478-14-28

South China Morning Post, January 14, 1941; interview with Rewi Alley, and Harry Steinmetz; Emily Hahn, China to Me (New York, 1944), p. 245

478-14-27

Strong and Keyssar, Right in Her Soul, pp. 196-99; Anna Louise Strong, »The Kuomintang-Communist Crisis in China,« Amerasia 5, no. 1 (March 1941): 11-23

478-14-25

Interviews: Rewi Alley; Elsie Cholmeley; Israel Epstein; Chen Han-sheng. See also oblique references in medical relief records, Public Records Office (London), FO 676, file 301

478-14-23

South China Morning Post, September 21, 26, 27, 28, 1940. Smedley's observations on Hong Kong were revised and published in the Clipper (Los Angeles) as »The Light of East Asia« 2, no. 7 (September 1941): 11 — 16

478-14-22

Many memoir accounts depict the liveliness of Chinese intellectual life at the time. Besides those oi Zou Taofen and Mao Dun cited earlier, see Xu Zijian's memoir in Wenhuibao (Hong Kong), November 22, 1978, p. 10

478-14-20

Interviews with Lu Yunming, and Zhang Wenjin; also Zhang Wenjin's letter to the authors, April 14, 1985. Some underground Communists worked for Dr. Lin. One of them was Zhang Wenjin, who in the 1980s became vice-minister of Foreign Affairs and ambassador to Washington, D.C. Zhang joined Dr. Lin in 1939 after graduating from Qinghua University. He left Guiyang as soon as the Guomindang agent, Wang Zhong, arrived. Zhang proceeded to Chongqing and worked for the rest of the decade for Zhou Enlai

478-14-19

»Agnes Smedley Addresses Club,« China at War 4, no. 5 (June 1940): 36-40; New York Times, April 17, 1940; Battle Hymn, pp. 499-500. Interviews with Hugh Deane, and T. H. White, as well as Hugh Deane, »Meeting Agnes Smedley,« China and U.S. 3, no. 2 (March-April 1974): 9

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