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...Sallie Bingham capture much of the agony of physical self-conciousness in a single line in "Winter Term...

Author: By Geoffrey Cowan, | Title: Harvard Romances as Others See Them | 11/10/1961 | See Source »

...Radcliffe romance the couple has its own place for making love. In "Sentimental Education" it is Elgin's room. In The Fume of Poppies it is first an apartment in Cambridge, and later it is hotel rooms and beaches throughout Europe. In "Winter Term", a short story by Sallie Bingham, it is the back seats of cars. In each case the nature of the love nest reflects the tone of the romance: the first a college affair, the second an epic romance, the third a grasping routine...

Author: By Geoffrey Cowan, | Title: Harvard Romances as Others See Them | 11/10/1961 | See Source »

...importance of sexual inter-course in an affair is clear to Dr. Binger--in many cases it serves to relieve almost unbearable pressure. But that affair may at once have the healthy effect of relaxation and the disconcerting effect of distraction, is evident in Sallie Bingham's description of Hal's thoughts while studying with Eleanor in "Winter Term...

Author: By Geoffrey Cowan, | Title: Harvard Romances as Others See Them | 11/10/1961 | See Source »

...when William J. Bingham '16 was appointed Harvard's first Director of Athletics, numerous changes were made in policy. On Oct. 18th, for example, the Athletic Committee decided that Harvard could make no guarantees to play any one really in football except Yale. There is no Ivy League then, and the Crimson felt obliged to nobody but Yale. Most of all, Harvard wanted to free its schedule so that it could play teams in other parts of the country...

Author: By James R. Ullyot, | Title: Princeton: A Second-Class Power? | 11/10/1961 | See Source »

...free world. With this leadership rests a great responsibility. Remember, Australian boys. South African boys, Israeli boys may die as a result of the actions we take. This is a great partnership, and we are not by any means running a foreign policy for ourselves alone." Editor-Publisher Barry Bingham of the Louisville Courier-Journal emphatically agrees. "It is terribly important that we show the world that we are not just acting out of self-interest. If we try to compete with the Soviets just on the basis of might alone, we might find that we have lost a vital...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign Relations: World Opinion | 9/15/1961 | See Source »

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