"If we didn't all agree in this, we would not be here today," Cordell Hull said.
Cordell Hull was Secretary of State from 1933 until 1944.
Cordell Hull looked uncomfortable in weightlessness, but made a good game show of pretending he wasn't.
Cordell Hull made a strange noise, half gasping, half barking.
Cordell Hull took off his steel-rimmed spectacles and placed them beside the folder.
Cordell Hull leaned forward in his chair, his elbows resting on the desk.
Cordell Hull again leaned forward on his desk.
Cordell Hull rose from his chak and faced the general.
But Cordell Hull has confirmed it in his memoirs and disclosed the details.
He is certainly to be preferred to Cordell Hull who received the prize in 1945.