JUSTICE in its many projects and supplies a wide spectrum of information, coupled with ably rendered and helpful points of view.

Glenys Brown and Merle Christie have again responded to whatever demands the work of the office has imposed on them with cheerfulness and efficiency. We must be very grateful to our staff for the accomplish- ments of JUSTICE Over the years.

None of us can forecast what the future holds for our Society. There is still an immense amount of work to be done by way of pressing for unfulfilled reforms and monitoring the practical effects of those which have been introduced. The number of individual cases pressed on the attention of our small office increases every year, and many of them are pleas for help which cannot be rejected out of hand. For the first time we have a substantial deficit on the JUSTICE and Trust accounts, taken as a whole, and our capacity for doing further fruitful work depends on many more members of the legal profession, and friends outside the profession, recognising its value in a practical and generous way.

6

JOHN FOSTER

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