Word: kelloggs
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Defense Day served to remind U. S. citizens in Hawaii, last week occupied with the inauguration of a new Governor (see p. 11), of the strategic importance of their position. More peaceful was last week's news from Tokyo when His Majesty the Emperor Hirohito ratified the Kellogg Treaty for the Renunciation of War (see below...
Emperor Hirohito's signing of the Kellogg Treaty (see above) had grave and unexpected results last week. Almost without warning it was announced that the Conservative Cabinet of Baron Giichi Tanaka would resign...
...Kellogg Treaty concludes with the seemingly harmless statement that it is signed by the rulers of the various nations "in the name of their respective peoples." Though Japan is a constitutional monarchy, yearly growing more democratic, nowhere are royal prerogatives more jealously guarded. According to the Japanese Constitution the Emperor, Son of Heaven, does not sign treaties "in the name of his people" for that would mean that it was the people who were making the treaty, the Emperor who was their agent. Japanese Prime Ministers sign "in the name of" the people. Japan's Emperor signs "for the good...
Harvard University Charles Francis Adams LL.D. Frank Billings Kellogg LL.D. Sergei Koussevitzky, orchestra conductor (Boston Symphony) LL.D. Robert Russa Moton, college principal (Tuskegee Institute) A.M. Henry Norris Russell, Princeton astronomer D.Sc...
Trinity College (Hartford, Conn.) Frank Billings Kellogg D.C.L. Alanson Bigelow Houghton LL.D. Sir Esme Howard, British Ambassador to U. S LL.D. George Payne McLean, onetime (1911-29) U. S. Senator from Connecticut LL.D. Andrew William Mellon LL.D...