An earlier and less influential book in 1938 was 'The Tyranny of Words,' by Stuart Chase.
Mr. Schlink was the co-founder, with Stuart Chase, of the Consumers' Club, which sought to protect the consumer by publicizing defective and unsafe products.
In 1927, Schlink was co-author, with Stuart Chase, of the bestseller, Your Money's Worth, a warning about sales pressure and misleading advertising.
One of these was Polish philosopher Alfred Korzybski's General semantics, which was espoused in the US by Stuart Chase.
Stuart Chase saw the school grow to 175 boarders and 58 day students.
In the United States, movement towards Plain English began in the 1940s through the pen of Stuart Chase.
Stuart Chase, economist, MIT trained engineer, writer.
Stuart Chase and others have come near to claiming that all abstract words are meaningless, and have used this as a pretext for advocating a kind of political quietism.
As to that, he knew what the late Stuart Chase meant when he wrote that improved technology would in the end cause widespread unemployment and the proletarianization of the middle class.
Stuart Chase, an Army engineer who worked on the study, said core samples should be taken along the entire concrete wall, which he estimated would cost $100,000 to $150,000.