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...find ways to eliminate such troubles, mental health programs headed by full-or part-time psychiatrists are operated by such companies as Eastman Kodak, Metropolitan Life Insurance, International Business Machines, Du Pont, New York Telephone Co. and American Cyanamid. Hundreds of other companies hire consulting psychologists to plumb their workers' difficulties. The number is still small compared with the total of corporations-partly because highly paid psychiatrists are difficult to attract to industry-but it is growing. U.S. Steel is about to set up a fulltime program, "as a natural step in the development of a medical program...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MENTAL HEALTH ON THE JOB: Industry's $3 Billion Problem | 5/30/1960 | See Source »

Said one of his fans last week: "Guardini is like a Renaissance humanist-he seems to have the key to everything. If he speaks about atomic science, one feels he knows all there is to know about modern physics. He can plumb the depths of Freud or analyze the mysticism of Paul Klee's paintings; he can throw new light on the obscure poetry of Hölderlin and Rilke, or expound the strengths and weaknesses of Communist dialectic. Guardini seems to control the bridges that lead from art, from literature, from philosophy -to religion...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Faith Is the Center | 3/14/1960 | See Source »

...with the ability to feel profound and communicable pain. The picturesque discomfiture and knavery that are familiar and amusing in Congreve and Gay are gradually, in Mr. Mayer's scheme, to be exposed as the sort of deep corruption which only the most sombre tragedy will generally attempt to plumb. The diamond-pointed cutting-tools of the Age of Wit are to be used to lay bare the dark reality of metaphysical evil. Think of Congreve trying to be Dostoevsky--better, think of a Broadway playwright of the 1920's, which Mr. Mayer was when he wrote Children of Darkness...

Author: By Julius Novick, | Title: Children of Darkness | 2/1/1960 | See Source »

...lacks a certain cleanness of impact, a certain soundness of effect. It pounds too hard at times, and stretches things out too long. And for all its speeches and screams, it does not deeply plumb its moral issue or its chief actors, particularly the key figure of the judge advocate (for which George C. Scott, however brilliant, seems miscast). And by mixing dialectics with histrionics to pose a moral inquiry, The Andersonville Trial disconcertingly forfeits much of the realistic and psychological fascination of a trial. About it all there is too much sense of external pressure, of the author...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theater: New Play on Broadway, Jan. 11, 1960 | 1/11/1960 | See Source »

...country's great classics. He presented a movingly stylized and austere show, using Gilbert Murray's not too satisfactory translation (Yeats' is no better; there is still need for a truly actable translation). Barry Morse, whose forte is high comedy, made an admirable Oedipus, but he could not plumb the depths of his final scene. Sydney Sturgess was badly miscast as Jocasta; but Ellis Rabb acted as cathartic a Tiresias as one is ever likely to see. The corporate delivery of the Chorus of Elders lacked rhythmic precision...

Author: By Caldwell Titcomb, | Title: Local Drama Sparks Summer Season | 9/21/1959 | See Source »

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