Word: jerrold
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...that being a good father means learning how to mother. Among child-rearing experts, the debate rages over whether men and women parent differently, whether there is some unique contribution that each makes to the emotional health of their children. "Society sends men two messages," says psychologist Jerrold Lee Shapiro, father of two and the author of A Measure of the Man, his third book on fatherhood. "The first is, We want you to be involved, but you'll be an inadequate mother. The second is, You're invited into the birthing room and into the nurturing process...
...October 2003, Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., sent Ford President Susan V. Berresford a letter co-signed by 20 other congressmen urging her to ensure that Ford money was not supporting anti-Semitic activities. In a November 2003 meeting, Berresford promised Nadler that Ford would not fund anti-Semitic groups...
...election is so hard to predict that it's no wonder some powerful players are hedging their bets. Broadcasting tycoon A. Jerrold Perenchio, who was Davis' largest individual campaign contributor, has joined Schwarzenegger's team of economic advisers, according to the Sacramento Bee. Investment banker Warren Hellman, who is contributing to the antirecall effort, also turned up among Schwarzenegger's advisers. "I'm dead set against a recall," says Hellman, "but if it happens, I want to be supporting someone I'm enthusiastic about." By Terry McCarthy, Sonja Steptoe and Karen Tumulty
...away with the brutal suppression of a postwar rebellion that flared in 14 of 18 Iraqi provinces while the first Bush Administration stood back. He made defiance a pillar of his power. "Saddam sees himself as a lone figure, battling the greatest power on earth," says Dr. Jerrold Post, a psychiatrist who has profiled the Iraqi leader for the CIA. Saddam felt, as did many others in the Arab world, that he had "won" the first Gulf War by not losing everything...
...easy. Saddam is considered one of the world's richest men, but over the past three decades, he has gone to great lengths to conceal his vast, ill-gotten fortune. "Money is profoundly important to Saddam, but not because of greed," says Dr. Jerrold Post, a psychiatrist and former CIA profiler of the Iraqi leader. "It represents instead his insurance policy and a tool through which he exercises power and manipulates others...