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Crime Factors and Neighborhood Decline in , 1979

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Richard Taub

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ICPSR 7952 Q~

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Q CRIME FACTORS AND NEIGHBORHOOD DECLINE IN CHICAGO, 1979 (ICPSR 7952)

Principal Investigator Richard Taub National Opinion Research Center First ICPSR Edition First Printing, Spring 1982

Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research P.O. Box 1248 Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106

'7 • I~ ~ ~ I ..... ~I ~i ~jl ~ I ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF ASSISTANCE

All manuscripts utilizing data made available through the Consortium should acknowledge that fact as well as

identify the original collector of the data. The ICPSR

Council urges all users of the ICPSR data facilities to follow some adaptation of this statement with the

parentheses indicating items to be filled in appropriately or deleted by the individual user.

The data (and tabulations) utilized in this (publication) were made available (in part) by the Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research. The data for CRIME FACTORS AND NEIGHBORHOOD DECLINE IN CHICAGO, 1979 were originally collected by Richard Taub. Neither the collector of the original data nor the Consortium bear any responsibility for the analyses or interpretations presented here.

In order to provide funding agencies with essential information about the use of archival resources and to facilitate the exchange of information about ICPSR participants' research activities, each user of the ICPSR data facilities is expected to send two copies of each completed manuscript or thesis abstract to the Consortium.

Please indicate in the cover letter which data were used. rl I TABLE OF CONTENTS

PAGE NO.

I NTRODUCTI ON

Study Description

Related Publications II

Sampling and Survey Information III

File Structure IX

Codebook Information X

ICPSR Processing Information XII

VARIABLE DESCRIPTION LIST XIII

CODEBOOK 0

0

0 INTRODUCTION

STUDY DESCRIPTION

This study explores the relationship between crime and neighborhood deterioration in eight neighborhoods in Chicago. The relationship between crime and neighborhood deterioration is neither simple nor obvious. In some cases, the deterioration may lead to increases in crime; in other cases, neighborhoods deteriorate in the absence of high crime rates, or improve despite high crime rates.

The theoretical orientation for this study is supplied by Burgess' (1925) classical theories of urban social change. In this view, the city is a growing, organic system with older neighborhoods closer to the center and newer neighborhoods further from the center. Underlying the model is the assumption that people want to live as far from the city center as is feasible, with feasibility defined as cost and time to travel to and from work in the central city. Thus cities grow in the manner of tree rings with the rich moving further and further from the city center, and the poor moving into their spacious homes and breaking them into smaller housing units.

A growing proportion of the population in many cities is black or Hispanic. As the suburban construction boom enticed whites to the suburbs, blacks moved outward from restricted ghetto areas. The arrival of blacks in a neighborhood is clearly associated with processes that often lead to deterioration: white flight, an oversupply of housing, and property depreciation. It also often leads to undermaintenance and subdivision by landlords, red-lining, and the reduction of city services.

A new pattern of succession in some cities is gentrification, the process where relatively affluent young professionals move into neighborhoods and renovate them. As these areas become popular, many more people move into them, raising property values and in some cases, driving away the original residents. Gentrification often takes place in the presence of high crime rates.

Investment and disinvestment, and the decision to move or to stay, are economic decisions based on complex stimuli of which crime and fear of crime are but two. Inadequate demand for housing leads to lack of maintenance and deterioration when residents and landlords perceive that their neighborhood does not have a future. Conversely, when the future looks bright, they respond with reinvestment to II make their properties more attractive, and with other aggressive market behaviors to attract new purchasers and tenants.

RELATED PUBLICATIONS

Taub, Richard P., D. Garth Taylor, and Jan D. Dunham. CRIME, FEAR, AND NEIGHBORHOODS. Chicago: Press. (Forthcoming)

Taub, Richard P., D. Garth Taylor, and Jan D. Dunham. "Neighborhoods and Safety," in Dan A. Lewis (ed.), 1981, REACTIONS TO CRIME. Beverly Hills, Californa: Sage Publications. III

SAMPLING AND SURVEY INFORMATION

Eight Chicago neighborhoods were selected for study on the basis of high or low crime rates, stable or changing racial composition, and slowly or rapidly appreciating property values. See Appendix A. The neighborhoods are described in greater detail below.

A telephone survey was administered to approximately 400 heads of household in each of the eight study neighborhoods. Respondents were selected using random digit dialing techniques and screened for street name and block number. Examples of the screener and questionnaire are in Appendix B.

The survey was designed to measure victimization experience, fear and perceptions of crime, protective measures taken, attitudes toward neighborhood quality and resources, attitudes toward the neighborhood as a financial investment, and intensity of community involvement. Each record in the file also contains supplementary information not obtained in the survey: appearance ratings for the block of the respondents' residence, and aggregate figures on personal and property victimization for that city block. The appearance ratings were compiled from windshield surveys taken by trained personnel of the National Opinion Research Center. The criminal victimization figures came from Chicago city Police Department files. BEVERLY Beverly stands in physical contrast to the other three low crime communities. Much of its housing is larger and more elegant, its lots are larger and some of its streets are slightly curving rather than displaying the standard Chicago grid pattern. The literature which promotes Beverly calls it a "Village in the City." Since it has no industry of its own, "Suburb in the City" might be a accurate characterization. Despite impressive natural amenities and a location far from the city's center, Beverly's character is the result of substantial intervention by residents and commercial interests. This is not unique to Beverly. With only one exception, all of our successful communities--that is, those in which housing stock is well-maintained, there is little or no abandonment, and there is enough market demand for housing--are communities in which considerable intervention has been required to prevent deterioration.

Beverly got its start as a residential community with the arrival of the railroad. It is one of the few Chicago areas with a hill, and that amenity became the site of homes for wealthy businessmen. Although some of the housing away IV

from the hill is substantially less elegant, Beverly grew and prospered until some time in the 1960s. However Beverly stood in the path of south side black expansion. A few blacks moved into the community and knowledgeable observers began to worry that the neighborhood was "going." Property values began to decline. Beverly residents have responded to the threat of racial change with efforts both to keep the flow of demand and capital in the area up, and to nip potential crime problems in the bud.

In 1971, and existing community organization, the Beverly Area Planning Association (BAPA) was reinvigorated and Beverly residents, with financial support from a local bank and from commercial interests associated with a nearby shopping center, began a multi-pronged effort to deal with Beverly's "problems". BAPA's annual budget went from $13,000 to more than $100,000 as it devoted itself to a range of concerns. These included renewed attention to crime and youth problems, efforts to deal with real estate agents who profited from neighborhood change, and attempts to attract middle-class and white people to the area. The last involved, among other things, selling the community through literature, community "walks" and internal morale boosting.

EAST SIDE East Side is part of a sub-center formed by the steel mills in the southeastern corner of the city. It grew with the steel industry, and the areas closest to the mills are the oldest and the poorest; housing is newer and of better quality as one moves further away. East Side has clearly defined boundaries including a river and a line of steel mills which set it off from the city. For an urban community, it has unusually high levels of residential stability.

Efforts have been made to keep public housing as well as commercial land uses that might attract "outsiders" out of the community. Residents worked to close a game arcade because it encouraged kids to hang out there. They also worked to close a particular bar where it seemed as if too many stabbings and other violent events took place.

East Side is a stable community, one which is low in crime and perceives itself to be safe, so far. There is some evidence of undermaintenance in the northern part of the community. More important, the high median age of the population coupled with low levels of property appreciation suggest that further deterioration is around the corner as residents are unable to recover maintenance money in the market. V PORTAGE PARK Like East Side, Portage Park is a low crime, mainly blue collar community inhabited mostly by ethnic whites. But whereas East Side is characterized by strong community identification, strong social ties, and a sense of hostility toward outsiders, Portage Park displays weak community identification, moderate to weak social ties, and a general sense of indifference to the outside world.

Today Portage Park is mainly characterized by block after block of trim brick bungalows mostly built in the 1920s; each well cared for, and each lawn neatly cut and edged. Located in one of the rings distant from the central city, the community is shielded from many of the sources of crime.

BACK OF THE YARDS The area abutting the famous Union Stockyards has always been a home for low income workers at the yards and an entry point for immigrant groups coming to the . Much of the community resembles the northern section of East Side, both physically (small frame houses on small lots) and demographically (older, European-born, blue collar Roman Catholics). The division between the mostly white long-time residents and black newcomers is apparent in two organizations in the neighborhood.

The Back of the Yards Council, founded in 1939, maintains strong ties to the churches and to the political organization in the area. Most of the news in its newspaper, the BACK OF THE YARDS JOURNAL, is church-related. No other community newspaper in the eight neighborhoods so completely excluded news on crime, housing developments or related matters.

The Organization for New City (ONC) represents the black population of Back of the Yards. ONC was founded in 1976 by local black residents who were alarmed at the .... increasing number of abandoned houses in their area and the HUD contribution to that process. Supported at times by community anti-crime funds, ONC has a vigorous anti-crime program and believes it must harass agents of criminal justice to get them to perform their duty.

Back of the Yards is a neighborhood that lacks a meaningful economic function. The Union Stockyards closed in 1971, and although some industries have located in the old stockyards, most of it is still vacant. There is weak demand for housing. Housing abandonment is high in some sections, and a greater proportion of buildings are undermaintained than in any of the other study neighborhoods. . Vl AUSTIN Austin is Chicago's largest community area with a population of 123,000. It is part of the sector moving out from the central business district to the west that has succumbed to much deterioration. The classic racial change scenario was written out in Austin, where between 1966 and 1973, blocks changed over from white to black at the rate of 37.5 percent a year. (Goodwin, 1979) The turnover was accompanied by every kind of abuse associated with such changes: panic peddling, racial steering, mortgage and insurance red-lining, and a whole panopoly of problems associated with mal-administered FHA programs.

Like Beverly, Austin got its start as both a commuter village and a residence for railroad employees who worked nearby. Although the area itself is largely residential, there are major industrial employers around its periphery. The housing is varied, and its residents represent a wide range of ethnic groups from the working and middle classes. By 1940 there was already some evidence of deterioration, and this was well on the way in the southern and eastern sections by the time blacks began to move into Austin in the 1960s. Today the northern third of Austin is still mainly white, and the southern two-thirds is predominantly black. Among the eight neighborhoods studied, it is the most deteriorated and has high levels of abandonment as well. It has the worst litter problem and the least satisfactory shopping areas. It is also high in crime, and among the eight neighborhoods, is the highest in personal crime. Austin has, on occasion, been singled out as a high murder neighborhood.

Austin, like Back of the Yards, is an acutely depressed area. High in crime and low on most other measures of neighborhood quality, its southern two-thirds is a deteriorated urban area. Austin is the one example among all eight neighborhoods where fear of crime has driven people into their homes, with the result that they make low use of community resources and have trouble banding together for the collective welfare.

SOUTH SHORE South Shore is a mostly black, high crime community of diverse housing stock whose residents vary widely in terms of income, occupation, and family type. Despite the fact that it displays many of the attributes of the other high crime areas--high levels of housing and commercial deterioration and high rating on the list of neighborhood problems--it fares better on other indicators. After a period of stagnation, rates of property appreciation have begun to improve. Its residents are more optimistic about the future than are residents of the other high crime areas. VII

One reason for the property value appreciation and the optimism is that, compared to other changing or changed neighborhoods, the flow of investment funds to the area has not been choked off. The neighborhood bank in South Shore has been committed to investing heavily in its own community and its presence has served as a catalyst to potential investors from outside the community. The neighborhood underwent the familiar processes of deterioration during its period of racial change, but the renewed flow of investment funds seems to have reversed the process.

Community activists in South Shore helped to ensure that the bank continued to invest in the community, and they have also been active on other fronts. They have campaigned with some success against prostitution; they have organized to vote some precincts dry; they were able to preserve the buildings of the fine old country club after the Park District, having taken the club's land, had decided to replace them. Whereas Back of the Yards and Austin are characterized by discouragement because similar efforts have failed, South Shore's limited optimism is based on a record of past successes that encourages further efforts. South Shore residents do perceive that they have a lot of crime, but the neighborhood provides a hint that high crime and racial change do not necessarily lead to deterioration.

HYDE PARK/KENWOOD • ~'h O Hyde Park/Kenwood is the home of the University of Chicago. and racially integrated, it is also the site of the most massive level of organized and planned investment of any of the eight neighborhoods. Though a high crime community by most of our measures, it is among the least deteriorated and best maintained.

Hyde Park lay in the path of black expansion southward from Chicago's historic black belt. Between 1950 and 1956, 20,000 whites left the community and 25,000 blacks moved in, and the process of undermaintainance and a soft housing market began. Hyde Parkers organized to begin considering urban renewal for the area. The University, initially uncertain as to what its level of involvement should be, entered the planning process with energy and commitment following the robbery and attempted rape of a faculty wife.

The University and its community organizational arm, the South East Chicago Commission, played a major role in attracting urban renewal funds to the area and in planning how they should be spent. More than 30 million dollars of federal funds were spent on urban renewal, and although it is difficult to guess how much additional investment was generated by the process, 90 million dollars is one figure that is often given. The area's most blighted buildings and VIII

those commercial strips that housed numerous taverns were replaced with townhouses and a shopping center. Other efforts have been made to shore up the housing market. Building codes have been vigorously enforced; there has been some selective purchase of problem buildings; a federal savings and loan association was chartered to avoid the deleterious effects of red-lining; efforts have been made to enrich local schools.

Crime has been a continuing concern for everyone involved in the community. The University supports a security force of 80-90 people that actively patrols the area in marked cars. The University has also installed emergency telephones throughout the area. In addition it operates a fleet of buses that travel around the community both day and night, transporting people who are connected to the institution. The South East Chicago Commission provides legal assistance for the victims of cr~mes, offers rewards for information leading to the perpetrators of major crimes, works with witnesses to encourage them to appear in court, and maintains strong rapport with the police.

LINCOLN PARK Lincoln Park is a community with appreciating property values, high crime rates, and weak social ties. In the 1950s, Lincoln Park was an exemplar of the concentric zone theory of growth and deterioration. Lincoln Park was in the ring that was beginning to decline. The older ethnic groups were moving away, fine old houses were being subdivided, and property values were going down. By the 1970s, Lincoln Park was booming economically. Although investors in the 1960s chose Lincoln Park because it was adjacent to another upper-middle class area, its development took place, as did Hyde Park/Kenwood's, because of large-scale, planned intervention. Lincoln Park has also followed the model of the gentrifying area. While it was declining, artists and Bohemians discovered the area. People who could appreciate housing bargains and were willing to renovate to recover the aesthetic values of the area were the first wave in the process of gentrification.

These people, along with others in the better maintained areas, and leaders of the neighborhood's major institutions, formed community associations to maintain and "upgrade" the area. The Lincoln Park Conservation Association was formed and began working with the Department of Urban Renewal. Substantial renewal did take place, focusing on the southern boundary of the community and neighborhoods where minorities lived. Subsequently, the city's major developers moved into the area, constructing high-rise buildings with lake and park front views and lower-rise units elsewhere. IX

FILE STRUCTURE

CRIME FACTORS AND NEIGHBORHOOD DECLINE IN CHICAGO, 1979 is available from the ICPSR in two formats: card image and OSIRIS. The card image file contains several decks per case in a format based on 80 column punched cards. The data are sorted by case with all decks for a case together in ascending order.

The OSIRIS dictionary gives the format and other information for each variable in the OSIRIS data file. The dictionary or dictionary-codebook file is used in conjunction with the OSIRIS software package. The OSIRIS data file is constructed with a single logical record for each case.

The OSIRIS data file can be accessed directly through software packages or programs that do not use the OSIRIS dictionary by specifying the tape locations of the desired variables. These tape locations are given in the OSIRIS dictionary-codebook.

The original five files if this data collection (telephone survey , police, housing, shops, and aggregate

shops) have been combined by the ICPSR into a single data ..... Z file. There are 411 variables for 3,310 cases. X

CODEBOOK INFORMATION

The example below is a reproduction of information appearing in the machine-readable codebook for a typical variable. The numbers in brackets do not appear but are references to the descriptions which follow this example.

oeeeeeeeeoeeeeoeeoeeoeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeoeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee.

[I] VAR 96 [2] Q.11G(1) STCRMSI [3] MD=9 REF 96 [4] LOC 123 WIDTH I [5] DK -- COL --

[6] --For each big problem mentioned in Q.11--

Q.11G(1). Have you ever taken any action to try to solve this problem ?

[7] [8] [9] [10] 108 I. Yes 181 2. No

3021 -9. NA/Inap.

"''''Qe'QB'O''OgD'ogee'oooooooooooooQOOGO.aoo..IOOO.Q.O...00

[1] Indicates the variable and reference numbers. A variable number and a reference number are assigned to each variable in the data collection. In the present codebook which documents the archived data collection these numbers are identical. Should the data be subsetted or rearranged by an OSIRIS program (e.g., MMP to intersperse data from another source, or TCOT to produce an analysis deck), the variable numbers would change to reflect the order of the new data collection, while the reference number would remain unchanged to reflect the variable number in the codebook describing the archived data collection.

[2] Indicates the abbreviated variable name (maximum of 24 characters) used in the OSIRIS system to identify the variable for the user. An expanded version of the variable name can be found in the variable description list. XI

[3] Indicates the code values of missing data. In this example, code values equal to 9 are missing data (MD=9). Alternative statements for other variables are "MD=-I" and "MD=0 OR GE 98", where code values equal 0 or greater than or equal to 98. Some analysis software packages (including the OSIRIS software package) require that certain types of data which the user desires to be excluded from analysis be designated as "MISSING DATA," e.g., inappropriate, unascertained, unascertainable, or ambiguous data categories. Although these codes are defined as missing data categories, this does not mean that the user should not or cannot use them in a substantive role if so desired.

[4] Indicates the starting location and width of this variable when the data are stored on a magnetic tape in the OSIRIS format. If the variable is of a multiple-response type, the width referenced is that of a single response. In this example the variable named "Q. IIG(1) STCRMSI" is I column wide and is located in the 123rd column within the record.

[s] Indicates the location by deck and column(s) of this variable when the data are on cards in a card-image format.

[6] This is the full text (question) supplied by the investigator to describe the variable. The question text and the numbers and letters that may appear at the beginning reflect the original wording of the questionnaire item.

[v] For all variables which are minor questions, a note is used to refer back to the major question.

[8] Indicates the frequency of occurrence of each code value for this variable.

[9] Indicates the code values occurring in the data for this variable.

