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Bang-Jensen was in `` hysterical condition ''.
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Brown Corpus
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Bang-Jensen and was
On January 24 Paul Bang-Jensen, accompanied by Adolf Berle, was met by Dragoslav Protitch and Colonel Frank Begley, former Police Chief of Farmington, Conn., and now head of U.N. special police.
But by the time the papers were finally disposed of, the group had informed the world of its purpose, its recommendations, and its belief that Paul Bang-Jensen was not of sound mind.
You know Bang-Jensen was told the Committee was ' to convey its views, suggestions and recommendations to the Secretary General.
Bang-Jensen said you told correspondents that you had checked in advance to make sure the term ' aberrant conduct ' was not libelous.
Even after the incident between Bang-Jensen and Shann in the Delegates' Lounge and this was not the way the Chicago Tribune presented it ''.
`` The case was that Bang-Jensen came up to Shann claiming he had found further errors in the report.
Bang-Jensen and .
There, Begley lit a fire in a wire basket, and Bang-Jensen dropped four sealed envelopes into the flames.
In his own words, Bang-Jensen ' took it for granted that the Group would report to the Secretary General privately and not in public.
The January fifteen report recommended that Bang-Jensen be instructed to burn the list -- the papers -- in the presence of a U.N. Security Officer ''.
from the home of his friend, Henrik Kauffmann, in Washington, D.C., Paul Bang-Jensen sent a telegram dated December 9, 1957, to Ernest Gross.
It sounded like a fair enough invitation, Peter Marshall reflected, and Bang-Jensen must have thought so too, because on the thirteenth, he met the group of three on the thirty-sixth floor of the U.N..
Peter Marshall noted that Bang-Jensen had later referred to his two interviews with the Gross group as `` unfortunate experiences '', and after his second meeting on the sixteenth the Dane refused to attend further hearings without legal counsel.
was and hysterical
Besides, there was something hysterical and silly, something almost childish about an attempt to frighten her.
The fact is incontestable: that liberal world of Unitarian Boston was narrow-minded, intellectually sterile, smug, afraid of the logical consequences of its own mild ventures into iconoclasm, and quite prepared to resort to hysterical repressions when its brittle foundations were threatened.
She displayed her love very openly and inappropriately according to the etiquette of the time, which made people consider her to be emotional, hysterical and very " feminine ", which meant she was not considered intelligent.
Nicholas's parents had known Alix as a child and formed the impression that she was hysterical and unbalanced.
His mother, Edwina, was an archetype of the ‘ Southern belle ’, whose social aspirations tilted toward snobbery and whose behavior could be neurotic and hysterical.
In 1908, having demonstrated the repressed sexual memory underlying the hysterical paralysis of a young girl ’ s arm, he faced allegations from the girl ’ s parents and was forced to resign his hospital post.
The priests proceeded to receive the prophecy, but the result was a hysterical uncontrollable reaction from the priestess that resulted in her death a few days later.
The upward glance when the heart was bitten again by the fangs of emotion, the hysterical joy of the Latin nature when in high spirits, all these phrases were delineated by this artist in a way that moved and thrilled.
'" And I remember that as I lifted my head to listen, my eye caught an omnibus on which was written " Hanwell ".... " Believing utterly in one's self is a hysterical and superstitious belief like believing in Joanna Southcote: the man who has it has ' Hanwell ' written on his face as plain as it is written on that omnibus.
This was an age in which women were seen as " hysterical " and " nervous " beings ; thus, when a woman claimed to be seriously ill after giving birth, her claims were sometimes dismissed as being invalid.
Peter was the most successful of the preachers of Urban's message, and developed an almost hysterical enthusiasm among his followers, although he was probably not an " official " preacher sanctioned by Urban at Clermont.
The exact nature of these illnesses, and their possible psychosomatic or hysterical ( as it was called at that time ) nature, is still a subject of debate.
The broadcast drew an estimated 73 million viewers, at the time a record for US television, and was characterized by an audience composed largely of screaming hysterical teenage girls in tears.
In addition to his hysterical make-up he probably had the persistence of a paranoid personality since he was able to play his role so imperturbably.
In psychology, the term was first employed by Sigmund Freud's colleague Josef Breuer ( 1842 – 1925 ), who developed a " cathartic " treatment for persons suffering from hysterical symptoms through the use of hypnosis.
The " hysterical behaviour " by spectators was so scandalous that French president Albert Lebrun immediately banned all future public executions.
When the conference opened the British political world was a jittery one ; on 12 November the opposition had narrowly defeated the government on an amendment to the Home Rule Bill, and the next evening Asquith attempted to introduce a motion reversing the previous vote, something met with hysterical shouting from the opposition.
The technique was difficult for a physician to master and could take hours to achieve " hysterical paroxysm ".
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