On May 17, 1951, Dwight Rugh -- a Yale-in-China representative for twenty years and one of the last Americans remaining in China after the Communist Revolution -- was taken from his home in Changsha to a mass rally where he was denounced as an imperialist spy. Twenty-three years later, his daughter was one of the first Americans to enter China after it reopened to the West. Despite the fact that the Cultural Revolution was in full sway, she visited the site of her father's "trial" and met with some of his friends and colleagues who had been compelled to participate in the proceedings....
On May 17, 1951, Dwight Rugh -- a Yale-in-China representative for twenty years and one of the last Americans remaining in China after the Communis...
On May 17, 1951, Dwight Rugh -- a Yale-in-China representative for twenty years and one of the last Americans remaining in China after the Communist Revolution -- was taken from his home in Changsha to a mass rally where he was denounced as an imperialist spy. Twenty-three years later, his daughter was one of the first Americans to enter China after it reopened to the West. Despite the fact that the Cultural Revolution was in full sway, she visited the site of her father's "trial" and met with some of his friends and colleagues who had been compelled to participate in the...
On May 17, 1951, Dwight Rugh -- a Yale-in-China representative for twenty years and one of the last Americans remaining in China after the Communis...