Word: mandel
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Benjamin R. Mandel, Chief Researcher for the Internal Subcommittee, indicated that the hearings would continue into next week if "sufficient information is uncovered...
Sack is one of these men. When you read his book, you may very well wind up agreeing with him. --PAUI W. MANDEL '51 Reprinted from the Summer Crimson, July...
When Drs. Eli Robins and Mandel E. Cohen and the late Dr. James J. Purtell began their study, they thought it would be easy to find patients because their colleagues spoke of there being a few hysterical men in every hospital. This, it soon developed, was not so. The "hysterical" men actually had diseases ranging from epilepsy to cancer and poliomyelitis. In fact, for a long time the three researchers could find no men in a civilian hospital whose illness fitted the definition of hysteria. So they turned to military and veterans' hospitals...
...smug contempt a moderate drinker might feel for an alcoholic. Emotionally, Diane is a D.P. Home, for her, is not her Bible-thumping mother's flat, but a kind of Greenwich Village inferno. The neurotics who crawl across her life and the pages of Novelist Mandel's book have addresses on Bleecker and MacDougal Streets but no roofs over their weary souls. Plagued with guilt-edged insecurities, they have one fear, themselves; one foe, reality; one condition, despair; one refuge, dope. Charged on Tea and Horse, they are world-beaters...
...sends her into a nerveless Nirvana: "Nothing itself in a uniform of gold, and Nothing loomed bigger than Anything ever could hope to be." To get the nothing her dreams are made of, Diane takes to shoplifting, finally sinks to old-fashioned prostitution. At novel's end. Author Mandel feebly suggests that psychoanalysis may save...