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INDEX

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INDEX

Administration of Health and Social Work De-
sirable? Is an Independent, Foster, 175
Advertising health programs, 185
Aged Poor, The Challenge of the, Epstein, 328
Agencies and schools for social work, 650;
child caring, intake, 83, 88; examinations on
admission, 124; councils of social, in sup-
port and interpretation of professional re-
quirements, 662; executives of, in support
and interpretation of professional require-
ments, 658; public, policy and personnel,
574, 578, 583; social, professional standards
in, 687, 692, 696; value of students in train-
ing to, 687

Agencies for Determining Whether Care Out-
side of Own Home Is Necessary, and If So,
What Kind of Care, Doherty, 88
Agency or the Individual Primarily Respon-
sible for the Professional Development of
the Social Worker? Is the, Van Waters, 696
Agricultural industry, 338, 347

Agriculture: child labor in, 32, 41, 341;
migratory workers in, 347

Alabama: leadership in child labor preven-
tion, 137; child welfare work, 138.
Alien: Bledsoe decision, 603; labor in agri-
culture, 351; smuggling of the, 603; women
and the Cable law, 611

Allegheny County, Pa., administration of
mothers' assistance fund, 243

America: needs to change ways with regard

to immigrant, 593; place of social work in, 3
American Association of Social Workers: in-
dicative of group consciousness, 635, 637;
job analysis, 685; qualifications for mem-
bership, 662

Americanization, Results from the Standpoint
of, Buell, 369; now called immigrant educa-
tion, 616

America's Present Immigration Policy; The
Visa and Quota Laws as They Affect the
Clients of Social Agencies, Razovsky, 599
Analysis, job: in social work, 685; for deter-
mining needs of training for hospital social
work, 672; of positions of graduates of N.Y.
School, 684

Arkansas, county social work, 107

Art of Helping by Changing Habit, The,
Libbey, 276

Art of Helping through the Interview, The,
Clow, 271

Assimilation of immigrants, 72; of Japanese,

619

Association, Japanese, on Pacific Coast, 74
Automobile Migrants, Buffington, 258

Balkans, a danger zone of war, 57
Baltimore, death-rate of Negro children, 227
Banking, cooperative, 319
Barrow, Ralph (paper), 132
Beautification of homes a means of develop-
ing leadership in community, 387
Bedside care and public health nursing, 480
Beet Sugar Industry, Industrial Problems in
the, Doherty, 338

Behavior problems, methods of treatment, 425
Berry, Charles S. (paper), 440
Berry, M. Mabel (paper), 687
Bethlehem, health and hospital survey, 461-82
Beyer, O. S. (paper), 307

Birth control for mentally retarded, 444; rate
of Japanese in California, 70
Bledsoe decision affecting naturalization, 608
Board members: as interpreters of profes-
sional standards, 670; should be chosen for
broad interests, 134

Boston Meets and Supports Its Family Service
Program, How, Pear, 482

Boston, "principles of administration, 667
Bowling Green Neighborhood Assoc. (N.Y.)
activities, 359, 366, 369

Boys: preventive work with, 152; work in
Chicago, 505

Branion, R. C. (paper,) 325

Breckinridge, Sophonisba P. (paper), 290
Brooklyn, health and hospital survey, 461-82
Bruno, Frank J. (paper), 232
Buddhist temple in California, 75
Budget (see also community chest, federation,
etc.) health: in a municipality, 179, 182,
184; "John Doe's," 490

Budget System, The, Wallace, 555
Buell, Bradley (paper), 369, 616

Buffalo, probation work among immigrants,
593

Buffington, Adaline A. (paper), 258
Bureaucracy, 42, 46

Bureaucratic and Political Influences in
Neighborhood Civic Problems, Robbins,

391

Burr, Walter (paper), 396

723

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Cable law, its effect on foreign women, 611
California and the Japanese question, 67
Can the Institution Equip the Girl for Normal
Social Relationships? Smith, 108
Cannon, Mary Antoinette (paper), 672
Carstens, C. C. (paper), 83; principles of
child care promulgated 1915, 95
Case: committee a normal school for com-
munity, 133; committee, a source of edu-
cation, 178; descriptions, 118, 119, 153,
156, 195, 196, 222, 223, 252, 260, 265, 266,
268, 272, 274, 277, 325, 406, 420, 432, 436,
479, 486, 512, 540, 576, 604; history of
Louisville, 460

