PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, SEPTEM$ER 12, 2967 SEEK REHABILITATION: Prisons Update Programs I PHILADELPHIA (IP) - Faced with a rapidly growing criminal population and increasing crime cost, America's prison officials are experimenting with new programs and modernizing century-old tech- niques in an effort to rehabilitate the offender. Many have worked. With fail- ures, penologists just try again. Past Attempts , Some examples: --Several daytime employes of the United States Department of Justice in Washington, D.C., spend nights and weekend in custody, completing sentences. -In Danbury, Conn., companies train prisoners in highly special- ized electronics-and then move them immediately into their plants even while they're serving sen- tences. --General Electric Co. has pro- vided instructors and computers ;o the federal penitentiary in At- Lanta, Ga., for a data processing class-and hires those who pass. Experiment These are some methods pen- Dologists are experimenting with to try to solve the problem of criminal rehabilitation. It is a never-ending, though always- changing battle. The aim, of couse, is to keep released offenders from returning to jail. About 95 per cent of offenders in the United States are male, most between the ages of 15 and 30. More than half have never fin- ished high school and also lack vocational skills. Key Education Thus the heart of the new pen- Dlogy-the effort to shift correc- tions from revenge and restraint 1o rehabilitation and reintegra- tion into society-is first-class ed- ucation and development of skills. But that's not all. The com- plicated process, modern penolo- gists have learned, also includes help from psychiatrists, ministers, social workers, businessmen-and aceptance froni the community,. because that. is where the ex-con- vict must live like others or re- turn to prison. "Many inmates are in need of general medical and surgical treatment upon arrival or during the course of their commitment," reports California's Department of Dorrections, which runs one of the most progressive programs in the nation. How do you cure the criminal and reshape him as a useful mem- ber of society? New techniques include ideas advanced as long ago as 100 years and just now getting attention, such as prerelease of halfway-out residences and work release; in- mates go out to work, return to jail to sleep. Conservation camps and other minimum security facilities re- place walled prisons. Criminologists agree on one thing: no longer can prisons sim- ply free a man with a prayer, a new suit and $10. But the new criminology, ac- cording to adherents, doesn't mean coddling prisoners; rather it means coddling society, because society is the big gainer if the pro- jects work. It means rehabilitating inmates, training them for useful lives and jobs, eliminating harsh punish- ment. It means breaking down the' impact of the high walls and iron oars: . Less Confinement Richard A. McGee, recently re- tired administrator of California's Youth and Adult Corrections De- partment, says: "One of the clear- est changes is depending less, on long' periods of confinement, ex- cepting cases of life imprison- ment." Alexander looks at it this way: "Instead of just dumping offend- ers out we are experimenting with new- kinds of carefully controlled, supervised, vigorously watched re- lease to the community." This gradual release, he says, means the inmates are injected Keeping the nation's prisons operating is expensive. It costs about $7 a day to keep a person in prison. Based on the present daily prison population of around 430. 000, this means Americans are spending $3 million every 24 hours, or about $1 billion a year. Th annual cost of crime in the United States is $27 billion-and rising. On an average day, the 50 states and the federal government handle nearly 1.3 million offenders, of whom one-third are in institu- tions. Not counted in these figures may be another million held daily in local jails for drunkenness and disorderly conduct, By 1967 it is estimated the daily corrections population will be 1,841,000. Juvenile offenders to- day total 360,000 and this is ex- pected to climb to 588,000 in eight years. America has some 400 adult prisons, 61 built before 1900. Juve- niles are held in 325 institutions. Probation Problems Last year, more than half the nation's convicts were released on probation. Some penologists say half is not enough; but almost all agree the chief trouble with pro- bation is lack of supervisory pro- Do' You Know 4 What They're GingTo 0-- Ij~l inesNext? I back into society via community bation officers to handle those re- and guidance centers staffed by leased. proper supervision with training Before many convicts are pa- in the "new penology." roled they are subjected to a new California Example modification of an old practice C-11r-A xa pl "4rVr zno~c _m~~v California - the nations most populous state-today has one- .fifth of its total prison population n minimum security facilities. M. C. Koblentz, Ohio's commis- sioner on. corrections, sees the trend toward specialized facilities: for the emotionally disturbed, for, the sex-offender, for training cen- ters, work schools and camps. But notmatter how you look at it, statistics worild. seem to bear out contentions that prisons have been unsuccessful in achieving their main goal-preventing crime repeaters.. Two-thirds of the state prison inmates are former convicts and ane-third of those sentenced by federal judges return to prison. galled "work release -meaning simply getting a prisoner a job before he is freed. Many prisons are offering col- lege training to inmates by enlist- ing faculties from nearby univer- sities. High school diplomas are common.' But normatter how good the in- prison program, what a convict needs most is work when he's -ut. Joblessness usuallybreeds crime. Companies, unions and individ- uals are gradually overcoming hostile attitudes about ex-convicts. Even the federal government, tra- ditionally barring offenders, shift- ed its policy a year ago. Some ex- convicts now can even be bonded. Nobody knows for sure. But you'll know as soon as anybody when you read the fashion pages of this news- paper. 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