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Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences Annual Meeting March 10-14, 1981 Philadelphia
Transcript

Academy of

Criminal Justice Sciences Annual Meeting March 10-14, 1981 Philadelphia

President

ACACEMY OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SCIENCES OFFICERS, 1980-1981

Harry W . More, San Jose State University, San Jose, California 1st Vice President and President Elect:

Robert G. C ulbertson, Illinois S tate University, Normal, Illinois Secretary/Treasurer:

Dorothy Bracey, John Jay College of C riminal Justice, New York, New York

Immediate Past President: Larry R. Bassi, State University C ollege of N ew York-Brockport, Brockport, N ew York

TRUSTEES

David E. Burns, San Jose State University, San Jose, California R. Paul McCauley, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky John A. C onley, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin

REGIONAL ASSOCIATION PRESIDENTS

Region !-Northeast Michael D'Auria, New York I nstitute of T echnology, Old Westbury, New York

Region 2-North Atlantic Gerald Rigby, Bowling Green State U niversity, Bowling G reen, Ohio

Region 3-South Reed Adams, University of North Carolina at C harlotte, C harlotte, North

Carolina Region 4-Midwest

Jack R. G reene, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan Region 5-Southwest

Jorge G arza, Central Arizona College, Collidge, Arizona Region 6-Pacific/Northwest

Ken Braunstein, University of Nevada/Reno, Reno, Nevada

PAST PRESIDENTS 1963-64 Donald F. McCall 1971-72 G ordon E. Misner

1964-65 Felix M. Fabian 1972-73 Richard A. Myren

1965-66 Arthur F. Brandstatter 1973-74 William J. Mathias

1966-67 Richard 0. Hankey 1974-75 Felix M. Fabian

1967-68 Robert Sheehan 1975- 76 George T. Felkenes 1968 -69 Robert F. Borkenstein 1976-77 Gordon E. Misner 1969-70 B. Earl Lewis 1977-78 Richard Ward 1970-7 1 Donald H. Riddle 1978 -79 Richter H. Moore , Jr .

1979-8 0 Larry Bassi

ACADEMY OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SCIENCES

Dear Colleagues

Welcome to the 1981 Annual Meeting of the Academy of Criminal Sciences.

The theme for the program is "Contemporary Issues in Criminal Justice:

Problems and Prospects." Around this theme the program committee has

organized approximately 120 panel sessions, workshops, and roundtables. In

addition, the program will include four major plenary sessions and two keynote

speakers. We anticipate that you will find the topics and presentations stimulat­

ing and informative .

A variety of services have been provided for your convenience. They are placed

in the following locations:

Registration/In/ormation: Mezzanine Level

Employment: Parlour A and B

Exhibits: Pacific Hall

Alpha Phi Sigma: Parlour C

Recreational Facilities: Third Floor

ACJS PROGRAM COMMITTEE 1981

Roy R. Roberg, Chair

San Jose State University

Charles E. Reasons

University of Calgary

Vincent J. Webb

University of Nebraska at Omaha

Brian E. Forschner

COPE, Inc.

Steve Mihajlovic

University of lllinois at Chicago Circle

Student Representative

1

Ineke Haen Marshall

University of Nebraska at Omaha

L. Thomas Winfree

Louisiana State University

Robert M. Regoli

Texas Christian University

Jim L. Munro

University of West Florida

C. Donald Engle

Temple University

Local Arrangements

r------------------------,

I

justice As Fairness: Perspectives on the justice Model David Fogel &joe Hudson

Critical Issues in Law Enforcement A New 3rd Edition by Harry More

Constitutional Law A New 4th Edition by Klotter & Kanovitz

Dynamics of Corrections Administration Truitt & Brewer

Legal Aspects of Private Security Bilek, Klotter & Federal

Principles of Security: An Introduction Ricks, Tillett & Van Meter

Anderson Publishing Co. 646 Main Street Cindnnati, Ohio 45201 (513) 421-4142

I

L------------------------�

2

PROGRAM SUMMARY

For your convenience we have provided a Program Summary for the 198 1

Annual Meeting. Detailed information regarding the participants and presentations

can be found in the Program section which follows.

TUESDAY, MARCH 10

9:00-12:00 1 :30-5:00

4:30-6:00

Executive Board Meeting . . . . . . . . . ... . . . . Seminar Room A

Executive Board Meeting . . ... . . . . ... . . .. Seminar Room A

ACJS Committee Meetings . . . . . . . . Dominion Ballroom D Criminal Justice Accreditation Council . . . . Delegate Room 1

No Host Social . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Committee Room 10

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1 1

9:00- 10:15 Welcome and Orientation . . . . . . . . . . Dommion Ballroom D

10:30- 12:00 1 . Law and Social Order . . . .... . . . .... . .. .. . . . . . . .. Delegate Room 1

2. Issues in Policing .... . . ...... . .... . . . . .. . . ... . . . Delegate Room 2

3 . Evaluation and Operations Research:

Treatment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Committee Room 7

4. Juvenile Delinquency Theories: Empirical

Assessments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Committee Room 8

5. Stress and Coping in Confinement from Detention through Death Row . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Committee Room 9

6. Legal Issues in Criminal Justice I . . . . . . . . . . . . . Committee Room 10

7. Cross-Cultural Perspective on Terrorism . . . .. . . Conference Room 3

8 . The History of Criminal Justice I . ...... . . .... . Conference Room 6

9. Impacting Criminal Justice Processes

and Policy . . . .... . . . . . . . . . .. . . . ... . . . ... . . . . Conference Room 5 10. Academic Programming in Criminal Just1ce: Some

Evaluation Findings . .. .... . ..... . . . . . . . ... . . . Conference Room 4

1 : 15-2:45 PLENARY SESSION I: Contemporary Issues in the Judiciary: Problems

and Prospects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dominion Ballroom D

3:00-4:30 1 1 . Bio-Politics and the Criminal Justice System . . . .... Delegate Room 1

12. Teaching Criminal Justice . .. . . . .. . . . . . . . .. . . . Committee Room 7

13. Evaluation and Operations Research: Potpourri I . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Committee Room 8

14. Ethnic Minorities as Offenders and as Vict1ms . . . Committee Room 9

15. Developments in Criminal Justice Labor

Relations . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . Conference Room 3

16. International Perspectives on Criminal Justice .. . Conference Room 4

17 . Responses to Domestic V1olence I . . . . . . . . . . . . . Conference Room 5

18 . Theory Testing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Delegate Room 2

3

CRIMINAL JUSTICE and CRIMINOLOGY Books, Monographs, and Journals

NEW Psychotherapy For Offenders DAVID LESTER, R1chard Stockton State College 19a1 153 pages Paper S10 45

An Organizational Approach To Correctional Effectiveness kEVIN WRIGHT, State Univ­ersity of New York at Bmg­hamton 1979 aJ pages Paper S7 25

JOURNAL OF CRIME AND JUSTICE The Journal Of The Society Of Police And Criminal Psychology Annual Ed1t1on

Sll 00 lnd1v1dual $16 00 L1brary

FORTHCOMING IN 1981-Ameriun Journal of Police • Stept:en Brown, Editor

A Multi-Dimensional Analy­sis of Conflict In The Criminal

Justice System • Edward Ryan

Child Abuse And Neglect: A C o m p r e h e n siwP B i b l i o­graphyeMichael kalinowslli

The Justice System In Alaskan Native VillageseJohn Angell

NEW Organized Crime In Africa JAMES OPOLOT, Un1vers1ty of Alaska 19a1 119 pages Paper Sa 95

Issues In The Law Of Criminal Corrections: Volume I SLOAN LETMAN, Loyola Un1vers1ty of Ch1cago 1979 72 pages Paper $6 75

ANALYSIS OF WORLD LEGAL TRADITIONS JAMES OPOLOT, Un1vers1ty of Alaska 19aO 96 pages Paper Sa 25

AN INVIT A liON TO AUTHORS­P I L GR I M A GE , INC. was created in 1978 by .1 group of academicians and practition­ers in an elfort to prowide a broadt'r, mort' innowatiwt' forum for acadt"mic and pro­ft"ssional enhangt'. You are inwitt'd to submit manuscript outlint's and pro­posals in art'as of Criminal Justice and Criminology interest.

Rt. 11, Box 551 PILGRIMAGE, INC. Jonesboro, TN 37659

4

ROUNDTABLES I Dominion Ballroom C

A Deterrence Research: Conceptual and Empirical Problems

B. The Medical Model in Criminal Justice:

A Phoenix Arisen or a Dead Duck

C. Transvestism, Transexualism and the Law D. Theory and Research in International Criminal Justice

4: 15-6: 15

19. Research Strategies: Evaluation .................. Delegate Room 1

20. Issues in Corrections ........................... Delegate Room 2

21 . Organizational Crime ............ .... ....... . Committee Room 7 22. Issues in Criminal Justice Education . . . . . . . . . . . Committee Room 8

23. Decision-Making in Criminal Justice I .......... Committee Room 9 24. Women as Offenders and as Victims ........... Conference Room 3 25_ Victim Services Programs .................... Conference Room 4 26. Criminal Justice Education: The State of

the Art ................. .......... ......... . Conference Room 6 27. Personnel Techniques: From Assessment Center to

Job Analy sis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Seminar Room D

WORKSHOPS I

A Getting Published: The Journals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Committee Room 10 B. Education Behind Bars ....................... Conference Room 5

THURSDAY, MARCH 12

8:30- 10:00

28. Women in Prison .... ..... .... . .... ..... ........ Delegate Room 1 29. Crime and the Public Institutions ........ ...... ... Delegate Room 2 30. Evaluating Correctional Policy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Committee Room 7

31 . International Issues of Justice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Committee Room 8

32. Minorities as Criminal Justice Officials . . . . . . . . . . Committee Room 9

33. Communication and Control in Police Agencies .. .. .......... .... . ... . .. ... ...... . Conference Room 3

34. Citizen Involvement in Criminal Justice

Management . ... . ....... .... .... . .... .... . . . Conference Room 4

35. Criminological Theory . .... . ........ ..... .... Conference Room 6

WORKSHOPS II

C. Getting Published: Texts, Readers and Monographs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Committee Room 10

D . Sex a s a Problematic Concept i n Criminal Justice Education . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . Conference Room 5

5

Highlight

YOU DESERVE IT______, As a leading legal publisher in the United States. WEST PUBLISHING COMPANY places much pride and emphasis on its Criminal Justice Series. We like to help make your job a bit easier ... by providing you with succinct, up-to-date, well-researched information. In other words. HIGH QUALITY EDUCATIONAL MATERIALS.

INTRODUCTION TO CRIMINAL JUSTICE, Second Edition, Joseph Senna and Larry Siegel. Instructor's Manual. Study Guide. 1981. Updated and revised to incorporate all the elements you and your colleagues deemed important. Includes current issues in policing; material on sentencing structures and presumptive sentencing; substantive crimes and criminal defenses; explanation of justice as a system and process; changes in juvenile justice and crime control.

Other new titles CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION. Wayne Bennett and Karen Matison Hess. Instructor's Manual. 1981.

CRITICAL ISSUES IN CORRECTIONS: Problems, Trends, and Prospects. Roy Roberg and Vincent Webb. 1981.

JUVENILE DELINQUENCY. Larry Siegel and Joseph Senna. Instructor's Manual. 1981.

BASIC CRIMINAL LAW. Second Edition. George Dix and Michael Sharlot. Instructor's Manual. 1980.

CRIMINAL LAW: PRINCIPLES. CASES. AND READINGS. Second Edition. Thomas Gardner and Victor Manian. Instructor's Manual. 1980.

FUNDAMENTALS OF LAW ENFORCEMENT. V. A. Leonard. Instructor's Manual. 1980.

LAW ENFORCEMENT HANDBOOK FOR POLICE. Second Edition. Louis Schwartz and Stephen Goldstein. 1980.

For more information, contact Elaine Dunn, College Division

II• WEST PUBLISHING COMPANY 50 W. Kellogg Blvd. St. Paul, MN 55165

AT WEST, WE THINK YOU DESERVE THE BEST. 6

10: 15-1 1:45

36 . ABSCAM: A Case Study . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Delegate Room 1

37. Police Stress . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .. . ..... . .. . . . . . . . . . Delegate Room 2 38 . Theories of Law . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Committee Room 7

39. Criminal Justice Information Systems . . . . . . .. . . Committee Room 8

40 . Juvenile Justice: Current Developments and Research I . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Committee Room 9

4 1 . Prisoners Rights . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Conference Room 3

42. Criminal Justice Educational Delivery Systems . . Conference Room 4 43. The History of Criminal Justice II . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Conference Room 6

WORKSHOPS III

E. Assessing Criminal Justice Research for

the 80's . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Conference Room 10 F . Teaching Research Methods in Criminal

Justice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . Conference Room 5

1 :00-2:30 PLENARY SESSION II

Contemporary Issues in Corrections: Problems and Prospects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dominion Ballroom D

2:45--4: 15

44. Organized Crime . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Delegate Room 1 45 . The Impact of Criminal Justice Education . . . . . . . . . . Delegate Room 2 46 . Organizational Conflict and Controls: The

Corrections Case . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Committee Room 7 47. Significant Legal Issues in Criminal Justice . . . . . . Committee Room 8 48 . Leading Issues in Criminal Justice

Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Committee Room 3 49. Mentor, Leader, Professional: A Rose by

Any Other Name ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Conference Room 4

50 . Ethical Issues in Criminal Justice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Conference Room 5 51. Domestic Violence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Conference Room 6

ROUNDTABLES II Dominion Ballroom C

E. Linkages between Learning Disabilities and Delinquent Behavior:

Implications for Future Programming F . Clarifying the Role o f the Criminal Defense Attorney

G. Jail Officer Training-Where it is Now-Where it Ought to Go

H. Private Justice: Workplace, Crime, and Discipline

7

Isn't it time you investigated Harper & Row's criminal justice materials?

NetV! INTRODUCTION 10 CORRECTIONS QEMENS BARIOUA� Offers beginning students a comprehen:-,i\·e picture of corrections that is

up to date, research oriented. and faithful ru today:" realities. Features

unique interYiews with leading figures in the field and a greater

emphasis on community-based corrections than in most a\·ailahle texts.

Instructor:.;; "lanual. 12/HO. -tHH pages.

NeuJ! CRIMINAL lAW History * Philosophy * Enforcement

EDWARD ELDEFONSO & ALAN R COFFEY Designed primarily for administration of justice courses. thi'i refreshinglY

nontechnical text pro,·ides a current m·erYiew of the origin. philosoph,·.

and enforcement of criminal law in the l'nited States-particular!\ its

impact on police. Instructors :\lanual. 9;HO. 30-t pages.

NetV! PSYCHOLOGY AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE KATI-IERINE \V Ell.ISON & ROBERT BllCKHOlTT flcre is an inno\·atiYe studY 1)\ research ps\ chulogish who ha\ e :tl.o.;o

\Yorked extensiYelY \Yith lawn:r.'i. police officers. and judgL'.'> .Jun selection. ,·ictimolug,-. t'Ye\\itne..,.., te'itimum. and upital punishment are

among some of the keY topics explored. 3 HI. -!)2 page-; tent

8

4:40-6:00

52. Paradigm Conflict in Criminology ........ . . . . .... . Delegate Room 1 53. Decision-Making in Criminal Justice II . . ...... . . .. . Delegate Room 2

54. Community Based Corrections . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Committee Room 7

55 . Future Directions in Criminal Justice . . ... . .... . Committee Room 8

56 . Citizen's Participation in Criminal Justice . . .... . Conference Room 3

57. Systems Approach to Criminal Justice Manpower Needs .... . . . . . . ........ .. . . . . . . . . . . ...... . Conference Room 4

58 . Evaluation and Operations Research: Potpourri II . . . .......... . . . . . . ........ . . . . . . Conference Room 5

59. Student Session I . . . . .......... . . . . ... . ..... . Conference Room 6

WORKSHOPS IV

G . Funding for Criminal Justice Research .. . . Provincial Ballroom South H. Race as a Problematic Concept in Criminal Justice

Education . ...... . . . . . . . . .... . . . . . . . . . ...... . .. Seminar Room A

I . Private Security Education and Training ..... . .. . . . Seminar Room B

FRIDAY, MARCH 13

8:30- 10:00 Regional Meetings

10: 15-1 1 :45 PLENARY SESSION IV:

12:00- 1:30 1 :30-2:30 2:45-4: 15

Racism in Criminal Justice: Problems

and Prospects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dominion Ballroom D Awards Luncheon .................. Dominion A and B Business Meeting .... . . . . . . . . . . .... . . . Provincial Ballroom

60 . Research Strategies: Qualitative Analysis . .. . . . . . . . . Delegate Room 1

6 1 . Can the Police Prevent Crime? ... .. . .. . . .... . . . .. Delegate Room 2

62. Correctional Standards and Acneditation . . . ... Conference Room 7

63. Research Strategies: Methodological Concerns . . Conference Room 8 64. Victimology: Current Status and Future

Directions . ..... . . . . . ... .. . . . . . . . ...... . . ... Conference Room 9

65 . The Elderly as Crime Victims ... . . . . . . . . .... . . Conference Room 3

66 . Deterrence: Current Research . . . .. . . . . . . .. . . . Conference Room 4

6 7 . Law and Order Reconsidered . . . . . ....... . . . .. Conference Room 5

ROUNDTABLES I l l Dominion Ballroom C

I . Rationalizing the Prosecution Decision-Making Process J. Collective Youth Crime

K. The Place of Volunteerism in Criminal Justice Curriculum L. The Polygraph: Problems and Prospects

M. The FBI and the Criminal Justice Scene: Yesterday, Today and

Tomorrow

9

INTRODUCTION TO 1HE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM Principles, Procedures, Practice

GERALD D. ROBIN Offers students a dynamic ptcture of the entzre cnmmal JU�tice system

\Vtth comprehensive. balanced coverage of tts three maJor components

pollee, prosecuuon and the courts, and correcttons Focuses throughout

not merely on the status quo but also on change.., bemg wrought tn the

s�·stem Instructor:.., Manual 1/HO ')')H pages

And don't forget­

INTRODUCTION 10 lAW ENFORCEMENT KIRKHAM & WOUAN

A straightforward statement of the elemenh of poltce \\'Ork

Instructor:.., Manual VHO 429 pages

CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION STANDARDS

DeLADURANTEY & SUlLIVAN

Pro\'ldes flextble, practtc1l standards for the untf()rmed offtcer and the t()lkl\\-up tm·esttgaror Instructor:-; :\lanual 19�9 -H--t page..,

PROBATION, PAROLE, AND COMMUNI1Y FIELD SERVICES Policy, Structure, and Process

HUSSEY & DUFFEE

Stre..,se.., the genenc problems . ���ues and sktllo.; encountered lw people tn the field :)!HO y;o page�

To request examination copies, "'niL' 11 l .... ulle -\D H.n pt·J 8. RU\\ lOE.bt�_',dSt '\e\\l<lll-- '\] \1)(122 I'Jt:.L,t'lllciudcullii'L' utk t'llnlllment. .111d plt''t'nt tt:''\t

