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Columbia Uhin Press 4-18-41
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
A. GENERAL SESSIONS
Does Social Work Promote Social Progress? (Presidential Address), Allen T. Burns.
Organization of Rural Social Forces, E. C. Lindeman
Educational Ideals and Public Welfare, L. D. Coffman
Public Welfare and Public Schools, Henry C. Morrison
Industrial and Economic Problems-Introductory Statement, Sophonisba P. Breckinridge
What's on the Worker's Mind? Whiting Williams
Organizing Immigrant and Unskilled Labor, Sidney Hillman.
The Relation of Social Service to the Church (Conference Sermon), Charles H. Brent
The Community, Maker of Men, Joseph Lee
Case-Work Methods in Legal Education, Joel D. Hunter.
After-Care for Industrial Compensation Cases, Frances Perkins
Making Health Knowledge the Property of the Community, Haven Emerson
Our Nation's Obligation to Her Children, Julia C. Lathrop
Our Duty to the Children of Europe, Homer Folks
DIVISION I. CHILDREN
B. SECTION MEETINGS
37
41
47
55
58
63
68
71
B. Prohibition and Crime, John L. Gillin
C. The Treatment of Women Offenders in the Municipal Court of Philadelphia, Leon
Stern.
PAGE
133
136
141
A. The National Health Council-Organization and Program, Donald B. Armstrong
B. The National Child Health Council-A Council for Co-ordinating Child Health
Activities, Courtenay Dinwiddie
Some Activities of the American Red Cross in Relation to Health:
A. The Social Significance of Health Centers, Philip S. Platt
B. The Co-operative Health Plan of the New York County Chapter, American Red
Cross, George R. Bedinger.
C. The Public Health Nursing Program of the American Red Cross, Elizabeth G. Fox.
Social Significance of Child Health Work:
A. The Psychology of Health Habits, J. Mace Andress
B. What State Divisions of Child Hygiene Are Doing to Promote Child Health, Ada E.
Schweitzer.
C. The Relation of Hospital Social Service to Child Health Work, Ida M. Cannon
Government Departments in Their Relation to Health:
A. The Place of Nutrition in Bringing the Undernourished Child up to Normal, E. V.
McCollum and Nina Simmonds
B. Where Should Nutrition Service Next Be Centered, in the School or in the Child's
Own Family? Mrs. Ira Couch Wood
194
C. The Modern Health Crusade and the Nutrition Movement, Charles M. DeForest
DIVISION IV. PUBLIC AGENCIES AND INSTITUTIONS
Can Prisons Be Made Self-Supporting and Inmates Be Paid Adequate Wages at the
Same Time? W. Richmond Smith
.
State Public Welfare Programs in Relation to Children:
A. The Articulation of Service of Juvenile Courts, Compulsory Attendance and Child
Labor Laws, Training Schools, Placing Agencies and Other Bodies, under a
Controlling and Directing State Department, Edward N. Clopper .
B. Remedial Work for Rural Children, Frances Sage Bradley
C. Is There a Dividing Line between the Cases Which the Public Agency Should Take Over, and Those Which Should Be Handled by Private Agencies? Robert W. Kelso
Relationship between State and Local Governments in the Development of Public Welfare
Service:
A. The Present Status of Legislation, William Hodson.
B. The New State Board Movement in the South-Cause, Extent, Condition, and
Future, L. H. Putnam
The Relation of State Institutions and Agencies to Private Institutions:
