Baker, Newton D. "Youth Challenges the Nation," National Education Association, Proceedings, 1934: 102-7. Excerpts, Jaurnal of the National Education Association, 23: 162, Oct. 1934.
2.
Building America. "Youth Faces the World," Building America, Vol. 1, May 1936. Pp.27. New York: Columbia University Press.
3.
Coffman, Lotus D. "The Exploitation of Youth," Educational Record, 17: 95-105, Jan. 1936 . Also in National Association of State Universities, Proceedings, 1935: 192-202. Excerpts in Bulletin of the American Association of University Professors, 22: 205-6, March 1936 .
4.
Douglass, Harl R. "Our American Youth," Journal of the National Education Association, 26: 110-13, April 1937 .
5.
Hubbard, Frank W. "Today's Youth Problems," JournaL of theNational Education Association, 25: 13-28, Jan. 1936 . Also available as a reprint.
6.
Johnson, George. "The Deeper Significance of the Youth Problem ," Educational Record, 18: 422-30, July 1937 .
7.
Kent, Raymond A. "Some Social and Economic Implications of the Youth Problem," Occupations, 15: 694-704, May 1937.
8.
May, Mark A. "The Dilemma of Youth," Progressive Education, 12: 5-11, Jan. 1935.
9.
Miller, Spencer , JR. "Directing the Energies of Youth into Proper Channels," Educational Record, 16: 147-57, April 1935. Available as a reprint from the American Council on Education, 744 Jackson Place, Washington, D. C.
10.
Rainey, Homer P. "Meeting the Needs of American Youth," Proceedings, 13th Annual Educational Conference, University of Kentucky. Bureau of School Service, Bulletin 9: 12-26, Dec. 1936.
11.
————. "The Outlook for Youth," Educational Forum, 1: 143-9, Jan. 1937 .
12.
————. "Youth in a Changing World," Proceedings, 13th Annual Educational Conference, University of Kentucky. Bureau of School Service, Bulletin 9: 53-4, Dec. 1936.
13.
Social Frontier .The Youth of America-Past, Present, and Future . Social Frontier, 1: 1-30, May 1935. A symposium.
14.
Wallace, H.A. "Potentialities of the Youth Movement in America ," Educational Record, 15: 3-9, Jan. 1934. Same in Bulletin of U. S. Department of Agriculture, 1933. Pp. 7, mimeo.
15.
YoungAmerica Looks Forward. America's Town Meeting of the Air, No. 18, Feb. 27, 1936. New York: American Book Co.
16.
Zook, George F. "Our Youth Problem," North Central Association Quarterly, 9: 279-84, Jan. 1935 . ATTITUDES OF YOUTH
17.
Davis, Maxine.The Lost Generation: A Portrait of American Youth Today. Pp. 385. New York: Macmillan Co., 1935.
18.
Lang, John A. "A Generation Faces Dry-Rot." Association of Urban Universities, 21st Annual Meeting, 1934: 49-56; same, Educational Outlook, 9: 83-9, Jan. 1935.
19.
Stutsman, Rachel.What of Youth Today? Report of Detroit Youth Study Committee, 1935. Pp. 232. Detroit: Research Division, DetroitPublic Schools.
20.
Calkins, Clinch.Youth Never Comes Again. Pp. 71. New York: The Committee on Unemployed Youth, 1934.
21.
Davis, Kingsley.Youth in the Depression. Pp. 48. American Primers Series. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1935.
22.
Leighton, George R., and Richard Hellman. "Half Slave, Half Free: Unemployment, the Depression, and American Young People," Harper's, 171: 342-53, Aug. 1935.
23.
Unemployment Among Young People.Report III of the International Labour Conference, Nineteenth Session. Pp. 189. Geneva, Switzerland: International Labour Office, 1935. (Available through The World Peace Foundation, 8 West 40th St., New York City.)
24.
Watson, Goodwin B. "Problems of Youth—What Does Youth Most Need?" National Education Association, Proceedings, 1935: 104-6.
25.
Williams, James M.Human Aspects of Unemployment and Relief with Special Reference to the Effects of the Depression on Children. Pp. 231. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1933.
26.
Young, Owen D. "Youth and the Avalanche," Review of Reviews, 86: 30-2, July 1932 .
