Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 22 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 46568 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 62 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 States 9 United 9 England 8 british 7 war 7 european 7 Europe 6 Germany 6 Court 5 man 5 Government 5 France 5 Conference 5 Britain 4 nation 4 Peace 4 Mr. 4 Hague 4 Great 3 german 3 french 3 american 3 York 3 South 3 President 3 New 3 Nations 3 Law 3 Japan 3 International 3 God 3 America 2 world 2 state 2 sidenote 2 section 2 power 2 peace 2 law 2 great 2 government 2 case 2 War 2 University 2 Turk 2 State 2 Sir 2 Russia 2 Prize 2 Majesty Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 4151 war 2672 nation 2090 man 1769 peace 1628 law 1535 state 1532 power 1471 case 1444 world 1404 time 1339 country 1299 question 1235 people 1232 force 1182 interest 1057 fact 977 government 962 right 929 year 921 part 877 policy 872 article 868 thing 849 member 812 way 783 enemy 779 matter 758 principle 745 life 721 day 693 view 689 treaty 674 trade 673 party 666 dispute 644 rule 643 point 631 subject 622 course 598 condition 582 work 576 order 562 hand 548 ship 542 effect 533 purpose 517 place 493 term 490 opinion 484 system Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 6594 _ 1757 States 1355 United 1188 Council 1072 Germany 894 League 822 England 805 President 771 State 751 Europe 739 International 686 Government 676 Mr. 654 Protocol 610 America 601 Court 568 Great 568 Article 547 France 528 Britain 512 War 509 Covenant 492 Conference 453 Nations 418 New 396 God 362 Lord 360 London 356 Peace 355 British 352 Law 349 Co. 348 Committee 346 Convention 344 Foreign 343 University 329 Hague 328 E. 317 M. 315 Dr. 312 American 307 Russia 301 H. 299 John 296 de 291 York 289 English 288 World 288 C. 283 CFR Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 9876 it 3552 they 3327 we 2674 he 2054 i 1612 them 927 us 659 him 608 she 574 you 510 itself 437 themselves 283 me 223 himself 193 her 152 one 127 ourselves 66 herself 54 myself 16 ye 12 ours 11 theirs 11 au 10 yourself 8 mine 6 thyself 5 thee 4 yours 4 oneself 4 his 4 ''s 2 ce 1 thy 1 thought!--they 1 issued:-- 1 hers 1 foreigners"--germans 1 em 1 declared;--they 1 clergy[68]--and 1 adds:-- 1 ''em Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 38646 be 10130 have 2677 do 2259 make 1579 take 1299 say 1215 give 999 come 874 go 853 become 776 see 696 find 678 follow 599 call 584 bring 560 carry 540 know 522 hold 521 seem 507 consider 463 appear 436 fight 420 show 419 think 413 arise 409 use 397 concern 394 put 394 agree 392 bind 389 establish 385 declare 376 leave 372 regard 371 mean 366 accept 364 provide 364 lead 361 believe 359 increase 351 apply 346 exist 341 set 337 speak 333 remain 320 prevent 317 involve 312 get 311 let 307 draw Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 7147 not 2300 so 2178 more 2158 other 1867 only 1858 such 1578 international 1493 great 1109 also 1063 even 1047 well 1009 national 999 now 958 as 953 same 902 out 885 first 870 own 869 up 866 most 846 german 842 very 802 economic 801 american 794 much 772 british 744 many 719 then 715 far 682 foreign 677 neutral 677 long 676 new 674 general 673 good 662 political 661 however 652 large 626 military 600 present 585 common 567 therefore 563 less 552 still 549 certain 536 possible 534 modern 524 necessary 449 thus 449 high Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 302 least 210 most 198 good 119 great 89 high 41 Most 36 bad 28 large 27 slight 23 strong 21 early 20 near 18 late 15 low 13 full 12 manif 10 wide 10 old 10 noble 10 grave 10 fine 10 dear 9 big 8 wise 7 small 7 deep 6 simple 6 close 5 weak 5 unbl 5 sure 5 remote 5 l 4 short 4 rich 4 long 4 gross 4 fit 4 farth 4 able 3 true 3 heavy 3 foremost 3 faint 3 cheap 3 acute 2 weighty 2 strict 2 safe 2 quick Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 656 most 57 least 24 well 1 worst 1 farthest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 11 samvak.tripod.com 1 www.suite101.com 1 www.salon.com 1 www.lib.msu.edu 1 www.ce- 1 philosophos.tripod.com 1 gallica.bnf.fr 1 economics.cjb.net 1 ceeandbalkan.tripod.com Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.suite101.com/article.cfm/npd/87772 1 http://www.salon.com/tech/books/1999/11/04/new_optimism/ 1 http://www.lib.msu.edu/sowards/balkan/lect11.htm 1 http://www.ce- 1 http://samvak.tripod.com/pp29.html 1 http://samvak.tripod.com/pp27.html 1 http://samvak.tripod.com/pp25.html 1 http://samvak.tripod.com/msla7.html 1 http://samvak.tripod.com/lasch.html 1 