10

4:30-6:00 68 . White Collar Crime .......................... Conference Room 3 69. Research Studies in Criminal Justice .............. Delegate Room 1

70 . Criminal Justice in England-Critical Issues ........ Delegate Room 2 7 1 . Can a Prison be Closed? Policy, Politics and Pressure

Groups Involved with the Federal Women's Prison

in Anderson W. VA. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Committee Room 7

72. Operations and Evaluation Research: Probation

and Parole ............................... Committee Room 8

73. Policing: Job Performance, Evaluation and Stress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Committee Room 9

74. Issues and Policy in Corrections .............. Conference Room 10 75 . Conflict Among Correctional Employees: Union and Non-Union

Responses .................................. Conference Room 4

76 . Juvenile Justice: Current Developments and Research II ................................. Conference Room 5

77. Student Session II ........................... Conference Room 6

SATURDAY, MARCH 14

8:30-10:00 78 . Research Strategies: The Police .................. Delegate Room 1

79. Criminological Theory and Specific Offenses ....... Delegate Room 2 80 . Criminal Justice Training ..................... Committee Room 7

8 1 . Cross-Cultural Perspectives-India ....... . . . .. Committee Room 8 8 2. Responses to Domestic Violence II ............. Committee Room 9

8 3. Evaluation and Operations Research: Juvenile ... Conference Room 3 84. Management Change and the Utilization of Civilian

Personnel .................................. Conference Room 4

85 . Internships in Criminal Justice Education ....... Conference Room 5 8 6 . Policy i n Criminal Justice ..................... Conference Room 6

10: 15- 1 1 :45

8 7. Civil Liberties: Prospects for the 1980's ............ Delegate Room 1

88 . Theories and Issues ............................. Delegate Room 2 8 9. Legal Issues in Criminal Justice II .............. Committee Room 7

90 . Motivation, Turnover and Job Enlargement: Issues in Personnel

Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Committee Room 8

91 . History of Criminal Justice I I I ..... . ........... Committee Room 9

92 . Dynamic Crime Prevention ................. . . Conference Room 3 93 . The Management of Stress ......... . ..... . ... Conference Room 4

94. Research on Criminal Justice Education ........ Conference Room 5 95 . Policy in Corrections ..... . . .. . . . . . ........... Conference Room 6

11

HOUGHIDN MIFFLIN

Investigating Crimes: An Introduction Alfred R. Stone, Texas Department of Public Safety Stuart M. Deluca 508 pages • cloth Instructor's Manual•1980

!he Criminal Justice System: An Introduction Second Edition Ronald J. Waldron U.S. Department of Justice Jagdish Uppal, National Center for State Courts Williamsburg, Virginia Chester Quarles University of Mississippi R. Paul McCauley University of Louisville Hilary Harper Marshall University Robert L. Frazier Lamar University James Benson, University of Houston, Clear Lake John R. Altemose Lamar University 522 pages • cloth • Study Guide •Instructor's Manual 1980

12

• •

Law Enforcement and CJrfmfnal Justice: An Introduction G. Bennett-Sandler City University of New York Robert L. Frazier Lamar University Donald A. Torres Ronald J. Waldron U.S. Department of Justice 354 pages • cloth Instructor's Manual • 1979

Deviant Behavior Alex T hio, Ohio University 416 pages • cloth Instructor's Manual • 1978

!he Criminology of Deviant Women Freda Adler, Rutgers, The S�ate University of New Jersey R1ta James Simon, University of Illinois, Urbana 425 pages • paper •1979

For adopt1on cons1derat1on, request exam1nat1on cop1es from your reg1onal Houghton M1ffl1n off1ce.

�� Houghton Mifflin Dallas, TX 75234 I Geneva, I L 60134 Hopewell, NJ 085251 Palo Alto. CA 94304 Boston, MA 02107

Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences

PROGRAM

1981 Annual Meeting Franklin Plaza Hotel

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania March 1 1- 14, 198 1

THEME: Contemporary Issues in Criminal Justice

Problems and Prospects

Tuesday, March 10, 9:00-6:30 PM

PRE-PROGRAM ACTIVITIES

9:00 AM-Noon 1:30 PM-4:30 PM

4:00 PM-7:00 PM

4:30 PM-6:30 PM

Executive Board Meeting Executive Board Meeting

ACJS Committee Meetings Criminal Justice Accredi­

tation Council Registration No Host Soc1al

13

Seminar Room A Seminar Room A

Provincial Ballroom

Delegate Room 1 Mezzanine Level

Comm1ttee Room 10

Little, Brown lays down the Law .

.._THE LAW OF CRIMINAL PROCEDURE: Analysis and Critique of American Criminal Process David A. Jones, J.D. This thorough new text summarizes and analyzes, in clear narrative form, all appellate court decisions that have influenced American criminal procedure. In addition, Professor Jones probingly and often critically examines the pertinent U.S. Supreme Court decisions. Cloth/c.600 pages/$17.95 tentative/ISBN-0-316-472832

•uNDERSTANDING CRIMINAL LAW Jay A. Sigler This unique text does more than simply describe criminal law. Designed for college students, it offers incisive, lively analysis of the social, political, and historical aspects of legal doctrines. Cloth/ c.352 pages/$16.95 tentative/with Teacher's Manual/ ISBN-0-316-790540

�PRISONS IN TURMOIL John Irwin This instructive, provocative new book interweaves numerous per­sonal observations and interviews to explore major social struc­tures that arise in prisons. Paper/277 pages/$6.95/ ISBN-0-316-432601

•CONSCIENCE AND CONVENIENCE The Asylum and Its Alternatives in Progressive America David J. Rothman This provocative study takes up where Rothman's prize-winning book, THE DISCOVERY OF THE ASYLUM, left off: It traces the effort of Progressive-era reformers to change criminal justice, juve­nile justice, and mental health. Paper/463 pages/$8.95/ ISBN-0-316-757756

.._THE SYSTEM OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE N. Gary Holten and Melvin E. Jones Cloth/496 pages/$16.95/ISBN-0-316-371688

CC©ILILOOIE JIDJVII§Il@N LITTLE, BROWN AND COMPANY 34 Beacon Street. Boston. Massachusetts 02100

14

Wednesday, March 1 1 , 8:00 AM- 12:00 Noon

8:00 AM-6:00 PM Registration Mezzanine Level

PROGRAM ACTIVITIES

9:00 AM- 10:15 AM Dominion Ballroom D

Welcome: HARRY W. MORE, President ACJS

MARK ARONCHIK, F1rst Deputy City Solicitor, Philadelphia

Speaker: DAVID W. MARSTON, Former United States Attorney, Philadelphia

Topic: Choosing Enforcement Priorities

10:30 AM-12:00 noon PANELS

PANEL I Delegate Room 1

LAW AND SOCIAL CONTROL

CHAIR: JOHN NEVILLE, Child Welfare, Calgary , Alberta

PRESENTERS: CHARLES R. FENWICK, Trenton State College -Juvenile Court Intake Decision-Making: The Importance of a Social Factor J . DAVID HIRSCHEL, University of North Carolina -Charlotte -- Controlling Drug Abuse: The Role of T ASC MICHAEL W. AG OPIAN, California Lutheran College - Parental Child Stealing: Dimensions and a Policy for Prevention

DISCUSSANT: JOHN NEVILLE, Child Welfare, Calgary, Alberta

PANEL 2 Delegate Room 2

ISSUES IN POLICING

CHAIR: STEVEN M. EDWARDS, Harvard University

PRESENTERS: ERIK BECKMAN, Michigan State University - Polic ing in Copenhagen: A Study of Danish Police Officers and Their Work CATHERIN W. BRAG G , State Umversity of New York - Albany - Legalized Police Homicide and the Institution of Individual Rights: Conflict and Resolution GARY W. SYKES, University of Wisconsin-Superior-The Classroom �o the Street: A Perspective on the Policy "Brotherhood" in Small Towns and Mid-Sized Cities

DISCUSSANT: STEVEN M. EDWARDS, Harvard University

15

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pitalization and life insurance, gener­

ous vacation, holiday and sick leave

are offered. And the Houston Police

Department's retirement program lets

you retire after 20 years and draw a

liberal pension by age 50.

As an officer, your assignments will

be challenging. There are 14 special­

ized divisions including one of the larg­

est helicopter patrols in the nation.

Why Houston? Houston's

booming economy and low

cost of living are bringing

1 ,000 people per week into

the city, and the present law

enforcement body cannot

keep pace. So, we are begin­

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exceptional people. People

who want to test their limits, strength­

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People seeking a future that's growing

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or its equivalent, you can start a new

career today and earn as much as some

college graduates in the Southwest's

most exciting city. For information

about our cadet classes or an applicant

package, call toll-free. Or write Houston

Police Recruiting, 401 Louisiana, Suite

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Wear the badge that means you care.

can Houston, Texas toll free

1-800-ZJI-7795 Equal Opportumty Employer, M!F

16

Wednesday, March 1 1 , 10:30 A.M.- 12:00 Noon

PANEL 3 Committee Room 7

EVALUATION AND OPERATIONS RESEARCH: TREATMENT

CHAIR: MARTIN SCHWARTZ, University of Cincinnati

PRESENTERS: JAMES L. JENGELESKI, Shippensburg State College-A Comparative Study of the Effects of a College Employment and Training Program on Post-Release Arrest, Conviction, and Sentence Outcome for Ex-Offenders B. JA YE ANNO, American Medical Association-An Evaluation Summary of the American Medical Association's Program to Improve Health Care in Jails CYNTHIA J. GINNETTI, Pima County Court Clinic, Tucson, Arizona-An Investigation of Treatment Recommendations Made by a Court Clinic ELMER H. JOHNSON, Southern Illinois University and F RIEDER DUNKEL,

Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Law-Reform as a Setting for Evaluation: A West German Experiment DEBORAH DENNO, The Wharton School-Evaluating Community Aware­ness of a Delinquency Prevention Center

DISCUSSANT: BARSA.E/� ':"""'::><·:,:-:: . , ! - ., Evaluation and Planning, State of New York

PANEL 4 Committee Room 8

JUVENILE DELINQUENCY THEORIES: EMPIRICAL ASSESSMENTS

CHAIR: CHARLES F RAZIER, University of Florida

PRESENTERS: WARDELL J. PAYNE, University of Vermont-Unemployment, Delin­quency and Crime: A Reconsideration of the Economics of Crime JEFFREY HYMAN, Old Dominion University and DONNA BISHOP, LaSalle College-The Effects of Sanctioning on Delinquent Self-Identification RICHARD E. JOHNSON, Brigham Young University -The Broken Home Revisited: A Cause of Delinquent Behavior INEKE HAEN MARSHALL, University of Nebraska at Omaha-A Compara­tive Framework for the Testing of Theories of Juvenile Delinquency

DISCUSSANT: LARRY SIEGEL, University of Nebraska at Omaha

17

1981 A Good Year for

Criminal Justice Texts from Duxbury Press!

--------� Available Now!

Managing Police Organizations: Text and Cases David A. Tansik and james F. Elliott, both of the University of Arizona

The first boc..,_ to take accepted general management principles and apply them in the police science curriculum. How? With from three to eight cases in the second part of each chapter ... cases based on Elliott's actual experiences as a consultant to a police department in a large American city ... cases that introduce the management principles in a relevant manner. Discussion questions focus students on key issues. Also included-chapter summaries. a running glossary, charts and diagrams. and a special introduction to show students how to make the most out of the text. 6-3/8 x 9-1/4. 250 pages. Paperbound. Instructor's Manual.

--------� Available Now!

Correctional Counseling and Treatment Peter C. Kratcoski

A survey of the most widely used techniques and approaches in correctional counseling-techniques applicable to both juveniles and adults and in both institu­tional and community settings. Article selections present contrasting and sometimes opposing views to give a balanced look at topics important to correctional counselors; each chapter begins with an introduction that defines terms and presents dilemmas in the area. Of special note-a full chapter on the evaluation of correctional treatment. 6-3/8 x 9-1/4. 300 pages. Paperbound.

For more information on these texts, or for a look at Duxbury's other fine Crimirtal]ustice texts for courses in Constitutional law and criminal procedure, please

drop by our booth or write to:

Box ACJS-D-Pro81.

Duxbury (A Division of Wadsworth, Inc.),

555 Abrego Street, Monterey, California 93940

18

Wednesday, March 1 1 , 10:30 A.M.- 12:00 Noon

PANEL 5 Committee Room 9

STRESS AND COPING IN CONFINEMENT F ROM DETENTION THROUGH DEATH ROW

CHAIR: JOHN GIBBS, Rutgers University

PRESENTERS: DANIEL LOCKWOOD , State College of New York at Utica/Rome -Sexual

Aggression in Confinement TIMOTHY FLANAGAN, Criminal Justice Research Center, Albany, NY­

Long Term Confinement MARC RENZEMA, Indiana State University-Post-Release Adjustment ROBERT JOHNSON, American University-Psychological Survival on Death Row JOHN GIBBS, Rutgers University-The Street-Jail Transition

DISCUSSANT: CHRISTOPHER DUNN, National Institute of Mental Health

PANEL 6 Committee Room 10

LEGAL ISSUES IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE I

CHAIR: VICTOR STREIB, Cleveland State University

PRESENTERS: DAVID SOLBERG, Department of Justice , Ottawa, Canada-Mentally Dis­ordered Offenders and the Criminal Justice System HARRY EDELSTEIN, Rockland County Court, New York-The Great Dis­parity in the Treatment of Non-Violent Felonies in Suburban Commun­ities as Compared to Large Cities DAVID MANN, College of Charleston-Resolving Free Press-Fair Trials Issues: Judges and Journalists in Washington State RAYMOND HELGEMOE, University of New Hampshire-Private Rights and Public Safety: The Dilemma of the Not-Guilty-By-Reason-of­Insanity Plea for the Criminal Justice System

DISCUSSANT: STEVEN RITTENMEYER, Western Illinois University

19

HOUGHIDN MIFFLIN

Crime and Delinquency !hird ldition Martin R. Haskell, Cal1forn1a State Un1vers1ty, Long Beach Lewis Yablonsky, Cal1forn1a State Un1vers1ty, Northndge 780 pages • cloth • Instructor's Manual • 1978 Haskell and Yablonsky offer a broad­based analysis of both cr1m1nology and JUVenile delmquency. The1r Third Ed1t1on 1s thoroughly rev1sed and updated, In­cluding both theoretical matenal and case stud1es. Spec1al features Include two new l1fe style analyses: the pimp and the hustler; expanded coverage of the pol1ce role 1n JUvemle delmquency; more detailed treatment of pol1ce problems; and data as recent as the "Son of Sam" murders.

Criminology: Crime and CrlmtnaJt:ty Second Edition Martin R. Haskell and Lewis Yablonsky 617 pages • paper • Instructor's Manual • 1978 In th1s updated ed1t1on, the authors focus on en me- 1ts nature, theones of causat1on, the cnm1nal, and recommen­dations for treatment and control. Many new features are Included, such as a diS­cussion of mult1-nat1onal corporation bnbery cases, the transfer of power m organ1zed en me to ethnic groups m the ghettos, and expanded coverage of the concept of "cnmmalmsan1ty."

Juvenile Delinquency Second ldition

• •

Martin R. Haskell and Lewis Yablonsky 569 pages • paper • Instructor's Manual • 1978 The Second Ed1t1on of th1s popular text Includes new matenal such as the nsmg rate of female Juvenile delinquency, ex­panded coverage of delinquency m schools, and updated matenal on the most contemporary drug use patterns among JUVeniles.

Ronreactive Meuures in the Social Sciences Second Edition Eugene J. Webb, Stanford Un1vers1ty Donald T. Campbell Syracuse Un1vers1ty Richard D. Schwartz Syracuse Un1vers1ty Lee Sechrest, Un1vers1ty of M1ch1gan Janet Belew Grove Flonda State Un1vers1ty About 280 pages • paper Just published

Webb's new Second Ed1t1on retams the w1t and 1ntell1gence so w1dely adm1red 1n the f1rst, but 1s up to date m all areas and contams expanded coverage of the maJor ethical 1ssues mvolved 1n 1nd1rect measurement. Both beginning students and expenenced professionals will f1nd th1s ongmal and authontat1ve gu1de to nonreactive 1nvest1gat1on an essential a1d to the1r research.

For adoption cons1derat1on. request exammat1on cop1es from your reg1onal Houghton M1ffl1n otf1ce

� Houghton Mifflin Dallas. TX 75234 Geneva. IL 60134 Hopewell. NJ 08525 Palo Alto. CA 94304 Boston. MA 02107

20

Wednesday, March 1 1, 10:30 A.M.-12:00 Noon

PANEL 7 Conference Room 3

CROSS-CULTURAL PERSPECTIVE ON TERRORISM

CHAIR: DONAL E. J. MacNAMARA, John Jay College of Criminal

Justice

PRESENTERS: ANDREA R. C. HELMS, University of Alaska-Fairbanks-Procedural-

Democracy and the Terrorist Threat EVYATAR LEVINE, Law Offices and Notary, Tel Aviv, Israel-Terrorism, Human Rights and Emergency Legislation DANIEL E. GEORGES-ABEYIE, Southern Illinois University-Terrorism and the Liberal State JACK A. KINNEY, Ancapa Sciences, Inc . , Santa Barbara, California-Urban Terrorism as a Readiness/Risk Committment Concept: A Model

DISCUSSANT: PETER C . UNSINGER, San Jose State University

PANELS Conference Room 6

THE HISTORY OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE I

CHAIR: JOHN D. HEWITT, Ball State University

PRESENTERS: F RANCES S. COLES, California State College, San Bernadino-The His­tory and Effectiveness of Domestic Violence: Temporary Restraining Order Legislation in California DAVID 0. F RIEDRICHS, University of Scranton -From Livingston to Kennedy: A Historical Perspective on Criminal Codes DAVID KALINICH, Michigan State University-Reinventing the Flat Tire: Comparing Historic and Contemporary Prescriptions for Corrections MARTIN B. MILLER, Lake Superior State College-Some Benefits of Re­Evaluating Early Prison Histories

DISCUSSANT: JOHN CONLEY, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

2 1

Throughout the year, qualitative and comprehensive coverage of all matters affecting police science and administration is presented to the subscribers of the JOURNAL OF POLICE SCIENCE AND ADMIN­ISTRATION.

The JOURNAL OF POLICE SCIENCE AND ADMINISTRATION serves the information needs of POLICE, COURTS, CORRECTIONS, ACADEMIA, GOVERNMENT, and interested STUDENTS OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE.

The JOURNAL OF POLICE SCIENCE AND ADMINISTRATION keeps its subscribers abreast of new discoveries and techniques in these two vital disciplines of criminal justice. It reports the findings of practitioners through the use of case studies, feature articles, research projects, and technical data, reported by contributing authors with established and recognized expertise to provide the most diversified views available. A book review section and a police science technical abstracts and notes section are included for the continuing study of any given subject area.

The JOURNAL OF POLICE SCIENCE AND ADMINISTRATION is published by the INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF CHIEFS OF POLICE in March, June, September, and December. Subscriptions are entered on a calendar-year basis.

SUBSCRIBE TODAY One-year subscription: $30.00 IACP members: $25.00

For additional information call or write . . . . . .