27.
Lovejoy, Owen R. "America's Wandering Boys," Current History, 37: 565-70, Feb. 1933 .
28.
Mineham, Thomas.Boy and Girl Tramps of America. Pp. 267. New York: Farrar and Rinehart, 1934.
29.
Hill, Frank E.The School in the Camps: The Educational Program of the Civilian Conservation Corps. Pp. 84. New York: American Association for Adult Education, 1935.
30.
Holland, Kenneth. "The European Work-Camp Movement," Clearing House, 10: 145-51, Nov. 1935 .
31.
Marsh, C.S. "Problems of Youth as Seen in the Civilian Conservation Corps Camps ," National Education Association, Proceedings, 1935: 99-108.
32.
Studebaker, John W. "An Overview of the CCC," Clearing House, 10: 134-8, Nov. 1935.
33.
Brewer, John M.Occupations: A Textbook for the Educational, Civic, and Vocational Guidance of Boys and Girls. Pp. 622. Boston: Ginn and Co., 1934.
34.
Harley, D.L.Youth: Finding Jobs. U. S. Office of Education Bulletin, 1936, No. 18-1. Pp. 59. Washington: Gov't Printing Office.
35.
Kitson, Harry D.Youth: Vocational Guidance for Those Out of School. U. S. Office of Education, Committee on Youth Problems. Bulletin1936, No. 18-IV. Pp. 81. Washington: Gov't Printing Office.
36.
Rainey, Homer P. "Guidance and Placement for America's Youth ," Occupations, 15: 838-844, June 1937 .
37.
State Of Connecticut.Youth in Search of Jobs . Pp. 69, mimeo. Hartford: Connecticut State Employment Service, 1935.
38.
Worman, E.C.Youth Without Jobs. Pp. 110. New York: Association Press, 1936 .
39.
Allen, John S. and Grace C. "The Need for Public Junior Colleges in New York State," School Review, 45: 38-52, Jan. 1937.
40.
Bryson, Lyman.Adult Education. Pp. 213. New York: American Book Co., 1936.
41.
Chase, Harry Woodburn. "Human Advancement: Youth and the Universities ," Vital Speeches, 3: 72-4, Nov. 15, 1936.
42.
Coffman, Lotus D. "The Province of Education," President Coffman's Biennial Message to the People of Minnesota , 1936 (pp. 3-33), Minneapolis: University of Minnesota, 1936. Pp. 73. Condensed, Education Digest, 2: 30-1, Feb. 1937.
43.
Ely, Mary L. (Ed.). Adult Education In Action. Pp. 480. New York: American Association for Adult Education, 1936.
44.
Jessup, Walter A. "Youth and Educational Abstractions," Thirty-First Annual Report of theCarnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching (pp. 3-13). Pp. 193. New York, 1936.
45.
Rainey, Homer P. "The Care and Education of American Youth ," Educational Record, 17: 451-62, July 1936 .
46.
Raup, Bruce.Education and Organized Interests in America . New York : Putnam's, 1936.
47.
Rosander, A.C. "How Many High School Pupils in 1940?" Nation's Schools, 18: 31-3, July 1936 .
48.
Rowden, Dorothy (Ed.) . Handbook of Adult Education, 1936. Pp. 436. New York: American Association for Adult Education.
49.
Swanson, H.B.Youth: Education for Those Out of School. U. S. Office of EducationBulletin, 1936 , No. 18-III. Pp. 76. Washington : Gov't Printing Office.
50.
Studebaker, John W.Plain Tallc. Pp. 166. Washington: National Home Library Association, 1936.
51.
Taussig, Charles W. "The Demands of the Present Crisis Upon the High School," School and Society, 45: 76-81, Jan. 16, 1937.
52.
Averill, Lawrence A.Adolescence: A Study in the Teen Years. Pp. 502. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1936.
53.
Bentley, John E.Problem Children. Pp.437. New York: W. W. Norton, 1936.
54.
Cole, Luella W.Psychology of Adolescence. Pp. 503. New York: Farrar and Rinehart, 1936.
55.
Cunningham, Bess V.Family Behavior: A Study of Human Relations . Pp. 444. Philadelphia: W. B. Saunders Co., 1936.
