Word: kelloggs
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Burbank (W) defeated Withington (D), 3-1; Ross (W) defeated Frey (D), 3-2; Peet (W) defeated Loomis (D), 3-0; Kellogg (W) defeated Humstone (D), 3-0; Schumann (D) won by default...
...time in the fight was the Court itself a major issue. Except to its enemies, the World Court (U. S. nickname for the Permanent Court of International Justice) is simply an international body of 15 old judges (including onetime U. S. Secretary of State Frank Billings Kellogg) who sit infrequently at The Hague and draw $18,000 a year each. In the twelve and a half years of its existence the Court has decided 23 cases and rendered 25 "advisory opinions." Neither its friends nor enemies claim that it has yet changed the course of world history...
...Bingham's warning against professionalism before the American Football Coaches Association last Friday in New York possesses far more significance for Harvard than the nine resolutions which the NCAA adopted for the New Year. For these resolutions without enforcing clauses are reminiscent of the Kellogg Peace Pact which has been so unsuccessful in preventing war when individual interests point the other way. What is more, they neglect the Harvard problems of indirect graduate influence and subsidization...
...might scratch their heads over the rights and wrongs of social or economic questions but it took no second thought to agree that War was Evil. Enthusiastically the U. S. plumped for limitation of naval armaments in 1922. Enthusiastically the U. S. plumped for Secretary of State Kellogg's multilateral treaty renouncing war as an instrument of national policy. Enthusiastically the U. S. plumped for embargoes on arms shipments to China, to Bolivia, to Paraguay...
Current diplomats appear to have forgotten completely their duties as guardians of international security. Lacking the broad vision of Kellogg, deprived of the stimulating leadership of Briand, their eyes are blinded by selfish nationalism to the pleas of all classes for peace. Saito's uncompromising demands for parity, Benes' threat of war in the Chamber of the League, Laval's antagonizing oratory, are all evidences of the failure of current diplomats to grasp to broader demands of statesmanship. Indeed, until they do learn to view the narrow policies of egoistic nationalism in the light of world harmony, international conferences...