GAMES PEOPLE PLAY: THE PSYCHOLOGY OF HUMAN RELATIONS—by Eric Berne, M.D., Grove Press, Inc., New York, 1964, 192 pages, $5.00

1965 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 44a-(44)
Author(s):  
Louis L. Lunsky
Keyword(s):  
New York ◽  
PEDIATRICS ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 83 (2) ◽  
pp. 217-217
Author(s):  
J. F. L.

I read with interest the article concerning the New York panel that wants to have physicians take competency tests for relicensure. I welcome this effort and would encourage this with one qualification: that our elected officials, especially those at the state and federal levels, have some basic education before governing similar to that required of physicians before practicing medicine. We cannot begin to practice medicine until we have gone through years of rigorous, demanding preparatory education, then must pass competency tests (board exams). Our elected officials, however, have no such requirements. I would suggest that these elected officials have some basic education in governing and be required to maintain a certain grade-point average before they are permitted to run for office. They should be required to take competency tests concerning world history, economics, human relations, and world affairs. Politicians also should not be exempt from recertification. Certainly, world politics have changed as much or more than anything in the field of medicine.


Author(s):  
Nerijus Udrenas

RENE COHEN and JENNIFER L. GOLUB, Attitudes toward Jews in Poland, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia: A Comparative Survey, Working Papers on Contemporary Antisemitism (New York: American Jewish Committee, Institute of Human Relations, Aug. 1991); pp. 44 The Skinhead International: A Worldwide Survey of Neo-Nazi Skinheads (New York: Anti-Defamation League, 1995); pp. 90...


1990 ◽  
Vol 64 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 41-49
Author(s):  
Catherine A. Sunshine

[First paragraph]The Cuba reader: the making of a revolutionary society. PHILIP BRENNER, WILLIAM M. LEOGRANDE, DONNA RICH, and DANIEL SIEGEL (eds.). New York: Grove Press, 1989. xxxv + 564 pp. (Paper US $14.95). Cuba: the test of time. JEAN STUBBS. London: Latin America Bureau, 1989. xvii + 142 pp. (Paper UK £3.95). Cuba: politics, economics and society. MAX AZICRI. London: Pinter Publishers Ltd., 1988. xxiii + 276 pp. (Cloth US $35.00, Paper US $12.50). Cuba libre: breaking the chains? PETER MARSHALL. Boston: Faber & Faber, 1987. viii + 300 pp. (Cloth US $18.95). The closest of enemies: a personal and diplomatic account of U.S.-Cuban relations since 1957. WAYNE S. SMITH. New York and London: W.W. Norton & Co., 1987. 308 pp. (Paper US $8.95). Imperial state and revolution: the United States and Cuba, 1952-1986. MORRIS H. MORLEY. New Rochelle, New York: Cambridge University Press, 1987. ix + 571 pp. (Paper US $16.95, Cloth US $59.50). From confrontation to negotiation: U.S. relations with Cuba. PHILIP BRENNER. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press, 1988. x + 118 pp. (Cloth US $30.00, Paper US $9.95).Nineteen eighty-eight marked the completion of the Cuban revolution's third decade. Several events that year suggested that Cubans might finally look forward to a lessening of the island's international isolation, if not its domestic economic woes. The revolution had survived eight years of hostility from the Reagan administration. Washington's attempts to secure international censure of Cuba on human rights grounds had culminated in the visit of a United Nations delegation, at Havana's invitation and with relatively little damage to Cuba's image. Fidel Castro's visits to Ecuador and Mexico to attend the inaugurations of two Latin American presidents underscored Cuba's reinsertion into the hemispheric community. Finally, Cuban military successes against South African troops in Angola and Cuba's role in the subsequent negotiations over Angola and Namibia were a source of pride.


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