Word: cordiales
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...tends the workers to idleness." Prosperity: "I am confident that the peace of the world will be preserved, and that before long a new era of prosperity will dawn; and in this assurance I bid goodby to those who have listened to my message, and beg to present my cordial regards to the President of your great republic...
...surgery and medicine, those who treat private patients in the Center Hospitals, work on two different plans. Some give all their fees to the hospitals. Their salaries therefore are larger than regular professors'. Others keep their patients' fees, but accept few patients. Dean Darrach is a cordial, friendly, well-liked person, bald, with a ruddy face and stocky frame. Last year at Columbia University's 175th anniversary, the university hung and oil painting of Dean Darrach. It shows him as he appears at Commencement exercises-in a lurid red gown and a dinky, black, lopsided hat which...
Other inter-sectional games will replace today's; they are to be welcomed as was the scheduling of Michigan. All serve the common end of fostering cordial relations in parts where Harvard's contacts are only of the most casual nature. Win, lose, or draw, the coming of Michigan to the domain of John Harvard makes this a red letter day on the athletic calendar...
...tries hard to be noncommittal. But sometimes a President, or his aide, slips.* At once some sensitive soul cries out in anguish or anger. This happened last week. A prominent Roman Catholic flayed President Hoover for his greeting to the Lutherans, which was: Hoover to Lutherans. "I send cordial greetings to the Americans of Lutheran faith who are celebrating on October 31 the anniversary of the Protestant Reformation and the 400th anniversary of the reading of the Augsburg Confession from which date so many of the changes in point of view from older conceptions both of religion and government...
Hoover to Catholics. "I will be obliged if you will express my cordial greetings to the meeting this evening of the National Eucharistic Congress,, at which, I am informed, you [George William Cardinal Mundelein of Chicago] will preside, and my appreciation of the value of spiritual ideals and of religious observance in the life of the nation, which are indispensable foundations of the social order and of enduring political institu tions." Lutheran Aside. The Burke outburst astonished Lutherans, still at Milwaukee last week, and suggested to them a new significance in what they had considered merely a formal Presidential greeting...