Word: cordialities
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...occasion of the annual dinner of the New York Real Estate Board President Hoover sent its chairman a telegram: "I will be obliged if you will express my cordial greetings and best wishes for an inspired meeting." Present was New York's Democratic Governor and Presidential aspirant, Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Observed he: "I take it, on the strength of this, that Mr. Hoover will be a candidate for re-election...
...current of student opinion favoring resumption of athletic rela- tions, has been forcibly and unequivocably expressed at both colleges through the medium of the petitions and resolutions to which Dr. Kennedy indirectly refers. Further satisfaction may be derived from his declaration that "There seems to be real hope of cordial renewal," and we feel that Dr. Kennedy's expressed willingness "to discuss the matter with Mr. Bingham at an early date" is full of promise...
...resolution of the Harvard Student Council, which states that "Harvard-Princeton competition cannot take place too soon" was the last step necessary to show the cordial feeling between the present student bodies, the editorial points...
...Student Council, stating that 'Harvard-Princeton competition cannot take place too soon' is in exact agreement with the previous Princeton resolution from the three upper class presidents, the chairman of the undergraduate council and all major and minor sports captains. Together the two declarations form clear evidence of the cordial feeling between the present student bodies and strongly support the earlier demands of both the 'Crimson' and the 'Princetonian...
...instating an old football rivalry. At the end of that time, they became amicably convinced that schedule difficulties and divergent athletic policies on one cardinal issue rendered this objective futile for the immediate future. Out of this joint investigation, however, came the definite and encouraging result that a cordial sentiment between Harvard and Princeton undergraduates of today has supplanted their onetime bitterness and that a restoration of athletic contests should recognize the obvious fact that Harvard and Princeton are natural rivals in every true sense of the world...