56.
Morgan, John J.B.Psychology of the Unadjusted School Child . Pp. 346. New York: Macmillan Co., 1936.
57.
Myers, Theodore R.Intra-Family Relationships and Pupil Adjustment . Contributions to Education, No. 651. New York: Teachers College, Columbia University, 1935. Summary, Teachers College Record, 37: 329-30, Jan. 1936 .
58.
Symonds, Percival M. "Life Problems and Interests of Adolescents ," School Review, 44: 506-18, Sept. 1936 .
59.
Abbott, Grace. "The Juvenile Court and a Community Program for Treating and Preventing Delinquency," Social Service Review , 10: 227-42, June 1936.
60.
Bates, Sanford. "Where Prisoners Come From," Journal of Juvenile Research, 20: 130-7, July 1936 .
61.
Carr, Lowell J.Organizing to Reduce Delinquency: The Michigan Plan for Better Citizenship . Pp. 62. Ann Arbor: Michigan Juvenile Delinquency Information Service, 1936.
62.
Glueck, Eleanor T. "Culture Conflict and Delinquency," Mental Hygiene, 21: 46-66, Jan. 1937 .
63.
Glueck, Sheldon and Eleanor T.One Thousand Juvenile Delinquents: Their Treatment by Court and Clinic. Pp. 341. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1934.
64.
———— and ———— (Eds.) . Preventing Crime. Pp. 509. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1936.
65.
Healy, William , and Augusta F. Bronner.New Light on Delinquency and Its Treatment . Pp. 226. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1936.
66.
Reckless, W.C. , and M. Smith.Juvenile Delinquency. Pp. 412. New York : McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1932.
67.
Sullenger, T.EARL. Social Determinants in Juvenila Delinquency . Pp. 412. New York: John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 1936.
68.
U. S. Children'S Bureau.Juvenile-Court Statistics and Federal Juvenile Offenders, 1933 . Publication No. 232. Pp. 114. Washington: Gov't Printing Office, 1936.
69.
Van Waters, Miriam. "Social Responsibility of School and Court," Educational Record, 18: 368-76, July 1937.
70.
————. Youth in Conflict. Pp. 293. New York: Republic Pub. Co., 1926.
71.
Young, Pauline V.Social Treatment in Probation and Delinquency . Pp. 646. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1937.
72.
Breen, Mary J.Partners in Play. Pp. 185. New York: A. S. Barnes, 1936.
73.
Gardner, Ella.Handbook for Recreation Leaders. Pp. 128. U. S. Children's Bureau. Washington: Gov't Printing Office, 1936.
74.
Glover, Katherine.Youth: Leisure for Living. U. S. Office of EducationBulletin, 1936 , No. 18-II. Pp. 126. Washington : Gov't Printing Office.
75.
Mitchell, Elmer D. (Ed.) . Sports for Recreation and How to Play Them. New York: A. S. Barnes, 1936.
76.
Neumeyer, Martin H. and ESTHER. Leisure and Recreation: A Study of Leisure and Recreation in Their Sociological Aspects. Pp. 405. New York: A. S. Barnes, 1936.
77.
Pangburn, Weaver W.Adventures in Recreation. Pp. 138. New York: A. S. Barnes, 1936.
78.
Recreation30: 97-184, June 1936 . Year Book Number: A Summary of Community Recreation in 1935 . Pp. 88. New York: National Recreation Association.
79.
Brooks, Wendell S.Youth: Adrift or Alert? Pp. 92. Boston: Meador Pub. Co., 1937.
80.
Hanna, Paul R. , et al. Youth Serves the Community. A publication of the Progressive Education Association. Pp. 303. New York: D. Appleton-Century Co., 1936.
81.
Keeny, S. M. (Ed.). Planning the Future with Youth. Pp. 64. New York: Association Press, 1936 .
82.
McKown, H.C.Character Education. Pp. 472. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1935.
83.
Merriam, Charles E.Civic Education in the U. S. Part IV of the Report of Commission on Social Studies, American Historical Association. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.
84.
—. The Making of Citizens. Pp. 371. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1931.
85.
Moore, Harry H. "Social Interests Among Older High School Students ," Social Studies, 27: 28-36, Jan.1936 .
