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Page 178 text:
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l164l R E E D COLLEGE ANNUAL -:- 1915 returns since 1904, from the counties having no city over three thousand in population and from the city of Portland. With the exception of the mesures 0n prohibition and woman suf- frage. each of which receivd a proportionally higher vote in the cuntry, progressiv legislation seems to receive a higher percentage of votes in the city than in the cuntry. Mr. Peterson made a similar examination of the voting in the different districts of Portland. The districts which wer selected correspond to the upper-middle, the 10er-middle, the organized, and the unorganized labor classes. Judging from the votes cast for such mesures as the universal eight- hour law, ventilation for female workers, and the fifteen hundred dollars tax exemption laws, the upper classes may be. said to be the more conservativ. The results of a study by Alvin Shagren of the Portland public market system in comparison with the systems in other cities, seem to sho that the public market is not such a means for reducing the cost of living as is commonly supposed. A survey of the Albina district Of the city of Portland made this year by the neighborhood survey clas under the direction of Mr. Wood, is one of the most important and coniprehensiv pieces of work accomplisht by the sociological department. Tousing conditions, immigrant problems, delin- quency and dependency, recreational faciities, industrial acci- dents and disease, unemployment and industrial occupation of the wage-earners hav been subjects for thoro investigation. An intensiv study of living conditions of nineteen families in the Albina district is also included in the survey. Careful maps. charts, and pictures hav been prepared to bring out the significant facts of the conditions which giV promis of de- veloping into a slum district should the city of Portland per- niit it. These facts wer presented before the Social Wrorkeris Conference held at Reed College in May of this year. Arlien Johnson. Louise Lewis and Gertrude Renter made a survey of the private employment agencies for women in Portland. After Visiting the agencies and talking with people looking for work, they came to the conclusion that there ought to be stricter regulation of these agencies. Carl Rochet made a study shoing the relation of public docks to the industrial development of the City, and a Study of the relation of housing problems to land speculation was undertaken by Otto Schultz. An examination Of the work of Portlanch Helth Bureau made by Margaret Creech indicated that Portland owes its good helth to its natural environment rather than to any precautions taken by the city to preserv public helth. The twenty-one cents per capita spent by the city for public helth, seemd to be an insufficient amount to provide adequate in- spection and activ educational work. Dorothy Elliott made a survey of the helth records of children in the Portland scools, the principal result of which was to sho that much of Portland's heith inspection in scools is renderd inadequate
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Page 177 text:
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REED COLLEGE AFUWUAL e 1915 IWH ority in any particular mental process is correlated with sn- periority in any particular subject and whether there ar any caracteristic sex differences. The work has been under way for three years now and wil probably be continued for some time longer before conclusiv results ar publisht. Gladys Lowden has had charge of much of this work and is using certain of the results in the preparation of a master's thesis. Other students under the direction of the psycology de- partment. hav been interested in the problems of mental mesurement of different groups. Glenn Johnson, assisted by others in the department, is making a study of unemployd men at the Associated Charities and Portland Commons to hnd out if the men more or Ies permanently out of work fall belo a certain level in specific mental functions. Dorothy Walton and Ada McCown at the Police Court, and Irma Lonegren and Ruth Hall at the Louise Home, hav made experiments testing the mental ability of yung women committed for varius 0f- fenses to ascertain. if possible, some relation between mental defect and juvenil delinquency. Verna Menefee and Albert Gentner ar making experi- ments on the psycology of testimony. XVhen individuals 211' required for any reason to giv an account of events not im- mediately experienst, what relation holds between the accuracy of the report after a few moments, and after a longer interval? In questions of the type usually put to witnesses such as estimates of times, numbers, sizes and so forth, wil it be pos- sible to ascertain the types into which individual ansers fall, and according to which such testimony must be judged? This experiment in the perception and memory of witnesses who endevor t0 tel the truth, is intended as a supplement to associa- tion-reaetion tests to find out the truth when the witness wilfully tries to conceal it. Miss Creech has made a study in social psycology by investigation of caracteristic Opinions and changes of opinions in the Reed College group. She hopes to be able to put these changes into grafic form, and to correlate them with rank in Clas, sex, life in the dormitory or in town, and the like, and thus to furnish information as to what may be expected as to Viewpoints in the college group, as they ar related to varia- tions in environment. SOCIAL INVESTIGATION The Annual would not be complete without a statement of some of the activities that at taking place in connection with courses in the social sciences. The method employd in these sciences of using the community as a laboratory for investigation is of particular interest. Some of these problems and the students dealing with them ar numerated belo. A coniparativ study of the City and cnntry vote on pro- posed legislation in Oregon has been made by Delbert French and Delvin Peterson. The results ar based upon the election
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Page 179 text:
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REED COLLEGE AbUWJAL + 1915 T1651 by the lack of follo-np work. Equipment for fysical education in public and private scools in Portland was the subject of an investigation by Edna Metcalf. A recreational survey, made by Margaret Creech and Elsa Grill shoes the relation of recreational facilities to the popula- tion of Portland. A map of the city prepard by them indicates the location of every theater, moving-picture house, scooi, church, playground, park, ball ground, beer garden, saloon and poolroom. In View of the fact of the closing of the saloons in 1916 special study is made by the investigators of the relation of the saloons to the general population and t0 the other recreational centers, and special attention is given to the prob- lem of possible substitutes for the saloon. Perhaps the largest and most significant group of in- vestigations undertaken ar those which hav to do with labor problems, particularly those of labor legislation, unemployment and immigration. An article, Oregon's iMz'nimum IVagc Law, ifs Enforce- ment and its Effects, by Harry XVeinbridge was printed in Uyclfarc for April first, 1914. Mr. TVeinbridge related the facts concerning the adoption of this law and the establishment of its constitutionality. He then analysed the varins objections which had been raised and evidence regarding them. The minimum wage law in Oregon seemd not to hav caused the predicted bad effects. Fighting Unemployment and Dcstiturion in Portland, is the title of a paper by Bess Owens in the Survey of April tenth, 1915. Miss Owens flrst reviewd the work which has been done in Portland during the past winter to relieve destitu- tion and unemployment. The second half of the paper is devoted to an analysis of the causes of destitntion. Miss Owens found mental or fysical incapacity to be the cause of 29.7 percent of the cases investigated and unemployment to be the cause of 25.9 percent of the cases. Portland's problem of homeless men was studied last semester by Ruth Shoudy and Lottie Grantham in connection with the work of the clas in social economics. One thousand records of the Associated Charities furnisht the material for this study. Data wer tabulated concerning the nationality, age, education, mental and fysical condition, time idle, addic- tion to alcohol, time in America, the state and the city of Portland, reasons for coming to the state and t0 the city, reasons for applying for aid, what relief was given, and whether or not the relief met a temporary or a permanent need Of these idle men. The city of Portland has made several attempts to deal with this most important problem of the homeless man, but as yet no permanent solution has been reacht. The results of this investigation help to make the situation clearer. Glenn Johnson has workt out the problem of the correla- tion between mental defectivness and unemployment. He tested the mentality of a hundred fifty nnemployd men selected
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