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.. ACADEMY OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SCIENCES 1981-1982

President Robert G. Culbertson, Illinois State University, Normal, Illinois 1st Vice President and President Elect Larry Hoover, Sam Houston State University, Huntsville, Texas 2nd Vice President Gilbert Bruns, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona Secretary/Treasurer Dorothy Bracey, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, New York, New York Immediate Past President Harry More, Jr., San Jose State University, San Jose, California

TRUSTEES

Richard Bennett, The American University, Washington, D.C. R. Paul McCauley, University of Louisville, Kentucky John A. Conley, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin

REGIONAL TRUSTEES

Region 1-Northeast Patricia Carter, Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester, New York Region 2-North Atlantic Gerald Rigby, Bowling Green State University, Bowl-ing Green, Ohio Region 3-South Gene Stephens, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina Region 4-Midwest Jack R. Greene, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan Region 5-Southwest Larry Johnson, Texas Department of Corrections, Huntsville, Texas Region 6- Western and Pacific David Fabianic, Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana

PAST PRESIDENTS 1963-64 Donald F. McCall 1972-73 Richard A. Myren 1964-65 Felix M. Fabian 1973-74 William J. Mathias 1965-66 Arthur F. Brandstatter 1974-75 Felix M. Fabian 1966-67 Richard 0. Hankey 1975-76 George T. Felkenes 1967-68 Robert Sheehan 1976-77 Gordon E. Misner 1968-69 Robert F. Borkenstein 1977-78 Richard Ward 1969-70 B. Earl Lewis 1978-79 Richter H. Moore, Jr. 1970-71 Donald H. Riddle 1979-80 Larry Bassi 1971-72 Gordon E. Misner 1980-81 Harry More, Jr. PHOTOJOURNALISM IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE

Ethan Hoffman

Thursday, March 25, 8:00 a.m.

Anchor Room

Ethan Hoffman, photographer, and John McCoy, author of Concrete Mama, Prison Profiles from Walla Walla spent four months "inside the walls" at the Washington State Prison at Walla Walla. The book includes more than 150 photographs which represent some of Hoffman's finest work.

Ethan Hoffman is a free-lance photographer whose work has appeared in Life, Geo, and the New York Times Magazine. He received the Nikon World Understanding Award in the 37th Annual Pictures of the Year Competition, sponsored by the National Press Photographers Association and the University of Missouri School of Journalism.

The book is published by the University of Missouri Press, Box 7088, Columbia Missouri. Louisville's Leading Convention Hotel. The Galt House brings you luxury, convenience, southern hospitality and a breath-taking view of the river. Located in the heart of downtown Louisville, it's just 10 minutes from the airport via I-65, and within walking distance of Actors Theatre, shopping and the museum. Not only does the Galt House provide worry-free meeting and conference facilities, but some of the finest dining and entertainment anywhere around.

GALT HOUSE

4th & River Louisville, Kentucky 40202 (502) 589-5200 ACADEMY OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SCIENCES

SUMMARY PROGRAM

"Interdisciplinary Contributions to Criminal Justice"

MARCH 24 -27, 1982

GALT HOUSE, LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY

TUESDAY, MARCH 23 , 1982

5:00 PM- 8:00 PM Registration 9:00AM- 4:00PM ACJS Executive Board Meetmg 9:00AM- 4:00PM Workshop : Cnminal JustiCe Program Management 9:00AM- 4:00PM Workshop : Domestic VIolence and Manta! Rape 6:00PM- 8:00PM Social Hour (No Host)

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24 , 1982

8:00AM- 5:00PM Registration 8:00AM- 9:50AM Panels

1. Female Offenders: The Smallest Minonty (Nancy Schafer) 2. Historical Analysis of Pnson Conditions (Tim Bynum) 3. Police Problems (David Wachtel) 4. Reconceptuahzmg Justice Processes (Phd Parnell) 5. Child Abuse and the Cnmmal Justice System (Carl E. Pope) 6. Crime Prevention I (Gerald R. Gnffm) 7. Organizational Human Resources Problem Diagnosis (John Hudzik) 8. Gettmg a Job With a Record or a Habit: Workshop (L. Segal and M. Marbury) 9. Interface of Eye-Witness Research and Cnmmal Justice Practice (Dell Warnick)

10:00 AM-11 :50AM Panels

10. Cnmmal Justice: Education and Profession (David Anderson) 11. A Reassessment of Cnme and Deviance m Colonial Amenca (Elmer Johnson) 12. Capital Punishment· Deterrence or Ideology (William Archambeault) 13. Private and Industnal Secunty II (W. Fred Wegener) 14. Critical Views of Criminal Justice Processes (Craig Haney) 15. Development and Utilization of Personality Tests (RIChard E. Farmer) 16. Minorities and the Law (Sloan Letman) 17. Crime and Delinquency (Lionel Neiman) 18. Police Professionalization and Development (Lambert Miller)

1 �------, I I

I Anderson Publishing • coming this spring ...

Community,Based Corrections Doeren Hageman & Reaffirming Rehabilitation: Crisis in Criminal Justice Policy Cullen Gilbert & Community Relations for Criminal Justice McDowell The Invisible Justice System: Discretion and the Law Atkins Pogrebin, New 2nd Edition I & Criminal Careers Vol. 1 Explaining Criminals Vol. 2 Killing One Another I Vol. 3 Lying, Cheating, Stealing Vol. 4 Responding to Crime Nettler

Visit our booth for more information on these and other Anderson titles.

Anderson Publishing Co., 646 Main St., Cincinnati, Ohio 45201 (513) 421 ..4142

L------� 12:00 PM - 1:50 PM Panels

19. Jails: Contemporary Issues and Trends II (Ken Kerle) 20. Issues in Criminal Justice: Student Section II (David L. Carter) 21. Historical Roots of a Discipline (Vincent J. Webb) 22. Critical Criminology (Arnold Anderson-Sherman) 23. Decision Criteria in Plea Negotiation (Dave Camp) 24. Crime from the Victim's Perspective (Jeffrey L. Schrink) 25. Research on Judicial Behavior (John M. Scheb) 26. Police Community Relations (Peter Horn�) 27. Handgun Control (James Greenstone) 28. Roundtable: Forensic Sciences

2:00 PM- 3:50 PM Plenary Session: "The FBI and Martin Luther King, Jr." 2:00 PM- 3:50 PM Panels

29. Issues Confronting Correctional Administrators (Mike Carlie) 30. Criminality and Sentencing Patterns in Antebellum America (William H. Feyerherm) 31. Juvenile Justice: Evaluation Studies (William E. Thornton) 32. Police Violence and Misconduct (Joseph E. Scuro, Jr.) 33. The Psychology of Dispute Resolution and the Criminal Justice System (Blair H. Sheppard) 34. Drugs and Crime: The Elusive Nexus (Jay R. Williams) 35. Rape Law and Law in Rape I (Franklyn A. M. Robbins) 36. The Pains of Incarceration (James LeBeau) 37. Roundtable: Criminal Justice Research

4:00 PM- 5:50 PM Panels

38. Understanding the Jury (Norbert Kerr) 39. Contemporary Issues in Terrorism I (Daniel E. Georges-Abeyie} 40. The Impact of Research on Public Policy (Charles Wellford) 41. Perspectives on Spouse Abuse II (Phillip W. Rhodes} 42. Evaluating Juvenile Justice and Juvenile Crime (Barbara Stolz} 43. Roundtable: History of Crime and Criminal Justice in America 44. Economics and Crime (Stan Keil) 45. Workshop: The Role of Student Organizations (Ira J. Silverman}

THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 19 82

8: 00 AM- 5:00 PM Registration

3

THURSDAY, MARCH 25 , 198 2

8:00 AM- 9:50 AM Panels

46. Management Information and the Issues of Performance Measures in Criminal Justice Evaluation (Richard Bennett) 47. Correctional Research: Strategies, Politics and Ethics (Eric Poole) 48. Police Education and Trainmg (Chris Dunning) 49. Crime in Government (David 0. Friedrichs) 50. Jails: Contemporary Issues and Trends I (Mananne Hopper) 51. Focus on the Criminal Courts (Michael Carlie) 52. Empirical Studies of Respectable Criminology (Gregg Barak) 53. Workshop: PhotOJOUrnalism in Criminal Justice (Ethan Hoffman)

10:00 AM-1 1:50 AM Panels

54. Critical Factors m Prison Policy Making (William Nardini) 55. Crime Prevention-1982 (Robert O'Biock) 56. Alternative Systems of Pumshment (Steven D. Rittenmeyer) 57. Computer Applications in Criminal Justice I (Jagan Lingamneni) 58. Police Stress (Joan Luxenburg) 59. Contemporary Issues m Cnminal Justice Evaluation Methodology (Richard R. Bennett) 60. Perspectives on Domestic Violence (Eve Buzawa) 61. Roundtable: Introduction to Corrections

12:00 PM- 1:50 PM Panels

62. Non-Traditional Sources and Methodologies for Criminal Justice His- tory (Ellen Hochstedler) 63 . Police Personality Characteristics (Joseph L. Peterson) 64. Issues in Corrections: Student Section III (Tom Sullenberger) 65. Mmorities in the Cnminal Justice System (Jagan Lingamnem) 66. Impact of Media on Criminal Justice (James Hendricks) 67. Policies and the Police (Ralph Baker) 68. Workshop: Whose Side Are We On? Reexaminmg the Role of the Criminologist (Dennis Longmire and Harold E. Pepinsky) 69. Film Presentation: "DEADLY FORCE" (Monroe J. Miller)

2: 00 PM - 3:50 PM Panels

70. Publish or Pensh: The Journals, Part II (Tom Winfree) 71. Historical Studies of Penal Issues in Bntain and Its Colonies (Clarice Femman) 72. Cnmes of Violence (Peter Hirschburg) 73 . International Criminology I (Jagan Lingamneni) 74. Interest Groups and the Criminal JustiCe Process (Robert Mendelsohn) 75. Research Issues m Crime (Robert S. Corrigan) 76. American Cnmmal JustiCe Higher Education (J. Pnce Foster) 77. Poht1cs of C1vil Liberties: The Courts (Richter H. Moore)

5 Fine introductory texts- brought to you by Harper & Row. Robin INIRODUCTION CRIMINAL 10 TilE JUSTICE SYSTEM Principles, Procedures, Practice

Extremely well researched and un­ most balanced treatment available of usually readable, this text combines an the police, prosecution and the courts, . in-principle and in-practice approach and corrections. Instructor's Manual. with a sociological perspective to the 558 pages. Bartolias INIRODUCTION CORRECTIONS 10 Here is a comprehensive picture of tern, despite many problems, is under­ corrections that is research-oriented going positive revision. Instructor's and reflectiveof todays world. This text Manual. 490 pages. demonstrates that the corrections sys- Eldefonso & Coffey CRIMINAL History, Philosophy, and Enforcement LAW A refreshingly nontechnical, com­ signed primarily for use in administra­ pletely up-to-date introduction to tion of justice courses. Instructor's criminal law in the United States, this Manual. 304 pages. text avoids legalistic jargon and is de- Ellison & Buckhout PSYCHOLOGY CRIMINAL JUSTICE AND

This lucid examinationof the common presents significant and hard-to-find interests of psychology and the law in­ documents and aids used by psychol­ cludes discussions of jury selection, ogists who work with law enforcement victimology,eyewitness testimony , and and legal workers. 446 pages. · capital punishment. A special section

To requeston examinati copies, write to Suite 3D, Harper & Row, 10 East S3d Street, New York, N.Y 10022. Please include

....--- � &;;;u:..w 4:00 PM - 5:50 PM Panels

78. Police Discretion (Mary J. Hageman) 79. Police Management (John E. Angell) 80. Radical Reconceptualization of Crime and Justice (W. Clinton Terry) 81. Contemporary Issues in Terrorism II (Gad Bensinger) 82. The Imprisonment of Women in the 18th and 19th Centuries (Martin Miller) 83 . Research on the Development of Legal Socialization (Susan Kurtz) 84. Minorities in Criminal Justice: Problems and Perspectives (Sloan Let man) 85. Violent Crime (Stephen Brodt)

6: 00 PM - 7:00 PM Regional Association Meetings 7:00 PM - 8: 00 PM Open Meeting for Informal Discussion of Historical Research-Women in Criminal Justice Committee 8: 00 PM - 9:00 PM Affirmative Action Committee

FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 19 82

8: 00 AM- 5:00 PM Registration 10:30 AM-11:45 AM ACJS Business Meeting 8: 00 AM- 9:50 AM Panels

86. Topics Examining the Criminal Justice Profession II (Ronald Holmes) 87. Deterrence and Sentencing: Rational Judgements (David Kalinich) 88. Intellectual Foundations of Social Order and Control (Nancy Frank) 89. Transcendental Meditation Program, Criminal Rehabilitation, and Crime Prevention: Research and Theory (Michael C. Dillbeck) 90. The Criminal Justice Student in Higher Education (Robert Briody) 91. Contemporary Issues in Evaluation Research (Lawrence E. Cummings) 92. Juvenile Justice in the United States and England: Values and Goals (James Kane) 93. Roundtable: Criminal Investigation

10:00 AM-11:50 AM Panels

94. Minorities, Crime, and Social Control in Historical Perspective (Dennis E. Hoffman) 95. Women and Crime (Jan Mickish) 96. Police Personnel Activities (Robert L. O'Biock) 97. Treatment and Prevention of Child Abuse (Michael C. Braswell) 98. Probation and Parole I (Mervin F. White) 99. Problems and Prospects for Undergraduate Criminal Justice Educa­ tion in the 1980s I (Robert F. Borkenstein) 100. Effective Exploitation of Librarians and Other Library Resources (Eileen Rowland) 101. Problems and Prospects for Undergraduate Criminal Justice Educa­ tion in the 1980s II (Jack R. Greene) 102. Roundtable: Criminology 7 I I � I When it comes to the world of comparatived?l policing, I ll. you can get the what, along with the why and how, 11· !J;: four times a year in Police Studies, The International � Jillll Review of Police Development. :1l ffi:::11 scholarly, provocative forum for educators, re- I A I �ea�chers, practiti�ners an� students in criminal . � JUStice, Pol1ce Stud1es exam1nes the complex world 1111: ;,. !�J.: of law enforcement from such diverse perspectives 11

. : ·'. ·'_ '. : ·.._·. .. Address .:.. ' ...'_'l '·'. ·':·i_. .·.• : .. j . Ill c t z __ � i: lice Studies. West 56th Street. New York, NY :j :::�:�:: : 444 10019. · =,· For information about contributing articles to Police Studies, please speak to ��:: · :�:.-�: Dr. Dorothy Bracey, Secretary/Treasurer of ACJS, who is in attendance at H. � :! the conference. ffiI - :·::;;i:!tt=��= �=�:}i:=:=:i:�:rr�=�=�=�=i:�:!{:�:r-%:�:�;:;:�i�i=�=�����J��i�*�i���;���ittt�Ji�f\)}ff �==t=�==�=�===�=�:s:!r{:;r�����=�i=i��iill�§..���ttt?tii;��:n��f}�ttt=�=i:i:t�t:i:ir =====t=:::::;:::::;:t;:;:::::;:��;{:;:; '·'''.''.'·'.•.!..� :-�.�.l.! :�: ·.· · _ 12:00 PM- I :5 0 PM LUNCHEON BANQUET Speaker: Dr. Michael Sherman, Hudson Institute

2:0 0 PM- 3:50 PM Panels

103. Comparative Criminal Justice Systems (Andrew W. Miracle, Jr.) 104. Police Use of Deadly Force (Roger B. Parks) 105. Issues in Juvenile Justice: Student Section I (Richard Lawrence) 106. New Perspectives on the 19th Century American Prison (Nicole F. Rafter) 107. A Reevaluation of Rehabilitation: Does It Work? (Raymond Armstrong) 108. Political Institutions and Criminal Justice (William E. Brigman) 109. Care and Treatment of the Mentally Disordered Offender (Jeff Schrink) 110. Distribution of Justice: Theoretical Issues (David Gugin) 111. Roundtable: Crisis Intervention for Criminal Justice

4:00 PM- 5:50 PM Panels

112. Exploring Attorney Behavior (Margaret Platt Jendrek) 113. The Origin of the Police: Case Studies (Richard J. Terrill) 114. Reintegration of the Offender into the Community (Brian Forschner) 115. Factors Influencing Testimony in Court (Joseph Peterson) 116. The Politics of Sentencing Reform (Susan E. Martin) 117. Juvenile Corrections (Ronald Carpenter)

4:00 PM- 5:50 PM Panels

118. Action Program Evaluation: Conceptualization, Politicalization and Methodology (Mervin F. White) 119. Issues and Problems in Law Enforcement Policy and Administration (Victor G . Strecher) 120. Roundtable: Community Crime Prevention

SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 19 82

8: 00AM- 5:00 PM Registration 8: 00 AM- 9:50 AM Panels

121. Equity and Productiv1ty in Prosecutor and Public Defense (Joan Jacoby) 122. Police Policies and Politics (Susan Bland Day) 123. Computer Applications in Criminal Justice II (James Adamitis) 124. Reconceptualizing White-Collar Crime (Peter M. Wickman) 125. Rape Law and Law in Rape II (David L. Steeno) 126. The Politics of Justice (Carl F. Pinkele) 127. Public Order and Social Control in Pre-Modern Europe (John A. Conley) 128. Police Community Relations (R. William Mathis) 129. Roundtable: The Insanity Plea

9 What Do Your Colleagues Know That You Should? In a field like criminal justice, the hectic pace of events can make the task of keeping up with the latest developments a maddening one for the educator or researcher- that is, unless you have the edge that more and more of your colleagues are discovering: Law Enforcement Looking behind the statistics News.

d !':t::i· :1

""lf;.ff.lll(t::�:, "� (Jf I• llt>� '��.b:of:: '':d�:ii!K'-.3!1�£:. p!O\"tl� ah� . X. Twenty-two times each year, Law :u�:d h''-'1 f:1���t;l, h���. 1fW J.,.._,C::.flUSe r�:.. 1:; ;:��:.: tet:) �'''") tKJ!h 11•· tk<•" d·d II>· jH�"; . : l>etW lli ;w::::l� get Ute:: flit Enforcement News brings its thou­ J>(;!u't111P1111. sands of readers a panorama of news and features that zero in on the critical issues confron­ ting criminal justice. Lively, incisive, tough-edged reporting mark the pages of LEN in a way that no other periodical can rnatch. Small wonder, then, that a recent survey of your col­ leagues found Law Enfocement News to be one of the most widely read publications among criminal justice educators.

Don't let the pressures of academic research keep you trapped in an ivory tower. Let LEN's timely coverage keep you up-to­ date and down-to-earth. At only $14.00 for a one-year subscription, you can hardly afford not to.

I'M READY FOR THE LEN ADVANTAGE. Please sign me up as a subscriber to Law Enforcement News for:

0 One year($14) 0 Two years($26) 0 Three years($38) 0 Payment enclosed 0 Bill me

Name ______Address

City ______State ______ZIP ______

For a free sample copy of Law Enforcement News, visit the Criminal Justice Center's booth in the conference exhibit area. Law Enforcement News 444 West 56th Street Room2104 New York 10019 10:00 AM-1 1 :§0 AM Panels ·

130. Substance Abuse and Crime II (Belinda Rodgers McCarthy) 131. International Criminology II (Agnes E. Watlington) 132. Crime and Delinquency Theories (Steven Gibbons) 133. Criminal Justice Internships (William H. Parsonage) 134. Victimology: Explanation and Societal Response (William F. Waters) 135. The Politics of Federal Law Enforcement and Regulatory Activity, 1870-1940 (Alan Block) 136. Issues in Law Enforcement: Student Sectton IV (Charles Chastain) 137. Roundtable: Jails and Jail Management

12:00 PM - 1:50 PM Panels

138. Substance Abuse and Crime I (Kenneth Polky) 139. Perspectives on Spouse Abuse I (Imogene Moyer) 140. Private and Industrial Security I (Robert J. Meadows) 141. International Criminology III (Charles R. Fenwick) 142. The Police and the Citizenry: Cooperation or Conflict (Paul Lavrakas) 143. Discrimination and Disparity in the Juvenile Justice System (Christopher M. Sieverdes) 144. The Role and Function of the American Police: What Does History Tell Us? (Jack Greene) 145. Roundtable: Sociology of Criminal Law

2:00 PM- 3:50 PM Panels

146. Juvenile Crime and Justice in American History (Larry Siegal) 147. Anthropology and Comparative Criminology (Andrew W. Mtracle, Jr.) 148. Correctional Education and Training (Marc Renzema) 149. Cnme Statistics and Data Analyses in Criminal Justice Evaluation (Arnold T rebach) 150. Probation and Parole I (John 0. Smykla) 151. The Political Environment and Criminal Justice Administration (Robert A. Lorinskas) 152. Examining the Criminal Justice Profession I (Norman Pomrenke) 153 . Roundtable: Juvenile Justice Process

4:00 PM - 5:50 PM Panels

154. Current Reforms in Criminal Justice: Must History Repeat Its Mtstakes (Wayne B. Hanewicz) 155. Community and Criminal Justice (James Hendricks) 156. Interdisciplinary Criminal Justice Higher Education (Bill Wakefield) 157. Crime Prevention I (Vic Sims) 158. The Interdisciplinary, the Transdisciplinary Nature of Justice Studies (Richard Myren) 159. Impact of Governmental Response to Organizational Crime (Paul Jesilow) 160. Police Discretion (Lynne A. Gressett) 161. Roundtable: Correctional Officer/Inmate Relationships: The Influence of Prison Organizational Structure

11 U.S. Department of Justice National Institute of Justice Justice 1raining Packages

For over five years. the National Institute of Justice has communicated �tate-of-the-art research and evaluation findings in criminal ju tice through its Research Utilization Program ( R UP). Now the instructionals resources from R UP's widely acclauned Research Utilization Workshops are accessible to all academic m�titutions and in-:�ervJCe training programs that are interested in advanced criminal JUStice practices.

