“STUDIED INSULT”
AMERICAN IMMIGRATION ACT JAPANESE FEELING. Press Association—By Telegraph—Copyright. NEW YORK, July 23. Count Michimnsa Soyeshhna proposed a second international conference on international relations from the Christian viewpoint in the course of an address at a conference of Chatauqua under the auspices of the Federal Council of Christian Churches. He urged the repeal of the Japanese exclusion provis.on in the Immigration Act, which, he said, a section of the Japanese people felt was a “ studied insult.” Count Michimnsa said that nationwile mobilisations and naval manoeuvres on a gigantic scale, almost eclipsing all they had read of in the naval struggles of history, and other causes of conflict were to he seen in some parts of the globe. If the Powers continued arming as they w'ere to-day there would he another world war, followed by a world revolution and the end of civilisation. —Reuter.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Star, Issue 19002, 25 July 1925, Page 4
Word Count
144“STUDIED INSULT” Evening Star, Issue 19002, 25 July 1925, Page 4
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