Word: freude
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Shatzky had a psychic flash. He ran to the Institute's Director Nolan Don Carpentier Lewis, exclaimed: "This can be the collection of only one man, and he is Sigmund Freud." If his hunch proved wrong, said Librarian Shatzky, he would foot the bill himself. Director Lewis got an appropriation...
...months Drs. Shatzky and Lewis waited anxiously for the books. Finally six large, swastika-stamped boxes arrived. When they pried open the boxes they found just what the doctors had hoped they had ordered: the library of Sigmund Freud. Most of the books were marked with his rubber stamp or signature. Among the items: Freud's medical-school texts; eleven rare volumes of Mesmerism (alone worth more than $500); a privately printed volume for "Le Roi de France" on animal magnetism (value...
...Helene Deutsch, 51, of Boston and Karen Horney, 55, of Manhattan are probably the outstanding women psychiatrists in the U. S. Until she left Austria in 1935, Dr. Deutsch was head of Freud's International Institute for Psychoanalysis. Now practicing successfully in a hushed, modernistic office, she deplores New England's pinched emotions. Dr. Horney, unlike Dr. Deutsch, does not relate most neuroses to a childhood love for parents, but claims that harsh society ultimately produces many mental ills...
Edward Bernays, a nephew of Sigmund Freud, hates to be called a press agent. He had raised his voice for democracy before, as a member of the U. S. Committee on Public Information (propaganda) in World War I. Since then he has ably publicized electricity, soap, refrigerators, sea food, written a book on propaganda, become a leading publicist. Three months ago, having concluded that democracy was in grave danger of going under by default, he decided to start a publicity campaign in its behalf. First broadside in his campaign was an article in Current History outlining a program for patriots...
John J. Anthony is a man of somewhat obscure antecedents, as are most of the problem wizards of the air. Manhattan-born, now 44, Mr. Anthony boasts that he has dabbled in law, studied psychology under Freud, claims that he holds three degrees from assorted universities. On the ground that he doesn't want to be looked upon as an academician, he refuses to divulge the names of his alma maters. He abhors the U. S. educational system. "It isn't," he remarks, "worth a goodgoddam...