[10] Indicates the textual definitions of the codes. Abbreviations commonly used in the code definitions are "DK" (DO NOT KNOW), "NA n (NOT ASCERTAINED), and "Inap." (INAPPROPRIATE). XII

ICPSR PROCESSING INFORMATION

The data collection was processed according to the standard ICPSR processing procedures. The data were checked for illegal or inconsistent code values which, when found, were recoded to OSIRIS missing data values. No consistency checks were performed. Statements bracketed in "<" and ">" signs in the body of the codebook were added by the processors for explanatory purposes. IDENTIFICATION VARIABLES I ICPSR Study Number-7952 2 ICPSR Edition Number-1 3 ICPSR Part Number-001 4 Neighborhood 5 Case number 6 Unique case identification number 7 Sequence number

GENERAL NEIGHBORHOOD INFORMATION

8 Type of respondent household sampled 9 Respondent's name for neighborhood 10 Respondent has heard name for neighborhood 11 Year respondent moved into neighborhood 12 Length of residence

IMPORTANT CHARACTERISTICS FOR CHOOSING A NEIGHBORHOOD 13 Importance of quality of public schools 14 Importance of general appearance of area 15 Importance of neighborhood's reputation 16 Importance of convenient shopping 17 Importance of neighborhood safety .t '' 18 Importance of closeness to job 19 Importance of public transportation 20 Importance of chance for appreciation 21 Importance of race of neighbors 22 Importance of housing quality

SATISFACTION WITH PRESENT NEIGHBORHOOD CHARACTERISTICS

23 Satisfied with schools 24 Satisfied with appearance of area 25 Satisfied with area's reputations 26 Satisfied with shopping 27 Satisfied with property appreciation 28 Satisfied with safety 29 Satisfied with closeness to job 30 Satisfied with public transportation 31 Satisfied with racial make-up 32 Satisfied with housing quality 33 Overall satisfaction with neighborhood

GENERAL OPINION OF NEIGHBORHOOD

34 Likelihood will move in next year 35 How neighborhood changed in past 2 years 36 How neighborhood will change in next 2 years 37 Neighborhood home or just a place to live 38 Investment potential of neighborhood

NEIGHBORHOOD PROBLEMS

39 Noisy neighbors 40 Problem with dogs 41 Garbage and litter 42 Poor maintenance - lawns, property 43 People insult, bother others 44 Landlords don't care about neighborhood 45 Street crimes 46 Drugs and drug users 47 Abandoned buildings 48 Vacant lots with trash

ACTIONS TAKEN TO SOLVE NEIGHBORHOOD PROBLEMS

- Noise

49 Taken action about noise 50 Talked with neighbor about noise 51 Formed group to deal with noise 52 Called police about noise 53 Called alderman about noise 54 Called city agency about noise 55 Taken other action about noise 56 Nature of other action about noise

- Dogs

57 Taken action about dogs 58 Talked with neighbor about dogs 59 Formed group to deal with dogs 60 Called police about dogs 61 Called alderman about dogs 62 Called city agency about dogs 63 Taken other action about dogs 64 Nature of other action about dogs

- Garbage

65 Taken action about garbage 66 Talked with neighbor about garbage 67 Formed group to deal with garbage 68 Called police about garbage 69 Called alderman about garbage 70 Called city agency about garbage 71 Taken other action about garbage 72 Nature of other action about garbage

- Maintenance 73 Taken action on poor maintenance 74 Talked with neighbor about maintenance 75 Formed group to deal with maintenance 76 Called police about maintenance 77 Called alderman about maintenance 78 Called city agency about maintenance 79 Taken other action about maintenance 80 Nature of other action about maintenance

- Insults

81 Taken action about insults 82 Talked with neighbor about insults 83 Formed group to deal with insults 84 Called police about insults 85 Called alderman about insults 86 Called city agency about insults 87 Taken other action about insults 88 Nature of other action about insults

- Landlords

89 Taken action about landlords 90 Formed group to deal with landlords 91 Called police about landlords 92 Called alderman about landlords 93 Called city agency about landlords 94 Taken other action about landlords 95 Nature of other action about landlords

- Street crimes

96 Taken action about street crimes 97 Formed group to deal with crimes 98 Called police about street crimes 99 Called alderman about street crimes 100 Called city agency about crimes 101 Taken other action about street crimes 102 Nature of other action about street crimes

- Drug users

103 Taken action about drug users 104 Formed group to deal with drug users 105 Called police about drug users 106 Called alderman about drug users 107 Called city agency about drug users 108 Taken other action about drug users 109 Nature of other action about drug users O - Abandoned buildings

110 Taken action about abandoned buildings 111 Formed group to deal with abandoned buildings 112 Called police about abandoned buildings 113 Called alderman about abandoned buildings 114 Called city agency about abandoned buildings 115 Taken other action about abanoned buildings 116 Nature of other action about abandoned buildings

- Vacant lots

117 Taken action about vacant lots 118 Formed group to deal with vacant lots 119 Called police about vacant lots 120 Called alderman about vacant lots 121 Called city agency about vacant lots 122 Taken other action about vacant lots 123 Nature of other action about vacant lots

NEIGHBORHOOD HELP

124 Neighbors would help if respondent were sick 125 Neighbors keep watch on house 126 Neighbors would lend $25 in emergency

NEIGHBORHOOD AWARENESS

127 Easy to spot strangers in neighborhood 128 Ever read a local newspaper 129 How often read local newspapers

SOCIAL CONTACTS

130 Relatives living in neighborhood 131 Good friends living in neighborhood 132 Frequency - social evening with relatives 133 Frequency - social evening with neighbors 134 Frequency - evening with friends outside neighborhood 135 Frequency - time with co-workers 136 Frequency - chat with neighbors on street

NEIGHBORHOOD SERVICES

137 Where does grocery shopping 138 Where goes to restaurants 139 Where goes to religious services 140 Where does banking 141 Where goes for medical care 142 Where buys clothing 143 Where takes car for repairs NEIGHBORHOOD GROUPS AND ORGAINIZATIONS

144 Belongs to a PTA or school group 145 Belongs to church group 146 Belongs to group of owners, renters 147 Belongs to quality of community life group 148 Belongs to recreational group 149 Belongs to ethnic-nationality group 150 Belongs to other kind of group 151 School group meet in neighborhood 152 Church group meet in neighborhood 153 Owner-renter group meets in neighborhood • 154 Quality of community life group meets in neighborhood 155 Recreational group meet in neighborhood 156 Nationality group meet in neighborhood 157 Other group meet in neighborhood

TYPE OF RESIDENCE

158 Live in house or apartment 159 If house - own or rent 160 If apartment building - number of units 161 If apartment - own or rent 162 If apartment - type of unit owned 163 If apartment - live in university housing 164 Type of housing arrangement 165 Summary - respondent owns or rents dwelling

IMPROVEMENT AND REPAIRS TO PLACE OF RESIDENCE

166 Year moved into present dwelling 167 Number of people in household 16B Made repairs to house 169 Cost of repairs to house 170 Amount of investment in house 171 Made repairs to apartment 172 Cost of repairs to apartment 173 Amount of investment in condominium/apartment building 174 Landlord made repairs 175 Respondent improved apartment

HOUSEHOLD PROBLEMS FACED

176 Heat in building 177 Pests in building 178 Plumbing in building 179 Paint or plaster in building 180 Broken windows in building 181 Security in building NEIGHBORHOOD CRIME

182 Amount of perceived crime in neighborhood 183 What accounts for crime in neighborhood 184 What accounts for crime in neighborhood <2nd mention> 185 What accounts for crime in neighborhood <3rd mention> 186 Likelihood of being a victim in neighborhood

SOURCE OF CRIME INFORMATION

187 Crime information from local community papers 188 Crime information from conversation from neighbors 189 Crime information from observation 190 Crime information from city paper, TV, radio

NEIGHBORHOOD CRIME PREVENTION PROGRAMS

191 Neighborhood programs on crime 192 Type of neighborhood crime programs 193 Type of neighborhood crime programs <2nd mention> 194 Type of neighborhood crime programs <3rd mention> 195 Participation in crime programs

POSSIBLE WAYS OF AVOIDING CRIMES

196 Avoid crime - public transport 197 Avoid crime - ID engraving 198 Avoid crime - walking with someone 199 Avoid crime - burglar alarm 200 Avoid crime - home security 201 Avoid crime - select safe residence 202 Avoid crime - turn down job 203 Avoid crime - watchdog 204 Avoid crime - weapon at home

NEIGHBORHOOD SAFETY

205 Fear of walking alone at night 206 Often worry about being a vlctim 207 Not afraid of strangers in neighborhood 208 More afraid for safety of close ones 209 Fear of break-in while away 210 Afraid when hears footsteps at night

CRIME INCIDENT VARIABLES -Robbery

211 Break-in or theft from home this year 212 Number of burglaries 213 Know the person who broke into home 214 Belongingstaken by force 215 Who in household was robbed 216 Number of robberies 217 Location of robberies 218 Knowing the robber 219 Other theft 220 Theft victim 221 Number of thefts 222 Location of theft 223 Knowing the thief

-Vandalism

224 Building vandalism 225 Number of vandalism acts 226 Knowing vandal

-Rape

227 Rape 228 Who in household was raped 229 Number of rapes 230 Location of rape 231 Knowing the rapist

-Assualt

232 Assault 233 Who in household was assaulted 0 234 Number of assaults 235 Location of assault 236 Knowing assailant 237 Homicide volunteered

RESPONDENT'S PERSONAL INFORMATION

238 Year of birth 239 Religion 240 Sex of respondent 241 Age of respondent 242 Race 243 Ethnicity 244 Education - highest diploma received

FAMILY INCOME

245 Family income 246 Family income - recoded O RESPONDENT 'S EMPLOYMENT I NFORMATI ON 247 Work status lastweek 248 Hours usually worked each week 249 Occupation 250 Main place of work

MARITAL STATUS AND FAMILY COMPOSITION

251 Marital status 252 Summary family composition 253 Number of children

SPOUSE'S EMPLOYMENT INFORMATION

254 Spouse's education - highest degree 255 Work status of spouse last week 256 Hours usually worked by spouse 257 Spouse's occupation 258 Spouse's main place of work

EDUCATION AND WORK STATUS OF HOUSEHOLD HEAD

259 Education of female head 260 Education of male head 261 Work status of female head 262 Work status of male head 263 Occupation of female head 264 Occupation of male head

AGES AND SCHOOL OF CHILDREN

265 Children under 19 266 Age of first child 267 First child's school 268 Age of second child 269 Second child's school 270 Age of third child 271 Third child's school 272 Age of fourth child 273 Fourth child's school 274 Age of fifth child 275 Fifth child's school 276 Age of sixth child 277 Sixth child's school 278 Age of seventh child 279 Seventh child's school 280 Age of eighth child 281 Eighth child's school 282 Number of additional children

CONCERNS OF PARENTS WITH SCHOOL-AGE CHILDREN 283 Child must do homework before TV 284 Child not allowed to walk somewhere 285 Worry about child's safety at school 286 Child can go to park without adult 287 Child may stay up late on weekends 288 Know parents of child's friends 289 Worry about child joining gang 290 Worry if child late getting home

ACCESS TO EXCELLENCE PROGRAM AND EFFECTS ON CHILDREN

291 Heard of access to excellence 292 Child in Access to Excellence program 293 Preschool program 294 Basic skills program 295 Classical schools 296 Elementary school language center 297 Centers for Languages 298 High School Bilingual Center 299 High School Performing and Creative Arts 30O Career Development Centers 301 Technical Centers - High Schools 302 City-wide Permissive Enrollment 303 District selected programs 304 Advanced placement 3O5 Von Humboldt Child Parent Center 306 Other Access to Excellence program .:. --, 307 Don't know which program 308 Satisified with Access to Excellence 309 Helps child learn more quickly 310 Helps cross-cultural understanding 311 Helps work with other races 312 Fosters parental role in school 313 Prepares child for occupation 314 Improves child's speaking

SCHOOLS CHILDREN ATTENDED LAST YEAR

315 Child attended same school 316 First child's school last year 317 Second child's school last year 318 Third child's school last year 319 Fourth child's school last year

INDIVIDUALS GENERAL BELIEFS AND FEELINGS

320 Everytime I try to get ahead 321 Everything changes so quickly 322 Planning only makes one unhappy 323 I am satisfied with myself 324 People were better off in the old days 325 General view on busing children O 326 View on busing own children INDIVIDUALS FEELINGS TO BLACK FAMILIES MOVING INTO AN ALL WHITE NEIGHBORHOOD

327 First black families - same standards 328 Realtors cause panic selling 329 First black families harrassed 330 Crime goes up when blacks move in 331 Property values go down with blacks 332 Neighborhood racially stable

DIFFERENT PHONES IN HOUSE

333 Other phones in house 334 Number of different phone numbers

INTERVIEW INFORMATION

335 Month of interview 336 Date of interview

HOUSECHECK

337 Distance from State and Madison 338 Street code 339 Location of street in Chicago grid plan 340 Location of block in Chicago grid plan 341 Census tract

HOUSING AND NEIGHBORHOOD APPEARENCE RATING

342 Respondent's block in house appearance sample 343 Day rating done 344 Month rating done 345 Date rating done 346 Time rating done 347 Side of street coded 348 Number of times coders questioned 349 Total number of units on block 350 Number of single family dwellings on block 351 Number of frame single family dwellings on block 352 Number of flats on block 353 Number of frame flats on block 354 Number of multi-unit dwellings on block 355 Number of vacant lots on block 356 Number of other building uses on block 357 Number of non-ratable and other building uses 358 Presence of church or school on block 359 Number of units for which rehabilitation possible 360 Number of scorable roofs 361 Number of scorable facades 362 NUmber of scorable window trims 363 Number of scorable window glass items 364 Number of scorable inside window items 365 Number of scorable entryways 366 Number of scorable pathways 367 Number of possible jerry-built repairs 368 Number of units undergoing rehabilitation 369 Number of roofs with flaws 370 Number of facades with flaws 371 Number of window trim flaws 372 Number of window glass flaws 373 Number of inside window flaws 374 Number.of entryway flaws 375 Number of pathway flaws 376 Number of jerry-built repairs 377 Number of abandoned single family dwellings - flat 378 Number of abandoned multi-unit dwellings and other buildings 379 Number of lawns without landscaping 380 Number of lawns for which neglect possible 381 Number of lawns scorable for litter 382 Number of lawns scorable for cans 383 Number of lawns scorable for large litter 384 Number of lawns showing neglect 385 Number of lawns exhibiting neglect and litter 386 Number of lawns landscaping possible 387 Number of lawns with 3-6 pieces of litter 388 Number of lawns with 7-plus pieces of litter 389 Number of lawns with cans 390 Number of lawns with large litter 391 Number of parkways scorable for litter 392 Number of parkways scorable for cans 393 Number of parkways scorable for large litter 394 Number of parkways with 3-6 pieces of litter 395 Number of parkways with 7-plus pieces of litter 396 Number of parkways with cans 397 Number of parkways with large litter

SUMMARY - NEIGHBORHOOD CRIME

398 Number of personal crimes - contract level 399. Number of property crimes - contract level 400 Total non-index crimes - contract level 401 Number of total crimes - contract level 402 Contract population estimate 403 Estimated number of households in contract 404 Per capita income estimate - contract level 405 Household income estimate - contract level 406 Aggregate personal victimization - contract level 407 Aggregate property victimization ~- contract level 408 Aggregate any victimization - contract level 409 Aggregate number of valid respondents - contract level 410 Aggregate number of valid respondents - contract level 411 Aggregate number of valid respondents - contract level DECK IDENTIFICATION NUMBER IS '01' DK I COL I- 2

VAR 0001 ICPSR STUDY NUMBER-7952 NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0001 LOC I WIDTH 4 DK I COL 3- 6

ICPSR Study Number-7952

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VAR 0002 ICPSR EDITION NUMBER-I NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0002 LOC 5 WIDTH I DK I COL 7

ICPSR Edition Number

The number identifying the release edition of this dataset.

I. Spring, 1982 release

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O VAR 0003 ICPSR PART NUMBER-001 NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0003 LOC 6 WIDTH 3 DK I COL 8-10

ICPSR Part Numb.t-,

The number identifying this as part I of a one-part study. The original five files of this data collection (telephone survey, police, housing, shops, and aggregate shops) have been combined by the ICPSR into a single data file.

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r+ VAN 0006 CASEID NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0006 LOC 14 WIDTH 5 DK I COL 11-15

Unique case identification number m~ O 2

VAR 0004 NBRHD MD=9 REF 0004 LOC 9 WI DTH DK 1 COL 16

Neighborhood

395 I. Portage Park 433 2. Lincoln Park 395 3. Austin 418 4. Back of the Yards 401 5. Beverly 417 6. Hyde Park-Kenwood 441 7. South Shore 410 8. East Side

. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0005 CASENO NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0005 LOC 10 WIDTH 4 DK I COL 17-20

Case number

Actual number is coded.

Valid-n=3310 Min=1 Max=t234 Mean=428.8 St.Dev=246.2 leeeooeeeeogleoeeooeoeoeooooeleeooeoe.eeoleeleeeoeoeeoeoeeeooe-

VAR 0007 SEQNO NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0007 LOC 19 WIDTH 7 DK I COL 21-27

Sequence number

Actual number is coded.

Valid-n=3310 Min=101001 Max=IS26000 Mean=586596.3 St.Dev=0.0 3

VAR 0008 RSPNDNT MD=9 REF 0008 LOC 26 WIDTH I DK 1 COL 28

Type of respondent household sampled

349 I. Male, one head of household 797 2. Female, one head of household 379 3. Selected male, two heads of household 736 4. Selected female, two heads of household 211 5. Other male, two heads of household 450 6. Other female, two heads of household 149 7. Male, multiple heads of household 233 8. Female, multiple heads of household

6 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0009 Q.I NBRHDNM MD=99 REF 0009 LOC 27 WIDTH 2 DK I COL 29-30

O Q.I. What is the name of your neighborhood?

208 10. Portage Park 41 11. Jefferson Park 7 12. Northwest Side 49 19. Other Portage Park 230 20. Lincoln Park 18 21. Park West 13 22. Sheffield 3 23. Wrightwood 27 24. Old Town 83 29. Other Lincoln Park 283 30. Austin 26 39. Other Austin 185 40. Back of the Yards 58 49. Other Back of the Yards 306 50. Beverly 45 51. Beverly Hills 3 52. East Beverly 30 59. Other Beverly 29 60. Hyde Park-Kenwood 337 61. Hyde Park 15 62. Kenwood 10 69. Other Hyde Park-Kenwood 4

(CONTINUED)

362 70. South Shore 24 79. Other South Shore 361 80. East Side 27 89. Other East Side 22 90. Neighborhood has no name 295 98. Don't know neighborhood name

213 99. NA/Znap.

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VAR 0010 Q. IA HEARDNM MD=9 REF 0010 LOC 29 WIDTH I DK I COL 31

Q. IA. Some people have called your neighborhood (neighborhood name). Have you ever heard this name used to describe your neighborhood?

662 I. Yes 192 2. No > 2456 9. NA/Znap.

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VAR 0011 Q.2 MOVYRN MD=97 OR GE 99 REF 0011 LOC 30 WIDTH 2 DK I COL 32-33

Q.2. In what year did you move into (neighborhood name)?

01. 1901

79. 1979 281 85. Lived here all of my life

2 97. Refused 4 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 1 4 9 12 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Freq: 1 1 1 2 2 1 2 1 2 1 4

Code: 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 5

(CONTINUED)

Freq: 3 I I 5 6 2 5 3 13 9 3

Code: 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 Freq: 7 3 4 6 5 4 6 15 15 8 4

Code: 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 Freq: 8 13 6 10 11 11 32 24 16 19 27

Code: 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 Freq: 47 22 24 30 39 52 50 29 33 41 63

Code: 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 Freq: 65 73 89 80 110 108 136 159 227 131 179

Code: 76 77 78 79 85 97 99 Freq: 243 255 365 50 281 2 4 eeeeeeeee•eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee•eeeee•eeeeeee•eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

VAR 0012 LRESIDE MD=99 REF 0012 LOC 32 WIDTH 2 DK I COL 34-35

Length of residence

00. Less than 1 year

89. 89 years

8 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Freq: 50 365 255 243 179 131 227 159 136 108 110

Code: 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Freq: 80 89 73 65 63 41 33 29 51 55 41

Code: 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 Freq: 40 31 26 53 36 26 22 33 39 18 19

Code: 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 Freq: 13 11 15 12 10 11 17 16 9 8 8

Code: 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 Freq: 14 5 3 8 8 11 18 11 12 7 13 6

(CONTINUED)

Code: 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 Freq: 8 6 4 7 11 10 11 2 .5 6 9

Code: 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 77 Freq: 6 6 5 5 3 2 3 2 2 3 2

Code: 78 79 80 82 84 85 89 99 Freq: 3 2 5 2 3 2 I 8

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VAR 0013 Q.3A MVSCHL MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0013 LOC 34 WIDTH I DK I COL 36

Q.3. I'm going to read a list of things some people think about when choosing a neighborhood to live in. Think back to when you first moved into (neighborhood name). How important was each of these in your decision to move into the neighborhood.

Q.3A. First, the quality of public schools--was that very important, somewhat important, or not important?

289 I. Very important 148 2. Somewhat important 700 3. Not important

2 7. Refused 45 8. DK 2126 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0014 Q.3B MVAPPR MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0014 LOC 35 WIDTH I DK I COL 37

Q.3B. The general appearance of the streets, grounds, and buildings in the area?

64,7 I. Very important 382 2. Somewhat important 145 3. Not important 7

(CONTINUED)

2 7. Refused 8 8. DK 2126 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0015 Q.3C MVREPUT MD=7 OR GE 8 • REF 0015 LOC 36 WIDTH I DK I COL 38

Q.3C. The reputation of the neighborhood?

