Word: psychologist
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...tragicomic fashion on May 24. At Bobby's request, Negro Author James Baldwin (TIME cover, May 17) arranged for a New York City meeting. Among those present besides Bobby and Baldwin were Negro Singers Lena Horne and Harry Belafonte, Playwright Lorraine (A Raisin in the Sun) Hansberry, Psychologist Kenneth Clark. Bobby went into the meeting under the illusion that Negroes feel gratitude toward the Administration. What he encountered was a shouting, finger-shaking barrage of anger, disappointment and impatience. Afterwards, one participant said the meeting was a "flop," another called it "tragic." Said Baldwin: "Bobby Kennedy was a little...
Memories, Dreams, Reflections, by C. G. Jung. A fascinating autobiographical account of the dream life of the great Swiss psychologist, who, in rejecting Freud and in pursuing his own mystic world of psychic energy, at last turned his back on much of the scientific thought of his own time...
...When the group suggested to Bobby that the President might help the situation by making a dramatic public appearance-such as personally escorting a Negro into the University of Alabama -the Attorney General laughed in his disbelief that it could be a serious proposal. Dr. Kenneth Clark, Negro psychologist at New York's City College, said later: "There was no communication. I think we might as well have been talking different languages...
Memories, Dreams, Reflections, by C. G. Jung. In this posthumous autobiography, the late great Swiss psychologist traces his life in dreams, offering some startling insights into a mind that at the end was in flight from its century, from science and particularly from Freud...
...universities can pool so many resources to find out. Psychologist Bruno Bettelheim, for example, is pioneering rehabilitation techniques with "incurably" maladjusted children. "I hope we can help him," says Beadle. "There are tremendous possibilities." Also potentially involved: Chicago's graduate school of education, which non-education professors confidently call "better than Harvard's." Dean Francis Chase proudly points out that his school, unlike Harvard's, gives doctorates only in philosophy, not education. More than half the graduates become "machine tools," teaching at other education schools...