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5 results for Juvenile delinquents--Rehabilitation
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Record #:
11753
Author(s):
Abstract:
North Carolina has five institutions located around the state which are endeavoring to make law-abiding men and women out of wayward boys and girls. Ivey discusses what each institution seeks to accomplish.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 2 Issue 13, Aug 1934, p8, 22
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Record #:
15479
Author(s):
Abstract:
Four hundred and eighty North Carolina boys are at the Stonewall Jackson Manual Training and Industrial School near Concord, undergoing a process of evolution which will result in making them law-abiding, self-supporting citizens. The boys range from age 6 to 16 and are at the school because their guardians could not support them. In most instances, they were sent there by welfare officers or juvenile-court judges.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 3 Issue 30, Dec 1935, p11, 20, f
Full Text:
Record #:
17683
Abstract:
The Training Center on Delinquency and Youth Crime at Chapel Hill became one of a select few across the nation. Operated out of the Institute of Government in Chapel Hill, staff plans conferences, projects, programs, and courses for personnel. The center addressed problems within the state and coordinating their efforts nationally with other centers.
Source:
Popular Government (NoCar JK 4101 P6), Vol. 29 Issue 9, June/July 1963, p1-2, il
Record #:
18398
Author(s):
Abstract:
Caring for and managing children with behavioral problems presents the state with a complicated and delicate problem. A study was organized by the Juvenile Justice Planning Committee of the Governor's Crime Commission through the National Council on Crime and Delinquency to determine any patterns amongst troubled adolescents and propose potential solutions to aid not only state programs but the children themselves. Details of that report are presented in this article.
Source:
Popular Government (NoCar JK 4101 P6), Vol. 47 Issue 1, Summer 1981, p28-33
Record #:
31626
Author(s):
Abstract:
Youth Unlimited, Inc., a private, non-profit Christian ministry serving juvenile delinquents and troubled youths from Piedmont North Carolina, has launched a special self-help project with Lexington artist Bob Timberlake. Postcard-size reproductions of Timberlake’s paintings are framed in barn wood and sold to the public. The project is meant to give youths the discipline of work responsibilities and also produce revenues to help support the ministry.
Source:
Carolina Country (NoCar HD 9688 N8 C38x), Vol. 8 Issue 9, Sept 1976, p6-7, il, por