Word: freude
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...London's blue-blood suburbs. Their leader is an engaging aristocrat, Jeremy Thorpe, 44, an amateur violinist and accomplished mimic whose ancestors were serving in Parliament in the 14th century. Now the band has been joined by David Austick, a bald lay preacher and bookseller, and Clement Freud, an antic journalist and television personality who, besides being Sigmund's grandson, is best known to the British electorate for his baleful appearances with a blood hound named Henry in a commercial for dog food...
Austick, 53, and Freud, 49, won stunning victories in by-elections on the same day. That gave the Liberals four of the eight national by-elections they have contested in the past year, and it has sent Tory and Labor politicians alike into their own form of self-analysis, probing whether all their recent slips at the polls are something more than Freudian. Altogether, the Liberals now occupy only ten of the 630 seats in the Commons. But suddenly they are no laughing matter-least of all to the Conservative government and the Labor opposition...
...work there is an encounter between American intuitive psychological wisdom and the European spirit of psychoanalysis, which he made part of the training of a whole generation of psychiatrists." Adds Psychoanalyst Erik Erikson: "In his books [Man Against Himself, Love Against Hate, The Vital Balance], Menninger translates Freud into American literature. He has not been a popularizer in the cheap sense, but rather an enlightener...
...30p.m.-Freud. John Huston directed this ponderous rendition of the early life of the great pioneer in psychoanalysis. This is not really a very good film, but Montgomery Clift does a creditable job in the difficult title role, and Susannah York is a stunning leading lady. It's good fare for Clift fans and Social Relations majors. Channel...
...world of fragments. The novels are built out of too much plot and too many characters; they provide quantities of information far beyond anyone's desire to be informed. They are full of technical disquisitions of differential calculus, organic chemistry, the history of film, jazz and rock, dope and Freud, the Holy Grail, rockets, the Wizard of Oz -- all Pynchon metaphors for the twentieth century. It is not that he is groping for the one correct metaphor to one consistent reality. He is compiling as many metaphors as he can for as many realities as he sees...