American Civil Liberties Union. Issues annual reports that summarize the year's developments in civil liberties, religious freedom, academic freedom, censorship. Also issues pamphlets and select bibliographies on special cases as they arise.
2.
American Marketing Society. The Technique of Marketing Research. New York and London: McGraw-Hill, 1937. 432 pp.
3.
ARNETTCLAUDE E.The Social Beliefs and Attitudes of American School Board Members. Emporia, Kansas: Emporia Gazette, 1932. 235 pp.
4.
BANSEEWALD. Germany Prepares for War (revised). New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1941. 370 pp.
5.
BARRETTJAMES WYMAN. JosephPulitzer and HisWorld. New York: Vanguard, 1941. 449 pp.
6.
“Battle for America,” Fortune (August, 1941), pp. 71–74 ff.
7.
BLEYERWILLARD GROSVENOR. Main Currents in the History of American Journalism. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1927. 464 pp.
8.
BRITTGEORGE. Forty Years — Forty Millions: The Career of Frank A. Munsey. New York: Farrar & Rinehart, 1935. 309 pp.
9.
BROCKHENRY IRVING. “Army's Morale Builder [General Frederick Henry Osborn],” New York Times Magazine (September7, 1941).
10.
BRUNTZGEORGE G.Allied Propaganda and the Collapse of the German Empire in 1918 (Hoover War Library Publications, no. 13). Stanford University, 1938. 246 pp.
11.
CANTRILHADLEY. The Psychology of Social Movements. New York; John Wiley, 1941. 274 pp.
12.
CANTRILHADLEY, and ALLPORTGORDON WILLAHD, The Psychology of Radio. New York: Harper's, 1935. 276 pp.
13.
CARLSONOLIVER. Brisbane: A Candid Biography. New York: Stackpole, 1937. 373 pp.
14.
CARLSONOLIVER, and BATESERNEST SUTHERLAND. Hearst, hard of San Simeon: An Unauthorized Biography. New York: Viking, 1936. 332 pp.
15.
CHAFEEZECHARIAHJR., Free Speech in the United States. Cambridge: Harvard University, 1941. 634 pp.
16.
CHAKHOTINSERGEI. The Rape of the Masses: The Psychology of Totalitarian Political Propaganda. New York: Alliance, 1940. London: Routledge, 1940. 317 pp.
17.
CHAMBERLINJOSEPH EDGAR. The Boston Transcript: A History of Its First Hundred Years. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1930. 241 pp.
18.
“Chicago Sun,” Fortune, February, 1942.
19.
CHILDSHarwood Lawrence, and WHITTONJOHN BOARDMAN, editors. Propaganda by Short Wave. Princeton University, 1942. 355 pp.
20.
CIVIL SERVICE ASSEMBLY OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA. Public Relations of Public Personnel Agencies. Chicago: Public Administration Service, 1941. 259 pp.
21.
CLARKEJAMES. “In the Language of the People,” in The Practice of Book Selection, edited by LouisRound Wilson. (Chicago: University of Chicago, 1940), pp. 179–89.
22.
COCHRAN, NEGLEY D. E. W. Scripps. New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1933. 315 pp.
23.
COMMITTEE FOB NATIONAL MORALE. The Axis Grand Strategy: Blueprints for Total War, compiled and edited by LadislasFarago. New York: Farrar & Rinehart, 1942. 614 pp.
24.
COMMITTEE FOB NATIONAL MORALEGerman Psychological Warfare: A Critical, Annotated and Comprehensive Survey and Bibliography, prepared under the direction of Ladislas Farago with the cooperation of GordonAllportW., BoringE. G., StevensS. S. and Dr. Beebe-Center of Harvard University, Kimball Young of Queens College and Floyd Ruch of the University of Southern California. New York, 1941. 144 pp.
25.
Conditions of Life and Work of Journalists (International Labour Office, Studies and Reports, Series L, no. 2). Geneva, 1928. 219 pp.
26.
CURTIMERLE EUGENE. The Social Ideas of American Educators (report of the Commission on the Social Studies of the American Historical Association, part 10). New York: Scribner's, 1935. 613 pp.
27.
DAVISELMER. History of the New York Times: 1851–1921. New York: New York Times, 1921. 434 pp.
28.
“DavisElmer,” Current Biography, 1940.
29.
