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...homosexual: "One who prefers his own but may accept the opposite sex." To most people Lonergan does not look like a homosexual. Contrary to popular legend, homosexuals are not necessarily physically abnormal, though sometimes a glandular disturbance is involved. As a rule, homosexuals are made, not born. Psychologists W. Norwood East and W. H. Herbert list seduction in childhood as the commonest precipitating cause. Other causes: 1) a tendency to varied and primitive sexual outlets; 2) an inherited tendency. From Lonergan's repudiated confession to the police he would seem to fall into the varied and primitive sexual outlet...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: The Lonergcm Case | 4/3/1944 | See Source »

...Senior five, all on leave since last February, are Theodore S. Baer '44, Norwood, Army; James H. Donald '44, Dallas, Texas, Harvard Medical School; Harold C. Fleming '44, Atlanta Army; Thomas H. Green, Jr. '44, Bloomington, III, Harvard Medical School; and Edmund L. Saunders '44, Mattapan, Boston University Medical School...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 16 Elected To PBK Society | 10/5/1943 | See Source »

Died. Sarah Haynes, Lady Maxim, widow of Sir Hiram Stevens Maxim, inventor of the machine gun, stepmother of the late Hiram Percy Maxim, inventor of the silencer; in Norwood, England...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, Sep. 1, 1941 | 9/1/1941 | See Source »

...seven: !- Norwood Francis Allman, chief editor of Shun Pao, China's largest independent daily. A native of Virginia, lawyer and poloist, Allman went to China in 1916 with the U. S. Consular Service, resigned in 1923 to practice law in Shanghai. Two years ago, Shun Pao's Chinese owners called in Lawyer Allman, asked him to take over management of the paper, see that nothing offensive to the Japanese crept into its columns. A fluent Chinese linguist, Allman reads every story that goes into Shun Pao, writes editorials, corrects editorials written by staff members. He serves without...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: New Order in Shanghai | 7/29/1940 | See Source »

...line on their Presidents, U. S. citizens have looked harder and oftener at political cartoons than at the editorial pages. Franklin D. Roosevelt was a caricaturist's "natural." But his cartoon character did not evolve overnight. At his nomination in 1932, top-flight Cartoonist "J. N. Ding" (Jay Norwood Darling) had already caught Roosevelt's cowcatcher chin and vaudeville grin. Added later were weightier jowls, up-jutting cigaret holder that make up the now-familiar Roosevelt caricature...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Problem in Caricature | 7/8/1940 | See Source »

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