Word: feeling
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...begun to tell on other Ministers. John Strachey (Food) had been down with flu. Sir Stafford Cripps (Trade) had been out with a chill. Foreign Minister Ernest Bevin was nursing his high blood pressure. At a cocktail party a friend told him that he looked well. Said Bevin: "I feel worse than I look." Clem Attlee, an early riser, toiled to the Churchillian hour of 2:30 a.m. to handle the extra work...
Women with deep emotional conflicts, Dr. Friedgood pointed out, often show psychosexual disorders. A fairly common one: false pregnancy among i) unmarried women who feel guilty about illicit interr course, 2) wives who fear pregnancy, 3) older women who want children...
...interested in [sandwiches] made with that ham from Georgia, but there are some . . . made of sanitary Wisconsin cheese, just for you." Mr. Churchill often bounds off into sonorous oratory, uses words like "bloody" and "jolly." Mr. Baruch is a wise elder statesman who can feel things "in his bones." Mr. Hopkins, who represents the frustrated New Dealer, is sincere but tart, and has to be reprimanded by Roosevelt for using the word "stink" in front of Mr. Churchill. Author Franklin, who once worked for the State Department as an economist and was active in psychological warfare during World...
...physician has lost the 'feel' of the patient's home. The patient, in turn, has been separated from his 'Doc' by receptionists, internes, residents, admitting physicians, house-officers, ward assistants, dispensary workers, specialists, subspecialists, nurses, social service workers, dietitians, etc. . . . Overall knowledge and responsibility for the human life are the province of no one practitioner...
...years of Miss Taylor's teacher-training program, several have become directors of similar schools. One of them, Mrs. Sebastian Hinton, founded a school of her own: Vermont's successful Putney School. Through them Teacher Taylor's methods have spread. Says she quietly: "We feel much less tentative...