Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB
[graphic]

Education: a function of government to ad-
vance human welfare, 62; a function of
juvenile court, 162; as promoter of morality,
45; by case conferences, 178; for mental
hygiene program, 400, 430; necessary for
support of health work, 184; necessary in
social and health work, 177; of community
to use trained service, 639; of immigrants,
616; of social workers (see Div. XI), 629; of
taxpayers in social work, 239; of the public
in social work, 102; of workers, 334; of
crippled children, 571, 573; through public-
ity, 124

Eddy Sherwood (address), 57

Effect of the Cable Law on the Citizenship
Status of Foreign Women, The, Roche, 611
Eight-hour day a result of employees' rep-
resentation, 300

Ellwood, Charles A. (paper), 18
Emerson, Haven (paper), 179, 460
Employees' Representation and Workers' In-
itiative, Selekman, 298

English, taught to immigrants, 372, 620
Environmental Handicaps of Four Hundred
Habit Clinic Children, Reynolds, 453
Epstein, Abraham (paper), 328

Equipment Needed by the Medical Social
Worker, Cannon, 672

Estimates, under budget system, 558
Evaluation of case work methods, 246, 252,
283

Evolution, intolerance of, 22

Examination, mental, of juvenile offenders,
543

Examinations on Admission, Bauer, 124

Executives of Social Agencies, By (in support

and interpretation of professional social
work), Jackson, 658

Facts of the Case, The, Whitney, 189
Family, The (Div. IV), 232

Family and the Law, Breckinridge, 291
Family and venereal disease, 204; definition,
235; foster home agencies, 531; incomes in
Philadelphia, 528; relations affected by
Cable law, 614; relief in Philadelphia, 530;
service program in Boston, 482; ties of
delinquent girls in institutions, 116; wel-
fare agency, responsible for migrant tuber-
culous? 197; welfare work for immigrants,
589

Family Social Work, Bruno, 232

Fearless criticism necessary to social progress,
136; leadership needed, 136
Federal appropriations for welfare, 516; prob-
lems of naturalization, 607, 611
Federated financing, prospects for future, 142
Federations in support and interpretation of
professional requirements in social work,
662

Feebleminded, functions of institutions for,
576

Field work for students of social work, 656,
695

Flexner, Abraham, reference, 629
Flickwir, A. H. (paper), 213
Foisie, F. P. (paper), 302
Foster, Edith (paper), 175
Foster, Sybil (paper), 431

Foster homes, for children, 84, 88, 531
Franklin County, Cooperative Creamery Milk
Clinic, 315; educational work, 335
Franklin, Paul (paper), 366

Functions of the Institutions of the State, The
True, Kelso, 574

Gebhart, John C. (paper), 216

Gentlemen's Agreement in Japanese immigra-
tion, 67, 70

Georgia, report of state department com-
mended, 563

Germany, government and industry, 64
Germany-France, a danger zone of war, 57
Gibson, Mrs. Katharine (paper), 103
Gillin, John L. (paper), 148, 354, 565
Gilman, Robbins (paper), 152, 385
Girls, institutions for delinquent, 108
Gloyne, L. B. (paper), 210
-Goals for Wanderers, Hill, 264

God, an antidote for dangers in social work, 16
Goldsmith, Ethel (paper), 543
Government (see also federal, state, county,

public, etc.), as a help in advancing human
welfare, 62

Great Western Sugar Co., industrial problems
of, 339

Green, George A. (paper), 607

Group Approach, The, Cotton, 360

Growth and Development of Cooperative
Processes, Hall, 509; Kingsley, 515
Gruenberg, Sidonie M. (paper), 221
Gulick, Sidney L. (quoted), 66

Habit (see also behavior): changing a means
of helping, 276; clinics study of four hun-
dred children, 453; of preschool child, 221
Hall, Bessie E. (paper), 509

Hall, Charles F. (paper), 99
Handicapped, The: Lowrey, 324; Branion,
325

Handicapped children, by environment, 453;
children, special classes for, 220; correla-
tion of work for, 325; reaction on personal-
ity, 324

Handley, Virginia B. (paper), 137

Harlem, N.Y., social conditions among
Negroes, 230

[ocr errors]