R UP now presents 10 self-contained training package on the following topics: s Developing Sentencing Guidelines Health Care in Correctional Institutions Improving Probation Strategies All videotapes and materials Juror Usage and Management are available for viewing at Maintaining Municipal Integrity the ACJS Research Utiliza­ Managing Cnminal Investigations tion Program exhibit. Managing Patrol Operations Mental Health tn Jails Operating a DcfenJer\ Office Each full p k e ont s Prison Grievance Mechanisms instructor ac ag ain c : • a trainer handbook. • a student workbook. • a manual or book of readings. • a videotape overview of the topic featuring • key criminal justice authorities. and a model program enrichment manual. •

For more information write or call: RESEARCH UTILIZATION PROGRAM Suite 1600 5530 Wisconsin Avenue, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20015 301-654-8338

National Institute of Justice, James Underwood, Acting Director THE 19 82 ACJS MEETING COMMITTEE EVENTS SCHEDULE

TUESDAY, MARCH 23, 19 82

9:00 AM- 4:00 PM ACJS Executive Board Meeting Old River Room Workshop: Criminal Justice Program Management Kmg's Head Room Workshop: Domestic Violence and Marital Rape Queen Room

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 19 82

NO COMMITTEE EVENTS SCHEDULED

THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 19 82

6:00 PM- 7: 00 PM REGIONAL ASSOCIATION MEETINGS Northeast Kent Room North Atlantic Oak Room South Turf Room Midwest Old River Room Southwest Anchor Room Northwest Dorset Room

7:00 PM- 8:00 PM Discussion of Historical Research Lord Crewe Room

7:00 PM- 8:00 PM Women in Criminal Justice Gothic Room

8:00 PM- 9:00 PM Affirmative Action Committee Queen Room

FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 19 82

10:30 AM-11:45 AM ACJS Business Meeting Queen Room

SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 19 82

NO COMMITTEE EVENTS SCHEDULED

13 NEW FROM

Juvenile Justice in America Second Edition By CLIFFORD. E. SIMONSEN, City College, Seattle, and MARSHALLS. GORDON III, Department of Social and Health Services, Wa._o;;hington State. 1982, 424 pp. This introductory text is a com­ the entire criminal justice field. prehensive and current treat­ A special section provides dis­ ment of the juvenile area in the cussions of all major causal theo­ criminal justice system. It covers ries of delinquency-biological, the system, processes within the sociological, and psychological. system, and the young people Current research is employed who become involved in those throughout the text, including processes. biophysical causes of deliquency. Special attention is paid to The current theories of Suther­ the historical background of land, Merton, and other noted juvenile justice and its impact on theorists are also covered. Research Methods in CriminalJustice and Crltninology By FRANK E. HAGAN, Mercyhurst College. 1982,512 pp. This is a text in basic research All standard research topics are methods which specifically ad­ treated; a chapter is devoted dresses itself to research in crim­ to ethics in criminal justice inal justice. Special attention is research; and a final chapter given to such sources as the Uni­ provides an overview of evalu­ form Crime Report, victim sur­ ation research and proposal vey, and clandestine means of writing. obta!ning data. Research meth­ An Instructor's Manual with ods are illustrated by examples test questions accompanies the from criminology throughout. text.

Co., Inc. Macmillan866 Third Publishing Avenue, New York, N.Y 10022 19 82 ACJS MEETING SOCIAL EVENTS SCHEDULE

TUESDAY, MARCH 23 , 19 82

6:00 PM - 8:00 PM No Host Social Hour King's Head Room

*Showtime ACJS Night at the Theater

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24 , 19 82

* 1:00 PM - 4:00 PM Bus Tour of Louisville

5:00 PM - 6:30 PM ACJS Wine & Cheese Reception Cochran Room

* 7:00 PM -11:00 PM ACJS Night on the River

*Showtime ACJS Night at the Theater

THURSDAY, MARCH 25 , 19 82

* 9:00 AM- 3:00 PM Bus Tour of Louisville

* 9:00 AM- 4:30 PM Bus Tour of Lexington

4:00 PM - 6:00 PM University of Louisville Presidential Library Reception (25th Floor)

6:00 PM - 7:00 PM Hosted Cocktail Hour for Sam Houston State University Alumni and Friends

* 6:00 PM-11:00 PM ACJS Night at Louisville Downs

FRIDAY, MARCH 26 , 19 82

12:00 PM - 1:50 PM Luncheon Banquet Archibald Room

* 8:30 PM -11:30 PM Bus Tour of Louisville

*Meet in Galt House Lobby Y2 hour before scheduled departure time.

15 �·�·� tST FLOOR .1. Galt House I louisville, Kentucky I Elevators LOAD CREWE OAK I 1 Guide to c A I� c' 1 Meeting and HOTEL :it:::- Banquet Room b � Locations �Ji�rnr,�£i��,.� �,,.���.� L =t= q= ���A���� I I 9 .

T UA F AooM ... - _ _ _ �-, Fountam Room Ommg Room LIVERPOOL ROOM DELL QUAY KENT ROOM I• (PubliC Dmmg) I ROOM • � 1 t- --I -i;�;.- --. FLO Cocktail j! Lounge) __jRiver Grill (- Coffee Shop r�tj :ND :�� (Public Dining) ---:JC r:! 'l 1 aE ALsl Elevet�'nl f� f MAIN LOBBY :� fr ROOM1 lROOM '* .rf===lHe J 1 r- � T� 'i' � __ �...____. �� I L--f---' J L--f---' f '------1 � � I � ! �·=YlJ-----.-.4---- I

E I WATER POET ROOM OLD [] RIVER [1 ROOM

I o ARCHIBALD COCHRAN BALLROOM o I I I c'

.!,...... oil ,_...,_.... 'i % MAYORs COMMISSIONERs ACADEMY OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SCIENCES

Dear Colleagues:

Welcome to the 1982 Annual Meeting of the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. The theme for the Program is "Interdisciplinary Contributions to Criminal Justice." Around this theme the program committee has organized approximately 160 panel sessions, workshops, and roundtables. In addition, the program will include a major plenary session and a keynote speaker. We anticipate that you will find the topics and presentations stimulating and informative.

A variety of services have been provided for your convenience. They are placed in the following locations:

Registration/Information: Third Floor Lobby

Employment: Dell Quay Room

Exhibits: Cochran Room

Alpha Phi Sigma: Liverpool Room

Banquet: Archibald Room

ACJS PROGRAM COMMITTEE 198 2

Robert M. Regoli, Chair Robert A. Lorinskas University of Colorado Southern Illinois University

Richard R. Bennett Andrew W. Miracle, Jr. American University Texas Christian University

John A. Conley William Parker University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Central State University

John D. Hewitt Harold Pepinsky Ball State University Indiana University

Pauline Houlden Jeffrey L. Schrink University of Illinois-Chicago Circle Indiana State University

Larry Johnson Richard R. Stevens Texas Department of Corrections University of Louisville

Sloan T. Letman Ralph A. Weisheit Loyola University of Chicago Washington State University

17 THE FOUNDATION PRESS PUBLISHERS OF QUALITY LEGAL MATERIALS ON CRIMINAL JUSTICE AND LAW ENFORCEMENT

NEW BOOKS- AVAILABLE NOW:

John Kaplan & Jerome H. Skolnick: Teacher's Manual TBA CRIMINAL JUSTICE: 1982 Introductory Cases and Materials, Third Edition

Nicholas N. Kittrie & Elyce H. Zenoff: Teacher's Manual SANCTIONS, SENTENCING AND CORRECTIONS: 1981 Law, Practice and Policy

Lloyd L. Weinreb: Annual-cumulative, soft-cover LEADING CONSTITUTIONAL CASES ON CRIMINAL JUSTICE 1981

FORTHCOMING BOOKS:

V. A. Leonard & Harry W. More: Teacher's Manual TBA POLICE ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT, Sixth Edition May 1982

Frank W. Miller, Robert 0. Dawson, George E. Six and Raymond I. Parnas: CRIMINAL JUSTICE ADMINISTRATION: May 1982 Cases and Materials, Second Edition

Also available in paperback reprints:

THE POLICE FUNCTION (Chapters 1-10) June 1982 PROSECUTION AND ADJUDICATION (Chapters 11-26) June 1982

Ronald N. Boyce & Rollin M. Perkins: ON CRIMINAL LAW, Third Edition (text) July 1982

1981 SUPPLEMENTS AND UPDATING MATERIALS: (Ordered separately) lnbau, Thompson, Haddad, Zagel & Starkman: CRIMINAL PROCEDURE: 1981 SUPPLEMENT Cases & Comments, Second Edition

Miller, Dawson, Dix & Parnas: THE MENTAL HEALTH PROCESS, Second Edition 1981 SUPPLEMENT

Perkins & Boyce: TEACHER'S UPDATE MEMO Cases & Materials on CRIMINAL LAW AND PROCEDURE, Fifth Edition

Weinreb: 1981 SUPPLEMENT �RIMINAL PROCESS: Cases, Comments, Questions, Third Edition

Visit Our Display or Write: THE FOUNDATION PRESS, Inc. College Department 170 Old Country Road, Mineola, New York 11501 ACADEMY OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SCIENCES

PROGRAM

1982 Annual Meeting

Galt House

Louisville, Kentucky

March 24-27, 1982

"Interdisciplinary Contributions to Criminal Justice"

TUESDAY, MARCH 23, 1982 9:00 AM-4:00 PM

9:00 AM-11:30 AM ACJS Executive Board Meeting, Part 1 Old River Room

9:00 AM-11:30 AM Workshop: Domestic Violence, Part I Queen Room

9:00 AM-11:30 AM Workshop: Criminal Justice Program Management, Part 1 King's Head Room

1:00 PM - 4:00 PM ACJS Executive Board Meeting, Part 2 Old River Room

1:00 PM - 4:00 PM Workshop: Domestic Violence, Part 2 Queen Room

1:00 PM - 4:00 PM Workshop: Criminal Justice Program Management, Part 2 King's Head Room

6:00 PM - 9:00 PM Registration Third Floor Lobby

6:00 PM - 9:00 PM No Host Social Cochran Room

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1982 8:00 AM-9:50 PM

8:00 AM- 5:00 PM Registration Third Floor Lobby

8:00 AM- 9:50 PM Panels

19 ''Order Under Law'' Readings in Criminal Justice

Robert G. Culbertson Illinois State University

Mark R. Tezak Illinois State University

1981 264 pages $6.95

OUTSTANDING FEATURES collect1on of seventeen contemporary and classic articles which explore controversies and 1ssuesa m the f1eld of cr1mmal JUStice.

developed for Introductory courses m cr1mmal justice-articles are argumentative, readable and wdl stimulate classroom d1scuss1on.

reasonably pnced to be used as a text, or as a supplement to your current text.

ADOPTIONS INCLUDE: Alfred Un1vers1ty. Chadron State College, College of Notre Dame, Drake Un1vers1ty, Eastern Wyommg College. Flonda State Un1vers1ty, Illinois State Un1vers1ty, Jackson Community College, John Jay College of Cnminal Just1ce, Kansas Newman College, Kutztown State College, Mercy­ hurst College. Monroe Community College, Muskingum College, Northern Mich1gan University, Purdue University. Rend Lake College, Roanoke College, San Diego State Un1versity, San Jose City College. Sonoma State University, Un1vers1ty of Baltimore, Umversity of North , Western lllmo1s Un1vers1ty. Wdl1am Ra1ney Harper College and Youngstown State University ...

CONTENTS

Part I. Crime: An American Institution Part Ill. Compromise and Confrontation: The "Fear"-Charles Silberman Courts 12 "The Nature of Law and The Causes of 8. "The Behav1or of Grand )uries"-Robert Carp Cnme"-)onathan Casper 9 "Individualized Judges"-Marvln Frankel "The Cnmmal )ust1ce Non-System "-Richter 10. "The Practice of Law as a Con Game''­ Moore Abraham Blumberg 11. "Plea Barga1n1ng"-Donald Newman 12. "Makmg the Pun1shment F1t the Crime"­ Franklm Z1mring Part II. Justice and Injustice in the Streets: The Police Part IV. Change Without Progress: Corrections "Observations on the Mak1ng of Pohcemen"­ 13. "The Pa1ns of lmpmonment"-Gresham Sykes 4 Peter Maanen 14. "Pmon Rackets"-Anthony Guenther "'A Professor'svan Street Lessons"-George 15. "Incarcerated Women"-Arthur Paddock and K1rkham Robert Culbertson 6 "Controll1ng People"-)onathan Rub1nstem 16. "The Parole Board Heanng"-Dav1d Stanley 7 "Becom1ng Bent"-Lawrence Sherman 17 "Res1dent1al Alternatives to lncarceration"­ Paul Hahn

All royalties are paid to the Illinois State University Foundation.

If you would like a complimentary copy for possible adoption, write to:

Waveland Press Inc. •P 0. Box 400 •Prospect He1ghts. IL 60070

or call: (312) 634-0081 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1982, 8:00 AM-9:50 AM

8:00 AM- 9:00 PM Panels

PANEL I TURF ROOM

FEMALE OFFENDERS: THE SMALLEST MINORITY

Chair: NANCY E. SCHAFER, Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis

Presenters:

"Women: the smallest minority," JUNE MORRISON, University of Arizona.

"Rural female delinquents' adaptation to coed institutional life," JAMES H. LARSON, University of North Dakota.

"Sex of juvenile offenders and length of stay in correctional facilities," NANCY THOMPSON and ELIZABETH WYDALLIS, Ohio Youth Commission.

"Relationship between phases of the menstrual cycle and disciplinary behavioral infractions of juvenile delinquents," ROBERT PRYTULA and ELAINE ROYAL, Middle Tennessee State University, and STEPHANIE BRICE, Manchester, Tennessee.

Discussant: PEGGY FORTUNE, Illinois State University

PANEL 2 KENT ROOM

HISTORICAL ANALYSIS OF PRISON CONDITIONS: POLICY IMPLICATIONS

Chair: TIM BYNUM, Michigan State University

Presenters : "A thanatological analysis of a maximum security prison, 1881-1968," KENNETH E. WINKER, JR., Murray State University.

"The effects of prison population trends at San Quentin on prison re­ form legislation, 1850 -1920," ROBERT J. APOSTOLOS, San Diego's Sheriff Department.

"Prison conditions and the eighth amendment: an historical analysis," JAMES ROBERTSON, Mankato State University

"An exploratory analysis of prison reform under court mandate in Arkansas, 1971 -1981," JAMES L. ELSTON, University of Arkansas­ Fayetteville.

Discussant: LUCIEN X. LOMBARDO, Old Dominion University

21 New & Recent Titles

0 World Legal Traditions Institutions @ Contemporary Issues In Corrections James Opolor I

�American Journal Of Police Srephen Brown ( Ediror) Published rwice yearly S 17.00 lndir·iduul 5.!.!.00 lnstitutiontJI

Journal Of Crime Justice Public Safety The Justice System In Alaskan Journal of for Police ri na Native Villages • & & Sloan Let man (Editor) John An,l(ell pa,l(eS The the Society & C mi l Sl/.00 lndit·id,.,d AnnualPsychology Edition 19!!1 !!!! p... pa 51>.')5 S/6.00 lnrtit,.ti"n"'l

A Multi-Dimensional Analysis Of Conflict In The An Organizational Approach To Correctional Effectiveness Criminal Justice System • Wright 57.25 S/6.H5 ,·..,ubmmd S22.H5 Edward Ryan 19!!1 .'>.'>Ipages 1979 !!.'>pages f>"'l''''

An Invitation To Authors. was created in by a Fonhcoming- woupPll.tiRIMAGE, of academiCians INC �nd pracritioners1978 in an TM Morahty Policing by Elhsron efft.lrt ru provide a broader. more innovarive forum fur academiC and professional Feldberg Of & PilGRIMAGE.INC. In Jeopardy: The SIUdy Victims ''"'h�nge. You are invited to submit Sm1th sals in areas of Of ·shoro.li HouleII. Box!""£·d Crimmal Justice and Crimmology interest iron .k lilt '111)('S."'('t' :fi'tlS9 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24 , 19 82, 8: 00 AM-9:50 AM

PANEL 3 ANCHOR ROOM

POLICE PROBLEMS

Chair: DAVID WACHTEL, University of Alabama-Birmingham

Presenters:

"The relationship of current urban police investigative effectiveness to the increasing rate of unsolved criminal homicide," JAMES N. GILBERT, Chadron State College.

"Coping with austerityin small town policing," WENDY GRIFFIN, Indiana University.

"Explaining rates at which police officers are murdered," DAVID LES­ TER, Richard Stockton State College.

"Rural police in the United States," VIC SIMS, Hattisburg, MS.

"Ethics in policing: towards a theory of corruption control," ROBERT McCORMAC, Temple University.

Discussant: JEFFREY PAUL RUSH, Palham, AL

PANEL 4 OLD RIVER ROOM

RECONCEPTUALIZATING JUSTICE PROCESSES

Chair: PHIL PARNELL, Indiana University

Pres nt rs e e : "An exploration of the possible legal consequences of redefining human life," LEE S. DOWNING, JR., North Georgia College.

"The insanity defense: our legal system and the mental health profes­ sion in conflict," LISA A. COHEN, Indiana University.

"Psychiatric examinations and analogues to criminal procedure," ELLEN HOCHSTEDLER, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.

"Is the criminal justice system designed to fail?," MICHAEL PAYNE, University of Dayton.

"Is punishment revenge?," TERRY PENCE, Northern Kentucky University.

Discussant: PHIL PARNELL, Indiana University

23 CRIME, CRIMINALS AND CORRECTIONS

Donal E. J. MACNAMARA LLOYD W. MCCORKLE John Jay College of Criminal Justice and the Graduate Center City University of New York

1982 John Jay Press 304pp $15.00

JOHN JAY PRESS 444 West 56th Street, NYC 10019

CRIMINALJUSTICE (with Instructor's Manual) 82/83 DONALE. J. MACNAMARA, editor

1982 Dushkin Annual Editions 256pp $7.95

DUSHKIN PUBLISHING GROUP Guilford, Connecticut 0643 7

SEX, CRIME AND THE LAW

DONAL E. J. MACNAMARA John Jay College of Criminal Justice and the Graduate Center EDWARDSAGARIN The City College and the Graduate Center City University of New York

1978 Macmillan-Free Press 291 pp $7.95

MACMILLAN·FREE PRESS 866 3rd Avenue, NYC 10022 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1982, 8:00 AM-9:50 AM

PANEL 5 KING'S HEAD ROOM

CHILD ABUSE AND THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM

Chair: CARL E. POPE, University

Presenters:

"Juvenile sexual offenders: an examination of case characteristics," CARL E. POPE, Atlanta University and ANN L. RANFRANZ, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.

"Children of an unfortunate destiny: indicated child abuse and legalistic reaction," LLOYD KLEIN and DIANE CAPACI URBANO, New York, NY.

"Systems in interaction: law enforcement and social service agency coordination in the handling of child abuse and spouse abuse cases," JERRY R. GATES, University of Tennessee and LYNNELLE HAMMETT, Tennessee Department of Corrections.

"Attitudes toward child abuse among Texas migrant workers," DAVID CAMP and FRED CERVANTES, Corpus Christi State University.

Discussant: LLOYD KLEIN, CUNY Graduate Center

PANEL 6 QUEEN ROOM

CRIME PREVENTION I

Chair: GERALD R. GRIFFIN, Wichita State University

Presenters:

"Community organization approaches to the prevention of juvenile delinquency," RONALD J. BERGER and CHERY E. BERGER, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater.

"A strategy for crime control: inferring from a microcosm," KEVIN N. WRIGHT, SUNY Binghamton.

"The learning disabled child: an at risk juvenile offender," ROBIN IRA HERMAN, Central State University.

"Challenging traditional theory: an alternative view of recidivism," GREGORY L. MUHLIN, LOUIS GENEVIE, and EVA MARGOLIES, New York State Psychiatric Institute.

"The teaching of burglary prevention techniques to older adults resid­ ing in non-urban areas," FLOYD W. LILEY, JR., Bluefield State College.

Discussant: LARRY GAINES, Eastern Kentucky University

25 GRADUATE ASSISTANTSHIPS AVAILABLE

Criminal Justice Center Silm Houston State University

Sevt.•ral Milstt._•rsand Doctoral assistantships are available for fall semester, IYH2. We intend to recruit the highest qualified criminal justice graduate studt._•nts niltionwide. Ph.D. Assistantships PilY $6,000 for 12-months, renewable for another yeM. - Milster's stipends P•lY $4,JOO for ninl' months for the first year, and $4,800 for tlw Sl'Cond Yl'ar. Out-of-state tuition is wilived. M.1ster's specialization in l.1w t._•nforcement, criminology and corrections, and social servict's. Doctor,ll concentratilHl administr,ltion, criminology or research. For applic.1tion forms and111 .1ddition.1l information, contact the Master's or Doctor.ll Coordinator.

Criminal Justice Center Sam Houston State University Huntsville, Texas 77341 (713) 294-1635

CRIMINALEMPLOYMENT JUSTICE - SOCIAL SERVICE SERVICES Looking for career opportunities? Want to know where the job vacancies are? Curious about salary comparisons? We have the answers! Each month tht• Nationill Employment Listing Service rush-mails listings of open positions in corrections, lilw enforcement, juvenile and social services, secunty, and academe. Agencies from around the nation list recruitment notices with us free. To get in on the ilCt, send your check, money order,or purchase order for an ilnnual ubscription to the monthly NELS BULLETIN for the Criminal Justice System sand Social Services. Agency/lnstitutiion rilte: $40.00; Individual Sub­ scription: $25.00.

1982 CRIMINAL JUSTICE EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES Listing of 600 nationwide colleges and universities offering degrees in criminal justice. Descriptions, types of degrees, available financial assist­ ance, and to whom and where to send inquiries. $12.50 per copy.

NELS/Office of Publications Sam Houston State University � Criminal Justice Center Huntsville, Texas 77341 � 713/294-1692

An Equal Opportun1ty Educational lnst1tut1on WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1982, 8:00 AM-9:50 AM

PANEL 7 DORSET ROOM

ORGANIZATIONAL HUMAN RESOURCES PROBLEM DIAGNOSIS

Chair: JOHN HUDZIK, Michigan State Umversity

Panelists: JACK R. GREENE, Michigan State Umversity VICKIE SCHNEIDER, Michigan State Umversity DAVID HAYESLIP, Michigan State University

PANEL 8 GOTHIC ROOM

WORKSHOP: GETTING A JOB WITH A RECORD OR A HABIT

Organizers: LEON SEGAL, Project CURE MARCO MARBURY, Project CURE

PANEL 9 OAK ROOM

INTERFACE OF EYE-WITNESS RESEARCH AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE PRACTICE

Chair: DELL WARNICK, Ball State University

Panelists: GARY WELLS, University of Alberta STEVEN PENROD, University of Wisconsin MICHAEL LEIPPE, St. Norbert College ROY MALPASS, SUNY College at Plattsburg PATRICIA DEVINE, Ohio State University

27 HOUGH'IDN MIFFLIN • •

Juvenile Delinquency Law Enforcement and Criminal Third ldUion Justice: An Introduction Martin R. Haskell G. Bennett-Sandler California State University, Long Beach City University of New Yo rk lewis Yablonsky et al. Californ ia State University, Northridge 354 pages • cloth • Instructor's Manual About 624 pages • paper • Instructor's 1979 Manual • Just published The Third Edition of this popular text pro­ Deviant Behavior vides up to date material on the juvenile Alex Thio, Ohio University court system. influences of the family and 416 pages • cloth • Instructor's Manual the educational system on deli nquency, 1978 and changes in patterns of drug use. Also included is expanded coverage of The Criminology of Deviant Women diversiOn and restitution programs. Freda Adler, Rutgers-The State University status offenders. female offenders, and Rita James Simon the fem1nist viewpoint on deli nquency. University of Illinois, Urbana 425 pages • paper • 1979 Also by Haskell and Yablonsky Crime and Delinquency Before the Law: Third Edition An Introduction to the Legal 780 pages • clot h • Instructor's Manual Process, Second Edition 1978 John J. Bonsignore University of Massachusetts. Amherst Criminology: Crime and et al. Criminality, Second Edition 545 pages • paper • 1979 617 pages • paper • Instructor's Manual 1978 Nonreactive Measures in the Social Sciences, Second Edition Investigating Crimes: Eugene J. Webb, Stanford University An Introduction et al. 394 pages • paper • 1981 Alfred R. Stone Texas Department of Safety Stuart M. Deluca form and Style: 508 pages • cloth • Instructor's Manual Theses, Beports, Term Papers 1980 Sixth Edition William Giles Cam pbell The Criminal Justice System: Stephen Va ughan Ballou An Introduction, Second Edition Carole Slade, Columbia University Ronald J. Waldron About 208 pages • spiralbound U.S. Department of Justice Now available tal. 522 pages • cloth • Study Guide For adoption consideration. request examination cop1es from your regional Instructor's Manual • 1980 Houghton Mifflin office.

