AA Bibliography Home

Jellnick- Yale Studies
Alcohol and Science and Society

see photos below


This is a rare 1945 first edition with the Bill Wilson Story
hard bound green cover
ex library
Journal of Studies on Alcohol Inc

Forward by Howard W Haggard click here for link

(he was also one of the founding father
of the scientific wingof the modern alcoholism movement.)


Intro and Chapter One (and other chapters) by Jellnick

Chapter 29 by W. W.

Titled the fellowship of Alcoholics Anonymous

473 pages pages are yellowing but not bad
spine cloth has separated from book
but front cover still attached well to spine see photos
spine binding is good

What makes this book really unusual it is marked


REVIEW COPY
on first page

front page has libary card slot and inscription: Dr Harold S Hulbert
30 No Michigan Ave and I assume chicago illinois which is covered
by the place the library card used to be
first page has Printed stamped lettering Review Copy and inscribed directly
below that; " for J Crim Law and Crim"

to the side and partiallly under library date paper is inscribed
Dr Harold Hublert Chicago Aurora
The book was checked out at Aurora College Library from 1952 till 1969

Twenty-nine Lectures with Discussions as give at
the Yale Summer School of Alcohol Studies
New Haven Quarterly Journal of Studies on Alcohol 1945

The 29 Lectures Include in Part:
-Introduction to The Curriculum by E.M.Jellinek
The Problems of Alcohol by E.M.Jellinek
-Effects of Small Amounts of Alcohol on Psychological Functions by E.M.Jellinek
-Heredity of the Alcoholic by E.M.Jellinek
-The Church and Alcohol by Rev. R.L.Bainton
-Alcohol and Aggression by R.S.Banay

Chapter 29 by W. W. the fellowship of Alcoholics Anonymous

Here is another page on aabibliography dot com about this book

till one more page Disease Concept click here

Alcohol Explored by Haggard & Jellinek 1945

The Center of Alcohol Studies is the first interdisciplinary research center devoted to alcohol-use and alcohol-related problems and treatment. Evolving in the late 1930s and 1940s at the Yale University Laboratory of Applied Physiology and Biodynamics which was directed by Yale physician Howard W. Haggard, the Section on Alcohol Studies, headed by E.M. Jellinek, pursued studies of the effects of alcohol on the body which broadened into a wide perspective of alcohol-related problems. The increasing demand for information about alcoholism led the Center to found the Summer School of Alcohol Studies in 1943. In 1944 the Center also began the Yale Plan Clinics, the first ever outpatient facilities for the treatment of alcoholism. The Yale Plan for Business and Industry, forerunner of current-day employee assistance programs, also began in the mid-1940s, in response to requests from business and industry having to cope with employment shortages during World War II. Another of Dr. Haggard's contributions to the field was the founding of the Quarterly Journal of Studies on Alcohol in 1940. Today the Journal of Studies on Alcohol remains a foremost journal in the field and is one of the top ten most cited scientific journals in the nation.

The Center of Alcohol Studies was the leader of the movement to recognize alcoholism as a major public health problem and to have the American Medical Association accept alcoholism as a treatable illness, a policy it formally adopted in the l950s.

In 1962 the Center moved to Rutgers University. It is located on Busch Campus in Smithers Hall, built through the generosity of R. Brinkley Smithers and the Christopher D. Smithers Foundation. Smithers Hall provides offices, conference space, and laboratories for biological and psychological research. Brinkley and Adele Smithers Hall, an addition to the Center which opened in 1992, has expanded office space, laboratory space, and a new library facility.

Over the years, Center faculty have served as consultants and experts for many important organizations and meetings, including the World Health Organization, the National States' Conference on Alcoholism, The Mooreland Commission, The Cooperative Commission on the Study of Alcoholism and the National Council on Alcoholism Blue Ribbon Panels, and helped to develop the federal legislation that created the National Alcohol Research Center Program.

The Center continues its research tradition with research programs and pre- and postdoctoral training in biochemistry, clinical and experimental psychology, neuropharmacology, sociology, public health, education, and prevention.

More info about Jellnick
http://www.roizen.com/ron/jellinek-pres.htm

http://www.roizen.com/ron/rr11.htm