Word: elisabeth
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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About all that can be said for Charley is that his reluctance to marry a spoiled-rotten fiance (Elisabeth Shue) and take on a classically choleric movie mogul (Robert Loggia) in the bargain is understandable. About all that can be said about Vicki is that she is pretty and sings sexily...
...while, the Chancellor's popularity rose with the deft handling of the complex negotiations that brought about merger in October. Unity, said the liberal weekly Die Zeit, "rescued him." It also obscured all other issues. The theme of unification, says Elisabeth Noelle-Neumann, head of the Allensbach polling institute, "was completely constant from the onset of the campaign, dominating it to the exclusion of any other everyday issue." The juggernaut rolled over Lafontaine...
...Maggie S. Tucker '93 Rebecca L. Walkowitz '92 Editorial Editor: Joshua M. Sharfstein '91 Feature Editors: Matthew M. Hoffman '91 Stephen J. Newman '92 Photo Editors: William H. Bachman '92 David E. Herne '93 Debra A. Schafer '93 Ali F. Zaidi '92 Business Editors: Gregory S. Belsher '92 Elisabeth S. Hilton '92 Robert M. Kim '93 Sarah B. Kirschbaum '93 Raymond Nomizu '91 Timothy B. Paydos '92 Seth E. Wilson '92 Music Editor: Jonathan M. Berlin '92 Tommy's Editor: John G. Knepper...
...never to see outside a war zone: it is to Los Angeles, which had more automatic-weapons victims than Beirut last year, that the U.S. Army sends its physicians for combat training, at Martin Luther King Jr./Drew Medical Center. "What gives out is not patient care," says Dr. Elisabeth Rosenthal of New York Hospital, "but our sanity...
...reigning Empress Elisabeth was half mad or, as Bettelheim more clinically describes her, "hysterical, narcissistic, and anorexic." And the heir apparent, Crown Prince Rudolf, climaxed a sexual episode by killing both his mistress and himself. Yet this was also the era of The Blue Danube. Bettelheim's conclusion: "Things had never been better, but at the same time they had never been worse; this strange simultaneity, in my opinion, explains why psychoanalysis, based on the understanding of ambivalence, hysteria, and % neurosis, originated in Vienna and probably could have originated nowhere else...