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...necessities was adopted last autumn in Dayton; Howard Whipple Green, Cleveland statistician, author of exhaustive studies of Cleveland's population and buying power; Eugene Henry Klaber of American Institute of Architects; Cincinnati's able Lawyer Alfred Bettman, vice president of the National Conference on City Planning; Sociologist Edith Elmer Wood, author of Recent Trends in American Housing. The conference talked & talked, adopted resolutions endorsing most opinions advanced. Chief opinions: 1) slum dwellers should be moved to homesteads on city outskirts, encouraged to provide their own food, maintain their own cottages; 2) the Federal Government should eliminate blighted areas...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Domestics Under the Eagle | 8/21/1933 | See Source »

...committees, at NRA hearings, on the stump. For the first time in years the working man may feel that there is a trained mind functioning for him in Washington. Gone are the easy platitudes of the politician; Miss Perkins speaks the idiom of the advanced welfare worker, the scientific sociologist...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: LABOR: Truce at a Crisis | 8/14/1933 | See Source »

...explained both in terms of he sane and of the insane. More advanced courses are offered in this subject a the Boston Psychopathic Hospital by psychiatrists from the Medical School. Social Psychology and the Psychology of Personality are taken up from the point of view of the sociologist as sell as that of the psychologist. As for the more exact departments of psychology, there are courses in Statistical Method, which is highly mathematical, in Experimental Psychology with laboratory work, and in psychophysiology. It can be seen from the foregoing remarks that a number of courses in other fields must...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fields of Concentration | 3/28/1933 | See Source »

...conditions first-upon advice of its special investigator Dr. Cameron St. Clair Guild (pronounced Gould), a Nova Scotian who has become expert on Southern U. S. public health deficiencies. The Rosenwald Fund, builder of schools for rural Negroes, is paying for tuberculosis control among the Race. One able Negro, Sociologist Charles Spurgeon Johnson of Fisk University, belongs to the committee of prevention...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Tuberculous Negroes | 2/13/1933 | See Source »

Already alarmed at the reported size of the country's floating population, the Senators got a fresh shock when Columbia University's Sociologist Nels Anderson told them that many of the nomads are girls. On the basis of a threeday, four-city survey made three weeks ago he estimates a transient U. S. population of some 165,000 boys and 100,000 girls under...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RELIEF: Young Transients | 2/6/1933 | See Source »

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