59 results

  • Subject is exactly "Addams, Jane, views on justice"
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Addams supports Anita Whitney who was convicted for being a member of the communist party.
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Also known as Address of Miss Jane Addams, January 18, 1906

Addams praises Judge Tuley for his dedication to the law and evenhanded decisions.
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With Maud Booth, Addams addresses the Merchant's Club, appealing for aid in helping criminals and rescuing boys who may become criminals.
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Addams discusses the exploitation of prison labor and its effects on inmates' families.
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Henderson offers an analysis of Addams' statement about capital punishment in Illinois.
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Article discusses the creation of an American Crime Study Commission to investigate the causes and prevention of crime.
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Stahl criticizes Addams for her opposititon to capital punishment.
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Rich disputes Addams's views on capital punishment, claiming that sentimental opposition results in more crime.
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Older asks Addams for a statement protesting Anita Whitney's sentence for the San Francisco Call.
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Addams discusses the value of social work at a mass meeting held at the National Conference of Social Work in Cleveland.
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Addams asks MacDougald to organize the women of Atlanta to seek a reprieve for Leo Frank in order to review the evidence.
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Addams and Breckinridge send Older a telegram defending Anna Whitney.
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Addams asks Fuller to give Sacco and Vanzetti a reprieve from the death sentence.
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Addams asks Hoover for clemency for Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti as a means of foreign-born Americans
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Addams signs a petition to Coolidge asking for a pardon for those convicted by the Espionage Act for speaking out against World War I.
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Addams accuses the editor of the Chicago Tribune of unfair coverage of her address, and explains her position on political deportations.
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Addams accuses Beck (the editor of the Chicago Tribune) of misleading coverage of her address at the Auditorium and demands a correction be published.
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Addams tells Kelley that she refused to sign a petition because she does not trust the Justice Department's files on the Sacco and Vanzetti case.
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Addams tells Lovett why she will not join the Citizen's Committee's petition to the Department of Justice.
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Addams sends Schwimmer an offer of legal help from Ethelwyn Mills.
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Addams defends her views against capital punishment for minors.
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Addams defends her views on capital punishment, replying to a critical editorial.
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Also known as Jane Addams to the Editor of the Chicago Tribune, February 23, 1920

Addams accuses the editor of the Chicago Tribune of unfair coverage of her address, and explains her position on political deportations.
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Addams sends Borah a clipping to explains her support of clemency in the Sacco and Vanzetti case.
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Addams explains how educational background, economic situations, and family predicaments have an impact on juvenile crime; and she argues for special treatment of the "juvenile adult." This is the tenth article of a monthly, year-long series on economic and social reform in America and a women's roles in affecting change.
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Lloyd asks Addams to write an editorial about the Averbuch Incident for Unity in order to address the hysteria it generated.
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Addams drafts her arguments for the protection of migrant laborers, food supplies, and discusses the different outlook that the working class have towards war. The speech was prepared for the National Conference on Foreign Relations of the United States.
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Addams argues for protection of migrant laborers and food supplies, and discusses the different outlook that the working class has towards war.
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Addams argues for the protection of migrant laborers and food supplies and discusses the different outlook that the working class have towards war. The speech was prepared for the National Conference on Foreign Relations of the United States.
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Addams drafts her arguments for the protection of migrant laborers, food supplies, and discusses the different outlook that the working class have towards war. The speech was prepared for the National Conference on Foreign Relations of the United States.
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Addams gives a memorial address on Merritt Pinckney's work on the juvenile court at his funeral on June 9 at St. Paul's Universalist Church. It was published in Unity a month later.
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Addams explains the evils of unpaid prison labor. This is the fourth article of a monthly, year-long series on economic and social reform in America and a woman's role to affect change.
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A fragmented document written by Addams, possibly a draft of a speech she would later give. In it, Addams argues how nationalistic ideas are beginning to cloud peoples judgement about the war.
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Addams likens prison labor camps to slavery and discusses how unpaid prison labor impacts the families of the inmates.
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Addams discusses the increasing rate of juvenile crime and the efforts to combat it at a meeting of the American Crime Study Commission.
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Addams discusses the increasing rate of juvenile crime and the efforts to combat it at a meeting of the American Crime Study Commission.
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The Tribune praises Governor Lowden's decision to allow Nicholas Viana to be executed and calls Addams's appeal sentimental.
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During an event held at the Orchestra Hall in Chicago, Addams argues for a peace based on justice and law.
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Addams discusses means of closing the divide between capitalist and trade unions.
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Addams argues for gun control and placing more faith in the younger generation.
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Addams defends the Progressive Party plank that calls for the salaries earned by prisoners to be sent to support their dependent families.
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Addams testifies before the House Committee on Foreign Affairs about relations between the United States and Japan and China.
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Addams criticizes the film Birth of a Nation as unjust and untrue and designed to foster race prejudice.
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Addams asks the Mayor for permission to see Abraham Isaak and other anarchists arrested in the wake of the McKinley assassination.
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Mary Field reports on her interview of Addams with regard to the criminal case against Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb for the murder of fourteen year old Bobby Franks in Chicago. Other comments were made by Carl Sandburg and Elllsworth Faris.
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Addams protests the execution by hanging in front of 200 prisoners as savage.
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Addams chastises newspapers for glamorizing the story of Harry Thaw, an heir to a railroad fortune who killed his wife's lover.
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Addams argues against the death penalty for Nicholas Viana because he is a minor.

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