86.
——— (Ed.). We Are the Builders of a New World: A Summons to Youth. Pp. 165. New York : Association Press, 1934.
87.
-. The Youth and the Nation. Pp. 179. New York: Macmillan Co., 1919.
88.
Pierce, Bessie L.Citizens' Organizations and the Civic Training of Youth. Part III of the Report of Commission on Social Studies, American Historical Association. Pp. 428. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1933.
89.
Stewart, George. "The Church Challenges Youth," Scribner's, 100: 150-3, Sept. 1936 .
90.
Tuttle, Harold S. "The Campus and Social Ideals," Journal of Educational Research, 30: 177-82, Nov. 1936 . Also, The Campus and Social Ideals. Pp. 94. New York: The Author, College of the City of New York, 1936.
91.
Chambers, M.M. "National Governmental Agencies and the Youth Problem," School and Society, 43: 1-6, Jan. 4, 1936.
92.
—. Youth-Serving Organizations: National Non-Governmental Associations. Pp. 327. Washington: American Council on Education , 1937.
93.
Jessen, Carl A. "The Federal Government and Youth," EducationalOutlook, 9: 193-201, May 1935 .
94.
Kelly, Fred J. "Needs of Youth as Seen by the Office of Education ," National Education Association Proceedings, 1935: 102-4.
95.
Lenroot, Katharine F. "Twenty-fifth Anniversary of the Children's Bureau," The Child, 1: 5-7, March 1937 .
96.
Lovejoy, Owen R. "Youth Programs," Social Work Yearbook1937 (pp. 554-63). Pp. 709. New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 1937.
97.
Pendry, Elizabeth R., and Hugh Hartshorne.Organizations for Youth . Pp.350. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1935.
98.
Rainey, Homer P. "The American Council Program for the Study of Youth Problems," Educational Programs for Today and Tomorrow , pp. 293-7. Twenty-third Annual Schoolmen's Week Proceedings. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania, School of Education, June 1936.
99.
—. "Meeting the Needs of American Youth," Occupations, 14: 717-88, May 1936. Condensed in the Education Digest, 1: 22-4, June 1936 .
100.
————. "The Plans of the American Youth Commission," Bulletin of the Department of Secondary School Principals, National Education Association, 20: 5-11, April 1936.
101.
Sims, Mary S.The Natural History of a Social Institution: The Young Women's Christian Association. Pp. 251. New York: The Woman's Press, 1936.
102.
Stone, Walter L.The Development of Boys' Work in the United States. Pp. 188. Nashville: Cullom and Ghertner Press, 1935.
103.
Community Chests And Councils, Inc.Youth Today. Proceedings of Youth Today Hearing, Sponsored by National Character-building Organizations and 1934 Mobilization for Human Needs. Pp. 34. New York: Community Chests and Councils, Inc.
104.
New York Herald-Tribune. " New Frontiers for Youth," Changing Standards, pp. 120-79. Report of the fourth annual New York Herald-Tribune Women's Conference on Current Problems, Sept. 26-27, 1934. New York: The Herald-Tribune, Inc.
105.
Brundage, A.J. , and M.C. Wilson.Situations, Problems, and Interests of Unmarried Rural Young People 16-25 Years of Age. Surveys of Five Connecticut Townships, 1934. Extension Service Circular 239. Pp. 47 mimeo. Washington: U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, Extension Service, Division of Coöperative Extension , April 1936.
106.
Kirkpatrick, E.L. and Agnes Boyn-Ton.Possibilities of a Rural Youth Movement . Special Circular. Pp. 13. Madison: University of Wisconsin, Agricultural Extension Service, Sept. 1935 .
107.
and ————. "Rural Young People Face Their Own Situation," Rural Sociology, 1: 151-63, June 1936.
108.
Melvin, Bruce L. "Rural Emergency Recreation and Future Rural Social Planning," Rural Sociology, 1: 214-20, June 1936.
109.
. "Scope of the Research on Rural Youth Needed Today," Social Forces, 15: 55-8, Oct. 1936 .
110.
Arthur, George R.Life on the Negro Frontier. Pp. 259. New York: Association Press, 1934.
111.