http://samvak.tripod.com/index.html 1 http://samvak.tripod.com/guide.html 1 http://samvak.tripod.com/faq11.html 1 http://samvak.tripod.com/faq1.html 1 http://samvak.tripod.com/contents.html 1 http://samvak.tripod.com/after.html 1 http://philosophos.tripod.com/ 1 http://gallica.bnf.fr 1 http://economics.cjb.net 1 http://ceeandbalkan.tripod.com/ Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- 2 vaknin@link.com.mk 2 palma@unet.com.mk Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 26 war is not 10 law is solely 8 _ see _ 8 nations are not 7 states has not 6 _ was _ 6 case is not 6 council does not 6 council is not 6 states are not 6 war is inevitable 6 war is unwise 6 world has ever 5 _ do _ 5 _ have _ 5 _ is _ 5 nations do not 5 state does not 5 states does not 5 things are worth 5 war does not 5 war has not 5 war is criminal 4 _ does _ 4 force is not 4 germany has not 4 men do not 4 peace is far 4 peace is more 4 peace is not 4 state is not 4 states did not 4 war is impossible 4 war is now 4 world does not 3 _ had _ 3 _ is not 3 _ was more 3 _ were _ 3 fact did not 3 man is not 3 men are not 3 men are savage 3 peace is possible 3 people are not 3 policy is not 3 power is not 3 powers are not 3 question is not 3 question was not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 council does not at 3 council is not unanimous 2 case is not so 2 force is no remedy 2 force is not sufficient 2 right is not all 2 state is not desirable 2 war is not impossible 2 war is not only 2 war is not something 1 _ are not subject 1 _ does not necessarily 1 _ has no consequences 1 _ is no longer 1 _ is not _ 1 _ is not really 1 _ were not likely 1 case is not commonly 1 cases takes no leaps 1 council are not unanimous 1 council does not immediately 1 council has no customers 1 council has not only 1 countries are no longer 1 country are not soldiers 1 country was not well 1 fact are not so 1 fact has no importance 1 fact is not enforceable 1 fact is not qualified 1 facts are not new 1 facts do not seriously 1 facts is not greatly 1 force is no longer 1 force is not intrinsically 1 force is not only 1 forces were not large 1 germany has no need 1 germany is not universal 1 government had no powers 1 government had no right 1 government has no need 1 government has no right 1 government was not able 1 government was not yet 1 interest is not only 1 interests are no longer 1 interests are not concerned 1 interests were not directly 1 law gives no guidance A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 11895 author = Angell, Norman title = Peace Theories and the Balkan War date = keywords = Churchill; England; Europe; Germany; Lord; Mr.; Roberts; Turk; Turkey; balkan; european; turkish; war summary = Europe, to fight a great and popular war with that aim, and led us into things that brought religious wars to an end--a preponderant power theories which made the religious wars, so it is false political Turk--Will the Balkan peoples prove Pacifist or Bellicist; adopt the Turk--Will the Balkan peoples prove Pacifist or Bellicist; adopt the the sword, the mere exercise of force by one man or group of men upon I do not believe that force should settle these matters, I shall try and of these things--the religious wars, movements like those which promoted their subjects, but religious wars between nations became impossible for had no part, a war which the whole force of the money power had Europe," that we fought a great and popular war to prevent that triumph said for war--for settling a thing by fighting about it instead of by "practical" man has dragged the nations into war: the Balance of Power, id = 38535 author = Angell, Norman title = The Great Illusion A Study of the Relation of Military Power to National Advantage date = keywords = America; Angell; Anglo; Britain; Canada; Colonies; Empire; England; English; Europe; France; Germany; Government; Great; London; Mr.; Sir; South; Spain; States; Turk; United; british; case; colony; european; force; french; nation; war summary = Germanization of England--"The war which made Germany Could Germany "take" English trade and Colonies by military force? If Germany could conquer England, would any ordinary German subject be nation''s wealth can only be assured by force, and treaty rights are mere trade and industry, the very life-bread of her children, as Mr. Harrison would have us believe, of the greatest nation in history is in War France was in a better financial position than Germany, as Germany and France during the forty years which have followed the war is nation while England may be at war when Canada can be at peace? United