Case for the Mentally Retarded, The, Berry,

440

Case work: a professional method, 633; basic
concepts of, 677; cost of, 238, 242; for the
immigrant, 589, 593; in a child guidance
clinic, 417, 418; its major responsibility,
233; methods, evolution of, 246, 252; stimu-
lant, social service exchange, 509; the
county as a unit of, 99, 538

Challenge of the Aged Poor, The, Epstein, 328
Chicago, expenses for welfare, 523

Chicago's Program for Meeting Its Recrea-
tion Needs, Seman, 493

Child (see also Div. I, infant, juvenile, etc.):
county programs for care, 95, 99, 103, 139;
caring institutions and agencies, intake, 83,
88; guidance clinics, organization and tech-
nique of, 415, 418, 422, 425; handicapped,
special classes for, 220; health, 216, 221,
226; welfare agencies, interpretation of, 132,
137, 141; welfare boards, 100

Child labor: debate, 27, 34, 50; in beet fields,
341; law, cost of administering, 34, 40;
legislation in Alabama, 137

Children (Div. I), 83; better in school or in
industry? 131; crippled, work for, 120, 570;
dependent, in Philadelphia, 525; health ac-
tivities of agencies, 124, 125, 127, 128; in
habit clinics, 453; institutions for delin-
quent, 108, 117; legislation for placing out,
83; of auto-migrants, 261; sovereign state
should have power to protect, 27, 35; state
programs for crippled, 120; threatened na-
tionalization of, 37, 51; trends of, 431, 435.
440; tuberculous, 190

Children Should Be Received for Care by an
Institution or Agency, and What Is the
Responsibility for Those Not Accepted?
What, Carstens, 83

Children's Trends: Causes and Consequences,
Foster, 431; Van Waters, 435; Berry, 440
Church (see also religion): a force for peace,
58; relations with juvenile eourt, 105
Church, The View of the, O'Ryan, 375
Citizenship: encouraged among aliens, 372,
620; status of foreign women, 611
Civil Service and Personnel Work in Public
Departments, Pershing, 583

Civil service in public institutions, 580
Classes for mentally retarded, 440
Cleveland: expenses for welfare, 523; health
and hospital survey, 461-82; results of
surveys, 666; School of Applied Sciences and
social agencies, 687; study of family case
work, 514

Clinic: a means of developing mental hygiene
program, 400; child guidance, organization,
and technique, 415, 418, 422, 425; children,
study of four hundred, 453; trial, in organ-
ization of community for neuropsychiatric
work, 450; use by child-caring agencies, 127
Clow, Lucia B. (paper), 271
Collective effort increasing, 172

College (labor) movement, 334
Colorado: expenses for welfare, 520; Fuel &
Iron Co., Rockefeller plan of employees' rep-
resentation, 299; merit system of appoint-
ments to state positions, 584; Psychopathic
Hospital activities, 407, 414

Colorado Psychopathic Hospital, The; Its
Community and Statewide Functions,
Ebaugh, 407

Colorado Springs: study of auto migrants,
259; study of tuberculous, 192
Common sense and simplicity urged in organ-
ization of a community program, 450
Commons, John R., quoted, 65
Communicable disease study, Louisville, 466
Communicable Disease Control, New De-
velopments in, Lanza, 204; Humphrey, 208;
Gloyn, 210; Flickwir, 213

354;

Community (see also Div. VI): and the im-
migrant, 616; centers, study of results, 357;
centers, views of the church, 375; chest, of
advantage of child welfare agencies, 136;
chest, responsibility in maintaining good
case work, 240, 667; child welfare work in-
terpreted to, 132, 137, 141; economic aspects
affecting democratic organization,
fund budget in 200 cities, 142; functions of
a psychopathic hospital, 407; medical case
history, 461; organization, leadership, and
strategy in, 385, 391; organization, philos-
ophy of, 396; organization of neuropsy-
chiatric work, 444; psychiatry and the
offender in the, 543, 548, 552; results of
organization of, 366, 369, 375; rural ideal in
organization, 396; work, prognostications
of, 681