� Houghton Mifflin Dallas. TX 75234 Geneva. IL 60 134 Hopewell. NJ 08525 Pa lo Alto. CA 94304 Boston. MA 02 108 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1982, 10:00 AM-11:50 AM

PANEL 10 QUEEN ROOM

CRIMINAL JUSTICE: EDUCATION AND PRACTICE

Chair: DAVID ANDERSON, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga

Presenters:

"Criminal justice education in India," PRABHA UNNITHAN, University of Nebraska.

"Law making, law breaking and adjudication: contributions of the physi­ cal sciences," JAMES OSTERBURG, University of Illinois-Chicago Circle.

"Forensic science and criminal justice: an evaluation of educational models," CHARLES LINDQUIST and FREDERICK SMITH, University of Alabama at Birmingham.

"Paper sessions and the annual meeting of the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences," DAVID 0. FRIEDRICHS, University of Scranton. "Your time is up: the sociology of professional conference paper presentations," MARTIN SCHWARTZ, University of Cincinnati.

Discussant: DAVID JAY BEIER, Middle Georgia College

PANEL 11 KING'S HEAD ROOM

A REASSESSMENT OF CRIME AND DEVIANCE IN COLONIAL AMERICA

Chair: ELMER H. JOHNSON, Southern Illinois University

Presenters:

"Recent developments in witch trial research," ALBERT HESS, SUNY Brockport.

"How wayward were New Haven's puritans?: a reassessment of crime and social deviance in early America," R. W. ROETGER, Emerson College.

"Institutionalized child abuse in early New England," BARBARA L. WATKINS, University of Kansas.

Discussant: ELI FABER, John Jay College of Criminal Justice

29 DETERMINATION.

Larry Hromadka, Houston Pol1ce Houston Pol1ce Academy offers a Officer. "I love my JOb. Ever s�nce the 7th challeng�ng course of classroom and grade, l have geared myself to be a pol1ce physical trainmg that is the first step off1cer." in becom1ng a law enforcement professional The Houston Police Force 1s made up of men and women who - like Larry Oual1fiec candidates can start with a Hromadka - feel that they can have a salary of up to $21 ,000 per year w1th posit1ve impact on the quality of life in our promotional opportunities and a host of commumty. To meet the needs of ourfast fully paid benefits. If you would like to growing city, we are looking for more know more about how you -or someone people who want to make a difference you know - can become part of the Candidates should be American Citizens Houston Pol1ce. please call toll free 1n between the ages of 1 9and35, with a high Texas 1-800-392-2281 or out of state school diploma or equivalent 1-800-23 1-7795 or wnte to Houston Police Recruitmg, 401 Louisiana, Suite We can offer training at one of the most 601 , Houston, Texas 77002. modern and best equipped police training facilities in America. The An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1982, 10:00 AM-11:50 AM

PANEL 12 OLD RIVER ROOM

CAPITAL PUNISHMENT: DETERRENCE OR IDEOLOGY?

Chair: WILLIAM G. ARCHAMBEAULT, Louisiana State University

Presenters:

"The capital punishment stalemate," PHILIP W. HARRIS, Temple Uni­ versity.

"Attitudes toward capital punishment: a trend analysis of student atti­ tudes, 1971, 1981," SHERRY L. CORBETT, University of Ohio.

"Crime, punishment, and deterrence: the impact of an execution on attitudes toward the death penalty," ROGER HANDBERG, ROBERT WRIGHT, and CHARLES UNKOVIC, University of Central Florida.

"Is capital punishment a short-term deterrent to homicide?," SAM G. McFARLAND, Western Kentucky University.

"Perspectives and punishment," RICHARD M. WOLTERS, Doane College.

Discussants: MARC P. RIEDEL Southcrr1 IllinOIS University CHKIS PRENDERGAST, University of Evansville

PANEL 13 TURF ROOM

PRIVATE AND INDUSTRIAL SECURITY II

Chair: W. FRED WEGENER, Indiana University of Pennsylvania

Presenters:

"Training for private security, a necessity," JEFFERY P. RUSH, University of Alabama-Birmingham.

"Surveying the need for a university security management degree pro­ gram," DONALD C. BECKER, University of Central Florida.

"The role of campus security in the secondary school setting: a study of selected California public schools," ROBERT J. MEADOWS, Glendale Community College.

Discussants: MICHAEL J. PALMIOTTO, Western Illinois University

31 ON CRIME ANDCRIMINOL OGY

CRIMAnE IntANDroduction PUNIS to CriminologHMENTy HARRY E. ALLEN, San Jose State University; PA UL C. FRIDAY, Western Michigan University; JULIAN B. ROEBUCK, Mississippi State University; and EDWARD SAGARIN, City College of the City of New Yo rk An outstanding introduction to the fu ll scope of modern criminology, this concise text integrates sociological, psychological, and legal materials to lead students from basic concepts of crime to complex issues in corrections and rehabilitation. Presenting and evaluating all major theories and per­ spectives, it provides a criticaf, conflict-oriented approach that recognizes both the successes and the fa ilures of the criminal JUstice system. Impor­ tant topics covered include victims and victimology ; criminal behavior systems; special categories of offenders ; and misdemeanant and com­ munity based corrections. Te acher's Manual #90046 464 pages $14.95

KNOWINGThe Insanity RIGHT Dcfcu�c of n FROMiel McNaughtan WRONG '�n RICHARD MORAN, Moun{ Holyoke College In the first detailed study of the case that set the precedent fo r pleas of criminal insanity, Moran shows how the court that relieved McNaughtan of responsibility fo r his actions also avoided confronting the political legit­ imacy of his attempted assassination of Prime Minister Sir Robert Peel. #92189 224 pages $15.95

CORPORATE CRIME MARSHALL B. CLI NARD, University of Wisconsin, and PETER C. YEAGER, Ya le University

An �xhaustive investigat.ion into such practices as price fixing,�ribe ry, tax evasion, and the marketing of unsafe or untested products, this unflmch­ ing analysis documents the nature and extent of corporate crime, explains the reasons behind its commission, and provides concrete proposals to halt its spread. #90571 432 pages $17.95

SEE US ATBO OTH #15.

PubliSher:\ prices mb;ut to chan,;e without notice. THE FREE PRESS A Division of Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc. 200D BROWN STREET, RIVERSIDE NJ 08370 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1982, 10:00 AM-I 1:50 AM

PANEL 14 KENT ROOM

CRITICAL VIEWS OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE PROCESSES

Chair: CRAIG HANEY, Umversity of California-Santa Cruz

Presenters:

"Dilemmas of defense strategies in trials of Vietnam war protesters," STEVEN E. BARKAN, Umversity of Mame

"Social scientists as expert witnesses: their use, misuse and sometimes abuse," SANDRA S EVANS, Umversity of Cmcmnati and JOSEPH E SCOTT, Ohio State Untversity

"Prison overcrowding and sentencing reform," KEL RYAN PRESTON, Indiana Umversity

"Convicting the innocent: when justice goes wrong," ARYE RATTNER and C. RONALD HUFF, Ohio State Umversity

"Dealth penalty for children: state execution of convicted children under age eighteen," VICTOR L STREIB, Cleveland-Marshall College of Law

Discussant: CRAIG HANEY , Umversity of California--Santa Cruz

PANEL IS ANCHOR ROOM

DEVELOPMENT AND UTILIZATION OF PERSONALITY TESTS

Chair: RICHARD E FARMER, Umversity of New Haven

Presenters:

'·A preliminary report on the stress behavior inventory: a clinical assessment instrument," RICHARD E FARMER and LYNN HUNT MON­ AHAN, Umvers1ty of New Haven.

"An integration of concepts in the literature on sociopathy, narcissism and the criminal personality," GEORGE HARRIS, Washburn Umvers1ty.

"Identifying the homicidal and assaultive personality," FRANK KOD· MAN, R G FLESCH, and T. L DUNN, \ll urray State Untversity

"An empirical topology of regular and occasional shoplifters," RICHARD H MOORE, Southern Illmois Umversity

"The psychological functioning of probationers: intake agents' ratings vs. clinical findings," NORMAN GOLDFARB, Milwaukee Commumty Correct1ons

Discussant: TBA

33 Texts that in zero on the real world of police work

LAW PRINCIPLESAn Overview of the OF Justice SysteENFORm, 3rdCEMENT Edition Edward Eldefonso, Alan R. Coffey, and Richard C. Grace The updated edition of this widely used text pinpoints practical solutions to contemporary problems in police work and the administration of criminal justice. Here is guidance to the human and scientific aspects of police, legal, and correctional work ...new strategies for effective criminal justice administration, based on a coordinated relationship between Police, Courts, and Corrections ...and a close look at future trends and career opportunities in criminal justice. An Instructor's Manual is available. (1-05509-3) 383pp. 1982

OperationsPOUCE PA andTROL CORRECTIONSPaul W. Keve Management Here's a comprehensive, clear intro­ Charles D. Hale duction to corrections that empha­ sizes the human interrelationships in Integrating the principles of public the field. Solidly anchored in extensive administration with modern manage­ interviews with corrections personnel, ment techniques. Police Pa trol shows th is text /handbook outlines strategies students and trainees how to effec­ and techniques for effective prison tively plan. conduct. and manage and prisoner management, prison patrol operations. Actual case studies programming, parole prograrr.s, and illustrate how local police depart­ adapting corrections to modern ments have put these innovative needs. Ava ilable with Instructor's methods to work solving problems Manual. related to the patrol environment and the ph ysical and psychological haz­ ( 1-03004-X) 506 pp. 1981 ards of the patrol function. Av ailable with Instructor's Manual. ( 1-03291-3) 328 pp. 1981

To be considered for complimentary copies, write to Joseph Morse. Dept. 2-1 588. JOHN WILEY & SONS, INC. Please include course name. 605 Third Avenue enrollment, and title of present text. New Yo rk, N.Y. 10158 2-1588

See them at the Wiley Booth. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1982, 10:00 AM-1 1:50 AM

PANEL 16 GOTHIC ROOM

MINORITIES AND THE LAW

Chair: SLOAN T. LETMAN, Loyola University of Chicago

Presenters:

"Organization, planning, implementation, and evaluation for first tribal enforcement officers academy for the northwest association of tribal enforcement officers," PHILLIP G. AVERILL, Everett Community College.

"The Navajo police department: its structure, composition, and juris­ diction," DAVID WACHTEL, University of Alabama-Birmingham.

"Women and the law," BARBARA RAFFEL PRICE and NATALIE J. SOKO­ LOFF, John Jay College of Criminal Justice.

"Legal repression of American Indians: criminal law and the Native American church," PAUL LAWSON and JENNIFER SCHOLES, Montana State University.

"Blacks and criminal justice: yesterday and today," KATHERINE VAN WORMER, Kent State University.

Discussant: MARY R. TWITTY, Kentucky State Umversity

PANEL 17 OAK ROOM

CRIME AND DELINQUENCY

Chair: LIONEL NEIMAN, Ball State University

Presenters:

"Self concepts and criminal behavior: implications for criminal justice policy," ELEANOR BLOCK, SUNY College of Technology.

"Prevention of criminal activity in the horse industry," THOMAS JOHN­ SON, Washington State University.

"Criminal justice themes which have originated in literature," CHARLES CHASTAIN and ALICE MUNSON, University of Arkansas-Little Rock.

"Two views of crime and delinquency," ROY LOTZ, John Jay College of Criminal Justice.

"Literature and criminality," FREDERICK GODWIN and JOAN WEATH­ ERLY, Memphis State University.

"A reappraisal: juvenile delinquency in relationship to the broken home," USHADEVI DAVID TRIBHURAN, Michigan State University.

Discussant: TIM CARTER, Virgima Polytechnic Institute and State University

35 Alpha Phi Sigma 1982 Convention Agenda

WEDNESDAY, March 24, 1982

1:)00 AM 4 00 PM Registrahon lnformdl Get-Together

THURSDAY, March 25, 1982

H 00 AM 9 00 AM Ldte RegJstrahon q ()( l AM ll lO AM Audio/VIsual Presentahon Introd uchons by Representahves of Schools Conshtuhonal Changes Normnatlons of Officers

ACJS Pres1dent Culbertson Gives Speech I .! 00 N 1 00 PM Lunch on Your Own

l Ull PM Report of Officers Chapter Development SessiOn ·l llO PM l) 00 PM ReL�ephon for ACJS Members

�) l)L) PM Pdrty at Red Barn-Evenmg

FRIDAY, March 26, 1982

�H�O AM l� N Elechon of National Off1cers New Off1cers' Acceptance Speeches Presentation of Awards Outgomg Pres1dent Address l� ()0 N ACJS Luncheon

A detailed program including specific items, will be availab i e at the Convention.

Judy Jacobs Nahonal Secretary Alpha Phi Sigma

36 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1982, 10:00 AM-1 1 :50 AM

PANEL 18 DORSET ROOM

POLICE PROFESSIONALIZATION AND DEVELOPMENT

Chair: LAMBERT MILLER, Wichita State University

Presenters:

"The use of alternative approaches to police intervention in domestic crisis," JUDITH REGINA O'NEILL, Annandale, VA.

"Civilians in the police organization: emergence or submergence·?," PAUL H. JOHNSON, Eugene, OR.

"Value dilemmas in law enforcement," RAYMOND G. HUNT, SUNY Buffalo and JOHN M. MAGENAU, Wayne State University.

"Police training: a contemporary approach," MICHAEL T. CHARLES, Indiana University-Purdue University-Fort Wayne.

Discussant: THOMAS H. McANINCH, Illinois State University

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1982, 12:00 PM-1 :50 PM

PANEL 19 KENT ROOM

JAILS: CONTEMPORARY ISSUES AND TRENDS II

Chair: KEN KERLE, Boonsboro, Maryland

Presenters:

"Scarce resources and jail management," MARK POGREBIN, University of Colorado-Denver.

"Developing a model policies and procedures manual for local jails in North Carolina," JOEL A. THOMPSON and GARY W. WILLIS, Appalach­ ian State University.

"Jail policy-making in a federal context," THOMAS S. OSTROWSKI, Gannon University.

"Treatment in a custody jail," FINN-AAGE ESBENSEN, University of Colorado.

Discussant: MARK TEZAK, Illinois State University

37 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1982, 12:00 PM-1:50 PM

PANEL 20 TURF ROOM

ISSUES IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE: STUDENT SECTION II

Chair: DAVID L. CARTER, Pan American University

Presenters:

"Demographic and econometric variables as management information tools in criminal justice administration," MARTIN S. MEAGHER, Sam Houston State University.

"The death penalty in Ohio," SUSAN E. VAUGHN and PAULA E. BIESER, University of Miami-Ohio.

"Reduction of dwelling related crime through environmental security design," GARY BRINKLEY and SUSAN F. BRINKLEY, Sam Houston State University.

"A case study of the death penalty in a kidnap-rape conviction," DIANE DIAZ, Claremont Graduate School.

Discussant: ALLEN SAPP, Sam Houston State University

PANEL 21 ANCHOR ROOM

HISTORICAL ROOTS OF A DISCIPLINE: THEORETICAL AND ORGANIZATIONAL ASPECTS

Chair: VINCENT J. WEBB, University of Nebraska-Omaha

Presenters:

"American criminology: historic sources of its emerging international influence," ELMER JOHNSON, Southern Illinois University.

"Cesare Beccaria: utilitarian or retributivist?," DAVID YOUNG, Central Missouri State University.

"History of the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences: a preliminary report," FRANK MORN, University of Illinois, Chicago Circle.

"The long resistance: the enemies of positivism, 1890-1950," PHILIP JENKINS, Pennsylvania State University.

Discussant: JOHN W. WRIGHT, University of Baltimore

38 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1982, 12:00 PM-1:50 PM

PANEL 22 KING'S HEAD ROOM

CRITICAL CRIMINOLOGY

Chair: ARNOLD ANDERSON-SHERMAN, George Mason University

Presenters:

"The rise of critical criminology: an emerging paradigm?," WILLIAM BENGSTON, St. Joseph's College.

"Ideological convergences in the justice model," RAY PATERNOSTER and LISA HICKMAN, University of South Carohna.

"State, crime, and labour in British Columbia," R. S. RATNER and JOHN McMULLAN, University of British Columbia.

"A critical functionalist analysis of the rise of violent crime in America," FRANK P. WILLIAMS, Sam Houston State Univers1ty.

"Class conflict and law enforcement during the great depression," STEVEN J. ROSENTHAL, Hampton Institute.

Discussant: DRAGAN MILOVANOVIC, Long Island Umversity

PANEL 23 OAK ROOM

DECISION CRITERIA IN PLEA NEGOTIATION

Chair: DAVE CAMP, Corpus Christi State Umversity

Presenters:

"The effect of mandatory minimum sentencing legislation on prosecu­ torial behavior," GREGORY P. FALKIN, SUNY Stony Brook.

"Administrative law and the criminal justice process as exemplified by medicaid fraud prosecution in Wisconsin," MICHALE J. LOSSE, Wiscon­ sin Department of Justice.

"Prosecutorial policy and practice in plea negotiation decisions," SHERWOOD ZIMMERMAN, New York Divis1on of Criminal Justice Services and JOSEPH S. COUGHLIN, Southern Illinois University.

"Plea bargaining as a system of games," JAMES E. LENNERTZ, Lafayette College.

Discussants: LINDA CARSTARPHEN, Indiana University-Southeast FRANK HORVATH, Michigan State University

39 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1982, 12:00 PM-1:50 PM

PANEL 24 OLD RIVER ROOM

CRIME FROM THE VICTIM'S PERSPECTIVE

Chair: JEFFREY L. SCHRINK, Indiana State University

Presenters: "Victim response to robbery and crime control policy," EDUARD A. ZIEGENHAGEN and DOLORES BROSMAN, SUNY Binghamton. "The effects of criminal/victim relationship, presence of a weapon and victim precipitation on the behavior of simulated crime victims," KENNETH S. BORDENS and LESLIE WILDS, Indiana University-Purdue University-Fort Wayne. "School children as victims of crime," EDWARD TROMANHAUSER, Chicago State University. "Ethnic, sex, and geographic correlates to perceived and actual victimi­ zation among Louisiana teachers," WILLIAM G. ARCHAMBEAULT, Louisiana State University. "The effect of social influence on victim's decision to report a crime," DAVID WESCOTT and MARTIN GREENBERG, University of Pittsburgh and R. BARRY RUBACK, Georgia State University.

Discussant: ELLEN HOCHSTEDLER, University of Wisconsin­ Milwaukee

PANEL 25 GOTHIC ROOM

RESEARCH ON JUDICIAL BEHAVIOR

Chair: JOHN M. SCHEB, University of Florida

Presenters: "Judicial selection, judicial roles and legal rationalization," JOHN M. SCHEB, University of Florida. "Pretrial release: an examination of the effects of the pretrial presenter on bail decisions," PATRICIA L. HARDYMAN, University of Cincinnati. "Survey of judicial behavior: an initial report," STEPHEN C. BITGOOD, SHELBY STARLING, and WILLIAM GARDNER, Jacksonville State Uni­ versity. "Sentencing discretion and judgments of criminal behavior: an attribu­ tion model," RICK FINLEY and ROBERT M. BERRY, University of Arkansas­ Little Rock. "Stone vs. Powell: the impact on state supreme courts," G. LARRY MAYS, New Mexico State University. Justice John Paul Stevens: views on the rights of the convicted," KATHLEEN M. SIMON, Appalachian State University.

Discussant: DAVID BARGER, James Madison University

40 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1982, 12:00 PM-1:50 PM

PANEL 26 DORSET ROOM

POLICE COMMUNITY RELATIONS

Chair: PETER HORNE, Mercer County Community College

Presenters:

"An analysis of the Muncie police department's public, community, and media relations," CARL PASCUAL FLOREZ, Michigan State University and KYLE RICHMOND, Indiana University.

"The police-social work program in Davenport, Iowa: 1978-1981," WIL­ LIAM F. WATERS, Northern Michigan University.

"Educating the police practitioner," THOMAS H. COOK, JAMES G. FRASER and W. F. LAMPREY, University of South Carolina.

"Improving police knowledge of and utilization of community resources with a pocket-sized resource guide," F. BARRY SCHREIBER, St. Cloud State University.

Discussant: MAHENDRA SINGH, Michigan State University

PANEL 27 QUEEN ROOM

HANDGUN CONTROL

Chair: JAMES GREENSTONE, National Academy of Crisis Intervention

Presenters:

"Handguns in Florida: patterns of acquisition, use and transfer," D. E. SCOTT BURR and TOMMIE NELSON, University of Central Florida.

"Handguns in Florida: public attitudes toward various handgun regula­ tion strategies," TOMMIE NELSON and D. E. SCOTT BURR, University of Central Florida.

Discussant: RICHARD BOGG, Ball State University

PANEL 28 LORD CREWE ROOM

ROUNDTABLE: FORENSIC SCIENCES

Chairs: JAY SIEGEL, Michigan State University BARRI LATEEF, Youngstown State University

41 PLENARY SESSION

''The FBI and Martin Luther King, Jr."

MARCH 24, 1982, 2:00 PM-3:50 PM, KING'S HEAD ROOM

featuring

DAVID GARROW

author of The FBI and Martin Luther King, Jr.

reactors

GEORGE FELKENES, California State University-Long Beach

SLOAN T. LETMAN, Loyola University

JOSEPH L. SCHOTT, Texas Christian University

42 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1982, 2:00 PM-3:50 PM

PLENARY SESSION: KING'S HEAD ROOM

THE FBI AND MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR.

PANEL 29 KENT ROOM

ISSUES CONFRONTING CORRECTIONAL ADMINISTRATORS

Chair: MICHAEL CARLIE, Ball State University

Presenters:

"Communication policies in state prisons for adult males: 1971-1981," GEORGE E. DICKINSON, Morehead State University.

"Conjugal visitation in United States prisons: the debate and its resolu­ tion," ANN GOETTING, Western Kentucky University.

"An assessment of contemporary accounts of prison corruption," BER­ NARD J. McCARTHY, Jacksonville State University.

"Professionalism, role conflict, work alienation, and anomia: a look at prison management," ROBERT M. REGOLI, University of Colorado and ERIC D. POOLE, Auburn University.

"Why aren't correctional officers motivated?" DAVID W. HAYESLIP, Michigan State University.

Discussant: WILLIAM NARDINI, Indiana State University

PANEL 30 TURF ROOM

CRIMINALITY AND SENTENCING PATTERNS IN ANTEBELLUM AMERICA

Chair: WILLIAM F. FEYERHERM, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

Presenters:

"Criminality and social class in Boston, 1814-1950," T. FERDINAND, Northeastern University.

"Patterns of criminal sentencing in Antebellum America: a north-south comparison," D. J. BODENHAMER, University of Southern Mississippi.

Discussant: ROBERT M. IRELAND, University of Kentucky

43 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1982, 2:00 PM-3:50 PM

PANEL 31 OAK ROOM

JUVENILE JUSTICE: EVALUATION STUDIES

Chair: WILLIAM E. THORNTON, Loyola University of

Presenters:

"An evaluation of the Essex County juvenile justice court intake ser­ vice," ETHAN J. JANOWITZ, Seton Hall University.

"The implementation of change in the juvenile justice system," SUSANNE FLEMING, Stochton State College.

