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22 result(s) for "Halliday James L"
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Enduring Emotions: James L. Halliday and the Invention of the Psychosocial
Emotions maintain an ambivalent position in the economy of science. In contemporary debates they are variously seen as hardwired biological responses, cultural artifacts, or uneasy mixtures of the two. At the same time, there is a tension between the approaches to emotion developed in modern psychotherapies and in the history of science. While historians see the successful ascription of affective states to individuals and populations as a social and technical achievement, the psychodynamic practitioner treats these enduring associations as pathological accidents that need to be overcome. This short essay uses the career of the Glaswegian public health investigator James L. Halliday to examine how debates over the ontological status of the emotions and their durability allow them to travel between individual identity and political economy, making possible new kinds of psychological intervention.
DEATHS
  Survivors include two sons, Don, Daytona Beach, and Arthur, Englewood; five grandchildren; and 11 great-grandchildren. Memorial donations may be made to Hospice of Volusia/Flagler, 3800 Wood- Briar Trail, Port Orange, FL 32119. Hannah Cremation, Holly Hill, is in charge. Survivors include a son, Chris, Waunakee, Wis.; two daughters, Barbara Asmus, Daytona Beach and Bonnie Harris, Weatherford, Texas; nine grandchildren; nine great-grandchildren; and two great great grandchildren. Memorial donations may be made to Hospice of Palm Coast, 149 S. Ridgewood Ave., Suite 400, Daytona Beach, FL 32114. Volusia Memorial, Ormond Beach, is in charge. Survivors include his wife of 69 years, Doris; two sons, James \"Skip\" III, Santa Clara, Calif., and [John Frazier], Morgantown, W.Va.; and two brothers, John, Boulder, Colo., and Thomas, Grand Junction, Colo. Memorial donations may be made to Hospice of Volusia Flagler, 7 Florida Park Drive, Palm Coast, FL 32137, or to the Kiwanis Club of Flagler Palm Coast, P.O. Box 350423, Palm Coast, FL 32135. Craig- Flagler Palms, Flagler Beach, is in charge.
Obituaries, April 7, 2002
Services: 2 p.m. on Monday, April 8, 2002, at the First Baptist Church in Cameron, Mo. Visitation will be one hour prior to the service. Burial will be at Cameron Memory Gardens, Cameron, Mo. Memorials may be made to the First Baptist Church in Cameron, Mo. Arrangements: Poland-Thompson Funeral Home, Cameron, Mo. Survivors: seven sons, Russell Larabee, Bobby Larabee and David Larabee, all of St. Joseph, Mo., Marion Larabee of New Bern, N.C., Ronald Larabee of Aurora, Colo., Raymond Larabee of Kirksville, Ill., and Charles Larabee of Russellville, Ark.; two daughter, Carolyn Nigh and Betty Jones, both of St. Joseph, Mo.; a brother, Charles Bennett of Mendon, Ill., and numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren. He was a member of United Methodist Church, Savannah, and attended McCarthy Baptist Church in St. Joseph. He was also a member of the Masonic Lodge No. 71 A.F. & A.M., Savannah; had served as member of the Savannah City Zoning, and Park & Recreation Boards; a member and former committeeman of Duncan Hills Golf Course; Missouri Pharmacy Association; Pharmacy Business Associates, and sponsored Pinto and T-Ball teams.
The Dallas Morning News Robert Miller Column
When Mr. [James N. Falk] first set out to increase membership, his unofficial surveys revealed that \"a lot of people weren't members because they weren't asked or didn't realize the importance of a large membership to the organization.\" The council's Haynes and Boone Business Breakfast series is held at a variety of sites, Mr. Falk said, and speakers have included the director-designate of the World Trade Organization and the chief economist at Exxon Mobil Corp. Mr. Falk said the council has forged partnerships with \"as many organizations as possible\" to promote Dallas as an international city, including Southern Methodist University's John Tower Center, the American Jewish Committee, the Asia Society and the Greater Dallas Chamber.