Communism, Conformity, and Civil Liberties: A Cross-section of the Nation Speaks Its MindNotes on materials from other surveys as related to the findings in this volume: p. 274-278. |
Contents
| 3 | |
| 9 | |
ARE CIVIC LEADERS MORE TOLERANT | 26 |
IS THERE A NATIONAL ANXIETY | 58 |
HOW TOLERANT IS THE | 89 |
DOES IT MATTER WHERE PEOPLE LIVE? | 109 |
DO WOMEN HAVE VIEWPOINTS DIFFERENT | 131 |
WHAT ASPECTS OF COMMUNISM | 156 |
HOW FAR DOES THE COMMUNIST THREAT | 188 |
WHAT THE ANSWERS TO SOME OF THESE | 220 |
APPENDICES | 237 |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
admitted Communist AIPO SAMPLE American Communists American Legion areas Army-McCarthy hearings asked atheists attended church attitudes Bar Association better educated Chairmen chapter Chart churchgoers CITIES AS LEADERS civil liberties COLLEGE GRADUATES conformists defense plants Democrats differences in tolerance East Edgar Hoover educational level example FEMALES findings go to church GRADE SCHOOL groups HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES Housewife Interested in Issues internal Communist threat interview intolerance kinds Labor Union less interested less tolerant MALES metropolitan Middle West munist national cross-section nonconformity NORC SAMPLE Number Opinion No Total PERCENTAGE DISTRIBUTION person population Presidents problems Public Opinion question rank and file region relatively great threat relatively little threat reported Republicans respondents rural Russia scale of tolerance SCORES SELECTED COMMUNITY LEADERS Socialists South survey agencies Table threat In-between tion tolerance of nonconformists TOLERATE NONCONFORMISTS type of community urban World War III worry Yes No Opinion