Harris, Franklin S. (paper), 379

Health (Div. III), 167

Health Activities of Child Caring Agencies:
Bauer, 124; Murphy, 125; Walker, 127;
Kepecs, 128

Health Agent in Social Work, The, Kingsley,
170

Health Budgets in Municipal Administration

and How Social Workers Can Help, Emer-
son, 179; Norton, 182; Walker, 184
Health conditions in Boston, 484; examina-
tions, periodical, 218; federal appropriations
for, 516-23; of children, 216, 221, 226; pro-
moted by cooperative movement, 315;
public, work tending toward overpopula-
tion, 169; standards, a guaranty of Constitu-
tion, 8

Health and Hospital Surveys: Louisville's
Case History, 1924, Emerson, 460

Health of the School Child, The, Dublin and
Gebhart, 216

Health Training of the Preschool Child, Gru-
enberg, 221

Health Work for Negro Children, Washing-
ton, 226

Heredity responsible for need of institutional
care, 168

Hill, Ruth (paper), 264

History of democratic organization, 354
Hodson William (paper), 629
Holidays, national, celebrations a means of
developing community leadership, 387
Holmes, Oliver Wendell, interview with, 170
Home (see also family): and personality de-
viations, 431; as habit-forming agency, 454
Homes at cost made possible by cooperative
movement, 315; of Philadelphia, children in,
525

Hospital, psychiatric, its responsibility as part
of mental hygiene program, 400, 404, 407,
411; federal appropriations for, 516-23;
social workers, training needed, 672; survey
in Louisville, 460

Houston, its smallpox problem, 213
How the Agencies and the Schools May Co-
operate in the Development of the Curric-
ulum, White, 692

How to Secure a Continuing and Progressive
Policy in Public Social Work and Institu-
tions, Potter, 578

Howett, Harry H. (paper), 102

Hull, Ida L. (paper), 589

Human welfare and the state, 61
Humphrey, Ethel (paper), 208

Hygiene (see sanitation, mental, social, etc.)

Illinois, expenses for welfare, 520
Illness, a cause of dependence, 175
Immigrant, The (Div. X), 589

Immigrant as a Factor in Social Work, The:
Hull, 589; Murphy, 593

Immigrant in the Community, The, Buell, 616
Immigrant in Industry, The, Levin, 626
Immigrants: Americanization of, 369, 617;
as affected by visa and quota laws, 599;
assimilation by group method, 360; in
family case work, 589; in the courts, 593; in
tropical countries awaiting entry into the
United States, 603; naturalization prob-
lems, 608, 611

Immigration: America's policy, 599; Jap-
anese, 66; laws, 599, 608, 611, 621
Immortality, an antidote for dangers in social
work, 17

Income of Public Health Nursing Association,
Louisville, 479

Individual, how far responsible for professional
development of social work? 696

Individualism and the Organization of Neuro-
psychiatric Work in a Community, Meyer,

444

Individualistic theory in assimilation of im-
migrants reviewed, 361

Individualizing of children, the key to develop-
ment, 87

Industrial and Economic Problems (Div. V),
298

Industrial Problems in the Beet Sugar Indus-
try, Doherty, 338

Industrial Relations, New Developments in:
Selekman, 298; Foisie, 302; Beyer, 307
Industry, in agriculture, 338, 347
Industry, The Immigrant in, Levin, 626
Infant mortality, decrease in, 167
Initiative, The development of Social, Gil-
man, 385

Initiative, of workers in industry, 298
Institutions, examinations for admission, 124;
for dependent children, 531; intake of, 83,
88; policy and personnel, 574, 578, 583; re-
formatory for juveniles, 108, 548

Institutions for Delinquent Children, Smith,
108; Van Waters, 117

Insurance, industrial for beet workers, 346
Intake of Child Caring Institutions and
Agencies: Carstens, 83; Doherty, 88
Interdependence of men, 14
International Community Center described,
365

Interpreting Child Welfare Work to the Com-
munity; The Private Agency, Barrow, 132
Interpretation of child welfare work, 132, 137,
141; of professional requirements in social
work, 658, 662, 668

Interpretation to the Community of a Public
Agency, The, Handley, 137

Interpretation and Support of Public Welfare
Work: Wallace, 555; Lundberg, 560; Gillin,
565

