| OCR Text |
Show 14 - - While mobility is a characteristic of cities, only a small fraction of people is involved. The lives of more people than is' supposed are confined to the neighborhoods in which The The facilities for daily life are there. their find associations can do their shopping and in the vicinit.y of their homesJ and elementary schools are they liveo homemakers scattered that children so can school in their go to own neighborhoods 01 , He adds that many men Furthermore, and claims that There is work in or their near neighborhoods. Hallenbeck expresses disagreement city people just are as neighborly on 2 another front rural as people. circumstances, to the number In small communities neighborly. but where are separated homes six, limit.even under the best a of families with which one can be it is to in few families may be probably from one spacious lots, those scattered over a An equivalent space in densely populated areas of cities would house thousands of people [Hence,] there must bp. a high degree of selection; of those families with which one is "nef.ghbor-Ly' in a city. Generally speaking, it is probable that considerable area. ••• neighborliness citY people will have as many as rural people, though hundreds of families neighborly 3 in between. live may within the of area families Woodbury shares Hallenbeck's inclination of urbanites that the 1 as neighborly is concerned, to be of this or each He notes inclination. physical arrangement of whether paths of at least far as the suggesting physical arrangement of city dwellings frequently impedes expression that the disagreement, of urban that many studies have found houses, and especially the factor not the outside doors of houses direct has other, a grat influence Hallenbeck, £E. £!!., on people into the neighbOrliness.4 Dunham, 157. p. 2Ibid• 3Ibido, 4 p Coleman The City in , 155 .. Woodbury, Mid-Centurr, UniverSity Press:, 1957 , "Human Relations in Urban Redevelopment, ed . Warren Dunham H. p. 144 .. (Detroit: tt Wayne Stte |