Word: fisher
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Thomas Fisher's "Cross-Cultural Study of Psychotherapy" is an attempt to determine whether certain elements of mental therapy exist universally in sample cultures. Fisher finds that such therapy, as a means of dealing with undesirable deviants from a culture's norms, does involve common elements in the deviant-therapist relationship. Western psychoanalysis, the Navaho "Singer" treatment and related ritualistic healings in the cultures of the Saulteaux, Yurok, and Guatemalan Indians have certain points in common. Especially significant are the common traits of curing through an emotional experience, with the assumption that the cause of the disturbance lies beyond...
Frank Knox Memorial Fellowships were awarded to four students. William F. Anderson '58, who has been studying pre-clinical medicine at Trinity College in Cambridge, England, received one of the fellowships. The others were granted to John P. Demos '59, of Lowell House and Cambridge; Thomas L. Fisher '59, of Claverly Senior House and Omaha, Neb.; and Isaac Kranmick '59, of Winthrop House and Millis...
...guess we all would, in that kind of company. Jim Swan, one of the College's most assured actors, leads the denizen crew with a misguided righteousness that very nicely constructs the mood for the rest. They are: Robert Schwartz, Richard Dozier, George de Menil, Travis Linn and Richard Fisher--with a special hello to Mr. Dozier. John Grace constructed the set; if he designed it, as well (the program doesn't say), he must be a very imaginative fellow...
...Adams, David M. Balbanian, Charles N. Steele, Derek T. Winans, Glen E. Clover, and Alan K. Percy. Those from Leverett are Michael Graney, Alan H. Grossman, Edward L. Croman, Joseph H. Gardner, Peter H. Brown, Christopher T. Bayley, Reverdy Johnson, Jr., Sheldon Greenfield, Charles E. Lister, Robert N. Fisher, Robert S. Lawrence, and Rodney D. Hardy...
...enthusiasm and imagination made a great impression on us at Lambeth," said a top British cleric this week. "Archbishop of Canterbury Fisher has been a bit conservative, perhaps, in his approach to TV and other 20th century methods of mass communication. Bayne is from the New World; he is young and wants to grapple in a modern manner with the problems facing the church today. He wants to see that we don't go on plodding along the road we have always been plodding along. There's been a lot of fluttering in the dovecots over Bayne...