DESMONDROBERT WILLIAM. The Press and World Affairs, with an introduction by HaroldJ. Laski. (Ph.D. thesis, London School of Economics and Political Science). New York: Appleton-Century, 1937. 421 pp.
30.
DONOVANFRANCES R.The Schoolma'am. New York: Stokes, 1942. 356 pp.
31.
“DonovanWilliam J.,” Current Biography, 1941.
32.
DOOBLEONARD WILLIAM. Propaganda: Its Psychology and Technique. New York: Henry Holt, 1935. 424 pp.
33.
FLEXNERABRAHAM. Universities: American, English, German. New York: Oxford University, 1930. 381 pp.
34.
FRANKLINJAY, pseud. The New Dealers. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1934. 414 pp.
35.
Freedom of Inquiry and Expression (Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, vol. 200, November1938, edited by EdwardPotts Cheyney).
36.
FREUDSIGMUND. Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego, translated from the German by James Strachey. London: International Psychoanalytical Press, 1922. 134 pp.
37.
FRIEDRICHCARL JOACHIM. Controlling Broadcasting in Wartime. Cambridge: Harvard University, 1940. 34 pp.
38.
FYFEHENRY HAMILTON. Northcliffe: An Intimate Biography. London: Allen and Unwin, 1930. 349 pp.
39.
GallupGeorge Horace, and RaeSaul Forbes. The Pulse of Democracy: The Public Opinion Poll and how it Works. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1940. 290 pp.
40.
GardnerGilson. Lusty Scripps: The Life of E. W. Scripps (1854–1926). New York: Vanguard, 1932. 274 pp.
41.
GELLARA., KAPLANDAVID, and LASSWELLHAROLD D. “An Experimental Comparison of Four Ways of Coding Editorial Content,” in Journalism Quarterly, 19, no. 4 (December, 1942).
42.
General Basic English Dictionary, edited by OgdenC. K.. London: Evans Bros., 1940. New York: Norton, 1942. 438 pp.
43.
GIBBSWOLCOTT. “A Very Active Type Man [Ralph W. Ingersoll],” New Yorker, May 2 and 9, 1942.
44.
GOSNELLHAROLD F. “The Improvement of Present Public Opinion Analyses,” essay in Print, Radio and Film in a Democracy (pp. 118—32), edited by DouglasWaples (Chicago: University of Chicago, 1942).
45.
GRAYWILLIAM SCOTT, and LEARYBERNICE ELIZABETH. What Makes a Book Readable, with Special Reference to Adults of Limited Reading Ability: An Initial Study. Chicago: University of Chicago, 1935. 358 pp.
46.
GRAYWILLIAM SCOTT, and LEARYBERNICE ELIZABETH, and MUNROERUTH. The Reading Interests and Habits of Adults. New York: Macmillan, 1929. 305 pp.
47.
GRAYWILLIAM SCOTT, and LEARYBERNICE ELIZABETH, and MUNROERUTH, editor. Recent Trends in Reading. Chicago: University of Chicago, 1939. 366 pp.
48.
Handbuch der neuzeitlichen Wehrwissenschaften. Berlin: De Gruyter, 1936–39. 5 vols.
49.
HardingJOHN SNODGRASS. “A Scale for Measuring Civilian Morale,” Journal of Psychology, 12: 101–10 (July, 1941).
50.
HerringE. PENDLETON. Federal Commissioners: A Study of Their Careers and Qualifications. Cambridge: Harvard University, 1936. 151 pp.
51.
“HowardRoy,” Current Biography, 1940.
52.
HOWERRALPH MERLE. The History of an Advertising Agency [N. W. Ayer] (Harvard Studies in Business History, no. 5). Cambridge: Harvard University, 1939. 652 pp.
53.
“IngersollRalph M.,” Current Biography, 1940.
54.
JANISIRVING L., and FADNERRAYMOND H. “A Coefficient of Imbalance for Content Analysis“ (Library of Congress, Experimental Division for the Study of Wartime Communication, Document no. 31). 1942. 17 pp. mimeo.
55.
JANISIRVING L., and FADNERRAYMOND H.FADNERRAYMOND H. I., and JANOWITZMORRIS: “Reliability of a Content Analysis Technique“ (Library of Congress, Experimental Division for the Study of War Time Communications, Document no. 32). 1942. 6 pp. mimeo.
56.
JOHNSONGERALD WHITE. Roosevelt: Dictator or Democrat?New York: Harpers, 1941. 303 pp.
57.
