Word: england
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...ninth annual whist match with Yale will be played today in the parlors of the Young Men's Republican Club at New Haven. Each team will be composed of eight men. The University team is A. C. England 4M., V. K. Keesey '03. C. W. Parry '03, G. B. Kerper 3L., J. M. De Wolfe '04, C. F. Lovejoy '04, C. W. Stark '03 and A. S. Newhall '05. Fifty-six boards will be played, half in the afternoon and half in the evening. The match will be decided by the highest total score. The Harvard team is unusually strong...
...have a decision of the Hague tribunal enforced, since the tribunal has considered all the circumstances of the case. The wedge, which the negative fears, will be split, because the South American republics will become aroused to national responsibilities. Replying to the proposal of temporary holding, he cited England's occupation in Egypt which has resulted practically in permanent control. They say it would be a chance for Germany to get a basis for military operations, but presented to Americans in this light the case does not apply. Where is Cervera's fleet today? The time has come when...
...United States under the presuppositions of our question. It is the danger of an immediate and unjust war with the European nation with whose just and legal rights the negative is arguing that the United States interfere. In 1896 we were in imminent danger of war with England when we merely insisted upon arbitration. Under our facts tonight the arbitration has taken place. The European government has chosen a legal and precedented method of satisfying its arbitrated claims. It would resent an unjustifiable interference on our part with its full naval force...
...defaulted claim might be satisfied by ways other than seizure of land. It might be satisfied by seizing ships in reprisal as, in 1862-3, England seized Brazilian ships to satisfy an unpaid claim. Another way to enforce the money award is suggested by the question itself. By the terms of this question simply the conditions at the time of the default are given. But, if we are to make this a practical debate, evidently the fact that there is no tariff at the time of default does not prevent the creditor nation from levying a tariff. This tariff might...
...opening the rebuttal for the negative, said that we have interfered in the past. Would any nation risk a war to collect a few paltry dollars which it could collect in many other ways? In replay to the isolation of the territory seized, we say that not only England but all the European powers would obtain footholds and we would soon see the extinction of the republics. If one nation retains land others will; and so the land in South America will all be acquired by European nations with danger to the United States...