THIS REPORT is based upon an investigation of the relationship between values and attitudes of adolescents, where the term values signifies a gen eralized and habitual system operating within per sonality, and the term attitudes refers to predis positions to actions growing out of such a value system. The tests utilized in the study were the California F-Scale and the Allport-Vernon Study of Values (Revised Version). It was hypothesized that a positive correlation would exist between the F Scale scores and the economic, political and re ligious subscale scores respectively on the Allport Vernon. It was also hypothesized that a negative correlation would exist between the F-Scale scores and the theoretical, aesthetic and social subscale scores respectively. Gough (6) found a positive correlation between F-Scale scores and religious subscale scores. Since the F-Scale in theory draws upon facets of authoritarian personality and since the political subscale score on the Allport-Vernon indicates striving political power, one might logically anticipate a positive relationship between the two. Since one of the components of the authoritarian syndrome as found by Adorno, et al., (1), is antij intraception, defined as opposition to the subjec tive, the imaginative or the tender-minded in favor of the useful, one might also anticipate a positive correlation between the F-Scale and the economic or practical subscale scores. A negative correla tion between the F-Scale and the theoretical sub scale is hypothesized because the two would seem to be in logical conflict with each other, the theo retical subscale being based upon a search for truth (2), and the authoritarian syndrome includ ing superstition and stereotypy. Again, since the authoritarian is anti-intraceptive, a negative cor relation with aesthetic (subjective) interests is hypothesized. Assuming that the social subscale is a measure of love fellow man, one might predict that this subscale would correlate negatively with the F Scale.