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Preface

This webpage reproduces a section of


The Nationality Problem
of the Soviet Union

by Roman Smal-Stocki

published by
The Bruce Publishing Company
Milwaukee, 1952

The text is in the public domain.

This page has been carefully proofread
and I believe it to be free of errors.
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please let me know!

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Introduction

 p. ix  Acknowledgment

We regarded as necessary for the elucidation of all questions involved in the nationality problem of the Soviet Union to submit before the reader numerous quotations from publications of other scholars and from articles of the current Soviet press. Our acknowledgments to publishers and authors for the material which they have kindly permitted us to use are therefore extensive.

We are indebted to Simon and Schuster, Inc., for permission to use quotations from Wendell L. Willkie, One World; to the Dial Press, Inc., for quotations from William Mandel, A Guide to the Soviet Union; to the Philosophical Library for quotations from Sir Arthur Keith, A New Theory of Human Evolution, and from Joseph S. Roucek, Slavonic Encyclopedia; to Barnes & Noble, Inc., for quotations from Walter R. Kirchner, Outline History of Russia; to Harcourt, Brace and Company for quotations from Corliss Lamont, The Peoples of the Soviet Union; to the Horizon Press, Inc., and the author for quotations from Corliss Lamont, The Independent Mind; to the Harvard University Press for quotations from Samuel Hazzard Cross, Slavic Civilization Through the Ages; to Columbia University, Department of Slavic Languages, for quotations from N. Troubetzkoy, The Common Slavic Element in Russian Culture, edited by Leon Stilman, Columbia Slavic Studies, New York, 1950; to the Macmillan Company for quotations from Edward H. Carr, Nationalism and After; to the Oxford University Press for quotations from Julian Towster, Political Power in the U. S. S. R., 1917‑1947; to Constantin R. Jurgela, History of the Lithuanian Nation; to Lancelot Lawton for quotations from Ukrainia: Europe's Greatest Problem; to Duell Sloan & Pearce, Inc., for quotations from Hede Massing, This Deception; to E. P. Dutton & Company, Inc., for quotations from Nicholas S. Timasheff, The Great Retreat.

For permission to use quotations from articles we are indebted to Time, the weekly news magazine, courtesy of Time, copyright by Time, Inc., 1948‑1949‑1950; to The New York Times Magazine and the author Sidney Hook, from "Should Communists Be Permitted to Teach?"; to The New Leader, from an article by William E. Bohn; to The American Mercury from R. de Toledano, "Grave Diggers of America"; to The Saturday Review of Literature from a book review by R. Jakobson; to The Ukrainian Quarterly; to The Eastern Quarterly; and to the Plain Talk, Inc., Mr. Isaac Don Levine for the reprint of the article by Prof. A. P. Coleman, "Munich in the Academy."

Above all we are indebted to The Joint Committee on Slavic Studies, appointed by the American Council of Learned Societies and the Social Science Research Council, for all the quotations from the current Soviet press given in the translations from The Current Digest of the Soviet Press, copyright by The Joint Committee on Slavic Studies.


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