LIEBERMAN - Lieberman

Lieberman

  • Avigdor Lieberman, Moldavian-born Israeli politician, current Minister of Foreign affairs
  • Dave Lieberman, chef and television host
  • David J. Lieberman, psychology writer
  • Evelyn S. Lieberman, American public official
  • Hadassah Lieberman, wife of Joe Lieberman
  • Hendel Lieberman, Russian-American artist
  • Herman Lieberman, Polish lawyer and Socialist politician
  • Jeff Lieberman (born 1947), American filmmaker
  • Jeffrey Lieberman, American psychiatrist, Chairman, Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University
  • Joe Lieberman, U.S. senator from Connecticut
  • Jon Lieberman, reporter and producer
  • Judith Lieberman, educator and the wife of Saul Lieberman
  • Lou Lieberman, Australian politician
  • Nancy Lieberman, basketball player
  • Philip Lieberman, linguist
  • Robert Lieberman, film and television director
  • Robert H. Lieberman, scientist, educator, novelist and movie director
  • Saul Lieberman, rabbi and scholar and the husband of Judith Lieberman
  • Syd Lieberman, storyteller

Read more about this topic:  LIEBERMAN

Famous quotes containing the word lieberman:

    Because the young child feels with such intensity, he experiences sorrows that seem inconsolable and losses that feel unbearable. A precious toy gets broken or a good-bye cannot be endured. When this happens, words like “sad” or “disappointed” seem a travesty because they cannot possibly capture the enormity of the child’s loss. He needs a loving adult presence to support him in his pain but he does not want to be talked out of it.
    —Alicia F. Lieberman (20th century)

    When toddlers are unable to speak about urgent matters, they must resort to crying or screaming. This happens even with adults. The voice is the carrier of emotion, and when speech fails us, we need to cry out in whatever form we can to convey our meaning. Often, what passes for negativism is really the toddler’s desperate effort to make herself understood.
    —Alicia F. Lieberman (20th century)

    Managing a tantrum involves nothing less than the formation of character. Even the parent’s capacity to cope well with conflict can improve with this experience. When a parent knows he is right and does not give in for the sake of temporary peace, everybody wins. The parent learns that denying some pleasure does not create a neurotic child and the child learns that she can survive momentary frustration.
    —Alicia F. Lieberman (20th century)