.... International Association of Chiefs of Police Eleven Firstf1eld Road Gaithersburg, Maryland 20760

(301) 948-0922

22

Wednesday, March 1 1 , 10:30 A.M.- 12:00 Noon

PANEL 9 Conference Room 5

IMPACTING CRIMINAL JUSTICE: PROCESSES AND POLICY

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

PRESENTERS: MARK TEZAK and ARTHUR PADDOCK, Illinois State University-The Coroner as Missing Link TIN BYNUM and JACK G REENE, Michigan State University-Apple Pie , Motherhood, and Crime Control: An Exploration of Faculty Attitudes WILLIAM KEMPER, Southfield, Michigan, Police Department-The Police Chaplain Program: Problems and Prospects for the 80's RICHARD L. DAVIS, St . John Fisher College-Matrix of Decision-Making in Criminal Justice

DISCUSSANT: DENNIS HOFFMAN, University of Nebraska at Omaha

PANEL 10 Conference Room 4

ACADEMIC PROGRAMMING IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE: SOME EVA­LUATION FINDINGS

CHAIR: BELINDA McCARTHY, University of North Carolina- Charlotte

PRESENTERS: KNOWLTON JOHNSON, Greenbelt , Maryland, and J. PRICE FOSTER,

Law Enforcement Assistance Administration-New Directions for Aca­demic Programming in Criminal Justice: Some Evaluation Findings

ROBERT SIGLER, University of Alabama-Volunteers in Criminal Justice: Curriculum Alternatives EMIL LEVINE, Laurel , Maryland-Information Science in the Criminal Justice Curriculum ROBERT CRANE, Sangamon State University-A New Raison d'Etre for Social/Criminal Justice and Higher Education

DISC USSANT: REINHOLD ENG ELMEYER, University of South Carolina

23

TECHNIQUES OF CRIME SCENE IMVES11GATIOM AIM Sv.nsson, formerly Chief Superintendent, Director of Laboratory Criminal Investigation Department, Stockholm,

Sweden; Otto W•nct.l. formerly Superintendent Criminal Investigation Department, Stockholm, Sweden; and

Do"y AJ. FlsMI, Chief Criminologist, Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department, Criminalistics Laboratory.

Completely revised and updated, the third edition of this classic book includes all significant advances made in the past decade. Expanded coverage features the latest in forensic science, new technologies in gunshot residue testing, a new chapter on narcotics evidence and illicit narcotic laboratories, arson, sexual assault, and more. This outstanding new edition offers a compendium of information on crime scene investigation and physical

PRISOM VICTIMIZATION t... H. lowk.,, Center for Advanced Studies in Human Services, University of Wisconsin. Milwaukee

" ... a convincing portrait of the extent and nature of victimization in prisons. His analysis is provocative, his suggestions for change challenging ... a ringing indictment of the inhumanity which seems a necessary part of prison."

James F. Short, Jr., Washington State University

The overwhelming turmoil in our prisons today as evidenced by physical violence and psychological, economic and social victimization is explored in this comprehensive new book. Causes and effects of victimization are closely examined in a readable way for students and professionals concerned with criminology, corrections and prisons. 1980 256 pages $10.95 paper 0-444-00551-X $16.95 cloth 0-444-99077-1

evidence that's sure to become a constant companion for students. January, 1981 512 pages $23.95 cloth 0-444-00427-0 Dy naanic new titles

In criminology . . . frol I I EJsevier North Holland GUARDS IMPRISONED: Correctional Officers at Work Lucl•n X. Lombardo, Old Dominion University

The topic of prison guards, a �ong neglected. area in criminology, IS comprehensively explored in this major investigation. The motiva· tions and experiences of the men and women who work as prison guards are fully analyzed. Based extensively on 6 years of the author's "participant observation " this highly readable book ques·

'

tions previous assumptions about guard behavior and motivation. 1981 250 pages $19.95 0-444-99080·1

Prices are subject to change without not1ce.

MORMS, DEVIANCE AMD SOCIAL CONTROL: Conceptual Matters Jack P. Gibbs, Vanderbilt University

A thorough investigation of the conceptual problems and issues that confronts the sociology of norms, deviance and social control. A complete exploration of the labeling perspective which includes: the new reactive concep­tion of deviance, the theory of secondary deviance, and societal reaction theory. Important reading for students and professi-onals con.cerned with criminology,

g [1--dev1ance and social control. 1981 210 pages $16.95 -- cloth 0-444-01551-5

- Ets.vl r North Holland, Inc. 52 Vanderbilt Avenue, New York, New York 10017

24

Wednesday, March 1 1 , 1 :15 P.M.-2:45 P.M.

1 : 15 P.M.-2:45 P.M. PLENARY SESSIONS

PLENARY I Dnmmion Ballroom D

CONTEMPORARY ISSUES IN THE JUDICIARY: PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS

MODERATOR: MARVIN ZALMAN, Wayne State University

SPEAKERS: RICHARD SPARKS, �utgers University-New Structures for Sentencing MIL TON HEUMANN, New Haven, Connecticut-Plea Bargaining and Sen­tencing Reform RUSSELL WHEELER , Federal Judicial Center-New Organizational Trends in the Judiciary

3:00 P.M.-4:30 P.M. PANELS

PANEL 1 1 Delegate Room 1

BIO-POLITICS AND THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM

CHAIR: JIM MUNRO, Umvers1ty of West Florida

PRESENTERS: C. R. JEFFERY, Florida State Univers1ty-Biopolitics and the Criminal Justice System BENSON GINSBURG, Umvers1ty of Connecticut-Biological Factors as Feedback Loops in the Social System DIANA FISHBEIN, Florida State Umvers1ty-The Contribution of Refined Carbohydrate Consumption in Maladaptive Behaviors

DISCUSSANT: FRED KORT, University of Connecticut

PANEL 12 Committee Room 7

TEACHING CRIMINAL JUSTICE

CHAIR: ALBERT ROBERTS, Harnden, Connect1cut

PRESENTERS: MICHAEL NORMAN, llhn01s State University -Andragogical vs. Peda­gogical Teaching Methods: Implications for Programs in Criminal Jus­tice Education BRIAN JIMISON, W1ch1ta State Umvers1ty-The Dull, the Dry, and the Wordy: Using Student Evaluations to Aid in the Choice of Textbooks ALBERT ROBERTS, Hamden, Connect1cut-A Strategy for Teaching Police and Correctional Counselors Domestic Violence Intervention: Issues, Techniques and Pitfalls

DISCUSSANT: ELAINE LIFTIN, Miam1, Flonda

25

Criminal Justice ����� New For 1981 Th second edition of the text that is the " most relevant and precise concerning criminal investigation."

James Jengeleski, Shippensburg State College

CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION, SECOND EDITION Charles R. Swanson, University of Georgia Neil C. Chamelin, Troy State University Leonard Territo, University of South Florida

·Follows the actual chronology of an investigation ·New chapters on arson and agricultural crime ·updated treatment of hypnosis, buried bodies, SIDS, auto theft and computer crime O-H302-2060-7 case 7YH x 91!. S2H pages

ALSOOFINTEREST:=================================

"An xcellent text that provides students with an introduction to the real problems faced by a correctional counselor­thought provoking."

Joseph Waldron, Youngstown State University

CASES IN CORRECTIONS Michael C. Braswell, East Tennessee State University Tyler Fletcher, University of Southern Mississippi

·Experiential casebook with 45 situations common to correctional settings. Includes an instructor's manual. O-H:�02-1.111-2 paper 6 x 9 2SO pages 19HO

"It is a professional injustice not to include this book as a must to read."

Suzette Feher Federal Probation Oune 19 0)

Jl!YENILEJllSTICE: POLICY, PRACTICE & LAW H. Ted Rubin, Institute of Court Management, Denver, Colorado

·Integrates all aspects of the juvenile justice �)'stem into a contemporary issues-oriented approach O-H7620-S02-3 paper 6 x 9 299 pages Dec. 1979

26

Wednesday, March 1 1, 3:00 P.M.-4:30 P.M.

PANEL 13 Committee Room 8

EVALUATION AND OPERATIONS RESEARCH: POTPOURRI I

CHAIR: B. JA YE ANNO, American Medical Association

PRESENTERS: DONALD C. BECKER, University of Central Florida-Surveying the Need for a Security Management Degree Program DAVID LESTER, Stockton State College -Murdered Police Officers: Which Departments Lose More Officers and Why? ROBERT C. LEVIE, Southeastern Louisiana University-Patterns in Crimi­nal Homicide in New Orleans ESTHER L. MARGOLIS, Phoenix, Arizona-High Speed Pursuit: Discre­tion or Restriction?

DISCUSSANT: MICHAEL I . VICTOR, University of Texas at Tyler

PANEL 14 Committee Room 9

ETHNIC MINORITIES AS OFFENDERS AND AS VICTIMS

CHAIR: ROBERTO POTTER, University of Florida

PRESENTERS: DAVID WACHTEL, Western New Mexico University-Peyotism : Its Ritual, History and Legality LAURENCE FRENCH, New Hampshire State Hospital-Native American Victimology WILL D. TATE, Cheney State College -Black Community Leadership and Black on Black Crime JAMES L. LeBEAU, Indiana State University-Race and Rape: The Issue of Variability

DISCUSSANT: SLOAN T. LETMAN, Loyola University of Chicago

27

MOS BY TI M ES M I R R O R

TO BE PUBLISHED:

CRIMINAL J USTICE STUDIES: Their Trans-Disciplina ry Nature

Edited by Gordon E. M isner, D. Crim.; with 8 contributors

CONTENTS: Introduction, Law as a Social Science, Anthropology. Pol itical Science. Economics and the Justice System, Sociology and the Criminal Justice System, Psychology. Planning and Justice Systems, summary and conclusion.

MAY. 1 98 1 - Approx. 4 1 6 pages and 31 illustrations

(Book Code: 3457- 1 ) About $ 1 4.95

SECURITY AND CRIME PREVENTION By Robert O 'Biock, Ph.D.

The broad scope o f this new volume provides a total look a t t h i s timely subject . Featuring practical information, the four sections cover:

"AN INTERDISCIPLINARY PERSPECTIVE"

"PERSONAL CRIME PREVENTION"

"BUSINESS CRIME"

"COM MUNITY-BASED CRIME PREVENTION"

MARCH. 198 1 - Approx. 378 pages, 25 i l lustrations and 9 tables

(Book Code: 3738-4) About $ 1 3.95

RECENTL Y PUBLISHED:

PERSPECTIVES ON CRIME VICTIMS Edited by Burton A. Qalaway and Joe Hudson;

with 57 contributors

OCTOBER. 1 980 - 436 pages and 8 illustrations

(Book Code: 1 733-2) $ 16.95

THE C. V. MOSBY COMPANY 1 1 830 Westline lndustr1al Or1ve - St. Lou1s, M1ssour1 631 41

Out-of-state r sidents call toll free · (BOO) 325-41 71 Missouri residents call collect · (314) 8 12·8370

28

Wednesday, March 1 1 , 3:00 P.M.-4:30 P.M.

PANEL 15 Conference Room 3

DEVELOPMENTS IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE LABOR RELATIONS

CHAIR: LARRY T. HOOVER, Sam Houston State University

PRESENTERS: MICHAEL PUGH, Pan American University -Critical Factors in the Emer­gence of Law Enforcement Unionism KENNETH AYERS, Sam Houston State University-Contemporary Issues in Police Unionism EVE ROPER, Sam Houston State Un iversity-Issues and Trends in Court Employee Unionization ALLEN D. SAPP, Sam Houston State University-Differential Distribution of Labor Organizations in Law Enforcement BARRY D. SMITH, Sam Houston State University -Issues and Trends in Unionization of Correctional Officers

DISCUSSANT: C. L. JOHNSON, University of Arkansas at Little Rock

PANEL 16 Conference Room 4

INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES ON CRIMINAL JUSTICE

CHAIR: MARSHALL H. WHITHED, Alexandria, Virginia

PRESENTERS: RICHARD ELMORE, Stockton State College -Minor Dispute Mediation: Some Comparative Historical Examples RICHARD C. MONK, Northwest Missouri State U niversi ty- Cross­Culturally Derived Typology of Alternatives to Incarceration DAVID L. CARTER , Pan American University -Mexican-American Atti­tudes Toward the Criminal Justice System-An Empirical Study of Cultural Variables JON S. T. QUAH, National University of Singapore -The Police and Law Enforcement in Singapore: Problems and Perspectives

DISC USSANT: GARY HELFAND, John Jay College of Cnminal Justice

29

}tnn us and see where the foture ofJustue ltes . . .

You can discover the latest and most up-to-date information available today on fustice and l'!'w enforcemen� by revie:w!ng

the books which we have on dtsplay at the Wtley Exhtbtt

CORRECTIONS Paul W. Keve,

Virginia Commonwealth University

Keve a career corrections adm inistrator I college instructor, draws upon his experience to provide a readable and in-depth portrayal of the correctional system . His i nnovative approach encompasses not only factual data but also conveys a genuine comprehension of the reasons for the conditions that charac­terize correctional programs and faci l ities. This text also deals with the historical background of the field, and discusses private correctional agencies and their role in probable future developments. (0 4 71 03004-X) Jan . 1 981 approx. 528 pp.

POLICE PATROL Operations and Administration

Charles D. Hale, Principal Associate. Public Administration Service, Chicago, Ill.

Combining theories and princi ples of general management and admin istration with the practical concerns of patrol oper�tions, goals, and strategies, this book emphasizes the need to apply contemporary pri nciples of manage­ment to the patrol fu nction. Viewing the patrol function as the most important of all police activities, Hale accordi ngly emphasizes the imperatives of proper planning, supervision and management. Along with new and i n nova-

You'll also be interested in these related titles . . .

COMMUNITY RELATIONS AND THE ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE, 2nd Ed.

Pamela D. Mayhall, Pima Community College, & David Patrick Geary, University of Nevada, Reno (0 471 04135-1 ) 1 979 359 pp.

Student Study Guide to Accompany COMMUNITY RELATIONS AND THE

ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE, 2nd Ed. (0 471 0531 4-7) 1 979 69 pp.

LAW AND THE ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE, 2nd Ed.

Vernon Rich, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale (0 471 04961 -1 ) 1979 362 pp.

INTRODUCTION TO THE ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE, 2nd Ed.

Charles A. Foster and Diane Machunze, both of Chemeketa Community College, & Robert Blanchard, Riverside City College (0 471 04079-7) 1 979 347 pp.

Student Study Guide to Accompany INTRODUCTION TO THE

ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE, 2nd Ed. (0 471 0531 6-3) 1979 92 pp.

tive approaches, the book i �cludes case @ John Wiley & Sons, Inc. studies to enhance the adm1n 1strat1ve 605 Third Ave. onentat1on. New York, N Y 1 01 58

(0 471 03291-3) Jan . 1981 approx. 352 pp. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Attn: James T. Gaughan 605 Third Ave. New York, NY 1 01 58

Please consider me for a complimentary copy of

(0 471 03004-X) Keve _ - - - �� -

(0 471 03291-3) Hale _

(0 4 71 041 35-1 ) MayhalL _ --� � - -- --­

(0 471 0531 4-7) Mayhall, SQ _ _

(0 471 04961 -1 ) Rich_ _ ----- - --

(0 4 71 04079-7) Foster _ ____ _

(0 471 0531 6-3) Foster, SG_

Name ___________ _

Institution

Department (Title)

Address- ----�----��- �- - -� --­

City/State/ ZiP ��---------- - --­

Course Title----�-- -- -- ---- � - - ­

Present Text--- -�- -------- -- ���-

Do you plan to change text next year? Yes�No __ _

Decision Date

1 -7313

30

_ ____ Enrollment

Wednesday, March 1 1 , 3:00 P.M.-4:30 P.M.

PANEL 17 Conference Room 4

RESPONSES TO DOMESTIC VIOLENCE I

CHAIR: EVE S. BUZAWA, Wayne State University

PRESENTERS: THOMAS AUSTIN and EVE S. BUZAWA, Wayne State University­Patterns of Utilization of a Domestic Violence Service Agency ANNA KUHL, Washington State University-Community Response to Battered Women SUZANNE STEINMETZ, University of Delaware-Community Response DEBRA KALNUSS and MURRAY STRAUS, University of New Hampshire­Factors Associated with Legislative and Local Responses to Domestic Violence

DISCUSSANT: ALAN JAY LINCOLN, University of Lowell

PANEL 18 Delegate Room 2

THEORY TESTING

CHAIR: JEROME RABOW, The Neuropsychiatric Institute , Los Angeles,

California

PRESENTERS: EDNA EREZ, University of Southern California-An Empirical Examination of the Relation Between Intent and Results: Determining the Severity of Punishment G REGORY L. MUHLIN, Albert Einstein College of Medicine and New York

State Psychiatric Institute , ELMER L. STRUENING, New York State Psychiat­nc Institute, LOUIS E. GENEVIE, SEYMOUR R. KAPLAN, and HARRIS B.

PECK, Albert Einstein College of Medicine-The Study of Blackout Loot­ing: Contrasts and Competing Theories FRANK J. HENRY, McMasterUnivers1ty-Expanding and Testing: Culture of Violence Theory RAY PATERNOSTER, University of South Carolma, GORDON WALDO, TED CHIRICOS, Florida State University, and LINDA SALTZMAN, Mankato State Umversity - Labeling , Perceived Sanctions and Social Control: A Causal Analysis

DISCUSSANT: EDWARD G REEN, Eastern M1chigan University

3 1

TH E FO U N DATI O N P R E S S P U B LI S H E R S O F QUALITY LEGAL MATE R IALS

ON C R I M I NAL J U STICE A N D LAW E N F O R CE M E NT

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(The leading book in its field.) V. A. Leonard & Ha rry W. More's

POLIC E O RGAN IZATION AND MANAG E M E NT, 5th

Rol l i n M . Perkins & Ronald N . Boyce 's

C R I M I NAL LAW AND PROCE D U R E : Cases & Mater ia ls , 5th

and new in 1980:

Fred E. l nba u , Ja mes R. Thompson, J a m es B. Haddad,

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Cases a nd Comments on C R I M I NAL PROC E D UR E, 2nd

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C R I M I NAL LAW: Cases, Com ment, Quest ions, 3rd

Lloyd L. Wei n reb's

LEADI N G CONSTITUTI O NAL CAS E S O N C R I M I NAL J U STICE

Ch arles H. Wh itebread's C R I M I NAL PROCE D U R E :

An Ana lys is o f Constitut iona l Cases a n d Concepts

Visit Our Display or Write: THE F O U N DATI O N PRESS, I nc .

Col lege Department

1 700 Old Cou ntry Road, M i neo l a , New York 1 1 50 1

32

Wednesday, March 11, 3:00 P.M.-4:30 P.M.

ROUNDTABLES I Dominion Ballroom C

A. DETERRENCE RESEARCH: CONCEPTUAL AND EMPIRICAL

PROBLEMS

CHAIR: DAVID ALCORN, Angelo State University

PANELISTS:

RICHARD E. JOHNSON, Brigham Young University

HAROLD G RASMICK, University of Oklahoma

WILLIAM G. ARCHAMBEAULT , Louisiana State University DAVID ALCORN, Angelo State University

B. THE MEDICAL MODEL IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE: A PHOENIX

ARISEN OR A DEAD DUCK?

