Loren baritz biography
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The Servants of Power, by Loren Baritz
Social Scientists in Industry
The Servants of Power.
by Loren Baritz.
Wesleyan University Press. 273 pp. $4.50.
It is one sign of the times that a swarm of psychologists, sociologists, psychiatrists, human relations experts, and similar quasi-academics now occupy high staff positions in most of America’s large industrial corporations. What they do there is obvious to anyone who has ever read an inkblot in order to get a job or filed out for a coffee break at the sound of a company bell. How all these thinkers got into the land of the hardheaded businessman is a revealing bit of 20th-century history that Loren Baritz somewhat portentously examines in his new book, The Servants of Power.
Professor Baritz’s tale is quickly retold. Fifty years ago business was as innocent of social science as the available social scientists were. Occasionally a manufacturer would hire a phrenologist to examine the heads of his foreme
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Backfire: A History of How American Culture Led Us into Vietnam and Made Us Fight the Way We Did
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Loren Baritz Edit Profile
history professor
Loren Baritz, American history professor. Research Training fellow Social Science Research Council, 1955-1956, grantee, 1960; grantee American Council Learned Societies, 1963.
Background
Baritz, Loren was born on December 26, 1928 in Chicago, Illinois, United States. Son of Joseph Harry and Helen (Garland) Baritz.
Education
Bachelor, Roosevelt University, 1953. Master of Arts, University Wisconsin, 1954. Doctor of Philosophy, University Wisconsin, 1956.
Career
Assistant professor of history, Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut, 1956-1962; associate professor, Roosevelt University, Chicago, 1962-1963; professor, U. Rochester, 1963-1969; department chairman history, U. Rochester, 1964-1967; leading professor, State University of New York, Albany, 1969-1971; executive vice president, Empire State College executive director university kommission on purposes and prior