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54 JUVENILE COURT JOURNAL NATIONAL COUNCIL MATTERS Summer College Attracts 79 IT HAS often been observed during the sixty year history of the juvenile court that juvenile justice programs of today foreshadow criminal court pro- lege participants represented all areas of the country. For the first time, there was one judge from Guam and one from Alberta, Canada. cedures of tomorrow. Since the conception of-the juvenile court at the turn of the century,Tuvenile court judges and other court officers have studied, refined and advanced the principle of substituting rehabilitation for punishment. During the past eight years, the National Council of Juvenile Court Judges has conducted 63 training sessions and institutes for more than 2,000 juvenile and family court judges and 1,200 court staff. This year, the third and fourth summer institutes of the National College of Juvenile Justice were held at the Council’s national headquarters on the campus of the University of Nevada in Reno. This year there were 33 participants for the first two-week summer session of the National College of Tuvenile Tustice and 36 juvenile court judges and PROFESSOR Vincent O’Leary, School of Crimi- nal Justice of the New York State University of Al- bany, was the director of this year’s summer session of the National College of Juvenile Justice. Professor O’Leary taught the sections on “The Judge as A Change Agent” and “The Effects of Information Availability.” Dr. Louis S. Klein, Assistant Director of the Ap- raisal Center for Multiple Handicapped Children, Children’s Hospital of Michigan in Detroit, taught the classes on “The Use of Diagnostic Devices and Treatment.” Along with Dr. Richard Komisaruk, Dr. Klein also conducted the section on “Varieties of Delinquent Behavior.” Warren E. Thornton, Chief Probation Officer of officers participated in the’ second session: The col- Sacramento County (Calif.), conducted a seminar CONGRATULATIONS were in order August 19 when Tom Clark, retired U.S. Supreme Court Justice, visited the University of Nevada campus at Reno to witness summer college progt‘ams by both the Na- tion Council of Juvenile Court Judges and the National College of State Trial Judges. Here Justice Clark contgratulates Judge James H. Lincoln of Detroit, M i c h i g a n, NCJCJ’s president-elect for 1971.

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54 JUVENILE COURT JOURNAL

NATIONAL COUNCIL MATTERS

Summer College Attracts 79 IT HAS often been observed during the sixty year

history of the juvenile court that juvenile justice programs of today foreshadow criminal court pro-

lege participants represented all areas of the country. For the first time, there was one judge from Guam and one from Alberta, Canada.

cedures of tomorrow. Since the conception of-the juvenile court at the turn of the century,Tuvenile court judges and other court officers have studied, refined and advanced the principle of substituting rehabilitation for punishment.

During the past eight years, the National Council of Juvenile Court Judges has conducted 63 training sessions and institutes for more than 2,000 juvenile and family court judges and 1,200 court staff. This year, the third and fourth summer institutes of the National College of Juvenile Justice were held at the Council’s national headquarters on the campus of the University of Nevada in Reno.

This year there were 33 participants for the first two-week summer session of the National College of Tuvenile Tustice and 36 juvenile court judges and

PROFESSOR Vincent O’Leary, School of Crimi- nal Justice of the New York State University of Al- bany, was the director of this year’s summer session of the National College of Juvenile Justice. Professor O’Leary taught the sections on “The Judge as A Change Agent” and “The Effects of Information Availability.”

Dr. Louis S . Klein, Assistant Director of the Ap- raisal Center for Multiple Handicapped Children, Children’s Hospital of Michigan in Detroit, taught the classes on “The Use of Diagnostic Devices and Treatment.” Along with Dr. Richard Komisaruk, Dr. Klein also conducted the section on “Varieties of Delinquent Behavior.”

Warren E. Thornton, Chief Probation Officer of officers participated in the’ second session: The col- Sacramento County (Calif.), conducted a seminar

CONGRATULATIONS were in order August 19 when Tom Clark, retired U.S. Supreme Court Justice, visited the University of Nevada campus at Reno to witness summer college progt‘ams by both the Na- tion Council of Juvenile Court Judges and the National College of State Trial Judges. Here Justice Clark contgratulates Judge James H. Lincoln of Detroit, M i c h i g a n, NCJCJ’s president-elect for 1971.

