Quintuple Alliance, League of Nations as name for
Racial equality issue in Shantung bargain
Racial minorities protection, in Wilson’s original draft
Ratification of Treaty Lansing’s attitude
Red Cross promotion in Treaty
Rhenish Republic as buffer state
Roumania Bucharest Treaty to be abrogated territory Fourteen Points on
Russia Wilson’s policy and route for Germany
to the East Lansing’s notes
on territorial settlement Fourteen
Points on
Ruthenians and Ukraine
Schleswig-Holstein disposition
Scott, James Brown drafts French alliance treaty and
projet of a
treaty
Secret diplomacy as subject of disagreement in negotiation
of League as
evil at Conference Lansing’s
opposition, its effect on Wilson
Wilson’s consultations and
Wilson’s “open diplomacy” in Council
of
Four public resentment Fiume affair
as lesson on perfunctory open
plenary sessions of Conference Council
of Ten effect on Wilson’s
prestige responsibility effect on
delegates of smaller nations
climax, text of Treaty withheld
from delegates psychological effect
great opportunity for reform missed
and Shantung Fourteen Points on
See also Publicity
Secretariat of the League in Wilson’s original
draft in Cecil plan in
Treaty
“Self-denying covenant” for guaranty of
territory and independence
Lansing’s advocacy House and
Wilson rejects suggested by others to
Wilson
Self-determination in Wilson’s draft of Covenant
why omitted from treaty
in theory and in practice Wilson
abandons violation in the treaties
and Civil War and Fiume colonial,
in Fourteen Points Wilson’s
statement (Feb. 1918)
Senate of United States and affirmative guaranty opposition
and Wilson’s
threat plan to check opposition
by a modus vivendi
Separation of powers Wilson’s attitude
Serbia Jugo-Slavia territory Fourteen Points on
Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes See Jugoslavia
Shantung Settlement as subject of disagreement and
secret diplomacy
bargain injustice, blackmail influence
of Japanese bluff not to agree
to the League German control Japanese
occupation moral effect Chinese
agreement to Japanese demands, resulting
legal and moral status
status after China’s declaration
of war on Germany attitude of Allied
delegates attitude of American Commission,
letter to Wilson argument
before Council of Ten Japanese threat
to American Commission before
Council of Four value of Japanese
promises questioned and Fiume
question of resignation of American
Commission over China refuses to
sign Treaty Wilson permits American
Commission to share in
negotiations American public opinion
text of Treaty articles on


