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Odnosi sie do akcji Amewrykanskich faszystow w Polsce

Data: 2012-11-13 09:05:15
Autor: AC
Odnosi sie do akcji Amewrykanskich faszystow w Polsce
INTERNAL ESPIONAGE USA ( 3) : for these who think that they do not know where American fascists of WWII are hidden, still.



"May 28, 2003  Press Contact: William Harms
(773) 702-8356
w-harms@uchicago.edu  Erika Fromm
1909-2003
    Resources Photo: Erika Fromm
   Erika Fromm, Professor Emeritus in Psychology at the University of Chicago and one of the nation's leading scholars of hypnosis, died Monday in her home in Chicago's Hyde Park neighborhood. She was 93.

A memorial service will be held at Graham-Taylor Chapel at 5757 S. University at 3:30 PM on Thursday, May 29.

"Erika is one of the world's leading figures in clinical psychology and is especially revered for her scientific and theoretical contributions to the field of hypnosis," said Michael Nash, professor of psychology at the University of Tennessee. "Her books, research reports, and clinical papers have been exceedingly influential.

Her early work challenged some of Freud's findings and sought ways in which she could use hypnosis as a more effective way to help people than psychoanalysis, which she felt had become the therapy of the rich. "Erika also helped pioneer the use of projective psychological testing in this country," Nash said. "As she further matured as a clinician, theorist and researcher Erika's focus turned to the nature of human intuition, creativity, dreams, adaptation, and hypnotic response. Her clinical work and research findings revealed humans to be remarkably and creatively resilient, in contrast to the prevailing tragic view of the human condition championed by conventional psychoanalysis."

Bertram Cohler, the William Rainey Harper Professor in the Social Sciences Collegiate Division and Psychology at the University of Chicago, said "Erika Fromm was a major figure in American psychology and psychoanalysis from her early work on dream interpretation to her later work on hypnosis and psychotherapy. Erika's contributions were magnificent and lasting. She was in addition a caring teacher and mentor." Fromm was co-author, with Thomas French, of Dream Interpretation—A New Approach, published in 1964. The book departs from Freud as the two contend the conflicts people have that are represented by their dreams are attempts to resolve current situations. Freud's emphasis in studying dreams was to understand how they are expressions of unresolved childhood conflicts.

Fromm considered hypnosis, like the dream, to be a road to the unconscious. Used by a skilled practitioner, hypnosis can be an effective and faster way to help people work through issues than psychoanalysis, she contended.

"Erika Fromm was a legendary teacher of hypnosis," said David Spiegel, professor of medicine at Stanford University. "Her devotion to her students was reflected in their devotion to her. She provided a thoughtful and intellectually rigorous connection between psychoanalysis and hypnosis, two fields traditionally marked by mutual suspicion, despite Freud's initiation into the ways of the unconscious mind with lessons in hypnosis. "Dr. Fromm had a special interest in self-hypnosis, and in using the hypnotic state as a means of teaching patients skills in self-management and self-exploration. She was thus in all ways a teacher," he added.

She was also the co-author with Daniel Brown of Hypnotherapy and Hypnoanalysis, published in 1986. She and Brown also co-authored in 1987 Hypnosis and Behavioral Medicine. She published Self-Hypnosis: The Chicago Paradigm, which she co-authored with Stephen Kahn, in 1990.

She wrote extensively on hypnosis and other topics and was invited to speak at workshops throughout the United States and Europe.

Fromm also served as clinical editor for the International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, and as associate editor of The Bulletin of the British Society of Experimental and Clinical Hypnosis. She was president of the Psychological Hypnosis Division of the American Psychological Association from 1972 to 1973, president of the American Board of Psychological Hypnosis from 1971 to 1974, and president of the Society for Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis from 1975 to 1977.

As a teen-ager growing up in Frankfurt, Germany, Erika Oppenheimer developed an interest in psychoanalysis and read books by Sigmund Freud in her parents' library. Her father was a physician.

She decided to pursue a life in academia as a child. "When I was 17 or 18, the Nazis began to gain great influence, and it became clear that, being a Jew, I either would get a Ph.D. very fast or I would not be able to become a professional at all," she wrote in her memoirs. She corresponded with Freud and Albert Einstein on a graduate project on scientific creativity. She received her Ph.D. in 1933 from the University of Frankfurt just a few days before her 24th birthday. At Frankfurt, she studied with Max Wertheimer, known as the father of Gestalt Theory. She spent the next four years in the Netherlands as a research associate and director of a psychology laboratory. She became engaged in 1936 to Paul Fromm, a wine merchant with a deep interest in contemporary music. The couple married and in 1938 came to the United States as the Nazis increased their persecution of the Jews. Paul Fromm, who became a great patron of contemporary American composers, died in 1987.