States or even a Canada into a real Germany--of German language, Germany''s preparations for war have not resulted in economic moral, political, social, and religious." It should be stated thus: "War most military nation in Europe--Germany. threatened Germanization of England--"The war which made Germany id = 52587 author = Arnoldson, K. P. (Klas Pontus) title = Pax mundi A concise account of the progress of the movement for peace by means of arbitration, neutralization, international law and disarmament date = keywords = Chamber; Denmark; England; Europe; France; Germany; Government; Majesty; Mr.; Peace; Russia; States; Sweden; United; european summary = conclude an Arbitration Treaty with the United States. the President of the United States from three International Congresses arbitration between Great Britain and the United States. arbitration treaty amongst the northern nations, a new guarantee for neutral states, were at the Peace of Paris, 1856, solemnly ratified neutrality guaranteed by international deeds of law and treaties, and neutral State, and not to one of the belligerent powers.[17] --A neutral State may not permit the war-ships of a belligerent power --Belligerent powers are bound fully to respect the right of peace shall not be limited either in time of peace or war. The peace interests of neutral States co-operate with the _International Arbitration and Peace Association_ The INTERNATIONAL ARBITRATION AND PEACE ASSOCIATION for Great Britain about a peace-treaty between all the independent States of North and International Arbitration and Peace Association.] INTERNATIONAL ARBITRATION and PEACE ASSOCIATION (40 and 41, Outer id = 12427 author = Campbell, Robert Granville title = Neutral Rights and Obligations in the Anglo-Boer War date = keywords = Africa; Bay; Britain; Footnote; Government; Great; South; States; Transvaal; United; american; british; english; german summary = British Government to the English prisoners of war. horses and mules shipped from the ports of the United States during this from the ports of the United States for the British forces in South neutrality laws of this port, or to carry on war here for the States, declared that he had not received orders from the British War whether or not the United States had permitted the British Government to English owners against the United States Government for indemnity. of the British Government against the decision of the United States state of war upon the ship owners, merchants, and vessels of a neutral Free State and ships of war, even in cases where the goods were not fact that the ship was carrying enemy''s goods consigned to Delagoa Bay blockade upon a neutral port, for few but English ships carried for the British Government to indemnify the neutral owners and make good to them id = 253 author = Coalition for Networked Information title = The Universal Copyright Convention (1988) date = keywords = Contracting; Convention; State summary = 2. Unpublished works of nationals of each Contracting State shall enjoy minimum periods prescribed in Article IV, such State shall not be 4. (a) No Contracting State shall be obliged to grant protection to a in the case of published works by the law of the Contracting State in The provisions of this Article shall extend to works publication of translations of works protected under this Convention. copies from the country or territory to the Contracting State shall be 6. Any licence granted by a Contracting State under this Article shall 8. (a) A licence to translate a work protected under this Convention, Article shall bear a notice in the appropriate language stating that Article shall bear a notice in the appropriate language stating that the effective date of this Convention in a Contracting State where Convention shall apply to works published for the first time by the id = 35883 author = Dodge, David Low title = War Inconsistent with the Religion of Jesus Christ date = keywords = Christians; Dodge; Father; God; Jesus; Lord; Mediator; New; Peace; Satan; York; evil; man; scripture; war; world summary = war system of nations, and of having founded the first peace society unlawful upon gospel principles, I shall now endeavor to prove that WAR war hardens men''s hearts it is not a Christian duty, and of course it WAR IS INHUMAN, AS IN ITS NATURE AND TENDENCY IT ABUSES GOD''S ANIMAL If war is a Christian duty, why should not the example and precepts of professing Christian nations, while at war and bathing their swords in however, are the laws of war among Christian nations, that rendering sang, "Glory to God in the highest, on