PROBLEMS OF THE PACIFIC
Paik, ; California, "!©£■ ice <?n the- Institute s. Previous cohferWld rat' ‘Honolulu, HrEdward C. Carter, who yelsmd Vlsitingthe HomNewtoh H, Bahei; mteniaiUonal, chairman of!stbe said itwould^tbe^^ c 3£ : *<tf Asia- It; study halance fr<?m .the world > depression, the pccupatiop of Manchuria, the. amaxing economic and' social ■of - the <IJ.S.SSIi the Y**&\ ! Sg®a« the apparently unending , success of Japan Jh industeisl inaas productiwi. ym.be"placed at the: conference; cpstiidiesot toe efforts both df cbnunefcial or ganisatwnSand mrt£odS of dealing, with -the struggle forinarlsets and raw materials. Every aspect " of'SIT SamUtt. Boare‘a; tionary ' at; the Leaguef ot Nations on new and fairer methods of amlned;V iu: an .effort -to discover whether this- was the; vision of a .Utopian'Voyj the ‘birth, off'** rascally neypolicy 'for 'the British Btopirhand of markets and raw materials more amitTS in We Pacifit where populatioa - pressure . in J- Japan, - China, ’ foi£pj| gcwathniettla. tp: march on to tneworld’s stage with new demands 4/’i~ itoCftdhcse'Group 7 ' * r * ,y j Dr.'l&i Shift of Peiping, will be chairmanof the Chinese group atYosenrtife; He iyas ebairman of me Shanghai Conference and leader, of . the c : al cf the ■ China Foundation: : The ■ ihetty ediior of the. Soviets Ency cior pedia, and now in charge of the new iSovlS-World . AtlaS: The teader of the Japanese, .group has. not'-yet been Banff* the late DT. of the House of Peers, led the Japanese group, and he yas ably assisted T>y YdWchT iwanaga, hsanapng ' d&ector s SpySfihna. and P*iSfc«or Anesafcu - ' •• * *- - ■fiiere will- be five major- Bound Thhle& at.the Yosemite Conference. The^flratfour" will explore theinternational repercussions . in -the pacific of cSa's reephr stowtion. - and, ofthe second five-year phut .The Table, in thought of;toe changing balance * of political and. economic . for<ss;i& vaWbUs methods for. the adjustment Qf current controversies which; are being ofan&d.by schohrrs -and; statesmen. A* l enOymous amoUnt Of 'stddy is being S^SS'SrtS'S: Already flve Wge volumes- have, been dre .Paddl? &as an Official "organisation niostof the governments of the,-world. The Instltute of Pacific - Relations, on the others wftf waaunoffl. ciaL heing made up of of thp leadidg ihciehtific. bu«h»M. ; and jMpSt Biker?- added/? in Brussels, Paris,;, Rome, or Geneva;. Aaaresultthe problems, of the’sneh organisations* "from' t the fEwopean angle. The Institute of Pacific Relations was a purely , .; society with, tofiWJUps m J 6odhtfiea 'wlth nialor interests in the research work iof other ahd older 11 MFew The hOedquarters of the New - Zea- , land.h^^'Js/in sWdt hngtonJafid* Mr Bruce . Turner, the Partftopcntary X-ibrary, is -the .secret' V; .'rather'' t r r 1 ”1. Jl 1 1
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Press, Volume LXXII, Issue 21710, 18 February 1936, Page 20
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419PROBLEMS OF THE PACIFIC Press, Volume LXXII, Issue 21710, 18 February 1936, Page 20
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