"The impact of Public Law 276 on child abuse and neglect services and the juvenile justice system," RONALD DOLON and LIONEL NEIMAN, Ball State University.

"The Los Angeles war on youth gangs: will justice be administered?," JOHN C. QUICKER, California State University-Domingues Hills.

Discussant: TBA

PANEL 32 GOTHIC ROOM

POLICE VIOLENCE AND MISCONDUCT

Chair: JOSEPH E. SCURO, JR.

Presenters:

"Police use of deadly force and minority victims," LLOYD BRAITH­ WAITE, Western Michigan University.

"Formal and informal indoctrination to police organization and proce­ dures," C. J. FLAMMANG and ROY 0. WALKER, University of Illinois. "Big Brother is watching you," LLOYD KLEIN, CUNY Graduate Center.

"Police deception and the entrapment defense," B. GRANT STITT and GENE G. JAMES, Memphis State University.

"Police misconduct: is civil liability an effective remedy?," STEVEN D. DILLINGHAM and H. E. "BUTCH" BARINEAU, University ofSouth Carolina.

Discussant: DAVID KEN WHEATON, Tennessee State University

44 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 19 82 , 2:00 PM-3:50 PM

PANEL 33 DORSET ROOM

THE PSYCHOLOGY OF DISPUTE RESOLUTION

Chair: BLAIR H. SHEPPARD, Duke University

Presenters: ROY LEWICKI, Duke University E. ALLAN LIND, University of Illinois ROBIN LISSAK, University of Illinois PAUL A. PALUMBO, University of Ilinois

Discussant: NEIL J. VIDMAR, University of Western Ontario

PANEL 34 OLD RIVER ROOM

DRUGS AND CRIME: THE ELUSIVE NEXUS

Chair: JAY R. WILLIAMS, Duke University

Presenters:

"Drug and crime data available in the treatment outcome prospective," ROBERT HUBBARD, J. VALLEY RACHAL, JAMES COLLINS, and ELIZA­ BETH CAVANAUGH, Research Triangle Institute.

"Studying crime and drug use episodes," BRUCE JOHNSON, The New York State Office of Drug Abuse Services.

"Drugs and violence: a conceptual approach," PAUL J. GOLDSTEIN, Narcotic and Drug Research, Inc.

"Are drug users really non -violent?," ERIC D. WISH, Narcotic and Drug Research, Inc.

Discussant: LOUISE RICHARDS, National Institute on Drug Abuse

45 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1982, 2:00 PM-3:50 PM

PANEL 35 QUEEN ROOM

RAPE LAW AND LAW IN RAPE I

Chair: FRANKLYN A. M. ROBBINS, Rhode Island Junior College

Presenters : "Consent, force, and resistance: the tragic trilogy in the law of rape," CHARLES P. NEMETH, Glassboro State College.

"The rape victim and the law," ROSLYN MURASKIN, C. W. Post College.

"An analysis of alterations in rape statutes in the United States," SUSAN CARINGELLA-MacDONALD, Western Michigan University.

"What's so bad about rape?," MICHAEL DAVIS, Illinois State University.

Discussant: CHARLES P. NEMETH, Glassboro State College

PANEL 36 ANCHOR ROOM

THE PAINS OF INCARCERATION

Chair: JAMES LEBEAU, Indiana State University

Presenters:

"The pains of imprisonment: a study of the juvenile institutions of Missouri," JAMES M. BRANNON, LLOYD L. MATTHEWS, and MARILYN MERRELL, W. E. Sears Youth Center.

"A typology of inmate perceptions of incarceration," JOHN P. SAR­ GENT, JR., Kent State University.

"Architectural determinism: violence in prison," RANDY ATLAS, Florida State University.

"Reasons for the New Mexico prison riot and the aftermath," JANE FORAKER-THOMPSON, Boise State University.

"Women on death row," PHYLLIS D. COONTZ, University of Pittsburgh.

Discussant: RICHARD LAWRENCE, University of Texas at

PANEL 37 LORD CREWE ROOM

ROUNDTABLE: CRIMINAL JUSTICE RESEARCH

Chair: WILLIAM G. ARCHAMBEAULT

46 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1982, 4:00 PM-5:50 PM

PANEL 38 KENT ROOM

UNDERSTANDING THE JURY

Chair: NORBERT KERR, Michigan State University

Presenters:

"The effect of prior mock jury experience on subsequent decisions of guilt," GORDEN E. MAPLEY, University of South Carolina-Spartanburg.

"A subjective test of alternative models of juror behavior," DAVID J. WEBBER, Indiana University.

"First impressions in the courtroom: juror impressions of prosecuting and defense attorneys in voir dire and opening statements," STEVEN PENROD, DAN COATES, MICHAEL ATKINSON, and LARRY HEVER, University of Wisconsin.

"The use of experts in the courtroom: juror and attorney judgments of expert witness credibility," DANIEL LINZ, University of Wisconsin.

"Psychologists as consultants for changes of venue: the use of public opinion surveys," MICHAEL T. NIETZEL and RONALD DILLEHAY, Uni­ versity of Kentucky.

"Informational determinants of jury decision shifts," ROBERT McDO­ NALD and ROBERT BERRY, University of Arkansas-Little Rock.

Discussant: NORBERT KERR, Michigan State University

PANEL 39 OAK ROOM

CONTEMPORARY ISSUES IN TERRORISM I

Chair: DANIEL E. GOERGES-ABEYIE, Southern Illinois University

Presenters:

"Terrorism, terror and guerrilla warfare: severity and governmental and societal response," DANIEL E. GEORGES-ABEYIE and MELANIE ZER­ MER, Southern Illinois University.

"Paranoiac terrorism," WALTER P. RISLER, Indiana University-South Bend.

"Terrorism in the sixties, political activism in the seventies: an analysis of the over two decades," CHESTER L. QUARLES, Univer­ sity of Mississippi.

"Security systems management: an innovative approach to combating terrorism," FRANCIS G. SPRANZA, MARIE SPRANZA, and ELIZABET ANN GAMBLE, Cheyenne, WY.

Discussant: WALTER P. RISLER, Indiana University-South Bend

47 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1982, 4:00 PM-5:50 PM

PANEL 40 GOTHIC ROOM

THE IMPACT OF RESEARCH ON PUBLIC SAFETY

Chair: CHARLES WELLFORD, University of Maryland

Presenters: GEORGE BRIDGES, Case Western Reserve University RICHARD GROSKIN, General Accounting Office PETER HOFFMAN, U.S. Parole Commission

Discussant: JAMES UNDERWOOD, National Institute of Justice

PANEL 41 OLD RIVER ROOM

PERSPECTIVES ON SPOUSE ABUSE II

Chair: PHILLIP W. RHODES, Portland State University

Presenters:

"The legacy of domestic violence: juvenile delinquency," PHILLIP W. RHODES and SHARON L. PARKER, Portland State University.

"An experimental study of the influences of police response, resources of wife, victim background, and severity of injuries on perceptions of marital violence," TERRY L. FINESMITH, Chicago, IL and STEVEN PEN­ ROD, University of Wisconsin.

"Alcohol and wife abuse: an attributional analysis," BERNARDO J. CARDUCCI, Indiana University-Southeast.

"Police response to spouse abuse," R . HOMAT, University of Detroit.

Discussant: BERNARDO J. CARDUCCI, Indiana University-Southeast

48 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1982, 4:00 PM -5:50 PM

PANEL 42 ANCHOR ROOM

EVALUATING JUVENILE JUSTICE AND JUVENILE CRIME

Chair: BARBARA STOLZ, American University

Presenters:

"The effects of positive peer group treatment on delinquent personality structure," JAMES M. BRANNON, W. E. Sears Youth Center and JAMES CRAIG, Western Kentucky University.

"Decision making process and patterns among juvenile court judges," EBRAHIM GHARAVI, Austin Peay State University.

"Differential effects of facilities on status offender types," C. LARRY HECK, Kansas Newman College.

"The use of multiple regression techniques in program evaluation: the case of juvenile diversion effects," JAMES L. WALKER and MARTIN THOMAS, Wright State University.

"Adolescent-parental separation and its relation to youth deviance," VINCENT J. HOFFMAN, Michigan State University.

Discussant: INEKE HAEN MARSHALL, University of Nebraska -­ Omaha

PANEL 43 LORD CREWE ROOM

ROUNDTABLE: HISTORY OF CRIME AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE IN AMERICA

Discussant: ELLEN DWYER

PANEL 44 DORSET ROOM

ECONOMICS OF CRIME

Chair: STAN KEIL, Ball State University

Presenters:

"A casual chain approach to evaluating the effectiveness of the criminal justice system," STAN KEIL, Ball State University.

"An economic analysis of crime and punishment," DANIEL HANN, Franklin College.

"Labor market discrimination and racial differences in participation in crime," SAMUEL MYERS, Federal Trade Commission.

Discussant: TBA

49 MARCH 24, 1982, 4:00 PM-5:50 PM

PANEL 45 TURF ROOM

WORKSHOP: THE ROLE OF STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS

Chair: IRA J. SILVERMAN, University of South Florida

Presenters: IRA J. SILVERMAN, University of South Florida NOLA ALLEN, University of South Florida BRUCE WOLFORD, Eastern Kentucky University

THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1982

8:00 AM- 5:00 PM Registration Third Floor Lobby

8:00 AM- 9:50 AM Panels

PANEL 46 TURF ROOM

MANAGEMENT INFORMATION AND THE ISSUE OF PERFORMANCE MEASURES IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE EVALUATION

Chair: RICHARD R. BENNETT, The American University

Presenters:

"Are management information systems research?," ROBERT T. SIGLER, University of Alabama.

"Linear programming in criminal justice administration," RONALD JOHN HY, University of Mississippi, DOUGLAS FEIG, Mississippi State University, and ROBERT M. REGOLI, University of Colorado.

"Media presentation as a hindrance to effective law enforcement," GREGORY M. BARTOSZEK, Indiana State University.

"Patrol officers' knowledge ofthe neighborhood as a performance mea­ sure," STEVEN MASTROFSKI, Pennsylvania State University.

Discussant: JAMES J. FYFE, American University

50 THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1982, 8:00 AM-9:50 AM

PANEL 47 LORD CREWE ROOM

CORRECTIONAL RESEARCH: STRATEGIES, POLITICS AND ETHICS

Chair: ERIC D. POOLE, Auburn University

Presenters: ROBERT G. LEGER, East Tennessee State University CHARLES W. THOMAS, University of Florida GREGORY S. KOWALSKI, Auburn University ALLEN J. SHIELDS, Auburn University DEBORAH G. WILSON, Auburn University

Discussant: ERIC D. POOLE, Auburn University

PANEL 48 KENT ROOM

POLICE EDUCATION AND TRAINING

Chair: CHRIS DUNNING, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

Presenters:

"A comparison of certain values and attitudes among students in two types of police higher education programs," C. ALLEN PIERCE, Youngs­ town State University.

"Issues in higher education and law enforcement: an IIUnois study," BRUCE HEININGER, KATHRYN GOLDEN, and ROBERT FISCHER, West­ ern Illinois University.

"Police training: a necessity for improved community services," DANIEL J. BELL, Kent State University.

"The college educated police officer: an emergent minority," FREDER­ ICK A. SHENKMAN, University of Florida.

"A case for regionalized law enforcement training academies based upon job-related performance objectives," LAMBERT J. MILLER, Wichita State University.

Discussant: R. WILLIAM MATHIS, Napa, CA

51 THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1982, 8:00 AM-9:50 AM

PANEL 49 OAK ROOM

CRIME IN GOVERNMENT

Chair: DAVID 0. FRIEDRICHS, University of Scranton

Presenters:

"Institutional responses to charges of corruption in the U.S. Senate, 1960- 1981," DANIEL CAMPAGNA, Appalachian State University.

"The violent side of governmental criminality," JOSEPH HARRISON, Nashville, TN.

"The confluence of organized, white-collar and political crime," L. MICHAEL McCARTNEY, State College of Massachusetts at Westfield.

Discussant: DAVID 0. FRIEDRICHS, University of Scranton

PANEL 50 GOTHIC ROOM

JAILS: CONTEMPORARY ISSUES AND TRENDS: I

Chair: MARIANNE HOPPER, St. Edward's College

Presenters:

"Jail overcrowding: the search for solutions," MARIANNE HOPPER, St. Edward's College.

"Adult local detention facilities vulnerabilities to litigation on over­ crowding," THOMAS A JOHNSON, Washington State University.

"America's local jails: contemporary issues and trends," KEN AYERS, Kentucky Wesleyan College.

Discussant: FINN-AAGE ESBENSEN, University of Colorado

52 THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1982, 8:00 AM-9:50 AM

PANEL 51 QUEEN ROOM

FOCUS ON THE CRIMINAL COURTS

Chair: MICHAEL CARLIE, Ball State University

Presenters:

"Court-affiliated mediation programs: an assessment," PAUL J. WEBER, University of Louisville.

"Prosecutive summary report: an investigative as well as an administra­ tive control in criminal investigation," ROLLAND SOULE, University of Louisville.

"Defense oriented pre-sentence reports: an alternative approach by private practitioners," GERALD FARE, San Diego State University.

"Citizens' perceptions of the criminal court," LARRY KIELICH, MAR­ GARET MITCHELL, and BRUCE FRAYMAN, Aquinas College.

"Social science contributions to the determination of 'cruel and unusual punishment' in non-capital cases," RICHARD FREY, SUNY Brockport.

Discussant: RICHARD SCHUSTER, Virginia Polytechnic and State University

PANEL 52 OLD RIVER ROOM

EMPIRICAL STUDIES OF "RESPECTABLE" CRIMINOLOGY

Chair: GREGG BARAK, Aurora College

Presenters:

"Collateral disabilities and white-collar offenders," MICHAEL BENSON, Indiana University-Purdue University-Fort Wayne.

"Dissecting white-collar crime: offense type and punitiveness," FRANCIS T. CULLEN, RICHARD A. MATHERS, GREGORY A. CLARK, JENNIFER LEE, MICHAEL SHEEHAN, Western Illinois University and BRUCE G. LINK, New York, NY.

"Predicting employee theft in home improvement centers," JOHN W. JONES, London House Management Consultants, Inc., WILLIAM TERRIS, DePaul· University.

"Consumer protection and auto fraud in Indiana," STANLEY V. PEN­ NINGTON, Indiana University.

Discussant: GREGG BARAK, Aurora College

53 THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1982, 8:00 AM-9:50 AM

PANEL 53 ANCHOR ROOM

WORKSHOP: PHOTOJOURNALISM IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE

Chair: ETHAN HOFFMAN, Professional Photographer, New York

Discussant: LYLE L. SHOOK, Illinois State University

THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1982, 10:00 AM-11:50 AM

PANEL 54 GOTHIC ROOM

CRITICAL FACTORS IN PRISON POLICY MAKING

Chair: WILLIAM NARDINI, Indiana State University

Presenters:

"Standards in corrections-what impact on prisons?," MARY Q. HAWKES, Rhode Island College.

"Decision making in state corrections: a case study," DEBORAH G. WILSON, Auburn University and LAURA J. WOOL, Alabama Department of Corrections.

"Managing the correctional process: a study of correctional technol­ ogy," WILLIAM CARTER SMITH, East Carolina University.

"Correctional treatment: a meta-analysis of the recidivism literature," LOUIS GENEVIE, GREGORY L. MUHLIN, and EVA MARGOLIES, New York State Psychiatric Institute.

"Postscripts on a prison riot," JOSEPH W. ROGERS, New Mexico State University.

Discussant: JAMES LEBEAU, Indiana State University

PANEL 55 TURF ROOM

DYNAMIC CRIME PREVENTION: 1982

Chair: ROBERT L. O'BLOCK, Appalachian State University

Presenters: DICK MELLARD, National Crime Prevention Institute RICHARD SCHAFFER, United Nations L. D. HYDE, State of North Carolina STEPHEN DOEREN , Wichita State University JOE DONNERMEYER, National Rural Crime Prevention Center 0. C. FOSTER, Taylor Drug Stores ROBERT L. O'BLOCK, Appalachian State University

54 THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1982, 10:00 AM-11:50 AM

PANEL 56 KENT ROOM

ALTERNATIVE SYSTEMS OF PUNISHMENT

Chair: STEVEN D. RITTENMEYER, Western Illinois University

Presenters:

"Easy time: a working alternative to rehabilitation and punishment," HOWARD M. KAPLAN, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Develop­ ment, KENT S. MILLER and JAMES E. ORCUTT, Florida State University_

"The evolution of the proposed federal criminal code, 1968-1981 ," WALTER A. HOPKINS, Indiana State University.

"Legislative reform of juvenile justice: the implications and impact of House Bill 440," JUDITH A JONES and C. RONALD HUFF, Ohio State University.

"The new federalism and criminal procedure: the states seek self­ determinism," JUDITH HAILS KACI, Illinois State University.

"How they closed the prison," DAVID ORRICK, Vermont College.

Discussant: STEVEN D. RITTENMEYER, Western Illinois University

PANEL 57 ANCHOR ROOM

COMPUTER APPLICATIONS IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE I

Chair: JAGAN LINGAMNENI, Governors State University

Presenters:

"JUSSIM-a demonstration of the general application of a computer simulation model program," RAYMOND SURETTE, Florida International University.

"Microprocessor computer network application to criminal justice management systems," COREY D. SCHOU, University of Central Florida.

"Personal identify and the self-policing computer: an ethically guided data base management system," FRANK H. MARSH and WALTER MANER, Old Dominion University.

"Building a computerized child abuse data base file," ERNIE HERNAN­ DEZ, JR., California State University-Long Beach.

"Computer literacy and the criminal justice curriculum: the modern imperatives," JOQUE H. SOSKIS, University of North Florida.

Discussant: JAGAN LINGAMNENI, Governors State University

55 THURSDAY, March 25, 1982, 10:00 AM-11:50 AM

PANEL 58 OLD RIVER ROOM

POLICE STRESS

Chair: JOAN LUXENBURG, Central State University

Presenters:

"The stress of imminent death: a post-shooting trauma syndrome," MARY C. HUBBARD, Santa Ana, CA.

"Stresses perceived by chiefs of police," KENNETH F. KUZENSKI, Mis­ sissippi State University.

"Work Stress, organizational pressure, and the police officer," CHRIS DUNNING, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.

"The relationship between cognition, occupational stress, and job satis­ faction for police officers," THOMAS M. KELLEY, Wayne State University and R. DOUGLAS JOY, Mercy College. "A study of the longitudinal effect of crisis intervention training on police officers," CURTIS McCLUNG, Albany State College.

Discussant: MARY J. HAGEMAN, Virginia Commonwealth University

PANEL 59 DORSET ROOM

CONTEMPORARY ISSUES IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE EVALUATION METHODOLOGY

Chair: RICHARD R. BENNETT, American University

Presenters:

"Shakespeare on recidivism," MARILYN CHANDLER, Niagara University.

"The responsiveness of correctional outcomes to treatment, program­ matic, and environmental variables," C. AARON McNEECE and DIANA DINITTO, Florida State University.

"An empirical assessment of the gains made by using personality data, alone or in combination, with demographic, social, prior record and case variables in restitution outcome prediction," KATHLEEN HEIDE, University of South Florida.

"A meta-analysis of the influence of research methodology on the out­ comes of jury simulation studies," DAN LINZ and STEVEN PENROD, University of Wisconsin.

"Using the ethnographic method for evaluating criminal justice educa­ tion: a professional socialization model," MITTIE SOUTHERLAND, Uni­ versity of Wisconsin.

Discussant: JACK R. GREENE, Michigan State University

56 THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1982, 10:00 AM-11:50 AM

PANEL 60 OAK ROOM

PERSPECTIVES ON DOMESTIC VIOLENCE

Chair: EVE BUZAWA, University of Lowell

Presenters:

"Role of passivity in determining victim responses to domestic vio­ lence," EVE BUZAWA, University of Lowell and THOMAS AUSTIN, Wayne State University.

"Typology of female responses to domestic violence," ROBERT WHITE· HURST, University of Windsor.

"Psychiatric autopsy of spouse abuse," JAMES E. HOVEY, Reading, MA.

"Marital relationships in domestic violence," MARY ANN KENNY, Kent State University.

Discussant: THOMAS AUSTIN, Wayne State University

PANEL 61 LORD CREWE ROOM

ROUND TABLE: INTRODUCTION TO CORRECTIONS

Chair: LEE H. BOWKER, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1982, 12:00 PM-1:50 PM

PANEL 62 TURF ROOM

NONTRADITIONAL SOURCES AND METHODOLOGIES FOR CRIMINAL JUSTICE HISTORY

Chair: ELLEN HOCHSTEDLER, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

Presenters:

"Towards a historical sociolinguistics of crime: criminal argot and criminal organization, 16-17th century England," JOHN L. McMULLAN, University of British Columbia.

"Nineteenth century English language serial literature on criminal jus­ tice," DAVID M. HORTON, Minot State College.

"Application of the oral history technique in criminology and criminal justice," JOHN H. LAUB, Northeastern University.

Discussant: ELLEN DWYER, Indiana University

57 THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1982, 12:00 PM-1:50 PM

PANEL 63 KENT ROOM

POLICE PERSONALITY CHARACTERISTICS

Chair: JOSEPH L. PETERSON, University of Illinois-Chicago Circle

Presenters:

"An analysis of law enforcement officer's attitudes towards the control of handguns," THOMAS H. McANINCH, Illinois State University and MIKE NORMAN, Weber State Umversity.

"The importance of cynicism in the police worldview," SUSAN BLAND (HILBERT) DAY, Southwest Texas State University.

"Personality traits and their relationship to job satisfaction and feelings of stress in police officers," DAVID LESTER, Richard Stockton State College.

"Validating Niederhoffer's cynicism scale for black police," RICHARD H. ANSON, Albany State College.

"Police types: work, stress, and education," STEVEN HATTING, ALAN S. ENGEL, and PHILIP A. RUSSO, Miami University (Ohio).

Discussant: GARY W. CORDNER, University of Baltimore

PANEL 64 DORSET ROOM

ISSUES IN CORRECTIONS: STUDENT SECTION III

Chair: TOM SULLENBERGER, University of Texas at Arlington

Presenters:

"An examination of black inmate solidarity: a self-reported survey of black solidarity in a medium security southern prison," DONNA TOTH, ·, DON SMITH, and RHONDA SHORT, East Tennessee State University.

"Mothers in prison: the women and their children," GEOFFREY R. KORS and NANCY JUDSON, Union College.

"Exploring the relationship between various importation and functional variables and correctional philosophy among correctional workers at the state prison of southern Michigan," STAN STOJKOVIC, Michigan State University.

"Veteran probationers: an inquiry into their rehabilitative potential," LINDSEY WHITEHEAD, Lucas County Adult Probation Department.

"Efficacy of special parole intervention: impact on recidivism," MIT­ CHELL J. STEIN and GARY G. RASMUSSEN, Vanderbilt University and JAMES W. FOX, Eastern Kentucky University.

Discussant: TODD R. CLEAR, Rutgers University-Newark

58 THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1982, 12:00 PM-1:50 PM

PANEL 65 OAK ROOM

MINORITIES IN THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM

Chair: JAGAN LINGAMNENI, Governors State University

Presenters:

"The Mexican national as prisoner," MICHAEL BELSKY, Governors State University. ' "Blacks and crime: a critical assessment," JULIUS DEBRO, Atlanta University.