693 I. Very important 319 2. Somewhat important 151 3. Not important

2 7. Refused 16 8. DK 2129 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 001 6 Q.3D MVSHOP MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 001 6 LOC 37 WIDTH I DK I COL 39

Q.3D. The availability of convenient shopping?

522 I. Very important 407 2. Somewhat important 246 3. Not important

2 7. Refused 4 8. DK 2129 9. NA/Inap. VAR 0017 Q.3E MVSAFE MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0017 LOC 38 WIDTH I DK 1 COL 40

Q.3E. The safety of the neighborhood?

853 I. Very important 215 2. Somewhat important 101 3. Not important

2 7. Refused 7 8. DK 2132 9. NA/Inap.

VAR 0018 Q.3F MVEMPL MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0018 LOC 39 WIDTH I DK I COL 41

Q.3F. The convenience of the neighborhood to place of work?

508 I. Very important 293 2. Somewhat important 343 3. Not important

2 7. Refused 30 8. DK 2134 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0019 Q.3G MVTRANS MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0019 LOC 40 WIDTH I DK I COL 42

Q.3G. The availability of public transportation? 9

(CONTINUED)

639 I. Very important 294 2. Somewhat important 235 3. Not important

2 7. Refused 8 8. DK 2132 9. NA/Inap. 000eOQOOOOOgOOOQOOOOOOtOOOOOOOOQOOOOOIOOSOOOOOOIOOOOOlIOOQO0000

VAR 0020 Q.3H MVUPVAL MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0020 L0C 41 WIDTH I DK I COL 43

Q.3H. The likelihood that property values will go up? mR

349 I. Very important 292 2. Somewhat important 499 3. Not important

2 7. Refused 39 8. DK 2129 9. NA/Inap. le°eeeooooeeoeeeeoeoeeooooeeeoeeoeoeoeeeeeeoeooeooeeooDBoeoeoeo

VAR 0021 Q.3I MVRACE MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0021 LOC 42 WIDTH I DK I COL 44

Q.3I. Having neighbors mostly of your own race?

189 I. Very important 279 2. Somewhat important 701 3. Not important

2 7. Refused O 11 8. DK 10

(CONTINUED)

2128 9. NA/Inap. oooeoeoeeeeeoooeoeeoeoeoeooeoooooeeeeoeeeooooeeeoeeoeoeoeeoeoe.

VAR 0022 Q.3J MVHOUSQ MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0022 LOC 43 WIDTH I DK I COL 45

Q.3J. Good quality housing for the money?

804 I. Very important 258 2. Somewhat important 103 3. Not important

2 7. Refused 14 B. DK 2129 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0023 Q.4A SASCHL MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0023 LOC 44 WIDTH I DK I COL 46

Q.4. We'd like to know how satisfied you are right now with various things in your neighborhood. Are you satisfied, somewhat satisfied, somewhat dissatisfied, or very dissatisfied?

Q.4A. First, the quality of public schools.

555 I. Very satisfied 710 2. Somewhat satisfied 349 3. Somewhat dissatisfied 330 4. Very dissatisfied

7. Refused 1306 8. DK 60 9. NA/Inap. 11

VAR 0024 Q.4B SAAPPR MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0024 LOC 45 WIDTH I DK I COL 47

Q.4B. The general appearance of the streets, grounds, and buildings In the area?

m

102 8 I. Very satisfied 123 4 2. Somewhat satisfied 56 9 3. Somewhat dissatisfied 45 9 4. Very dissatisfied

7. Refused 11 8. DK 9 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0025 Q.4C SAREPUT MD=7 OR GE 8 O REF 0025 LOC 46 WIDTH I DK I COL 48

Q.4C. The reputatio n of your neighborhood?

1381 I. Very satisfied 1225 2. Somewhat satisfied 385 3. Somewhat dissatisfied 244 4. Very dissatisfied

I 7. Refused 62 8. DK 12 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0026 Q.4D SASHOP MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0026 LOC 47 WIDTH I DK I COL 49

O Q.4D. The 12

(CONTINUED )

availability of convenient shopping?

1590 I. Very satisfied 984 2. Somewhat satisfied 398 3. Somewhat dissatisfied 310 4. Very dissatisfied

7. Refused 20 8. DK 8 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0027 Q.4E SAUPVAL MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0027 LOC 48 WIDTH I DK I COL 50

Q.4E. The way property values are going?

855 I. Very satisfied 783 2. Somewhat satisfied 519 3. Somewhat dissatisfied 572 4. Very dissatisfied

2 7. Refused 554 8. DK 25 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0028 Q.4F SASAFE MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0028 LOC 49 WIDTH I DK I COL 51

Q.4F. The safety of the neighborhood?

1090 I. Very satisfied 13

(CONTINUED)

1279 2. Somewhat satisfied 518 3. Somewhat dissatisfied 397 4. Very dissatisfied

I 7. Refused 18 8. DK 7 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0029 Q.4G SAEMPL MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0029 LOC 50 WIDTH i DK I COL 52

Q.4G. The convenience of the neighborhood to place of employment?

1525 I. Very satisfied r 859 2. Somewhat satisfied 238 3. Somewhat dissatisfied O 198 4. Very dissatisfied 2 7. Refused 412 8. DK 76 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0030 Q.4H SATRANS MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0030 LOC 51 WIDTH I DK I COL 53

Q.4H. The availability of public transportation?

2039 I. Very satisfied 862 2. Somewhat satisfied 157 3. Somewhat dissatisfied 151 4. Very dissatisfied

I 7. Refused 81 8. DK 14

( CONTI NUED )

19 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0031 Q.4I SARACE MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0031 LOC 52 WIDTH I DK I COL 54

Q.4I. The racial make-up of the neighborhood?

1501 I. Very satisfied 1308 2. Somewhat satisfied 259 3. Somewhat dissatisfied 138 4. Very dissatisfied

2 7. Refused 84 8. DK 18 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0032 Q.4J SAHOUSQ MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0032 LOC 53 WIDTH I DK I COL 55

Q.4J. The quality of housing for the money?

1220 I. Very satisfied 1046 2. Somewhat satisfied 465 3. Somewhat dissatisfied 426 4. Very dissatisfied

2 7. Refused 140 8. DK 11 9. NA/Inap. 15

VAR 0033 Q.5 SAGENL MD=7 OR GE REF 0033 LOC 54 WIDTH I DK I COL 56

Q.5. On the whole, are you very satisfied with your neighborhood, somewhat satisfied, somewhat dissatisfied, or very dissatisfied?

1460 I. Very satisfied 1284 2. Somewhat satisfied ,393 3 .....Somewhat dissatisfied 155 4. Ver~y dissatisfied

7. Refused 5 8. DK 13 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 00 34 Q.6 MOVODDS MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 00 34 LOC 55 WIDTH I DK I COL 57

Q.6. How likely is it that you might move out of (neighborhood name) within the next year? Will you definitely move, probably move, is there a fifty-fifty chance of moving, will you probably not move, or will you definitely not move?

315 I. Definitely move 246 2. Probably move 482 3. 50-50 chance 720 4. Probably not move 1513 5. Definitely not move

2 7. Refused 21 8. DK 11 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0035 Q.7 PASTCHG MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0035 LOC 56 WIDTH I DK I COL 58

Q.7. Overall, in the past two years, would you say your 16

(CONTINUED)

neighborhood has become a better place to live, has gotten worse, or is it about the same as itused to be?

597 I. Better 1889 2. About the same 733 3. Worse

7. Refused 85 8. DK 6 9. NA/Inap. leOOOOOGOQIOIIIIIQIIOO'QgOmOOOIOIOeI.IIQIaIIIIIIIOOOQ+OgI..O.Q.

VAR 0036 Q.8 FUTRCHG MI)=7 OR GE 8 REF 0036 LOC 57 WIDTH I DK I COL 59

Q.8. All things considered, what do you think the neighborhood will be like in two years from now? Will it be a better place to live, will it have gotten worse, or will it be about the same as it is now?

776 I. Better 1636 2. About the same 673 3. Worse

2 7. Refused 218 8. DK 5 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0037 Q.9 NBHDHOM MI)=7 OR GE 8 REF 0037 LOC 58 WIDTH I DK I COL 60

Q.9. Some people feel their neighborhood is a real home to them, a place where they have roots. Other people think of their neighborhood as just a place where they happen to be living. Which one of those comes closest to the way you consider your neighborhood?

2064 I. Real home 1219 2. Just a place to live 17

(CONTINUED)

7. Refused 13 8. DK 14 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0038 Q.10 INVSTMT MD=7 OR GE 9 REF 0038 LOC 59 WIDTH I DK I COL 61

Q. 10. Suppose a family had saved its money and was thinking about buying a house in your neighborhood. In your opinion, would they be making a good financial investment, or would they be better off investing their money in another neighborhood?

2198 I. Good investment 810 2. Better off elsewhere 287 8. DN

2 7. Refused 13 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0039 Q.11A NOISY MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0039 LOC 60 WIDTH I DK I COL 62

Q. 11. I'm going to read a list of things that are sometimes problems in neighborhoods. Please tell me if they are a big problem, somewhat of a problem, or not a problem at all to you in your neighborhood.

Q.11a. Noisy neighbors; people who play loud music, have late parties, or have noisy quarrels

207 I. Big problem 565 2. Somewhat problem 2535 3. Not a problem

I 7. Refused 8. DK 2 9. NA/I nap. 18

VAR 0040 Q. IIB DOGS MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0040 LOC 61 WIDTH I DK I COL 63

Q.11b. Dogs barking loudly or relieving themselves near your home?

600. 1. Big problem 1014 2. Somewhat problem 1692 3. Not a problem

2 7. Refused 8. DK 2 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0041 Q.11C GARBAGE MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0041 LOC 62 WIDTH I DK I COL 64

Q.11c. People not disposing of garbage properly or leaving litter around the area?

455 I. Big problem 883 2. Somewhat problem 1969 3. Not a problem

7. Refused 8. DK 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0042 Q.11D LAWNS MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0042 LOC 63 WIDTH I DK I COL 65

Q.11d. Poor maintenance of property and lawns? 19

(CONTINUED)

209 I. Big problem 673 2. Somewhat problem 2423 3. Not a problem

7. Refused 8. DK 5 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0043 Q.11E INSULT MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0043 LOC 64 WIDTH I DK I COL 66

Q.11e. People who say insulting things or bother people as they walk down the street?

122 I. Big problem 410 2. Somewhat problem 2773 3. Not a problem

7. Refused 8. DK 5 9. NA/Inap.

VAR 0044 Q. IIF LNDLRDS MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0044 LOC 65 WIDTH I DK I COL 67

Q.11f. Landlords who don't care about what happens to the neighborhood?

274 I. Big problem 587 2. Somewhat problem O 2435 3. Not a problem 20

(CONTINUED)

2 7. Refused 8. DK 12 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0045 Q.11G STCRMS MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0045 LOC 66 WIDTH I DK I COL 68

Q.11g. Purse snatching and other street crimes?

292 I. Big problem 1106 2. Somewhat problem 1906 3. Not a problem

7. Refused 8. DK 6 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0046 Q.11H DRUGS MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0046 LOC 67 WIDTH I DK I COL 69

Q.11h. Presence of drugs and drug users?

341 I. Big problem 892 2. Somewhat problem 2066 3. Not a problem

7. Refused 8. DK 11 9. NA/I nap. 21

VAR 0047 Q11I ABANDON MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0047 LOC 68 WIDTH I DK I COL 70

Q.11i. Abandoned houses or other empty buildings?

169 I. Big problem 430 2. Somewhat problem 2708 3. Not a problem

7. Refused 8. DK 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0048 Q. IIJ VCNTLOT MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0048 LOC 69 WIDTH I DK I COL 71

Q. IIj. Vacant lots filled with trash and junk?

187 I. Big problem 461 2. Somewhat problem 2657 3. Not a problem

7. Refused 8. DK 5 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0049 Q. IIA(1) NOISYI MD=9 REF 0049 LOC 70 WIDTH I DK I COL 72

--For each big problem mentioned in Q.11--

Q.11A. Now I am going to read you a list of what people might do when faced with such problems. Some people take no 22

(CONTINUED)

action at all. Others may talk directly to the neighbor involved, or get together with other neighbors to try to solve the problem, or call the police, or call their alderman or precinct captain, or call a city agency, or do something else.

Q.11A(1). Have you ever taken any action to try to solve this problem ?

117 1. Yes 90 2. No / 3103 9. NA/Znap. oooeooooooooeeoeooooeooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooeoeooeoooooo

VAR 0050 Q. IIA(2) NOISY2 MD=9 REF 0050 LOC 71 WIDTH I DK I COL 73

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. I1--

Q. IIA(2). Talked directly with neighbor involved ?

68 I. Yes 44 2. No

3198 9. NA/I nap. oeeleoooeloeleeleooeeooooooooeo@eoeoloeeeloeoomloooooeoelooooee

VAR 0051 Q. IIA(3) NOISY3 MD=9 REF 0051 LOC 72 WIDTH I DK I COL 74

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. I1--

Q. IIA(3). Gotten together with other neighbors to try to solve the problem ?

23

(CONTINUED)

51 1. Yes 63 2. No

3196 9. NA/I nap.

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YAR 0052 Q.11A(4) NOISY4 MD=9 REF 0052 LOC 73 WIDTH I DK I COL 75

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q.11A(4). Called the police ?

70 I. Yes 46 2. No

3194 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0053 Q. IIA(5) NOISY5 MD=9 REF 0053 LOC 74 WIDTH I DK I COL 76

--For each big problem mentioned in Q.11--

Q. IIA(5). Called your alderman or precinct captain ?

23 1. Yes 91 2. No

3196 9. NA/Inap. 24

VAR 0054 Q. 11A(6) NOISY6 MD=9 REF 0054 LOC 75 WIDTH I DK 1 COL 77

--For each big problem mentioned in Q.11--

Q. IIA(6). Called a city agency ? ~o

11 I. Yes 102 2. No

3197 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0055 Q.11A(7) NOISY7 MD=9 REF 0055 LOC 76 WIDTH I DK I COL 78

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q. IIA(7). Taken some other action ?

17 I. Yes 95 2. No

31 98 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0056 Q.11A(8) NOISY8 MD=99 REF 0056 LOC 77 WIDTH 2 DK I COL 79-80

--For each big problem mentioned in Q.11--

Q. IIA(8). (Specify) other

14 96. R specified other action taken 25

(CONTINUED)

3296 99. NA/Inap.

DECK IDENTIFICATION NUMBER IS '02' DK 2 COL 1--

O°°°°°°°''oooooeoeeoeooooeoeooooeoooooeeeeoeoeooooooeooeoeeoeo.

VAR 0001 ICPSR STUDY NUMBER-7952 NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0001 LOC I WIDTH 4 DK 2 COL 3- 6

ICPSR Study Number-7952

°°''°e°°eoeeoleooeeoeooelooegeoooeooeeoeeoooeeoooooeoeoeeoooooo

VAR 0002 ICPSR EDITION NUMBER-I NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0002 LOC 5 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 7

ICPSR Edition Number

The number identifying the release edition of this dataset.

I. Spring, 1982 release

°°ooeeooloeeoooeoleoooooeeeooooeoooeoeooeolooOeoeoleoOoooeoooeo

VAR 0003 ICPSR PART NUMBER-001 NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0003 LOC 6 WIDTH 3 DK 2 COL 8-10

ICPSR Part Number-1

The number identifying this as part I of a one-part study. The original five files if this data collection (telephone survey, police, housing, shops, and aggregate shops) have been combined by the ICPSR into a single data file. 26

VAR 0006 CASEID NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0006 LOC 14 WIDTH 5 DK 2 COL 11-15

Unique case identification number

eeoooooooeoeeooooeoeoooeoo~ooooooooooooooooeoooeooooooooeooooeo

.....VAR 0057 ~ Q. IIB(1) DOGSI MD=9 REF 0057 LOC 79 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 16

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q.11B(1). Have you ever taken any action to try to solve this problem ?

231 I. Yes 363 2. No

2716 9. NA/Inap.

oooooeoooooooeoooeooeooooooooooooooooooloooooooooooooeooooeoooe

VAR 0058 Q.11B(2) DOGS2 MD=9 REF 0058 LOC 80 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 17

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q. IIB(2). Talked directly with neighbor involved ?

139 I. Yes 71 2. No 3100 9. NA/I nap. 27

VAR 0059 Q,11B(3) DOGS3 MD=9 REF 0059 LOC 81 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 18

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q.IIB(3). Gotten together with other neighbors to try to solve the problem ?

111 I. Yes 113 2. No

3086 9. NA/Inap.

ee~oeoeoeetoeeeoueeeooooeeeooeooeeeeoeeeeeoeeeeeeeeeoeoeoeeoooo

VAR 0060 Q. IIB(4) DOGS4 MD=9 REF 0060 LOC 82 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 19

O --For each big problem mentioned in Q. II-- Q. IIB(4). Called the police ?

65 1. Yes 157 2. No 3088 9. NA/Inap.

Q'OOQOOOOOQOOQIOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOIOOOOQOOOQOIOIOOIQOOOOOOQOOOQOOOO

VAR 0061 Q.11B(5) DOGS5 MD=9 REF 0061 LOC 83 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 20

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q. 11B(5). Called your alderman or precinct captain ?

28

(CONTINUED)

66 I. Yes 156 2. No

3088 9. NA/Inap.

OOOlllOOOllOO°OOOOlOOllOOOOOOOlOOOOOOOOlOlOOllOlllOlOOOO+0°°°°°

VAR 0062 Q.11B(6) DOGS6 MD=9 REF 0062 LOC 84 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 21

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q. IIB(6). Called a city agency ?

60 I. Yes 161 2. No

3089 9 o NA/I nap.

°°°°°°°°°°°°°ooeooeeeoeoeoeoooooooooooooeelooooeeeeeoooooooeooo

VAR 0063 Q. IIB(7) DOGS7 MD=9 REF 0063 LOC 85 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 22

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. I1--

Q. IIB(7). Taken some other action ?

46 I. Yes 171 2. No

3093 9. NA/Inap. 29

VAR 0064 Q.11B(8) DOGS8 MD=99 REF 0064 LOC 86 WIDTH 2 DK 2 COL 23-24

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q. IIB(8). (Specify) other m~D

40 96. R specified other action taken 3270 99. NA/Inap.

eeeele°eeoeeeeeoeeeoeeeeeeooeeeoeoeeeeeoeeeeeeeeoeeoeeleoooeeeo VAR 0065 Q.11C(I) GARBAGI MD=9 REF 0065 LOC 88 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 25

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q.11C(I). Have you ever taken any action to try to solve this problem ?

217 I. Yes 228 2. No

2865 9. NA/I nap.

eeeoeeeeeeeoeoooeeeeeeoeeoeoeeeteoeeooeooooooeeloeeeeoeeeeoeeeo

VAR 0066 Q.11C(2) GARBAG2 MD=9 REF 0066 LOC 89 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 26

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q. 11C(2). Talked directly with neighbor involved ?

30

(CONTINUED)

97 I, Yes 85 2, No

3128 9, NA/I nap.

OO000'''O00"O'00"'O00000000000,,,,O,O000,O0,O000,O,OOQ.Q,QQ,,QQ

VAR 0067 Q,11C(3) GARBAG3 MD=9 REF 0067 LOC 90 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 27

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q.11C(3). Gotten together with other neighbors to try to solve the problem ?

110 1. Yes 100 2. No

3100 9. NA/Inap.

QOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOgQQQ,QOQQQ,,,UODOOOOOOQOOOOOOOQOOOQ,OOOQOOO

VAR 0068 Q.11C(4) GARBAG4 MD=9 REF 0068 LOC 91 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 28

--For each big problem mentioned in Q.11--

Q.11C(4). Called the police ?

32 I. Yes 177 2. No

3101 9. NA/Inap. 31

VAR 0069 Q. 1 IC ( 5 ) GARBAG5 MD=9 REF 0069 LOC 92 WI DTH I DK 2 COL 29

--For each big problem mentioned in Q.11--

Q.11C(5). Called your alderman or precinct captain ?

