Word: sigmund
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...outstanding notes, claiming that two former directors had issued them without authorization. An gry investors took the company to court, and a legal bankruptcy action is under way. The government has placed responsibility for the notes squarely on Mannesmann, arrested one of the former directors, brought in President Sigmund Weiss for questioning. It is pushing for complete reorganization of the company's board of directors. Brazil's central bank is expected to ask holders of Mannesmann notes to register them, may reach a settlement this week whereby note holders would be issued debentures convertible to Mannesmann stock...
...techniques of talk-it-out psychotherapy have changed slowly but significantly since Sigmund Freud first stretched patients out on a couch. The Freudian "50-Minute Hour," originally restricted to patient and analyst, has led to two-hour sessions of group therapy in which half a dozen or so patients, all with similar symptoms, get together with the same therapist. Now Los Angeles' Dr. George R. Bach, 51, a Latvian-born Ph.D. psychologist, has pushed the trend -both in time and numbers-about as far as it can reasonably go. He has enlarged the cast to a dozen or more...
Vienna's population has slipped from 2,000,000 in 1910 to 1,600,000 today. Where once it was the center of a rich culture that produced, among dozens of other brilliant men. Dr. Sigmund Freud, Philosopher Martin Buber and Composer Arnold Schoenberg, today, mourns Werner Hoffman, director of Vienna's only gallery of modern art, "Austria simply is not avantgarde. People are brought up cherishing concepts of the 19th century, and the stimulating effect of the Jewish element is missing." Attracted by better pay and opportunity, thousands of young Austrian intellectuals have deserted the Danube...
That is not surprising; the land that produced Sigmund Freud has a split personality on most matters. Its economy and government are run by a coalition of the cartel-minded Peoples' Party and the nationalization-minded Socialist Party. Austria has suffered less than its Western neighbors from inflation and labor strife because both parties agreed to let a government board rule on wage and price hikes. Almost 25% of Austria's economy is nationalized, including most of its basic industries, much of its banking, and two-thirds of its joint-stock companies...
...This is his sixth cover for TIME. The others: André Malraux, Sigmund Freud, Alec Guinness, Adlai Stevenson and Lenin...