Caliver, Ambrose.Fundamentals in the Education of Negroes. U. S. Office of Education Bulletin, 1935, No. 6. Pp. 90. Washington: Gov't Printing Office.
112.
Embree, Edwin R. "Education for Negroes—Divided We Fall ," American Scholar, 5: 312-22, Summer 1936.
113.
Johnson, Charles S. "The Negro College Graduate: How and Where He Is Employed," Journal of NeigroEducation, 4: 5-22, Jan. 1935.
114.
Lovejoy, Owen R.The Negro Children of New York. Pp. 49. New York: Children's Aid Society, 1932.
115.
Cammell, Dorothy B.Youth: What Civic and Service Clubs Can Do to Help. Pp. 27 mimeo. U. S. Office of Education, Circular154, Feb. 1936.
116.
Hendry, Charles E., and Margaret T. Svendsen.Between Spires and Stacks . Pp. 369 mimeo. Cleveland : Welfare Federation, 1936.
117.
U. S. Office Of Education, Committee On Youth Problems.Youth: How Communities Can Help. U. S. Office of Education Bulletin, 1936, No. 18-I. Pp. 77. Washington: Gov't Printing Office.
Kelly, Fred J. "Youth Surveys," Educational Programs for Today and Tomorrow, pp. 283-93. Twenty-third Annual Schoolmen's Week Proceedings. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania, School of Education, June 1936 .
120.
Wetherill, Francis M.Youth Welfare in Philadelphia. Pp. 259. Philadelphia: John C. Winston Co., 1936.
121.
Anderson, W.A., and W. Kerns.Interests, Activities, and Problems of Rural Young Folk. II. Men 15 to 29 Years of Age. Pp. 43. Ithaca, N. Y.: Cornell University Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin No. 631. May 1935.
122.
Thurow, Mildred B.Interests, Activities, and Problems of Rural Young Folk. I. Women 15 to 29 Years of Age. Pp. 57. Ithaca, N. Y.: Cornell University Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin617. May 1935.
123.
Jessen, Carl A. , and H. Clifton Hutchins.Youth: Community Surveys . U. S. Office of EducationBulletin , 1936 , No. 18-VI. Pp. 97. Washington: Gov't Printing 0ffice.
124.
Harley, D.L.Surveys of Youth: Finding the Facts. Pp. 106. Washington : American Council on Education, 1937.
125.
American Youth Commission Of The American Council On Education.Surveys of Youth in Pennsylvania; in Maryland; in Dallas, Texas; and in Muncie, Indiana. To be published late in 1937. Inquiries may be addressed to the American Youth Commission, 744 Jackson Place , Washington, D. C.
126.
Grout, Ruth E. (Ed.). Handbook of Health Education. Pp. 298. New York: Doubleday, Doran, 1936 .
127.
Rogers, James F.Instruction in Hygiene in Institutions of Higher Education. U. S. Office of EducationBulletin, 1936, No. 7. Pp. 47. Washington : Gov't Printing Office.
128.
Spencer, R.R. "Periodic Health Examinations," Health Officer, 1: 460-4, April 1937.
Mcconnell, Beatrice. "Child Labor 1912 to 1937," The Child, 1: 20-22, March 1937 .
131.
U. S. Children'S Bureau.Child Labor Facts and Figures. Children's Bureau Publication No. 197. Pp. 85. Washington: Gov't Printing Office, 1933.
132.
————. Children Engaged in Neivspaper and Magazine Selling and Delivering. Children's Bureau Publication No. 227. Pp. 60. Washington: Gov't Printing Office, 1935.
133.
Adair, Fred L. "The American Committee on Maternal Welfare, Inc," The Child, 1: 5-6, May 1937.
134.
U. S. Federal Emergency Administration Of Public Works.Housing and Child Welfare. Housing Division Research Bulletin No. 2. Pp. 42 and appendices. Washington: Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works, 1936.
135.
Warburton, C.W. "The Rural Child: What the Cooperative Extension Service Is Doing for His Welfare," The Child, 1: 3-5, June 1937.
136.
Monthly annotated lists of references on youth problems have been issued by the American Youth Commission of the American Council on Education (744 Jackson Place, Washington, D. C.) since July 1936. A comprehensive annotated bibliography of about 2,000 entries is also in preparation.