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Show 50 ... - TABLE 17 DISTRIBUTION OF RESPONDEN'!'S ACCORDING ro PURPOSES FOR WHICH THEY HAD BEEN IN NEIGHBORS f HOMES " , Purposes 'Per Cent Number Visiting 23 '88 Entertainment 15 13 58' Surveys or solicitations To" offer s,ervice' higher than it 'would majority of homes to the 50 77 20 be in most American respondents were neighborhoods because Mormons who had gone to the vast neighbors' u+fill chch responsibilities. As ,-,i,s shdwn in Table 18, the fourteen respondents in the greater neighborliness group and the twelve respondents in the lesser neighborliness RESPONDENTS IN GREATER AND LESSER NEIGHBORLINESS GROUPS· ACCORDING '1'0 NUMBER OF NEIGHBOBS HOMES ENTERED" NUMBER OF PtmPOSES FOR ENTERING, AND YEARS ,OF RESIDENCE IN NEIGHBORHOOD Neighborliness Group IIQmes (14) Les ser- Range Mean. Ra.:g.ge 6-68 2-4 1-42 entered Purposes Years of residence , Greater 30 3 16 '(12) Mean 1-40 1-3 2-30 12' ,'2 12 '1'ota.l Sample ).1ean R§Ul&e 1-68 1-4 1-42 22 3 16 'V group were compaed which they had tho'se homes, latter factor been, wth the number of purposes for which and their was respect to the number ot neighbors' homes in length of residency included on the relationship to the first two 0 in they had been in :the neighborhood.. supposition that it, might bear The some Table 18 indicates that the average |