Community Agencies and the Clinic, Lynde,
418

Community Organization for Child Guidance
Clinic Work, Marcus, 415

Concept, basic, of case work, 677

Consumers' cooperation and the elimination
of poverty, 313

Continuous Health Supervision, Murphy, 125
Convalescents in hospitals, 476

1

Coolidge, President, quoted, 36; reference, 52,
60, 62
Cooperation and social reconstruction, 311;

consumers' and abolition of poverty, 313; in
health and social work, 167, 171, 175; in in-
dustry, 298, 302, 307; of family service
agencies in Boston, 482; of social agencies
and training schools, 692; of various branch-
es of social work, 84, 90, 91; popular, in
state social work, 567; producers' and indus-
trial democracy, 316; through social service
exchange, 509; using county as unit, 538
Cooperative banking the key to economic
progress, 319

Cooperative Movement, The, Coyle, 311

Cooperative Processes, Growth and Develop-
ment of, Hall, 509; Kingsley, 515
Constitution of U.S.: debate on proposed
Twentieth Amendment, 27, 34, 50; guaran-
ties of, 6, 8, 9, 20, 24, 28; social work's basis,
4; proposed twentieth amendment to, de-
feat of, due to intolerance, 21

Correlation of Public and Private Work for
the Handicapped, Branion, 325
Cost of administering child labor law, 34, 40;
of care of crippled children, 571; of crime,
494; of health work, 179; of hospital care,
472; of living in Philadelphia, 530; of wel-
fare work, 515-23

Cost of Maintaining Good Case Work in a
Public Agency, Vaile, 238; Porter, 242
Cotton, Thomas L. (paper), 360
Councils of Social Agencies and Federations,
By (in support and interpretation of pro-
fessional requirements in social work),
Davis, 662

County as a Unit for Administration of Local
Public Social Services, The, Johnson, 538
County Programs of Child Care, Curry, 95;
Hall, 99; Gibson, 103

County as a unit of administration, 243
Courts (the immigrant), In the, Murphy, 593
Crime (see also Div. II): among immigrants,

594; caused by social conditions, 596; cost
of, 494; prevalence and growth of, 44
Crime in Our Modern Civilization, The
Existence of, Gillin, 148

Criminals (see also offender), youthful age of,
494

Crippled children, state programs for, 120, 570
Crippled Children in Ohio, Work for, Lat-
timer, 570

Crutcher, Hester B. (paper), 422

Culbert, Jane F. (summary of meeting), 130
Cultural Values in the Social Service Curric-
ulum, Wood, 643

Curriculum, of social service training, 643,
650, 692

Curry, H. Ida (paper), 95

Czechoslovakia and human welfare, 64

Data, uniform, social and publications, 560
Davis, Otto W. (paper), 662

Deardorff, Neva R. (paper), 525, 636
Death-rate reduced in New York City, 367
Defectives, production should be checked, 169
Definition: community organization, 682;
diagnosis, 416; family, 235; mental hygiene
movement, 401; method, 255; profession,
662; social group, 696; social work, 79
Delinquency and the School, Van Waters, 435
Delinquent children, institutions for, 108, 117
Delinquents and Correction (Division II), 148
Democratic organization of community, eco-
nomic aspects of, 354

Denver, expenses for welfare, 523; experience
with smallpox, 209; study of auto migrants,
259; study of migratory tuberculous, 194
Departmental requests for support of public
welfare work, 556

Deportation bill pending, 605

Detroit, special classes for delinquent, 441
Developing the Social Program, Hall, 99
Diagnosis defined, 416

Difficulties of running an institution humane-
ly, 117

Direct and Indirect Methods in the Treat-
ment of Behavior Problems, Lowrey, 425
Disabled (see handicapped)

Discipline, parental, necessary in formation of
habits, 454

Disease (see also health, etc.), decline of, 216
Dispensary, care, cost of, 181: traffic, 475
Divorce, a problem of marriage, 285; and mar-
riage laws, international, needed, 606
Doherty, C. W. (paper), 338
Doherty, Rev. John (paper), 88
Donors, as interpreters of professional stand-
ards, 669

Dramatization of social work, 135
Dublin, Mrs. L. I. (paper), 216
Dutchess Bleachery, partnership plan de-
scribed, 299

Dutchess County (N.Y.) program for child
care, 98

Dynamics of Social Work, The, Nelson, 14

Ebaugh, Franklin G., M.D. (paper), 407
Economic Aspects of the Community That
Determine the Nature and Extent of Com-
prehensive Democratic Organization, Gil-
lin, 354

Economic processes, cooperative, 232; stand-
ards, minimum, a guaranty of Constitu-
tion, 6

Economists' criticisms of social work, 646
Economy, a danger in institutional work, 114

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