CHAIR: SUZANNE D. FLEMING , Louisiana State University

PANELISTS: PETER C ONRAD, Bradeis University

ROBERT M. FIGLIO, University of Pennsylvania

JAMES E. HOVEY, Neurobehavioral Institute, Burlington, Massachusetts

DONAL E. J . MacNAMARA, John Jay College of Criminal Justice ROBERT L. SADOFF, M.D. , Jenkintown, Pennsylvania

SUZANNE D. FLEMING , Louisiana State University

C. TRANSVESTISM, TRANSEXUALISM AND THE LAW

CHAIR: JOHN T. TALAMINI, University of Scranton

PANELISTS:

ARIADNE KANE, Outreach Institute , Boston, Massachusetts CURTIS P. HINCKLEY, University of Lowell

JOHN T. T ALAMINI, University of Scranton

D. THEORY AND RESEARCH IN INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL

JUSTICE

CHAIR: HENRY PRAGER, San Jose State University

PANELISTS:

JAGAN LINGAMMENI, Governor's State University JAMES S. E. OPOLOT , University of Alaska-Anchorage S. GEORGE VINCENTNATHAN, University of Wisconsin-Platteville

LEONARD J. HIPPCHEN, Virginia Commonwealth University

DAE E. CHANG , Wichita State University NICHOLAS PIJOAN, University of Colorado-Denver

33

AWA RDS NOTICE I f you wou ld like your paper considered for the Anderson O ut­stand ing Paper Award or the Anderson Stud ent Paper Award, please send six carefu lly ed ited copies to :

Dr. Vincent J. Webb, Chairperson ACJS Awards Com m ittee c/o Center for Applied Urban Research University of Nebraska-Omaha Omaha, Nebraska 681 82

T H E C R I T E R I A F O R EAC H R ESPECT I V E AWARD IS O U TL I N E D B ELOW.

Anderson Outstanding Paper Award To be considered for the Anderson Outsta n d i n g Paper Award, a paper

must meet the fol lowi ng m i n i m u m criteria. O n l y those papers presented

at the Academy's A n n u a l Conference are e l ig ib le for this Award. 1. Conceptual a n d methodological

r igor i n the development of the thes is and its subsequent em­piri ca l or logica l docu mentat i o n .

2. Theoretical or pragmatic relevance of the thesis and its

i m porta nce to the development of a body of k nowledge for

C r i m i n a l J u st ice.

3. Formal organizat ion of mater ia l ,

f low of ideas, and c lar i ty of

narrative.

Anderson Student Paper Award For recogni t ion of outsta n d i n g

students a n d t h e i r contr i but ions t o

the d isc i p l i ne of C r i m i n a l J u st ice. Criteria To be considered for the A n d e rson Stu dent Paper Award, a paper m ust meet the fol lowing m i n i m u m cr iter ia .

On ly t h ose papers presented at t h e Academy's A n n u a l Conference a r e e l i g i ble for t h is award. 1 . Relevancy o f Research Problem.

2 . Qua l ity of theo retical or ientat i o n .

3. Rigor a n d empi r ica l a nd/or logical docu mentatio n .

4. Q u a l ity of wr i t ing .

D E A D L I N E DATE F O R S U B M I SS I O N IS J U LY 1, 1 981

34

Wednesday, March 1 1 , 4:45 P.M.-6: 15 P.M.

4:45 P.M.-6: 15 P.M. PANELS

PANEL 19 Delegate Room 1

RESEARCH STRATEGIES: EVALUATION

CHAIR: JOSEPH L. SCHOTT, Texas Christian University

PRESENTERS: ROBERT P. LILLIS, MARCUS SALM, and PATRICIA A. STORM, New York State Division of Alcoholism and Alcohol Abuse-A Methodology for Empir­ical Program Planning and Evaluation: Criminal Justice/Treatment Interface in Treatment of Problem Drinker Drivers KNOWLTON W. JOHNSON, Greenbelt , Maryland-An ARIMA Model­Building Strategy for Evaluating Planned Interventions in the Judicial Processing of Juveniles LARRY J. COHEN and MARK I . LICHBACH, University of Illinois at Chicago

Circle-Evaluating Crime Reporting Policy: An Econometric Approach to Alternative Measurement Procedures ANNA KUHL, Washington State University-A Preliminary Look at a Pro­file of Men Who Batter

DISCUSSANT: BRIAN ROWAN, Texas Christian University

PANEL 20 Delegate Room 2

ISSUES IN CORRECTIONS

CHAIR: JAMES STINCHCOMB, Virginia Commonwealth University

PRESENTERS: THOMAS REED, Eastern Kentucky University, PATRICK QUINLAN, Bureau

of Training, Richmond, Kentucky, and DAVID D. GOODRICK, Wisconsin Bureau of Mental Health-Correctional Management of Offenders by Line Staff: Implications of the Behavioral Model W. WILLIAM MINOR, University of Maryland and MERRY MORASH, Michigan State University-The Community Factor in Community Corrections

ELIOT C. HARTSTONE, New York State Office of Mental Health, SHARON

DAVIS, Los Angeles, California, and PAMELA CLARK, New York State Office

of Mental Health-Prison-Mental Health Transfers Post Vitek: A Six State Survey ROBERT E. DEVINE, Mars, Pennsylvania-Role and Functions of Prison Psychological Service in British Prisons PHYLLIS JO BAUNACH, National Inst1tute of Justice -Brubaker : The Dynamics of Prison Reform

DISCUSSANT: JAMES CURRAN, John Jay College of Criminal Justice

35

Wednesday, March 1 1 , 4:45 P.M.-6: 15 P.M.

PANEL 21 Committee Room 7

ORGANIZATIONAL CRIME

CHAIR: DONNA M. RANDALL, Washmgton State University

PRESENTERS: JAY S. ALBANESE, Kean College of New Jersey-Where Political and Corporate Crime Meet: The Financing of Watergate and Lockheed Corporations Payments to Foreign Governments-Toward an Ideolog­ical Understanding JOSEPH J. G ROSS, Pace University-Crimes Against the Health and Safety of the People: Criminal Violations of the Food, Drug, and Cos­metic Act by Major U.S. Corporations KEVIN N. WRIGHT , State University of New York at Binghamton -A Longi­tudinal Study of the Trends in the Prosecution of White Collar and Corporate Crime LYLE A. HALLOWELL, State University of New York at Stonybrook-The Political Economy of Deviance and Control in Industry

DISCUSSANT: MERVIN F. WHITE, Clemson University

PANEL 22 Committee Room 8

ISSUES IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE EDUCATION

CHAIR: GALAN JANEKSELA, Wichita State University

PRESENTERS: DONALD BLAZICEK, Wichita State University-Marginal Man: A Portrait of the Criminal Justician MICHAEL CARRIE, Ball State University-Enrollment Attrition in Crimi­nal Justice: Approaches for the 1980s STANLEY SWART, University of North Florida-Undergraduate Criminal Justice Education, 1980-1981 : A Status Report THOMAS E. SULLENBERGER, Marshall University , and GARY D. COPUS,

University of Alaska-The Magnet Phenomena in Criminal justice Educa­tion: Personality Comparisons between Law Enforcement and Correc­tions Oriented Students with Additional Comparisons to Counterparts ROBERT G. CULBERTSON, Ilhnois State University -Criminal Justice Accreditation: Perspectives for the 1980s

DISCUSSANT: MICHAEL PALMIOTTO, Western Illinois University ,

Macomb, Illinois.

36

Wednesday, March 11 , 4:45 P.M.-6: 15 P.M.

PANEL 23 Committee Room 9

DECISION-MAKING IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE I

CHAIR: MARTIN G RUBERG, University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh

PRESENTERS: TODD R. CLEAR, Rutgers University-Managing by Objectives in Proba­tion: Some Implications of a Case Study ANNE THOMAS, University of Maryland-Systems Analysis: Can It Be Applied to Criminal Justice in America? FRANK P. WILLIAMS, Sam Houston State University-The Impact of Dis­cretion on Station-House Release TIMOTHY J. FLANAGAN, Criminal Justice Research Center, Albany, New York-Making Parole: An Analysis of Factors Associated with Parole Release Decisions in a State Correctional System

DISCUSSANT: CARL POPE, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

PANEL 24 Conference Room 3

WOMEN AS OFFENDERS AND AS VICTIMS

CHAIR: JULIE HORNEY, University of Nebraska at Omaha

PRESENTERS: CYNTHIA KEMPINEN, Pennsylvania State University-An Assessment of the Judicial Processing Patterns of Male and Female Criminal Defendants NANCI KOSER WILSON, Southern Illinois University -Changing Patterns in the Criminal Victimization of Women WILLIAM WILBANKS, Florida International University -Homicide By and Against Women MARY J. C. HAGEMEN, Wichita State University-Male Rapees and Women Rapists JAMES E. HOVEY and CINDY L. EHLERS, Neurobehavioral Institute, Bur­

lington , Massachusetts-Increased Plasma Testosterone Levels and Vio­lent Episodic Dyscontrol in Female Outpatients

DISCUSSANT: INEKE HAEN MARSHALL, University of Nebraska at Omaha

37

Wednesday, March 1 1 , 4:45 P.M.-6: 15 P.M.

PANEL 25 Conference Room 4

VICTIM SERVICES PROGRAMS

CHAIR: JOYCE E. KOWALEWSKI, Neighborhood Justice Project, Elmira, New York

PRESENTERS: BARBARA LONARDI, Neighborhood Justice Project, Charlottesville, Virginia­Neighborhood Justice: A Holistic Approach to Preventing Crime LAWRENCE CENTER, Criminal Justice and the Elderly Program, Washing­

ton, D. C.-Victim Assistance for the Elderly VICTOR A. KOWALESKI, Elmira College-The Student as Victim: An Approach to Prevention and Aftercare STEVEN P. LAB and WILLIAM G. DOERNER, Florida State University­Client Evaluation of the Florida Crimes Compensation Commission MICHAEL ISRAEL, Kean College-Victim-Witness Assistance Programs: Problems for Civil Liberties

1

DISCUSSANT: JOYCE E. KOWALESKI, Neighborhood Justice Pro­ject, Elm1ra, New York

PANEL 26 Conference Room 6

CRIMINAL JUSTICE EDUCATION: THE STATE OF THE ART

CHAIR: VINCENT J. WEBB, University of Nebraska at Omaha

PRESENTERS: JACK GREENE and TIM BYNUM, Michigan State University, and VINCENT J. WEBB, University of Nebraska at Omaha-Professional Identity, Patt­erns of Entrance and Attitudes Toward the Field: A Study of Criminal Justice and Criminology Faculty RICHARD MARTIN, Ball State University-Administrators of Criminal Justice Baccalaureate Programs R. THOMAS DULL, Sam Houston State University- Current Issues in Criminal Justice Education: Aftermath of the Sherman Report KENNETH WINKLER , Murray State University-Criminal Justice/Crimi­nology Journal Rankings: ASC vs. ACJS (Who Reads What and Why?)

DISCUSSANT: J. PRICE FOSTER, Law Enforcement Assistance Administration

38

Wednesday, March 1 1 , 4:45 P.M.-6: 15 P.M.

PANEL 27 Seminar Room D

MANAGERIAL DEVELOPMENT IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE

CHAIR: JOHN E. ANGELL, University of Alaska-Anchorage

PRESENTERS: FREDERICK HUSSEY, Pennsylvania State University-Increasing the Validity of Performance Appraisals for Juvenile Probation Officers Through the Development of Behaviorally Anchored Rating Scales WILLIAM C. TOOMEY, Havertown, Pennsylvania -Personnel Selection Techniques in Criminal Justice CHESTER L. QUARLES, University of Mississippi-The Assessment Cen­ter Approach to Pre-Employment and Promotional Testing as a Suc­cess Predictor in Criminal Justice JONATHAN R. WHITE, Grand Rapids Junior College , Grand Rapids,

Mich1gan -Police Job Analysis: The Limitations of Mechanism Applied to a Social Construct

DISCUSSANT: STEVEN M. EDWARDS, Harvard University

WORKSHOPS I

A. GETTING PUBLISHED: THE JOURNALS Committee Room 10

CHAIR: L. THOMAS WINFREE, Jr . , Louis1ana State University

PANELISTS: CHARLES W. THOMAS, Editor, Criminology KENT B. JOSCELYN, Editor, Journal of Criminal Justice IRA J. SILVERMAN , Editor, Lae Journal of the American Criminal Justice Association ROBERT ANG RISANI , Editor, Journal of Police Science and Admm1stration

B. EDUCATION BEHIND BARS Conference Room 5

CHAIR: DONALD GOODMAN, John Jay College of Crimmal Justice

PANELISTS: JOSEPH BEHAR, Dowling College

W. REASONER CAMPBELL, New York City STEPHEN SHIELDS, St. Johns Umvers1ty

RONALD MORRIS, John Jay College of Criminal Just1ce

39

Thursday, March 12, 8:30 A.M.- 10:00 A.M.

8:00 A.M.-6:00 P.M. Registration

8:30-NOON PANELS

PANEL 28 Delegate Room 1

WOMEN IN PRISON

Mezzanine Level

CHAIR: JIM KANE, University of Nebraska at Omaha

PRESENTERS: NICOLE HAHN RAFTER, Northeastern University-Hard Times: The Evo­lution of the Women's Prison System and the Example of the New York State Prison for Women at Auburn, 1893- 1933 SUSAN K. DATESMAN, Arizona State University -Disciplinary Violations Among Female Offenders DEBORA A. SEVERA, Southern Illinois Umversity -lnmate Mothers and Their Children PHYLLIS JO BAUNACH, National Inst1tute of Justice - Mothers in Prison: Perspectives on the Separation From Their Children GINNY BURNS, State University College at Brockport -Inmate Diagnostic Classification: The Contribution of Dr. Katherine Bement Davis

DISCUSSANT: LUCIEN LOMBARDO, Old Dominion Univers1ty

PANEL 29 Delegate Room 2

CRIME AND THE PUBLIC INSTITUTION

CHAIR: ALAN JAY LINCOLN, Univers1ty of Lowell

PRESENTERS: ROBERT L. DAVID, American University -School Disruption: A Continu­ing American Problem JOHN KIRKPATRICK, University of New Hampshire - Urban Revitaliza­tion, Public Places and Prostitution Patterns ALAN JAY LINCOLN, Univers1ty of Lowell and CAROL ZALL LINCOLN, Newmarket, New Hampshire-The Impact of Crime on Public Library Services

DISCUSSANT: MURRAY STRAUS, Umversity of New Hampshtre

40

Thursday, March 12, 8:30 A.M.- 10:00 A.M.

PANEL 30 Committee Room 7

EVALUATING CORRECTIONAL POLICY

CHAIR: NATHAN C LARK, University of Illinois at Chicago Circle

PRESENTERS: BRUCE WOLFORD, Eastern Kentucky University -Impact of Adult Edu­cational Furlough Program on Offenders Released by the Ohio Depart­ment of Rehabilitation and Correction ROGER TURNQUIST, Aurora College-Assessing the Personal Skills Development of Incarcerated Juvenile Delinquents ROBERT STERNHELL, University of New Orleans-Patterns of Post Incarce rated Employme n t : Differences Result ing from Status Distinctions NATHAN CLARK, University of Illinois at Chicago Circle-Exploring the Environment of a Modern Correctional Facility: The Utility of a User Evaluation

DISCUSSANT: MARK TEZAK, Illinois State University

PANEL 31 Committee Room 8

INTERNATIONAL ISSUES OF JUSTICE

CHAIR: GAD J . BENSINGER, Loyola University of Chicago

PRESENTERS: VINCENT J. HOFFMAN, Michigan State University-The Police of Korea and Japa n : Internal and Foreign Mil itary Influence on Their Development ERICK BECKMAN, Michigan State University-Fear of Crime in Denmark JAMES S. E. OPOLOT, University of Alabama-Birmingham -Problems in Criminal Justice Reform in the New African States PETER JUVILER, Columbia University-Current State of Rape in USSR GAD J. BENSINGER, Loyola University of Chicago -Israel's Most Recent Problem: Violent Crimes

DISCUSSANT: DAVID PATTERSON, Marshall University

4 1

Thursday, March 12, 8:30 A.M.- 10:00 A.M.

PANEL 32 Committee Room 9

MINORITIES AS CRIMINAL JUSTICE OFFICIALS

CHAIR: JAMES CONSER, Youngstown State University

PRESENTERS: SIOBHAN O'BRIEN, Atlanta Police Department and EDMOND J. TRUE,

Florida State University-Getting There: Female and Minority Perfor­mance in the Police Academy-Issues in Public Policy J. LARRY WILLIAMS, Arkansas State University-Women in Arkansas Law Enforcement: Attitudes, Recruitment, and Retention KATHRYN GOLDEN, Western Illinois University-Women as Patrol Offic­ers: A Study of Attitudes FRED A. SHENKMAN, University of Florida-Educated Police : A New Minority

DISCUSSANT: RICHARD R. BENNETT, American University

PANEL 33 Conference Room 3

MANAGERIAL IMPLICATIONS IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE

CHAIR: THOMAS A. JOHNSON, Washington State University

PRESENTERS: TOM BARKER, Jacksonville State University-Police Administrators' Atti­tudes Toward the Definition and Control of Police Misconduct CHRISTINE M. DUNNING and ELEN HOC HSTEDLER, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee-Shooting the Shit: Communicating within a Police Organization JAMES J. FYFE, American University-Communication and Control in Police Agencies

DISCUSSANT: RICHARD S. POST, B. F. Goodrich Company

PANEL 34 Conference Room 4

CITIZEN INVOLVEMENT IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE MANAGEMENT

CHAIR: DAVID G . PECK, Shippensburg State College

PRESENTERS: RALPH G. LEWIS, Florida International University-Involvement of Citi­zens in Criminal Justice Policy Development JOHN ORTIZ SMYKLA, University of Alabama-Citizen Awareness in Crime Prevention: Do They Really Get Involved? RICHARD J . TERRILL, St . Cloud State University -Complaint Procedures: Variations on the Theme of Civilian Participation

DISCUSSANT: WAYNE LUCES, University of Missouri at Kansas City

42

Thursday, March 12, 8:30 A.M.- 10:00 A.M.

PANEL 35 Conference Room 6

CRIMINOLOGICAL THEORY

CHAIR: DAVID 0. FRIEDRICHS, University of Scranton

PRESENTERS: JOHN J. BRODERICK, Stonehill College-Critical and Neo-Conservative Theories of Crime: Are There Prospects for Convergence? W. ALLEN MARTIN, University of T exas at Tyler-Specifying a Spectrum­Based Theory of Enterprise DAVID R. STRUCKHOFF, Loyola University of Chicago-The Morass of Causes, Explanation, Correlates, Reasons, Factors and Motives

DISCUSSANT: JAMES T. SCOTT, Howard University

WORKSHOPS II

C. GETTING PUBLISHED: TEXTS, READERS AND MONOGRAPHS Committee Room 10

CHAIR: MARGIT NANCE, Simon Fraser University

PANELISTS: HENRY M. STAAT, Editor, Criminal Justice Division, Brooks/Cole Publishing

Company

G LEN HOWARD, Director , Criminal Justice Department, Harper and Row,

Publishers, Inc.

