Word: bulkley
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Among former CRIMSON editors now prominent in public affairs and journalism are Joseph F. Barnes '27, Managing Editor in 1926 and lately manager of the Moscow bureau of the Herald-Tribune, and Robert J. Bulkley '02, former Democratic Senator from Ohio and President of the CRIMSON in 1901, who sent congratulations and best wishes for this 70th anniversary. John Cowles, newspaper publisher and vicepresident of LOOK magazine, was an editor, as was Corliss Lamont '24, well-known teacher and radical author. Roger Sherman Greene '01, former President, has been a loading diplomat in the Far East...
...article on my husband in TIME, which I very much enjoyed, there was a story of a sort of debate between Mrs. Bulkley and me, which never occurred. As far as I know, Mrs. Bulkley made no speeches during the campaign, and, as a matter of fact, quite often, when our husbands were debating, Mrs. Bulkley and I indulged in a friendly and sympathetic chat as from one candidate's wife to another. I feel that I should put the record straight for Mrs. Bulkley...
Phenomenal in 1938 was Robert Alphonso Taft's Ohio Senatorial victory over promising New Dealer Robert Johns Bulkley. Mr. Taft was phenomenally dull, phenomenally serious, phenomenally popular at the polls. Prissy, solemn, ponderous Mr. Taft was expected to fade away into the obscure routine of a freshman Senator. He didn't. He engaged in a series of radio debates with clever, Horace-quoting Democratic Congressman T. V. Smith of Illinois. Most people expected Mr. Taft to be skunked. But pollsters found the U. S. public voting for Senator Taft's serious, platitudinous remarks 2-to-1 over...
Arthur A. Ballautine '04, under-secretary of the Treasury under Hoover, and Joseph Clark Grew '02, ambassador to Japan, were also on the CRIMSON board with Hull, Roosevelt and Bulkley, he said...
...passage of thirty-six years, Hull admits, has dimmed his memory about the two politicoes, but he recalls Roosevelt as "tall, slim and giving the general impression of a pleasing and agreeable personality." He described him as "a well-behaved young man." Bulkley was called Roy, he said...