87 I. Yes 124 2. No 3099 9. NA/Inap. eooeooooooeooeoooooeoeoooooeooeooooooloeoooeoooooeooooooooeeeoo

VAR 0070 Q.11C(6) GARBAG6 MD=9 REF 0070 LOC 93 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 30

--For each big problem mentioned in Q.11--

Q.11C(6). Called a city agency ? D

84 I. Yes 126 2. No

3100 9. NA/I nap. oeooooooooooooooooooeoooooooeoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooe

VAR 0071 Q.11C(7) GARBAG7 MD=9 REF 0071 LOC 94 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 31

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. I1--

Q.11C(7). Taken some other action ?

32

(CONTINUED)

62 1. Yes 151 2. No

3097 9. NA/Inap.

eeeeeee'oeeeeeeeeeeeoeeeeeeoeeeoeoeoeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

VAR 0072 Q.11C(8)'GARBAG8 MD=99 REF 0072 LOC 95 WIDTH 2 DK 2 COL 32-33

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q.11C(8). (Specify) other

48 96. R specified other action taken

3262 99. NA/Inap.

eeeeooeoeeoeoeeeeoeeeoeeeeooeeeeeeoeeeeeeeoeeoeeeoeeeeeeoeeeeee

VAR 0073 Q.11D(1) LAWNSI MD=9 REF 0073 LOC 97 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 34

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q. IID(1). Have you ever taken any action to try to solve this problem ?

80 ~ I. Yes .~125 2. No

3105 9. NA/Xnap. 33

VAR 0074 Q.11D(2) LAWNS2 MD=9 REF 0074 LOC 98 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 35

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q. IID(2). Talked directly with neighbor involved ?

45 I. Yes 22 2. No

3243 9. NA/Inap.

eoeeOleeOeoeeloloeoeooeoolleooeeleloooeeeoelleeeolooeeaooloeeoo

VAR 0075 Q. IID(3) LAWNS3 MD=9 REF 0075 LOC 99 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 36

O --For each big problem mentioned in Q. II-- Q. IID(3). Gotten together with other neighbors to try to solve the problem ?

45 I. Yes 31 2. No

3234 9. NA/Inap.

eeeeeoeooooooeoeoeeoeoeooeoeeeoooololeoeeeooooooeoeeooeooeeeeoe

VAR 0076 Q. IID(4) LAWNS4 MD=9 REF 0076 LOC 100 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 37

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q.IID(4). Called the police ?

O 34

(CONTINUED)

9 I. Yes 67 2. No

3234 9. NA/I nap.

oooooooooooooooooeooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooeooeoeoeooo

VAR 0077 Q. IID(5) LAWNS5 MD=9 REF 0077 LOC 101 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 38

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q. IID(5). Called your alderman or precinct captain ?

18 I. Yes 59 2. No

3233 9. NA/Inap.

ooooooeooooeooeooooooooooooooooeoooooooooooooooooooooo0eooooooo

VAR 0078 Q. IID(6) LAWNS6 MD=9 REF 0078 LOC 102 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 39

--For each big problem mentioned in Q.11--

Q. IID(6). Called a city agency ?

25 I. Yes 51 2. No

3234 9. NA/Inap. 35

VAR 0079 Q. IID(7) LAWNS7 MD=9 REF 0079 LOC 103 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 40

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q. IID(7). Taken some other action ?

29 I. Yes 47 2. No

3234 9. NA/Inap.

eoo@eoooe@oooooooooeoloooeoooo@oo@oooooooooooooooooeooooooooeol

VAR 0080 Q. IID(8) LAWNS8 MD=99 REF 0080 LOC 104 WIDTH 2 DK 2 COL 41-42

--For each big problem mentioned in Q.11--

Q. IID(8). (Specify) other

25 96. R specified other action taken 3285 99. NA/Inap.

@@@°e@@@@@@@@@l@e@@e@lel@@@@@@@@e@e@@@@@@@e@@leeel@@@@lleelee@e

VAR 0081 Q.11E(1) INSULTI MD=0 OR GE 6 REF 0081 LOC 106 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 43

--For each big problem mentioned in Q.11--

Q.IIE(1). Have you ever taken any action to try to solve this problem ?

47 I. Yes 36

( CONTI NUED )

74 2. No

1 0. Undocumented code 1 6. Undocumented code 3187 9. NA/Inap.

ooooooeeoeeeeeeoooeeoeeeooooeeeoeooeeoeooeeoeeeeoeoeoeeooeeeeee

VAR 0082 Q.11E(2) INSULT2 MD=7 OR GE 9 REF 0082 LOC 107 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 44

--For each big problem mentioned in Q.11--

Q. IIE(2). Talked directly with neighbor involved ?

23 I. Yes 18 2. No

1 7, undocumented code 3268 9. NA/Inapo

oeeeeeoeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeooeeeeeeeeeoee0e-ooeeeoee

VAR 008 3 Q.11E(3) INSULT3 MD=0 OR GE 9 REF 008 3 LOC 108 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 45

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q.11E(3). Gotten together with other neighbors to try to solve the problem ?

21 I. Yes 27 2. No

1 0. Undocumented code 3261 9. NA/Inap. 37

VAR 0084 Q.11E(4) INSULT4 MD=4 OR GE 9 REF 0084 LOC 109 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 46

--For each big problem mentioned in Q.11--

Q.11E(¢). Called the police ?

32 I. Yes 16 2. No

1 4. Undocumented code 3261 9. NA/Inap.

IQOOOIOOOOOOQOOQOQOOIOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOQIOOOQOOQOOOQOOO0

VAR 0085 Q.11E(5) INSULT5 MD=9 REF 0085 LOC 110 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 47

--For each big problem mentioned in Q.11--

Q.11E(5). Called your alderman or precinct captain ?

16 I. Yes 31 2. No

3263 9. NA/Inap. eoeeeeeeeeeeoeeleeeeeeoeeeeeeeeeeooeoeeeeeteeeeeoeeeeeeeoeoleee

VAR 0086 Q.11E(6) INSULT6 MD=9 REF 0086 LOC 111 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 48

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q. IIE(6). Called a city agency ?

38

(CONTINUED)

6 I. Yes 40 2. No

3264 9. NA/Inap.

O0000000000000OOOO000000OO0000OO0~O000000000~O0000O,OOaO000OOOO

- VAR 0087 Q.11E(7) INSULT7 MD=9 REF 0087 LOC 112 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 49

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q. IIE(7). Taken some other action ?

13 I. Yes 34 2. No

3263 9. NA/Inap.

eoeooeoeooeeeeeeoQie.eooQoloeeoooooooeoBeeeeeeoeoeeeeeoeoeoolee

VAR 0088 Q.11E(8) INSULT8 MD=99 REF 0088 LOC 113 WIDTH 2 DK 2 COL 50-51

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. I1--

Q. IIE(8). (Specify) other

12 96. R specified other action taken

3298 99. NA/Inap. 39

VAR 0089 Q. 11F(1) LNDLRDI MD=9 REF 0089 LOC 115 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 52

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. I1--

Q. IIF(1). Have you ever taken any action to try to solve this problem ?

106 I. Yes 165 2. No

3039 9. NA/Inap.

eoeooooooooooooooooooooooeooeoeoooooooooooooooooeooooo°°°°°°°°°

VAR 0090 Q. IIF(3) LNDLRD3 MD=9 REF 0090 LOC 116 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 53

--For each big problem mentioned in Q.I1--

Q. IIF(3). Gotten together with other neighbors to try to solve the problem ?

67 I. Yes 32 2. No

3211 9. NA/I nap.

oeooeeooeoooooooooeoooooooooooooooeoooooooooo°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°e

VAR 0091 Q. IIF(4) LNDLRD4 MD=9 REF 0091 LOC 117 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 54

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q.11F(4). Called the police ? O 40

(CONTI NUED )

13 I. Yes 85 2. No

3212 9. NA/Inap. °°eeeeeee°eooloeeeeeoeeeeeeeooeooeoeoeoeooeoeeeeeoeeooeeeoeeeeo VAR 0092 Q. IIF(5) LNDLRD5 MD=9 REF 0092 LOC 118 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 55

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q. IIF(5). Called your alderman or precinct captain ?

31 I. Yes 67 2. No

3212 9. NA/Inap.

°eoeooeooeooooeoeoooooooloeeoooeooeoleolooooeooooeoooooooeooloe

VAR 0093 Q. IIF(6) LNDLRD6 MD=9 REF 0093 LOC 119 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 56

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q. IIF(6). Called a city agency ?

41 I. Yes 57 2. No

32 12 9. NA/I nap. 41

VAR 0094 Q.11F(7) LNDLRD7 MD=9 REF 0094 LOC 120 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 57

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q. IIF(7). Taken some other action ?

41 1. Yes 61 2. No

3208 9. NA/Inap.

°°°°°e°°o°°°oooooooooooooooooooooooeooooooeooooeoooooooeeeooooo.

VAR 0095 Q.11(F)(8) LNDLRD8 MD=99 REF 0095 LOC 121 WIDTH 2 DK 2 COL 58-59

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q.11F(8). (Specify) other i

37 96. R specified other action taken 3273 99. NA/Inap.

eeeoDoeoooeoeoooeeeooleoooeooooleooooooooeoeeoeeeoeeeeeoeeeeeee

VAR 0096 Q. 11G(1) STCRHS1 MD=9 REF 0096 LOC 123 WIDTH 1 DR 2 COL 60

--For each big problem mentioned in 0.11--

Q.IIG(1). Have you ever taken any action to try to solve this problem ?

108 I. Yes 42

(CONTINUED)

181 2. No

3021 9. NA/Inap.

°e°O°lOeeeeelllleloeelleoeooooelleOloleoleeoleoeeOlOODooeooleeo

VAR 0097 Q. IIG(3) STCRMS3 MD=9 REF 0097 LOC 124 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 61

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q.11G(3). Gotten together with other neighbors to try to solve the problem ?

48 I. Yes 56 2. No

3206 9. NA/I nap. oeeeeeeoQaoooooeeoooeeoooeoooooeeoeooeooeooeoooooooeeeooeeooeee

VAR 0098 Q. IIG(4) STCRMS4 MD=9 REF 0098 LOC 125 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 62

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. I1--

Q.11G(4). Called the police ?

88 I. Yes 17 2. No

3205 9. NA/I nap. 43

VAR 0099 Q. IIG(5) STCRMS5 MD=9 REF 0099 LOC 126 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 63

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q.11G(5). Called your alderman or precinct captain ? mt

17 I. Yes 87 2. No

3206 9. NA/I nap.

eleeoelleeeeleeeeleeeleeleeeleeeeleeeeeeeeleleeeelleeleeeleeeee

VAR 0100 Q.11G(6) STCRMS6 MD=9 REF 0100 LOC 127 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 64

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q.IIG(6). Called a city agency ?

13 I. Yes 91 2. No

3206 9. NA/Inap.

eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeleeleeeeeleeeeleeleleeeleeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeleee

VAR 0101 Q.11G(7) STCRMS7 MD=9 REF 0101 LOC 128 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 65

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q. IIG(7). Taken some other action ?

4

(CONTINUED)

19 I. Yes 86 2. No

3205 9. NA/Inap.

°ooooooooeoooooeoooooeooo,oooooooooooooeeoooooooooooooooooooooo

VAR 0102 Q. IIG(8) STCRMS8 MD=99 REF 0102 LOC 129 WIDTH 2 DK 2 COL 66-67

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. I1--

Q. IIG(8). (Specify) other

16 96. R specified other action taken

3294 99. NA/Inap. oooooeooeooooooeoooeoeooooooooooeoooooooeoeooooooooooooooooooeo

VAR 0103 Q. IIH(1) DRUGSI MD=9 REF 0103 LOC 131 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 68

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q. IIH(1). Have you ever taken any action to try to solve this problem ?

90 I. Yes 245 2. No

2975 9. NA/Inap. 45

VAR 0104 Q. IIH(3) DRUGS3 MD:9 REF 0104 LOC 132 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 69

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q. IIH(3). Gotten together with other neighbors to try to solve the problem ?

38 I. Yes 43 2. No

3229 9. NA/Inap.

loooeooeeeeeeeoeeeeeeeeeooeoooooooeoooeoeoeeloeeoeeoooeeoooeoeo

VAR 0105 Q. IIH(4) DRUGS4 MD=9 REF 0105 LOC 133 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 70

O Q.11H(4). Called the police ?

64 I. Yes 16 2. No

3230 9. NA/Inap.

eeeooeooeooeooooooeooeoeeeooooooeoeooeooeoseoooooeoeeeoeooeeoee

VAR 0106 Q. IIH(5) DRUGS5 MD=9 REF 0106 LOC 134 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 71

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q.IIH(5). Called your alderman or precinct captain ?

O 28 I. Yes 46

(CONTINUED)

53 2. No

3229 9. NA/Inap.

e°e°e°°DooooeooooeoeoeolleeooeoeeoooDooooleooeoolooeooooooooooe VAR 0107 Q.11H(6) DRUGS6 MD=9 REF 0107 LOC 135 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 72

--For each big problem mentioned in Q.11--

Q. IIH(6). Called a city agency ?

15 I. Yes 66 2. No

3229 9. NA/Inap.

ooooeeloooeleoleeeoeooooooeoeoleoooooloooeoeeooeleooeeeoeeeeege VAR 0108 Q. IIH(7) DRUGS7 MD=9 REF 0108 LOC 136 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 73

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q. IIH(7). Taken some other action ?

21 I. Yes 61 2. No

3228 9. NA/Inap.

eeeooloooloooloeooeolooooeoo,oeoooooooleoeeoeeoooooooeeeeoooleo

VAR 0109 Q. IIH(8) DRUGS8 MD=99 REF 0109 LOC 137 WIDTH 2 DK 2 COL 74-75

--For each big problem mentioned in Q.11-- 47

(CONTINUED)

Q.11H(8). (Specify) other

18 96. R specified other action taken 3292 99. NA/Inap.

°°e°ooooeooooe'oeoooooooooooeoooeoooeoeooooooooooooooooooooooooe

VAR 0110 Q.11I(I) ABANDNI MD=9 REF 0110 LOC 139 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 76

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. 11--

Q.11I(I). Have you ever taken any action to try to solve this problem ?

42 I. Yes 126 2. No ......

3142 9. NA/Inap.

:oooooooooeooeooooolooooooooooooooooooooooeooeoeooeoeoeeoooooooo

VAR 0111 Q.11I(3) ABANDN3 MD=9 REF 0111 LOC 140 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 77

--For each big problem mentioned in Q.11--

Q.11I(3). Gotten together with other neighbors to try to solve the problem ? D~--m

22 1. Yes 16 2. No 3272 9. NA/Inap. 48

VAR 0112 Q.11I(4) ABANDN4 MD=9 REF 0112 LOC 141 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 78

--For each big problem mentioned in Q.11--

Q.11I(4). Called the police ?

10 1. Yes 28 2. No

3272 9. NA/Inap.

°°°°eee°oeeoeooooooeoooeoooooooooooeoeeeeeoeoeooeooeooeeeeooeoe

VAR 0113 Q.11I(5) ABANDN5 MD=9 REF 0113 LOC 142 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 79

--For each big problem mentioned in Q.11--

Q.11I(5). Called your alderman or precinct captain ?

20 I. Yes 19 2. No

3271 9. NA/Inap.

oooeoeQIeooooeeeoeoooooooeoeeooooeooeeeoeooeoeoeooooooeeeooeoee

VAR 0114 Q.11I(6) ABANDN6 MD=9 REF 0114 LOC 143 WIDTH I DK 2 COL 80

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q.11I(6). Called a city agency ?

49

(CONTINUED)

18 1. Yes 20 2. No

3272 9. NA/Inap.

DECK IDENTIFICATION NUMBER IS '03' DK 3 COL 1-- 2

o°'ooeoo''oeee.oeeoooeee.oeeoeeeeeooo.ooooo.oooeoo.oetoeoeeooeo

VAR 0001 ICPSR STUDY NUMBER-7952 NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0001 LOC I WIDTH 4 DK 3 COL 3- 6

ICPSR Study Number-7952

oeeooo--o-oeeeo-oooo...... oo.o....oOOOlle.oeeeoloo.oeeeleloeeoo

VAR 0002 ICPSR EDITION NUMBER-I NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0002 LOC 5 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 7

ICPSR Edition Number ~mD

~ The number identifying the release edition of this dataset,

I. Spring, 1982 release

eee°leeeoleeeeleeoeeeeeeleoeeoeeeeeeoeoeleeeoeeeeeoooeeeeeeeeel

VAR 0003 ICPSR PART NUMBER-001 NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0003 LOC 6 WIDTH 3 DK 3 COL 8-10

ICPSR Part Number-1

The number identifying this as part I of a one-part study. The original five files if this data collection (telephone survey, police, housing, shops, and aggregate shops) have been combined by the ICPSR into a single data file. 50

VAR 0006 CASEID NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0006 LOC 14 WIDTH 5 DK 3 COL 11-15

Unique case identification number D

°°°e°°e°°°°e°°e°e°oooooelooooeeeeeooloooooooeeeeeooleooeeeo°ooo

~ VAR 0115 Q.11I(7) ABANDN7 MD=9 REF 0115 LOC 144 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 16

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q.11I(7). Taken some other action ?

13 I. Yes 25 2. No -

3272 9. NA/Inap.

°°°°°°°°°l°°°eelooeloooeooeeooeolooeoeooooeoeeooooeooeeeeoeoooe

VAR 0116 Q.11I(8) ABANDN8 MD=99 REF 0116 LOC 145 WIDTH 2 DK 3 COL 17-18

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q.11I(8). (Specify) other

11 96. R specified other action taken

3299 99. NA/Inapo 51

VAR 0117 Q.11J(1) VCNTLTI MD=9 REF 0117 LOC 147 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 19

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. I1--

Q.11J(1). Have you ever taken any action to try to solve this problem ?

55 I. Yes 130 2. No

3125 9. NA/Inap.

OooeOOeOooeooooooQeOOOeeoooloeeooooooeoOoooooeooOOooeooOooooooo

VAR 0118 Q. IIJ(3) VCNTLT3 MD=9 REF 0118 LOC 148 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 20

--For each big problem mentioned in Q.11--

.... Q.11J(3). Gotten together with other neighbors to try to solve the problem ?

32 I. Yes 20 2. No

3258 9. NA/Inap.

eoeleeeeeeeeeeeeeeeleeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeleegeeeeee

VAR 0119 Q.11J(4) VCNTLT4 MD=9 REF 0119 LOC 149 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 21

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q. 11J(4). Called the police ? 0 52

(CONTINUED)

14 1. Yes 37 2. No

3259 9. NA/Inap.

eQQIooQtoeeooeeoooeeoooeeOOl,eeoeoeeoe,oeooe~eeoeeeooeo,eeeoooe

VAR 0120 Q. IIJ(5) VCNTLT5 MI)=9 REF 0120 LOC 150 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 22

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. I1--

Q.11J(5). Called your alderman or precinct captain ?

23 I. Yes 28 2. No

3259 9. NA/Inap.

QQeIQo-oeoeeoe,ooeoeoeeeooeoooeoeeooeoooooeoeoeoeeoeeeooooooeoe

VAR 0121 Q.11J(6) VCNTLT6 MD=9 REF 0121 LOC 151 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 23

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. I1--

Q. IIJ(6). Called a city agency ?

24 1. Yes 26 2. No

3260 9. NA/Inap. 53

VAR 0122 Q. IIJ(7) VCNTLT7 MD=9 REF 0122 LOC 152 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 24

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q. IIJ(7). Taken some other action ?

15 I. Yes 38 2. No

3257 9. NA/Inap.

°'°eeeoeeo°elooeoeeeeoooeooeoooeoooeeoooooeoQeeoooooooeooeoooo.

VAR 0123 Q. IIJ(8) VCNTLT8 MD=99 REF 0123 LOC 153 WIDTH 2 DK 3 COL 25-26

--For each big problem mentioned in Q. II--

Q.11J(8). (Specify) other

12 96. R specified other action taken

3298 99. NA/Inap.

eooDeeeooeoooooooooooeeooeooeoeeeeeeQeeeooeeoeeeeeoooeoooeoeeeo

VAR 0124 Q.12A SICK MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0124 LOC 155 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 27

Q.12. Please tell me if the following statements about your immediate neighbors are true or false.

Q.12A. If I were sick, I could count on my neighbors to shop for me at the supermarket, go to the drugstore, and so on.

O 2493 1. True 54

°

(CONTINUED )

686 2. False

125 8. DK 6 9. NA/Inap.

°°e°°°eeoeoooeeeooooooooooeoeoeoooooooleoot~ooooooooeoooooooooo

VAR 0125 Q.12B WATCH MDI8 OR GE 9 REF 0125 LOC 156 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 28

Q.12B. When I'm away from home, I can count on some of my neighbors to keep their eyes open for possible trouble.

2842 I. True 403 2. False

60 8. DK 5 9. NA/Inap.

00000010000000000001QOOOOOOQgOO.090000OQgOOOOOOIOOOOOOOOQIQIQOD

VAR 0126 Q.12C LEND25 MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0126 LOC 157 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 29

Q.12C. If I had to borrow about $25 for an emergency, I could turn to one of my neighbors.

2342 I. True 692 2. False

269 8. DK 7 9. NA/Inap. 55

VAR 0127 Q.12D STRANGR MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0127 LOC 158 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 30

Q.12D. It's pretty easy to tell a stranger from someone who lives in my immediate neighborhood.

1970 I. True 1221 2. False

115 8. DK 4 9. NA/Znap.

O000eOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQ0900000000

VAR 0128 Q. 13 LCLNEWS MD=9 REF 0128 LOC 159 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 31

Q. 13. Do you ever read a local neighborhood newspaper to learn what's happening in your neighborhood?

2520 I. Yes 786 2. No

4 9. NA/Inap.

oeeeeeeeeeeeeeeoeoeo.eeoeeeegeoeeoeoeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeoeeeeeeeeeee e

VAR 0129 Q.13A LCLFREQ MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0129 LOC 160 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 32

--If yes to Q.13--

Q. 13A. About how often? Would you say nearly every week, once every few weeks, or less often than that?

1581 1. Nearly every week 627 2. Every few weeks 306 3. Less often

1 8. DK 56

(CONTINUED)

795 9. NA/Inap.

°°°°°°°°°eoooooooooooooooooooeoooeeoooeoooooeoooooeooeoooooooeo

VAR 0130 Q.14 RELATVS MD=3 OR GE 9 REF 0130 LOC 161 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 33

Q.14. Do any of your relatives live in (neighborhood name)?

1514 1. Yes 1778 2. No

12 3. Inap., don't have relatives 6 9. NA oooooeo eeeoeooeooooeeeeooooeeeoeeoeeeoeooeoeooeeoeoeoeeeoooeeee

VAR 013 I Q.15 FRIENDS MD=3 OR GE 8 REF 013 I LOC 162 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 34

Q.15. Do any of your good friends live in (neighborhood name)?

2587 I. Yes 705 2. No

13 3. Inap., don't have friends I 8. DK 4 9. NA

Oeooeeoeoeoooeoeoeleoooeeoooooooeooeoeooeeooeeoeoeeeoeloooeeeee

VAR 0132 Q.16A FRELEVE MD=5 OR GE 7 REF 0132 LOC 163 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 35

Q.16. please tell me how often you usually do the following things. Once a week or more, about once a month, less than once a month, or never?

Q.16A. Spend a social evening with relatives? 57

(CONTINUED) O 1258 I. Once a week 1009 2. Once a month 637 3. Less than monthly 337 4. Never

54 5. Inap. 7 7. Refused/DK 8 9. NA

• • • eeolo °eooeoooooooooooooeooooooeooooooooooooooooooooooeooo

VAR 0 133 Q.16B FNBREVE MD=5 OR GE 7 REF 0 1:33 LOC 164 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 36

Q. 16B. Spend a social evening with one of your neighbors? --mm

984 I. Once a week 803 2. Once a month 515 3. Less than monthly 974 4. Never

11 5. Inap. 7 7. Refused/DK 16 9. NA

eoeeo ooooeeooeoeeeeeeoooeoeoooloeoeooeoeeeeoeeeeeeeoeeoeoeoeeee

VAR 0 134 Q.16C FFRNEVE MD=5 OR GE 7 REF 0 134 LOC 165 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 37

Q.16C. Spend an evening with friends who • live outside of (neighborhood)?

996 I. Once a week 1240 2. Once a month 600 3. Less than monthly 443 4. Never 58

(CONTINUED)

14 5. Inap. 9 7. Refused/DK 8 9. NA

ooooeoooooooooooooooooooooooooooeooooooooooooooooooeooooooooooo

VAR 0135 Q.16D COWORKER MD=5 OR GE 7 REF 0135 LOC 166 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 38

Q.16D. Spend time with the people you work with away from work?

573 I. Once a week 648 2. Once a month 507 3. Less than monthly 857 4. Never

712 5. Inap. 6 7. Refused/DK 7 9. NA

oooeeoooeoo eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

VAR 0136 Q,16E CHATNBR MD=5 OR GE 7 REF 0136 LOC 167 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 39

Q.16E. Chat with your neighbors when you run into them on the street?

2698 I. Once a week 293 2. Once a month 119 3. Less than monthly 171 4. Never

11 5. Inap. 8 7. Refused/DK 10 9. NA 59

VAR 0137 Q.17A GROCERY MI)=6 OR GE 7 REF 0137 LOC 168 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 40

Q.17. I'd like you to tell me where you do the following things.

Q.17A. First, grocery shopping. Do you do this usually in (neighborhood), or usually outside the area?

2536 I. Usually in neighborhood 45 2. Some in - some out 715 3. Usually outside

0 6. Inap. I 7. Refused/DK 3 9. NA

..o. .ooo..o .oooeoooooooooooooooeeoooooooooeeooooeoooeooeoooo..o

VAR 0138 Q.17B RSTRNT MD=6 OR GE 7 REF 0138 LOC 169 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 41

Q.17B. Go to restaurants.

137 2 I. Usually in neighborhood 9 3 2. Some in - some out 147 2 3. Usually outside

36 4 6. Inap. I 7. Refused/DK 8 9. NA

O O • 0 Oo.oeoeooeeoeeeeeeooooeeeeooeeeeeeeeoeeooeeoeeoooeeeooeeoe.

VAR 0139 Q.17C CHURCH MD=6 OR GE 7 REF 0139 LOC 170 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 42

Q. 17C. Go to religious services. 60

(CONTINUED)

-1818 1. Usually in neighborhood 4 2. Some in - some out 882 3. Usually outside

603 6. Inap. 7. Refused/DK 3 9° NA

oo.o. °°°°°°'e°°eooeoeoooeeeooeeeeo.ooooooooeoeoooeooeeeoooooee.

VAR 0 140 Q.17D BANKING MD=6 OR GE 7 REF 0 140 LOC 171 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 43

Q.17D. Do your banking.

1844 I. Usually in neighborhood 32 2. Some in - some out 1256 3. Usually outside 167 6. Inap. 7 7. Refused/DK 4 9. NA

...agog. "eeeeeeeoeeoeloeoeeooeoeeeooooeeeeeeeoeeoeooeeeeeeo.

VAR 0141 Q.17E MEDICAL MD=6 OR GE 7 REF 0141 LOC 172 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 44

Q.17E. Go to a doctor or other medical facility.

1313 1. Usually in neighborhood 15 2. Some in - some out 1903 3. Usually outside 61

(CONTINUED)

75 6. Inap. I 7. Refused/DK 3 9. NA

oooeooooeoeooooooooooooooooooooeoooooo.....o.ooo.ooeoooooooooe.

VAR 0142 Q.17F CLOTHES MD=6 OR GE 7 REF 0142 LOC 173 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 45

Q.17F. Buy clothing.

1004 I. Usually in neighborhood 66 2. Some in - some out 2182 3. Usually outside

45 6. Inap. I 7. Refused/DK 12 9. NA

.eoooo...... eeee.eeeeeueeeeeeeeemeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee.

VAR 014 3 Q.17G FIZCAR MD=6 OR GE 7 REF 014 3 LOC 174 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 46

Q.17G. Take your car for repairs.

1258 I. Usually in neighborhood 13 2. Some in - some out 1210 3. Usually outside

817 6. Inap. 3 7. Refused/DK 9 9. NA ~8

0

0 62

VAR 0144 Q.18A(1) SCHLGRP MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0144 LOC 175 WIDTH DK 3 COL 47

Q.18. we're interested in the groups and organizations that individuals belong to. Please tell me whether or not you are a member of ....

Q.18A(1). A PTA or local school council.

606 I. Yes 2699 2. No

I 7. Refused 8. DK 4 9. NA/Inap.

VAR 0145 SCHLGPN MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0145 LOC 176 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 48

--If yes in Q.18A--

Q.18B. Does it ever meet in your neighborhood?

Q.18B(1). A PTA or local school council.

482 I. Yes 118 2. No

7. Refused I 8. DK 2709 9. NA/Inap.

VAR 0146 RELGRP MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0146 LOC 177 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 49

Q.18A(2). Any group connected with your religion or church? m

0

0 63

(CONTINUED)

976 I. Yes 2332 2. No

I 7. Refused 8. DK I 9. NA/Inap.

O00BgOOOOQOOOOlIOOIOOQ6000010000100000000OO0000000000000OO00O00

VAR 0147 RELGPN MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0147 LOC 178 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 50

--If yes to Q.18A--

Q.18B(2). Any group connected with your religion or church.

686 I. Yes 279 2. No

7. Refused 8. DK 2345 9. NA/Inap.

000000000060000000010000QOOOOOO60OOOOOIOOOOOIOQODBO000001000000

VAR 0148 HOMEGRP MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0148 LOC 179 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 51

Q.18A(3). Any group of renters or homeowners?

530 1. Yes 2773 2. No

I 7. Re f used 8. DK ASI

0

0 64

(CONTINUED)

6 9. NA/Inap. eoooooolooooooeoooooe.ooeoooooooooooeooo.oeeoooeooeoooeoe.o.ooo

VAR 0149 HOMEGPN MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0149 LOC 180 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 52

--If yes in Q.18A--

Q.18B(3). Any group of renters or homeowners.

494 I. Yes 26 2. No

7. Refused 8. DK 2790 9. NA/Inap.

.eoe.eoeoooooeoeoeoeeeeooooooooooeooooooooeooooooooeoooeeooeooe"

VAR 0150 NBHDGRP MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0150 LOC 181 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 53

Q.18A(4). Any other group concerned with quality of community life?

600 1. Yes 2701 2. No

I 7. Refused 8. DK 8 9. NA/I nap. 0

0 65

VAR 0151 NBHDGPN MD=7 OR GE REF 0151 LOC 182 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 54

--If yes to Q.18A--

Q.18B(4). Any other group concerned with quality of community life.

498 I. Yes 91 2. No

7. Refused 8. DK 2721 9. NA/Inap.

O00QOOlOOOIOOOOOOOOOOO60OOOOOQOOOOOQO'OOO6000DO00000100000000000

VAR 0152 RECRGRP MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0152 LOC 183 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 55

Q.18A(5). Any recreational group or club, such as a bowling league, the YMCA, or something like that?

901 I. Yes 2404 2. No

I 7. Refused 8. DK 4 9. NA/Inap.

11060gOOQOOQOOOOOOOOOQOOOOIOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOODOOQOOOOOOOODO

VAR 0153 RECRGPN MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0153 LOC 184 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 56

--If yes to Q. 18a--

Q.18B(5). Any recreational group or club, such as a bowling a

0

0 66 8 (cONTINUED) league, the YMCA, or something like that.

494 I. Yes 394 2. No

7. Refused 8. DK 2422 9. NA/Inap.

VAR 0154 ETHNGRP MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0154 LOC 185 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 57

Q.18A(6). Any ethnic or nationality group?

225 I. Yes 3078 2. No

I 7. Refused 8. DK 6 9. NA/Inap.

ooooeooeooo ooooooooooooeeoeeooooeoooooeoooooooeoooooooooooooeo.

VAR 0155 ETHNGPN MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0155 LOC 186 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 58

--If yes to Q.18A--

Q.18B(6). Any ethnic or nationality group.

98 I. Yes 125 2. No

67

(CONTI NUED )

7. Refused 8. DK 3087 9. NA/Inap.

.e...,,...... o.o.,.,.°°.°°.o.,,°°...,...... ,.°,..°°,.°°°°,°.°°

VAR 0156 OTHRGRP MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0156 LOC 187 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 59

Q.18A(7). Any other kind of group? ......

572 I. Yes 2732 2. No

I 7. Refused 8. DK 5 9. NA/Inap.

°--..-°,,,.o.°Q....,...... °.,,.°,oo.,.,°...o°..°°°,..,..°..°°°,

VAR 0157 Q.18B(7) OTHRGPN MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0157 LOC 188 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 60

--If yes to Q.18A--

Q.18B(7). Any other kind of group.

290 I. Yes 267 2. No

7. Refused I 8. DK 2752 9. NA/Inap. ooo4ooooooooooooeooooooooooooooooooooooeeoooooooeooooooooooooeo

VAR 0158 Q19 HOUSAPT MI)=9 REF 0158 LOC 189 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 61

Q.19. Do you live in a house or apartment? 0

0 68

(CONTI NUED )

1416 I. House 1886 2. Apartment 8 3. Other

9. NA/Znap. °oe°°°°e°le°e°°oeooeeeoeooooeooeoooooooooooeooooeeoeooeoeeoeeee

VAR 0159 Q19A OWNRNTH KD=7 OR GE 9 REF 0159 LOC 190 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 62

--If house (code I) in Q.19 (house includes detached single family house, row house, town house, duplex)--

Q.19A. Are you an owner or a renter?

1229 I. Owner 184 2. Renter I 3. Rent free

2 7. Refused 1894 9. NA/Inap.

°°eo°e°eoeeeeeeoeeoeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeooeeeeooeeeoeeoeeeeoeeoeoeooe

VAR 0160 Q.19B(1) NUNITS MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0160 LOC 191 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 63

--If apartment or other in Q.19--

Q.19B(1). Does your building have seven or more units?

886 1. Yes 898 2. No

I 7. Refused I 8. DK 1524 9. NA/I nap. 0

0 69

O VAR 0161 Q.19B(2) OWNRNTA MD=7 OR GE 9 REF 0161 LOC 192 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 64

--If apartment or other in Q.19--

Q.19B(2). Are you an owner or renter?

359 I. Owner 1532 2. Renter 3 3. Rent free

7. Refused 1416 9. NA/Inap.

oeoQIQQItto~ooooeeoooooooeooooooooooooooeoooooooooeoooeoooooeeo

VAR 0162 Q.19B(2)A APTTYPE MD=9 REF 0162 LOC 193 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 65

--If owner in apartment buildings (code I) in Q.19B(2)--

Q.19B(2)a. Is it a condominium, or is it a cooperative, or do you own the entire building?

113 I. Condominium 54 2. Cooperative 145 3. ~ntire building

2998 9. NA/Inap.

QOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOQOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOQOOIOOOOQOO000

VAR 0163 19B(2)B SUBSIDZ MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0163 LOC 194 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 66

--For Hyde Park-Kenwood renters only--

Q.19B(2)b. Do you live in any kind of university housing, either staff or student subsidized housing?

58 1. Yes 193 2. No 70

(CONTINUED)

2 8o Uncertain 3057 9o NA/Inap.

.-eD.eDIo-oee.oeooee.eeo.leoooQoeee.oeeeo...... oooooo.ee.

VAR 0164 19B(2)C HOUSING MD=9 REF 0164 LOC 195 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 67

--If uncertain (code 8) in Q. 19B(2)b--

Q.19B(2)c. Describe name of building or type of arrangements.

1229 I. Owns house 164 2. Owns condominium, cooperative 143 3. Owns apartment building 184 4. Rents house 1529 5. Rents apartment 8 6. Other

53 9. NA/Inap.

Q'QQ''OQOD'''Q''OQOIQQOOO.BOOOI.QOO.OOOO..QQOOOOO.O.OQQOO..g..O

VAR 0165 OWNRENT MD=9 REF 0165 LOC 196 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 68

Respondent owns or rents dwelling

1716 0. Renter 1588 I. Owner

6 9. NA/Inap.

oleeeoeeoeleloeeeeoeoeoooeoeeeeeeeeeooeooeoeeeooeteoeeeeeoooeee

VAR 0166 Q.20 MOVYRD MD=97 OR GE 98 REF 0166 LOC 197 WIDTH 2 DK 3 COL 69-70

Q.20. In what year did you move in this (house/apartment)? 71

(CONTINUED)

02. 1902

o

79. i979 38 85. All my life

3 97. Refused 3 98. DK 13 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 2 4 9 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Freq: 2 2 1 1 2 1 1 3 2 2 4

Code: 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Freq: I 4 I 4 5 3 2 I 6 7 2

Code: 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 Freq: 2 2 2 6 3 2 5 15 6 10 3

Code: 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 Freq: 7 11 6 4 12 10 28 19 16 29 24

Code: 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 Freq: 36 23 19 24 31 48 40 26 29 34 46

Code: 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 Freq: 62 57 80 82 107 103 132 167 192 170 211

Code: 76 77 78 79 85 97 98 99 Freq: 286 348 535 86 38 3 3 13

•'eoeeeeoeoo°eoeoelooeooeooooooeoooooooeooeooeoeeeeaoeeoooeoeoe

VAR 0167 Q.21 NPEOPLE MD=97 OR GE 98 REF 0167 LOC 199 WIDTH 2 DK 3 COL 71-72

Q.21. What is the total number of people who live in your household? Please count any boarders, any college students who live there at least part of the year, and anyone else who normally lives there but is away now. (Make sure you count yourself.)

01. I person 72

(CONTINUED)

20. 20 people

25 97. Refused I 98. DK 15 99. NA/Inap.

Code: I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Freq: 633 834 585 547 328 182 70 35 27 14 6

Code: 12 17 20 97 98 99 Freq: 6 I I 25 I 15

oooo'ooooooooooooeoooeoooooeooooooooooooooooooooooooo~oeoeooo.o

VAR 0168 Q.22 REPAIRH MD=7 OR GE 9 REF 0168 LOC 201 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 73

--If respondent owns a single family home--

Q.22. In the past two years or so, have you made any improvements or any necessary repairs on your home? That is, such things as painting, a new roof, new storm windows, or adding a porch or new room.

1024 I. Yes 193 2. No

2 7. Refused 2091 9. NA/Inap.

oO00"0"O00OO00oO0 o.ooosoooeooeooooooeooooooooeooo o ooee. ooo0ooo0

VAR 0169 Q.22A RPRHCST MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0169 LOC 202 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 74

--If yes to Q.22--

Q.22A. During the past two years, have you spent less than $1,000, between $I,000 and $2,000, or more than $2,000 on these improvements or repairs?

260 I. Less than $1000 285 2. $1000 - $2000 73

(CONTINUED)

454 3. More than $2000

7 7. Refused 12 8. DK 2292 9. NA/Inap., made no repairs or don't live in house

eee°eee°eooeeoeeQoeeeeooeoeoeoeeeeoeeeeooeeoeeoooeeeeeeeeeeeeee

VAR 0170 FIXHOUSE MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0170 LOC 203 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 75

How much investment in house?

193 0. Made no repairs 260 I. Less than $1000 285 2. $1000 - $2000 454 3. More than $2000

7 7. Refused 12 8. DK 2099 9. NA/Inap., don't live in house

MD=7 OR GE 9 REF 0171 LOC 204 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 76

--If respondent owns condominium, cooperative, or apartment building--

Q.23. In the past two years or so, have you made any improvements or any necessary repairs on your home? That is, such things as painting, new storm windows, or modernizing your kitchen?

285 I. Yes 69 2. No

I 7. Refused 2955 9. NA/Inap. 74

VAR 0172 Qo23A RPRACST MD=7 OR GE REF 0172 LOC 205 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 77

--If yes to Q.23--

Q.23A. During the past two years, have you spent less than $500, between $500 and $I,000, or more than $I,000 on these improvements or repairs?

44 I. Less than $500 58 2. $500 - $1000 178 3. More than $1000

2 7. Refused 3 8. DK 3025 9. NA/Inap., made no repairs or don't live in house

O0000QOOQOQOOOOOOOOOQQaQQOIOOQOgOOOOOOOOOOOOOIOOOQOOOOOOOO00001

VAR 017.3 FIXCONDO MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0173 LOC 206 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 78

How much investment in condominium/apartment building?

69 0. Made no repairs 44 I. Less than $500 58 2. $500 - $1000 178 3. More than $1000

2 7. Refused 3 8. DK 2956 9. NA/Inap., don't live in house

eeeooeoeeooooeoeeeeeeeeeoeoeoeeoeteeeoeeoeeeeoeoeeoooeoeeeeeeoe

VAR 0174 Q.24 LLIMPR MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0174 LOC 207 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 79

--If respondent rents apartment--

Q.24. As far as you know, in the past two years or so, has your landlord made any improvements in your apartment or building? That is, such things as modernizing your kitchen 75

(CONTINUED)

or bathroom, fixing up the public spaces, or improving security? ~--Dm

823 I. Yes 697 2. No

8 8. DK 1782 9. NA/Inap.

ooooo eoeeoeeeeeeeeeeeeeooeeoeoeeooeoeeooeooeeeeoeeooeeoeeeeooee

VAR 0 175 Q.25 YOUIMPR MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0 175 LOC 208 WIDTH I DK 3 COL 80

Q.25. In the past two years or so, have you made any improvements in your apartment? That is, such things as refinishing floors or building a closet?

805 I. Yes 722 2. No O 1 8. DK !782 9. NA/Inap.

DECK IDENTIFICATION NUMBER IS '04' DK 4 COL I- 2

eoeeeooeoeooeooooooooeoeeoeeeeoeoooooeeoooeeeeooeeoe°ee°e°°°eee

VAR 0001 ICPSR STUDY NUMBER-7952 NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0001 LOC I WIDTH 4 DK 4 COL 3- 6

ICPSR Study Number-7952

ooeoooeeoeeoeeeooooeoooooeoeoo.oooeeooeo eeeoeo°°°°e°e°e°e°ee°ee e

VAR 0002 ICPSR EDITION NUMBER-I NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0002 LOC 5 WIDTH I + DK 4 COL 7

ICPSR Edition Number 76

(CONTINUED)

The number identifying the release edition of this dataset.

I. Spring, 1982 release eeeoeeeeeeeeeeeoeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeoeoe.eeeeeeeoeeeeleeeoeoeooeeee

VAR 0003 ICPSR PART NUMBER-001 NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0003 LOC 6 WIDTH 3 DK 4 COL 8-10

ICPSR Part Numb, t-,

The number identifying this as part I of a one-part study. The original five files if this data collection (telephone survey, police, housing, shops, and aggregate shops) have been combined by the ICPSR into a single data file. 000000"'''''OO''''O'00"000QOOO'OOOOOQ.OOQg.QOO.O..OQOOQQ.QO.QQQ

VAR 0006 CASEID NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0006 LOC 14 WIDTH 5 ~ DK 4 COL 11-15

Unique case identification number

"''eoeeeleeeeeleeeeeeeeeeeeeee~eeeeeeeooeeeee®oeo.oooo.ooooooo.

VAR 0176 Q.26A HEAT MD=9 REF 0176 LOC 209 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 16

Q.26. Please tell me whether the following things are a big problem in your building, somewhat a problem, or not at all a problem.

Q.26A. The amount of heat you get in the winter

164 I. Big problem 220 2. Somewhat problem 142 3. Not a problem

1784 9. NA/I nap. 77

VAR 0177 Q.26B PESTS MD=9 REF 0177 LOC 210 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 17

Q.26B. Roaches, mice, or rats.

224 I. Big problem 409 2. Somewhat problem 893 3. Not a problem

1784 9. NA/Inap.

oo..ooooooeoooo..t.ooooeoeoooooooooooooooooo....o...... oooeoooo

VAR 0178 Q26C PLUMBNG MD=9 REF 0178 LOC 211 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 18

Q.26C. Bad plumbing or not enough hot water.

96 I. Big problem 236 2. Somewhat problem 1194 3. Not a problem

1784 9. NA/Inap.

eo.oeoo.oooooooo.ooooo.oooooooooooooeooooooooo.ooeoooooooooe.o.

VAR 0179 Q26D PAINT MD=9 REF 0179 LOC 212 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 19

Q.26D. Peeling paint or loose plaster.

149 I. Big problem O 340 2. Somewhat problem 78

(CONTI NUED )

1037 3. Not a problem

1784 9. NA/Inap.

°'°°°°eooo°eooooooooeooooeooooeooooeooooeoooooeoooeeeooeooeoeoo

VAR 0180 Q26E WINDOWS MD=9 REF 0180 LOC 213 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 20

Q.26E. Broken windows.

38 I. Big problem 82 2. Somewhat problem 1407 3. Not a problem

1783 9. NA/Inap.

O00"O00"OOOOOO'0000"O000OO'OOOOOOOO.0.O00.0..OOOOO00000OO0000.O.

VAR 0181 Q.26F BLDGSAF MD=9 REF 0181 LOC 214 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 21

Q.26F. Building security.

118 I. Big problem 221 2. Somewhat problem 1187 3. Not a problem

1784 9. NA/Inap. ooooeeooooeoooeoeeeeoooeeooeooooooooooeooeoooooeeooeooeooeoeeee

VAR 0182 Q.27 CRMQTY MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0182 LOC 215 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 22

Q.27. Now I'd like to ask you some questions about crime. 79

(CONTINUED)

How much crime would you say there is in your own immediate neighborhood - alot, some, or only a little?

269 I. A lot 1323 2. Some 1354 3. Only a little 133 4. None

225 8. DK 6 9. NA/Inap.

OeQI,eOIOOaQIOOOOOOeQOQeOOOOOOQQOOOQOOIaOOIIOOIIOOOOOeaOOOOQeQOe

VAR 0183 Q.27A(1) CRMWHYI MD=98 OR GE 99 REF 0183 LOC 216 WIDTH 2 DK 4 COL 23-24

--If a lot, only a little, or none answered in Q.27--

Q.27A(1). What do you think accounts for the fact that there is (amount of crime) in your neighborhood?

525 01. The kind of people who live in the neighborhood 211 02. People look out for their neighbors/people care 28 03. Peopleprotect themselves from crime/take security measures 85 04. Single family homes/few other attractions ~165 05. Good police protection 9 06. Specific crime prevention programs 18 07. Neighborhood organizations or institutions are doing something - but no specific crime program is identified 28 08. University of Chicago security measures 192 09. Other 97 11. The kind of people who live in the neighborhood - unfavorable characteristics 6 12. People don't look out for their neighbors/people don't care 18 13. Outsiders are to blame for crime 11 14. Minorities are to blame for crime 7 15. Too many people/overcrowding in residential areas 46 16. Taverns~drinking~drugs are to blame for crime 19 17. Poor police protection 5 18. Lack of neighborhood organization or programs 39 19. Other 80

(CONTINUED)

217 98. DK 1584 99. NA/Inap. eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeleeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeoeoeeeeeoeoooeeee

VAR 0184 Q.27A(2) CRMWHY2 MD=98 OR GE 99 REF 0184 LOC 218 WIDTH 2 DK 4 COL 25-26

--If a lot, only a little, or none answered in Q.27--

Q.27A(2). What do you think accounts for the fact that there is (amount of crime) in your neighborhood?

50 01. The kind of people who live in the neighborhood 103 02. People look out for their neighbors/people care 12 03. People protect themselves from crime/take security measures 36 04. Single family homes/few other attractions 140 05. Good police protection 8 06. Specific crime prevention programs 18 07. Neighborhood organizations or institutions are doing something - but no specific crime program is identified 31 08. University of Chicago security measures 54 09. Other 17 11. The kind of people who live in the neighborhood - unfavorable characteristics 5 12. People don't look out for their neighbors/people don't care 3 13. Outsiders are to blame for crime 4 14. Minorities are to blame for crime 15. Too many people/overcrowding in residential areas 33 16. Taverns~drinking~drugs are to blame for crime 10 17. Poor police protection 4 18. Lack of neighborhood organization or programs 20 19. Other

98. DK 2762 99. NA/Inap. 81

VAR 0185 Q.27A(3) CRMWHY3 MD=98 OR GE 99 REF 0185 LOC 220 WIDTH 2 DK 4 COL 27-28

--If a lot, only a little, or none answered in Q.27--

Q.27A(3). What doyou think accounts for the fact that there is (amount of crime) in your neighborhood?

7 01, The kind of people who live in the neighborhood 11 02, People look out for their neighbors/people care 5 03. People protect themselves from crime/take security measures 7 04. Single family homes/few other attractions 23 05. Good police protection 2 06. Specific crime prevention programs 5 07. Neighborhood organizations or institutions are doing something - but no specific crime program is identified 12 08. University of Chicago sesurity measures 12 09. Other 2 11. The kind of people who live in the neighborhood - unfavorable characteristics 3 12. People don't look out for their neighbors/people don't care 13. Outsiders are to blame for crime 14. Minorities are to blame for crime 2 15. Too many people/overcrowding in residential areas 2 16. Taverns~drinking~drugs are to blame for crime 1 17, Poor police protection 18. Lack of neighborhood organization or programs 4 19, Other

98. DK 3212 99. NA/I nap.

OO QO$ OQQOO OOQIODOOOOQIOOQQOOOOOOQOOQOOOOOQO,OOOOOQQOOQ OIOOOO 1OO

VAR 0186 Q.28 CRMRSK MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0186 LOC 222 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 29

Q.28. Would you say that the likelihood you will be a victim of a crime in your neighborhood during the coming year is high, moderate, or low? D 82

(CONTI NUED )

230 I. High 838 2. Moderate 1987 3. Low

I 7. Refused 239 8. DK 15 9. NA/Inap.

°io'°°'°'''oooooo'oooooooo.ooooooooo.ooo.oe.oooooooooooooooo....

VAR 0187 Q.29A CRMINFI MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0187 LOC 223 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 30

Q.29. How much information do you get about crime in your neighborhood from each of the following sources? Do you get a great deal of information, some information, or no information at all about crime in your neighborhood?

Q.29A. Local community newspapers.

573 I. Great deal 1543 2. Some 1180 3. None

2 7. Refused I 8. DK 11 9. NA/Inap, ooeoooooooo "eeooeoeeooeeoeeeeleoeueooiletoeoeeloeeeo.eeeeeoeeo.

VAR 0188 Q.29B CRMINF2 MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0188 LOC 224 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 31

Q.29B. Conversations with neighbors?

657 I. Great deal 1702 2. Some 938 3. None

I 7. Refused 83

(CONTI NUED )

2 8. DR 10 9. NA/Inap.

Oeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

VAR 0189 Q.29C CRMINF3 MD-7 OR GE 8 REF 0189 LOC 225 WIDTH I DR 4 COL 32

Q.29C. Just keeping your eyes and ears open?

556 I. Great deal 1657 2. Some 1076 3. None

4 7. Refused 6 8. DK 11 9. NA/Inap.

eeeoeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

VAR 0190 Q.29D CRMINF4 MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0190 LOC 226 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 33

Q.29D. City newspapers, radio or television?

682 1. Great deal i495 2. Some 1116 3. None 3 7. Refused 5 8. DK 9 9. NA/Inap. 84

VAR 0191 Q.30 CRMPRG REF 0191 LOC 227 WIDTH I DK MD=9 4 COL 34

Q.30. Do you know of any special efforts or programs going on in your neighborhood to prevent or reduce crime? ~tm

1033 1. Yes 2272 2. No

5 9. NA/Inap. eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee®e@ooeeeeeeee

VAR 0192 Q.30A(1) CRMPRGI MD=98 OR GE 99 REF 0192 LOC 228 WIDTH 2 DR 4 COL 35-36

--If yes to 0.30--

Q.30A(1). What are they?

227 01. Whistlestop 5 02. Operation Identification 17 03. Beat Representative Program 100 04. Citizens' Patrols/Radio Patrols 80 05. Other examples of police~community cooperative efforts 67 06. Police doing a good job in general/good police protection 70 07. Youth programs 322 08. Neighborhood organizations/institutions doing something 11 09. Alderman doing something 28 10. University of Chicago doing something 35 19. Other

55 98. DK 2293 99. NA/I na p. 85

VAR 0193 Q.30A(2) CRMPRG2 MD=98 OR GE 99 REF 0193 LOC 230 WIDTH 2 DK 4 COL 37-38

--If yes to 0.30--

Q.30A(2). What are they?

17 01. Whistlestop 17 02. Operation Identification I~ 03 Beat Representative Program 04[ Citizens' Patrols/Radio Patrols 16 05. Other examples of police/community cooperative efforts 42 06. Police doing a good job in general/good police protection 27 07. Youth programs 79 08. Neighborhood organizations~institutions doing something 8 09. Alderman doing something ~7 I0. University of Chicago doing something 11 19. Other

98. DR 3023 99. NA/Inap.

oeooeooooooo eeeeeeooeeeeleeoeeeeeeeeleeoeleoeeeeeoeeeeeeeeee#ee

VAR 0194 Q.30A(3) CRMPRG3 MD=98 OR GE 99 REF 0194 LOC 232 WIDTH 2 DK 4 COL 39-40

--If yes to 0.30--

Q.30A(3). What are they?

3 01. Whistlestop 1 02. Operation Identification 2 03. Beat Representative Program l 04. Citizens' Patrols/Radio Patrols ? 05. Other examples of police/community cooperative efforts 13 06. Police doing a good job in general/good police protection 4 07. Youth programs 11 08. Neighborhood organizations/institutions doing something 86

(CONTINUED)

4 09. Alderman doing something 14 10. University of Chicago doing something 4 19, Other

98. DK 3243 99. NA/Inap.

O°°°°°°°.ooooeoeeooooooooooooooooleoeooeeooeooooeoooooooeeoeeooo

VAR 0195 Q.30B CRMPRG4 MD=9 REF 0195 LOC 234 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 41

--If yes to Q.30--

Q.30B. Do you actively participate in any of these programs?

308 1. Yes 658 2. No

2344 9. NA/Inap. eooooooooooooooeooooooooooooooeooeooooeeoooeoooooooeeooeooeeeee

VAR 0196 Q.31A AVDPUBT MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0196 LOC 235 WIDTH I DK ( COL 42

Q.31. In order to avoid crime have you ever ....

Q.31A. Avoided using public transportation

1039 1. Yes 2241 2. No

4 7. Refused 2 8. DK 24 9. NA/I nap. 87

MD=7 OR GE VAR 0197 Q.31B AVDCRID DK 4 COL 43 REF 0197 LOC 236 WIDTH I

Q.31B. Engraved identification on valuables?

863 1. Yes 2435 2. No 4 7. Refused 2 8. DK 6 9. NA/Inap.

VAR 0198 Q.31C AVDWLK REF 0198 LOC 237 WIDTH I ~ DK 4 COL 44

Q.31C. Arranged to go out with someone so you wouldn't have to be alone when going somewhere in the neighborhood? .....

1207 1. Yes 2091 2. No 3 7. Refused 2 8. DK 7 9. NA/Inap...... ODOQ

0199 Q.31D BGRALM VAR 0199 LOC 238 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 45 REF

Installed a burglar alarm in your Q.3~d. home?

88

(CONTINUED)

462 1. Yes 2811 2. No

29 7. Refused I 8. DK 7 9. NA/Inap.

°e°ooeeoo°oooeooeeooooooooltooooooeeeoooooeoooeoooe6oooo

VAR 0200 Q.31E CRMSCTY MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0200 LOC 239 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 46

Q.31E. Taken other security measures such as using timers on your lights, putting bars on windows, or adding new locks?

1858 1. Yes 1419 2. No

26 7. Refused I 8. DK 6 9. NA/Inap.

o0oo0ooooooooooo0ooooooooooooooo00ooooo0oooooo0ooooo0oooooooooo

VAR 0201 Q.31F AVCRRES MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0201 LOC 240 WIDTH I DR 4 COL 47

Q.31F. Selected a residence because of its particular safety features?

1123 1. Yes 2165 2, No

7 7. Refused 5 8. DK 10 9. NA/Inap. 89

VAR 0202 Q.31G AVCRJB MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0202 LOC 241 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 48

Q.31G. Turned down a job because of its unsafe location?

426 1. Yes 2862 2. No

6 7. Refused 4 8. DK 12 9. NA/Inap.

VAR 0203 Q.31H AVCRDOG REF 0203 LOC 242 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 49

Q.31H. Kept a watchdog?

952 1. Yes 2339 2. No

11 7. Refused I 8. DK ? 9. NA/Inap.

VAR 0204 Q .311 AVCRGUN REF 0204 LOC 243 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 50

Kept a gun or other weapon at home? Q.311.

735 1. Yes 2510 2. No 90

(CONTINUED)

42 7. Refused 2 8. DK J 21 9. NA/Inap. °°°°°°°°°°eoeooeoeoeooeoeeeoeooooooeoeooooeooeooeooeooeeeeooeee VAR 0205 Q.32 FRWLKAL FE)=7 OR GE 8 REF 0205 LOC 244 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 51

Q.32. Is there any area right around here - that is, within a mile - where you would be afraid to walk alone at night? ~D~o

2145 1. Yes 1140 2. No

2 7. Refused 13 8. DK 10 9. NA/Inap. °°°eeeeeooooeooeeoooooooooeooooooeoooeoooooeoeoeoooeoeeeeeoooo.

VAR 0206 Q.33A FRVCM MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0206 LOC 245 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 52

Q.33. I'm going to read some statements people have made about crime. For each one please tell me if it's mostly true in your case or mostly false.

Q.33A. I'm often a little worried that I will be the victim of a crime in my neighborhood.

• 971 1. Mostly true 2297 2. Mostly false

6 7. Refused 18 8. DK 18 9. NA/Inap.

I 91

VAR 0207 Q.33B FRSTGR MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0207 LOC 246 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 53

Q.33B. I would probably not be afraid if a stranger stopped me at night in my neighborhood to ask for directions.

1416 I. Mostly true 1804 2. Mostly false

11 7. Refused 31 8. DK 48 9. NA/Inap. ee°°eooe°oe°oooeeeooooeeeooeoooooooOoeoeoeoooeeeooeoeeoeoeoeoeo VAR 0208 Q.33C FRFOR MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0208 LOC 247 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 54

Q.33C. I'm not as afraid for my own safety as I am for the people close to me.

1876 I. Mostly true 1351 2. Mostly false

8 7. Refused 26 8. DK 49 9. NA/Inap. °e'°oeoeeoeeeooBoooooeoeooooooooooooooeoooooeooeoooooooooooooooo

VAR 0209 Q.33D FRBRKIN MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0209 LOC 248 WIDTH I DK .4 COL 55

Q.33D. When I have to be away from home for a long time, I worry that someone might try to break in. 92

(CONTINUED)

1350 I. Mostly true 1929 2. Mostly false

9 7. Refused 6 8. DK 16 9. NA/Inap. eeeeeeoeeeeeeeeoeeeoeOeoeeeeeeeeeeooeeeeeeeeeeooeeeeoeeeeeoeeee

VAR 0210 Q.33E FRFTSP MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0210 LOC 249 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 56

Q.33E. When I hear footsteps behind me at night in my neighborhood, it makes me feel uneasy.

2163 I. Mostly true 1073 2. Mostly false

9 7. Refused 26 8. DK 39 9. NA/Inap.

"'eeeeooeeeeeeeeeeeeeoeeeeeeeeeoooeeoeeoeeeeeoeeeeoeeeeeeeeoee..

VAR 0211 Q.34 BRGLR MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0211 LOC 250 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 57

Q.34. Now I'd like to ask you about things that might have happened to you or to members of your household since the beginning of 1978. I'd like you to think back to January 1978, about 14 months ago. Since January 1978, did anyone break into your (house/apartment) or steal anything from inside your (house/apartment)? Even someone you knew?

321 1. Yes 2987 2. No

+ 1 7. Refused 93

(CONTINUED)

8. DR 1 9. NA/I nap.

°°°@°°°°eo°o°°°°o°o°oOooooooooeooooeooooooooooooooooooooooooooo

VAR 0212 Q.34A BGLRFRQ MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0212 LOC 251 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 58

--If yes to 0.34--

Q.34A. Did that happen once or more than once?

216 1. Once 99 2. More than once 8. DR 2995 9. NA/Inap.

eoooooo °°°°°°°°oooooeoooooooooeoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo

VAR 021 3 Q.34B BGLRKNW MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 021 3 LOC 252 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 59

--Zf yes to Q.34--

Q.34B. D~d you know the person who broke into your (house/apartment)?

86 1. Yes 218 2. No 1 3. Both

9 8. DK 2996 9. NA/Inap. oo@@e oooooooooooooooo@ooooooooooeoooooooooooeoooooooooooooooooo

VAR 0 214 Q.35 ROBRY MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0 214 LOC 253 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 60

Q.35. Since January of 1978, did anyone take money or other belongings from you or from other members of your household 94

(CONTINUED)

by force? For example, did someone use a gun or knife, or in any way force one of you to give them something that did not belong to them? Even someone you knew?

179 1. Yes 3125 2. No

3 7. Refused 8. DK 3 9. NA/Inap. eoeooooeooeoeooeooooooooeooeoeeooooeoeooeeeeoeooooeooeeoeoooooe

VAR 0215 Q.35A RBRYWHO MD=9 REF 0215 LOC 254 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 61

--If yes to Q.35--

Q.35A. Did that happen to you or to someone else in your household?

90 I. Respondent 79 2. Someone else 9 3. Both

3132 9. NA/Inap. ooooooooooooooeooooooooooooooooooooooooooeooooeoooooooooooooooo

VAR 0216 Q.35B RBRYFRQ MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0216 LOC 255 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 62

--If yes to Q. 35--

Q.35B. Did that happen once or more than once?

140 1. Once 38 2. More than once

8. DK 3132 9. NA/Inap. 95

VAR 0217 Q.35C RBRYWHR MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0217 LOC 256 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 63

--If yes to Q.35--

0.35C. Did that happen in (neighborhood) or elsewhere?

133 I. In neighborhood 43 2. Elsewhere 2 3. Both

8. DK 3132 9. NA/Inap.

eeeo°e°°°eoooeeoeooooooeoooeoeoooooeeoeoeoeeooeeoeeeeeeeoeeeeee

VAR 0218 Q.35D RBRYKNW MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0218 LOC 257 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 64

--If yes to Q.35--

Q.35D. Did you/they know the person who robbed you/them?

18 1. Yes 158 2. No 1 3. Both

8. DK 3133 9. NA/Inap.

eooeleoeoeeoooooooooeooooooooeoeoooooooooooeooeooeooooeoooeooee

VAR 0219 Q.36 THFT MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0219 LOC 258 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 65

{).36. Other than what has been mentioned, has anyone stolen anything else from you or someone in your household during the time since January, 19787 Perhaps a bicycle, clothing, tools, wallet, money, or anything else?

655 1. Yes 2650 2. No 96

(CONTINUED)

3 7. Refused 80 DK 2 9. NA/Inap.

eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee VAR 0220 Q. 36A THFTWHO MD=9 REF 0220 LOC 259 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 66

--If yes to Q.36--

Q.36A. Did that happen to you household? or to someone else in your

335 1. Respondent 241 2. Someone else 75 3. Both

2659 9. NA/Inap.

......

MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0221 LOC 260 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 67

--If yes to Q.36--

mQ.Q.36B. Did that happen once or more than once? rim,

451 I. Once 200 2. More than once

8. DK 2659 9. NA/Znap.

OOOOOoOOOOo • °°°oooeOOOoooooooooooooo~eooe.oeooooo

REF 0222 LOC 261 WIDTH 1 DK MD-84 COLOR GE68 9

--If yes to Q.36-- 97

(CONTINUED) O Q.36C. Did that happen in (neighborhood) or elsewhere?

500 I. In neighborhood 134 2. Elsewhere 11 3. Both

6 8. DK 2659 9. NA/Inap.

ee°ooeeeeeeeoeeeeeeeooooeooeoooeooeooeeeeeeeeooooeeoeoeooooooe 0

VAR 0223 Q.36D THFTKNW MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0223 LOC 262 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 69

--If yes to Q.36--

Q.36D. Did you/they know the person who stole these things? mum--

90 I. Yes 540 2. No 5 3. Both

14 8. DK 2661 9. NA/I nap.

eooooeooooeeoo0ooooeoooooeoooooooeeomoooooeoooooooooooooooeeeee

VAR 0224 Q.37 CRMBLD MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0224 LOC 263 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 70

Q.37. Since January, 1978, has anyone damaged or defaced the building you live in, for example, by writing on the • walls, breaking windows, setting fires, or anything like that?

589 I. Yes 2708 2. No

2 7. Refused 2 8. DK 9 9. NA/I nap. 98

VAR 0225 Q.37A CRMBLDF MD-8 OR GE 9 REF 0225 LOC 264 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 71

--If yes to Q.37--

Q.37A. Did that happen' once or more than once?

232 1. Once 349 2. More than once

4 8. DK 2725 9. NA/Inap.

eleeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeoeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

VAR 0226 Q.37B CRMBLDK MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0226 LOC 265 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 72

--If yes to Q.37--

Q.37Bo Did you know the person who damaged your building?

121 1. Yes 454 2. No 2 3. Both

7 8. DK 2726 9. NA/Inap.

eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeoeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

VAR 0227 Q.38 RAPE MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0227 LOC 266 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 73

Q.38. Since January of 1978, was anyone in your household the victim of a rape or sexual assault, even by someone she knew?

31 1. Yes 3271 2. No

2 7. Refused 99

(CONTINUED)

8. DK 6 9. NA/Inap. O°eooeoee°eeeeeeoeeeee°°ooOeooeeeeeeeeeeeoloeoooooooeeoeoooeeoe VAR 0228 Q.38A RAPEWHO MD=9 REF 0228 LOC 267 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 74

--If yes to Q.38 and respondent a female--

Q.38A. Were you the victim, or was it another your household? member of

8 I. Respondent 16 2. Someone else I 3. Both

3285 9. NA/Inap. eoO°eo°o°°oeeoooeoeQooleeeoooeoooeeeooeoeeooeoooeoeoeeoeeeeeeee

VAR 0229 Q.38B RAPEFRQ MD=8 OR GE 9 +: REF 0229 LOC 268 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 75

--If yes to Q.38 and respondent a female--

Q.38B. Sometimes people are the victim of the same crime more than once during a year. Did that happen once or more than once?

25 1. Once 3 2. More than once

8. DK 3282 9. NA/Inap. llll+llOlllllellllllOOlllOllllOllllOllll+llOllelOlllllllleOeele

VAR 0230 Q.38C RAPEWHR MD-8 OR GE 9 REF 0230 LOC 269 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 76

--If yes to Q.38 and respondent a female-- 100

(CONTINUED)

Q.38C. Did that happen in (neighborhood) or elsewhere?

20 I. In neighborhood ? 2. Elsewhere 3. Both

1 8= DK 3282 9. NA/Inap.

°°°eeo°°e°oo°eeeoooooooooooeooooooooeooooooeoooooeoeoeeoeooooeo

VAR 0231 Q.38D RAPEKNW MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0231 LOC 270 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 77

--If yes to Q.38 and respondent a female--

Q.38D. Was the attacker someone you/she knew?

8 I. Yes 19 2. No 3. Both

I 8. DK 3282 9. NA/Inap.

°°ooooooooooooooooooooooeooooeooooooooooooooooooeooooeooooeoeeo

VAR 0232 Q.39 ASLT MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0232 LOC 271 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 78

0.39. Other than what you have already mentioned, since January, 1978, did anyone, including someone you knew, use violence against you or members of your household in an argument or quarrel, or in any other way attack or assault one of you?

180 I. Yes 3125 2. No

3 7. Refused 8. DK 2 9. NA/I nap. 101

VAR 0233 Q.39A ASLTWHO REF MD=9 0233 LOC 272 WIDTH DK 4 COL 79

--If yes to Q.39--

Q.39A. Did that happen to you or to someone else in your household?

66 I. Respondent 92 2. Someone else 19 3. Both

3133 9. NA/Inap.

e°°4ooeoeeooeooooooeooooeoeoooeoeeoeoeooeeeloooeoooooeoooooeeee

VAR 0234 Q.39B ASLTFRQ MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0234 LOC 273 WIDTH I DK 4 COL 80

--If yes to 0.39--

Q.39B. Did that happen once or more than once?

113 I. Once 64 2. More than once

8. DK 3133 9. NA/Inap.

DECK IDENTIFICATION NUMBER IS '05' DK 5 COL 1-- 2 ooooeooooeooooooooooooooooooeeoooooooooooooooolooeoooooooooeoeo

VAR 0001 ICPSR STUDY NUMBER-7952 NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0001 LOC I WIDTH 4 DE 5 COL 3- 6

ICPSR Study Number-7952 102

VAR 0002 ICPSR EDITION NUMBER-I NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0002 LOC 5 WIDTH I DK 5 COL 7

ICPSR Edition Number

The number identifying the release edition of this dataset. I. Spring, 1982 release

°e°°°°o°°°°°°°ooooooooooooooooooeoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo

VAR 0003 ICPSR PART NUMBER-001 NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0003 LOC 6 WIDTH 3 DK 5 COL 8-10

ICPSR Part Number-1

The number identifying this. as part I of a one-part study. The original five files if this data collection (telephone survey, police, housing, shops, and aggregate shops) have been combined by the ICPSR into a single data file. °°°oooeeoooooooooooooooooolooeoeoooooooooooooeoeoeoleoeooeeeoe.

VAR 0006 CASEID NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0006 LOC 14 WIDTH 5 DK 5 COL 11-15

Unique case identification number

OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOO

VAR 0235 Q.39C ASLTWHR MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0235 LOC 274 WIDTH I DK 5 COL 16

--If yes to Q.39--

Q.39C. Did that happen in (neighborhood) or elsewhere?

144 1. In neighborhood 31 2. Elsewhere 2 3. Both 103

(CONTINUED)

8. DR 3133 9. NA/Inap.

O00000000°OO00"oeeeooe'ooo'O°OO'O°O°O000.°..O00°OO00°O.O00..eeO

VAR 0236 Q.39D ASLTKNW MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0236 LOC 275 WIDTH I DK 5 COL 17

--If yes to Q.39--

Q.39D. Was the attacker someone you/they knew?

110 1. Yes 66 2. No 3. Both

I 8. DK 3133 9. NA/lnap.

°°°'eeooe°°oo°eoooooeoooeeooeooeooeeeeeleOOeOOeOeeoeeeeoooeeee.

VAR 0237 Q.39E HOMICIDE MD=9 REF 0237 LOC 276 WIDTH I DK 5 COL 18

If volunteered that victim was killed.

1 1. Yes 2. No

3309 9. NA/Inap.

O°°oo°o°°°o°oooooeeooo0o°oo°oooeeeoooooeooooeeooeeooeeooeeoeeee

YAR 0238 Q.40 BIRTHYR MD=I00 OR GE 998 REF 0238 LOC 277 WIDTH 3 DK 5 COL 19-21

Q.40o Now I have just a few questions about yourself. First, in what year were you born?

000. 1900 104

(CONTINUED)

062. i962 088. 1888

099. 1899

I 100. Undocumented code, originally coded 78 78 998. Refused 11 999. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Freq: 15 17 9 13 16 23 19 26 24 22 33

Code: 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Freq: 31 28 32 45 38 28 24 43 39 51 56

Code: 22 +23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 Freq: 32 47 44 63 53 61 50 42 54 48 43

Code: 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 Freq: 35 51 65 52 45 65 54 61 63 66 85

Code: 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 Freq: 70 77 73 105 109 99 136 102 103 93 82

Code: 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 88 90 91 Freq: 81 71 58 40 32 20 7 2 1 1 3

Code: 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 998 999 Freq: 1 1 3 8 8 4 6 13 1 78 11

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VAR 0239 Q.41 RELIG MD=97 OR GE 99 REF 0239 LOC 280 WIDTH 2 DK 5 COL 22-23

Q.41. What is your religion - is it Protestant, Catholic, Jewish, Muslim, some other religion, or no religion?

1345 01. Protestant 1440 02. Catholic 107 03. Jewish 14 04. Muslim 279 05. None 105

(CONTI NUED )

103 06. Other

14 97. Refused 8 99. NA/Inap.

e•••emeeoeeeeeoooeeeoooeoooeeeee•eo•oeooooeooeeeoe•ooeeeeeeeooo

VAR 0240 SEX MD=9 REF 0240 LOC 282 WIDTH I DK 5 COL 24

Sex of respondent

1088 1. Male 2216 2. Female

6 9. NA 952000

eeooeeeooeoooeeoeeoeloeoeeeooeloeeooeeeeooeeooeeoooeeeoeooooooe

VAR 0241 AGE MD=99 REF 0241 LOC 283 WIDTH 2 DK 5 COL 25-26

Age of respondent

17. 17 years

91. 91 years

90 99. NA

Code: 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 Freq: 2 7 20 32 40 58 71 81 82 93 103

Code: 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 Freq: 102 136 99 109 105 73 77 70 85 66 63

Code: 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 Freq: 61 54 65 45 52 65 51 35 43 48 54

Code: 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 6O Freq: 42 50 61 53 63 44 47 32 56 51 39 106

(CONTINUED)

Code: 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 Freq: 43 24 28 38 45 32 28 31 33 22 24

Code: 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 Freq: 26 19 23 16 13 9 17 15 13 6 4 Code: 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 91 99 Freq: 8 8 3 1 1 3 1 1 90

°°°Oooe°°°°°°°°°eoooeooooooooooooooeooeooeoooeooooooooeoeoooooo

VAR 0242 Q.42 RACE MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0242 LOC 285 WIDTH I DK 5 COL 27

Q.42. For statistical purposes, we would like to know what racial group you belong to. Are you black white hispanic or something else? ' ' '

1020 I. Black 1998 2. White 199 3o Hispanic 72 4. Other

16 7. Refused 2 8. DK 3 9o NA/Inap.

OOOooeooeoo °eooeooeeoooeoeooeoooooooeoeooeeooeoeooeeeoooeoeoooo VAR 0243 0243., Q.42A ETHNIC MD=97 OR GE 98 REF LOC 286 WIDTH 2 DK 5 COL 28-29

--If white-- Q.42A. What is your ethnic background? For example, is it Irish, Italian, Polish, or what? D~q

25"7 01. Polish 115 02. Italian 298 03. Irish 236 04. German 7"/2 05. Other 17 06. None 54 11. Scandinavian 107

(CONTINUED)

24 12. Lithuanian 101 13. Slavic 91 14. Anglo Saxon 13 15. Russian Jew

4 97. Refused 4 98. DK 1324 99. NA/Inap.

OQOOOOOOOQO °°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°o°OooooooOoooeooooooooooooooooooeooo

VAR 0244 Q.43 EDUC MD=97 OR GE 98 REF 0244 LOC 288 WIDTH 2 DK 5 COL 30-31

Q.43. What is the highest regular school certificate, diploma or degree that you have gotten?

116 01. None ever 516 02. 8th grade - Junior. high 1478 03. High school or GED 263 04. AA or Junior college 518 05. BA or BS 252 06. Masters 50 07. PhD 33 08. Law or Medicine 60 09. Other

9 97. Refused 98. DK 15 99. NA oeoooooooooe eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeQoeeeeeeeeeeeeoee#eeeeee#eeeeeeeeee VAR 0245 REF 0245 Q.56 INCOME MD=97 OR GE 98 LOC 290 WIDTH 2 DK 5 COL 32-33

Q.56. Please tell me which category represents our family's total income before taxes and other deductions during 1978. (INCLUDE ALL SOURCES) Was it less than $10, 000, between $10,000 and $30,000, or was it $30,000 or more? (If exactly $10,000, circle 20 and 21; if exactly $30 000 circle 30 and 31.) ' '

109 10. Less than $10,000, but NA what amount 108

(CONTINUED)

526 11. Between $5,000 and $10,000 222 12. $o - $5,000 7 17. Less than $10,000, but NA what amount 24 20. Between $10,000 and $30,000, but NA what amount 1096 21. Between $10,000 and $20,000 572 22. $20,000 - $30,000 24 27. Between $10,000 and $20,000,, but NA what amount 21 30. $30,000 or more, but NA what amount 237 31. Between $30,000 and $40,000 151 32. $40,000 or more 19 37. $30,000 or more, but NA what amount

265 97. Refused 29 98. DK 8 99. NA/Inap.

O00000000000000QOOOOOtOOOOQOOOOOOODOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOODO

VAR 0246 INCOME4 MD=9 REF 0246 LOC 292 WIDTH I DK 5 COL 34

Family income

864 I. Less than $10,000 1096 2. $10,000 - $20,000 572 3. $20,000 - $30,000 428 4. $30,000 or more

350 9. Refused/HA

IIII++IIIIIIII+IIIII+DIII++III+IIII+IDIIIIIIIIeleelIIIIIIII+II +

VAR 0247 Q.44 WRKNOW MD=97 OR GE 99 REF 0247 LOC 293 WIDTH 2 DK 5 COL 35-36

Q.44. Last week were you working full time, part time, keeping house, or what?

1711 01. Work full time 286 02. Work part time 61 03. Ill, vacation, etc 66 04. Unemployed 255 05. Retired 81 06. In school only 109

(CONTINUED)

820 07. Keeping house only 13 08. Other

2 97. Refused 15 99. NA/Inap. e°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo VAR 0248 Q.44A WRKHRS MD=7 OR GE 9 REF 0248 LOC 295 WIDTH I DK 5 COL 37

--If not working at present--

Q.44A. When you do work, is that usually time? full time or part

134 I. Full time 11 2. Part time 4 3. Varies

7. Refused 3161 9. NA/Inap. °°°°e°°ooooooooooeooooooooooooooooo°ooooooooooooeoooooooeooooooo VAR 0249 Q.45 OCCUP MD=97 OR GE 98 REF 0249 LOC 296 WIDTH 2 DK 5 COL 38-39

0.45. What kind of work do you (did you normally) do? That is, what is (was) your job called?

Codes classified from the U.S. Census Dictionary of Occupational Titles

644 01. Professional - Technical 258 02. Managers - Administration 590 03. Clerical - Sales 198 04. Craftsmen 181 05. Operatives 118 06. Laborers 272 07. Services workers 1897. Refused 98. DK 110

(CONTINUED)

1031 99. NA/Inap. eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeoeoeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeooeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeo

VAR 0250 Q.45B WRKWHR ME)=7 OR GE 9 REF 0250 LOC 298 WIDTH I DK 5 COL 40

Q.45B. Where is your (main) place of work? Is it in (neighborhood), downtown Chicago, elsewhere in Chicago in the suburbs, or where?

494 I. Neighborhood 565 2. Downtown Chicago 801 3. Elsewhere in Chicago 244 4. Suburbs 119 5. Other

13 7. Refused 1074 9. NA/Inap. eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeoeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeoe

VAR 0251 Q.46 MARRY MD=7 OR GE 9 REF 0251 LOC 299 WIDTH I DK 5 COL 41

Q.46. What is your current marital status? Are you married, living with someone, widowed, divorced, separated, or have you never been married?

1694 I. Married 103 2. Living with someone 332 3. Widowed 312 4. Divorced 156 5. Separated 684 6. Never married

17 7. Refused 12 9. NA/Inap. 111

VAR 0252 FAMCOMP REF 0252 LOC 300 WIDTH MD--9 DK 5 COL 42

Summary family composition

957 I. Married with kids 836 2. Married no kids 298 3. Female headed 44 4. Male headed 427 5. Single male 705 6. Single female 43 9. NA/I nap.

ooemoooooo• ••••••••••••eeeeeeleeeeeeeeeeeeleeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee••

VAR 0253 NKIDS NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0253 LOC 301 WIDTH I DK 5 COL 43

Number of children

0. No children

8. 8 children

Code: 0 I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 F~eq: 2031 545 398 200 77 38 14 5 2

OII+IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII+IIIIIII+II+IIIIIIIIIIII+IIIIIIII+IIIIIe VAR 0254 Q.47 SEDUC MD=97 OR GE 98 REF 0254 LOC 302 WIDTH 2 DK 5 COL 44-45

Q.47. What is the highest regular school certificate, diploma, or degree that your husband/wife (or person you're living with) has ever gotten?

58 01. None ever 255 02. 8th grade - Junior high 787 03. High school or GED 112

(CONTINUED)

131 04. AA or Junior college 303 05. BA or BS 117 06. Masters 33 07. PhD 35 08. Law or Medicine 32 09. Other

2 97. Refused 30 98. DK 1527 99. NA/Inap., no spouse

QQQQOOOQQQOO eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

VAR 0255 Q.48 SWRKNOW MD=97 OR GE 99 REF 0255 LOC 304 WIDTH 2 DK 5 COL 46-47

0.48. Last week was he/she working full time, part time, keeping house, or what?

1207 01. Work full time 87 02. Work part time 27 03. Iii, vacation, etc 20 04. Unemployed 139 05. Retired 27 06. In school only 259 07. Keeping house only 12 08. Other

4 97. Refused 1528 99. NA/Inap.

#eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee#eeeeeeeeeleeeleeeeeleeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeleoe

VAR 0256 Q.48A SWRKHRS MD=7 OR GE 9 REF 0256 LOC 306 WIDTH I DK 5 COL 48

--If not working at present:--

Q.48A. When he/she does work, is that usually full time or part time?

55 I. Full time 6 2. Part time 2 3. Varies 113

(CONTI NUED )

I 7. Refused 3246 9. NA/Inap. O°eoe°°°°°oe°o°°°e°°°°ooooeooooooooooooooooooooeoooeooooooooooe VAR 0257 Q.49A SOCCUP MD=97 OR GE 98 REF 0257 LOC 307 WIDTH 2 DK 5 COL 49-50

Q.49A. What kind of work does he/she (did he/she normally) do? That is, what is (was) his/her job called?

Codes classified from the U.S. Census Dictionary of Occupational Titles

338 01. Professional - Technical 185 02. Managers - Administration 249 03. Clerical - Sales 235 04. Craftsmen 139 05. Operatives 103 06. Laborers 146 07. Services workers 23 97. Refused 20 98. DK 1872 99. NA/Inap. e°o°o°ooeoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooeeoooeooeoooooooo VAR 0258 Q.49B SWRKWHR MD=7 OR GE 9 REF 0258 LOC 309 WIDTH I DK 5 COL 51

Q.49B. Where is his/her (main) place of work? Is it in {neighborhood), downtown Chicago, elsewhere in Chicago in the suburbs, or where?

302 I. Neighborhood 304 2. Downtown Chicago 509 3. Elsewhere in Chicago 206 4. Suburbs 90 5. Other

14 7. Refused 1885 9. NA/Inap. 114

VAR 0259 Q.43,47 EDUCFEM MD=O OR GE 97 REF 0259 LOC 310 WIDTH 2 DK 5 COL 52-53

Education of female head

104 01. None ever 449 02. 8th grade - Junior High 1320 03. High school or GED 217 04. AA or Junior college 435 05. BA or BS 185 06. Masters 26 07. PhD 8 08. Law or Medicine 55 09. Other

6 00. Undocumented code 5 97. Refused 8 98. DK 492 99. NA/Inap. eeo°eeoeooeeoooeooeooeoeeooooeoeooeoeeeeooooeeoeeeeoeoeooeeeooo

VAR 0260 EDUCMAL MD=0 OR GE 97 REF 0260 LOC 312 WIDTH 2 DK 5 COL 54-55

Education of male head

70 01. None ever 320 02. 8th grade - Junior High 944 03. High school or GED 177 04. AA or Junior college 384 05. BA or BS 184 06. Masters 58 07. PhD 59 08. Law or Medicine 37 09. Other

00. Undocumented code 97. Refused 22 98. DK 1043 99. NA/Inap. 115

VAR 0261 WRKNOWFE MD=97 OR GE 99 REF 0261 LOC 314 WIDTH 2 DK 5 COL 56-57

Work status of female head

1191 01. Work full time 279 02. Work part time 30 03. Iii, vacation, etc. 34 04. Unemployed 159 05. Retired 58 06. In school only 1040 07. Keeping house only 12 08. Other

4 97. Refused 503 99. NA/Inap.

QOOOeOOOOOOO °°°°°°°°°°°oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooOoooooooo

VAR 0262 WRKNOWMA MI)=97 OR GE 99 REF 0262 LOC 316 WIDTH 2 DK 5 COL 58-59

Work status of male head

1724 01. Work full time 94 02. Work part time 58 03. Ill, vacation, etc. 52 04. Unemployed 233 05. Retired 49 06. In school only 38 07. Keeping house only 13 08. Other

2 97. Refused 1.047 99. NA/Inap.

O00OOOOOOOOO e#ee#ee#eeeeeeee#eeeeeeee#eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeoeeee

.VAR 0263 OCCUPFEM MD-97 OR GE 98 REF 0263 LOC 318 WIDTH 2 DK 5 COL 60-61

Occupation of female head mo m ol 116

(CONTINUED)

Codes classified from the U.S. Census Dictionary of Occupational Titles

495 01. Professional - Technical 160 02. Managers _ Administration 582 03. Clerical - Sales 39 04. Craftsmen 79 05. Operatives 43 06. Laborers 206 07. Services workers

15 97. Refused 6 98. DK 1685 99. NA/Inap. eoeeeeeeeeeee~oeeeeeooeeeeoeeeeeeeeeeDeeeoeeeeeeeeeeoeeoeoeeeee VAR 0264 OCCUPMAL MD=97 OR GE 98 REF 0264 LOC 320 WIDTH 2 DK 5 COL 62-63

Occupation of male head

Codes classified from the U.S. Census Dictionary of Occupational Titles

486 01. Professional - Technical 283 02. Managers - Administration 256 03. Clerical - Sales 394 04. Craftsmen 241 05. Operatives 176 06. Laborers 212 07. Services workers

26 97. Refused 14 98. DK 1222 99. NA/Inap.

eeeoeeeeoeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeoeeeeeeeeeoeeeoeeeeoeeeeeee

VAR 0265 Q.50 CHILDRN MD=7 OR GE 9 REF 0265 LOC 322 WIDTH I DK 5 COL 64

Q.50. Do you have any children under 19 living at home with you? This includes adopted children, foster children, and 117

(CONTINUED)

children from a previous marriage.

1313 1. Yes 1982 2. No

4 7. Refused 11 9. NA/Inap.

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VAR 0266 Q.50A(1) CHLDAGI MD=97 OR GE 99 REF 0266 LOC 323 WIDTH 2 DK 5 COL 65-66

--If yes to Q.50 and child is 5 years of age or older--

Q.50A. I'm interested in the ages of your children and where they go to school. Q.50A(1). How old is the oldest child living at home with _you?

00. Less than one year

18. i8 years of age

12 97. Refused 2019 99. NA/Inap.

Code : 0 I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 26 27 48 48 51 50 41 59 79

Code : 9 I 0 11 12 13 14 15 16 .17 • Freq: 59 58 60 57 54 68 71 109 167

Code : 18 97 99 Freq: 147 12 2019 118

VAR 0267 Q.50B(1) CHLDSCHI MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0267 LOC 325 WIDTH I DR 5 COL 67

--If yes to Q.50 and child is 5 years of age or older--

Q.50B(1). What is the name of the school this child attends?

2195 0. No children 454 1. Public schools 231 2. Private schools 290 3. Catholic schools 13 4. Other, not coded 59 6. Not in school

11 7. Refused 5 8. DK 52 9. NA/Inap., college given ooo••••••••oeeo•oooooooooeoo•o•oooo•••oooeoooo•oooeoooo•oo•oooo

VAR 0268 Q.50A(2) CHLDAG2 MD=97 OR GE 99 REF 0268 LOC 326 WIDTH 2 DR 5 COL 68-69

--If yes to Q.50 and child is 5 years of age or older--

Q.50A(2). How old is the oldest child living at home with you?

00. Less than one year

18. ~8 years old

97. Refused 2576 99. NA/Inap.

Code : 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: i5 22 29 41 26 36 37 53 38 119

(CONTINUED)

Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Preq: 33 44 36 49 50 62 69 59 33

Code: 18 99 Freq: 2 2576

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VAR 0269 Q.50B(2) CHLDSCH2 MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0269 LOC 328 WIDTH I DK 5 COL 70

--If yes to Q.50 and child is 5 years of age or older--

Q.50B(2). What is the name of the school this child attends?

2674 0. No children 273 I. Public schools 115 2. Private schools 171 3. Catholic schools 12 4. Other, not coded 15 6. Not in school

7 7. Refused 4 8. DK 39 9. NA/Inap., college given

e e • • e • • e • e e e e e • • e • e e e e e • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • e e e e e e e e e e e e e

VAR 0270 Q.50A(3) CHLDAG3 MD=97 OR GE 99 REF 0270 LOC 329 WIDTH 2 DK 5 COL 71-72

--If yes to Q.50 and child is 5 years of age or older--

Q.50A(3). How old is the oldest child living at home with you?

D

00. Less than 1 year 120

(CONTI NUED )

17. 17 years old

97. Refused 2974 99° NA/Inap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 11 7 18 22 19 16 12 18 21

Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Freq: 25 31 19 25 32 28 20 11 1

Code: 99 Freq: 2974

°e°eo°o°o°°ooooooooooeooooooooooooeooooooooooooooooooeo6oooooeo

VAR 0271 Q.50B(3) CHLDSCH3 MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0271 LOC 331 WIDTH I DK 5 COL 73

--If yes to Q.50 and child is 5 years of age or older--

Q.50B(3). What is the name of the school this child attends?

3018 0. No children 125 I. Public schools 41 2. Private schools 76 3. Catholic schools 6 4. Other, not coded 2 6. Not in school

4 7. Refused 4 8. DK 34 9. NA/Inap., college given

##oee##e###ee################eeeeeee##eeee##eee#eeoeee#eeeeeee e

VAR 0272 Q.50A(4) CHLDAG4 MD=97 OR GE 99 REF 0272 LOC 332 WIDTH 2 DK 5 COL 74-75

--If yes to Q.50 and child is 5 years of age or older-- 121

(CONTINUED)

Q.50A(4). How old is the oldest child living at home with you?

00. Less than 1 year

16. 16 years old

97. Refused 3174 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 6 4 7 6 4 5 9 10 9

Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 99 Freq: 10 18 18 10 9 7 3 1 3174

° eooooeeooooeoooooleoooeoeoooeloooooooeoeooloooseoe°e°e°°$e°e°ee

VAR 0273 Q.SOB(4) CHLDSCH4 MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0273 LOC 334 WIDTH I DK 5 COL 76

--If yes to Q.50 and child is 5 years of age or older--

Q.50B(4). What is the name of the school this child attends?

3169 0. No children 55 I. Public schools 16 2. Private schools 30 3. Catholic schools 1 4. Other, not coded 4 6. Not in school 2 7. Refused I 8. DK 32 9. NA/Inap., college given 122

VAR 0274 Q.50A(5) CHLDAG5 MD=97 OR GE 99 REF0274 LOC 335 WIDTH 2 DK 5 COL 77-78

--If yes to Q.50 and child is 5 years of age or older--

Q.50A(5). How old is the oldest child living at home with you?

00. Less than I year

14. 14 years old

97. Refused 3251 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 2 3 4 6 7 8 9 10 Freq: 3 3 2 6 6 5 8 8 5 Code: 11 12 13 14 99 Freq: 8 1 2 2 3251

°°ooooooeooooeoooeoooeoooooooooeooooooooeeoeoooeooooeooeoeoeeee

VAR 0275 Q.50B(5) CHLDSCH5 MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0275 LOC 337 WIDTH I DK 5 COL 79

--If yes to Q.50 and child is 5 years of age or older--

Q.50B(5). What is the name of the school this child attends?

3233 0. No children 22 I. Public schools 11 2. Private schools 9 3. Catholic schools 4. Other, not coded 6. Not in school

I 7. Refused 123

(CONTI NUED )

I 8. DK 32 9. NA/Inap., college given

DECK IDENTIFICATION NUMBER IS '06' DK 6 COL 1--

.o.loeooooo..eoooeeoeoeoeooeoee.oooooeoleeoeeoeeoeoeoooeoooooo.

VAR 0001 ICPSR STUDY NUMBER-7952 NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0001 LOC I WIDTH 4 DK 6 COL 3- 6

ICPSR Study Number-7952 D~

emeeeee go • eoeoeee.eeeeeeeeeeoeeee...eeoee.eeeoee .gee. eoee ... e..

VAR 0002 ICPSR EDITION NUMBER-I NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0002 LOC 5 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 7

ICPSR Edition Number

D

O The number identifying the release edition of this dataset. I. Spring, 1982 release

oeo-oeoooooeeloooeoeeoeoeoeoooooooleooo..oeooeooooeo...... Iooe.

VAR 0003 ICPSR PART NUMBER-001 NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0003 LOC 6 WIDTH 3 DK 6 COL 8-10

ICPSR Part Numb.t-,

The number identifying this as part I of a one-part study. The original five files if this data collection (telephone survey, police, housing, shops, and aggregate shops) have been combined by the ICPSR into a single data file.

0 124

VAR 0006 CASEID NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0006 LOC 14 WIDTH 5 DK 6 COL 11-15

Unique case identification number

°°e°eoo°ee°eoooeeeeeegeeoeoooeoeeeoeeeeeeeoeeoeeooeoeeeooeeeoeoe

VAR 0276 Q.50A(6) CHLDAG6 MD=97 OR GE 99 REF 0276 LOC 338 WIDTH 2 DK 6 COL 16-17

--If yes to Q.50 and child is 5 years of age or older--

Q.50A(6). How old is the oldest child living at home with you?

01. 1 year old

11. 11 years old

97. Refused 3289 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 1 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Freq: 1 2 3 3 7 2 1 1 1 Code: 99 Freq: 3289

Ooeooooooooooooeoooooooooooooeooooeooeooeoooooooooooooooooeeoeo

VAR 0277 Q.50B(6) CHLDSCH6 MD-7 OR BE 8 REF 0277 LOC 340 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 18

--If yes to Q.50 and child is 5 years of age or older--

Q.50B(6). What is the name of the school this child attends? bDOO, ~m~o~

125

(CONTI NUED )

3260 0. No children 9 I. Public schools 2 2. Private schools 5 3. Catholic schools 4. Other, not coded 6. Not in school

7. Refused I 8. DK 33 9. NA/Inap., college given

°°ee°ee°°oeeoo°ooooeeoooeeoooeeoooeooeoooooeeooeoooeeeeoeeeeooe

VAR 0278 Q.50A(7) CHLDAG7 MD=97 OR GE 99 REF 0278 LOC 341 WIDTH 2 DK 6 COL 19-20

--If yes to Q.50 and child is 5 years of age or older--

Q.50A(7). How old is the oldest child living at home with you?

I 02. 2 years old I 04. 4 years old 3 05. 5 years old I 09. 9 years old I 10. 10 years old

97. Refused 3303 99. NA/Inap.

eoeeooeeooeeoeeoooooooooooeoooeooo.eooooooooeooooooooeeoeoeeeooe

VAR 0279 Q.50B(7) CHLDSCH7 MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0279 LOC 343 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 21

--If yes to Q.50 and child is 5 years of age or older--

Q.50B(7). What is the name of the school this child attends?

126

(CONTINUED)

3273 0. No children I. Public schools 2. Private schools 3 3. Catholic schools 4. Other, not coded 6. Not in school

7. Refused I 8. DK 33 9. NA/Inap., college given

e°e°eeee°°e°eeeeooeeoeeoeeeoeeoeeoeoeooeooeeeeeoeoeeeeeoeeooooe VAR 0280 Q.50A(8) CHLDAG8 MD=97 OR GE 99 REF 0280 LOC 344 WIDTH 2 DK 6 COL 22-23

--If yes to Q.50 and child is 5 years of age or older--

Q.50A(8). How old is the oldest child living at home with you?

I 03. 3 years old I 09. 9 years old

97. Refused 3308 99. NA/Inap. e+ll°lllollollllllel+oolllololooo++ll+llollooll+llll+lloleolooo

VAR 0281 Q.50B(8) CHLDSCH8 MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0281 LOC 346 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 24

--If yes to Q.50 and child is 5 years of age or older--

Q.50B(8). What is the name of the school this child attends?

3309 0. No children 1. Public schools 127

(CONTINUED)

2. Private schools 3. Catholic schools 4. Other, not coded 6. Not in school 7. Refused 8. DK 9. NA/Inap.- College given e°°eeeoee°e°eeeeeo'°elOOeooeeoloolooeooloeeeoeeogoeleeOelOleoe. VAR 0282 Q.50A ADDCHLD MD=9 REF 0282 LOC 347 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 25

--If more than eight children--

?

I 4. 4 additional children 3309 9. NA/Inap. e°eeeeeeolegeeeeeO.oeoololologeoeeeoeooogooeoeooeooeeeeQllO..ol VAR 0283 Q.50C(I) CHDTV MD=3 OR GE 7 REF 0283 LOC 348 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 26

Q.50C. I'm going to read a iist of statements that apply to some families with school age children. Please tell me if each statement is mostly true or mostly false in your family.

Q.50C(1). My children are not allowed to watch television until their homework is done on school nights.

704 1. Mostly true 316 2. Mostly false 39 3. NA 7. Refused 2251 9. lnap. 128

VAR 0284 Q.50C(2) CHDWALK MD-3 OR GE REF 0284 LOC 349 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 27

Q.50C(2). There are certain areas in the neighborhood where my children are not allowed to walk.

569 1. Mostly true 476 2. Mostly false

11 3. NA 1 7. Refused 2253 9. Inap.

"°°°°°''ooeoeoeooeeoeeooooooooooooeeooooeoooooooooooeoooeooooe.

VAR 0285 Q.50C(3) CHDSAFE MD=3 OR GE 7 REF 0285 LOC 350 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 28

Q.50C(3). I worry about my children's safety at school.

366 I. Mostly true 685 2. Mostly false

8 3. NA 1 7. Refused 2250 9. Inap. ooooooooooeooooooooooooooooooeoolOOlOOOoo.ooooooooooooooOOOlOl.,,

VAR 0286 Q.50C(4) CHDPARK MD=3 OR GE 7 REF 0286 LOC 351 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 29

Q.50C(4). My children are allowed to go to the park without adult supervision.

129

( CONTI NUED )

568 1. Mostly true 461 2. Mostly false

23 3. NA 2 7. Refused 2256 9. Inap.

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VAR 0287 Q.50C(5) CHDLATE MD=3 OR GE 7 REF 0287 LOC 352 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 30

Q.50C(5). My children stay up as late as they want to on weekends.

300 1. Mostly true 756 2. Mostly false

4 3. NA 7. Refused 2250 9. Inap.

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VAR 0288 Q.50C(6) CHDFRND MD=3 OR GE 7 REF 0288 LOC 353 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 31

Q.50C(6). I know the parents of most of my children's friends.

818 I. Mostly true 238 2. Mostly false

5 3. NA 7. Refused 2249 9. Inap. e 130

VAR 0289 Q.50C(7) CHDGANG MD=3 OR GE 7 REF 0289 LOC 354 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 32

Q.50C(7). I worry about my children getting involved with gangs.

418 1. Mostly true 626 2. Mostly false

15 3. NA I 7. Refused 2250 9. Inap. eooeooeeoeooooooeoeoeooeeeoeooeeeeeoeoeooeoeoooeoeooooooo~eeeee

VAR 0290 Q.50C(8) CHDCALL MD=3 OR GE 7 REF 0290 LOC 355 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 33

Q.50C(8). It frightens me when my children are late getting home and don't call meo

887 1. