li 2003 Hump Air Transport PDF The State Council Information Office of the PRC China Intercontinental Press pp 16 amp 19 see Mao BangChu ISBN 7 5085 0286 8 Archived from the original PDF on 18 November 2015 McMahon Patrick 27 January 1945 This is the Tradesmen s Entrance to China The World s News Sydney NSW Australia p 5 Spencer Otha C 1992 Flying the Hump PDF College Station TX Texas A amp M University Press p 27 Archived from the original PDF on 18 November 2015 Plating John D 8 February 2011 The Hump America s Strategy for Keeping China in World War II Texas A amp M University Press p 38 ISBN 9781603442374 Chinese Envoy General Speak at Bond Rally The Washington Post 7 May 1943 The Southland Chinese Flyer Visits Cadets at Santa Ana Los Angeles Times 4 October 1943 Inflation Calculator a b c d e f O Connor Richard 15 April 1957 The Tarnished Treasure of General Mow PDF Coronet Magazine Vol 41 pp 111 116 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a Cite magazine requires magazine help Legion of Merit Database Mow Pang Tzu s biography on Baike webpage in Chinese Lt General Mow Pang Tsu 毛邦初 Webpage Inflation Calculator Mow Barred From U N New York Times Saturday 1 September 1951 p 2 Gen Mow Ousted By Chiang Submits Corruption Details New York Times Thursday 6 September 1951 p 1 Texts Of Two Memorandums Made Public By General Mow New York Times Thursday 6 September 1951 p 4 a b General Mow and the 19 000 000 by Roy Langdon CLIMAX June 1957 pp 2 9 a b c The Wellington Koo Memoirs Chinese Oral History Project of the East Asia Institute of Columbia University Vol VII Part C 1978 page C 8 a and page C 241 b 1 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 18 November 2015 Retrieved 1 November 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Madame Chiang Kai shek China s Eternal First Lady by Laura Li Grove Press First Trade Paper Edition 1 September 2007 p 144 ISBN 0802143229 a b The Eagle Dragon Alliance America s Relations with China in World War II by Wesley Marvin Bagby Univ of Delaware Press First Edition January 1992 pp 50 51 126 127 128 150 153 159 185 ISBN 151680578X a b Stilwell s Command Problem by Romanus and Sunderland Series United States Army in World War II China Burma India Theater CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform 8 August 2015 p 369 Gen Mow Is Directed To Answer In Court New York Times 11 January 1952 p 4 Default Judgment Against Gen Mow Accused Nationalist Failed to Appear in Court New York Herald Tribune 4 March 1952 p 4 Judgment Ordered Against Mow New York Times 4 March 1952 pp 1 amp 3 New York Times Gen Mow In Mexico Bars Return In Suit Friday 22 February 1952 p 2 The General amp the Blonde Time Magazine Vol 60 Issue 8 p33 8 25 1952 Mexico Arrests China General in Funds Theft Chicago Tribune 14 August 1952 Part 2 p 4 a b c CONGRESSIONAL HEARING HRG 1952 SJS 0024 Subcommittee To Investigate the Administration of the Internal Security Act and Other Internal Security Laws Committee on the Judiciary Testimony of Frances Yuan and Col Ve Shen Hsiang Hearing Dates 1 10 Jul 1952 Senate Sudoc Number Y4 J89 2 Y9 3 Length 61 pp Legacy CIS Number 87 S1543 3 Mexico Holds Mow At Chiang Request New York Times Thursday 14 August 1952 p 2 La Detencion de Teo Mow Los E Unidos Solicitaron la Extradicion de ese General Chino El Siglo de Torreon 14 August 1952 pp 1 9 El Gral Pang Tsu Mow fue a dar a la Penitenciaria El Siglo de Torreon Domingo 17 August 1952 p 9 Chinese On Fund Count Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners Advocate NSW Australia Saturday 23 August 1952 p 1 a b Enriquez Jueves 30 October 1952 General Mow El Siglo de Torreon p 4 Wire tap probe turns to vast blackmail ring Chicago Tribune 18 March 1949 p 8 Wire Tapping Expert Gets 2 to 4 Year Term in N Y Chicago Tribune 14 January 1950 p part 1 p 3 Levine Isaac Don 28 September 1959 Secrets of an Assassin LIFE p 122 Mow grew carrots and set tight on the missing millions PDF The Sydney Morning Herald 27 February 1955 p 47 Archived from the original PDF on 18 November 2015 Retrieved 1 November 2015 Diplomacy In Cuckoo Land The Washington Post 4 Sept 1951 p 8 Let s Turn The Light On China Editorial St Petersburg Times 14 Sep 1951 p 8 Forgotten Ally China s World War II 1937 1945 by Rana Mitter Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 1st edition 10 September 2013 ISBN 061889425X The Coldest Winter America and the Korean War by David Halberstam Hachette Books 25 September 2007 ISBN 1401300529 Liberals use any club to discredit Nationalist China by Geraldine Fitch Saturday Evening Post 23 March 1957 Vol 229 Issue 38 p 10 Accused Aide s Kin Back In Red China New York Times 2 March 1952 pp 1 amp 4 Pearson Asserts Chiang Fired General Who Bared Corruption Waterloo Daily Courier Waterloo Iowa 23 December 1951 p 4 Madame Chiang Tried to Stop Boodle Well Meant Try Gets Wrong Man Fired by Drew Pearson Santa Fe New Mexican 2 January 1952 p 5 Cables Show Chiang s War Effort by Drew Pearson The Washington Post 4 June 1952 p 35 Empty Deposit Box by Drew Pearson St Petersburg Times 31 October 1953 p 6 Tourism in Mexico by Drew Pearson Joplin Globe 7 December 1958 p 6D Westbrook Pegler Reveals Pearson Link to Chinese General The Milwaukee Sentinel 19 February 1953 p 16 Lawyer Threatens Pearson Hatchet in Case of China s Missing 7 Million by Westbrook Pegler Madison Wisconsin State Journal 19 February 1953 p 4 Link Pearson s Lawyer with Missing China Cash by Westbrook Pegler Norwalk Reflector Herald Ohio 19 February 1953 p 3 a b Extradicion de Gral Chiw El Siglo de Torreon Miercoles 25 May 1955 p 1 Mexico releases Chinese Ex Aid Mow Once Air Mission Head Gets Refugee Status After Lengthy Imprisonment New York Times Wed 25 May 1955 p 10 Gen Mow Freed by Mexico The Washington Post and Times Herald Wed 25 May 1955 p 6 Mexico Frees Chiang Ex Aid in Fund Probe Chicagoan Tells of Getting Bills Chicago Daily Tribune Wed 25 May 1955 p 1 El General Chino Pang en Libertad La Vanguardia Spain 26 May 1955 p 12 Mow Ordered To Pay Formosa 6 368 503 New York Times 22 June Tuesday 1954 p 5 Chiang s China wins 6 Million from General Chicago Daily Tribune 22 June Tuesday 1954 p 14 CABLES IN BRIEF 6m Judgment By U S Court The Advertiser Adelaide SA Australia Thursday 24 June 1954 p 7 U S Court Award to KMT The Times of India New Delhi India Thursday 24 June 1954 p 11 U S Appeals Court Rules Against Mow New York Times Friday 1 July 1955 p 5 Pang Tsu Mow Appellant v Republic of China Appellee 220 F 2d 811 D C Cir 1955 Case Law VLEX 36650687 Archived from the original on 4 June 2015 Retrieved 4 June 2015 a b 225 F 2d 543 Pang Tsu Mow v Republic of China United States Court of Appeals District of Columbia Circuit 30 June 1955 Retrieved 2 January 2020 via OpenJurist Chiang Regime Wins 810 000 Recovery Suit Chicago Daily Tribune 7 August 1956 p A9 Formosa Regime Given Judgment for 810 000 Court Rules Against Chinese Merchant Accused of 5 598 899 Embezzlement Role Los Angeles Times 1956 August 7 p A6 Two Missing U S Bonds Turn Up Florence Morning News Florence SC 25 May 1955 p 10 TRACE CHINESE HOARD HERE Trail Leads From Mexico to Chicagoan Find 200 000 in Treasury Notes Chicago Daily Tribune 24 May 1955 p 1 U S Judge Halts Cashing Million Note Long Beach Independent Long Beach CA Wed 25 January 1956 p 2 孙立人 毛邦初及其他 来自 顾维钧回忆录 第八分册的评论 Wellington Koo Memoirs Volume 8 by Liu Delin Yuan Press Zhonghua 1989 ISBN 7101001653 a b 毛邦初 让蒋介石颜面扫地的侄子 2015年05月18日 Chinese TV on 15 May 2015 Archived from the original on 22 May 2015 Retrieved 1 November 2015 a b Back to His Future by Evelyn Iritani Los Angeles Times 28 September 1997 a b c d e Riches from Rags by H Y Nahm GOLDSEA ASIAN MONEY WORKS Pang Tsu Mow and Ve Shuen Hslang Petitioners V Republic of China U S Supreme Court Transcript of Record with Supporting Pleadings Irene Kennedy Chauncey Belknap U S Supreme Court Records 28 Oct 2011 54 page U S top court backs Obama invalidates Jerusalem passport law by Lawrence Hurley REUTER Politics Monday 8 Jun 2015 The Jerusalem Passport Case The New York Times 9 June 2015 p A22 348 U S 356 75 S Ct 423 99 L Ed 389 The NATIONAL CITY BANK OF NEW YORK Petitioner v The REPUBLIC OF CHINA et al No 30 Argued 9 Nov 1954 Decided 7 March 1955 Rehearing Denied 18 April 1955 2 208 F 2d 627 REPUBLIC OF CHINA et al v NATIONAL CITY BANK OF NEW YORK No 44 Docket 22773 United States Court of Appeals Second Circuit Argued 10 November 1953 Decided 8 December 1953 3 Court Listener Webpage dead link Sovereign Debt Genesis Restructuring Litigation by Mauro Megliani Springer 2015 edition 22 November 2014 ISBN 1401300529 International Law Reports Volume 22 by Hersch Lauterpacht Cambridge University Press 1 January 1994 ISBN 052146367X p 532 Aces of the Republic of China Air Force by Raymond Cheung http ww2db com person bio php person id 936 Gustavsson Hakans Biplane Fighter Aces China Mao Ying Chu Biplane Fighter Aces China Mao Ying Chu was a native of Fenghua County in Chekiang His older brother Major General Mao Pang Chu also known as P T Mow and Peter Mow was Combat Commander of the Chinese Air Force during the war Mao Ying Chu ended the war with at least 4 biplane victories and a total of 5 Los Angeles Times Back to His Future by Evelyn Iritani 28 September 1997 VC Mow How to Succeed in America as a Chinese Researcher A personal journey from the abyss to day light Plenary Honorary Lecture at the International Chinese Hard Tissue Society ICHTC Meeting Washington DC 20 February 2005 Mow Family Ties Run Deep at Rensselaer Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Alumni Magazine Summer 2005 Classmates Webpage Donald Mow Obituary on obitsforlife com Archived from the original on 24 June 2016 Retrieved 1 November 2015 William C W Mow articles in the LA Times Bugle Boy to Battle on New Fronts The firm s founder overcame personal and business woes to build a top clothing firm Now his company aims for new markets by Barry Stavro Los Angeles Times 8 August 1989 Riverdale Country School Board of Trustees Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 4 November 2015 Purdue Engineering Awards Webpage Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 1 November 2015 The Ticker Bugle Boy Files For Bankruptcy New York Daily News The Associated Press 3 February 2001 Riverdale Country School History Archived 22 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine see Entry 17 Discord Over Dean Rocks Columbia Engineering School New York Times 8 December 2011 p A30 SEAS Tenured Faculty Vote No Confidence Pena Mora Prof Says Columbia Spectator 18 May 2012 Archived 5 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine 新华网 抗战 驼峰 航线资料落户北京航空馆 Hump Route Data Located in Beijing Aviation Museum 15 July 2005 Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 1 November 2015 二战期间 驼峰航线 资料及部分文物落户北航 World War II Hump Information at Beijing Aviation Museum NETEASE News 16 July 2005 二戰期間 駝峰航線 資料落戶北航 2005年07月18日12 23 Webpage of Notable Military People in China Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 1 November 2015 Republic of China Air Force Museum California State University at Chico Scholarship Webpage Transparent California Retirement Webpage Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mao Bangchu amp oldid 1189662712, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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