Word: bingers
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Speaking of untidiness, had Dr. Binger ever met Dr. Einstein when he was wearing his sweat shirt? Had he ever met Will Rogers, Bing Crosby, Owen D. Young, Thomas Edison? Dr. Binger never had. Or Heywood Broun? Apparently he had met the late Heywood Broun. "Oh, dirty!" exclaimed the doctor. Were these people psychopathic? "No," the doctor said...
...Binger had said that hiding the stolen documents in a pumpkin was bizarre behavior. Was it bizarre for Benedict Arnold, when he sold out West Point to the British, to hide the plans in Major Andre's shoe? "No," said the doctor. Was it bizarre for Moses' mother to hide him in the bulrushes? "She could scarcely put him in a safety-deposit box," said the doctor brightly...
Absinthe in a Daiquiri. For 2½ days a fascinated jury listened before a finally exhausted Dr. Binger was allowed to step down. But Defense Attorney Claude B. Cross immediately wheeled up reinforcements: Dr. Henry Alexander Murray. Like both Dr. Binger and Alger Hiss, Dr. Murray was a graduate of Harvard. He had also studied under Dr. Jung. He testified that he had had lots of opportunity to observe psychopathic personalities at Harvard University, where he was director of the Harvard Psychological Clinic. He backed up his colleague, Binger. Chambers, he said, was a psychopathic personality...
...Like Dr. Binger, Dr. Murray had all the answers, except for one question to which Dr. Binger also had no answer. How did Chambers happen to have the notes in Hiss's handwriting and the stolen State Department documents typed out on Hiss's machine? "That is outside my province," said the expert witness. Early this week the defense rested...
...defense concluded its evidence for the trial, prosecutor Thomas F. Murphy came forward and attempted to tear down the testimony of Dr. Murray and Dr. Carl A.L. Binger '10, both of whom claimed in a previous session that Chambers had a "psychopathic personality...