AA in the Theater
June 1960
Players and playwrights can mask their drinking problem for just so long. Then fame turns to notoriety--and worse
AA + Gp = Progress
June 1960
By:
Dr. William W. Bauer
The Director of Health Education for the American Medical Association tells how the physician can help the drunk to seek recovery through Alcoholics Anonymous
What Happened to the Newspaper Drunk?
June 1960
An esteemed journalist and critic reveals why the news hound booze hound is becoming less and less a part of the picture
Problems with the Alcoholic Executive
June 1960
By:
Ivan Underwood
Here is the "Half-Man" in business, the individual who does not get too drunk to function at all but who can operate only at half-speed with his morning hangover and four-martini lunch
For Men Only?
June 1960
One of AA's first woman members describes her pioneering struggle to gain acceptance of her sex in what was exclusively a man's world of sobriety
The 12th Step on TV
June 1960
Bridge Across the Centuries
June 1960
How the AA program revitalized an author's faith in God and opened her eyes to the importance of the Church in her life
Sneak Previewing A.A. for the Actor
June 1960
An eminently successful movie and TV star discloses the activities of the "Garage Group" he founded in Hollywood
A Psychiatrist's Appreciation of Alcoholics Anonymous
June 1960
By:
Adele E. Streeseman, M.D.
The AA program enables the withdrawn alcoholic to trust the mental therapist, thus hastening a return to sobriety--and sanity
Let's Be Friendly With Our Friends. . .
June 1960
Psychiatry and AA can work together, as this professional writer's story shows
AA Philosophy and the Creative Artist
June 1960
Can an alcoholic get too much AA? A noted novelist says yes--and tells you why he thinks so
Youth in A.A.
June 1960
The average age of today's new AA member is dropping as more and more young people seek help--before they hit bottom
Thoughts of a Premier
June 1960
The Honorable Ernest Charles Manning, Premier of Alberta, Canada, reflects that the misconceptions, stigma and concealment of alcoholism are being swept away through a rapidly-growing awareness of the problem and its time-tested treatment
AA in the Theater
June 1960
Players and playwrights can mask their drinking problem for just so long. Then fame turns to notoriety--and worse
AA + Gp = Progress
June 1960
By:
Dr. William W. Bauer
The Director of Health Education for the American Medical Association tells how the physician can help the drunk to seek recovery through Alcoholics Anonymous
What Happened to the Newspaper Drunk?
June 1960
An esteemed journalist and critic reveals why the news hound booze hound is becoming less and less a part of the picture
Problems with the Alcoholic Executive
June 1960
By:
Ivan Underwood
Here is the "Half-Man" in business, the individual who does not get too drunk to function at all but who can operate only at half-speed with his morning hangover and four-martini lunch
For Men Only?
June 1960
One of AA's first woman members describes her pioneering struggle to gain acceptance of her sex in what was exclusively a man's world of sobriety
The 12th Step on TV
June 1960
Bridge Across the Centuries
June 1960
How the AA program revitalized an author's faith in God and opened her eyes to the importance of the Church in her life
Sneak Previewing A.A. for the Actor
June 1960
An eminently successful movie and TV star discloses the activities of the "Garage Group" he founded in Hollywood
A Psychiatrist's Appreciation of Alcoholics Anonymous
June 1960
By:
Adele E. Streeseman, M.D.
The AA program enables the withdrawn alcoholic to trust the mental therapist, thus hastening a return to sobriety--and sanity
Let's Be Friendly With Our Friends. . .
June 1960
Psychiatry and AA can work together, as this professional writer's story shows
AA Philosophy and the Creative Artist
June 1960
Can an alcoholic get too much AA? A noted novelist says yes--and tells you why he thinks so
Youth in A.A.
June 1960
The average age of today's new AA member is dropping as more and more young people seek help--before they hit bottom
Thoughts of a Premier
June 1960
The Honorable Ernest Charles Manning, Premier of Alberta, Canada, reflects that the misconceptions, stigma and concealment of alcoholism are being swept away through a rapidly-growing awareness of the problem and its time-tested treatment