"Inmate judgments concerning inter-racial crimes," ROBERT SHERWIN and ALAN STRAUS, Miami University (Ohio).

"Race and correctional institution escape behavior: an exploratory study," ERNEST L. COWLES, Northeast Missouri State University.

"Black women in criminal justice," CAROL ADAMS, Loyola Umversity.

Discussant: MARY R. TWITTY, Kentucky State University

PANEL 66 GOTHIC ROOM

IMPACT OF MEDIA ON CRIMINAL JUSTICE

Chair: JAMES HENDRICKS, Ball State University

Presenters:

"Deference for the Supreme Court: the impact of exposure to the backstage behavior of judges via The Brethren," OTHO CRAWFORD and RAYMOND GONZALEZ, Columbus College.

"Media presentation as a hinderance to effective law enforcement," GREGORY BARTOSZEK, Indiana University.

59 THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1982, 12:00 PM-1:50 PM

PANEL 67 OLD RIVER ROOM

POLICIES AND THE POLICE

Chair: RALPH BAKER, Ball State University

Presenters:

"Personnel retrenchment affecting rank structures: an urban police problem," GEORGE B. LOCKWOOD, Kent State University.

"A model for long range planning in policing," CAROL S. MUELLER, Nassau Community College.

"A point system for probable cause," A. JACK MAY, Kentucky Depart­ ment of Corrections.

"Hypertension: a treatment program for criminal justice workers," JEFFERY D. WHITE, University of South Carolina.

Discussant: FRED MEYER, Ball State University

PANEL 68 ANCHOR ROOM

WORKSHOP: WHOSE SIDE ARE WE ON? REEXAMINING THE ROLE OF THE CRIMINOLOGIST

Chairs: DENNIS LONGMIRE, Ohio State University HAROLD E. PEPIN SKY, Indiana University

PANEL 69 QUEEN ROOM

FILM PRESENTA TION: DEADLY FORCE

Chair: MONROE J. MILLER, University of Pittsburgh

60 THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1982, 2:00 PM-3:50 PM

PANEL 70 OLD RIVER ROOM

PUBLISH OR PERISH: THE JOURNALS, PART II

Chair: TOM WINFREE, Louisiana State University

Presenters: DAE CHANG, Editor, International Journal of Comparative and Applied Criminal Justice DONALD BLAZICEK, Associate Editor, International Journal of Comparative and Applied Criminal Justice STEVEN FLEECE, Editor, Journal of Fam ily Law DON GOTTFREDSON, Editor, Criminal Justice and Behavior

PANEL 71 TURF ROOM

HISTORICAL STUDIES OF PENAL ISSUES IN BRITAIN AND ITS COLONIES

Chair: CLARICE FIENMAN, Trenton State College

Presenters:

"The abolition of pain: Foucault's Discipline and Punishment and the humanitarian critique of the death penalty in England," RANDALL McGOWEN, Middleburg College.

"F. Hill: the Scottish prison inspectorate in the age of reform," DAVID SMITH, University of Puget Sound.

"The penitentiary model in a pre-industrial society," RAINER BAEHR, Mount Saint Vincent University.

Discussant: JOHN D. HEWITT, Ball State University

61 THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1982, 2:00 PM-3:50 PM

PANEL 72 KENT ROOM

CRIMES OF VIOLENCE

Chair: PETER HIRSCHBURG, Southeast Missouri State University

Presenters:

"Media incited violence and crime: who can control it?," ALEXANDRA THOMPSON, Women's Information League.

"Scientific research on pornography and violence: the empirical find­ ings," EDWARD DONNERSTEIN, DAN LINZ, and STEVEN PENROD, Uni­ versity of Wisconsin.

"Scientific research on pornography and violence: the legal context," STEVEN PENROD, DAN LINZ, and EDWARD DONNERSTEIN, University of Wisconsin.

"If violence is as American as cherry pie, can there be a nonviolent future?," GENE STEPHENS, University of South Carolina.

Discussant: ERNEST D. GIGLIO, Lycoming College

PANEL 73 DORSET ROOM

INTERNATIONAL CRIMINOLOGY I

Chair: JAGAN LINGAMNENI, Governors State University.

Presenters:

"Social control of crime in Japan," CARL B. BECKER, Southern Illinois University.

"Youth crime in Japan: implications for United States policy," CHARLES R. FENWICK, Trenton State College

"Community based alternatives in Japan," CHRIS W. ESKRIDGE, Uni­ versity of Nebraska-Omaha.

"A cross-cultural test of the behavior of law," AL MIRRANE, University of New Orleans and MARILYN HOWELL, Washington State University.

"A wholistic approach to the rehabilitation of offenders in the Virgin Islands," AGNES ELIZABETH WATLINGTON, Virgin Islands.

Discussant: GALEN M. JANEKSELA, Wichita State University

62 THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1982, 2:00 PM-3:50 PM

PANEL 74 OAK ROOM

INTEREST GROUPS AND THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE PROCESS

Chair: ROBERT I. MENDELSOHN, Indiana University

Presenters:

"The ACLU as policy-maker," THOMAS S. OSTROWSKI, Gannon University.

"Identifying criminal justice publics: interest groups and the reform of the federal criminal code," ALBERT P. MELONE and ROBERT SLAGTER, Southern Illinois University.

"Interest group politics: the PSE lobby," HOWARD W. TIMM, Southern Illinois University.

"Congress and criminal law: motivations, process and change," BAR­ BARA ANN STOLZ, American University.

"Too many mansions: promoting societal development through law," MARK C. KENNEDY, American University-Cairo.

Discussants: GREGORY P. FALKIN, SUNY Stony Brook MICHAEL ISRAEL, Kean College

PANEL 75 GOTHIC ROOM

RESEARCH ISSUES IN CRIME

Chair: ROBERT S. CORRIGAN, Stockton State College

Presenters:

"Preventing rape: an evaluation of a multi-leveled approach," GENNARO VITO, Temple University, JOHN P. KENNEY, California State University­ Long Beach, and DENNIS R. LONGMIRE, Ohio State University.

"The People vs. Everyone," RICHARD FULMER, Pennsylvania State University.

"On the relationship between murder and aggravated assault," DAVID ANDERSON, University of Tennessee.

"Criminal justice: towards an end to the nonsystem," CHARLES UN­ KOVIC, University of Central Florida and HAROLD KELTON, U.S. Probation Department.

"Confidentiality, privilege and third party disclosure of dangerousness: an attempt to unravel the Tarasoff case," SUELLYN VANDERSLICE, University of Hawaii.

Discussant: VERNETTA YOUNG, American University

63 THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1982, 2:00 PM-3:50 PM

PANEL 76 ANCHOR ROOM

AMERICAN CRIMINAL JUSTICE HIGHER EDUCATION

Chair: J. PRICE FOSTER, University of Louisville

Presenters:

"Self-evaluation of criminal justice curriculum," WILLIAM V. PELFREY, Memphis State University.

"Credit for life experience: issues and concerns," GALAN JANEKSELA and R. G. IACOVETTA, Wichita State University.

"Paradigm development in crime related education," JACK R. GREENE and TIM S. BYNUM, Michigan State University.

"Undergraduate criminal justice education, 1981-1982," STANLEY L. SWART, University of North Florida.

"Criminal justice doctoral programs: administrative practices and issues," ROLANDO V. DEL CARMEN, Sam Houston State University.

Discussant: STANLEY L. SWART, University of North Florida

PANEL 77 QUEEN ROOM

POLITICS OF CIVIL LIBERTIES: THE COURTS

Chair: RICHTER H. MOORE JR., Appalachian State University

Presenters:

"Searching for the elusive balance between state power and individual rights," EDWARD V. HECK, University of New Orleans.

"The Burger court and criminal justice," WILLIAM. E. BRIGMAN, Univer­ sity of Missouri-St. Louis.

"The political theory of political trials," RON CHRISTENSON, Gustavus Adolphus College.

"Relevancy, politics, and the criminal law," C. F. ABEL, Old Dominion University.

"Protection of privacy in the 80's: the Burger court's reaction to Douglas," THOMAS J. O'DONNELL, Georgia College.

Discussant: OTIS H. STEPHENS, University of Tennessee

64

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65 THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1982, 4:00 PM-5:50 PM

PANEL 78 OAK ROOM

POLICE DISCRETION

Chair: MARY J. HAGEMAN, Virginia Commonwealth University

Presenters:

"Police discretion: a necessity for effective law enforcement," JEFFERY PAUL RUSH, Palham, AL.

"Constructing authority in ambiguous situations: the plainclothes officer confronts a suspect," LYNNE A. GRESSET, University of Michigan.

"Discretion or discrimination: the use of official sanctions by Navajo police officers," DAVID WACHTEL, University of Alabama-Birmingham.

Discussant: JOSEPH E. SCURO, JR., Assistant Attorney General, Ohio

PANEL 79 DORSET ROOM

POLICE MANAGEMENT

Chair: JOHN E. ANGELL, University of Alaska

Presenters:

"Towards a proactive model of police personnel selection," LAWRENCE M. LYNCH, Onondaga Community College, EDWARD A THIBAULT, SUNY Oswego, and R. BRUCE McBRIDE, SUNY College of Technology.

"Management and police organization: the research interface," JAMES L. MUNRO, University of West Florida.

"Reconceptualizing resource allocation decision-making," DAVID J. FARMER, Virginia Commonwealth University.

"Improving police organizational performance through strategic man­ agement methods," ROY R. ROBERG, San Jose State University and JUDITH KIRCHHOFF, University of Maryland.

Discussant: RAYMOND G. HUNT, SUNY Buffalo

66 THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1982, 4:00 PM-5:50 PM

PANEL SO QUEEN ROOM

RADICAL RECONCEPTUALIZATION OF CRIME AND JUSTICE

Chair: W. CLINTON TERRY, University of Florida

Presenters:

"Capitalism, socialism, and crime," ROBERT M. BOHM, Jacksonville State University.

"A theory of incongruities in punishment: further reasons why punish­ ment fails," RAY P. CUZZORT, University of Colorado.

"New directions in critical criminology: law, ideological effects and semiotic analysis," DRAGAN MILOVANOVIC, Long Island University.

"Toward a theoretical reconstitution of law," LANCE H. SELVA, Middle Tennessee State University.

"Crime in the coal mines: a study of rural crime," JOHN R. WARNER, JR., West Virginia Wesleyan College.

Discussant: HAROLD E. PEPINSKY, Indiana University.

PANEL S! ANCHOR ROOM

CONTEMPORARY ISSUES IN TERRORISM II

Chair: GAD BENSINGER, Loyola University of Chicago

Presenters:

"The Israeli police terrorism management," GAD BENSINGER, Loyola University of Chicago.

"Profiling for effective strategies in hostage negotiations," WILLIAM J. LEWINSKI and ROBERT POCKRASS, Mankato State University.

"Terrorism in contemporary Africa south of the Sahara," JAMES S. E. OPOLOT, Atlanta University.

"The prospects for private government in post-industrial societies," ANDREA HELMS, University of Alaska.

"Anti-terrorism in Western Europe," JOHN B. WOLF, Union College.

Discussant: WILLIAM J. LEWINSKI, Mankato State University

67 THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1982, 4:00 PM-5:50 PM

PANEL 82 TURF ROOM

THE IMPRISONMENT OF WOMEN IN THE 18TH AND 19TH CENTURIES

Chair: MARTIN B. MILLER, State University of New York-Utica

Presenters:

"Wicked as hell itself: women in the prisons of Georgian London," WAYNE J. SHEEHAN, Sui Ross State University.

"Chastising the unchaste: the women's reformatory system as a means of punishing sex-role deviations," NICOLE F. RAFTER, Northeastern University.

"By women, for women: America's first separate female prison," NANCY E. SCHAFER, Indiana University-Indianapolis

Discussant: CATHY SPATZ WIDOM, Indiana University

PANEL 83 KENT ROOM

RESEARCH ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF LEGAL SOCIALIZATION

Chair: SUSAN KURTZ, University of North Carolina

Presenters:

"Moral development approaches and their implications for correc­ tions," SUSAN TURNER KURTZ, University of North Carolina.

"Legal socialization: an examination of the developmental perspective," LARRY R. BAAS, Valparaiso University and DANIEL B. THOMAS, Wartburg College.

"Level of moral development and susceptibility to experimenter influ­ ence in delinquent and nondelinquent adolescent males," LYNDA J. LIMBACH.

"Applying developmental psychology in corrections: concepts for un­ derstanding inmates," GARY R. GORDON, SUNY College of Technology.

Discussant: MARCIA GILBERT, University of North Carolina

68 THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1982, 4:00 PM-5:50 PM

PANEL 84 OLD RIVER ROOM

MINORITIES IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE: PROBLEMS AND PERSPECTIVES

Chair: SLOAN T. LETMAN, Loyola University of Chicago

Presenters:

"Minorities, 'isms,' and the criminal law,'' RICHARD L. DAVIS, St. John Fisher College.

"Indicators of recidivism among black lifers at Angola State Prison in Angola, Louisiana," ROBERT E. WILLIAMS, Southern University.

"A descriptive assessment of older incarcerated offenders in Louisi­ ana," DAN W. EDWARDS, Louisiana State University.

"A model for recruiting and retaining minority students as criminal justice majors," EDDYTH P. FORTUNE, Illinois State University.

"Sterilizing AFDC mothers and Native American women," DENNIS E. HOFFMAN, University 0f Nebraska-Omaha.

Discussant: RICHARD L. DAVIS, St. John Fisher College

PANEL 85 GOTHIC ROOM

VIOLENT CRIME

Chair: STEPHEN BRODT, Ball State University

Presenters:

"A quest for power: a treatment approach with the latency age fireset­ ter,'' MARY C. HUBBARD, Santa Ana, CA.

"Public opinions toward crime and punishment: correlates of legal sanc­ tions in a small Texas town,'' L. THOMAS WINFREE, Louisiana State University and LARRY WILLIAMS, Midwestern State University.

"A comparative study of homicide trends in New Orleans, 1971 and 1979,'' ROBERT C. LEVIE, Southeastern Louisiana University.

"Patterns of homicide across time and culture,'' RICHARD BLOCK, Loyola University of Chicago.

Discussant: MARTIN SCHWARTZ, University of Cincinnati

69 THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1982, 6:00 PM-7:00 PM

Regional Association Meetings

Region 1 Northeast Kent Room Region 2 North Atlantic Oak Room Region 3 South Turf Room Region 4 Midwest Old River Room Region 5 Southwest Anchor Room Region 6 Northwest Dorset Room

THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1982, 7:00 PM-8:00 PM

Open Meeting for Discussion of Historical Research Lord Crewe Room Women in Criminal Justice Committee Meeting Gothic Room

THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1982, 8:00 PM-9:00 PM

Affirmative Action Committee Queen Room

FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1982 8:00 AM-5:00 PM

8:00 AM- 5:00 PM Registration Third Floor Lobby 10:30 AM-11:45 AM ACJS Business Meeting Queen Room 8:00 AM- 9:50 AM Panels

PANEL 86 KENT ROOM

TOPICS EXAMINING THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE PROFESSION II

Chair: RONALD M. HOLMES, University of Louisville

Presenters:

"The criminal justice system as an educational enterprise," DENNIS D. MURPHY, Armstrong State College.

"Criminally marginal: an examination of the process of learned criminal adaptation," LARRY A. JORDAN, Western New England College.

"Responding to the 'call for papers': participation at ACJS annual meet­ ings," MATTHEW R. DEZEE, WILLIAM DOERNER, and STEVEN LAB, Florida State University.

"Innovations in correctional officer selection: employing the assess­ ment center concept," JEANNE B. STINCHCOMB, Dade County Depart­ ment of Corrections.

"The Dade-Miami criminal justice assessment center: a non-traditional approach to selection and promotion of criminal justice personnel," ROBERT H. MENDOZA, JR., Dade-Miami Criminal Justice Assessment Center.

Discussant: RONALD M. HOLMES, University of Louisville

70 FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1982, 8:00 AM-9:50 AM

PANEL 87 TURF ROOM

DETERRENCE AND SENTENCING: RATIONAL JUDGMENTS?

Chair: DAVID KALINICH, Michigan State University

Presenters:

"A critical review of the pros and cons of deterrence and capital pun­ ishment," PHIL MERCHAN, Marshall University.

"The deterrence of violent repetitive offenders: a rare and unlikely event" STUART J. MILLER, Washington and Jefferson College.

"Determinants of sentencing variation: the Georgia sample," THOMAS ORSAGH, University of North Carolina.

"Sentence length variations for female offenders," POLLY FISHER ORSAGH, Fisher-Orsagh Associates.

"The impact of major local community disorder on trial judge sentenc­ ing dispositions: the 1980 Miami riots," CHARLES R. PASTORS, North­ eastern Illinois University and LENORE ALPERT, University of Georgia.

Discussant: DICK VAN TASSELL, York College of Pennsylvania

PANEL 88 ANCHOR ROOM

INTELLECTUAL FOUNDATIONS OF SOCIAL ORDER AND CONTROL

Chair: NANCY K. FRANK, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

Presenters:

"Parallels between theory and humanistic values: a comparison of ideas expressed by creative and scientific authors," VIRGINIA B. MORRIS, John Jay College of Criminal Justice.

"It is a problem of (crime) formation rather than reformation: Edwin H. Sutherland and the modern problem of social order," NOEL CRICUOLA, University of Wisconsin-Stout.

"The critical conflict theory of crime in early Canada, 1760- 1840," TERRY L. CHAPMAN and LOUIS A. KNAFLA, University of Calgary.

"Quo vadis corrections?: are we witnessing a renaissance in neo­ classical thought in contemporary penal policy?," JOHN C. WATKINS, University of Alabama.

Discussant: MARVIN ZALMAN, Wayne State University

71 FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1982, 8:00 AM-9:50 AM

PANEL 89 DORSET ROOM

THE TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION PROGRAM, CRIMINAL REHABILITATION, AND CRIME PREVENTION: RESEARCH AND THEORY

Chair: MICHAEL C. DILLBECK, Maharishi International University

Presenters:

"A review of research on the transcendental meditation program in correctional settings from the perspective of the MIU physiological index of rehabilitation," DAVID ORME-JOHNSON, Maharishi International University.

"Research on the transcendental meditation program and crime prev­ ention," MICHAEL C. DILLBECK, Maharishi International University.

"New perspectives on crime suggested by research on consciousness," STEVEN DRUCKER, Maharishi International University.

Discussant: STEVEN DRUCKER, Maharishi International University.

PANEL 90 OAK ROOM

THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE STUDENT IN HIGHER EDUCATION

Chair: ROBERT BRIODY, Kutztown State College

Presenters:

"The assessment and comparison of criminal justice student personal­ ity type with individual personality characteristics," STEVEN G. COX and THOMAS ELLSWORTH, Illinois State University.

"Student evaluation of instructors in criminal justice classes," JOSEPH WALDRON, C. ALLEN PIERCE, and JAMES A. CONSER, Youngstown State University.

"Criminal justice graduate education: its effect upon alumnae careers," ANNE THOMAS SULTON and BARTON INGRAHAM, University of Maryland.

Discussant: ROBERT BRIODY, Kutztown State College

72 FRIDAY, MARCH 26,1982, 8:00 AM-9:50 AM

PANEL 91 GOTHIC ROOM

CONTEMPORARY ISSUES IN EVALUATION RESEARCH

Chair: LAWRENCE E. CUMMINGS, Youngstown State University

Presenters:

"Costs, benefits and negotiations in the juvenile justice domain," JOSEPH L. TROPEA, George Washington University and MARK DIFFEN­ DERFER, University of New Hampshire.

"Evaluating a performance appraisal program," VICKI SCHNEIDER, Okemos, MI.

"Functional unit management: an evaluation of organizational effec­ tiveness in the federal prison system," MICHAEL JANUS, Federal Prison Safety Office.

"Development of an instrument to measure sources of police officer stress: the Police Stress Test," THURSTON COSNER, Cayahoga Com­ munity College and JOSEPH DEOMA, Shaber Heights Police Department.

"Evaluation of procedures for assessing competency to stand trial," JAY SCHREIBER, Social Science Research Institute.

Discussant: TIMOTHY S. BYNUM, Michigan State University

PANEL 92 OLD RIVER ROOM

JUVENILE JUSTICE IN THE UNITED STATES AND ENGLAND

Chair: JAMES KANE, University of Nebraska-Omaha

Presenters:

"Social control perspectives and planning for change within the juvenile justice system," GREGORY R. SCHLUETER, George Mason University.

"Young children in juvenile court," LYNN SAMETZ, Kent State University.

"Juvenile court: an endangered species," ROGER McNALLY, SUNY­ Brockport.

"Juvenile justice in England: the Magistrate's Court as a juvenile court," RICHTER H. MOORE, JR., Appalachian State University.

Discussant: TBA

PANEL 93 LORD CREWE ROOM

ROUNDTABLE: CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION

Chair: MICHAEL J. PALMIOTTO, Western Illinois University

73 FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1982, 109:00 AM-11:50 AM

PANEL 94 OAK ROOM

MINORITIES, CRIME AND SOCIAL CONTROL IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE

Chair: DENNIS E. HOFFMAN, University of Nebraska-Omaha

Presenters:

"Alcohol control and native Alaskans: from the Russians to statehood," STEPHEN CONN, University of Alaska.

"Crime among free persons of African descent in 16th century colonial Mexico," D. LOCKWOOD, Temple University.

"Due process and tribunals among persons of African descent in Portu­ guese America." A. J. R. RUSSELL-WOOD, The Johns Hopkins University.

Discussant: ROY AUSTIN, Pennsylvania State University

PANEL 95 GOTHIC ROOM

WOMEN AND CRIME

Chair: JAN MICKISH, Ball State University

Presenters:

"Women are not very good crooks," JANE M. TOTMAN, California State Polytechnic University.

"Describing the female offender: a demographic analysis of arrest pat­ terns," FRANCIS CULLEN, Western Illinois University, NANCY WOLFE, University of South Carolina, and JOHN B. CULLEN, University of Nebraska.

"Women and crime: an examination of the analysis of historical trends," JAN MICKISH, Ball State University.

"Imposition of despair: an ethnography of women in prison," SUE MAHAN, University of Texas at El Paso.

"Having babies underground," PAT TJADEN, University of Colorado.

Discussant: SUSAN NELSON, University of Evansville

74 FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1982, 10:00 AM-11:50 AM

PANEL 96 KENT ROOM

POLICE PERSONNEL ACTIVITIES

Chair: ROBERT L. O'BLOCK, Appalachian State University

Presenters:

"Personnel retrenchment affecting rank structures: an urban police problem," GEORGE B. LOCKWOOD, Kent State University.

"Copping out: voluntary attrition among police," JERRY R. SPARGER and DAVID J. GIACOPASSI, Memphis State University.

"Police mentoring and the FTO program," M. MICHAEL FAGAN, Ken­ tucky Wesleyan College.

"A decade after 'policewomen's liberation'-status report," PETER HORNE, Mercer County Community College.

Discussant: JOHN E. ANGELL, University of Alaska

PANEL 97 ANCHOR ROOM

TREATMENT AND PREVENTION OF CHILD ABUSE

Chair: MICHAEL C. BRASWELL, East Tennessee State University

Presenters:

"Aggression in battered and nonbattered women," JAMES E. KANTNER, Eastern Illinois University.

