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VOLUME I, No. 4. APRIL, 1911

THE REVIEW

A MONTHLY PERIODICAL, PUBLISHED BY THE NATIONAL PRISONERS' AID ASSOCIATION

AT 135 EAST 15th STREET, NEW YORK CITY.

TEN CENTS A COPY. SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS A YEAR

E. F. Waite, President. F. Emory Lyon, Vice President. O. F. Lewis, Secretary and Editor Review. E. A. Fredenhagen, Chairman Ex. Committee. James Parsons, Member Ex. Committee. A. H. Votaw, Member Ex. Committee. G. E. Cornwall, Member Ex. Committee Albert Steelman, Member Ex. Committee

THE NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF CHARITIES AND CORRECTION

This year's conference bids fair to be the best yet. The topics in general are timely and fundamental. The Committee on Lawbreakers will have for its general session the opening evening, Wednesday, the seventh. In addition to the committee report, a speaker of national reputation will give an address. In the section meetings the topics will be, respectively, the care of defective delinquents, modern methods of dealing with misdemeanants, and the development of systems of probation and parole. The section meetings will be "round table" discussions, open to all.

THE TREND OF LEGISLATION

Most legislative sessions for 1911 are now through or nearly so. Certain general tendencies have been prominent in prison and correctional legislation. The problems of prison labor have been prominent in California, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Texas, Missouri, Michigan, New York and some other states. The trend of legislation is strongly toward the introduction or strengthening of the state-use system. Legislative inquiries into alleged mal-administration have been instituted in several states. The question of corporal punishment has been under investigation in Michigan. The REVIEW will give the results of these investigations, but believes it inadvisable to print statements and comments prior to official findings.

Legislatures have been asked in many states, notably Wisconsin, Indiana, California, New York, to consider the establishment of new kinds of correctional institutions for tramps and vagrants, or for inebriates, or for young misdemeanants. The health of prisoners attracts increasing attention, as well as their mental conditions.

FOUR MONTHS OF THE REVIEW


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