Word: guilts
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...telling management about its faults, Dr. McMurry admits that he has to pull his psychological punches. Otherwise, he says, "We would lose our jobs." For management is also emotionally immature, and when given bitter pills of truth, it suffers anxieties and guilt feelings which it is apt to take out on the bearer of the bad news...
...every word he rumbles, able Prosecutor Murphy displays his conviction of Hiss's guilt. He rises, puffing out his cheeks a little, eyes on his quarry. Hiss's head on his thin neck is cocked to one side. His only gestures are with his head, which he ducks, shakes, nods, rolls from side to side. His hands are kept folded in his lap; his eyes are fixed steadily on Murphy's face...
...Samuel Johnson, "the great convulsionary, [was] a kind of intellectual John Bull, dogmatic, tough and rather insensitive . . . beneath [whose] assured demeanor lay a torment .of apprehensiveness, doubt and misgivings . . ." His antics suggested St. Vitus' dance but were actually of psychic, not organic, origin. Obsessed with a sense of guilt and fears of insanity and death, Johnson prescribed his own remedy for fits of melancholia: busying himself with involved arithmetical problems...
...most enterprising of the new generation was squat, baby-faced Photographer Ivo Meldolesi, 34, who was acquitted of collaboration charges in 1945 for "insufficient proof of guilt." Last spring, Meldolesi made front pages in Europe and the U.S. with two notable beats. Masquerading as a Capri fisherman, he snapped the only picture of Britain's Princess Margaret in a bathing suit; later, he surprised camera-shy Greta Garbo without her hat, got a shot of her covering her face with her long, tawny hair. Last week, Meldo-lesi's energy and enterprise landed him his biggest scoop...