BIBLIOGRAPHY 159 Krieg, Laurel. “Community Studies in Reading: IV. A Middle- Western Manufacturing Community,” Library Quarterly, 1X (1939), 72-86. | Analysis of library records for Alliance, Ohio, February- March, 1935; for the adult collection only. Lazar, May. Reading Interests, Activities, and Opportunities of Bright, Average, and Dull Children. New York, Teachers Col- lege, Columbia University, 1937. Contributions to Education, No. 707. Thirteen public schools in New York City, representing var- ious nationalities, neighborhoods, socio-economic status, and intelligence levels; ages, 10-12; 1931-32. Lazarsfeld, Paul F. 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. —— and Patricia Kendall. “The American Radio Listener.” Bureau | of Applied Social Research, Columbia University. Manuscript, 1948. Follow-up survey, with about 3,500 adult respondents, of at- titudes toward radio reported in Lazarsfeld and Field, The People Look at Radio, 1946; includes questions on public library use along with considerable other communication data. i—— and Harry Field. The People Look at the Radio; Report on a i Survey Conducted by the National Opinion Research Center. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1946. 2,571 personal interviews with a representative cross-section of the U.S. adult population, plus an expanded sample of 672 people living in the Mountain and Pacific areas, November, 1045. eary, Bernice E. “What Does Research Say about Reading?” Journal of Educational Research, XXXIX (February, 1946), 434-44- 1 Popular summary of 2,500 separate reports on reading. ilLewerenz, Alfred S. “Children and the Public Library,” Library Quarterly, 1 (April, 1931), 152-74. # Analysis of withdrawals of public library books by children