“Among prevailing views about how one goes about producing behavior change (especially, change in other people) a cherished notion has always been that it helps to engender discomfort in the person to be changed.” Criminal Justice and Behavior. Vol. 35:388 (2008) 8 pages.
“This task is a modest and undramatic one, but it is legitimate and worthy.” Aggressive Behavior. Vol. 11, No. 1 (1985) 6 pages.
“Many of the boys are eminent professors today…But as we meet them in the book most of the boys seem to be wearing their faded uniforms.” ETC: A Review of General Semantics. Vol. XVI, No. 2, Winter (1959) 8 pages.
“The concept of Subculture of Violence is a simple and plausible one…” Contemporary Psychology. Vol. 13, No. 6 (1968) 2 pages.
“We are enjoined to think about diversion, but I am worried about the hard core (the dirty dozen?) left…” Contemporary Psychology. Vol. 24, No. 10 (1979) 2 pages.
“The Symposium is short…and may raise questions as to value for money…” Journal of Criminal Law, Criminology and Police Science. Vol. 61.(1970) 2 pages.
“Kitties book…stands in the same sense as does the picture of Dorian Gray, as a cross-section of accelerating trends — of features that grow uglier, more obvious in time….” Contemporary Psychology. Vol. 19, No. 1. (1974) 4 pages.
“On Sunday April 12, 1959, Robert Edmondson, 86, passed away in his home town Bend (population 12,000) Oregon. Two days later the Bend Bulletin contained an editorial about Mr. Edmonton’s demise…” Journalisk Quarterly, University of Minneapolis, 14, Minn. (1960) 14 pages.
“The social change business has been transformed from a corner store enterprise into an industry…”The Journal of Communication, Vol. 21, June (1971) 22 pages.
“It îs not true that Hawthorne researchers were oblivious to concerns with threats to livelihood.” American Psychologist. July (1982) 1 page.
”Rules about dictionary usage are critical when scientific language deploys terms that are in the public domain.“ American Behavioral Scientist, Vol. 23 No.5, May/June (1980) 7 pages.
“…so far nothing about ego psychology warrants the characterization of he delinquent’s ego as defective…” Seminars in Psychiatry, 3, 386-399 (1971) 14 pages.
“Individuals who are characterized as heretics, however, generally regard themselves as in possession of a positive interpretation, a constructive and objective set f beliefs…” Etc: A Review of General Semantics. Vol. XV. No. 1. Autumn (1957) 12 pages.
“‘Crackpot’ documents are generally characterized by their recipients as deficient in what one might call ‘reality orientation’ — a characteristic exemplified by delusional content or by cryptic or bizarre features.” The American Inago. Vol. 13. No. 2. (1956) 41 pages.
“…it was possible to demonstrate that loading through meaning, to be effective, had to be compatible with generalized pas experiences with movement…” The British Journal of Psychology. Vol. XLVII, Part 3, August (1956) 13 pages.
“Once upon a time there were two little gray men on the planet Mars…” Etc: A Review of General Semantics. Vol. XVII, No. 1. April (1961) 10 pages.
“While in theory public officials may resonate to public opinion, in practice, they may be selectively invoking agreeable and congenial documentation…” Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency. 1-21 (2014) 22 pages.
“The organization of police departments along hierarchical, classic management lines makes it difficult for departmental leadership to tackle commonly-experienced internal problems…” Policing and Society. Vo. 18. No. 1. March (2008) 13 pages.
“Since differences in behavior sometimes reflect differences in perception, it is plausible to assume that persons who behave in an anti-social way might show a tendency to perceive the world in a characteristic fashion.” The Journal of Criminal Law, Criminology and Police Science. Vol. 53, No. 4 December (1962) 7 pages.
“High morale characterizations were independent of the respondents’ morale…” Personnel Psychology. Vol. 10. Winter No. 4 (1957) 18 pages.