Catalog of the Law and Aging Library Collection, Library of Law and Aging, Chicago, Kent Law Library, Chicago, IL, 1983, 1985, 1987
3.
HaskoJ.HolochA. and YoungN., “Gerontology and the Law: A Selected Bibliography, 56 S. Cal. L.R. 289 (1982); See Also 58 S. Cal. L.R. 631 (1984) and 60 S. Cal. L.R. 897 (1987) for updates through 1985.
4.
LlewellynK.N., The Bramble Bush, Columbia University School of Law, New York City, NY, 1930, p. 132.
5.
See, for example, AchenbaumA., Old Age in the New Land, The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, MD, 1978; FischerD.H., Growing Old in America, Oxford University Press, New York City, NY, 1977; and, HaberC., Beyond Sixty-Five, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, Eng., 1983.
6.
Achenbaum, Op. Cit, p. 39 and Fischer, Op. Cit., p. 108–108.
7.
Achenbaum, Op. Cit, p. 167.
8.
CowgillD., “The Aging of Populations” in “Political Consequences of Aging”, The Annals, September, 1974.
9.
America's Shame, America's Hope: Twelve Million Youth at Risk, M.D.C., Inc., Chapel Hill, NC, 1988, p. 2–3.
10.
SherradenM., “School Dropouts in Perspective”, prepared for the Business Advisory Committee, Education Commission of the States, 1985.
11.
SchlisselL., Women's Diaries of Westward Journey, Schocken Books, New York Ciry, NY, 1982.
12.
SchlisselL.GibbensB. and HampstenE., “The Malicks in Oregon” in Far From Home, Schocken Books, New York City, NY, p. 89–92, 1989.
13.
See, for example, BirminghamS., Our Crowd, Harper and Row, New York City, NY, 1967; and BirminghamS., The Grandees, Berkeley Publications, New York City, NY, 1985.
14.
Haber, Op. Cit, p. 24–25.
15.
CohenE. and KruschwitzA., “Old Age in America Represented in 19th and 20th Century Popular Sheet Music”, 30 The Gerontologist, 345 (1990).
16.
SohngenM. and SmithR., “Images of Old Age in Poetry”, 18 The Gerontologist, 181 (1978).
17.
AchenbaumA., Op. Cit., p. 4–5.
18.
Op. Cit., supra.
19.
Op. Cit., supra.
20.
RileyM.W. and RileyJ.W., Preface to “The Quality of Aging: Strategies for Interventions”, The Annals, Vol. 503, May, 1989, p. 12–13.
21.
ButlerR., “Ageism: Another Form of Bigotry”, 9 The Gerontologist, 243 (1969).
22.
ButlerR., “Dispelling Ageism: The Cross Cutting Intervention” in “The Quality of Aging: Strategies for Intervention”, The Annals, Vol. 503, p. 140–142, May, 1989.
23.
Aging Americans: Trends and Projections, 1987–1988 Edition, prepared by staff of U.S. Senate Special Committee on Aging (No City), p. 154.
24.
Id. p. 156.
25.
Id., p. 178, 179.
26.
CohenE., “The Elderly Mystique: Constraints on the Autonomy of the Elderly with Disabilities”, 28 The Gerontologist Supplement, 24, 1988.
27.
PrattH.J., “Old Age Associations in National Politics” in “Political Consequences of Aging”, The Annals, Sept. 1974.
28.
CutlerN. and BengtsonV., “Age and Political Alienation: Maturation, Generation and Period Effects” in “Political Consequences of Aging”, The Annals, Sept. 1974.
29.
CohenE., “Old Age and the Law”, 53 Women Lawyers Journal 96, 103–105 (1967).
30.
See TrattnerW., From Poor Law to Welfare State: A History of Social Welfare in America, The Free Press, New York City, NY, 1974, for the general historical background. For a brief historical survey of public welfare in Colonial America through the 1st half of the 20th century see: TollenW.B., “Historical Resume of Public Welfare in the United States”, 40 J. Jewish Communal Service, No. 4 (1964).
31.
SchneiderD. and DeutscheA., The History of Public Welfare in New York State 1867–1940, University of Chicago Social Service Monographs, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, IL, 1941.
32.
49 Stat. 620, C. 531, Title 1 et seq. August 14, 1935. 42 USCA 301 et. seq.
33.
49 Stat. 622, C. 531, Title II, Para. 201, August 14, 1935. 42 USCA 401 et. seq.
34.
42 USCA 301.
35.
42 USCA 601, et. seq.
36.
42 USCA 1201, et. seq.
37.
42 USCA 1351, et. seq.
38.
“Elderly Citizens of Our Nation,” Message from the President of the United States, February 21, 1963, House Document #72, 88th Cong. A Compilation of Materials Relevant to the Message of the President of the United States on our Nation's Senior Citizens, (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1963). Presidents Johnson and Nixon also sent messages. Nothing like Kennedy's, Johnson's, or Nixon's messages have been transmitted by their successors. See CohenE., “Presidential Messages on Aging: Historical Analysis and Projection” in Areawide Planning for Independent Living for Older People, OsterbirdC., ed., University of Florida Press, Gainesville, FL (1973)
39.
42 USCA 1395, et. seq.
40.
42 USCA 3001, et. seq.
41.
SpencerG., U.S. Bur. of the Census, “Projections of the Population of the United States by Age, Sex, and Race: 1983–2080”, Current Population Reports, Series P-25, No, 952 (May, 1984).
42.
Ibid.
43.
Ibid.
44.
Ibid.
45.
Aging America, Op. Cit., p. 13–14.
46.
Ibid. p. 16.
47.
EvansD.E., “Clinically Diagnosed Alzheimer's Disease: An Epidemiological Study in Community Population of Older Persons”, Journal of the American Medical Association, November 10, 1989
48.
Aging America, Op. Cit., p. 118.
49.
Ibid.
50.
Id. p. 22.
51.
Id. p. 21.
52.
Id. p. 22.
53.
Ibid.
54.
Ibid.
55.
Id. p. 28.
56.
Id., p. 30, See also SiegalJ.S. and TaeuberC., “Demographic Perspectives on the Long-Lived Society”, 115 Daedalus 77, 87–90 (1986).
57.
Aging America, Op. Cit. p. 56.
58.
Id. p. 57.
59.
Id. p. 60.
60.
Id. p. 69.
61.
MillayVincent E. St., Collected Sonnets, Washington Square Press, New York City, NY, 1959.