Abstract

In the Driftway

November 9, 1918 issue

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The article throws light on one year imprisonment of Roger Nash Baldwin, an army personnel in a penitentiary. This was a great relief to his friends as they had feared that he would be turned over to the army and sentenced to the usual twenty-five or thirty years which is the penalty of those who refuse to violate their consciences in the matter of taking military service. Baldwin's attitude was so impressive in court that for once the New York newspapers treated him with respect and quoted somewhat from his address to the court, part of which the Nation reprints elsewhere.

See Also:

CRIMINAL justice, Administration of; BALDWIN, Roger Nash; DETENTION of persons; SENTENCES (Criminal procedure); NEW York (N.Y.); NEW York (State); UNITED States
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