[graphic]

Interpreters, Who Are Our? Tousley, 668
Interstitial renovation, 171

Interview, a means of helping, 271

Intolerance, The Menace of Racial and Reli-
gious, Ellwood, 18

Investigation of intake of institutions and
agencies, 89, 90

Iowa: care of crippled children, 122; social
work in Webster County, 538; work of State
Psychopathic Hospital, 402

Jackson, James F. (paper), 658
Japan, a danger zone of war, 58

Japanese: associations on Pacific Coast, 74;
schools, 74; in agriculture, 69, 339

Japanese Problem, Social Aspects of the, Starr,
66

Jewish work for children in Philadelphia, 535
Job Analysis in Social Work, Klein, 685
Johnson, Wesley (paper), 538
Judges: a power for good in neighborhood,
392; of juvenile courts should have scientific
attainments, 165

Juvenile Court of the Future, The, Lindsey,
159

Juvenile court workers in relation to county
agencies, 104

Juvenile Offender, The, Goldsmith, 543
Juveniles in Reformatory Institutions, Whipp,
548

Kansas, the smallpox problem, 211

Karpf, M. J. (paper), 650

Kelso, Robert W. (paper), 574

Kempshall, Anna (paper), 677
Kepecs, Jacob (paper), 128

Kingdom, human, 52, 57

Kingsley, Sherman C. (paper), 171, 515
Klein, Philip (paper), 685

Labor (see also child) cooperative banks, 323;
education for workers, 334; Japanese on
Pacific Coast, 69; longshore in Seattle, 302;
of families in beet fields, 340; organized
cooperation with railroad management, 307;
unions as affecting immigrants, 628; United
States Department of, interpretation of
naturalization laws, 607

Labor College Movement, The, Lackland, 334
Lackland, G. S. (paper), 334
Lanza, A. J., M.D. (paper), 204
Lattimer, Gardner (paper), 570

Law (see also legislation) and the family, 290;
child labor, 27, 34, 50, 137; for care of crip-
pled children, 121, 571; marriage and
divorce, 284, 290, 606; naturalization, 607,
611; New York budget system, 558; vac-
cination, 211; visa and quota, 599; work-
men's compensation, 489

Leadership and Strategy in Community Or-
ganization: Gilman, 385; Robbins, 391
League of Nations: a force for peace, 59;
America's entry into, 59; work of, 60
Legal Aid work in Boston, 491

Legal Aspects of the Indigent Migratory Con-
sumptive Problem, Tobey, 200

Legislation: dangers of too much, 43; effective
in case of desertion, 234; for aged poor, 330;
for child care, 99; for children born out of
wedlock, 294; for placing out of children, 83;
for women in family life, 291; multiplies
crimes, 148, 149

Leisure (see also recreation): a Constitutional
guaranty, 9; dangers of, 44; resulting from
eight-hour work day creates need for
recreation, 494

Levin, Samuel (paper), 626
Libbey, Betsey (paper), 276
Lindsey, Ben B. (paper), 159
Lloyd, Ruth (paper), 411
Longevity, an inheritance, 167
Longshore labor in Seattle, 302

Louisville, health and hospital survey, 460
Love, the mainspring of social work, 10, 57
Lovejoy, Owen R. (address), 27, 50
Lowrey, Lawson G., M.D. (paper), 324, 425
Lummis, Jessie D. (paper), 194

Lundberg, Emma O. (paper), 560

Lynchburg, Va., death-rate of Negro children,

227

Lynde, Edward D. (paper), 418

Mallory, Mrs. H. S. (paper), 404
Marcus, Grace F. (paper), 415

Marriage and divorce laws, international,
needed, 606

Marriage License Bureau, When People Ap-
ply at a, Mudgett, 284

Massachusetts: amount collected by proba-
tion officers, 489; care of crippled children,
123; mothers' aid laws, 489; state board re-
ports, 562; study of handicapped children,
453; workmen's compensation law, 489
Medical case history, 461; inspection of school
children, 217; social service training for,
694; social worker, equipment needed, 672
Melish, Rev. John H. (sermon), 52
Meninger, Karl A., M.D. (paper), 552
Mental (see Psychiatry, Psychology, etc.) ex-
aminations of juvenile offenders,
hygiene and teachers, 426;, movement de-
fined, 401; movement, history of, 444
Mental Hygiene (Div. VII), 400
Mentally retarded, the care of, 440