JONESDOROTHY BLUMENSTOCK. “Quantitative Analysis of Motion Picture Content,” Public Opinion Quarterly, 6: 411–28 (Fall, 1942).
58.
LASSWELLHAROLD D.Analyzing the Content of Mass Communication: A Brief Introduction (Library of Congress, Experimental Division for the Study of Wartime Communication, Document no. 11). 1942. 33 pp., mimeo.
59.
LASSWELLHAROLD D. “The Contribution of Freud's Insight Interview to the Social Sciences,” American Journal of Sociology, 45: 375—90 (November, 1939).
60.
LASSWELLHAROLD D.Democracy through Public Opinion. Menasha, Wis.: Banta, 1941. 176 pp.
61.
LASSWELLHAROLD D.Propaganda Technique in the World War. New York: Knopf, 1927. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, and Trubner, 1927. New York: Peter Smith, 1938. 233 pp.
62.
LASSWELLHAROLD D. “The Propagandist Bids for Power,” American Scholar, 8: 350–57 (Summer, 1939).
63.
LASSWELLHAROLD D. “A Provisional Classification of Symbol Data,” Psychiatry, 1: 197–204 (May, 1938).
64.
LASSWELLHAROLD D.Psychopathology and Politics. Chicago: University of Chicago, 1930. 285 pp.
65.
LASSWELLHAROLD D.Essay on “The Strategy of Revolutionary and War Propaganda,” pp. 187–224 in Public Opinion and World Politics, edited by QuincyWright (Chicago: University of Chicago, 1933).
66.
LASSWELLHAROLD D. “The Triple-Appeal Principle: A Contribution of Psychoanalysis to Political and Social Science,” American Journal of Sociology, 37: 523—38 (January, 1932).
67.
LASSWELLHAROLD D. “The World Attention Survey,” Public Opinion Quarterly, 5: 456–62 (Fall, 1941).
68.
LASSWELLHAROLD D. and Associates. “The Politically Significant Content of the Press: Coding Procedures,” Journalism Quarterly, 19: no. 1 (March, 1942).
69.
LASSWELLHAROLD D.CASEYRALPH D., and SMITHBruce Lannes. Propaganda and Promotional Activities: An Annotated Bibliography. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota, for Social Science Research Council, 1935. 450 pp. Supplements by SmithB. L. in each issue of Public Opinion Quarterly since January, 1937.
70.
LAZARSFELDPAUL FELIX. Radio and the Printed Page: An Introduction to the Study of Radio and Its Role in the Communication of Ideas. New York: Duell, Sloan and Pearce, 1940. 354 pp.
71.
LAZARSFELDPAUL FELIX. and STANTONFRANK N., editors. Radio Research, 1941. New York: Duell, Sloan and Pearce, 1942. 333 pp.
72.
LeeAlfred Mcclung. The Daily Newspaper in America: The Evolution of a Social Instrument. New York: Macmillan, 1937. 797 pp.
73.
LEITESNATAN C., and POOLIthiel de Sola. “On Content Analysis“ (Library of Congress, Experimental Division for the Study of Wartime Communication, Document no. 26). 1942. 27 pp., mimeo.
74.
LENINVLADIMIR ILYICH. Agitation und Propaganda: Ein Sammelband. Vienna: Verlag für Literatur und Politik, 1929. 250 pp.
75.
LOEWENSTEINKARL. “Legislative Control of Political Extremism in European Democracies,” Columbia Law Review, 38: 591–622, 725–74 (April, May, 1938). See also his “Militant Democracy and Fundamental Rights,” American Political Science Review, 31: 417–32, 638–58 (June, August, 1937).
76.
“LuceHenry R.,” Current Biography, 1941.
77.
LUNDBERGFERDINAND. Imperial Hearst: A Social Biography, with a preface by Charles Austin Beard. New York: Equinox, 1936. 406 pp.
78.
LUNDBERGGEORGE A.Social Research: A Study in Methods of Gathering Data, revised edition. New York: Longmans, Green, 1942. 426 pp.
79.
MCCAMYJAMES L.Government Publicity (Ph.D. thesis, political science, Chicago). Chicago: University of Chicago, 1939. 275 pp.
80.
“MacLeish, Archibald,” Current Biography, 1940.
81.
“McCormickRobert R.,” Current Biography, 1942.
82.
“The Managers,” Fortune, February1940.
83.
“MellettLowell,” Current Biography, 1942.
