University of San Francisco - USF Don Yearbook (San Francisco, CA)

 - Class of 1921

Page 20 of 140

 

University of San Francisco - USF Don Yearbook (San Francisco, CA) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 20 of 140
Page 20 of 140



University of San Francisco - USF Don Yearbook (San Francisco, CA) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 19
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University of San Francisco - USF Don Yearbook (San Francisco, CA) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 21
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Page 20 text:

18 TUB USA T AS message was distasteful to the Roman because it demanded caution, Caesar was too great, too powerful to stoop to caution. And Caesar—died. In the fake security which the knowledge of his greatness built about him he fell—an easy victim to the schemes of lesser men. As with men—so with nations! What, we wonder—will be the decision of mankind when it looks back on this living. breathing present to determine the wisdom of our general attitude toward Japan today? Will its judgment be. that this great nation in its pride of place, at the pinnacle of its power was guilty of the self-same folly that bared the breast of Caesar to the knives of his assassins? Shall il in the light of future analysis appear to ail the world that the American people, blinded by an egotistic conception of their greatness, rushed headlong and unseeing into the very midst of dangers that were plainly visible to the normal eye of reason? Shall it some day be told how the American eagle was lulled into a fanciful and groundless security by the sweet music of its own laudations, how it was rendered apathetic and indifferent to danger in the consciousness of its power, on the adulations of its inferiors,—it in tin midst of its lazy improvident dreamings was victimized by the danger it was too proud to prepare against.—the practiced—sharpened and murderous talons of an eagle that flew from tin East ? And what cause—what reason is there at the present time for the issuance of such a warning to America? Trouble in the nature of armed conflict, between this nation and Japan has ever been a topic of at least academic interest. Volumes have been written en it by the more eminent strategists of both countries. In the Pacific states however, and particularly in California, the question has been far more than simply one of academic interest. Due to the inactment of such measures as the Alien-land law for the purpose of affording to American citizens their just proportion of protection. feeling has sometimes run high both in Japan and along our own Pacific slope. Today that feeling has been

Page 19 text:

The Eagle of the East Edward I. Kit .patrick, 21. YESTERDAY it was the Teuton; today it is the Jap. Yesterday it was Pan-Germanism; today it is the yellow peril of Nippon. Some years ago an eagle screamed in Europe and shattered the tranquility of two hemispheres. That eagle died. It had broken the peace. Its wings are crushed; its carcass has been stripped of its splendid plumage; its bones lie bleaching in the sun. That was yesterday. Today,—another eagle, powerful and proud, preens its feathered beauty.—this time in the East. Its talons are sharp and extended for the fight. It is restless; it is greedy; it is strong. Recently it lias occupied a new seat, despite tin protest of one of its strongest fellows. Will it too scream.— and break the peace.—and die? By some people, the context of the preceding paragraph will be branded as the hysterical outburst of a trouble-seeking, trouble-fomenting Jingoist. Their doctrine, they will tell you, is ‘‘moderation in all things”. Were it rigidly observed by all who proclaim adhesion to it, the world wouid have taken a long step forward. Temperance is a wonderful thing. Had it been always practiced our American liberties would today be untrammeled by the restrictions of certain constitutional amendments. But to carry temperance to excess is t transform virtue into vice. To deafen oneself to the timely warning of a friend, who senses the presence of a danger; to still the voice of judgment because it cries aloud for wariness and caution; to deny tin logic of one's reason because its conclusions may stimulate suspicion;— these are the acts of fools. Caesar turned unheeding ear to the warning of the soothsayer who bade him “Beware the Ides of March! That



Page 21 text:

20 THE MX AT I AS reborn and intensified by the posit ion which I lie government of Japan has recently assumed relative t the rights ol the Cnited States in the important little island of Yap. Yap—he it known, is one of the Caroline Islands situated some eight or nine hundred Hides from the Philippines. These islands, together with all the other of (ici many's Paci fie possessions north of the equator, were included in the mandate conferred on Japan by the Supreme Council of the League of Nations as her just and rightful portion of the spoils of the war. The only island wherein Japan's exclusive control is odious and in conflict with the recognized rights of the Cnited States is the Isle of Yap. For Yap. small and insignificant as it appears to he. is tin very heart of all cable communication between America and the Far Fast. The arteries of news from two different worlds run through the very heart of this island. Prior to the war, when (iermany controlled the Caroline group, the rights of the Cnited States to the supervision and control of her national cable interests were recognized by all the nations of the world. Now, armed with the mandate of tin League of Nations, Japan denies any right of America in Yap, and firmly contends that, under the terms of the mandate her control is exclusive. The result of Japan's determined stand in the matter has been the launching of numerous official messages from Washington to the various members of tin League Council and to Japan herself. The I'nited States of America, through tin lips of her Secretary of State. Charles Evans Hughes, has voiced its official protest. The tenor of the notes is this: First: Since the rights of Japan in Yap are in conflict with the prior rights of the Cnited States in the same island. Japan can obtain no exclusive control over the said island without the consent of the Government of the Cnited States. Second: At no time in any negotiations has tin Cnited States Government ceded to Japan its rights in the island of Yap. Third: The Supreme Council in granting to Japan a

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