From 1939 to 1940, she was a Research Assistant in psychiatry at the University of Chicago. From 1943 to 1948, she was supervising psychologist for the Veterans' Rehabilitation Center in Chicago. She held a variety of teaching and research positions before she joined the University faculty in 1961.

"What made her most unusual was her capacity to push a person beyond his or her own self-perceived limits," said Marlene Eisen, a former student. "I believe this was a legacy from her own youth, when she insisted on rushing through her Ph.D. so she could escape the Nazis, and flee to Holland, where she worked and nearly starved before coming to America.

"She loved to edit papers, spending hours turning an ordinary, or even poorly written text into something that became a model of scientific writing," Eisen continued. "She encouraged newly minted Ph.D.s to join her in making presentations at conferences, giving them the positive feedback they needed to feel confident. She referred clients to former students (including myself) who were starting into private practice, offering her wisdom and intuitive empathy in supervisory support."

As her work with hypnosis and hypnoanalysis continued, Fromm used the techniques with narcissistic patients and patients suffering from posttraumatic stress disorders, particularly incest victims, both female and male. She used a permissive form of hypnosis, which encouraged patients to participate in their therapy, rather than an authoritative form that had been used before World War II.

She received numerous awards for her work, including a Distinguished Practitioner in Psychology award from the National Academy of Practice in Psychology in 1982, an Award for Outstanding Contributions to Psychoanalysis from the American Psychological Association in 1985, and in 1991 and 1973, the Arthur Shapiro Award of the Society for Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis for her books.

She is survived by a sister, Clementina Kro; three brothers, Walter Oppenheimer, Asher Oppenheimer and John Ormond; and two grandsons, Michael Greenstone and Daniel Greenstone; two granddaughters-in-law, Heidi Lynch and Katherine Ozment; and two great-grandsons, Fineas Greenstone and William Greenstone. She was preceded in death by her daughter, Joan Fromm Greenstone, who died in 1996.

 http://www-news.uchicago.edu/releases/03/030528.fromm.shtml
Last modified at 12:36 PM CST on Wednesday, May 28, 2003.  -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
 University of Chicago News Office
5801 South Ellis Avenue - Room 200
Chicago, Illinois 60637-1473 "

but watch this one:

"1892 1st Annual Meeting December 27-28 Philadelphia, PA G. Stanley Hall, PhD, President

Published Proceedings: Proceedings of the APA, published by Macmillan, New York, 1894, pp. 3-14 Includes Secretary and Treasurer’s reports; abstracts of papers
 1893 2nd Annual Meeting December 27-28 New York, NY George Trumbull Ladd, DD, President Published Proceedings: Proceedings of the APA, published by Macmillan, New York, 1894, pp. 15-29 Includes Secretary and Treasurer’s reports; abstracts of papers
 1894 3rd Annual Meeting December 27-28 Princeton, NJ William James, MD, President Published Proceedings: Psychological Review, 1895, Vol. 2, # 2, pp. 149-172 Includes Secretary and Treasurer’s reports; abstracts of papers"