84.
Methods in Social Science: A Case Book, edited by StuartA. Rice. Chicago: University of Chicago, for Social Science Research Council, 1931. 822 pp.
85.
“Military Psychology,” special issue of Psychological Bulletin (June, 1941).
86.
MILLERDELBERT C. “The Measurement of National Morale,” American Sociological Review, 6: 487–98 (August, 1941).
87.
MOCKJAMES ROBERT. Censorship, 1917. Princeton: Princeton University, 1941. 250 pp.
88.
MOCKJAMES ROBERT and LARSONCEDRIC. Words that Won the War: The, Story of the Committee on Public Information, 1917–1919. Princeton: Princeton University, 1939. 372 pp.
89.
MODLEYRUDOLF. How to Use Pictorial Statistics, with one chapter on symbols by FranzC. Hess. New York: Harper's, 1937. 170 pp.
90.
MOTTFRANK LUTHER. American Journalism: A History of Newspapers in the United States through 250 Years: 1690 to 1940. New York: Macmillan, 1941. 772 pp.
91.
MURPHYGARDNER, MURPHYLOIS BARCLAY, and NEWCOMBTHEODORE MEAD. Experimental Social Psychology: An Interpretation of Research upon the Socialization of the Individual, 1937 edition. New York and London: Harper's, 1937. 1,121 pp.
92.
NAFZIGERRALPH O.International News and the Press: an Annotated Bibliography. New York: H. W. Wilson, 1940. 193 pp.
93.
NEUMANNFRANZ. Behemoth: The Structure and Practice of National Socialism. New York: Oxford University, 1942. 532 pp.
94.
NEURATHOTTO. International Picture Language: The First Rules of Isotype. London: Kegan Paul, 1936. 117 pp.
95.
NEVINSALLAN. The Evening Post: A Century of Journalism. New York: Boni and Liveright, 1922. 590 pp.
96.
New Horizons in Radio: Problems and Progress of Sound Broadcasting and Future Developments in the Radio Field (Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, vol. 213, January, 1941, edited by HermanS. Hettinger).
97.
OGDENCHARLES KAY. The System of Basic English. New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1934. 320 pp.
98.
“Osborn, Frederick Henry,” Current Biography, 1941.
99.
“PaleyWilliam S.,” Current Biography, 1940.
100.
“Polls: Dr. Jekyll or Mr. Hyde?“ Symposium by a dozen specialists in Public Opinion Quarterly (July, 1940).
101.
The Press in the Contemporary Scene (Annals of American Academy of Political and Social Science, vol. 219, January, 1942, edited by MalcolmM. Willey and RalphD. Casey).
102.
“PriceByron,” Current Biography, 1942.
103.
PRICEBYRON. “Governmental Censorship in Wartime,” American Political Science Review, 36: 837–49 (October, 1942).
104.
Recent Social Trends (report of President Hoover's Committee on Recent Social Trends). New York: McGraw-Hill, 1933. 1,568 pp.
105.
Report on the British Press: A Survey of Its Current Operations and Problems with Special Reference to National Newspapers and their Part in Public Affairs. London: PEP (Political and Economic Planning Group), April, 1938. 333 pp.
106.
Research Project on Totalitarian Communication (Directors: Ernst Kris and Hans Speier). Mimeographed. Research Papers: 1. German Radio Bulletins. 83 pp. 2. A Study of War Communiqués: Methods and Results. 137 pp. 3. German Freedom Stations Broadcasting to Britain. 177 pp. 4 (has not yet appeared). 5. Data on a German Defeat Situation. 82 pp. 6. Topics of The Day: A German Radio Program. 125 pp. Forthcoming: 1. A Statistical Analysis of Stereotypes in German Broadcasts. 2. German Front Reports during the Russian Campaign. 3. Predictions in German Propaganda.
107.
RIEGELO. W.Mobilizing for Chaos: The Story of the New Propaganda. New Haven: Yale University, 1934. 231 pp.
108.
RIESMANDAVID. “Civil Liberties in a Period of Transition,” pp. 33–96 in Public Policy (Yearbook of Harvard Graduate School of Public Administration), vol. 3 (1942). See also his recent series in Columbia Law Review.
109.
ROLOCHARLES J.Radio Goes to War: The “Fourth Front,” introduction by JohannesSteel. New York: Putnam, 1942. 293 pp.
110.
“RostenLeo Calvin,” Current Biography, 1942.
