Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh Debate Index | Page 3

Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh
1906, p. 11: Briefs and references.--Askew, 1911, p. 9: Briefs.
=Anger.=
Is anger a vice or a virtue? Rowton, p. 225: References.
=Anglican church.= See =England, Church of.=
=Anglo-Japanese alliance.=
Askew, 1906, p. 13: Briefs and references.--Askew, 1911, p. 11: Briefs.

=Anglo-Saxon peoples.=
America and England; union of the English-speaking race. Askew,
1906, p. 9: Briefs and references.
=Animals.=
Are brutes endowed with reason? Rowton, p. 192: Briefs and
references.
Have animals intelligence? Gibson, p. 19: Briefs and references.
Rights of animals. Askew, 1906, p. 195: Briefs and references.--Askew,
1911, p. 12: Briefs.
See also Human mind and brute mind.
=Anti-trust law, 1890.= See =Sherman anti-trust law.=
=Arbitration, Commercial.=
Askew, 1906, p. 15: Briefs.
=Arbitration, Compulsory industrial.=
Boards of arbitration with compulsory powers should be established to
settle disputes between employers and wage-earners. Ringwalt, p. 210:
Briefs and references.
Capital and labor should be compelled to settle their disputes in legally
established courts of arbitration. Debaters' handbook ser., no. 1: Briefs,
references, and selected articles.
Compulsory industrial arbitration. Askew, 1906, p. 16: Briefs and
references.--Askew, 1911, p. 13: Briefs.
The government should settle all disputes between capital and labor.
Craig, p. 556: Outlines.

Ought arbitration in trade disputes to be enforced by law? Gibson, p. 24:
Briefs and references.
State boards of arbitration with compulsory powers should be
established throughout the United States to settle industrial disputes
between employers and employees. Foster, p. 353: Speech
(affirmative).
There should be a national board of arbitration for matters in dispute
between employers and employees on inter-state railroads, and this
board should be given compulsory powers. Brookings, p. 162: Briefs
and references.
=Arbitration, International.=
Could not arbitration be made a substitute for war? Rowton, p. 224:
References.
International arbitration; is it a substitute for war? Askew, 1906, p. 16:
Briefs and references.--Askew, 1911, p. 14: Briefs.
The United States should form a treaty with Great Britain and with
France agreeing to arbitrate all disputed questions. C. L. of P.
Reference lists.
=Arctic exploration.=
Has Arctic exploration been justified in its results? Matson, p. 412:
Briefs and references.
=Aristocratic and democratic government.=
Askew, 1906, p. 17: Briefs and references.
=Aristotle and Plato.= See =Plato and Aristotle.=
=Armaments.=
Danger of increased armaments. Askew, 1906, p. 114: Briefs and

references.
Reduction of national armaments. Askew, 1911, p. 15: Briefs.
See also Disarmament.
=Armed intervention.=
Armed intervention for the collection of debts. Speaker, v. 2, p. 391:
Briefs and references.--C. L. of P. Debates: Briefs.
Armed intervention is not justifiable on the part of any nation to collect
in behalf of private individuals financial claims against any American
nation. Pearson, p. 223: Synopses and references.
=Armenian question.=
Armenian question and English intervention. Askew, 1906, p. 18:
Briefs and references.
=Army= (England).
Army short service. Askew, 1906, p. 20: Briefs and references.--Askew,
1911, p. 16: Briefs.
Compulsory universal service. Askew, 1911, p. 207: Briefs.
See also Conscription.
=Army= (United States). Increase.
Is it good government for the United States to maintain a standing army
greater than is actually necessary to enforce the laws of the country?
Craig, p. 520: Speeches.
The United States army should be increased rather than diminished. C.
L. of P. Reference lists.
The United States army should be increased to one thousand for each

million of our population. Thomas, p. 200: Briefs.
=Art.=
Should not all national works of art be entirely free to the public?
Rowton, p. 227: References.
=Art, British.=
Is British art declining? Gibson, p. 27: Briefs and references.
=Art and morality.=
Does art, in its principles and works, imply the moral? Is art amenable
to an ethical standard? Matson, p. 365: Briefs and references.
=Art and religion.=
Is the influence of the fine arts favorable to religion? Matson, p. 366:
Briefs and references.
=Art and science.=
Are art and science antagonistic? Is the general prevalence of natural
science prejudicial to the cultivation of high art? Matson, p. 362: Briefs
and references.
=Art unions.=
Do the associations entitled "art unions" tend to promote the spread of
the fine arts? Rowton, p. 228: References.
=Asset currency.=
National banks should be permitted to issue notes based on their
general assets. Ringwalt, p. 143: Briefs and references.
National banks should be permitted to issue, subject to tax and
government supervision, notes based on their general assets. Speaker, v.

3, p. 409: Brief (affirmative).--C. L. of P. Debates: Brief (affirmative).
A system of asset currency, under federal control, should be established
in the United States. Pearson, p. 191: Synopses of speeches, and
references.
=Astronomy and geology.=
Does the study of astronomy tend more to expand the mind than the
study of geology? Is the study of geology of more practical benefit than
the study of astronomy? Matson, p. 261: Briefs and references.
=Athanasian creed.=
Should the rubric requiring its public recitation be removed? Askew,
1911, p. 17: Briefs.
=Atheists.=
Are
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