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The Survey, February 1, 1913. (Volume 29, Issue 18)

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Survey Associates

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This is an issue of one of the Survey family of periodicals. The Survey was titled the Charities Review, Charities and the Commons in earlier stages. From 1912 the Survey was published weekly, but because weekly publication was prohibitively expensive and because of a constant clash between readers seeking technical material and readers seeking an overall view of philanthropic fields, the Survey split into two publications: the Survey Midmonthly and The Survey Graphic.The Survey Midmonthly was formally founded in June, 1922, as a digest of social work. The Survey Graphic was a magazine of "social interpretation" directed at people who were concerned with social and economic problems. It focused on areas of industrial relations, health, education, international relations, housing, race relations, consumer education, and related fields. This issue contains articles including "Has the Emancipation Act Been Nullified by National Indifference" by Jane Addams, "The Status and Vocation of Our Colored People" by George Burman Foster, "The Basis of Race Adjustment" by George Edmund Haynes, "Social Effects of Emancipation" by W.E.B. Du Bois, "Our Country's Lynching Record," by Ida B. Wells-Barnett, "The Color Line in the Housing Problem," by Sophonisba P. Breckinridge, "A Civic Problem and a Social Duty" by George Packard.
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Periodicals | Http://Vocab.Getty.Edu/Aat/300026657
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