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==Free Enterprise as Response to New Deal==
'''St. John III, Burton. 2010. “A VIEW THAT’S FIT TO PRINT: The National Association of Manufacturers’ Free Enterprise Rhetoric as Integration Propaganda in The New York Times, 1937–1939.” Journalism Studies 11 (3): 377–392.'''
@article{st._john_iii_view_2010,
volume = {11},
shorttitle = {A {VIEW} {THAT}'{S} {FIT} {TO} {PRINT}},
url = {http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/14616700903290585},
abstract = {This study examines the appearance of National Association of Manufacturers'(NAM)
propaganda, from 1937 to 1939, in articles within The New York Times. NAM's ability to
}
'''Rippa, S. Alexander. 1958. “The Textbook Controversy and the Free Enterprise Campaign, 1940-1941.” History of Education Journal, 49–58.———. 1959. “Dissemination of the Free-Enterprise Creed to American Schools.” The School Review 67 (4): 409–21. doi:10.1086/442511.'''
@article{rippa_textbook_1958,
title = {The textbook controversy and the free enterprise campaign, 1940-1941},
url = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/3692590},
abstract = {50 HISTORY OF EDUCATION JOURNAL attack upon the" anti-advertising" material which, it
charged, had been" planted" in the social science textbooks. The editors as-serted that
volume = {67},
issn = {0036-6773},
url = {http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1086/442511},
doi = {10.1086/442511},
abstract = {The free-enterprise campaign launched during the late thirties marked a significant turning
'''Fones-Wolf, Elizabeth A. 1994. Selling Free Enterprise: The Business Assault on Labor and Liberalism, 1945-60. University of Illinois Press. '''
@book{fones-wolf_selling_1994,
title = {Selling free enterprise: {The} business assault on labor and liberalism, 1945-60},
shorttitle = {Selling free enterprise},
url = {http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=W4p8-BAs0dcC&oi=fnd&pg=PA1&dq=info:uIh_mJdu3vMJ:scholar.google.com&ots=VDTieSeQme&sig=L75z9k6kOw2MJeZrE285jsHMWEM},
abstract = {During December 1951, half of the adult population of the industrial town of Latrobe,
Pennsylvania, took regular breaks from work to study economics on company time.

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