Word: jurgens
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...just as catching and as hard to cure. When a tense, anxious man tries to hide his feelings, other people "sense" what he is up against and start worrying too. In fact, it may be the tenseness of trying to hide tenseness that infects others, say Drs. Jurgen Ruesch and A. Rodney Prestwood of the University of California Medical School, in the current Archives of Neurology and Psychiatry...
...middle class consists mostly of fine, upstanding citizens who mind the conventions and obey the law. And what does it get them? Ulcers and trouble with their wives, say Drs. Jurgen Ruesch and Karl M. Bowman of the University of California's division of psychiatry...
Little Enthusiasm. One wartime U.S. visitor was impressed by the prevalence of sexy books in Karachi. "In one dismal hotel," he recalled, "the hall porter was reading Jurgen. The night clerk was reading Lady Chatterley's Lover and the manager was reading Elinor Glyn's Three Weeks. The food was bad, too, but I never found out what the chef had on his mind." A Karachi professor asked another U.S. visitor to send him Forever Amber. "I'm interested," he said, "because I have a beautiful young daughter...
Also reported were the appointments of the following as cadet non-commissioned officers: Oliver W. Roosevelt, Jr. '48, Charles H. Sammond, Jr. '48, David S. Jensen '48, Jurgen M. Kruse '48, Wilfredo A. Gautier '48, and Walter L. Moore...
Somewhere in England, hawk-faced Colonel General Jurgen von Arnim, captive commander of Axis North African armies, complained of a soldier's ailment (flat feet). He also showed signs of a beaten general's occupational ailments-mental depression and an anxiety neurosis. For the latter trouble, the British called in a psychiatrist...