Message to Take Home with You, A, Ritter,

71

Methods (see also technique): definition, 255;
evaluation of case work, 246, 252; of
popular publicity, 568; treatment of be-
havior problems, 425

Mexicans in agriculture, 70, 341, 351
Meyer, Adolf, M.D. (paper), 444
Michigan State Psychopathic Hospital, work
of, 405

Migrants: automobile, 258, 270; in agricul-
ture, 348; tuberculous, 189, 194, 200
Migratory Workers in Agriculture, Shields,
347

Minimum economic standards, 6; health
standards, 8; wage law for women, 62
Minneapolis, work of child guidance clinic, 442
Minnesota, attempt to remedy defects in mar-

riage law, 285; program for child care, 95,
99; program for crippled children, 120;
smallpox problem, 212; work for disabled,
327

Minors (see also Div. I. child, juvenile, etc.),
preventive work with, 152

Montana legislation for aged poor, 330, 333
Morbidity in New York City and San Fran-
cisco, 464

Mortality in New York City and San Fran-
cisco, 464

Mothers' Assistance Fund, administration of,
in Pennsylvania, 243

Mudgett, Mildred D. (paper), 284

Municipal authority's responsibility: to mi-
gratory consumptive, 194; in health work,
179, 182, 184

Murphy, Joseph P. (paper), 593

Murphy, Mary E. (paper), 125

National Child Labor Survey in Alabama, 138
National Conference of Charities and Cor-
rection, early reports of, 560

National Conference of Social Work, program
for cities and towns proposed, 78
National Negro Health Week, ref., 230
Nationalities, distribution of, in Erie Co.,
N.Y., 594

Naturalization problems, 601, 607, 611
Negro: child health, 226; intolerance, 26;
social conditions in Harlem, 230
Neighborhood and Community Life (Div. VI),
354

Nelson, Rev. Frank (address), 14

Neuropsychiatric work in community, 444
Nevada, legislation for aged poor, 330
New Developments in Communicable Disease
Control: Lanza, 204; Humphrey, 208;
Gloyne, 210; Flickwir, 213

New York, care of crippled children, 123;
expenses for welfare, 520; state board re-
ports, 562

New York City: expenses for welfare, 423;
health and hospital survey, 461, 482
Newspapers, presentation of social work, 565
North Carolina program for child care, 97;
reports of state board commended, 563
Norton, W. J. (presidential address), 3;
(paper), 182

Nuisance in neighborhood, used as means of
developing civic leadership, 389
Nursing, public health, 480

Objectives of the Professional Organization,
Deardorff, 636

Observable Results of the Organization of
the Local Community: Franklin, 366;
Buell, 369; O'Ryan, 375

Occupational therapy in psychopathic hos-
pital, 409

Offender, psychiatry and the, 543, 548, 552,
597

Ohio: care of crippled children, 121, 570; ex-
penses for welfare, 520; plan for work with
handicapped, 325

Opportunity, a constitutional guaranty, 9
Oregon, migratory agricultural workers, 350
Organization of neuropsychiatric work in
community, 444; professional objectives of,
636;

Organization of Social Forces (Div. VIII), 460
Organization and technique in Child Guidance
Clinic Work: Marcus, 415; Lynde, 418;
Crutcher, 422; Lowrey, 425

Organized Labor's Cooperation with Railroad
Management, Beyer, 307

Organizer's Analysis, The, Franklin, 366
Orphans, dependent, care of, 85
O'Ryan, Rev. William F. (paper), 375

Pacific Steamship Co., stabilizing of longshore
labor, 303

Parents: and health habits, 222; and person-
ality problems, 432; and the forming of
habits, 457, 459

Participation in community activities by im-
migrants, 371, 374

Peace movements throughout world, 59
Pear, William H. (paper), 482
Pensions, federal appropriation for, 517
Pennsylvania: administration of mothers'
assistance fund, 243; expense for welfare,
520: laws for old-age pensions, 330; policies
in public institutions, 580
Pershing, James H. (paper), 583
Personal service, under budget system, 559
Personality, reaction on, of physical handicap,
324