"Sexual abuse and the role of the courts," PAUL J. WEBER, University of Louisville and MADELINE C. RENO and WINNEFRIED DOBBINS, Project FIND.

"Prevention of spouse abuse among law enforcement agencies in a four state region," JUDITH CONBOY, Missouri Southern State College.

"Childhood prostitution and childhood pornography," RONALD M. HOLMES, University of Louisville, JOHN RABUN, Exploited Child Unit, KERRY RICE, University of Louisville, and ROBERT HAIN, Louisville Police Department.

"Family therapy and family violence: suggestions for a criminal justice response," MICHAEL C. BRASWELL, East Tennessee State University.

Discussant: MURRAY M. NEEL, Office of Attorney General, KY

75 FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1982, 10:00 AM-11:50 AM

PANEL 98 OLD RIVER ROOM

PROBATION AND PAROLE II

Chair: MERVIN F. WHITE, Clemson University

Presenters:

"Organizational demand in a county probation office," THOMAS J. REUTZEL, Pennsylvania State University.

"Parole rules revisited," LAWRENCE F. TRAVIS, III, University of Cincinnati.

"Survival in the community: an analysis of the temporal distribution of recidivism among three groups of prisoners," TIMOTHY J. FLANAGAN, Criminal Justice Research Center.

"Florida's objective parole guidelines," JOHN H. LOMBARDI, University of Alabama-Birmingham.

Discussant: SCOTT JOHNSTON, Missouri Division of Probation and Parole

PANEL 99 TURF ROOM

PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS FOR UNDERGRADUATE CRIMINAL JUSTICE EDUCATION IN THE 1980s I

Chair: ROBERT F. BORKENSTEIN, Indiana University

Presenters:

"The role of alumni in the educational process," JANET CROYLE, Indiana University.

"Police professionalism and the role of higher education," JASON DURA, Ball State University.

"Must we be criminal?," RICHARD A. MYREN, American University.

"Toward the new, new police," HILLARD J. TRUBITT, Indiana University.

Discussant: ROBERT F. BORKENSTEIN, Indiana University.

76 FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1982, 10:00 AM-11:50 AM

PANEL 100 DORSET ROOM

EFFECTIVE EXPLOITATION OF LIBRARIANS AND OTHER LIBRARY RESOURCES

Chair: EILEEN ROWLAND, John Jay College of Criminal Justice

Presenters:

"Locating and dealing with primary sources," ANTHONY SIMPSON, John Jay College of Criminal Justice.

"Old and new approaches to secondary literature," SUSAN VAUGHN, John Jay College of Criminal Justice.

Discussant: TBA

PANEL 101 QUEEN ROOM

PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS FOR UNDERGRADUATE CRIMINAL JUSTICE EDUCATION IN THE 1980s II

Chair: JACK R. GREENE, Michigan State University

Presenters:

"The value of student club activities," GREGORY M. BARTOSZEK, Indi­ ana University.

"Parameters of a core curriculum," MICHAEL CARLIE, Ball State Uni­ versity.

"Student internships in criminal justice," JACK R. GREENE, Michigan State University.

"The role of experience based programs in undergraduate criminal justice education," VICTOR FICKMAN, Michigan State University.

Discussant: JACK R. GREENE, Michigan State University

PANEL 102 LORD CREWE ROOM

ROUNDTABLE: CRIMINOLOGY

Chair: GENE STEPHENS, University of South Carolina

FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1982, 12:00 PM-1:50 PM

12:00 PM - 1:50 PM AWARDS BANQUET ARCHIBALD Speaker: Dr. Michael Sherman Director of Justice and Regulatory Study Hudson Institute and Fellow, University of Chicago Law School

77 FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1982, 2:00 PM-3:50 PM

PANEL 103 OAK ROOM

COMPARATIVE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEMS

Chair: ANDREW W. MIRACLE, JR., Texas Christian University

Presenters: "Culture and crime: Japan and the United States," S. GEORGE VIN­ CENTNATHAN, Aurora College.

"The role of the prosecutor in West Germany," ROBERT V. BARROW, University of South Alabama.

"Street fighting in Northern Ireland: a study of police restraint," DAN F. BRADSHAW, Kentucky Wesleyan College.

Discussant: ANDREW W. MIRACLE, JR., Texas Christian University

PANEL 104 GOTHIC ROOM

POLICE USE OF DEADLY FORCE

Chair: ROGER B. PARKS, Indiana University

Presenters:

"Deadly force, a controversial issue," WILLIAM ERIC HOLLAND, Indiana University.

"The impact of civil rights litigation on the McAllen, Texas Police Department," DAVID L. CARTER, Pan American University.

"Looking down the wrong side of the barrel: the police officer's use of lethal force," DAVID APPELBAUM, Dayton University College.

Discussant: GARY W. SYKES, University of Louisville

78 FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1982, 2:00 PM-3:50 PM

PANEL 105 TURF ROOM

ISSUES IN JUVENILE JUSTICE: STUDENT SECTION I

Chair: RICHARD LAWRENCE, University of Texas-San Antonio

Presenters:

"The potential for child abuse: a survey of adolescent perceptions," LINDA STECKELBURG and VICTOR GRIDER, East Tennessee State University.

"The constitutional rights, and other juvenile procedural privileges of the delinquent," RICHARD R. NEDELKOFF, University of Louisville.

"Public school legal education: an alternative approach to criminal justice education and the formal juvenile justice system," JEFFERY P. RUSH, University of Alabama-Birmingham.

"Psychological profiles of delinquent offenders," DONALD L. HARRIS and JAMES ARWOOD, East Tennessee State University.

Discussant: MARILYN CHANDLER, Niagara University •

PANEL 106 KENT ROOM

NEW PERSPECTIVES ON THE 19TH CENTURY AMERICAN PRISON

Chair: NICOLE F. RAFTER, Northeastern University

Presenters:

"Clues to the origin of the American penitentiary: crimes and demogra­ phic data of inmates in New York, Massachusetts, and Pennsylvania, 1815-1835," M. MILLER, SUNY-Utica.

"Scientific reform: the 'new penology' at Elmira, 1876-1900," ALEX­ ANDER W. PISCIOTTA, Washington State University.

"Sing Sing Prison, 1825-1850: a study of profits and losses," CLARICE FIENMAN, Trenton State College.

"Imprisonment: the Dutch republic and early America," PIETER C. SPIERENBURG, Erasmus University-Rotterdam.

Discussant: JOHN A. CONLEY, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

79 FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1982, 2:00 PM-3:50 PM

PANEL 107 OLD RIVER ROOM

A REEVALUATION OF REHABILITATION: DOES IT WORK?

Chair: RAYMOND ARMSTRONG

Presenters:

"Criminal justice populations: the myth of their failure in psychothera­ peutic treatment," RAYMOND ARMSTRONG.

"Mental health and criminal justice: systems in conflict?," WILLIAM WALTERS and LAURIE S. LEVI, Court Psychiatric Center, Cincinnati.

"Patient treatability: the dilemma of untreatable patients," LAURIE S. LEVI and WILLIAM WALTERS, Court Psychiatric Center, Cincinnati.

"Prostitution: a crime? a career choice? a mental health problem?," DORIS B. STILES.

"Rehabilitation, community crime prevention and the transcendental meditation program, ARTHUR ARON and ELAINE N. ARON, Institute for Advanced Research.

Discussant: TBA

PANEL 108 DORSET ROOM

POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE

Chair: WILLIAM E. BRIGMAN, University of Missoun-St. Louis

Presenters:

"Criminal justice and policy evaluation," STUART S. NAGEL, University of Illinois.

"Crime, politics, and political science," PETER A. LUPSHA, University of New Mexico.

"Bossism, democracy, and the criminal sanction," MICHAEL ISRAEL, Kean College.

"The impact of political ideologies on jury decision-making," ROBERT T. ROPER, Southern Illinois University.

"An institutionalized ideology: the military model in policing," ROBERT A. LORINSKAS, Southern Illinois University.

Discussant: ROBERT PURSLEY, University of Arkansas-Little Rock

80 FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1982, 2:00 PM-3:50 PM

PANEL 109 ANCHOR ROOM

CARE AND TREATMENT OF THE MENTALLY DISORDERED OFFENDER

Chair: JEFFREY L. SCHRINK, Indiana State University

Presenters:

"The relationship between seriousness of alleged offense and length of hospitalization for those found unfit to stand trial," DANIEL J. CUNEO, TERRY B. BRELJE, and JOHN RANDOLPH, Chester, IL.

"Crisis intervention in a correctional facility handling psychiatric emer­ gencies," ALBERT 0. ROSSI, J. MICHAEL QUINLAN, and JEREMY GARD, Federal Correctional Institution.

"Facilities for the adult mentally disordered offender," JEFFERY A. ROTH, Westat.

"Facilities for the mentally disordered juvenile," CHARLOTTE A. KERR, Westat.

Discussant: STEPHEN G. COX, Illinois State University

PANEL 110 QUEEN ROOM

DISTRIBUTION OF JUSTICE: THEORETICAL ISSUES

Chair: DAVID GUGIN, University of Evansville

Presenters:

"Robert Nozick and the distribution of justice," LARRY PRESTON, Northern Arizona University.

"John Rawls and the distribution of justice," WILLIAM R. CONNOLLY, University of Evansville.

"Marcuse and the distribution of justice," DAVID GUGIN, University of Evansville.

"Social justice, criminal justice, and learning disabled youth," JEFFERY W. CRAWFORD, Central State University.

"Inquisitorial Justice and the Constitution," MORRIS D. FORKOSCH, Yeshiva University.

Discussants: DONALD WAGNER, West Georgia College BRUCE PATERNOSTER, University of Evansville.

81 FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1982, 2:00 PM-3:50 PM

PANEL Ill LORD CREWE ROOM

ROUNDTABLE: CRISIS INTERVENTION FOR CRIMINAL JUSTICE

Presenters: JAMES HENDRICKS , Ball State University JAMES GREENSTONE, National Academy of Crisis Intervention SHARON LEVITON, Southwestern Academy of Crisis Intervenors

FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1982, 4:00 PM-5:50 PM

PANEL 112 TURF ROOM

EXPLORING ATTORNEY BEHAVIOR

Chair: MARGARET PLATT JENDREK, Miami University

Presenters:

"Defense attorney's perceptions of the criminal justice system," NOR­ MAN G. KITTEL, St. Cloud State University.

"Lawyers and clients: an examination of two models," MARGARET PLATT JENDREK, Miami University.

"The financial incentive and criminal defense attorney behavior," ROBERTA ROUNER-PIECZENIK, National Institute of Justice.

"Defense attorney as double agent: a new role for the defense bar," PEGGY DESTEFANO, Ulster County Community College.

Discussant: TBA

PANEL 113 KENT ROOM

THE ORIGIN OF THE POLICE: CASE STUDIES

Chair: RICHARD J. TERRILL, Wayne State University

Presenters:

"Policing Middletown: 1880-1900," JOHN D. HEWITT, STEPHEN BRODT, DWIGHT HOOVER, Ball State University.

"The police as servant: reevaluating the history of policy independ­ ence," STANLEY L SWART, University of North Florida.

"Policing rural England before the police," ROBERT D. STORCH, Univer­ sity of Wisconsin-Center System.

Discussant: JOHN E. ANGELL, University of Alaska

82 ANNOUNCING

1983 ANNUAL MEETING

OF ACADEMY CRIMINAL JUSTICE SCIENCES

MARCH 22-26. 1983

HYATT REGENCY HOTEL SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS

THEME:

Translating Theory Into Practice

Persons interested in participating should write for an abstract format. Contact:

Larry T. Hoover, Ph.D., President, Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences Criminal Justice Center Sam Houston State University Huntsville, Texas 7734 1 FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1982, 4:00 PM-5:50 PM

PANEL 114 OAK ROOM

REINTEGRATION OF THE OFFENDER INTO THE COMMUNITY

Chair: BRIAN E. FORSCHNER, Dayton, OH

Presenters:

"Ex-offender reentry programs: a critical review," JAMES L. JENGE­ LESKI, Shippensburg State College.

"From out-group to in-group: gaining reentry into legitimate society," LEROY GRUNER, Northern Kentucky University.

"The effects of co-correctional programming on successful and unsuc­ cessful program completion: a discriminant analysis," BRIAN E. FOR­ SCHNER, Dayton, OH.

"The politics of community correction," JAMES L. WALKER, Wright State University and HONORABLE CARL D. KESSLER and JUDITH CRAMER, Montgomery County.

Discussant: MARC RENZEMA, Indiana State University

PANEL 115 QUEEN ROOM

FACTORS INFLUENCING TESTIMONY IN COURT

Chair: JOSEPH PETERSON, University of Illinois-Chicago Circle

Presenters:

"Interpersonal factors affecting witness accuracy and motivation," MAUREEN O'MARA, University of Maine-Presque Isle.

"Through the warped looking glass: television's cultural impact on the trial process," ROGER HANDBERG and CHARLES M. UNKOVIC, Univer­ sity of Central Florida.

"A survey of the law concerning the use of hypnosis in criminal cases," ALBERT J. RODENBERG, JR., University of Cincinnati.

"The criminal justice system's five deadly sins, according to forensic scientists," JAMES E. STARRS, The George Washington University.

"Reconceiving the insanity defense," A AARON SNYDER, University of Wisconsin-Parkside.

Discussant: TBA

84 FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1982, 4:00 PM-5:50 PM

PANEL 116 ANCHOR ROOM

THE POLITICS OF SENTENCING REFORM

Chair: SUSAN E. MARTIN, National Academy of Sciences

Presenters:

"Judicially mandated sentencing guidelines: the development of Michi­ gan's guidelines," MARVIN ZALMAN, Wayne State University.

"Sentencing reform and sentencing research," CHARLES WELLFORD, University of Maryland.

"Legislatively mandated sentencing guidelines: the politics of reform: the case of Minnesota and Pennsylvania," SUSAN E. MARTIN, National Academy of Sciences.

"Sentencing reform: the Pennsylvania experience," JOHN H. KRAMER, JOHN P. McCLOSKEY, and NANCY J. KURTZ, Pennsylvania Commission on Sentencing.

Discussants: ROBERT I. MENDELSOHN, Indiana University SHERWOOD E. ZIMMERMAN, New York State Division of Criminal Justice Sciences

PANEL 117 GOTHIC ROOM

JUVENILE CORRECTIONS

Chair: RON CARPENTER, Vigo County Group Homes

Presenters:

"The Ohio Youth Commission's placement guideline system," FRED CHEESEMAN, Office of Research, Columbus, OH.

"A comparison of actual and predicted placement decisions through the Ohio Youth Commissions newly implemented placement guideline sys­ tem," THOMAS JOYCE, Office of Research, Columbus, OH.

"An alternative treatment for delinquents," DONALD E. WEBER, Father Flanagan's Boys' Home.

"Characteristics of Ohio Youth Commission recommitments," FRED CHEESEMAN, Office of Research, Columbus, OH.

Discussant: LOUIS R. SAN MARCO, Baldwin-Wallace College

85 FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1982, 4:00 PM-5:50 PM

PANEL 118 DORSET ROOM

ACTION PROGRAM EVALUATION: CONCEPTUALIZATION, POLITICALIZATION AND METHODOLOGY

Chair: MERVIN F. WHITE, Clemson University

Presenters:

"Implicit factors in program analysis," JAMES J. GINGER, Radford University.

"The importance of research rigor in formative and summative evalua­ tions," KNOWLTON W. JOHNSON, University of Alaska.

"The use of dialectics in modern criminological research," JOHN MURPHY, Ohio State University.

"The validity of prior offense seriousness indices as predictors of sub­ sequent criminal involvement," DONALD M. BARRY, Rutgers University­ Newark.

Discussant: SANDRA BAXTER, Adtech Inc.

PANEL 119 OLD RIVER ROOM

ISSUES AND PROBLEMS IN LAW ENFORCEMENT POLICY AND ADMINISTRATION

Chair: VICTOR G. STRECHER, Sam Houston State University

Presenters:

"Judging police performance: views from patrol officers and their supervisors," DAVID N. ALLEN, Pennsylvania State University.

"Managerial decision-making: an integrated approach," ROBERT W. TAYLOR, University of South Florida.

"The concept of a police college for police executive training," MITRA ARIYASINGHE, Southern Illinois University.

"Equal employment opportunity and female criminal justice employ­ ment," LEE W. POTTS, University of Mississippi.

Discussant: STANLEY VANAGUNAS, University of Arizona

86 FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1982, 4:00 PM-5:50 PM

PANEL 120 LuRD CREWE ROOM

ROUNDTABLE: COMMUNITY CRIME PREVENTION

Participants: JOHN HAYES, Fairview Homes Crime Prevention Program CURTIS LANGELY, National Center for Community Anti-Crime Progams JAMES NOLAND, National Center for Community Anti­ Crime Programs IMRE KOHN, Department of Housing and Urban Devel­ opment EUGENE RHODEN, U.S. Department of Justice ANTHONY M. PATE, Police Foundation HOWARD KAPLAN, Department of Housing and Urban Development IRVIN WALLACH, Department of Housing and Urban Development

SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1982, 8:00 AM-5:00 PM

8:00 AM- 5:00 PM Registration Third Floor Lobby 8:00 AM- 9:50 AM Panels

PANEL 121 TURF ROOM

EQUITY AND PRODUCTIVITY IN PROSECUTOR AND PUBLIC DEFENSE

Chair: JOAN JACOBY, Jefferson Institute for Justice Studies

Presenters: STANLEY H. TURNER, Temple University EDWARD C. RATLEDGE, University of Delaware JOAN E. JACOBY, Jefferson Institute for Justice Studies LEONARD R. MELLON, Jefferson Institute for Justice Studies DAVID ARMSTRONG, 39th Judicial District

87 SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1982, 8:00 AM-9:50 AM

PANEL 122 KENT ROOM

POLICE POLICIES AND POLITICS

Chair: SUSAN BLAND (HILBERT) DAY, Southwest Texas State University

Presenters:

"An exploratory analysis of the psychology and social dynamics of involuntary dismissal among a sample of recalled police officers," DEBORAH ROBINSON and THOMAS AUSTIN, Wayne State University.

"Police reform in India: a possibility?," MAHENDRA SINGH, Michigan State University.

"Perceived political favoritism and its relation to occupational well being in the Virgin Islands P�Iice Department," DAVID KEN WHEATON, Tennessee State University and RAY L. PATTON, FBI Office.

"Who really is best served by the police?," MONICA KOECHLI, New Orleans, LA.

Discussant: STEVEN HATTING, Miami University-Ohio

PANEL 123 DORSET ROOM

COMPUTER APPLICATIONS IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE II

Chair: JIM ADAMITIS, University of Dayton

Presenters:

"The effect of computers on organizations: a case study in probation," CAROL RAUH, Rutgers University.

"The use of data bases in interdisciplinary analysis of organizational deviance," EUGENE SZWAJKEWSKI, University of Illinois-Chicago Circle.

"Computer applications in teaching criminal justice research and data analysis," JAGAN LINGAMNENI, Governors State University.

"Advantages and disadvantages of computer based education, using large, centralized computers as compared with using micro-processors," ROY 0. WALKER, University of Illinois.

Discussant: JIM ADAMITIS, University of Dayton

88 SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1982, 8:00 AM-9:50 AM

PANEL 124 OLD RIVER ROOM

RECONCEPTUALIZING WHITE COLLAR CRIME

Chair: PETER M. WICKMAN, State University College-Potsdam

Presenters:

"Corporate criminology: explaining deviance of business and political organizations," JAY S. ALBANESE, Niagara University.

"Is 'crime against the environment' really crime?," THOMAS H. COOK, University of South Carolina.

"The violent side of white collar crime," PAUL JESILOW, Indiana University.

"Environmental crime and deceptive advertising," EUGENE SZWAJ­ KOWSKI, University of Illinois-Chicago Circle.

Discussant: PETER M. WICKMAN, State University College-Potsdam

PANEL 125 CORN ISLAND ROOM

RAPE LAW AND LAW IN RAPE II

Chair: DAVID L. STEENO, Western Illinois University

Presenters:

"Rape shield laws," DAVID L. STEENO, Western Illinois University.

"An analysis of rape in the rape capital of the U.S.," DAVID J. GIACO­ PASSI and JERRY SPARGER, Memphis State University.

"Public attitudes toward criminal sanctions against forced marital intercourse," CHARLES R. JEFFORDS, Wichita State University.

"Criminalizing spousal rape: a trend in the right direction?," JOAN GIBSON FINER, Cleveland State University.

"Rape in the college community," NANCI KOSER WILSON, Southern Illinois University.

Discussant: BENJAMIN WRIGHT, South Carolina State College

89 SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1982, 8:00 AM-9:50 AM

PANEL 126 OAK ROOM

THE POLITICS OF JUSTICE

Chair: CARL F. PINKELE, Ohio Wesleyan University

Presenters : "Politics of justice: an overview," WILLIAM C. LOUTHAN, Ohio Wesleyan University.

"Politics of bail," FRED RHYNHART, Northern Kentucky University.

"Politics of mediated justice," RICHARD A. SALEM, U.S. Department of Justice.

"Judges, justice, and politics," CARL F. PINKELE, Ohio Wesleyan University.

"The fiction of nonpolitical police," WESTLEY POMEROY, Michigan Department of Mental Health.

Discussants: CHARLES T. BARBER, Indiana State University­ Evansville DICK VAN TASSELL, York College of Pennsylvania

PANEL 127 GOTHIC ROOM

PUBLIC ORDER AND SOCIAL CONTROL IN PRE-MODERN EUROPE

Chair: JOHN A. CONLEY, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

Presenters:

"Sodomy and the parameters of criminal behavior: homosexuality and public perception under the Later Stuarts, 1660-1774," B. R. BURG, Arizona State University.

"Sex crime and governmental disciplining of the family in the Renais­ sance: fornication and adultry in Venice, 1300- 1500," GUIDO RUG­ GIERO, Princeton University.

"Nobility, marginality, and criminality in medieval Bologna," SARAH R. BLANSHEI, University of T ennessee, Knoxville.

"Reconciliation and public order: the church's role in crime control in pre-modern Europe," W. R. JONES, University of New Hampshire.

Discussant: BARBARA HANAWALT, Indiana University

90 SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1982, 8:00 AM-9:50 AM

PANEL 128 ANCHOR ROOM

POLICE COMMUNITY RELATIONS

Chair: R. WILLIAM MATHIS, Napa, CA.

Presenters : "Communication problems in law enforcement and the community," QUINTEN G. GRESHAM, University of Alabama-Birmingham.

"A case for regionalized law enforcement training academies based upon job-related performance," LAMBERT J. MILLER, Wichita State University.

"The effects of n·eighborhood context on evaluations of police service," DAVID L. CINGRANELLI, SUNY -Binghamton.

"Evaluating the police: determinants of a vote on a bond issue for a new public safety building," OTWIN MERENIN, Washington State University.

"Black police officers," ROI TOWNSEY, John Jay College of Criminal Justice.

Discussant: WILLIAM F. WATERS, Northern Michigan University

PANEL 129 LORD CREWE ROOM

ROUND TABLE: THE INSANITY PLEA

Presenters: NILE STANTON, defense attorney, Indianapolis, IN LARRY SIMON, prosecuting attorney, Louisville, KY RICHARD LAWLOR, Indiana University RALPH BAKER, Ball State University FRED MEYER, Ball State University

91 SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1982, 10:00 AM-11:50 AM

PANEL 130 CORN ISLAND ROOM

SUBSTANCE ABUSE AND CRIME II

Chair: BELINDA RODGERS McCARTHY, Umversity of Alabama­ Birmingham

Presenters:

"Drug abuse: treatment or control?," JACK FERGUSON , Douglas College.