ERIC MUNSON, Editor, College Division, Mc G raw Hill Book Company

D. SEX AS A PROBLEMATIC CONCEPT IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE EDUCATION Conference Room 5

CHAIR: DARRELL J. STEFFENSMEIER, Pennsylvania State University

PANELISTS: NICOLETTE PARISI, Temple University

SUE MAHAN, University of Texas-El Paso SHELLEY CANTOR, Behavioral Research Institute

WILLIAM AMOS, United States Parole Commission LYNNE GOODSTEIN, Pennsylvania State University

43

Thursday, March 12, 10: 15 A.M.-11 :45 A.M.

10: 15 A.M.-11 :45 A.M. PANELS

PANEL 36 Delegate Room 1

ABSCAM: A CASE STUDY

CHAIR: J. LARRY WILLIAMS, Arkansas State University

PRESENTERS: DWIGHT C. SMITH, Jr. , Rutgers State University-Changing the Rules in the Middle of the Game: ABSCAM as an Investigative Technique LEONARD M. CUTLER, Siena College-ABSCAM: The Constitutional Collision of Congressional Immunity and the Administration of Justice RICHARD G. FREY, Washington State University-Reassessing the Tests for Entrapment after ABSCAM

DISCUSSANT: J. LARRY WILLIAMS, Arkansas State University

PANEL 37 Delegate Room 2

POLICE STRESS

CHAIR: MARY J. C. HAGEMAN, Wichita State University

PRESENTERS: WILLIAM F. BOURNS, Oklahoma State University-Police Stress and Organizational Design: The Wilson/Skolnick Policing Model DAVID LESTER, Stockton State College-Police Stress: Some Objective Measures and Their Implications JOAN LEXENBURG INGLE, Central State University-Police Stress: A View From Recruits

DISCUSSANT: ROBET H. HAMIL TON, Lower Moreland Township Police Department, Huntingdon Valley , Pennsylvania

PANEL 38 Committee Room 7

THEORIES OF LAW

CHAIR: CHARLES E. REASONS, University of Calgary

PRESENTERS: MARK C. KENNEDY, Cairo, A. R. Egypt-Law and Development : The Role of Law and Incrimination in Third World Societal Development­Historical Cases DRAGAN MILOVANOVIC, C. W. Post Center of Long Island University ­Commodity-Exchange Theory of Law: In Search of a Perspective LAUREEN SNIDER, Queen's University-The Practical Implications of Critical/Marxist Theory

DISCUSSANT: PIERS BEIRNE , University of Connecticut

44

Thursday, March 12, 10: 15 A.M. - 1 1 :45 A.M.

PANEL 39 Committee Room 8

CRIMINAL JUSTICE INFORMATION SYSTEMS

CHAIR: DON GOTTFREDSON, Rutgers University

PRESENTERS: LOUIS J. CSABAY, Passaic County Juvenile Court, New Jersey-Time Management of the Juvenile Court Calendar CHRIS W. ESKRIDGE, University of Nebraska at Omaha-Information Sys­tems in Probation CAROL RAUH, Rutgers University -Assessing Criminal Justice Informa­tion Systems: A Preliminary Model

DISCUSSANTS: DWIGHT SMITH, Rutgers University nnd TODD CLEAR, Rutgers University

PANEL 40 Committee Room 9

JUVENILE J U STICE: C U RRENT DEVELOPM ENTS A N D RESEARCH I

CHAIR: FINN HORNUM, LaSalle College

PRESENTERS: ROBERTO POTTER and C HARLES FRAZIER, University of Florida­Determinants of Intake Dispositions CHRIS E. MARSHALL and INEKE HAEN MARSHALL, University of Nebraska at Omaha and CHARLES W. THOMAS, University of Florida­Juvenile Court Decision-Making Revisited VICTOR L. STREIB, Cleveland State University -The Role of Prosecuting Attorney in the Juvenile Justice System WILLIAM C. BAILEY, Cleveland State Umversity and RUTH D. PETERSON , University of Wisconsin-Legal vs. Extra-Legal Determinants of Juvenile Court Dispositions

DISCUSSANT: WILLIAM E. THORNTON, Loyola University-New Orleans

45

Thursday, March 12, 10: 15 A.M.-11 :45 A.M.

PANEL 41 Conference Room 3

PRISONERS RIGHTS

CHAIR: RICHARD MYREN, American University

PRESENTERS: NICOLETTE PARISI, Temple University and JOSEPH A. ZILLO, Arthur D.

Little -Good Time: The Forgotten Issue L Y N N E G O O D S T E I N , Pe n n s y l v a n i a State U n i v e r s i t y - A Quasi ­Experimental Test of Prisoner Reactions to Determinate Versus Inde­terminate Sentencing REID MONTG OMERY, University of South Carolina-Eliminating Poten­tial Prison Violence by Measuring and Evaluating Inmate Dissatisfaction JAMES L. BECK, United States Bureau of Prisons-Offender Perceptions of Parole Decision-Making

DISCUSSANT: MARTIN F. HORN, Department of Correctional Servi­ces, New York

PANEL 42 Conference Room 4

CRIMINAL JUSTICE EDUCATIONAL DELIVERY SYSTEMS

CHAIR: HAROLD METZ, West Chesten State College

PRESENTERS: R A Y M O N D C I E N E K , U n i v e r s i t y of W y o m i n g - N o n - Tra di t ion al Approaches to Criminal Justice Education MICHAEL PALMIOTTO, Monaca, Pennsylvania-The Role of Community Colleges in the Development of Formalized Training and Education Programs for Criminal Justice Personnel WILLIAM PARSONAG E, Pennsylvania State University-The University and the Field: Collaboration in Education and Training GARY HELFAND, John Jay College of Criminal Justice-Accelerated learning for Police: Marketability vs. Quality

DISCUSSANT: ROOSEVELT SHEPARD, Shippensburg State College

46

Thursday, March 12, 10: 15 A.M. - 1 1 :45 A.M.

PANEL 43 Conference Room 6

THE HISTORY OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE II

CHAIR: ROY LOTZ, John Jay College of Criminal Justice

PRESENTERS: ERIC L. JENSEN and G EORGE KAI HUNG LING, University of Idaho­Chinese Crime in a Frontier Mining Town JOHN D. HEWITT and DWIG HT HOOVER, Ball State University -Public Order, Vice, and Crime in Middletown: 1845- 1975 RICHARD CUMMINGS, University of Maryland-The Sterilization of Criminals: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives DAVID A. RESNICK, Riverdale, New York-The Changing Conception of Juvenile Justice in Jewish Law: A History of the Exegesis of "The Stubborn & Rebellious Son" JERRY W. JOPLIN, Southern Illinois University and JAMES HENDRICKS,

University of Tennessee at Chattanooga -History of Corrections From an Economical Pointed View

DISCUSSANT: SCOTT H. DECKER, University of Missouri-St . Louis

WORKSHOPS III

E. ASSESSING CRIMINAL JUSTICE RESEARCH FOR THE 80's Conference Room 10

CO-CHAIRS: DOROTHY H. BRACEY, John Jay College of Criminal Justice and JACK GREENE, Michigan State University

PANELISTS: ALBERT J. REISS, Jr . , Yale Umversity PETER K. MANNING, Michigan State University DOROTHY H. BRACEY, John Jay College of Criminal Justice JACK GREENE, Michigan State University

F. TEACHING RESEARCH METHODS IN C RIMINAL JUSTICE Conference Room 5

CHAIR: STEPHEN E. BROWN, East Tennessee State University

PANELISTS: DOUG McKENZIE, Sam Houston State University JAMES FOX, Eastern Kentucky Universtty JAMES GILLHAM , SUNY College-Buffalo JOHN MILLIGAN , Universtty of Southern Mississippt RONALD VOGEL, Universtty of North Carohna-Charlotte

' 47

Thursday, March 12, 1 :00 P.M.-2:30 P.M.

1 :00 P.M.-2:30 P.M. PLENARY SESSIONS

PLENARY II

CONTEMPORARY ISSUES IN POLICING: PROBLEMS AND PROS-PECTIS Dominion Ballroom D

MODERATOR: ALBERT J. REISS, Jr. , Yale University

SPEAKERS: CARL KLOCKERS, University of Delaware -Short-Term Workers and Long-Term Employees: The Detective-Informer Relationship LAWRENCE W. SHERMAN, Police Foundation-The Scientific Practice of Police Work HUBERT WILLIAMS, Newark Police Department -Police Use of Deadly Force

2:45 P.M.-4:15 P.M. PANELS

PANEL 44 Delegate Room 1

ORGANIZED CRIME

CHAIR: DONAL E. J. MacNAMARA, John Jay College of Criminal Justice

PRESENTERS: HOWARD ABADINSKY, Western Carolina University -Researching Or­ganized Crime: Methodological Problems PETER A. LUPSHA, University of New Mexico-Organized Crime Evolv­ing: Contemporary Trends in Criminal Enterprise JOHN L. McMULLAN, University of British Columbia-The World Upside Down: Social Control and Criminal Organization in An Historical Underworld

DISCUSSANT: LUCIANO J. IORIZZO, John Jay College of Criminal

48

Thursday, March 12, 2:45 P.M.-4: 15 P.M.

PANEL 45 Delegate Room 2

THE IMPACT OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE EDUCATION

CHAIR: BRIAN E. FORSCHNER, COPE Inc .

PRESENTERS:

MERVIN F. WHITE, Clemson University-The Effects of Educational Attainment on the Job Status Faction Level of Correctional Officers

JEANNE STINCHCOMB, Virginia Commonwealth University-Where Do They Go From Here? A Follow-Up Survey of Bachelor's Degree Recip­ients from the Administration of Justice and Public Safety Program at Virginia Commonwealth University BRIAN E. FORSCHNER, COPE Inc . -An Analysis of the Personality Characteristics of Undergraduate Criminal Justice Majors and Their Field Counterparts

DISCUSSANT: JACK GREENE, Michigan State University

PANEL 46 Committee Room 7

ORGANIZATIONAL CONFLICT AND CONTROLS: THE CORREC­TIONS CASE

CHAIR: BARBARA RAFFEL PRICE, John Jay College of Criminal Justice

PRESENTERS: MARK POG REBIN, University of Colorado at Denver-Organizational Conflict in Correctional Institutions FRANCES E. CHEEK and MARIE DiSTEFANO MILLER, Correction Officers Training Academy, Trenton, New Jersey-Serendipitious Effects of Auto­mated Surveillance in Terms of Loss Control of the Correctional Insti­tution: Implications for the Role of the Correction Officer NEAL A ELOVER, Maryland Pre-Release System-The Use of the Section 1983 Against Prison Officials JAMES A McCAIN and ROGER B. McNALLY, State University of New York-Brockport

DISCUSSANT: ROBERT WAG NER, John Jay College of Criminal Justice

49

Thursday, March 12, 2 :45 P.M.-4: 15 P.M.

PANEL 47 Committee Room 8

SIGNIFICANT LEGAL ISSUES IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE

CHAIR: SLOAN T. LETMAN, Loyola University of Chicago

PRESENTERS: ALFREDA TALTON-HARRIS, Youngstown State University-The First Amendment and Judicial Closure HERBERT SCOTT, Chicago State University-Standards of Evidence in Prison Disciplinary Hearings SLOAN T. LETMAN, Loyola University of Chicago-The Question of Legal Insanity: Implications for the Criminal Defense Attorney

DISCUSSANT: CAROLYN MARSH, University of Nebraska at Omaha

PANEL 48 Conference Room 3

LEADING ISSUES IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE MANAGEMENT

CHAIR: IRVING J. KLEIN, John Jay College of Criminal Justice

PRESENTERS: STEVEN M. E D W A R D S , H a rvard Law Sc hool and K E N N ET H E . CHRISTIAN , Michigan State University-Police Officer Mandatory Retire­ment: A Personnel Issue of the 1980's WILLIAM R. NELSON, James Madison University-Age Discrimination in Police Employment PETER W. COLBY, SUNY-Binghamton-The Goldilocks Problem: When Are Police Departments Too Large, Too Small, and Just Right? R. BRUCE McBRIDE, SUNY College of Technology-Utica, EDWARD A.

THIBAULT, SUNY College-Oswego, and LAWRENCE LYNCH, Onodaga Community College-Management Prerogatives Versus Union Rights: The Clash for the 1980's

DISCUSSANT: EDWARD P. BRACKEN, C.S. Post Center, Long Island University

PANEL 49 Conference Room 4

MENTOR, LEADER, PROFESSIONAL: A ROSE BY ANY OTHER NAME

CHAIR: LARRY SIEGAL, University of Nebraska at Omaha

PRESENTERS: DANIEL J. BELL, Kent State University-Police Leadership: Individual or Organizational Determinants? M. MICHAEL FAGAN and KENNETH AYERS, Kentucky Wesleyan College ­Mentoring and the Police Profession G E O R G E E . R U S H , C a l i f o r n i a S t a t e U n t v e r s i t y - L o n g B e a c h ­Professionalism: Cui Bono? (Who Benefits?)

DISCUSSANT: MICHAEL O'NEILL, Center for the Study of Local Police

50

Thursday, March 12, 2:45 P.M.-4: 15 P.M.

PANEL 50 Conference Room 5

ETHICAL ISSUES IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE

CHAIR: LEONARD J. HIPPCHEN, Virginia Commonwealth University

PRESENTERS: TED SHUMAKER, Enola, Pennsylvania-Ethical Conduct for Police-A Professional Challenge LAURIN WOLLAN, Florida State University-The Administration of the Death Penalty EDWARD SCHOENBAUM. Sangamon State University-Judicial Ethics: Procedures and Causes of Misconduct LEONARD J. HIPPCHEN, Virginia Commonwealth University-Some Ethi­cal Bases for a Social Justice Model

DISCUSSANT: DAVID ORRICK, Norwich Universtty/Vermont College

PANEL 51 Conference Room 6

DOMESTIC VIOLENCE

CHAIR: SANDRA BAXTER, Mattech, Washington, D .C.

PRESENTERS: LYNN REYNOLDS, Brooklyn, New York -Wife Abuse: A Power Imbalance DANTE R. PENA, Sam Houston State University-Incidence of Sexual Abuse Among Male Jail Inmates LEO C. DOWNING , Jr. , North Georgia College , and JACK BYNUM,

Oklahoma State University-Reported Cases of Child Abuse: How Biased? JIM HENKENIUS, University of Nebraska at Omaha-Domestic Violence: A Review of the Literature

DISCUSSANT: NANCY CAMPBELL, Greenley, Colorado

ROUNDTABLES II Dominion Ballroom C

E. LINKAGES BETWEEN LEARNING DISABILITIES AND DELIN­QUENT BEHAVIOR: IMPLICATIONS FOR FUTURE PROGRAMMING

CHAIR: RAYMOND P. CIENEK, University of Wyoming

PANELISTS: JACK PARKER, Louisiana State University RAYMOND P. CIENEK, University of Wyoming

5 1

Thursday, March 12, 2:45 P.M.-4: 15 P.M.

F . C LARIFYING THE R O LE O F THE C R I M I N A L D EFENSE ATTORNEY

CO-CHAIRS: FRED A. MEYER, Jr . , Ball State University and RALPH BAKER, Ball State University

PANELISTS: R. DOUGLAS HAILEY, Attorney, Indianapolis, Indiana

DAN KRAMER, Staten Island College BEN LERNER, Public Defender, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

NILE STANTON, Attorney, Indianapolis, Indiana STANFORD SHMUKLER, Attorney, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

FRED A. MEYER, Jr . , Ball State University

RALPH BAKER, Ball State University

G. JAIL OFFICER TRAINING -WHERE IT IS NOW-WHERE IT OUGHT TO GO

CHAIR: KEN KERLE, Boonsboro, Maryland

PANELISTS: TED HElM, Washburn University of Topeka JAY MOYNAHAN , Eastern Washington University

FRANCIS R. FORD, National Sheriff's Association CLARICE FEINMAN, Trenton State College JOHANNA ROODE, Cumberland County College R. ALLEN Mc CARTNEY, Eastern Kentucky University

KEN KERLE, Boonsboro, Maryland

H. PRIVATE JUSTICE: WORKPLACE, CRIME, AND DISCIPLINE

CHAIR: JAMES D. CALDER, University of Texas-San Antonio

PANELISTS: RICHARD S. POST, BF Goodrich Company JACK STEIBER, Michigan State University ROBERT MEADOWS, Glendale Community College, Glendale, California

52

Thursday, March 12, 4:30 P.M.-6:00 P.M.

4:30 P.M.-6:00 P.M. PANELS

PANEL 52 Delegate Room 1

PARADIGM CONFLICT IN CRIMINOLOGY

CHAIR: DAVID 0. FRIEDRICHS, University of Scranton

PRESENTERS: LARRY R. C O M EA U , University of Toronto-Functionalism, Neo­Functionalism, and Marxian Analysis in Criminology DOUG LAS RICHARD MAYER , University of Delaware-The Case for an Integrated Criminological Paradigm OTWIN MARENIN, Washington State University-Parking Tickets and Class Repression-The Concept of the State in Conflict Theories of the Criminal Justice System

DISCUSSANT: DAVID 0. FRIEDRICHS, University of Scranton

PANEL 53 Delegate Room 2

DECISION-MAKING IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE II

CHAIR: J. SHERWOOD WILLIAMS, Virginia Commonwealth University

PRESENTERS: FRANKLYN C. MORGAN, University of Alabama-Birmingham-The Influ­ence of Interactional Relationships between Courtroom Actors on Case Processing and Sentencing Decisions: An Analysis of the Criminal Court Organizations JOAN HELLAND, Carnegie-Mellon University-Impact of Descriptive Guidelines for Sentencing Decisions THOMAS L. AUSTIN, Wayne State University-Race and Criminal Sen­tencing in Metropolitan and Non-Metropolitan Areas MIC HAEL I. VICTOR, University of Texas at Tyler-Inequality and Arrest Rates: Questions for Conflict Theorists

DISCUSSANT: RALPH WEISHEIT, Washington State University

53

AFFI RMATIVE ACTI ON MEETI N G

Thursday March 1 2

4 : 45-6 : 00

Seminar Room C

Clarice Fein man Trenton State College

Sloan T. Letman Loyola U niversity

Co-Chairpersons

54

Thursday, March 12, 4:30 P.M.-6:00 P.M.