AND EVERY YEAR SINCE MISSES ONLY A CRITICAL YEAR WHEN I WAS INVITED THERE
 Other publications: separate program (APA Library call number: APA 003 1998) 1999 107th Annual Convention August 20-24 Boston, MA Richard M. Suinn, PhD, President   Published proceedings: American Psychologist, 2000, Vol. 55, # 8, pp. 832-890 Includes minutes of the annual meeting of the Council of Representatives and minutes of the Meeting of the Board of Directors Other publications: separate program (APA Library call number: APA 003 1999) 2000 108th Annual Convention August 4-8 Washington, DC Patrick H. DeLeon, PhD, MPH, JD, President Published proceedings: American Psychologist, 2001, Vol. 56, # 8, pp. 587-702. Includes minutes of the annual meeting of the Council of Representatives and minutes of the Meeting of the Board of Directors. In the same issue: 2000 APA Annual Report, pp.538-567; APF Awards and Reports of the Association, pp. 573-586 Other publications: separate program (APA Library call number: APA 003 2000) 2001 109th Annual Convention August 22-26 San Francisco, CA Norine G. Johnson, PhD, President   Published proceedings:
American Psychologist, 2002, Vol. 57, # 8, pp. 531-669. Includes minutes of the annual meeting of the Council of Representatives and minutes of the Meeting of the Board of Directors. In the same issue: 2001 APA Annual Report, pp.482-511; APF Awards and Reports of the Association, pp. 517-530 Other publications: separate program (APA Library call number: APA 003 2001) 2002 110th Annual Convention August 22-25 Chicago, IL Philip G. Zimbardo, PhD, President   Published proceedings:
American Psychologist, 2003, Vol. 58, # 8, pp. 559-688. Includes minutes of the annual meeting of the Council of Representatives and minutes of the Meeting of the Board of Directors. In the same issue: 2002 APA Annual Report, pp.510-540; APF Awards and Reports of the Association, pp. 541-558 Other publications: separate program (APA Library call number: APA 003 2002) 2003 111th Annual Convention August 7-10 Toronto, Ontario, Canada Robert J. Sternberg, PhD, President   Published proceedings:
American Psychologist, 2004, Vol. 59, # 5, pp. 366-477. Includes minutes of the annual meeting of the Council of Representatives and minutes of the Meeting of the Board of Directors. In the same issue: 2002 APA Annual Report of the American Psychological Association, pp. 289-320; APA Presidential Addresses,APF Awards and Reports of the Association, pp. 321-365 Other publications: separate program (APA Library call number: APA 003 2003) 2004 112th Annual Convention July 28-August 1 Honolulu, HI Diane F. Halpern, PhD, President   Published proceedings:
American Psychologist, 2005, Vol. 60, # 5, pp. 436-567. Includes minutes of the annual meeting of the Council of Representatives and minutes of the Meeting of the Board of Directors. In the same issue: 2004 APA Annual Report of the American Psychological Association, pp. 362-392; APA Presidential Addresses pp. 397-409, APF Awards and Reports of the Association, pp. 422-435 Other publications: separate program (APA Library call number: APA 003 2004) 2005 113th Annual Convention August 18-21 Washington, DC Ronald Levant EdD, President   Published proceedings:
American Psychologist, 2006, Vol. 61, # 5, pp. 348-565 Includes minutes of the annual meeting of the Council of Representatives and minutes of the Meeting of the Board of Directors. In the same issue: 2005 APA Annual Report of the American Psychological Association, pp. 348 -378; APA Presidential Address pp. 383-395, APF Awards and Reports of the Association, pp. 396-410 Other publications: separate program (APA Library call number: APA 003 2005) 2006 114th Annual Convention August 10-August 13 New Orleans, LA Gerald P. Koocher, PhD, President    Published proceedings:
American Psychologist, 2007, Vol. 62, # 5. Other publications: separate program (APA Library call number: APA 003 2006)
 2007 115th Annual Convention August 17-August 20 San Francisco, CA Sharon Stephens Brehm, PhD, President

Published proceedings:
American Psychologist, 2008, Vol. 63, # 5. Other publications: separate program (APA Library call number: APA 003 2007)
 2008 116th Annual Convention August 14-August 17 Boston, MA Alan E. Kazdin, PhD, President Published proceedings:
American Psychologist, 2009, Vol. 64, # 5. Other publications: separate program (APA Library call number: APA 003 2008)
 2009 2009 117th Annual Convention August 6-August 9 Toronto, Canada James H. Bray, PhD, President


Published Proceedings:
American Psychologist, 2010, Vol. 65, # 5
 2010 2010 118th Annual Convention August 12-August 15 San Diego, CA Carol D. Gooddheart, EdD, President

Published Proceedings: American Psychologist, 2011, Vol. 66, # 5
 2011 2011 119th Annual Convention August 4-August 7 Washington, DC Melba Vasquez, PhD, President


Expected Published Proceedings: American Psychologist, 2012, Vol. 67, # 5"
 ...

THIS IS OF COURSE NOT THE ERICA FROMM THAT LECTURED AT NEW JERSEY ACADEMY OF PSYCHOLOGY IN 1987 OR 1988, NOT THE ONE THAT RUN THE NURSING SCHOOL AND NOT THE ONE THAT BROUGHT UP HEAVY SATELLITES INSIGHT THE BUILDING TO KILL ME IN 2007 ( WHEN THAT WAS RELATIVELY NEW TO NE ABLE TO DO IT INSIGHT DURING SLEEP).


( long really to sear that that greatious person that I met at lecture and school is not her;' spies on line that look for similar links to know who messed USA and their family lines are not of the same mind; it could be that very greatious small old lady that was so neat always in her delivery; could be the court clerk for the Real estate in one of the major cities too; could mock my illnesses and pretend that I gave birth to one of the biggest fascists USA an Jew killer in USA and Europe; rapist of me in 1938 that I did not
identify in 10 years of contacts with me;the euthanasia theorist;

mind you, all that while I am skilled in getting them)

WHO IS THIS ONE?  WHERE IS ORIGINAL FASCIST. I AM ALREADY IDENTIFYING THE LINE OF AMERICAN FASCISTS OF HER. NO ONE PICTURE IN THE INTERNET NOW RESEMBLES HER. SHE IS SEVERAL HUNDRED YEARS OLD. IT CROSS DNA-ED WITH FAMOUS NOW FASCISTS ON THE RUN IN USA ( AND IN PUBLIC VIEW , AGAIN)

Odnosi sie do akcji Amewrykanskich faszystow w Polsce

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