"Drug traffic systems and their endemic violence," JOHN M. MARTIN, Fordham Umvers1ty.

"Comparative tolerances toward violence, sex and drug-related behav­ iors in a southern community," FRANKLYN C. MORGAN, University of Alabama.

"Head shops and pot laws: the new legislation of morality," PAMELA S. GRIFFIN, Newton Falls, OH.

"The impact of TASC on drug treatment population characteristics: the impact of reform," BELINDA R. McCARTHY, University of Alabama­ Birmingham and J. DAVID HIRSCHEL, University of North Carolina­ Charlotte.

Discussant: ERIC D. WISH, Narcotic and Drug Research, Inc.

PANEL 13 1 OLD RIVER ROOM

INTERNATIONAL CRIMINOLOGY II

Chair: AGNES E. WATLINGTON, St. Thomas, Virgin Islands

Presenters:

"Examining police cynicism and length of police service," CHARLES HOU, Bowling Green State University and ANDREW W. MIRACLE, JR., Texas Christian Univers1ty.

"Compensation for lay judges in Germany," NANCY WOLFE, University of South Carolma.

"A cross-national study of the arbitrary use of power by the state," KEVIN N. WRIGHT, DAVID L. CINGRANELLI, and ZEHRA ARAT, SUNY­ Binghamton.

"The power of Interpol: Review of history, status and some problems," MILOS SEBOR de WSSEBORZICZ.

Discussant: CARL B. BERCKER, Southern Illinois University

92 SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1982, 10:00 AM-11:50 AM

PANEL 132 GOTHIC ROOM

CRIME AND DELINQUENCY THEORIES

Chair: STEVEN GIBBONS, James Madison University

Presenters:

"A social learning analysis of offender-images, ideology, and 'correc­ tional' response," THOMAS E. REED, Eastern Kentucky University.

"A test of the class-delinquency hypothesis," STEPHEN E. BROWN, East Tennessee State University.

"Commitment and delinquency," RICHARD SALEM, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater.

"Subcultural violence: an empirical review," PETER HIRSCHBURG, Southeast Missouri State University.

"Towards a theory of religion and crime," SUZANNE FLEMING, Stockton State College.

Discussant: JOHN NEWMAN, Indiana University-Southeast

PANEL 133 OAK ROOM

CRIMINAL JUSTICE INTERNSHIPS

Chair: WILLIAM H. PARSONAGE, Pennsylvama State University

Presenters:

"Interdisciplinary field placements in criminal justice," W. FRED WEGENER, Indiana University of Pennsylvania.

"Criminal justice internships: legal liability for actions and injuries," ROBERT BRIODY, Kutztown State College.

"The Penn State/Glen Mills schools graduate internship program," WILLIAM H. PARSONAGE, Pennsylvania State University and ROD HESS, Glen Mills Schools.

"Field experience for faculty: opinions of criminal justice program administrators," RICHARD H. MARTIN, Kearney State College.

Discussant: W. FRED WEGENER, Indiana University of Pennsylvania

93 SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1982, 10:00 AM-11:50 AM

PANEL 134 KENT ROOM

VICTIMOLOGY: EXPLANATION AND SOCIETAL RESPONSE

Chair: WILLIAM F. WATERS, Northern Michigan University

Presenters:

"Crime victimization in perspective," ROBERT MURILLO, University of T exas-EI Paso.

"Approaches to victimology," EDWARD G. ARMSTRONG, LeMoyne­ Owen College.

"Criminal justice policy and victim compensation: how can social work contribute," WILLIAM F. WATERS, Northern Michigan University.

"Compensating crime victims: developing trends," GERALD F. RAMKER and MARTIN S. MEAGHER, Sam Houston State University.

"Obscene phone calls: perpetrators and victims," COLUMBUS B. HOPPER, University of Mississippi.

Discussant: ROBERT MURILLO, University of T exas-EI Paso

PANEL 135 TURF ROOM

THE POLITICS OF FEDERAL LAW ENFORCEMENT AND REGULATORY ACTIVITY, 1870-1940

Chair: ALAN BLOCK, University of Delaware

Presenters:

"The FBI as guardian of the public morals: a history of the white slave traffic act, 1910-1940," JOSEPH L. SCHOTT, Texas Christian University.

"The direction of federal law enforcement from the White House: Her­ bert Hoover and the Capone and Lindbergh cases," JAMES D. CALDER, University of Texas-San Antonio.

"Federal crime detection: the formative years, 1870-1920," DAVID R. JOHNSON, University of Texas-San Antonio.

"The Pure Food and Drug act, 1906: the movement from criminal to administrative sanctions," NANCY K. FRANK, University of Wisconsin­ Milwaukee.

Discussant: MARK HALLER, Temple University

94 SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1982, 10:00 AM-11:50 AM

PANEL 136 DORSET ROOM

ISSUES IN LAW ENFORCEMENT: STUDENT SECTION IV

Chair: CHARLES CHASTAIN, University of Arkansas-Little Rock

Presenters:

"Affirmative action and police perception of the reality of racism," KAREN S. McCADDEN and RAYMOND G. HUNT, State University of New York.

"Protest and the police," DILIP K. DAS, Sam Houston State University.

"The cost of arson to Baltimore city," MAUREEN A. MURRAY, ALLEN C. GOODMAN, and DAVID PURYEAR, Johns Hopkins University.

Discussant: DAVID WACHTEL, University of Alabama-Birmingham

PANEL 137 LORD CREWE ROOM

ROUNDTABLE: JAILS AND MANAGEMENT

Chair: KEN KERLE, Jail Consultant

SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1982, 12:00 PM-1:50 PM

PANEL 138 OLD RIVER ROOM

SUBSTANCE ABUSE AND CRIME I

Chair: KENNETH POLKY, Gibault School for Boys

Presenters:

"Substance abuse in a sample of incarcerated female felons," SUSAN WEITZEL, WILLIAM R. BLOUNT, and IRA J. SILVERMAN, University of South Florida.

"Illegal behavior for the expressed purpose of obtaining cocaine," DALE D. CHITWOOD and PATRICIA J. MORNINGSTAR, Miami, FL.

"Economic aspects of adolescent substance use and criminal behavior," CAROLE GOZANSKY GARRISON and HELENE RASKIN WHITE, Univer· sity of Akron.

"An empirical examination of competing sociological theories of drug use," R. THOMAS DULL, Memphis State University.

"Structural variations in the treatment of substance use/abuse," JOEL H. HENDERSON, San Diego State University.

Discussant: LARRY SIEGEL, University of Nebraska-Omaha

95 SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1982, 12:00 PM-1:50 PM

PANEL 139 CORN ISLAND ROOM

PERSPECTIVES ON SPOUSE ABUSE I

Chair: IMOGENE MOYER, Northern Illinois University

Presenters:

"Women who murder: a study of responses to spouse abuse," IMOGENE MOYER, Northern Illinois University and ANNA KUHL, San Jose State University.

"Intimacy and the style of disputes within the family," RICHARD D. ALFORD, Earlham College.

"Child, spouse, and elderly abuse," DAVID R. STRUCKHOFF, Loyola University of Chicago.

"A typology of abused women," LISA OLINGER, Indiana University.

Discussant: RICHARD D. ALFORD, Earlham College

PANEL 140 DORSET ROOM

PRIVATE AND INDUSTRIAL SECURITY I

Chair: ROBERT J. MEADOWS, Glendale Community College

Presenters:

"An informational theory of security," NORMAN R. BOTTOM, JR., Indi­ ana University of Pennsylvania and JOHN I. KOSTANOSKI, SUNY­ F armmgdale.

"Maximizing the effectiveness of deterrence as a control strategy for internal theft," HAROLD R. HOLZMAN and JULIA MUELLER, Rutgers University.

"The impact of detection-of-deception services on labor relations," MICHAEL J. PALMIOTTO, Western Illinois University.

"Factors related to job performance for industrial security personnel," ROBERT T. SIGLER, Umversity of Alabama and RICHARD P. SANDERSON, Reynolds Metal Company.

Discussant: JEFFERY P. RUSH, University of Alabama-Birmingham

96 SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1982, 12:00 PM-1:50 PM

PANEL 141 GOTHIC ROOM

INTERNATIONAL CRIMINOLOGY III

Chair: CHARLES R. FENWICK, Trenton State College

Presenters:

"Selected measures of criminal justice activity in Holland," ALFRED C. SCHNUR, Kansas State University.

"Penal regimes of the West Indian territories," MILTON E. PRINGLE, Bermuda Prison Service.

"The problem of offender apprehension and prosecution in Nigeria," OBI N. I. EBBE, University of Tennessee-Chattanooga.

"Lessons from the Third World for understanding American criminal justice," LUCIEN X. LOMBARDO, Old Dominion University.

Discussant: FINN HORNUM, La Salle College

PANEL 142 OAK ROOM

THE POLICE AND THE CITIZENRY: COOPERATION OR CONFLICT?

Chair: PAUL J. LAVRAKAS, Northwestern University

Presenters:

"An equilibrium model of political shaping of the function of urban police," JOHN MEMORY, University of South Carolina.

"Toward a model of empirical program planning for police-community crime control," DENNIS P. ROSENBAUM, Evanston Police Department.

"Public housing residents' attitudes toward security," ANTHONY M. PATE, Police Foundation.

"Police responses to citizens' perceptions of fear," AZCHARY TUMIN, Wasserman and Associates.

"Attitudes of police toward citizens' anti-crime measures," PAUL J. LAVRAKAS and JANICE NORMOYLE, Northwestern University.

Discussant: DAN A LEWIS, Northwestern University

97 SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1982, 12:00 PM-1:50 PM

PANEL 143 KENT ROOM

DISCRIMINATION AND DISPARITY IN THE JUVENILE JUSTICE SYSTEM

Chair: CHR!STOPHER M. SIEVERDES, Clemson University

Presenters:

"Parens patriae vs. due process," INEKE HAEN MARSHALL, Umversity of Nebraska-Omaha.

"Judicial perceptions of transfer" JACK GASPER, Pennsylvania State University-Fayette Campus.

"Rural-urban differences in juvenile court dispositions: legal and non­ legal influences,"CH RISTOPHER M. SIEVERDES, Clemson Umversity and DONALD J. SHOEMAKER, Vtrgima Polytechnic Institute and State University

"Juvenile custody and detention: an analysis of patterns of sexual dis­ crimination," G. LEVERNE WILLIAMSON, Senate Research Office.

Discussant: TBA

PANEL 144 TURF ROOM

THE ROLE AND FUNCTION OF THE AMERICAN POLICE

Chair: JACK R. GREENE, Michigan State Umversity

Presenters:

"Citizen review boards: must history repeat itself?," RICHARD J. TER­ RILL, Wayne State University.

"The 1912 Little Falls, New York labor dispute: a case study of social control," RICHARD D. CLARK, SUNY -Albany.

"Urban growth and the police role: Oakland, California, 1850-1910," MICHAEL GRIFFITH, Dickmson College.

"How good is police historiography?: an assessment of the historical method of recent research," DONNA C. HALE, Michigan State Umversity

"Myths and realities of law enforcement development in Dodge City," DIANE S. ROBL and MARIE E. GILCHRIST, St. Mary of the Plams College.

Discussant: SAMUAL WALKER, Umversity of Nebraska-Omaha

PANEL 145 LORD CREWE ROOM

ROUNDTABLE: SOCIOLOGY OF CRIMINAL LAW

Chair: DEBORAH G. WILSON, Auburn University

98 SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1982, 2:00 PM-3:50 PM

PANEL 146 KENT ROOM

JUVENILE CRIME AND JUSTICE IN AMERICAN HISTORY

Chair: LARRY SIEGEL, Umversity of Nebraska-Omaha

Presenters:

"The Chicago School's attempt to reform the Cook County Juvenile Court system," ANTHONY R. TRAVIS, Grand Valley State College.

"Juvenile delinquency prevention in historical perspective," GAYLE C. OLSON, Amencan Justice Institute.

"Historical trends in violence and crime in public schools from 1950- 1980," ROBERT J. RUBEL, Southwest Texas State Umversity.

Discussant: LARRY SIEGEL, Umversity of Nebraska-Omaha

PANEL 147 TURF ROOM

ANTHROPOLOGY AND COMPARATIVE CRIMINOLOGY

Chair: ANDREW W. MIRACLE, JR., Texas Christian Umversity

Presenters:

"Anthropological contributions to the development of African crimi­ nology," JAMES S. E. OPOLOT. Atlanta University.

"Significant events and the community-based treatment of the serious juvenile offender," TROY L. ARMSTRONG, ChiCago, IL.

"The social anthropologist in law enforcement studies and services," RICHARD R. E. KANIA, Umversity of North Carolina-Charlotte.

"An examination of comparative criminology as a method of study," ROBERT G HUCKABEE. Sam Houston State Umversity.

99 SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1982, 2:00 PM-3:50 PM

PANEL 148 OLD RIVER ROOM

CORRECTIONAL EDUCATION AND TRAINING

Chair: MARC RENZEMA, Indiana State University

Presenters:

"Coeducational training schools," CLEMENS BARTOLLAS, University of Northern Iowa and CHRISTOPHER M. SIEVERDES, Clemson University.

"Report on the National Survey of post-secondary correctional educa­ tion," BRUCE I. WOLFORD, Eastern Kentucky University and JOHN F. LITTLEFIELD, Chilicothe Correctional Institution.

"The role of the prison legal aid attorney," ARTHUR R. GOUSSY, Univer­ sity of Detroit.

"The Kansas State Industrial Reformatory Education Program: 1976- 1982," STEVEN J. DAVIES, Atwood School District and STEPHEN E. DOEREN, Wichita State University.

"Inmates perceptions of conditions in a metropolitan adult detention center," RICHARD LAWRENCE, University of Texas-San Antonio.

Discussant: TBA

PANEL 149 DORSET ROOM

CRIME STATISTICS AND OAT A ANALYSES IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE EVALUATION

Chair: ARNOLD TREBACH, The American University

Presenters:

"The Crime Index: a new look at an old problem," BARY R. BEASLEY, University of South Carolina.

"The utility of national data sources on homicide," MARC RIEDEL, Southern Illinois University.

"Arima models in an analysis of crime activity," RICHARD H. BEE and YIH-WU LIU, Youngstown State University.

"The fear of crime: problems in measurement and conceptualization," JOHN J. PFUHL, Northern Arizona University.

Discussant: PHILLIP D. JACKSON , Virginia Intermount College

100 SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1982, 2:00 PM-3:50 PM

PANEL 150 OAK ROOM

PROBATION AND PAROLE I

Chair: JOHN 0. SMYKLA, University of Alabama

Presenters:

"Due process in prisons: the parole and probation revocation process," NEAL A. ELOVER, Randallstown, MD.

"Probation and parole service delivery models," TODD R. CLEAR, Rutgers University-Newark and P. KEVIN BENOIT, New York City Depart­ ment of Probation.

"Utilization of rational emotive psychotherapy with federal proba­ tioners and parolees," REID H. MONTGOMERY, JR., University of South Carolina.

"The nature and extent of job stress in probation officers," JOHN WHITEHEAD, Valparaiso University.

"An assessment of the impact of parole classification on parole supervi­ sion and parole outcome," ALLEN C. BARRETT, Old Dominion University.

Discussant: RONALD J. SCOTT, University of Missouri-St. Louis.

PANEL 151 GOTHIC ROOM

THE POLITICAL ENVIRONMENT AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE ADMINISTRATION

Chair: ROBERT A. LORINSKAS, Southern Illinois University

Presenters:

"The concept of economic crime in the context of European community law," W. H. BALEKJIAN, University of Glasgow.

"Avoiding substantive change in criminal justice," DAVID KALINICH, Michigan State University.

"The last, great Arizona robbery: how to administer for economic crime, the manipulation of political inputs by symbolism and rhetoric," STANLEY VANAGUNAS, University of Arizona.

"Comparative criminal justice: the political context factor," ERIC BECKMAN, Michigan State University.

"Understanding criminal investigation as an organizational process: a political economy perspective," DAVID M. JONES, University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh.

Discussants: ROBERT C. TROJANOWICZ, Michigan State University THOMAS ORSAGH, University of North Carolina

101 SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1982, 2:00 PM-3:50 PM

PANEL 152 CORN ISLAND ROOM

EXAMINING THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE PROFESSION I

Chair: NORMAN E. POMRENKE, Umversity of Louisville

Presenters:

"Diagnosing internal organizational environment as a means to increase productivity predicated upon reduced government spending for crimi­ nal justice agencies," NORMAN E. POMRENKE, Umversity of Lowsviiie.

"The disguised blessing of the Proposition 13 syndrome," ROBERT M. DOMALEWSKI, University of Louisville.

"Police certification," RALEIGH W SMITH, JR., Miami Umversity

"Higher education for the police," DAVID S. SALTEN , New York Institute of Technology.

"Recruitment of minorities for criminal justice agencies in a southern state," ROSEMARY STANFORD, Flonda State Umversity.

Discussant: ROBERT M. DOMALEWSKI, Umversity of Louisville

PANEL 153 LORD CREWE ROOM

ROUNDTABLE: JUVENILE JUSTICE PROCESS

Chair: NORMAN G KITTEL, St. Cloud State Umversity

SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1982, 4:00 PM-5:50 PM

PANEL 154 KENT ROOM

CURRENT REFORMS IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE: MUST HISTORY REPEAT ITSELF?

Chair: WAYNE B. HANEWICZ, Wayne State Umversity

Presenters:

"The changing role of victims in pursuit of justice," WALTER L. BAEUMLER, University of Mmnesota.

"Crime and crime prevention: historical perspectives," WILLIAM A FORMBY, Umversity of Alabama

"Criminalization of mental illness," WALTER P. RISLER, Indiana Uni­ versity-South Bend.

Discussant: WAYNE B. HANEWICZ, Wayne State University

102 SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1982, 4:00 PM-5:50 PM

PANEL 155 TURF ROOM

COMMUNITY AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE

Chair: JAMES HENDRICKS, Ball State Univers1ty

Presenters:

"Volunteers and para-professionals in parole," EDWARD LATESSA, Umversity of Cmcmnati and HARRY ALLEN, San Jose State Umverslty.

"Citizen participation in the production of public safety," STEPHEN PERCY, Indiana Umvers1ty.

"Constitutional law and the community-based criminal justice practi­ tioner," JANET B. PORTER, Umversity of Nebraska-Omaha.

Discussant: DAVID ANDERSON, Umversity of T ennessee-Chattanooga

PANEL 156 OAK ROOM

INTERDISCIPLINARY CRIMINAL JUSTICE HIGHER EDUCATION

Chair: BILL WAKEFIELD, Umversity of Nebraska-Omaha

Presenters:

"The critical void in the present interdisciplinary contributions to criminal justice education,"JAMES B. HALSTED, University of Southern Mississippi. "How does the police speciality 'fit' into a college of education?," ROY 0. WALKER, Umvers1ty of Illm01s.

"A comparison of authoritarianism among female and male criminal justice students planning careers in law enforcement and female stu­ dents planning careers outside law enforcement," THOMAS AUSTIN and JOHN J. O'NEILL, Wayne State Univers1ty.

Discussant: TBA

103 SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1982, 4:00 PM-5:50 PM

PANEL 157 GOTHIC ROOM

CRIME PREVENTION I

Chair: VIC SIMS, University of Southern Mississippi

Presenters:

"The use of an alternate school program as a delinquency diversion strategy," KATHLEEN NATALINO and LILLIAN R. HINDS, Cleveland State University.

"Police response time and on scene arrests," GARY W. CORDNER, JACK GREENE, and TIM S. BYNUM, Michigan State Univers1ty.

"The utility of scientific evidence in the investigation and prosecution of criminal cases," JOSEPH L. PETERSON, STEVEN MIHAJLOVIC, and MICHAEL GILLILAND, University of Illinois-Chicago Circle.

"Saturated enforcement: the efficacy of deterrence," GARY W. SYKES, University of Louisville.

"Dynamic crime prevention: 1982," ROBERT O'BLOCK, Appalachian State University.

Discussant: SAMUEL GREENE, Illino1s State University.

PANEL 158 DORSET ROOM

THE INTERDISCIPLINARY, THE TRANSDISCIPLINARY NATURE OF JUSTICE STUDIES

Chair: RICHARD MYREN, American University

Presenters: DONALD PHARES, University of Missouri DOROTHY BRACEY, John Jay College of Crimmal Justice GORDON MISNER , University of Illinois-Chicago Circle

104 SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1982, 4:00 PM-5:50 PM

PANEL 159 OLD RIVER ROOM

IMPACT OF GOVERNMENTAL RESPONSE TO ORGANIZATIONAL CRIME

Chair: PAUL JESILOW, Indiana University

Presenters:

"On the waterfront revisited," ALAN A. BLOCK, University of Delaware.

"Remedies for white collar crime: a confluence of economics, law and organization theory," JAMESON W. DOIG, Princeton University.

"Court and regulatory processing of trade and professional association law violators," HENRY R. LESIEUR, St. John's University.

"The organized crime continuum: a new conceptual model," FRANK E. HAGAN, Mercyhurst College.

Discussant: PAUL JESILOW, Indiana University

PANEL 160 CORN ISLAND ROOM

POLICE DISCRETION

Chair: LYNNE A. GRESSETT, University of Mich1gan

Presenters:

"The implementation of police rule-making," FRANK A. SCHUBERT, Northeastern University.

"Effective and ineffective uses of police officer discretion," ROGER B. PARKS and JOHN P. MCIVER, Indiana Umversity.

"Information flow in initial citizen-police communication," ERIC J. SCOTT and STEPHEN L. PERCY, Ind1ana Umversity.

"Broad-based departmental participation in the development of poli­ cies to define and limit police discretion: boon or boondoggle?," GEORGE A. JAMES, Murray State Umversity and ALAN HARVEY, Com­ munity Research and Management, Inc.