Personality Deviations and Their Relation to
the Home, Foster, 431

[graphic]

Personnel in public institutions and agencies,
574, 578, 583

Pettit, Walter W. (paper), 681

Philadelphia: clinics for Negroes, 228; health
of Negro children, 230; housing for Negroes,
228; expenses for welfare, 523

Philadelphia as a Provider for Dependent
Children, Deardorff, 525

Philosophy of Community Organization, The:
The Rural Community Ideal, Burr, 396
Phoenix, Ariz., study of migrating tubercu-
lous, 192

Picture brides (Japanese), 71

Play: facilities in Chicago, 493; need of, 435,
494, 551

Policeman's power for good in neighborhood,

[blocks in formation]

Policy and Personnel in Public Institutions
and Agencies: Kelso, 574; Potter, 578;
Pershing, 583

Politician, professional, what the social work-
er can learn from him, 394

Politics, in community civic problems, 391;
in public social work, 575, 578
Poolrooms in settlements, 155

Popular Presentation of Public Social Work,
Gillin, 565

Population: of Boston, by race and nation-

ality, 484; rate of growth in Louisville, 463
Porter, Rose (paper), 242

Portland, Ore., seasonal employment com-
mission, 263

Potter, Ellen C., M.D. (paper), 578

Poverty: a cause of bad habits of children,

454; elimination of, by consumer's coopera-
tion, 313

Prejudice (see also intolerance), racial and
religious, an approach to understanding, 379
Preschool Child, Health Training of the,
Gruenberg, 221

Present Naturalization Law at Work, The,
Green, 607

Presentation of public social work, 565

Preventive Work with Minors, Gilman, 152
Principles of public presentation of social
work, 560

Prisoner: function of prison with reference
to, 576; psychiatry and the, 548
Private agency (child welfare), interpreted to
community, 132

Private and public agencies, correlation of, 133

Probation, The Relation of, to Other County
Social Work, Gibson, 103

Probation: officers as psychologists, 545;
among immigrants, 595

Problems of a Permanent Child Guidance
Clinic,, The, Crutcher, 422

Problems of Naturalization: Green, 607;
Roche, 611

Producers' cooperation the way to industrial
democracy, 316

Profession: definition, 662; is social work a?
629, 696

Professional development of social worker:
responsibility for, 696; organization, objec-
tives of, 636; needs, studies of, 672, 677, 681,
685; requirements in social work, support
and interpretation of, 658, 662, 668
Professional Standards and Education (Div.
XI), 629

Professional Standards in Social Agencies:
Berry, 687; White, 692; Van Waters, 696
Prognostications in the Field of Community
Work, Some, Pettit, 681

Program for county: in child care, 95, 99, 103;
for crippled children, 120; for family service,
how met and supported, 482; for mental
hygiene, 400, 404, 407, 411; for recreation
in Chicago, 493; for social work in cities
and towns, 78

Provincialism, a danger to social workers, 20
Psychiatric social work and a mental hygiene

program, 411; treatment, in reformatory
institution, 548; work for immigrants, 597
Psychiatric Social Work in Relation to a State
Mental Hygiene Program, Lloyd, 411
Psychiatry and the Offender in the Com-
munity: Goldsmith, 543; Whipp, 548;
Meninger, 552

Psychiatry and the Prisoner, Meninger, 552
Psychology: a contribution to social work,
649; and the immigrant offender, 597; and
the juvenile offender, 543

Psychopathic Hospital, Colorado, its social
functions, 407

Psychopathic Hospitals to the Mental Hy-
giene Movement, The Relation of, Orton,

400

com-

Public (see also county, state, federal, gov-
ernment) agency: interpreted to
munity, 137; and private relief in Boston,
484; and private work for handicapped, 325;
cost of maintaining good case work, 238,
242; health nursing, 480; institutions and
agencies, policy and personnel in, 574, 578,
583; social work with county as unit, 538;
welfare work, interpretation and support of,
555, 560, 565

Public Officials and Administration (Div. IX),
538

Publications and Uniform Social Data, Lund-
berg, 560

Purchases and contracts under budget system,
559

Quota and visa laws as they affect clients of
social agencies, 599

« AnteriorContinuar »