PANEL 54 Committee Room 7

COMMUNITY BASED CORRECTIONS

CHAIR: STEPHEN E . DOEREN, Wichita State University

PRESENTERS: MARY J. C. HAGEMAN, Wichita State University-The Management, Administration, and Implementation of Community-Based Corrections Programs GARY WILLIS, Applachian State University - Legal Aspects of Community­Based Corrections ROBERT O'BLOCK, Appalachian State University--Work Release Programs ROBERT C. EVANS, Louisiana State University-Restitution: An Alterna­tive for Juveniles

DISCUSSANT: JACK B. PARKER, Louisiana State University

PANEL 55 Committee Room 8

FUTURE DIRECTIONS IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE

CO-CHAIRS: IRA J. SILVERMAN, University of South Florida and

HAROLD J. VETTER, University of South Florida

PRESENTERS: CHARLES M. FRIEL, Sam Houston State University-The Lessons at Corinth, Sparta and Athens-Thoughts on the Future of Justice DONALD GOODMAN , John Jay College of Criminal Justice -Punishment: The Future of an Intrusion GENE STEPHENS, University of South Carolina-Human Values and Their Impact on Criminal Justice in the Future

DISCUSSANT: EUGENE J. WATTS, Ohio State Unviersity

PANEL 56 Conference Room 3

CITIZEN'S PARTICIPATION IN CORRECTIONS

CHAIR: JOEL H. HENDERSON, San Diego State University

PRESENTERS: RONALD A. BOOSTROM, San Diego State University - Neighborhood Justice and Mediating Structures in Criminal Justice ALICE CHERBONNIER, Baltimore Chromc le -Mass Media Coverage of Community Participation in Corrections: A Case Study

55

Thursday, March 12, 4:30 P.M.-6:00 P.M.

PRESENTERS: (cont.) GORDON C . KAMKA, Department of Public Safety and Correctional Servi­

ces, Baltimore, Maryland-The Expansion of Community-Based Correc­tions: The Maryland Experience JERRY MILLER, National Center for Institutions and Alternatives, Washing­

ton, D.C. -Unstated Pitfalls: The Need for Citizen Participation

DISCUSSANT: ELMER JOHNSON, Southern Illinois University

PANEL 57 Conference Room 4

SYSTEMS APPROACH TO CRIMINAL JUSTICE MANPOWER NEEDS

CHAIR: VICTOR G. STRECHER, Sam Houston State University

PRESENTERS: C. L. JOHNSON, University of Arkansas at Little Rock-Sorting the Hay­piles of Data: A Systems Approach to Manpower Informational Needs ALLEN D. SAPP, Sam Houston State Univeristy-lntercomponent Effects in Criminal Justice Manpower Decisions DAVID R. G ULICK, Sam Houston State University-The Development of Behaviorally Specific Information Retrieval Skills for Undergraduate Criminal Justice Students GWEN SCROGGINS, Sam Houston State University-Management by Information-Users of Literal and Numeric Data in Decision-Making JOAN CULP, Sam Houston State University-Fast Access Computer Sys­tems: Applications in Management

DISCUSSANT: JOHN HUDZIK, Michigan State University

PANEL 58 Conference Room 5

EVALUATION AND OPERATIONS RESEARCH: POTPOURRI II

CHAIR: JOSEPH L. PETERSON, University of Illinois at Chicago Circle

PRESENTERS: RALPH G. LEWIS, Florida International Univeristy - Multiple Outcome Expectations and Decision Theoretic Approaches to Evaluations J O S E P H L. P E T E R S O N , M I C H A E L G I L L I L A N D , a n d S T E V E N MIHAJLOVIC , Umversity o f Illinois a t Chicago Circle -An Assessment of the Role and Impact of Scientific Evidence in Criminal Investigations GENNARO F. VITO, Temple Universit y- Does It Work? Problems in the Evaluation of a Correctional Treatment Program SABRA MARTIN and ANNA KUHL, Washington State Umversity -Direct Service and Research: Are They Incompatible in Family Violence Programs?

DISCUSSANT: THOMAS PAVLAK, University of Pittsburgh

56

Thursday, March 12, 4:30 P.M.-6:00 P.M.

PANEL 59 Conference Room 6

STUDENT SESSION I

CHAIR: ZEBULON V. CASEY, LaSalle College

PRESENTERS: MARTHA A. MINNIS, Sam Houston State University -Ethical Guidelines in the Conduct of Research with Prisoners L. KEMP ENSOR, University of Alabama-Organization and Management of White Collar Crime Investigation G. L. HOUSTON, University of Colorado at Denver-The Continuing Debate of Viewing Television Violence

DISCUSSANT: ZEBULON V. CASEY, LaSalle College

WORKSHOPS IV

G. FUNDING FOR CRIMINAL JUSTICE RESEARCH Room South

CO-CHAIRS/PANELISTS: LARRY HOOVER, Sam Houston State University RICHARD R. BENNETT, American University

Provincial

H. RACE AS A PROBLEMATIC CONCEPT IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE EDUCATION Seminar Room A

CHAIR: LARRY E. WILLIAMS, Midwestern State University

PANELISTS: B. A. CHADWICK, Brigham Young University JOSEPH H. STAUSS, University of Tennessee

SUE MAHAN, University of Texas-El Paso

I. PRIVATE SECURITY EDUCATION AND TRAINING Room B

Seminar

CHAIR: HAYES C. LARKINS, Community College of Baltimore

PANELISTS:

RICHARD W. KOBETZ, North Mountain Pines Training Center , Winchester, V1rginia

KEN FAUTH, Northern Michigan University NORMAN BOTTOM, Jr. , Indiana University of Pennsylvania

5 7

Friday, March 13, 8:00 A.M.-6:00 P.M.

8:00 A.M.-6:00 P.M. Registration Mezzanine Level

8:30 A.M.- 10:00 A.M. REGIONAL MEETINGS

Region 1 Northeast Committee Room 9 Region 2 North Atlantic Conference Room 3

Region 3 South Conference Room 10 Region 4 Midwest Conference Room 6

Region 5 Southwest Conference Room 5

Region 6 Northwest Conference Room 4

10: 15 A.M.- 1 1 :45 A.M. PLENARY SESSIONS

PLENARY IV Dominion Ballroom D

RACISM IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE: PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS

MODERATORS: LAWRENCE W. SHERMAN, Police Foundation

SPEAKERS:

PATRICK V. MURPHY, Police Foundation-Racism and Policing BENJAMIN WARD, New York City Corrections Commission-Racism and Corrections HUBERT LOCKE, University of Washington-University and Criminal Justice Racism MARTHA FLEETWOOD, National Association for the Advancement of

Colored People-Combating Racism in Criminal Justice

12:00 Noon - 1:30 P.M.

AWARDS LUNCHEON Dominion A and B

SPEAKER: GERHARD 0. W. MUELLER, Chief, Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice Branch, United Nations

TOPIC: Contemporary Issues in Criminal Justice: A Worldwide

Perspective

1:30 P.M.-2:30 P.M.

BUSINESS MEETING Provincial Ballroom

58

Friday, March 13, 2:45 P.M.-4: 15 P.M.

2:45 P.M. -4: 15 P.M. PANELS

PANEL 60 Delegate Room 1

RESEARCH STRATEGIES: QUALITATIVE ANALYSIS

CHAIR: DENNIS WIECHMAN , University of Evansville

PRESENTERS: THOMAS W. FOSTER, Ohio State University-Mansfield-The Prison Sub­culture in Microcosm: An Exploratory and Typological Analysis of "Mushfaking" PHYLLIS D. COONTZ, University of Pittsburgh-Uses For and Using the Ethnographic Method RONALD J. SC OTT, University of Missouri -St. Louis-Evaluating Correc­tional Institutions: The Use of Survey and Observational Methods to Understand Functional Unit Management Programming DONNA C. HALE, Michigan State University-Quantification in Historical Analysis: The Merger of History and the Social Sciences

DISCUSSANT: J. D. GINGER, Jr . , Bluefield State College

PANEL 61 Delegate Room 2

CAN THE POLICE PREVENT CRIME?

CHAIR: EVE S. BUZAWA, Wayne State University

PRESENTERS: GEORGE KELLING , Harvard University -Attacking and Preventing Crime: The Ongoing Tension of a Historical Dilemma GARY MARKS, Massachusetts Institute of Technology-Who Really Gets Stung? PETER MANNING , Michigan State University-Some Unanticipated Con­sequences of Crime Focused Policing

DISCUSSANT: EVE S. BUZAWA, Wayne State University

59

Friday, March 13, 2:45 P.M.-4: 15 P.M.

PANEL 62 Conference Room 7

CORRECTIONAL STANDARDS AND ACCREDITATION

CHAIR: ILENE R. BERGSMANN, Bureau of Prisons

PRESENTERS: DALE K. SEC HREST, American Correctional Association -Adopting National Standards for Correctional Reform JANE O'SHAUG HNESSEY, Commission on Accreditation for Corrections­

The Accreditation Process and Its Future Implications NANCY KRAMER , Bureau of Prisons-Policy Impact of Standards Imple­mentation for Correctional Agencies ACLU Representative, American Civil Liberties Union, National Prison Project-Correctional Standards From the Inmate's Perspective

DISCUSSANT: ROY ROBERG , San Jose State University

PANEL 63 Conference Room 8

RESEARCH STRATEGIES: METHODOLOGICAL CONCERNS

CHAIR: ROBERT M. REGOLI, Texas Christian University

PRESENTERS: DONALD M. BARRY, Rutgers University-The Use and Misuse of Statis­tical Significance Tests in Criminal Justice Research MARTIN D. SCHWARTZ, University of Cincinnati -Violence Prediction, No! Risk Assessment, Si! : A Probation Program Which Works N. PRABHA UNNITHAN, University of Nebraska-Collecting Data in a Correctional Setting: Biases and Constraints ROY B. ALLEN, Florida State University-The Influence of the Number of Stimuli on the Development of a Penalty Severity Scale JAMES GAROFALO, National Counctl on Crime and Delinquency and

RICHARD F. SPAR KS, Rutgers Universi ty - Measuring the Use of Imprisonment

DISCUSSANT: ERIC D. POOLE, Western Carolina University

60

Friday, March 13, 2:45 P.M.-4: 15 P.M.

PANEL 64 Conference Room 9

VICTIMOLOGY: CURRENT STATUS AND F UTURE DIRECTIONS

CHAiR: DONALD L. BLAZICEK, Wichita State University

PRESENTERS: ELIZABETH A. STANKO, Clark University-Characteristics of Victims as a Factor in Prosecutors' Determinations about "Real" and "Phony" Robbery Cases JOEL HENDERSON and G. THOMAS GITCHOFF, San Diego State University-Victim and Offender Perceptions of Alternatives to Incar­ceration: An Exploratory Study B. J. F RAYMAN and LAWRENCE KIELICH, Aquinas College , and L.­

THOMAS WINFREE, Louisiana State Univeristy -Victimization and Atti­tudes Toward Police Performance CHARLES P. NEMETH, Niagara University-The Tragic Trilogy in the Proof of Rape: Force, Consent and Resistance

DISCUSSANT: DAVID L. SMITH, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University

PANEL 65 Conference Room 3

THE ELDERLY AS CRIME VICTIMS

CHAIR: ALBERT BHAK, Kent State Umversity

PRESENTERS: KATHERINE VAN WORMER, Kent State University-The Elderly in Prison J. DAVID HIRSCHEL, University of North Carolina - Charlotte-Special Problems Faced by the Elderly Victims of Crime JOHN J. PFUHL, Monmouth College -Community Solidarity: Facilitator or Suppressor of Fear of Crime Among the Aged? ALBERT BHAK, Kent State University -Fear of Crime by the Elderly : An Empirical Evaluation

DISCUSSANT: ELLEN HOCHSTEDLER, Univers1ty of Wisconsin­Milwaukee

6 1

Friday, March 13, 2:45 P.M.-4: 15 P.M.

PANEL 66 Conference Room 4

DETERRENCE CURRENT RESEARCH

CHAIR: JEFFREY HYMAN, Old Dominion University

PRESENTERS: CHARLES W. THOMAS, University of Florida, and DONNA BISHOP, LaSalle College-The Effect of Formal and Informal Sanctions on Juve­nile Delinquency ROBERT E. QUAID and CHARLES R. PASTORS, Northeastern Illinois University-The Effect of a Juvenile Officer's Dispositional Decision Upon the Juvenile's Subsequent Deviant Behavior FRANK P. WILLIAMS and R. THOMAS DULL, Sam Houston State University­Deterrence as a Social Control: A Decade Later

DISCUSSANT: JOSEPH E. JACOBY, University of South Carolina

PANEL 67 Conference Room 5

LAW AND ORDER RECONSIDERED

CHAIR: GREGG BARAK, Aurora College

PRESENTERS: JOHN S. GOLDKAMP, Temple University-The State of Preventive Det­ention in the United States DENNIS E. HOFFMAN and VINCENT J. WEBB, University of Nebraska at

Omaha-The Sterilization of the Dangerous Classes, 1922-1980: A Bib­liographic Overview and Critical Commentary GREGG BARAK, Aurora College-The Dialectics of Law and Order: Adjudication in Historical Perspective

DISCUSSANT: LARRY R. COMEAU, University of Toronto

62

Friday, March 13, 2:45 P.M.-4: 15 P.M.

ROUNDTABLES III Dominion Ballroom C

I. RATIONALIZING THE PROSECUTION DECISION-MAKING PROCESS

CHAIR: JOAN E. JACOBY, Bureau of Social Science Research , Inc . ,

Washington, D.C.

PANELISTS: LEONARD R. MELLON, Bureau of Social Science Research, Inc . , Washing­

ton, D .C. STANLEY H. TURNER, Temple University

EDWARD C. RATLEDGE, University of Delaware SHELDON GREENBERG, Kings County District Attorney's Office , Brooklyn,

New York JOAN E. JACOBY, Bureau of Social Science Research, Inc . , Washington , D.C.

J. COLLECTIVE YOUTH CRIME

CHAIR: HEDY BOOKIN, Virginia Commonwealth University

PANELISTS: RUTH HOROWITZ, University of Delaware WALTER B. MILLER, Harvard Law School

K. THE PLACE OF VOLUNTEERISM IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE CURRICULUMS

CHAIR: KEITH LEENHOUTS, Volunteers in Probation/National Coun­

cil on Crime and Delinquency

PANELISTS: ROBERT T. SIGLER, University of Alabama GORDON MISNER, University of Illinois at Chicago Circle

ERNIE SHELLEY, Olivet College LA MARR HOWARD, Georgia State University

63

Friday, March 13, 2:45 P.M.-4: 15 P.M.

L. THE POLYGRAPH: PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS

CHAIR: HOWARD W. TIMM, Southern Illinois University

PANELISTS: FRANK HORVATH, Michigan State University DAVID RASKIN, University of Utah

CLARENCE ROMIG, University of Illinois

M. THE FBI AND THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SCENE: YESTERDAY, TODAY AND TOMORROW

CHAIR: NOLA ALLEN, University of South Florida

PANELISTS: WINTHROP YOUNG , University of South Florida

MITCHELL SILVERMAN, University of South Florida

WILLIAM M. MOONEY, Iona College JOSEPH L. SCHOTT, Texas Christian University

4:30 P.M.-6:00 P.M. PANELS

PANEL 68 Conference Room 3

WHITE COLLAR CRIME

CHAIR: CHARLES E. REASONS, University of Calgary

PRESENTERS: EZRA STOTLAND, University of Washington-Can White Collar Crime Investigations Be Protected from Improper Pressure? TERESA R. MITCHELL-BANKS, Simon Fraser University-Going to Blazes and Making Money on the Way: Arson for Profit in Canada and the U.S. CYNTHIA M. BERGER, Public Administration Service, Chicago, Illinois and EDWARD J. BERGER, Postal Inspector, Chicago, Illinois-An Innovation in White Collar Crime: Account Manipulation T.H. COOK, University of South Carolina-The Increasing Cost of White Collar Crime

DISCUSSANT: CHARLES E. REASONS, University of Calgary

64

Friday, March 13, 4:30 P.M.-6:00 P.M.

PANEL 69 Delegate Room 1

RESEARCH STUDIES IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE

CHAIR: DONALD M. BARRY, Rutgers University

PRESENTERS: DENNIS J. WIECHMAN, University of Evansville and RONALD BAE, Louisi­

ana State University-Eunice-The Death Penalty: A Comparison of Pre­Moratorium and Post-Moratorium Homicide Rates PHYLLIS D. COONTZ, University of Pittsburgh-Criminal Responses to Disasters WILUAM FEYERHERM , CARL E. POPE, and JEFFERY MARTIN, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee-Ecological Correlates of Juvenile Dispositions in Ten California Counties CANDACE McCOY, University of Cincinnati-Remedies for Unconstitu­tional Correctional Facilities: Two Legal Models

DISCUSSANT: ROY LOTZ, John Jay College of Criminal Justice

PANEL 70 Delegate Room 2

CRIMINAL JUSTICE IN ENGLAND-CRITICAL ISSUES

CHAIR: NANCY TRAVIS WOLFE, University of South Carolina

PRESENTERS: ERNEST D. GIGLIO, Lycoming College-Free Press-Fair Trial Issues in England and the United States RICHARD J. TERRILL, St . Cloud State University-Police and Minority Groups: The Concern in England RICHTER H. MOORE, Jr . , Appalachian State University and TOMMY

THOMAS, University of South Carolina-The Magistrate's Court in the British Criminal Justice System

DISCUSSANT: GARY HELFAND, John Jay College of Criminal Justice

65

Friday, March 13, 4:30 P.M.-6:00 P.M.

PANEL 7 1 Committee Room 7

CAN A PRISON BE CLOSED? POLICY, POLITICS AND PRESSURE GROUPS INVOLVED WITH THE FEDERAL WOMEN'S PRISON IN ALDERSON, W. VA.

CHAIR: CLAUDINE SchWEBER, SUNY-Buffalo

PRESENTERS: GAIL HIGGINS FOGARTY, Committee on the Judiciary, United States

House of Representatives-The Congressional Perspective: The Legisla­tive Process and Oversight Responsibilities RON WALDRON, Bureau of Prisons-Summary of the Alderson F easabil­ity Study Recently Completed by the Federal Prison System TINO CALABIA, United States Commission on Civil Rights-Strategies of a Civil Rights Group KAY HARRIS, National Council on Crime and Delinquency-Closing Alder­son: A Logical Step in the Process of Reducing Prison and Jail Use in the United States TOBY SLAWSKY, United States Parole Commission-Home to D.C.: The Parole Effects of Closing Alderson

PANEL 72 Committee Room 8

OPERATIONS AND EVALUATION RESEARCH: PROBATION AND PAROLE

CHAIR: THOMAS J. PAVLAK, University of Pittsburgh

PRESENTERS: MARGUERITE E. BRYAN, University of Wisconsin-Offender Participa­tion in a Job Training Program: An Evaluation EDWARD J. LATESSA, University of Cincinnati-An Evaluation of Inten­sive Supervision with Shock Probationers N. E. SCHAFER, S .P. E.A./I .U.P.U . I . -Changing "Good Time": Public Opinion and Presumptive Parole ETHAN J. JANOWITZ, Montville , New Jersey and LAURENCE S. BALKIN , Point Pleasant, New Jersey-Probation-Field Remedial Services Project: An Evaluation

DISCUSSANT: RONALD J. SCOTT, University of Missouri-St. Louis

66

Friday, March 13, 4:30 P.M.-6:00 P.M.