SUMMER, 1970 - VOL. XXI NO. 2 55

on detention, and Robert E. Smith, California Youth Authority, taught the class “Alternative Services to the Juvenile Court.” Professor Aidan R. Gough, University Of Santa School Of Law’ taught several sections on juvenile court law, including “Arrest and Pre-trial Interrogation,” “Detention and Bail,” and “Transfer of Jurisdiction.” JUDGE Ted Rubin, Denver Juvenile Court, di-

rected seminars on “Dependency and Neglect” and “Delinquency Law and Procedure” Milton Luger,

Director of the New York Sttae Division for Youth, conducted classes on “The Usese of Institutional services” and “Alterntiave services.” M ~ . L~~~~ also directed the field trip to Squaw Valley, Calif., where the summer college participants met with 18 wards of the California Youth Authority for a “rap session” during which views of the juvenile court process were-nrchanged.

Participants for both sessions included :

John H. Benjamin Paxton, Illinois Otto B. Cheesman, Jr. Cam bridge, Maryland Albert P. Close Be1 Air, Maryland Arthur Daniels Charlottesville, Virginia Fred A. Fischer Bakersfield, California Edward G. Gillin New Orleans, Louisiana Ted Glenn Elko, Nevada Robert F. Greene Burlington, Kentucky Irving M. Harris Los Angeles, California Jerome Jones Galveston, Texas William P. Kannel Akron, Ohio Roger D. Kelsey Dover, Delaware James P. Kyne Miami, Florida Kenneth Mackey Elkton, Maryland John F. Mendoza Las Vegas, Nevada Charles W. Mentkowski Milwaukee, Wisconsin Darryl T. Owens Lou isvi I le, Kentucky James Robles Las Cruces, New Mexico Barry J. Rubin Honolulu, Hawaii Robert Sanderson Lamar, Colorado Frances Sleep Sandpoint, Idaho Jeanette Squat r ito Reno, Nevada

John S. Stanton Colum bia, Tennessee Marion C. Swartz Lewiston, Idaho David J. Thomson, Jr. Louisville, Kentucky George R. Triplett Elkins, West Virginia Philip Versluis Grand Rapids, Michigan Goodrich Walton Fort Logan, Colorado Richard A. Warmuth Moundsville, West Virginia Valeria W. Watts Dalton, Georgia Sheldon M. Wheeler Indianapolis, Indiana Joseph L. White Columbus, Ohio Gordon K. Wylie Eugene, Oregon Nelson Bohannan Anderson, Indiana Joe R. Broz Schuyler, Nebraska David S. Dodd Flint, Michigan .J. D. Doty Potnotoc, Mississippi William S. Eakes Du ran go, Coloa rdo Forest E. Eastman Cedar Falls, Iowa John V. Ferguson Miami, Florida Edward P. Gallogly Providence, Rhode Island Willis Gordon Lincoln, Nebraska Richard J . Ja m bo rs ky Fai rfax, Vi rgi ina Lewis Kapner West Palm Beach, Florida

Ted Lauer Columbia, Missouri George Lilly Detroit, Michigan Paul D. Lipsitt Boston, Massachusetts H. Litsky Calgary, Alberta, Canada Richard S. Lowe Norristown, Pennsylvania Eugene L. McCoy Twin Falls, Idaho Rose McGrorey San Francisco, California John L. McKinney Ames, Iowa Edward Meyers Columbia City, Indiana Robert Murray London, Ohio Frank A. Orlando Fort Lauderdale, Florida Alfredo M. Ortiz Santa Fe, New Mexico John D. Potts Columbus, Ohio Vicente Reyes Agana, Guam Fred Rowe Provo, Utah Grant Schofield Bakersfield, California Leon Simon Las Vegas, Nevada Allan M. Stranz Crandon, Wisconsin Frank Sullivan Reno, Nevada Gerald R. Thalhammer Flint, Michigan Monroe W. Treiman Brooksville, Florida Joseph Wade, Jr. Phenix City, Alabama Thomas Wood Wi II iamsport, Pennsylvania