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Article

Volume 22 • Number 4

Summer 2003



 

 

Foreign Policy, National Identity, and Citizenship: The Roosevelt White House and the Expediency of Repeal


KAREN J. LEONG


IN MID-JULY 1943, the Chinese Ambassador to the United States formally communicated with the United States Secretary of State about a "Chinatown Opium Den" in New Haven, Connecticut. New Haven did not have a Chinatown. The town did boast, however, a self-proclaimed "World's Museum (Wax Figures)." Within weeks, a special agent of the Department of State paid a visit to this museum. Housed in a two-story frame building, the museum featured wax likenesses of noteworthy individuals. A customer would peer through an 18 by 10-inch window into a room about ten feet square. The special agent described what he saw: There are two figures resembling white girls in separate booths, and four other booths each containing a figure resembling a Chinese man, all in reclining position with pipes resembling opium pipes inserted in their mouths. Alongside of one booth containing one of the girl figures, the figure of a Chinese man is kneeling, and in the center of the room is the figure of a Chinese man supposedly mixing opium.


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