Social Status and Consumer ChoiceJacobi, John, E.;Walters, S., George
doi: 10.2307/2573806pmid: N/A
* Some of the material in this paper was developed by an operations research team at Lehigh University in connection with a commercial project entitled, “Fundamental Determinants of Textile Demand,” of which the authors were co-directors. Article PDF first page preview Close This content is only available as a PDF. Copyright, 1958, The Williams & Wilkins Company
An Analysis of the Validity of Health QuestionnairesSuchman, Edward, A.;Streib, Gordon, F.;Phillips, Bernard, S.
doi: 10.2307/2573809pmid: N/A
* This paper is a part of a larger research project conducted by the Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Cornell University. The investigation was supported by grants from the Lilly Endowment, Inc., and the National Institute of Mental Health, United States Public Health Service (Grant M-1196). The authors are pleased to acknowledge the assistance of Dr. Wayne E. Thompson who collaborated in setting up the design for the analysis and the procedures for conducting the statistical tabulations. Article PDF first page preview Close This content is only available as a PDF. Copyright, 1958, The Williams & Wilkins Company
The Supreme Court as a Small GroupSnyder, Eloise, C.
doi: 10.2307/2573810pmid: N/A
* For many valuable suggestions, the author is indebted to Dr. Jessie Bernard of The Pennsylvania State University. A more detailed account of the research on which this report is based can be found in the author's Ph.D. dissertation, A Quantitative Analysis of Supreme Court Opinions from 1921 to 1953: A Study of the Responses of an Institution Engaged in Resolving Social Conflict, The Pennsylvania State University, 1956. Article PDF first page preview Close This content is only available as a PDF. Copyright, 1958, The Williams & Wilkins Company
The Acculturation of Eastern Cherokee Community OrganizationGulick,, John
doi: 10.2307/2573812pmid: N/A
* This article is a somewhat modified version of a paper of the same title which was read at the Fifth International Congress of Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, September 2, 1956. The author wishes to acknowledge the helpful discussion he has had with Dr. T. M. N. Lewis and Miss Madeline Kneberg (University of Tennessee), Professor Joffre L. Coe (University of North Carolina), and the field workers in the first summer field session at Cherokee of the Cross Cultural Laboratory of the University of North Carolina: Hester A. Davis, John L. Grant, Charles H. Holzinger, and R. Paul Kutsche, Jr. Article PDF first page preview Close This content is only available as a PDF. Copyright, 1958, The Williams & Wilkins Company
The Structure of the Socialization Process in Papago Indian SocietyWilliams, Thomas, Rhys
doi: 10.2307/2573813pmid: N/A
* This research was made possible by a pre-doctora1 fellowship of the Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research, Inc. The study was conducted during residence from January–June 1956 in the Gu Achi district of the Papago reservation. Preliminary research on this topic was undertaken in this area in the spring and summer of 1954. Article PDF first page preview Close This content is only available as a PDF. Copyright, 1958, The Williams & Wilkins Company