111.
ROSTENLEO C.Hollywood: The Movie Colony, The Movie Makers. New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1941. 436 pp.
112.
ROSTENLEO C.The Washington Correspondents (Ph.D. thesis, political science, Chicago). New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1937. 436 pp.
113.
“LordRothermere,” obituary, New York Times, November 27, 1940.
114.
“SarnoffDavid,” Current Biography, 1940.
115.
SEITZDON CARLOS. Joseph Pulitzer: His Life and Letters. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1924. 478 pp.
116.
SHENTONHERBERT NEWHARD. Cosmopolitan Conversation: The Language Problems of International Conferences. New York: Columbia University, 1933. 803 pp.
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“SherwoodRobert,” Current Biography, 1940.
118.
SMITHBRUCE LANNES. “Democratic Control of Propaganda through Registration and Disclosure,” Public Opinion Quarterly, 6: 27–40 (Spring, 1942).
119.
SMITHBRUCE LANNES. “Propaganda Analysis and the Science of Democracy,” Public Opinion Quarterly, 5: 250–59 (June, 1941).
120.
SMITHPAYSON, WRIGHTFRANK WATSON, and associates. Education in the Forty-Eight States (U. S. Advisory Committee on Education, Staff study no. 1). Washington, D. C: Government Printing Office, 1939. 199 pp.
121.
TAUSSIGFRANK WILLIAM, and JOSLYNC. S.American Business Leaders. New York: Macmillan, 1932. 319 pp.
122.
TAYLOREDMOND. The Strategy of Terror. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1940. 278 pp.
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THORPEMARGARET FARRAND. America at the Movies. New Haven: Yale University, 1939. 313 pp.
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U. S. ADVISORY COMMITTEE ON EDUCATION. Report of the Committee. Washington, D. C: Government Printing Office, 1938. 243 pp.
125.
U. S. FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION. SPECIAL COMMITTEE ON MONOPOLY ABUSES IN BROADCASTING. Report of the Committer, June 12, 1940. 1,300 pp., mimeo.
126.
U. S. NATIONAL RESOURCES COMMITTEE. CONSUMER INCOMES IN THE UNITED STATES. Washington, D. C: Government Printing Office, 1938. 104 pp.
127.
VanGelder Robert. “An Interview with Archibald MacLeish,” New York Times Magazine, May 10, 1942, p. 2.
128.
WAPLESDOUGLAS. People and Print. Chicago: University of Chicago, 1937. 228 pp.
129.
WAPLESDOUGLAS, and BERELSONBERNARD. Public Communications and Public Opinions, and What the Voters Were Told. Chicago: Graduate Library School, University of Chicago, 1941. 76 and 77 pp. mimeo, (bound together).
130.
WAPLESDOUGLAS, and BERELSONBERNARD. and TYLERRALPH W.What People Want to Read About: A Study of Group Interest and a Survey of Problems in Adult Reading. Chicago: University of Chicago, 1931. 312 pp.
131.
WAPLESDOUGLAS, and BERELSONBERNARD. and TYLERRALPH W., BERELSONBERNARD, and BRADSHAWFRANKLIN R.What Reading Does to People: Effects of Reading and a Statement of Problems for Research. Chicago: University of Chicago, 1940. 222 pp.
132.
WAPLESDOUGLAS, and BERELSONBERNARD. and TYLERRALPH W., BERELSONBERNARD, and BRADSHAWFRANKLIN R. editor. Print, Radio and Film in a Democracy: Ten Papers on the Administration of Mass Communication in the Public Interest, Read Before the Sixth Annual Institute of the Graduate Library School of the University of Chicago, August 4–9, 1941. Chicago: University of Chicago, 1942. 197 pp.
133.
Weekly Analysis of Newspaper. Opinion. James S. Twohey Associates, Washington, D. C.
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Who's who in Advertising, 1931, edited by JohnL. Rogers. New York: Harper's, 1931. 284 pp.
135.
WILSONLOGAN. The Academic Man: A Study in the Sociology of a Profession. New York and London: Oxford University, 1942. 248 pp.
136.
WILSONLOUIS ROUND. The Geography of Reading: A Study of the Distribution and Status of Libraries in the United States. Chicago: American Library Association and University of Chicago, 1938. 481 pp.
137.
WINKLERJOHN K. W. R.Hearst: An American Phenomenon. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1928. 354 pp.