Discussant: JOAN LUXENBURG, Central State University

105 SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1982, 4:00 PM-5:50 PM

PANEL 161 LORD CREWE ROOM

ROUNDTABLE: CORRECTIONAL OFFICER/INMATE RELATIONS

Presenters: SALLY SIMPSON, University of Massachusetts IMOGENE MOYER, Northern Illinois University BEN MENKE, Washington State University MERVIN WHITE, Clemson University

106 INDEX 1982 ACJS Program

Abel,NAME C PANELF.77 Block,NAME E, PANEL 17 Cra1g,NAME J, PANEL42 NAMEFmley, R, PANEL25 Adam1tJs, J , 123 Block, R,85 Cramer, J , 114 F1scher, R,48 Adams, C,65 Blount, W R, !38 Crawford, J W, I 10 Flammang, C , 32 Albanese, J S , 124 Bodenhamer, D J , 30 Crawford, 0 , Flanagan, T J J , 98 Alford, R D , 139 Bogg, R,27 Cncuola, N , 66 Fleece, S , 70 Allen, D N. 119 Bohm, R M,80 Croyle, J , 99 Flemmg, S , 31, 132 88 Allen, H, !55 Bordens, K S , 24 Culber,t son, R G , 50 Flesch, R G , 15 Allen, 45 Borkenstem, R F , 99 Cullen, F T , 52, 95 Florez, C P , 26 Alpert, L , 87 Bottom, Jr , N R , 140 N, Cullen, J B , 95 Foraker Thompson, J , 36 Anderson, D , 10, 75, 155 Bowker, L H,61 Cummmgs, L E , 91 Forkosch, M D , 110 Anderson-Sherman, A , 22 Bracey, D , 158 Cuneo, D J , 109 Formby, W A, 154 Angell, J E , 79, 96, 113 Bradshaw, D F , 103 Cuzzort, R P,80 Forschner, B E . 114 Anson, R H , Bra1thwa1te, L , 32 Das, D K,!36 Fortune, E P, I, 84 Apostolos. R J , 2 63 Brannon, J M,36, 42 Dav1es, S , 148 Foster, J P , 76 Appelbaum, D , 104 Braswell, M C , 97 Dav1s, M,35 Foster. 0 C , 55 J Arat, 131 Bre\Je, T B, 109 Dav1s, R L , 84 Fox, J W, Archambeault, W G,12, 24, Bnce, S, Day, S B H, 122 Frank, N K 135 Z, 64 37 Bndges, G , 40 Debra, J,65 I 63, Fraser, J G,, 88,26 Anyas1nghe, M, 119 Bngman, W E,77, 108 De\Carmen, R V , 76 Frayman, B,51 Armstrong, D , 121 Bnnk\ey, G , 20 Deoma, J,91 Frey, R,51 Armstrong, E G , !34 Brmkley, S F , 20 Destefano, P , 112 Fnednchs, D 0 , 10, 49 Armstrong, R , 107 Bnody, R , 133 Dev1ne, P, 9 Fulmer, R,75 Armstrong, , 147 Brodt, S, 113 90, Dezee, M R , Fyfe, J J , Aron, A,107 Brosman, D , 24 D1az, D,20 T L 84, 86 Games, L,466 Aron, E , 107 Brown, S E . 132 D1ckmson, G , Gamble, E A . 39 Arwood, J , 106 Burg, B R , 127 Diffenderfer, M , 91 N E 29 Gard, J, 109 Atkmson, M , 38 Burr, D E S,27 D1llbeck, M C , 89 -Gardner, W,25 Atlas, R.36 Buzawa, E , 60 D,l\ehay, R,38 Gasper, J , 143 Austm, R,94 Bynum, T S,2, 76, 91, 157 D1lhngham, S D , 32 Garnson, C G , 138 T,60. 122, 156 Calder, D, 135 D1Mto, D,59 Garrow, D , Plenary Aveni\, P G , 16 Camp, D , 5, 23 Austm, J Dobbms, W , 97 Gates, J R,5 Ayers, K,50 Campagna, D , 49 Doeren, S E , 55, 148 Genev1e, L , 6, 54 Baas, L R, Carducci, B J , 41 Doerner, W , Georges Abey1e, D E , 39 Baehr, R, 71 Canngella-MacDonald, S , 35 D01g, J W, !59 83 86 Gharav1, E , 42 Baeumler, W L, 154 Carhe, M , 29, 51, 101 Dolan, R,31 G1acopass1, D J , 125 Baker, R , 67, 129 Carpenter, R , 117 Domalewsk1, R M , 152 G1bbons, S . 132 96, Ba\ek)lan, W H, 151 Carstarphen, L , 23 Donnermeyer, J , 55 G1gho, E D , 72 Barak, G,52 Carter, D 20, 104 Donnerstem, E , 72 G1\bert, J N,3 Barber, C T, 126 Carter, T,L, 17 Dowmng, Jr , L S , 4 GJibert, M, Barger, D , 25 Cavanaugh, E , 34 Drucker, S , 89 G1\chnst, M E , 83 Abnneau, H E,32 Cervantes, F , 5 Dull, R T, 138 GJihland, M, 157 144 Barkan, S E , 14 Chandler, M,59, 105 Dunn, T 15 Gmger, 117 Barrett, A C , !50 Chang, D,70 Dunmng, L,C , 48, 58 Godwm,J F, J, 17 Barrow, R V , 103 Chapman, T L , Dura, J,99 Goettmg, A , Barry, D M, 118 Charles, M T , 18 Golden, K , 48 88 Dwyer, E,43, 62 29 Bartollas, C , 148 Chastam, C, 17, 137 Ebbe, 0 N , 141 Goldfarb. , 15 Bartoszek, G M , 46, 101 Cheeseman, F , 117 Edwards, D W , 84 Goldstem, P J , 34 N Baxter, S, 118 66, Ch1twood, D D , 138 Ellsworth, T , Gonzalez, R , Beasley, B R, 149 Chnstenson, R , Elover, A,90 150 Goodman, 66A C , 136 Becker,C B, 73 Cmgranelh, D L , 128, 131 Elston, J L , 2 Gordon, G R . 83 77 N Becker, D C , 13 Clark, G A , 52 Engel, A S , Gottfredson, D , 70 Beckman, E. 151 Clark, R D , 144 Esbensen, F ,63 19, 50 Goussy, A R, 148 Bee, R H, 149 Clear, T R, !50 Eskndge, C W , 73 Greenberg, M , 24 Be1er, D J, 10 Coates, D , 3864, Evans, S S , 14 Greene, J R , 7, 53, 59, 76, Bell, D J,48 Cohen, L A,4 Faber, E, II 101, 144, !57 Belsky, M,65 Co\hns, , 34 Fagan, M M, Greene, S, 157 Bengston, W , 22 Conboy, J,97 J Falkm, G P , 23,96 74 Greenstone, J , 27, Ill Bennett, R R , 46, 59 Conley, J A , !06, 127 Fare, G,51 Gresham, Q G , !28 BenOit, P K , 150 Conn, S,94 Farmer, D J, 79 Gresset, L A,78, 160 Bensmger, G,81 Connolly, W R , 110 Farmer. R E, 15 Gnder, V , 105 Benson, M , 52 Conser, J A, Fe1g, D,46 Gnfhn, G R,6 Bercker, C B, 131 Cook, T H . 26,90 124 Felkenes, G , Plenary Gnfhn, P S , 130 Berger, C E,6 Coontz, P D , 36 Fenw1ck, C R,73, 141 Gnfhn, W.3 Berger, R J,6 Corbett, S , 12 Ferdmand, T , 30 Gnff1th, M , 144 Berry, R M . 25, 38 Cordner, G W, !57 Ferguson, J , 130 Groskm, R , L B1eser, P E.20 Corngan, R S , 75 63, Feyerherm, W F , 30 Gruner, 11404 B1tgood, S C , 25 Cosner, T,91 FKkman, V , 10! Gugm, D, 110 L, Blashe1, S R , 127 Coughhn, J S , 23 F1enman, C, 71, 106 Hagan, F E , 159 BlazJCek, D , 70 Cowles, E L,65 Fmer, J G, 125 Hageman, M J , 58, 78 Block,A A , 135, !59 Cox, S G , 109 Fmesm1th, T L,41 Ham, R,97 90, 107 Hale,NAME D PANEL C , 144 NAMEJanus, PANELM,91 Lev1ton,NAME PANEL S Mlha)loviC,NAME PANEL S, 157 Hailer, M , 135 Jeffords, C R , 125 LewiCki, R, 33 Miller, K S , 56 . Ill Halsted, J B , !56 Jendrek, M P , 112 Lewmsk1, W J,81 M11ler, L J , 18. 48, 128 Hammett, L , 5 Jengelesk1, J L , 114 Lew1s, D A , 142 M11ler, M , 106 Hanawalt, B , 127 Jenkms, P, 21 Llley, Jr , F W , 6 M1ller, M B. Handberg, R , !15 Jestlow, P , 124, 159 L1mbach. L J , M11ler, M J , 69 82 Hanew1cz, W B , 154 Joh)nson, B , 34 Lmd. E A,33 M1ller, S J,87 12, 83 Haney, C, 14 Johnson, D R , 135 LmdqUist. C , 10 M1lovanov1c, D,22, 80 Hann, D, Johnson, E H, 11, 21 Lmgamnem, J , 57 , 65, 73, 123 M�racle, Jr , A W, 103, 13 1, Hardyman, P L , 25 Johnson, K W , 118 Lmk, B G,52 147 44 Hams, D L , !05 Johnson, P H , 18 Lmz, D , 38, 59, 72 M1rrane, A , 73 Hams, G, 15 Johnson, A, 50 L1ssak, R , 33 M1sner, G , 158 Hams, P W , 12 Johnston, S , 98 L1ttleheld, J F , 148 M1tchell, M , 51 T 17, Hamson, J , 49 Jones, D M, 151 L1u, Y, 149 Monahan, L H , 15 Harvey, A , Jones, J W , 52 Lockwood, D , 94 Montgomery, Jr , R H , Hattmg, S , 122 Jones, J A , 56 Lockwood, G B, 67, 96 Moore, R H , 15 !60 ISO Hawkes, M Q , 54 Jones, W R , 127 Lombardi, J H , 98 Moore, Jr , R H.77. 92 63, Hayes, J , 120 Jordan, L A,86 Lombardo, L , 2, 141 Morgan, F C , 130 Hayeshp, D W , 7, 29 Joy, R D,58 Longm�re, D R , 75 Morn, F.21 X Heck, C L,42 Joyce, T. 117 Lormskas, R A, 108, 151 Mornmgstar, P J, 138 68, Heck, E V,77 Judson, N . 64 Losse, M J,23 Morns, V B . 87 He1de, K,59 Kac1, J H,56 Lotz, R, 17 Mornson, J , I Hemmger, B , 48 Kahmch, D. 87. Louthan, W C , 126 Moyer, I, 139, 161 Helms, A, 81 Kane. J,92 Lupsha, P A , 108 Mueller, C S,67 lSI Henderson, J H , 138 Kama, R R E, 147 Luxenburg, J , 58, 160 Mueller, J. 140 Hendncks, J, !II, 155 Kantner, J E,97 Lynch, L M , 79 Muhhn, G L , 6, 54 Herman, R I , 6 Kaplan, H M . 56, 120 Magenau, J M , 18 Munro, J L.79 66, Hernandez, Jr , E , 57 Ked, S, Mahan. S.95 Munson, A, !7 Hess, A, II Kelley, T M , 58 Malpass, R , 9 Muraskm, R , 35 44 Hess, R, 133 Kelton, H, 75 Maner, W,57 Munllo, R , 134 Hever, L,38 Kennedy, M C , 74 Mapley, G E,38 Murphy, D D , Hew1tt, J D, 71, 113 Kenny, M A , 60 Marbury, M , 8 Murphy, J, 118 86 Hickman, L , 22 Kenny, J P , 75 Margohes, E , 6, 54 Murray, M A , 136 Hmds, L R, !57 Kerle. K . 19, 137 Marsh, F H , 57 Myers. S,44 H�rschburg, P , 72, !32 Kerr, C A, 109 Marshall, I H,42, 91, 143 Myren, R A , 99, 158 H�rschel, J D , !30 Kerr, N,38 Martm, J M, 130 Nagel, S S , 108 Hochstedler, E , 4, 24, 62 Kessler, C D, 114 Martm, R H , 133 Nard1n1, W , 29, 54 Hoffman, D E , 84, 94 K1ehch, L , 51 Martm, S E , 116 Natalmo, K . !57 Hoffman, E , 53 K�rchhoff, J . 79 Mastrofsk1, S , 46 Nedelkoff, R R . 105 Hoffman, P,40 K1ttel. N G , 112, 153 Mathers, R A , 52 Nee!, M M,97 Hoffman, V J , 42 Klem, L , 5, 32 Math1s, R W , 48, 128 Ne1man, L. 17, 31 Holland, W E , 104 Knafla. L A . 88 Matthews, L L , 36 Nelson, S , 95 Holmes, R M , 97 Kodman. F . 15 May, A J,67 Nelson, , 27 Holzman. H R . 140 Koechh, M, 122 Mays, G L,25 Nemeth, C P , 35 86, T Homat, R.41 Kohn, I. 120 McAnmch. T H, !8, 63 Newman, J , !32 Hoover, D, 113 Kors, G R,64 McBnde. R B , 79 N1etzel, M T , 38

Hopkms. W A , 56 Kostanosk1, J I , 140 McCadden, K S , 136 Noland, J . 120 Hopper, C B , !34 Kowalski, G S , 47 McCarthy, B R . 130 Norman, M . Hopper, M , Kramer, J H, 116 McCarthy, B J,29 Normoyle, J, 142 63 Horne. P . 26, 96 Kuhl, A. 139 McCartney, L M , 49 O'Biock. R L . 55, %. !57 SO Hornum. F , 141 Kurtz, N J, 116 McCloskey, J P. !16 O'Donnell, T J,77 Horton. D M . 62 Kurtz. S T. McClung, C , 58 Ohnger, L, 139 Horvath, F . 23 Kuzensk1, K F . 58 McCormac, R , 3 Olson, G C , 146 83 Hou. C, 131 Lab, S.86 McDonald, R . 38 O'Mara, M . 115 Hovey, M,73 Lamprey, W F.26 McFarland, S G , 12 O'Ne1ll, J J , !56 Howell. M.73 Langely, C , 120 McGowen, R , 71 O'Ne1ll, J R . 18 Hubbard, M C . 58, 85 Larson. J H , Mc1ver, J P, 160 Opolot, J S E, 81, 147 Hubbard, R , 34 Lateef. B, 28 McMullan, J L . 22. 62 Orcutt. J E,56 I Huckabee. R G . 147 Latessa. E . !55 McNally, R . 92 Orme Johnson. D , 89 Hudz1k, J . 7 Laub. J H . 62 McNeece. C A . 59 Ornck,D. 56 Huff. C R . !4. 56 Lavrakas, P J , 142 Meadows. R J . !3, 140 Orsagh. P F,87 Hunt, R G . 18. 79, 136 Lawlor, R , 129 Meagher. M S.20, !34 Orsagh, 87, !51 Hy, R J.46 Lawrence, R . 36. 105. 148 Mellar, D,55 Osterburg, J , 10 T, Hyde, L D.55 Lawson. P , 16 Mellon. L R . 121 Ostrowski, T S. 19, 74 lacovetta. R G . 76 Lebeau. J . 36. 54 Melone. A P , 74 Palm1otto, M J . 13. 93. 140 Ingraham, B . Lee. J . 52 Memory, J , 142 Palumbo, P A , 33 Ireland. R M , 30 Leger. R G , 47 Mendelsohn. R . 74, 116 Parker. S L . 41 90 Israel, M,74. 108 Le1ppe. M,9 Mendoza. R H , Parks. R B, 104. 160 I Jackson, P D . 149 Lennertz. J E.23 Menke. B. 161 Parnell. P.4 Jr 86 Jacoby. J. 121 Les1eur. H R. !59 Merchan, P.87 Parsonage, W H , 133 James. G G . 32 Lester. D . 3. 63 Merem, . 128 Pastors. C R . 87 James, G A . 160 Let man. S T, 16. 84, Plenary Merrell. M . 36 Pate, A M. 120. 142 0 Janeksela. G M . 73. 76 Lev1, L S. 107 Meyer F.67, 129 Paternoster. B, 110 Janowttz. E J . 31 Lev1e, R C . 85 M1ck1sh, J , Paternoster. R,22 95 108 Patton.NAME RPANEL L . 122 Royal,NAME E. PANEL Starling.NAME PANEL S . 25 Warner,NAME PANEL Jr . J R . 80 Payne, M.4 Ruback, R B , 24 Starrs, J E , 115 Warn1ck, D . 9 I Pelfrey, W V , 76 Rubel, R J , 146 Steckelburg, L . 105 Waters, W F , 26. 128. 134 Pence, T,4 Rugg1ero, G , 127 Steeno, D L . 125 Watkms, B L , 52 Rush. J P , 3, 13, 78, 105, 140 Stem, M J,64 Watkms, J C . 88 Pennmgton, S V , II Penrod, S,9, 38, 41, 59, 72 Russell Wood. J R , 94 Stephens. G , 72, 102 Watlington, E, 73, 131 Pepmsky, H E , 80 Russo, P . 63 Stephens, 0 H , 77 Weatherly, 17 A A Percy, S L. 155. 160 Salem, R , 132 Stiles, D B , 107 Webb, V J, 21 68, A J, Peterson, J L,63, 115, 157 Salem, R , 126 Stmchcomb, J B , 86 Webber, D J.38 Pfuhl. J J , 149 Salten, D S , 152 St1tt, B G , 32 Weber, D E, 117 A Phares. D , 158 Sametz, L,92 Sto]koviC, S,64 Weber. P J,51. 97 P1erce. C 47, 90 Sanderson, R P, 140 Stolz, B . 42. 74 Wegener, W F, 13, 133 Pmkele, C F , 126 San Marco, L R. 117 Storch, R D , 113 We1tzel, S , 138 A, A P1sC1otta, W , 106 Sapp, 20 Straus, , 65 Wellford, C , 40, 116 Pockrass. R , 81 Sargent, Jr , J P,36 Strecher, V G,11 8 Wells. G,9 A A, A Pogrebm, M , 19 Schafer, N E, 82 Stre1b, V L , 14 Wescott. D K . 32, 122 Polky, K, 138 Schaffer, R , 55 Struckhoff. D R , 139 Wh1te, H R , 138 I, Pomeroy, W.12 6 Scheb, J M , 25 Sullenberger. T . 64 Wh1te. J D , 67 Pomrenke, N E , 152 Schlueter, G R , 92 Sulton, T , 90 Wh1te, M F,98, 118, 161 Poole, E D, 29, 47 Schne1der, V , 7, 91 Surette, R , 57 Wh1tehead, J . !50 A Pope, C E,5 Schnur, A C, 141 Swart, S L,'/ 6, 113 Whitehead, L , 64 Porter, J B . !55 Scholes. J , 16 Sykes. G W , !04, 157 Whitehurst, R. 119 135 Szwa]kewsk1, E , 123, 124 W1ckman. P M , 124 Potts, L W, Schott, J L , Plenary, 60 Prendergast, C , 12 Schou, C D , 57 Tassell, D V,87, 126 W1dom, C S . 82 Preston, K R . 14 Schre1ber, F B,26 Taylor. R W, 119 W1lds, L,24 Preston, L , 110 Schre1ber, J,91 Ternii, R J, 113. 144 Williams. F P , 22 Pnce, B R , 16 Schnnk, J L , 24, 109 Terns, W,52 Williams, J R , 34 Prmgle, M E, 141 Schubert, F 160 Terry, W C ,80 Williams, L 85 Prytula, R , Schuster, R,51 Tezak M R, 19, 50 Williams, R E , 84 A, Pursley, R , 108 Schwartz, M, 10, 85 Th1bault, E , 79 Williamson, G . 143 I Puryear, D, 136 Scott, E J, 160 Thomas, C W , 47 Willis, G W, 19 A L Quarles, C L . 39 Scott, J E, 14 Thomas, D B , 83 W1lson, D G , 47. 54. 145 QuiCker, J C,31 Scott, R J . 150 Thomas. M , 42 W1lson. N K, 125 Qumlan, J M , 109 Scuro, Jr , J E , 32, 78 Thompson, . 72 Wmfree. L T , 70 Rabun, J , 97 Segal, L,8 lihompson, J 19 Wmker. Jr . K E,2 A Rachal, J V , 34 Selva, L H , 80 Thompson, N , W1sh, E D . 34, 130 A, Rafter, N F,82, 106 Sheehan, M , 52 Thornton, W E,31 Wolf, J B, 81 I Ramker, G F, 134 Sheehan, W J , 82 T1mm, H W, 74 Wolfe, N.95, 131 Randolph, J , 109 Shenkman, F A . 48 TJaden, P . 95 Wolford, B , 45, 148 Ranfranz, L , 5 Sheppard, B H , 33 Toth, D,64 Wolters, R M . 12 I Rasmussen, G G , 64 Sherman, M , Banquet Totman, J M.95 Wool, L J.54 A Ratledge, E C , 121 Sherwm, R , 65 Townsey, R. 128 Wnght. B, 125 Ratner. R S,22 Sh1elds, J , 47 Trav1s, R, 146 Wnght, J W.21 Rattner, 14 Shoemaker, D J . 143 Trav1s, L F,98 Wnght. K N , 6, 131 A A Rauh, C, 123 Short, R,64 Trebach, 149 Wnght. R, 12 A, Ill. Reed, T E . 132 S1egel, . 28 Tnbhuran, U D. 17 Wsseborz1cz, M S, 131 A, Regoli, R M , 29. 46 S1egel, L , 138, 146 Tro]anowiCz, R C, 151 Wydallis, E . J Reno, M C,97 S1everdes, C M, 143, 148 Tromanhauser, E,24 Young. D.21 I Renzema, M , 114, 148 S1gler, R T,46, 140 Tropea, J L.91 Young. V,75 Reutzel, T J , 98 Silverman, I J , 45, 138 Trub1tt, H J , 99 Zalman, M , 88, 116 Rhoden, E , 120 S1mon, K M,25 Tumm, 142 Zermer, M,39 Rhodes, P W,41 S1mon, L , 129 Turner, S H, 121 z,egenhagen, E , 24 A, Rhynhart, F , 126 S1mpson. , 100 Tw1tty, M R, 16. 65 Z1mmerman, S E , 23. 116 A R1ce, K,97 S1mpson, S, 161 Underwood. J . 40 A R1chards, L , 34 S1ms, V,3. 157 Unkov1c, C M, 12. 75. 115 R1chmond, K , 26 Smgh, M , 26, 122 Unmthan, P , 10 R1edel, M P , 12, 149 Slagter, R,74 Urbano, D C , 5 R1sler, W P, 39, 154 Sm1th. D,64 Vanagunas, S, 119. 151 R1ttenmeyer, S D,56 Sm1th, D F,71 Vanderslice, S , 75 Robbms, M , 35 Sm1th, F. 10 VanWormer, K, 16 Roberg, R R , 79 Sm1th, Jr , R W , 152 Vaughn, S, 100 F A Robertson, J , 2 Sm1th, W C , 54 Vaughn, S E , 20 Robmson. D . 122 Smykla, J 0 , 150 V1dmar, N J , 33 Robl, D S , 144 Snyder, 115 Vmcentnathan. S G , 103 Rodenberg, Jr J, 115 Sokoloff, N J . 16 V1to, G.75 A A, Roetger, R W. Sosk1s, J H, 57 Wachtel, D , 3. 16, 78, 136 A Rogers, J W , 54 Soule. R, 51 Wagner, D, 110 II Roper, R T. 108 Southerland, M , 59 Wakefield, B, !56 Rosenbaum, D P , 142 Sparger, J R,96, 125 Waldron, J . 90 Rosenthal, S J , 22 Sp1erenburg, P C , 106 Walker. J L, 42, 114 Ross1, 0 , 109 Spranza, F G , 39 Walker, R 0,32, 123, 156 Roth, J 109 Spranza, M . 39 Walker, S, 144 A Rounder·P1eczemk, R , 112 Stanford, R , 152 Wallach. , 120 A, Rowland, E, 100 Stanton, N , 129 Walters, W , 107 I

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The Cover

"Mornmg Exercise" was drawn by D. Krebs Yandell, a Mtsstsstppt native now living m Louisville, Kentucky. Mrs. Yandell has drawn many beauttful sketches of historical interest throughout Kentucky . A copy of "Morning Exerctse" may be purchased through Art Ongmals, Incorporated, 2346 Frankfort Avenue, Louisvtlle, Kentucky 40206. ·-- q . ( ' . , , I ' '

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