PANEL 73 Committee Room 9

POLICING: JOB PERFORMANCE, EVALUATION AND STRESS

CHAIR: BEN MENKE, Washington State University

PRESENTERS: MARK BLUMBERG , Central Missouri State University-The Relationship Between Police Use of Firearms and Other Indicators of Job Performance WILLIAM STENZEL and MICHAEL BUREN, Traffic Institute- Northwestern University-Police Work Scheduling: Issues and Trends GERALD GRIFFIN, Southwest Texas State University-The Concept of the Balance Sheet and Profit and Loss Statement for Law Enforcement Agencies as a Measure of Productivity MICHAEL O'NEILL, Center for Local Pol ice, WAYNE HANEWICZ, LYNN FRANSWAY, Michigan State University , TOM CARLi and D.W. EDINGTON,

University of Michigan-Police Stress Conditioning and Job Performance

DISCUSSANT: GARY W. CORDNER, Washington State University

PANEL 74 Conference Room 10

ISSUES AND POLICY IN CORRECTIONS

CHAIR: CURT G RIFFITHS, Simon Fraser University

PRESENTERS: DANIEL KENNEDY, Univers1ty of Detroit -Toward a Perspective on the New Penology SUE MAHAN, University of Texas at El Paso-An Orgy of Brutality at Attica, the Killing Ground at Santa Fe: A Comparison of Prison Riots ROGER HANDBERG and CHARLES UNKOVIC , University of Central Florida-Corrections Policy in Rural and Small Town America GORAY GORDAN, SUNY College of Technology- Utica-Toward Justice as an End in Corrections: A Planned Change Case Study

DISCUSSANT: RALPH G. LEWIS, Florida International University

67

Friday, March 13, 4:30 P.M.-6:00 P.M.

PANEL 75 Conference Room 4

CONFLICT AMONG CORRECTIONAL EMPLOYEES: UNION AND NON-UNION RESPONSES

CHAIR: PEGGY FRANDSEN, Bureau of Prisons

PRESENTERS: CLARICE FEINMAN, Trenton State College-No Union to Call Their Own: Impact on New Jersey Correction Officers of Being Members of the PBA CLAUDINE SchWEBER and DAVID ROTH , SUNY College- Buffalo­

AFSCME and the New York State Correctional Employees: Impact of a Long-Term Relationship CHARLES BETHEL, Center for Commumty Justice-Responding to Employee Grievances in a Non-Union Setting: A Potential Model Stressing Mediation

DISCUSSANT: PEGGY FRANDSEN, Bureau of Prisons

PANEL 76 Conference Room 5

JUVENILE JUSTICE: CURRENT DEVELOPMENTS AND RESEARCH II

CHAIR: DONNA BISHOP, LaSalle College

PRESENTERS: DEBORAH DENNO, University of Pennsylvania-Just Deserts and the Juvenile Justice System: Reform or Recourse? ROGER B. McNALLY, SUNY College-Brockport-A Century Later: The Juvenile Justice System JOSEPH B. SANBORN, Jr . , Broomall, Pennsylvania-The Negotiation­Oriented Juvenile Court LYNN SAMETZ, Lesley Col lege -Children's Judgments of Serious Crime

DISCUSSANT: LAWRENCE E. CUMMINGS, Youngstown State

University

68

Friday, March 13, 4:30 P.M.-6:00 P.M.

PANEL 77 Conference Room 6

STUDENT SESSION II

CHAIR: STEVEN MIHAJLOVIC, University of Illinois at Chicago Circle

PRESENTERS: CASSANDRA MACON, Burlington, New Jersey-Deterrence or Ven­geance? The Incarceration of Black Male Delinquents SUSAN LYNN CAULFIELD, University of South Carolina-A Criticism of Juvenile Delinquency Theories MARY KNUDSEN, Stockton State College -Police Marital Instability and Moonlighting

DISC USSANT: STEVEN MIHAJLOVIC , University of Il l inois at Chicago Circle

Saturday, March 14, 8:00 A.M.- 10:00 A.M.

Registration Mezzanine Level

PANELS

PANEL 78 Delegate Room 1

RESEARCH STRATEGIES: THE POLICE

CHAIR: DAVID LESTER, Stockton State College

PRESENTERS: GREG ORY L. MUHLIN, Albert Einstein College of Medicine and New York State Psychiatric Institute, LOUIS E. G ENEVIE, Albert Einstein College of

Medicine, ELMER L. STRUENING, New York State Psychiatric Institute,

SEYMOUR KAPLAN and HARRIS B. PECK, Albert Einstein College of

Medicme-Multidimensional Components of Attitudes Toward Police: An Evaluation in 20 Communities CHUNG-WEUN HOU, Bowling Green State University-Testing the Relia­bility of Niederhoffer's Police Cyncism Scale on Taiwan Police J. D. GINGER, Jr . , Bluefield State College-Comparative Police Adminis­tration: A Proposal for the 1980's

DISCUSSANT: REINHOLD ENGELMEYER, University of South Carolina­Coastal Carolina College

69

Saturday, March 14, 8:30 A.M.- 10:00 A.M.

PANEL 79 Delegate Room 2

CRIMINOLOGICAL THEORY AND SPECIFIC OFFENSES

CHAIR: CLIFF ROBERSON, St . Edwards University

PRESENTERS: EDWARD G. ARMSTRONG, LeMayne-Owen College-Police Perspec­tives and Pandering ALLEN R. MILLER, Lancaster County Adult Probation Office, Lancaster,

Pennsylvania-Assertiveness Training and Self-Administered Covert Sensitization in a Case of Exhibitionism STEVEN A. GILHAM, University of Missouri-Kansas City-Bodies , Proper­ties and Markets: Can a Prostitute be Raped? LEON E. PETTIWAY, Temple University and CARL E. POPE, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee-Patterned Relationships in Burglary

DISCUSSANT: CLIFF ROBERSON, St. Edwards University

PANEL 80 Committee Room 7

CRIMINAL JUSTICE TRAINING

CHAIR: THOMAS A. JOHNSON , Washington State University

PRESENTERS: CHRISTOPHER FLAMMANG and ROY WALKER, University of Illinois­

Training: The Search for Alternatives KEVIN PARSONS , Kevin Parsons and Associates, Inc .-Psyco-Motor Skill Training System Design: Evaluation of the YELON Model THOMAS A. JOHNSON, Washington State University-The Bombing Inci­dent at Perham Hall : Development of a Videotape Training Program for University Police and Campus Administrators

DISCUSSANT: FRANKLYN ROBBINS, Canterbury, Connecticut

PANEL 81 Committee Room 8

CROSS-CULTURAL PERSPECTIVES-INDIA

CHAIR: JAGAN LINGAMMENI, Governor's State Umversity

PRESENTERS: N. PRABHA UN NITHAN, University of Nebraska -Criminal Justice Research and Its Utilization in a Third World Contest: The Case of India MAHENDRA P. SING H, Michigan State University-India's Police Dilemma­The British Legacy JAGAN LINGAMNENI, Governor's State Un iversity - Police Administra­tion in India: Some Cross-Cultural Perspectives

DISCUSSANT: DAVID PATTERSON, Marshall Umversity

70

Saturday, March 14, 8:30 A.M.- 10:00 A.M.

PANEL 82 Committee Room 9

RESPONSES TO DOMESTIC VIOLENCE II

CHAIR: THOMAS AUSTIN, Wayne State University

PRESENTERS: JIM BANNON, Detroit Police Department-Law Enforcement Problems with lntrafamily Violence EVE S. BUZAWA, Wayne State University- The Role of Training Upon Patrol Officer Response to Domestic Violence Legislation ALBERT R. ROBERTS, University of New Haven-Police Intervention Approaches with Battered Women

DISCUSSANT: HOWARD TIMM, University of Southern Illinois

PANEL 83 Conference Room 3

EVALUATION AND OPERATIONS RESEARCH: JUVENILES

CHAIR: ERIC D. POOLE, Western Carolina University

PRESENTERS: RALPH WEISHEIT, Washington State University and ROBERT M. REG OLI,

Texas Christian University-Primary Prevention of Delinquency-Lessons to be Learned from Alcohol Education MARILYN CHANDLER, Criminal Justice Research Center, Albany, NY and

BARBARY BRODERICK, New York State Division of Parole-The Legisla­tive Prescription: Can It be Remedied by Evaluation? RICHARD C. MONK, Northwest Missouri State University-A Typology of Problems and Possible Solutions in Researching and Evaluating Certain Aspects of Juvenile Correctional Systems

DISCUSSANT: THOMAS C. GRAY, West Covina Police Department

PANEL 84 Conference Room 4

MANAGEMENT CHANGE AND THE UTILIZATION OF CIVILIAN PERSONNEL

CHAIR: DICK FORD, Hergerstown, Maryland

PRESENTERS: CHARLES R. JEFFORDS, Sam Houston State Univeristy-An Analysis of Civilian Personnel in Police Field Operations CHARLES A LINDQUIST, University of Alabama at Birmingham-Police

Attitudes Toward the Untilization of Civilian Employees WILLIAM L. TAFOYA, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Training Academy­Needs Assessment: Key to Organizational Change

DISCUSSANT: GARY HOWARD, University of West Florida

71

Saturday, March 14, 8:30 A.M.-10:00 A.M.

PANEL 85 Conference Room 5

INTERNSHIP IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE EDUCATION

CHAIR: MARSON JOHNSON, Pan American University

PRESENTERS: ELAINE LIFTIN, Miami, Florida-Preparing Persons in the Criminal Jus­tice Fields to Serve as Legal Resources in School Law Education Pro­grams (Grades K- 12) L. THOMAS WINFREE, Louisiana State University and LAWRENCE KIELICH, Aquinas College-The Legal Internship: Help or Hindrance? MARSON JOHNSON, Pan American University-Assessment of Intern­ship Experiences in Criminal Justice Programs

DISCUSSANT: EDWIN DONOVAN, Pennsylvania State University

PANEL 86 Conference Room 6

POLICY IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE

CHAIR: JOHN HUDZIK, Michigan State University

PRESENTERS: RALPH LEWIS and RONALD SCHNEIDER, Florida International University­Emerging Administrative Issues in the Criminal Justice System ANDREW KARMEN, John Jay College of Criminal Justice-Crime Victims and Congress STANLEY SWART, University of North Florida-The FBI Focuses on

White Collar Crime, Promises and Possible Pitfalls. JOHN HUDZIK, Michigan State Univeristy-Pianning Without LEAA

DISCUSSANT: LARRY SIEGEL, University of Nebraska at Omaha

10: 15 A.M.- 1 1 :45 A.M. PANELS

PANEL 87 Delegate Room 1

CIVIL LIBERTIES: PROSPECTS FOR THE 1980's

CHAIR: ALFREDA TAL TON-HARRIS, Youngstown State University

PRESENTERS: GARY W. SYKES, University of Wisconsin-Superior-The Coming Crisis of Adversary Justice: Due Process in the Eighties NEAL A. ELOVER, Maryland Pre-Release System-Due Process in Prisons DONALD L. POFFENBERGER, Wheeling College-Systematic Exclusion of Blacks for Jury Duty in Ohio County

DISCUSSANT: RICHARD FREY, SUNY College at Brockport

72

Saturday, March 14, 10:15 A.M. - 1 1 :45 A.M.

PANEL 88 Delegate Room 2

THEORIES AND ISSUES

CHAIR: LEE ELLIS, Minot State College

PRESENTERS: LEONARD J. HIPPCHEN, Virginia Commonwealth University-Some Pos­sible Biochemical Aspects of Criminal Behavior C. H. S. JA YEW ARDENE, University of Ottawa-Alternative to Criminal Justice-A Natural Disaster Approach to Crime DERRAL CHEATWOOD, University of Baltimore-The Prison Movie, Cor­rectional Practice, and Pristine Theory: Who Listens to Whom?

DISCUSSANT: J. DAVID MARTIN, Lakehead University

PANEL 89 Committee Room 7

LEGAL ISSUES IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE II

CHAIR: VICTOR STREIB, Cleveland State University

PRESENTERS: RODNEY HENNINGSEN, Sam Houston State University-Legal Responsi­bilities of Probation and Parole Personnel THOMAS PAVLAK, University of Pittsburgh-Procedural Justice in Parole Revocation MARY ALMORE, University of Texas-Arlington -Research and Treatment Related Regulations and Rights: A Review with Implications for the Criminal Justice System FRANK SCHUBERT, Northeastern Univeristy-Striking a Balance: Police Investigations and Separation of Power

DISCUSSANT: TIM BYNUM, Michigan State University

PANEL 90 Committee Room 8

MOTIVATION, TURNOVER AND JOB ENLARGEMENT: ISSUES IN PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT

CHAIR: RALPH BAKER, Ball State University

PRESENTERS: CHARLES L. JOHNSON , Sam Houston State University-Motivation, Turn over and Job Enlargement SAM S. SOURYAL, Sam Houston State University-Issues in Personnel Management KEVIN PARSONS, Kevin Parsons and Associates, Inc . -Four Dimensions of Expectancy-Valence Theory as a Predictor of Motivation

DISCUSSANT: FRED A MEYER, Jr . , Ball State University

73

Saturday, March 14, 10: 15 A.M.-1 1 :45 A.M.

PANEL 91 Committee Room 9

HISTORY OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE III

CHAIR: GENE STEPHENS, University of South Carolina

PRESENTERS: THOMAS C. GRAY, West Covina Police Department-The Irish Connection LARRY K. GAINES, Eastern Kentucky University and STEVEN BROWN, East Tennessee State University-A Critical Examination of the Role of Police in Society STEPHEN E. DOEREN, Wichita State University-Mounted Patrol (Horse) Programs in Law Enforcement

DISCUSSANT: DONALD GOODMAN, John Jay College of Criminal

Justice

PANEL 92 Conference Room 3

DYNAMIC CRIME PREVENTION

CHAIR: ROBERT O'BLOCK, Appalachian State University

PRESENTERS: JOE DONNEMEYER, Ohio State University-Rural Crime Prevention RICHARD SCHAFFER, Appalachian State University-The United Nation's Approach to Crime Prevention L. D. HYDE, Department of Crime Control and Public Safety, Raleigh, North Carolina-The North Carolina Approach to Crime Prevention B. MacGRAY, National Council on Crime and Delinquency-The National Council on Crime and Delinquency Approach to Crime Prevention THOMAS P. HENDLEY, General Electric Company, Philadelphia, Pennsyl­

vania-The Corporation's Role in Crime Prevention

DISCUSSANT: ROBERT O'BLOCK, Appalachian State University

74

Saturday, March 14, 10: 15 A.M.-1 1 :45 A.M.

PANEL 93 Conference Room 4

THE MANAGEMENT OF STRESS

CHAIR: WILLIAM F. WALSH, New York City Police Department

PRESENTERS: JOHN T. WHITEHEAD, Valparaiso University-Implications of Burnout for Managers in Correctional Agencies FREDERICK C. HUSBAND, Hamden Police Department-The Everyday, Unending Stress of Being a Cop: An Extensive Attempt to Specify Both the Determinants and the Differential Effects of Stress on Police Officers WILLIAM P. OSBORN, University of Southern Mississippi-A Self-Adminis­tered Stress Management Program for Corrections Personnel PETER C. MARINAKIS, Options Consulting-A Supervisor's Functional Approach to Dealing with the Results of Employee Stress: Employee Assistance Programs

DISCUSSANT: EDWIN J. DONOVAN, Pennsylvania State University

PANEL 94 Conference Room 5

RESEARCH ON CRIMINAL JUSTICE EDUCATION

CHAIR: WILLIAM WAKEFIELD, University of Nebraska at Omaha

PRESENTERS: THOMAS ELLSWORTH, Illinois State University-The Effects of Criminal Justice Internship Placements on Individual Personality Characteristics BELINDA McCARTHY, University of North Carolina-Charlotte-The Impact of Criminal Justice Education on Student Views of the Criminal Justice System RONALD BAE, Louisiana State University-Eunice-Police Discretion­College Education: A Statistical Analysis of Discretion Between Col­lege and Noncollege-Educated Police Officers WILLIAM WAKEFIELD, University of Nebraska at Omaha-The Cognitive­Affective Impact of the Field Excursion on Criminal Justice Students: An Assessment EDDYTH P. FORTUNE and MARGARET BALBACH, Illinois State University­Project MET: A Community-Based Education Program for Women Offenders

DISCUSSANT: ROBERT MUTCHNICK, Marshall University

75

Saturday, March 14, 10: 15 A.M.- 1 1 :45 A.M.

PANEL 95 Conference Room 6

POLICY IN CORRECTIONS

CHAIR: NORMAN KITTEL, St. Cloud State University

PRESENTERS: CHARLES FAUPEL, University of Delaware-Theoretical Consideration for a Socially Oriented Drug Treatment Policy DENNIS McMARTY and HAROLD KILBURN, New York State Office of Mental Hygiene-Developing Agendas for Mental Health Services in the Local Jail STEVE DILLINGHAM, University of South Carolina -Criminal Sentencing Reform: A Policy Approach NORMAN KITTEL, St . Cloud State University-Juvenile Justice Philo­sophy in Minnesota

DISCUSSANT: BRUCE WOLFORD, Eastern Kentucky University

PANEL 96 Seminar Room 4

POLITICS AND CORRECTIONS POLICY

CHAIR: CURT G RIFFITHS, Simon Fraser University

PRESENTERS: CHARLES FRIEL, Sam Houston State University, Huntsville, Texas -Infor­

mation Systems in Corrections DON SINCLAIR, Province of Ontario-Future Trends and Correctional Policy LEAH LAMBERT, Province of Ontario -Manpower Needs in Corrections JOHN EKSTEDT, Simon Fraser University - Policy Making in Corrections

DISCUSSANT: ROY ROBERG , San Jose State University

76

NAME PAGE Abadinsky, H. 48 Agopian, M. 15 Albanese, J . 36 Alcorn, D. 33 Alexander, M. 48 Allen, N . 64 Allen, R . 60 Atmore, M. 73 Amos, W. 43 Angell, J. 39 Angrisani, R. 39 Anno, B. 17, 27 Archambeault, W. 33 Armstrong , E . 70 Austin, T. 3 1 , 53, 71

Ayers, K . 29, 50

Bae, R. 65, 75 Bailey , W. 45 Baker, R. 52, 73 Balbach, M. 75 Balkin, L. 66 Bannon, J. 7 1 Barak , G . 62 Barker, T. 42 Barry, D. 60, 65 Baunach, P. 35, 40 Baxter, S. 5 1 Beck, J . 46 Becker, D. 27 Beckman , E. 15, 4 1 Behar, J . 39 Beirne, P. 44

Bell , D . 50 Bennett, R . 42, 57

Bensinger, G . 41 Berger, C . 64 Berger, E. 64

Bergsmann, I. 60 Bethel , C. 68 Bhak, A. 6 1 Bishop, D . 62, 68 Blazicek, D . 36, 61 Blumberg, M . 67 Bookin, H. 63 Boost rom, R . 55

INDEX 1981 ACJS Program

NAME PAGE Bottom, N . , Jr. 57 Bourns, W . 44 Bracey, D. 47 Bracken, E. 50 Bragg, C. 15 Broderick, B. 17, 7 1 Broderick, J . 43 Brown, S. 47, 74 Bryan, M. 66 Buren, M. 67 Burns, G . 40 Buzawa, E. 3 1 , 59 , 7 1 Bynum, J. 5 1 Bynum, T. 23, 38, 73

