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Excerpt from: Training Schools - And CPS The opening of CPS units in training schools all followed the same general pattern. War industries with higher salaries lured many of the old employees from the tedious, nerve-wracking work in the schools. The draft got a few more. Expansion of buildings stopped and waiting lists grew longer. State training schools were under staffed and over crowded.... | ![]() Read Full Text |
Document Information
Title: | Training Schools - And CPS | |
Creator: | Stephen L. Angell, Jr. (author) | |
Date: | July 15, 1944 | |
Format: | Article | |
Publication: | The Reporter | |
Source: | Available at selected libraries | |
Location: | vol.3, no.2, pp.3-5 | |
Keywords: | Advocacy; Attendants; Children; Civil Liberties & Rights; Civilian Public Service; Cognitive Disability; Connecticut; Conscientious Objectors; Economics; Education; Educational Institutions; Employment; Government; Institutions; Jurisprudence; Labor; Labor & Commerce; Laws & Regulation; Mansfield State Training School; Maryland; Neglect; New Jersey; New Jersey Training School; Pennhurst State School & Hospital; Pennsylvania; Policy; Psychiatric Disability; Religion; Rosewood Training School; Schools; Social Welfare & Communities; Work; WWII | |
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