A. A Redefining of the Proper Relation of State Boards of Control to Boards of Educa-
tion, Child Welfare, and the Like, Burdette G. Lewis
202
200
212
215
218
222
224
A. Problems of Administration, Joel D. Hunter
B. The Present Status of Mothers' Pensions Administration, Emma O. Lundberg.
Discussion, C. C. Carstens
D. Analysis of Processes in the Records of Family Case Working Agencies, Virginia P.
Robinson
242
247
249
253
A. Application of Mental Tests in Family Case Work, William Healy
B. Possibilities of Home Supervision of Moron Women, Elisabeth Dutcher
268
The Responsibility of a Family Agency at a Time of Industrial Readjustment, Stockton
Raymond
C. Extra Medical Service in the Management of the Misconduct Problems of Children,
M. E. Kenworthy
272
276
281
DIVISION VI. INDUSTRIAL AND ECONOMIC PROBLEMS
Women's Work and Wages:
The Women's Bureau and Standards of Women's Work, Mary Anderson
Child Labor:
285
A. Work Opportunities and School Training for Coal-Miners' Children, Ellen Nathalie
Matthews
287
B. Enforcement of Physical Standards for Working Children, George P. Barth
C. Notes of Street Trades Department and Milwaukee Newsboys' Republic, Perry O.
Powell.
B. Public Employment Offices in Relation to Unemployment, F. S. Deibler
Lessons Learned from the Government Experience in Housing, Harlean James.
Standards of Life:
A. Public Control of the Packing Industry, a Factor in Reducing the Cost of Living,
Mrs. Edward P. Costigan.
B. Recent Developments in the Problem of Negro Labor, T. Arnold Hill
DIVISION VII. THE LOCAL COMMUNITY
Standards in Local Community Work, Robert A. Woods.
Extent of the Housing Shortage in the United States: Its Economic and Social Effects,
Resources Available in Dealing with It, John Ihlder
The Local Community in the Far East, Robert A. Woods
The Milwaukee Recreation System, Dorothy Enderis
The Social Revolution Taking Place in the Orient and Its Call to the American Social
Worker, J. S. Burgess.
331
336
341
The Library's Relation to Neighborhood and Community Work, Delia G. Ovitz.
346
348
DIVISION VIII. MENTAL HYGIENE
Mental Hygiene Problems of Normal Childhood and Youth:
A. The Elementary School and the Individual Child, Esther Loring Richards.
B. Mental Hygiene Problems of Normal Adolescence, Jessie Taft
351
Mental Hygiene Problems of Subnormal Children:
C. The Significance of Mental Hygiene for the Teacher and the Normal Child, Frank-
wood E. Williams
Mental Hygiene Problems of Maladjusted Children:
A. In a Public Clinic, A. L. Jacoby.
B. In Institutions, Herman M. Adler
Educational Value to the Community of Mental Hygiene Agencies:
A. The Psychopathic Hospital, William F. Lorenz
B. Psychiatric Social Work, Mary Jarrett
C. Mental Health Clinics, H. Douglas Singer.
Mental Hygiene in Education:
A. What Teachers Want to Know about Mental Hygiene, William H. Burnham .
B. How Mental Hygiene May Help in the Solution of School Problems, Eleanor H.
Johnson
C. Speech Defects in School Children, Smiley Blanton.
371
375
379
381
385
390
395
401
DIVISION IX.
ORGANIZATION OF SOCIAL FORCES
The Board Member-What Is He?
What Are His Responsibilities? How Can He Be
Endowments: How to Leave Wisely $25,000 to $1,000,000, Hastings H. Hart
420
427
The Central Council of Social Agencies: Actual Accomplishments, Francis H. McLean
Discussion, Elwood Street
Job and Salary Analysis in Social Work. Classification and Description of Positions in
Cleveland's Social Agencies, Raymond Clapp.
B. The Present Outlook for Immigration from Jugo-Slavia, Branko Lazarevitch
C. The Outlook with Reference to Jewish Immigration, Hugo Pam.
460
463
Port Problems in Europe and the United States, Ruth Crawford
465
The Schooling of the Immigrant:
A. Elementary Adult Education for Native- and Foreign-Born, Ruby Baughman.
B. The Home Teacher Experiment in Springfield, Illinois, Geneva M. Bane
471
477
C. The Place of the Foreign Language Press in an Educational Program, Josephine
Roche
481
Cultural Aspects of Immigration:
A. The Cultural Contributions of the Immigrant and a Policy of Incorporation,
Julius Drachsler.