Word: psychologists
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Lonely People. One way or another, it is audience involvement that makes the talk shows successful-whether the listener is actually participating or just watching or listening. What engages them is a matter for the social psychologist. NBC Vice President Paul Klein suggests that "people are always lonely at night. Forty or fifty percent of the people have bad sex partners or none at all." Klein's statistics may be suspect, but after all, he is NBC's man in charge of audience measurement. Sylvester L. Weaver Jr., onetime NBC president and instigator of the Tonight, Today...
...mere ten Negro freshmen two years ago, has accepted 75. Harvard, which never makes an official count of its students by race, nevertheless seems certain to add sharply to the 160 unofficially estimated to be on the campus now. The competition for the academically talented Negro, contends Stanford Psychologist Bernadene V. Allen, is "just as intense as it is for football players...
...technology gap and international monetary liquidity. Twenty-three business bigwigs lectured as visiting professors, among them, top men from Volkswagen and Renault who explained why their companies have respectively succeeded and failed in the U.S. auto market. There was even a lesson by a white-haired German psychologist. Count Karlfried Von Durckheim, on how to breathe properly-according to the Japanese "Hara" discipline...
MANY COLLEGE students will use the services of a psychiatrist or psychologist during their undergraduate years, where such services are adequate and readily available. Delineation of the characteristics of students who are likely to seek psychological help can be useful to psychiatric and counseling services in planning for optimum care, both in terms of prevention and treatment. This paper-presents data on students who sought psychiatric help in college and compares them with students who did not receive such help...
...Chicago Metropolitan Mutual Assurance Co. and one of the new drive's organizers,* said of the young radicals: "We've waited almost a year to see them come up with a program. They haven't, and now we have." To Dr. Kenneth Clark, the Negro psychologist, the decision to wield green power rather than shout black power represents "part of our growing up." Prosperous Negroes, of course, have for many years contributed quietly to the N.A.A.C.P., the Urban League and similar groups. "What makes this new move important," says Clark, "is that it takes the wealthy Negro...