Calabia, T. 66 Calder, J. 52 Campbell, N. 5 1

Campbell, W . 39 Cantor, S. 43 Carli, T . 67 Carrie , M. 36 Carter, D. 29 Casey, Z. 57 Caulfield, S . 69 Center, L. 38 Chang, D. 33 Chadwick, B. 57 Chandler, M. 71 Cheatwood, D. 73 Cheek, F . 49 Cherbonnier, A. 55 Chiricos, T. 3 1 Christian, K . 50 Cienek, R. 46, 5 1

Clark, N. 4 1 Clark, P. 3 5 Clear, T . 37, 45 Cohen, L. 35 Colby, P. 50 Coles, F . 2 1 Comeau, L . 53, 62 Conley, J. 21 Conrad, P . 33 Conser, J . 42 Cook, T. 64

77

NAME PAGE Coontz, P. 59, 65 Copus, G. 36 Cordner, G . 67 Crane, R. 23 Csabay, L. 45 Culbertson, R. 36 Culp, J. 56 Cummings, L. 68 Cummings, R. 47 Curran, J. 35 Cutler, L. 44

Datesman, S. 40 David, R. 40 Davis, R. 23

Davis, S. 35 Decker, S. 47 Denno, D. 17, 68 Devine, R. 35 Dillingham, S. 76

Doeren, S. 55, 74 Doerner, W. 38 Donnemeyer, J. 7 4 Donovan, E. 72, 75 Downing, L. 51 Dull, R. 38, 62 Dunkel, F. 17 Dunn, C. 19 Dunning, C. 42

Edelstein, H. 19 Edington, D. 67 Edwards, S. 15, 39, 50 Ehlers, C. 37 Ekstedt, J. 76 Ellis, L. 73 Elmore, R. 29 Elover, N. 49, 72 Engelmeyer, R. 23, 69 Ensor, L. 57 Erez, E. 3 1 Eskridge, C . 45 Evans, R . 55

Fagan, M . 50 Faupel, C . 76

NAME PAGE

Fauth, K . 57 Feinman, C . 52, 68 Fenwick, C. 15 Feyerherm, W. 65

Figlio, R. 33 Fishbein, D. 25 Flammang, C. 70

Flanagan, T. 19, 37

Fleming, S. 33 Fleetwood, M. 58 Fogarty, G. 66 Ford, D. 7 1 Ford, F. 52 Forschner, B. 49 Foster, J. 38 Foster, T. 59 Fortune, E . 75 Fox, J . 47 Frandsen, P. 68 Fransway, L. 67

Frayman, B. 61

Frazier, C . 17, 45

French, L. 27 Frey, R. 44, 72 F riedrichs, D. 21, 43 , 53 Friel , C. 55, 76 Fyfe, J . 42

G aines, L. 74 Garofalo, J . 60 Genevie, L. 3 1 , 69

Georges-Abeyie, D. 21 Gibbs, J. 19 Giglio, E . 65 Gilham, S . 70 Gillham, J . 47 Gilliland, M. 56 Ginger, J. 59, 69

Ginnetti , C . 17

Ginsburg, B. 25

Gitchoff, G . 6 1 Golden, K . 42 Goldkamp, J. 62 Goodman, D. 39, 55, 74 Goodrick, D. 35 Goodstein, L. 43 , 46 Gordan, G. 67

Gottfredson, D. 45

NAME PAGE

Grasmick, H . 33 Gray, T. 7 1 , 74 G reen, E. 3 1 Greenberg, S . 63 G reene, J. 23, 38, 47, 49 G riffin, G . 67 Griffiths, C. 67, 76 Gross, J. 36 G ruberg, M. 37 Gulick, D. 56

Hageman, M. 37, 44, 55 Hailey, R. 52 Hale, D. 59 Hallowell, L. 36 Hamilton, R. 44 Handberg, R. 6 7 Hanewicz, W. 67 Harris, K . 66 Hartstone, E. 35 Heim, T. 52 Helfand, G . 29, 46, 65 Helgemoe, R . 19 Helland, J . 53 Helms, A . 2 1 Henderson, J . 55, 6 1 Hendley, T. 7 4

Hendricks, J. 4 7

Henkenius, J. 5 1

Henningsen, R . 73

Henry, F. 3 1 Heumann, M. 25 Hewitt, J . 21, 47 Hinckley, C . 33 Hippchen, L . 33, 5 1 , 73 Hirschel , J. 15, 6 1 Hochstedler, E . 42, 6 1 Hoffman, D . 2 3 , 62 Hoffman, V. 41 Hoover, D. 47 Hoover, L. 29, 57 Horn, M. 46 Horney, J . 37 Hornum, F . 45 Horowitz, R . 63 Horvath, F. 64 Hou, C. 69 Houston, G . 57

78

NAME PAGE

Hovey, J. 33, 37 Howard, G . 43, 7 1 Howard, L . 63 Hudzik, J. 56, 72 Husband, F . 75 Hussey, F. 39 Hyde, L. 74 Hyman, J. 17, 62

Ingle, J. 44 lori zzo, L. 48 Israel , M. 38

Jacoby, Joan 63 Jacoby, Joseph 62 Janeksela, G . 36 Janowitz, E . 66 Jayewardene, C. 73 Jeffords, C. 7 1 Jeffrey, C . 25 Jengeleski, J . 17 Jensen, E . 47 Jimison, B. 25 Johnson, C. L. 29,

56, 73 Johnson, E. 17, 56 Johnson, K. 23, 35 Johnson, M. 72 Johnson, R. 19 Johnson, R. E. 17, 33 Johnson, T . 42, 70 Joplin, J . 47 Joscelyn, K. 39 Juviler, P. 4 1

Kalinich, D . 2 1 Kalnuss, D . 3 1 Kamka, G . 56 Kane, A. 33 Kane, J. 40 Kaplan, S. 3 1 , 69 Karmen, A. 72

Kelling, G. 59 Kemper, W. 23 Kempinen, C . 37 Kennedy, D . 67 Kennedy, M . 44 Kerle, K . 52

NAME PAGE

Kielich, L. 61 , 72

Kilburn, H . 76 Kinney, J. 2 1 Kirkpatrick, J . 40 Kittel , N. 76 Klein, I. 50 Klockers, C . 48 K nudsen, M. 69 Kobetz, R. 57 Kort, F. 25 Kowalewski, J. 38 Kowalewski, V. 38 Kramer, D. 52

Kramer, N. 60 Kuhl , A. 3 1 , 35, 56

Lab, S . 38 Lambert, L . 76

Larkins, H. 57 Latessa, E. 66 LeBeau, J. 27 Leenhouts, K. 63 Lerner, B. 52 Lester, D . 27, 44, 69 Letman, S. 27, 50 Levine, Emil 23 Levine, Evyatar 2 1 Levie, R . 2 7 Lewis, R . 42, 56, 67, 72 Lichbach, M . 35 Liftin, E . 25, 72 Lillis, R . 35 Lincoln, A . 31, 40 Lincoln, C. 40 Lindquist, C . 71 Ling, G. 47 Lingamneni, J. 33, 70 Locke, H. 58 Lockwood, D. 19 Lombardo, L. 40

Lonardi, B. 38 Lotz, R. 47, 65 Luces, W. 42 Lupsha, P. 48 Lynch, L. 50

NAME PAGE

Macon, C . 69 Mahan, S. 43, 57, 67 Mann, D. 19 Manning, P . 47, 59 Marenin, 0. 53 Margolis, E. 27 Marinakis, P . 75 Marks, G. 59 Marsh, C. 50 Marshall, C. 45 Marshall, I. 1 7, 37, 45 Marston, D. 15 Martin, J. 65 Martin, J. David 73 Martin , R . 38 Martin, S. 56 Martin, W. 43 Mayer, D . 53 McBride, R . 50 McCain, J. 49 McCarthy, B . 23, 75 McCartney, R. 52 McCoy, C . 65 McK enzie, D. 47 McNally, R. 49, 68 McMarty, D. 76 McMullan, J. 48 Meadows, R . 52 Mellon, L. 63 Menke, B. 67 Metz, H. 46 Meyer, F . , Jr . 52, 73 Mihaj lovic, S. 56, 69 Miller , A. 70 Miller, J. 56

Miller, Marie D. 49 Miller, Martin 21

Miller, W . 63 Milligan, J. 4 7 Milovanovic, D . 44 Minnis, M . 57 Minor, W . 35 Misner, G . 63 Mitchell-Banks, T. 64 Monk, R . 29, 7 1

Montgomery, R . , Jr. 46

MacG ray, B. 74 Mooney, W. 64

MacNamara, D. 2 1 , 33, 48 Moore, R. 65

79

NAME PAGE

Morash, M. 35 Morgan, F. 53 Morris, R. 39 Moynahan, J. 52 Mueller, G. 58 Muhlin, G. 31, 69 Munro, J. 25 Munson, E. 43 Murphy, P. 58 Mutchnick, R. 75 Myren, R. 46

Nance, M. 43 Nelson, W. 50 Nemeth, C. 61

Neville, J. 15 Norman, M. 25

O'Block, R. 55, 74 O'Brien, S. 42 O'Neill, M. 50, 67 Opolot, J. 33, 41 Orrick, D. 51 Osborn, W. 75 O'Shaughnessey, J. 60

Paddock, A. 23 Palmiotto, M. 36, 46 Parisi, N. 43, 46 Parker, J. 51, 55 Parsonage, W. 46 Parsons, K. 73 Pastors, C. 62 Paternoster, R. 3 1 Patterson, D . 4 1 , 70 Pavlak, T. 56, 66, 73 Payne, W. 17 Peck, D. 42 Peck, H. 31, 69 Pena, D. 5 1 Peterson, J. 56 Peterson, R. 45 Pettiway, L. 70 Pfuhl, J. 61 Pi joan, N . 33 Poffenberger, D. 72 Pogrebin, M. 49 Poole, E. 60, 7 1

NAME PAGE

Pope, C. 37, 65 Post, R. 42, 52 Potter, R. 27, 45 Prager, H. 33 Price, B. 49 Pugh, M. 29

Quah, J. 29 Quaid, R . 62 Quarles, C. 39 Quinlan, P. 35

Rabow, J. 31 Rafter, N. 40 Randall, D . 36 Raskin, D. 64 Ratledge, E. 63 Rauh, C . 45 Reasons, C . 44, 64 Reed, T. 35 Regoli, R. 60, 7 1 Reiss, A. 47, 48 Renzema, M. 19 Resnick, D. 47 Reynolds, L. 5 1 Rittenmeyer, S . 1 9 Robbins, F . 70 Roberg, R. 60, 76 Roberson, C . 70 Roberts, A. 25, 7 1 Romig, C. 64

Roode, J. 52 Roper, E. 29 Roth, D. 68 Rowan, B. 35 Rush, G. 50

Sadoff, R . 33

Salm, M. 35 Saltzman, L. 3 1 Sametz, L. 68 Sanborn, J. 68 Sapp, A. 29, 56 Schafer, N. 66 Schaffer, R. 74 Schneider, R . 82 Schoenbaum, E. 51 Schott, J. 35, 64

NAME PAGE

Schubert, F. 73 Schwartz, M. 17, 60 SchW eber, C. 66, 68 Scott, H . 50 Scott, J. 43 Scott, R. 59, 66 Scroggins, G . 56 Sechrest, D. 60 Severa, D. 40 Shelley, E . 63 Shenkman, F. 42 Shepard, R . 46 Sherman, L. 48, 58 Shields, S. 39 Shmukler, S. 52 Shumaker, T. 51

Siegel, L . 17 , 50, 72 Sigler, R. 23, 63 Silverman, I. 39, 55 Silverman, M. 64 Sinclair, D . 76 Singh, M. 70 Slawsky, T. 66 Smith, B. 29 Smith, David 61 Smith, Dwight, 44, 45 Smykla, J. 42

Snider, L. 44 Solberg, D . 19 Souryal, S. 73 Sparks, R. 25, 60 Staat, H. 43 Stanko, E. 6 1 Stanton, N . 52 Stauss, J. 57 Steffensmeier, D. 43 Steiber, J. 52 Steinmetz, S. 3 1 S tenzel , W . 67 Stephens, G. 55, 74 Sternhell, R . 41 Stinchcomb, James, 35 Stinchcomb, Jeanne 49 Storm, P. 35 Stotland, E. 64

Straus, M. 3 1 , 40

Strecher, V. 56

Streib, V. 19, 45, 73

80

NAME PAGE

S truckhoff, D. 43 Struening, E. 3 1 , 69 Sullenberger, T. 36 Swart, S . 36, 72 Sykes, G. 15, 72

Tafoya, W. 7 1 Talamini, J . 33 Talton-Harris, A. 50, 72 Tate, W. 27 Terrill, R. 42, 65 Tezak, M. 23, 41 Thibault , E. 50 Thomas, A. 37 Thomas, C. 39, 45,

48, 62 Thomas, T. 65 Thornton, W . 45 Timm, H. 64, 7 1 Toomey, W . 3 9 True, E . 42 Turner, S. 63 Turnquist, R . 41

Unkovic, C . 67 Unnithan, N . 60, 70 Unsinger, P. 2 1

van Wormer, K . 61 Vetter, H. 55 Victor, M. 27, 53 Vincentnathan, S . 33

Vito, G. 56 Vogel, R. 47

Wachtel , D. 27 Wagner, R . 49 Wakefield, W . 75 Waldo, G . 3 1 Waldron, R . 66 Walker, R. 70 Walsh, W. 75

Ward, B. 58 Watts, E. 55 Webb, V. 38, 62 Weisheit, R. 53, 7 1 Wellford, C. 48 Wheeler, R . 25

NAME PAGE

White, J . 39 W hite, M. 36, 49 Whitehead, J . 75 Whithed, M. 29 Wiechman, D. 59, 65 Wilbanks, W. 37 Williams, F. 37, 62 Williams, H. 48 Williams, J . L . 42, 44 Williams, J .S . 53 Williams, L . 57 Willis, G. 55 Wilson, N. 37 Winfree, L . 39, 61, 72 Winkler, K. 38 Wolfe, N. 65 Wolford, B . 41, 76 Wollan, L . 5 1 Wright, K . 36

Young, W. 64

Zalman, M. 25

Zillo, J . 46

8 1

CALL FOR PAPERS 1 982 ANNUAL M EETI NG

ACADEMY OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SCIENCFS

March 23-27, 1 982

THE GALT HOUSE Louisvil le, Kentucky

THEM E :

I nterd isciplinary Contributions to Criminal Justice

Persons i nte rested in part i ci pat i ng sho u l d write for a n a bstract format. Co ntact :

Robert G. C u l bertson, P h . D . , Pres ide nt, Acade my of Cr i m i n a l J ust ice Sc i e n ces

401 Sch roeder H a l l I l l i n o i s State U n ivers ity N o r m a l , I l l i no i s 61 761

DEADLI N E DATE F OR ABSTRACTS : S E PT EM B ER 1 0, 1 981

82

NOTES

83

Alpha Phi Sigma

National Criminal Justice Honor Society

Parlour C, Franklin Plaza Hotel

National Offices

Eastern Kentucky University

National Officers

Ron Bates, President, EKU*

Paula Kopey, Vice-President,

National Advisors

Dr. Bruce I. Wolford, EKU

Dr. Jim R. Alexander,

Youngstown State University

Peggy Brune, Secretary, EKU

Susan Lewis, Treasurer, EKU

Texas Woman's University

Dr. Elizabeth R. Horn,

University of Alaska

Dr. James Conser, Newsletter Editor,

*Eastern Kentucky University Youngstown State University

Wednesday, March 1 1

Thursday, March 12

Friday, March 13

Agenda

3:00-5:00 PM

5:30-7:00 PM

9:00 AM

1 1 :00 AM

12:00 PM

1:30-4:30 PM

9: 15 AM

10:45 AM

1 1 : 15 AM

1 1 :45 AM

Registration

Informal Get-Together

Call to Order

Roll Call of Chapter

Reports of Officers

Regional Director Reports

Committee Reports

New Business

By-Law Proposals

National Officer Nominations

Break for Lunch

Chapter Development Session

Call to Order

Dr. Harry More, President

Academy of Criminal

Justice Sciences

Vote on National Officers

New President's Address

Adjourn Meeting

Alpha Phi Sigma appreciates the support and cooperation of the ACJS. As

the national honor society for criminal justice students, we are interested in

establishing new chapters throughout the country. If you would like additional

information, please contact us at the convention or write Alpha Phi Sigma,

Powell 128, Eastern Kentucky University, Richmond, Kentucky 40475.

84

PHILADELPHIA: A BLEND OF OLD AND NEW

An open-air I talian Market. A Victorian City Hall . A tree-lined boulevard bedecked with flags of all nations. Tiny boutiques nestled among 200-year-old townhouses. Cobblestone streets, illuminated by old-fashioned lampposts.

It could be any one of a dozen European capitals. But in reality, it's Philadelphia, U .S.A.

Philadelphia has emerged as an international, cosmopolitan city, with its roots entrenched in early America and its eyes gazing at t he future. While t he entire community grasps historic preservation as a mission to fulfill,

Philadelphia is unquestionably a modern city for the 1980s. The two drives blend well, just as Independence Hall stands proud amid gleaming office com­plexes.

W illiam Penn brought his dream of religious freedom to light on the shores of the Delaware River in 1682. Less than 100 years later, the fires of freedom burned brighter than ever as the delegates to the Second Continental Congress

solemnly proclaimed the 13 colonies independent. And as Philadelphia blossomed into an industrial center, commercial hub,

international port and cultural showplace, the 37-foot-high bronze statue of William Penn stood watch from atop the tallest structure in his City of Brotherly Love, C ity Hall.

After three centuries of development, the " most historic square mile in America" is still the focal point of Philadelphia.

That historic area, Independence National Historical Park, features the city's most beloved monuments, Independence Hall and the Liberty Bell, now in a glass pavilion across the street from its original home .

The footsteps o f Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, John Adams and hundreds of nameless Patriots echo through the park's original buildings.

Nearby are t he homes of Betsy Ross and Dolley Todd (Madison); the churc hes where Franklin and Washington worshipped; and City Tavern, where now-famous men debated over glasses of ale how best to sever the ties to England.

P hiladelphia boasts a wide variety of museums, catering to just about every interest in every season. In fact, recent studies tally more than 104 institutions in the city and environs.

The cultural hub of Philadelphia is the Benjamin Franklin Parkway, a broad

boulevard, often compared to Paris' C hamps-Eiysees. There you'll find the F ranklin Institute, a science wonderland for all ages; the Academy of Natural Sciences, boasting a two-story dinosaur skeleton; and the Philadelphia Museum of Art , the queen of the city's museums, noted for its outstanding collection of both American and European paintings, Oriental exhibits and American furniture. A short walk away are the Rodin Museum and the Penn­sylvania Academy of fine Arts, displaying 200 years of the best America has �o

offer. Philadelphia has developed a diversity which captivates residents and

visitors alike. I t's sophisticated and cosmopolitan, yet friendly and lively. It's a 300-year-old International city, just waiting to be explored. 0-2154


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