Word: mutually
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Sigmund's constant companion was his nephew John, and (says Jones with unanalytical British understatement) "there are indications that their mutual play was not always entirely innocent." Their lack of innocence extended to play with John's sister Pauline, and Freud (as he told later) had fantasies of her being raped by both John and himself. Outstanding in his early relationships was his attitude toward a father old enough to be his grandfather. By putting him on a pedestal of eld and aloofness, and absolving him of "blame" for his mother's pregnancies, little Sigmund...
...interest in the New York situation. He insisted solemnly that "in my opinion it was an honest election." He also made it clear that the shelving of the I.L.A. loan did not mean that tough, power-hungry Jimmy Hoffa would be forced to abandon his idea of a "mutual aid pact"-committing the Teamsters and the discredited Longshoremen to joint organizational drives and joint pressure on employers...
...misgivings were felt, few were expressed. Colonial Secretary Alan Lennox-Boyd and his opposition member on the Labor bench, Nye Bevan, joined in mutual self-congratulation. The fact was that in deciding to accept Malta, everyone was all too conscious of unhappy events in another Mediterranean colony, Cyprus. Malta's 320,000 inhabitants are completely dependent on Britain for their economy, i.e., the Royal Navy, their foreign policy and defense. And, in contrast to Cyprus, thousands of Maltese demonstrated recently by waving Union Jacks and crying, "Long live England...
...port, one airfield, one railway terminal and some military forces, the inspection teams would be free to carry out aerial photography, watch all traffic and check on military installations. This plan, according to the U.S. theory, would be a quick means of getting disarmament started and of establishing mutual trust. It would also provide a kind of laboratory for the development of disarmament control techniques...
...proposals were far less ambitious than the main business before the conference-an Anglo-French general disarmament plan intended to lead in three slow stages from what the British call "the grey world of today" to a "white" world of mutual trust, in which all nuclear weapons would be banned. Precisely because they were more limited, however, the U.S. proposals had a far better chance of acceptance than the Anglo-French plan. The odds against even the U.S. proposals were high, for, as one conferee noted, if the Russians agreed to let foreign observers nose around the U.S.S.R., it would...