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CHINESE SCHOOLS DESTROY ED.—More than 30,000 students have been denied schooling, and a score or more O colleges and universities have been destroyed in China. So said Miss Pao-Chen Shih (right) in a radio lecture in America recently. She appeared on a special programme with Miss Helen Morton (left], executive secretary of the National Intercollegiate Christian Council, and Dr Henry P. Van Dusen (centre), dean of students at Union Theological Seminary, Now York. Miss Shih is student secretary of the Chinese Y.M.C.A., and was in Shanghai during recent bombardments.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD19380212.2.17.13.1

Bibliographic details

Evening Star, Issue 22881, 12 February 1938, Page 4

Word Count
89

CHINESE SCHOOLS DESTROY ED.—More than 30,000 students have been denied schooling, and a score or more O colleges and universities have been destroyed in China. So said Miss Pao-Chen Shih (right) in a radio lecture in America recently. She appeared on a special programme with Miss Helen Morton (left], executive secretary of the National Intercollegiate Christian Council, and Dr Henry P. Van Dusen (centre), dean of students at Union Theological Seminary, Now York. Miss Shih is student secretary of the Chinese Y.M.C.A., and was in Shanghai during recent bombardments. Evening Star, Issue 22881, 12 February 1938, Page 4

CHINESE SCHOOLS DESTROY ED.—More than 30,000 students have been denied schooling, and a score or more O colleges and universities have been destroyed in China. So said Miss Pao-Chen Shih (right) in a radio lecture in America recently. She appeared on a special programme with Miss Helen Morton (left], executive secretary of the National Intercollegiate Christian Council, and Dr Henry P. Van Dusen (centre), dean of students at Union Theological Seminary, Now York. Miss Shih is student secretary of the Chinese Y.M.C.A., and was in Shanghai during recent bombardments. Evening Star, Issue 22881, 12 February 1938, Page 4

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