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Elmer Pendell

Elmer Pendell, c. 1917
Elmer Pendell c. 1964

Elmer Pendell (July 28, 1894 – March 18, 1982) was an American eugenicist and sociologist.

Early life

Pendell was born in Waverly, New York to George and Ida Harris PenDell. Pendell received his B.S. from the University of Oregon; M.A. from the University of Chicago; PhD from Cornell University; L.L.B. from George Washington University.

Pendell was a first lieutenant in the infantry in first World War where he was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross and the Purple Heart. Pendell was an economic analyst for the Republican National Committee in 1944. He was then a researcher for Colorado Senator Eugene Milliken.

Pendell taught as a professor of economics at Cornell, Baldwin-Wallace College, Olivet College, Pennsylvania State, University of Arkansas, Oklahoma A&M, Jacksonville State College. Pendell ended his teaching career at Jacksonville State College, retiring in 1965 after teaching there since 1957.

Pendell was a Republican Party candidate for the Alabama House of Representatives in 1966, losing to incumbent Rep. Hugh Merrill, an ally of Governor George Wallace.

Writing

Ashley Montagu, reviewing Pendell's edited volume Society under Analysis (1942), wrote that "none of the authors contributing to the present volume shows any but the merest tangential acquaintance with the physical sciences with which they deal".[1]

Reviewing Pendell's 1945 book Population Roads to Peace or War, co-authored with Guy Irving Burch, Paul H. Landis wrote that "[s]ociologists will … classify it as propaganda rather than an objective scientific statement".[2] The work argued that democracy would be imperilled if population growth did not slow.[3] A 1947 follow-up to the work, similarly titled Human Breeding and Survival: Population Roads to Peace or War, advocated population limitation as a means of reducing social problems such as hunger.[4]

Pendell was the author of seven books on economics. Pendell was buried at Arlington National Cemetery.[5]

Works

References

  1. ^ Montagu, M. F. Ashley (November 1, 1942). "Review of Society Under Analysis". Psychiatry. 5 (4): 603. ISSN 0033-2747. ProQuest document ID 1301422461.
  2. ^ a b Landis, Paul H. (February 1946). "Review of Population Roads to Peace or War". American Sociological Review. 11 (1): 125. doi:10.2307/2085295. JSTOR 2085295.
  3. ^ K., W. (August 12, 1945). "Too Many People in the World". The New York Times. p. 1. ISSN 0362-4331. ProQuest document ID 107051159.
  4. ^ Bashford, Alison (2014). Global Population: History, Geopolitics, and Life on Earth. Columbia University Press. p. 305. doi:10.7312/bash14766. ISBN 9780231519526. JSTOR 10.7312/bash14766.
  5. ^ "Burial detail: Pendell, E L". ANC Explorer. Retrieved January 18, 2024.
  6. ^ F. G. Brooks (December 1942). "Book Reviews: Society under Analysis by Elmer Pendell". BIOS. 13 (4): 269. JSTOR 4604713.
  7. ^ Wilbert E. Moore (June 1952). "Book Reviews: Population on the Loose by Elmer Pendell". The American Economic Review. 42 (3): 481–482. JSTOR 1810440.
  8. ^ Frank H. Hankins (December 1951). "Book Reviews: Human Fertility: The Modern Dilemma. by Robert C. Cook, Julian Huxley; Population on the Loose. by Elmer Pendell, Walter B. Pitkin". Social Forces. 30 (2): 238–240. JSTOR 2571643.
  9. ^ Bentley Glass (March 1946). "Book Reviews: Population Roads to Peace or War. by Guy Irving Burch, Elmer Pendell". The Quarterly Review of Biology. 21 (1): 128. doi:10.1086/395208. JSTOR 2808715.
  10. ^ Lee R. Dice (November–December 1947). "Reviews and Comments: Human Breeding and Survival: Population Roads to Peace or War. by Guy Irving Burch, Elmer Pendell". The American Naturalist. 81 (801): 461–462. doi:10.1086/281556. JSTOR 2457761.