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Lloyd and deMause
Lloyd deMause, the pioneer of psychohistory, has described a system of psychogenic modes ( see below ) which describe the range of styles of parenting he has observed historically and across cultures.
Lloyd deMause developed a formal psychohistorical approach from 1974 onwards, and continues to be an influential theorist in this field.
The principal center for psychohistorical study is The Institute for Psychohistory founded by Lloyd deMause which has 19 branches around the globe and has for over 30 years published the The Journal of Psychohistory.
The International Psychohistorical Association founded by Lloyd deMause in 1977 is the professional organization for the field of psychohistory.
* Lloyd deMause, founder of The Institute for Psychohistory.
* deMause, Lloyd ( 2002 ).
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The expression at a broad social level of basic perinatal feelings, such as " suffering fetus " or " toxic placenta ," is part of the narrative in psychohistory, developed by Lloyd deMause ( born 1931 ).
Lloyd deMause and the psychohistorians have advanced a model that aims to understand the ubiquity of the schizotypal personality in the Old World.

Lloyd and then
" Not Counting You " reached number 2, and then " The Dance " put him at number-one again ; this song's theme of people dying while doing something they believe in resonated strongly and, together with a popular music video, directed by John Lloyd Miller, gave Brooks his first push towards a broader audience.
Most locations for filming were in the San Francisco area, including the then unfinished tunnels of the Bay Area Rapid Transit ( BART ) subway system, the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, the Marin County Civic Center in San Rafael designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, the Lawrence Hall of Science, Berkeley, the San Francisco International Airport and at a remote manipulator for a hot cell.
Psychologist Lloyd Humphreys, then editor-in-chief of The American Journal of Psychology and Psychological Bulletin, wrote that The Mismeasure of Man was " science fiction " and " political propaganda ", and that Gould had misrepresented the views of Alfred Binet, Godfrey Thomson, and Lewis Terman.
From 1926 when Lloyd George became leader of the Liberals, Keynes took a major role in defining the party's economics policy, but by then the Liberals had been displaced into third party status by the Labour party.
As a young man, Quinn boxed professionally to earn money, then studied art and architecture under Frank Lloyd Wright, at Wright's Arizona residence and his Wisconsin studio, Taliesin.
The main attack came from Stanley Baldwin, then President of the Board of Trade, who spoke of Lloyd George as a " dynamic force " who would break the Conservative Party.
In 1911, David Lloyd George, then Member of Parliament for Caernarfon boroughs, which included various towns from Llŷn to Conwy, agreed to the British Royal family's idea of holding the investiture of the Prince of Wales at Caernarfon Castle.
This major figure in The Fountainhead epitomized the " second-hander " who – in stark opposition to the uncompromising and innovative hero of the novel, Howard Roark, and exemplified in real life by Frank Lloyd Wright, whom Rand idolized – adapts the classicist and historicist Old World architectural styles to the new American medium of the skyscraper, and then goes on to adopt modernism as soon as this becomes safely fashionable.
and Airport, is largely based on building a comedy around actors who were then known exclusively for their dramatic roles ( other stars included Robert Stack, Peter Graves, and Lloyd Bridges ).
They were initiated in 1992 by then Governor General Ray Hnatyshyn and the first recipient was Gweneth Lloyd, co-founder of Canada's Royal Winnipeg Ballet.
After holding a preview screening of the film, 20th Century Fox studio boss Darryl F. Zanuck felt Ford's original cut was too long and had some weak spots, so he had Lloyd Bacon shoot new footage and then heavily edited the film.
Lloyd Thaxton's face appeared at the top of the newly launched Tiger Beat magazine ( then known as Lloyd Thaxton's Tiger Beat ) for which he did a column.
Bleek and Lloyd learned and wrote down their language, first as lists of words and phrases and then as stories and narratives about their lives, history, folklore and remembered beliefs and customs.
Lloyd D. Newell has been the announcer since then.
In 1676, James Lloyd acquired the neck, which was then taken over by his son Henry.
In 1885, Lloyd Neck, which was then part of the Town of Oyster Bay and had earlier been known as Queens Village, seceded from Queens County and became part of the Town of Huntington in Suffolk County.
The property was purchased in 2000 by the Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy ( Chicago, IL ), and as part of a prearranged plan, the house was then sold to a newly formed local Westcott House Foundation.
As she called for the election of Governor Michael Dukakis of Massachusetts and then U. S. Senator Lloyd M. Bentsen of Texas as President and Vice President of the United States, Richards read a letter from an unnamed young mother in Lorena who described herself as " forgotten " by the national leadership.
One person who could have joined the National Radical Union at this stage was David Lloyd George ( later Prime Minister ), who was then a keen supporter of Chamberlain's social agenda.
He returned to the Cabinet as First Lord of the Admiralty in the coalition government formed in May 1915, then in David Lloyd George's coalition government he was Foreign Secretary ( 1916 – 1919 ).
By then, Santa Cruz had replaced Cochabamba as the largest hub for Lloyd Aéreo Boliviano ( now flag carrier of Bolivia ), with another one having been opened at Trinidad Airport, and international routes being offered from La Paz Airport.
He then faced the Democratic nominee, State Senator Lloyd Doggett of Austin in the general election for the right to succeed retiring Republican Senator John G. Tower.
Because there was already another student at the college with the name William Webber, William continued to use his second middle name ' Lloyd ' from then on as part of his name.

