Word: psychologist
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...likely to have a skeleton text, a book of suggested activities, a visual-aid kit, and the advice of a child psychologist...
...native of Rahway, N.J., now 33, he received his B.S. degree from Rutgers University in 1950 and his Ph.D. from Yale in 1954. He taught at Ohio State, and served as psychologist in medical research at the U.S. Army Hospital, West Point, N.Y., before joining the staff of the Fels Institute in 1957. He is a fellow of the American Psychological Association and of the Society for Research in Child Development...
...psychologists had a friendly, ecumenical view of clerical neurosis. Jesuit William C. Bier, chairman of Fordham's psychology department, said that the priesthood has a particular attraction for the potential schizophrenic. Dr. Fred Brown, chief psychologist at Manhattan's Mount Sinai Hospital, reported that many rabbinical candidates were sick, but "no 'sicker' than the ministerial candidates of the Roman Catholics and Protestants...
...cord, and assorted other examples of the 200 human ills loosely classed as neurological. It had already undertaken its first operation, for a temporal-lobe defect causing epilepsy. The 13-member team in the operating room included an electronics engineer, a neurophysiologist, a neuroanesthesiologist, an electroencephalographer, and a behavioral psychologist...
Wait Till Supine. Such "analysis" can be done by mail, but some testers supplement it with "depth" interviews lasting an hour or more. The chief psychologist for the "management engineering" firm of Stevenson, Jordan & Harrison told Gross that "we set up a sort of doctor-patient relationship to put employees at their ease. I try to make the man feel as much at home as possible.'' A testing psychologist at George Fry said: "I wait until I have him almost supine. After that, he reveals himself quickly and I learn a great deal about the man." The Hippocratic...