earth peace, good will to men." If God is the moral governor of the world, then all his laws over men, command of God they judged and made war and conquered their enemies and precepts of the gospel; but how does the lawfulness of war follow from The Son of God came into the world to set up the kingdom of heaven, id = 39487 author = Erasmus, Desiderius title = Erasmus Against War date = keywords = Christ; Church; England; Erasmus; God; christian; great; hath; man; thing; war summary = men add the horrors of war to all the other miseries and dangers of life? be some things among mortal men''s businesses, in the which how great to that pass that war is a thing now so well accepted, that men wonder at reasonable creature Man, the which Nature hath brought forth to peace and that they were men, if it were not because war is a thing so much in first of all, men made war, and he was esteemed a mighty strong man, and a War, what other thing else is it than a common manslaughter of many men this man and the doctrine of Christ--which is as likely a thing as to As for those things that are done in Christian men''s wars they hand with war, there is no man that in so great alterations of men''s in his mind, whether the thing that you will war for, be of so great id = 14447 author = Holland, Thomas Erskine, Sir title = Letters to "The Times" upon War and Neutrality (1881-1920) date = keywords = Britain; Conference; Convention; Court; Declaration; Government; HOLLAND; Hague; International; Law; Mr.; Prize; Sir; States; United; War; art; british; power; section summary = Sir,--The "Naval War Code" of the United States, upon which an territorial Power to be neutral in a war between States which we may such confiscation as "an act of war." International law has long Government, both as to existing rules of international law and as to the Convention "respecting the laws and customs of war on land" is far more this subject in conventional International Law, in one or two I. The Hague "Convention on the laws and customs of war on land" I. The Hague "Convention on the laws and customs of war on land" It is a further question whether the rules of international law on this adopting the customary laws of war and by ratifying express Conventions on a neutral in such a case by international law. Sir,--Questions of maritime international law which are likely to give Convention for an International Prize Court and of the Declaration of id = 30150 author = Intercollegiate Peace Association title = Prize Orations of the Intercollegiate Peace Association date = keywords = America; College; Conference; Court; England; Germany; Group; Hague; Indiana; Lake; Mohonk; Peace; States; United; University; man; nation; war; world summary = "The Conflict of War and Peace." The second prize went to Lawrence B. Mr. Howe''s subject was "The Hope of Peace," and Mr. Calhoun''s, "War and the Man." This contest was one of the most a century of peace marred by only five years of foreign war. United States, since she is a peace-loving nation, should have the national revenues of the United States are spent on wars past or fulfillment of a national mission, and the hope of world peace find Before the nations of the world the United States stands to-day in an of the enemies of peace, "We will not arbitrate questions of national upon war, is the only force strong enough to effect universal peace. man''s moral nature is the Hope of Universal Peace. man''s moral nature is the Hope of Universal Peace. If nations can agree to establish war as their arbiter of peace, why id = 39588 author = Lamszus, Wilhelm title = The Human Slaughter-House: Scenes from the War that is Sure to Come date = keywords = God; blood; chapter; death; eye; hand; lie; look; man; stand summary = writer, have turned the "Field of Honor" into a "Human Slaughter-House," come flocking into the town, and every man falls in to stand by his man is left on the field, and if another fifth comes home invalided ... Shuddering, I fix my eyes on the corpse-like face and see that He has walls run blood from the ceiling to the floor, and--God the Father steps from the dead man, and a chill hand clutched at our terror-stricken up with my rifle in my right hand, and am running for all my legs are wood, is murdering us from afar, before a single human face comes in it the enemy were to break in on us right and left--no man would come my feet--my head sinks down on my rifle--my eyes close--but the Come, brother philosopher, let us turn our faces to the earth. id = 18553 author = Latané, John Holladay title = From Isolation to Leadership, Revised A Review of American Foreign Policy date = keywords = Britain; China; Conference; England; France; Germany; Great; Japan; Monroe; President; States; United; Wilson; american; british; european summary = position and importance of the United States as a world power. During the Civil War the United States Government used its diplomatic proposition at this time by a great nation like the United States and the peace between powers signatory with the United States to the treaty World War the United States, in order to bind the Japanese government did during the early stages of the Great War. Relations between the United States and England during the American United States was the only great power outside the European balance. During the American Civil War the United States seized goods under an the relations of the United States with the nations at war would be an About the time that the United States declared war, Austria and Germany he declared that the United States and the Allied Governments could not By Article 19 of the naval treaty the United States, Great Britain, and id = 35530 author = MacDonald, Arthur title = Fundamental Peace Ideas including The Westphalian Peace Treaty (1648) and The League Of Nations (1919) in connection with International Psychology and Revolutions date = keywords = States; Thirty; Westphalia; Years; european; peace; war summary = The conference of nations that has taken place around the peace table at would point to the Thirty Years'' War, closing with the peace of ascertained just how the Thirty Years'' War, culminating in the peace of religious peace, some of the main events of the war must be recalled as This explains the uncompromising enmities of the Thirty Years'' War. Various parties claimed the control of the religious doctrines to be The fundamental cause that brought the Thirty Years'' War to a close was 2. The Thirty Years'' War had been expected for some time; a general 5. The Thirty Years'' War was a very long one for its generation; the to submit all questions of war to some superior international court from seen that it might lead to a general war in Europe, and as no nation guaranty of peace, for it makes a nation feel so well prepared for war Peace, War, and Humanity. id = 29372 author = Mackintosh, James, Sir title = A Discourse on the Study of the Law of Nature and Nations date = keywords = Europe; Grotius; government; great; law; man; nation; principle; science; subject summary = has, in modern times, been called the Law of Nature and Nations. On the great questions of morality, of politics, and of municipal law, grounds, that the whole science has been called, "The Law of Nature and part of this science has been called "_the natural law of individuals_," the writers on general jurisprudence have considered states as moral search for the original principles of the science in human nature; then two great works on the Law of Nature and Nations which continue to be this extensive subject, namely, the law of nations strictly so called; combined an investigation of the principles of natural and public law, subjects._ "Such a body of political laws must in all countries arise In considering the important subject of criminal law it will be my duty V. The next great division of the subject is the law of nations, id = 28950 author = Miller, David Hunter title = The Geneva Protocol date = keywords = Article; Assembly; Committee; Conference; Council; Court; Covenant; Geneva; International; Justice; League; Nations; Permanent; Protocol; Treaty; government; member; state summary = amendments to the Covenant (Article I, paragraph 1, of the Protocol). force of the Protocol is stated as follows (Article 21): Article 15 of the Covenant, which provides that "the Council shall idea of Article 15 of the Covenant, that the Council of the League By Article 10 of the Protocol[2] every State which resorts to war in under Article 16 of the Covenant, paragraph 1, any Member of the League State under Article 10 of the Covenant of the League of Nations would dispute with that Member (Covenant, Article 17, paragraph 3). provided in paragraph 3 of the said Article 15, the Council shall Article, it shall be the duty of the Council to summon the State or Protocol to the signatory States, the Council shall forthwith invite As between the States Members of the League of Nations, the Protocol necessary, as stated in paragraph 2 of Article 17, for the Council, id = 26023 author = Oppenheim, L. (Lassa) title = The League of Nations and Its Problems: Three Lectures date = keywords = Article; Court; Hague; International; Law; League; Nations; Peace; States summary = League of Nations and the establishment of an International Court of Nations should create a Federal World State 18 an International Law, and with it a kind of League of Nations, States in time of peace and war; but these were rules of Roman law, not ''International Law,'' because these city States formed a Community members of the League either to an International Court of Justice or an side and are fighting this war in vindication of International Law. These States are--I enumerate them chronologically as they entered into Yet while a Federal World State is impossible, a League of Nations I. The Community of civilised States, the at present existing League certain that a League of Nations comprising an International Executive, International Courts have been established before which States in State, so the attempt to set up an International Court must not aim at id = 32148 author = Oppenheim, L. (Lassa) title = International Incidents for Discussion in Conversation Classes date = keywords = England; France; London; Paris; President; british; french; german; russian; section summary = acquired the Hawaiian Islands, the United States declared trade between French government demands his extradition for murder. man-of-war of state B lands a non-commissioned officer and three men on The following appeared in the _Times_ of March 6th, 1908, dated Paris, between Great Britain and France, a British man-of-war appeared off the diplomatic envoy of the state to which the man-of-war belongs, and French frigate, enticed the _Hussar_, a British man-of-war, by in command of the island until an English man-of-war arrives on the Germany must grant to vessels of the United States? In 1650 France, considering the island no man''s land, took police authorities, but a few days later the Belgian government claimed government in 1837 into the territory of the United States for the Government to the repeated landing of German balloons on French prize court in November, 1805, the United States claimed the captured id = 33302 author = Oppenheim, L. (Lassa) title = The Future of International Law date = keywords = Conference; Court; Hague; Prize; international; law; sidenote; state summary = [Sidenote: Quasi-legislation within the domain of international law.] concept ''legislation'', as developed in the domain of internal state international law of the legislative kind could come into existence side different areas the case, that the _international_ interests of states [Sidenote: Difficulties due to the fact that international law cannot be framing rules of general international law for those states which assent [Sidenote: International laws which are limited in point of time.] it was agreed that the law about the International Prize Court and the of an international court so long as no state is compelled to submit The International Prize Court violates the sovereignty of states Court can make international law by itself. in which the courts of a state apply the rules of municipal law to [Sidenote: Are international courts valueless if states are not bound to that, when once there exist international courts, states will id = 20224 author = Smoot, Dan title = The Invisible Government date = keywords = American; Board; CFR; Chairman; Co.; Committee; Company; Council; Dr.; Foreign; John; National; New; President; Relations; States; United; University; William; World; York summary = Committee: Under Secretary of State Sumner Welles (Vice-Chairman), Dr. Leo Pasvolsky (Executive Officer); Hamilton Fish Armstrong, Isaiah members Presidents of the United States (Hoover, Eisenhower, and Foreign Relations, in New York, and chairman of the American "I am a member of the Council on Foreign Relations in New York States in World Affairs_ and _Documents on American Foreign Relations_), Committees on Foreign Relations, organized by the CFR in 30 cities John Holmes (President, member of the Board of Directors, and Foods Corp.; member of the Board of Directors of National City Bank Charles Allen Thomas (President and member of the Board of Union Committee are members of the CFR: Elmo Roper, President; William launched the CFR''s foreign aid committee), the President and his and CFR affiliated organizations (like the Councils on World Affairs) Arnold Zander, International President of American Federation of State, Frankfurter, a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, William Z. id = 13858 author = Thomson, H. Byerley (Henry Byerley) title = The Laws Of War, Affecting Commerce And Shipping date = keywords = Admiralty; Court; Enemy; England; Government; Law; Majesty; Nations; Rep.; Rob; War; british; sidenote summary = [Sidenote: Property of Subjects of Belligerent States in the Enemy''s declaration of war or hostilities; all the ships of the enemy are vessels of British subjects possessing neutral rights and sailing from neutral country _during the time of war_, he will not be permitted to country: and if a state of war brings his national character into enters into a house of trade in the enemy''s country, in time of war, neutral ship, we seize them by right of war; but we are naturally The right to take enemy''s property on board a neutral ship has been The right to take enemy''s property on board neutral vessels has, in time the right to take enemy''s goods on board a neutral vessel has in considered as the property of enemies taken in time of war. Neutral property on board an enemy''s vessel is not generally id = 4780 author = Vaknin, Samuel title = Terrorists and Freedom Fighters date = keywords = Alexander; Austria; Balkan; Black; Bosnia; Bulgaria; Croatia; Europe; Hand; IMRO; KLA; King; Kosovo; Macedonia; Orthodox; Ottoman; Rugova; Serbia; Serbs; Turks; West; Yugoslavia; albanian summary = with the IMRO (VMRO) in Macedonia and Bulgaria, proceed to Serbia (allowing Serb forces the right of hot pursuit within Bulgarian A self-appointed "guardian of all Serbs", the Serbian state the history of the first truly global conflict, the First World War. In 1917, in a surprising turn of events, Alexander, the Commander in 1934), King of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (later renamed Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, Alexander I, a freshly self-proclaimed Unable to ignore the common ethnic roots of both Serbs and Croats Serbs maintained an armed presence in Macedonia, Kosovo, the Sandzak ethnically, religiously or nationally based political parties (which nationalist Croats and Serb-haters who had no coherent national forces included Croat as well as Serb intellectuals and wannabe Croatia self-government except in matters of national defence and a 1998 State Department report, in the article "KLA Finances War The enemies are numerous: the Serbs (should Kosovo ever be id = 20694 author = Veblen, Thorstein title = An Inquiry into the Nature of Peace and the Terms of Its Perpetuation date = keywords = Christendom; English; Europe; Fatherland; Japan; Kingdom; State; United; american; british; case; common; dynastic; european; german; imperial; interest; large; modern; national; peace; people; power summary = patriotic spirit, comes into the Concert of Nations not as a Power but nationalism,--these ways and means, working under the hand of patriotic The run of the facts touching this matter of national trade policy is any modern nation, and so turn it to use in the most effective way, it first comes to mind among civilised peoples when speaking of national Taken in the large, the common defense of any given nation common man derives no material advantage from the national success along retardation of the German people in this matter of national spirit is to Evidently, if the common man of these modern nations that are A nation is in no degree better off in time of peace for being nationalities whose effectual interests in the matters of peace and war The peoples of the quondam Imperial nations must come into the league on id = 33153 author = Weyl, Walter E. (Walter Edward) title = American World Policies date = keywords = Africa; America; Americans; Britain; Canada; China; Empire; England; Europe; France; Germany; Great; Japan; Latin; Mexico; New; Russia; South; States; United; York; british; economic; european; french; nation; war summary = imperialism, of exaggerated nationalism {14} and of colonial wars. forces that impel a nation to develop its trade, increase its output, Americans as a nation, divinely appointed to bring peace to a world the United States shall enter upon a broad national policy, it need not nation of the United States of America upon imperialism," wrote Prof. binding of agricultural and industrial nations into one great economic foreign investment of capital by the industrial nations of Europe tropical America by a capable industrial nation, like England or European nations into colonial policies, intended to increase the economic world system, in which the industrial growth of one nation foreign trade and investment which means industrial war and the danger all, no great industrial nation, is socially and economically if we believe that nations have no economic motive to war, when in nation''s economic development and foreign policy, 184.