Lloyd and editor
Although still actively involved in running his many businesses, Carnegie had become a regular contributor to numerous magazines, most notably the Nineteenth Century, under the editorship of James Knowles, and the influential North American Review, led by editor Lloyd Bryce.
He would later prove influential in the career of William Lloyd Garrison, whom he hired as an associate editor in 1829.
* ( editor ) Lloyd George: Twelve Essays, 1971.
* ( editor ) Lloyd George: A Diary by Frances Steveson, 1971.
* ( editor ) My Darling Pussy: The Letters of Lloyd George and Frances Stevenson, 1975.
** William F. Lloyd, newspaper editor
The show stars Robert Guillaume as managing editor Isaac Jaffe, Felicity Huffman as executive producer Dana Whitaker, Peter Krause as anchor Casey McCall, Josh Charles as anchor Dan Rydell, Sabrina Lloyd as senior associate producer Natalie Hurley, and Joshua Malina as associate producer Jeremy Goodwin.
* Jenkin Lloyd Jones, Unitarian minister and magazine editor
* Jenkin Lloyd Jones ( 1843 – 1918 ), Unitarian minister and magazine editor
The editor of the Daily Star, Lloyd Turner, was sacked six weeks after the trial.
The New England Anti-Slavery Society ( 1831 – 1835 ) was formed by William Lloyd Garrison, editor of The Liberator, in 1831.
His sister sent his first poem, " The Exile's Departure ", to the Newburyport Free Press without his permission and its editor, William Lloyd Garrison, published it on June 8, 1826.
According to Herbert Marshall Lloyd, an attorney and editor of Morgan's works, Lewis was descended from James Morgan, brother of Miles, who were Welsh pioneers of Connecticut and Springfield, Massachusetts, respectively.
Along with publisher / editor Robert Reginald, he is one of the co-founders and Curator Emeritus of The J. Lloyd Eaton Collection of Science Fiction & Fantasy Literature, located in the Special Collections & Archives Department at the University of California, Riverside.
Her stepfather is Sir Nicholas Lloyd, former editor of the Daily Express, and her half-sister, from her father's second marriage, to children's author Cindy Black, is actress Sophie Winkleman, wife of Lord Frederick Windsor.
* TCM Remembers 1998: composer John Addison, Gene Autry, Binnie Barnes, Lloyd Bridges, Dane Clark, art director George Davis, John Derek, special effects visual Linwood G. Dunn, Alice Faye, Norman Fell, editor Gene Fowler, Jr., Douglas Fowley, Patricia Hayes, Valerie Hobson, Josephine Hutchinson, director Alan J. Pakula, Leonid Kinskey, director Akira Kurosawa, cinematographer Charles Lang, Phil Leeds, Jean Marais, E. G. Marshall, Roddy McDowall, Jeanette Nolan, Lucille Norman, Maidie Norman, Dick O ' Neill, Maureen O ' Sullivan, composer Gene Page, choreographer Jerome Robbins, Gene Raymond, Roy Rogers, Esther Rolle, Frank Sinatra, J. T. Walsh, Vincent Winter, O.
Lloyd and story editor Gerry Davis came up with an intriguing way of writing the First Doctor out – as he was an alien being, they decided that he would have the power to change his body when it became worn out or seriously injured, a process that was called " renewal " but would later become known within the mythology of the series as " regeneration ".
* Lloyd Mangram ( editor of the Letters pages, named for golfer Lloyd Mangrum )
Lapham was the father of Lewis A. Lapham, the paternal grandfather of Harper's Magazine editor Lewis H. Lapham, and the maternal uncle of actor Christopher Lloyd.
In the Virgin Missing Adventures novel Invasion of the Cat-People by Gary Russell, Wright is expressly given as Polly's last name, as it was supposedly given in Gerry Davis's character breakdown and audition script sample when, as story editor, he and producer Innes Lloyd created Ben and Polly in 1966.
In the 1930s and throughout the " war years " the editor of the Ficksburg News was Harold Lloyd, whose son, Michael, also a journalist, became well known as the editor of The Star, The Natal Mercury and the Diamond Fields Advertiser, among other leading newspapers.
On October 21, 1835, Mayor Theodore Lyman, Jr. gave temporary refuge to William Lloyd Garrison, the editor of the abolitionist paper The Liberator, who was being chased by a violent mob.

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