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Page 30 text:
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The Senior Looks at His Environment y , HE high school senior, as he approaches graduation, is at a critical point in his career Realizing this, he stops to look about him in order to see which features of his environment are of help to him and which should be corrected. As he does this, he notices' immediately that the family as an influence over young people no longer holds the place it formerly did. He wonders about this change,-what caused it, and what results it may have. If we consider why these changes have come, we Hnd that contributing to the instability of the modern home are several factors, one of the greatest of which is mobility of our population. Each year millions of our rural residents move to the city, it is true that many city families take up farm life, but it is only very rarely that this balance is favorable to the farming districts. In this way the stable old country home is being constantly changed for the city apartment. Coincidental with this crowding of our population into the cities, has been the development of many modern forms of recreation not harmful in themselves, but tending to disturb family life to such an extent that youth no longer considers sufhcient the recreational diversions provided by the home, in fact, many young people do not stay at home nowadays even when they have no specific place to go. If this is true in homes of moderate comfort, what is the condition in the homes of those poverty-stricken people in the slums of our great cities? The harmful effect of living in crowded, unsanitary tenement houses is now generally recog- nized. In Great Britain the national government has embarked upon an ambitious program of slum clearance, and in this country various private organizations of social workers have long been doing their best to better conditions, but there is still room for improvement. Homes such as these, which are unable to provide decent living conditions, can hardly be expected to provide recreation. One result of this driving of children into the streets to find amusement is the general misuse of leisure and, ultimately, the formation of street gangs engaged in petty crimes. The number of cases now being tried in juvenile courts is testimony to this effect of a lack of useful occupation for leisure hours, occupation once provided by the home. The tendency for the delinquent youth to develop into the hardened criminal is well known. The outlook, then, is darkly menacing, for organized racketeering, the product of the petty crimes of youth, annually costs the citizens of Chicago the appalling sum of SS145,000,000, to say nothing of the greater loss in the lowering of moral standards of the general public. If such conditions prevailed in the majority of cities, as they certainly will if preventive measures are not taken, our country will be overrun with crime. ROLAND S. BRAND Twenty-.fix
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Page 29 text:
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EQCLASSHC O Qu Q MYTMS if Qs e a tion of the state and local governments. It is heartening to learn that Worcester and many other communities have begun to help. Even the common people of the United States are youth-conscious. They are willing to try to supplement the action of the National Youth Administration. In addition to these organized forces striving to help us, there are various ways in which we must prepare to aid ourselves in obtaining and keeping a job. We must safeguard our health so that we shall have the strength and vitality necessary to fulfill the demands of our employment. Of course, it goes without saying that our personal appearance should always represent us at our best. We should try to cor- rect any obvious personality faults. We should study how to meet people and how to carry on intelligent conversation. By our attitude, we should show an alert interest in our prospective work. We must remember that many people judge us by our daily actions, and it is quite possible that some one whom we favorably impress may recom- mend us for a position. Besides, we should acquire a definite knowledge of what pre- paration we should make for our life of work. It is advisable to develop skills in more than one field, because such a person has many more chances to gain employment. Above all, we should keep on studying in order not to forget what we have mastered. We must keep our technical or professional abilities alive until we can use them in an actual work program. Finally, we must practice perseverance. In spite of all dis- appointments, we must go on living a normal life in a mental and physical sense. This means we have a difficult task to perform, whether we find a job or not. Yet it seems to us that the inevitable outcome of the combined efforts of the National Government, the local governments, and private citizens will be the making of a place in the revolving wheel of industrial life for those of us who are eagerly awaiting our opportunity. Twenty-five
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Page 31 text:
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,J Y ,M ,,-X ,, , , ,, gorercamessao Q Q5 0 lMIYj'QFJ34HSf 3 The inability of the modern city home to supply worth while amusements has led to the establishment of recreational facilities by city governments, but these provisions are painfully inadequate. Various community organizations are making efforts to relieve this situation, so that it seems reasonable to believe that eventually everyone will have opportunity for the use of public parks and playgrounds. There is another need, however, which is not so generally appreciated: that is, competent supervision of public playgrounds and a program of athletic contests between organized teams in city-wide leagues. A supervised competitive program such as this would make for harder, yet cleaner and more sportsmanlike, play than do the pick-up games which at present are the only ones available. In regard to recreational activities there is room for improvement in another line. To be of any use, an educational amusement must appeal to youth more than his ordinary pursuits, or he will not co-operate. The solution lies in teaching youth to prefer these beneficial amusements to detrimental ones. Such training should be in- cluded in the programs of our public schools. Many individual teachers have at- tempted this by discussions in class of moving pictures, books, and radio programs, but this education should be made a part of the regular school instruction. Although the modern family, not entirely through its own fault, may have failed in some of its functions to such an extent that city and even state and national governments have been forced to take measures calculated to make up these deficiencies, in another respect the family of to-day is far advanced over the family of fifty years ago. I refer to the awakened civic conscience of our people generally. The nation- wide response to the call of the Red Cross at the time of the recent Hood is concrete evidence of the prevailing Do unto others-'T policy of our society. This altruistic spirit is an indication of the progress of America, slow though it may be, toward the ideal state of complete harmony dreamed of throughout the ages. Twenty-:even
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