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Page 17 text:
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REV. JOSEPH I. ZIEGLER, S. J., Moderator Alumni Association,
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Page 16 text:
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8 THE LOYOLA ANNUAL their place. “Our ancestors,” it has been said, “have bred pug- nacity into our bones and marrow, and this, together with our inordinate desire to fight because of gain, glory and deceit, is the stumbling block in the way of all peace. To remove this may require time, but if war is to be abolished it must be done only by destroying its causes and by teaching individuals and nations to regard each other with the good will and confidence involved in the word peace. Such a change, I believe, is already in progress and that the world is unconsciously but surely coming to act according to the dictates of right rea- son. The question of the “Creole,” formerly supposed to in- volve a question of honor, brought the United States and Eng- land to the brink of war. Y et, so amicably was it settled, even sixty years ago, that its existence has faded into oblivion. And, again, though twenty years ago an arbitration of the con- troversy regarding the North Atlantic fisheries would have been thought impossible on grounds of international honor, nevertheless, about a year ago, awards from the Permanent Court at The Hague were accepted on the fundamental points. Is it not obvious, that these and many other settlements spring from our new views of national honor? Do not such facts establish us in the belief that the one way to peace lies in changing the people’s views? Y es, if the advocates of peace ever accomplished anything in the way of permanent peace it must be not by treaties, but by correcting the hearts of the people. When the citizens of the nations, have as a unit the virtues that disdain excessive com- mercial greed; when they have put aside all unveracity and deceit and are willing to deal with each other on terms of mu- tual trust ; and, finally, when they have outlived their extrava- gant, personal, party and racial pride, then we shall have a a universal, international peace — not the kind that is transient and uncertain, but a peace that is permanent because founded in the hearts of the people. Ed. J. Hanrahan, ’12.
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