Word: binghams
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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William J. Bingham '16, Director of Athletics, said he could not comment on Crowther's possible successor. "That is entirely in Dick Harlow's hands. Harlow yearly nominates the members of his coaching staff which in turn are referred to the Committee on the Regulation of Athletic Sports for approval...
Carrying out his predicted shift in the U. S. diplomatic corps, President Roosevelt last week sent to the Senate his recommendations that 1) trouble-shooting Joseph Patrick* Kennedy-succeed the late Robert Worth Bingham in London, 2) Assistant Secretary of State Hugh R. Wilson succeed anti-Nazi Professor William E. Dodd in Berlin. When news of these appointments leaked out (TIME, Dec. 20), the scramble for embassy chairs left one diplomat awkwardly standing, Lawyer Joseph E. Davies. He had just returned from the Soviet Union to see the President and told the press: "I'll go anywhere the boss...
...Association are Phillips Ketchum '06, Boston, law; Gilbert G. Browne '10, New York, finance; Richard C. Floyd '11, Brookline, manufacturing; John S. Fleek '15, Cleveland, finance; Edward W. Mahan '16, Lakewood, New Jersey, education; Laurence M. Lombard '17, Boston, law; Frederick W. Warburg '19, New York, finance; and Barry Bingham '18, Louisvile, journalist...
...Father often said he felt at a disadvantage for having started in newspaper work at the top and wanted me to start at the bottom." When George Barry Bingham graduated magna cum laude from Harvard, he traveled two years, did a stint at Bingham radio station WHAS, then went humbly to work as police reporter on his father's Louisville Courier-Journal and Times. By the time Publisher Bingham became Ambassador to England in 1933, Barry Bingham was well on the way to the co-publishership he earned in 1935. Last week 31-year-old Barry Bingham, the late...
Died. Robert Worth Bingham, 66, sportsman, lawyer, publisher, since 1933 U. S. Ambassador to the Court of St. James; following a diagnostic operation which disclosed "abdominal Hodgkins disease," probably some form of infection with the appearance of tumor, whose rarity baffled Johns Hopkins' surgeons, whose seriousness surprised his friends; in Baltimore. His second marriage, in 1916, was to the widow of Standard Oil's late great Henry M. Flagler. She died eight months after marrying Mr. Bingham, left him $5,000,000. Next year he purchased the Louisville Courier-Journal and Times, became famed...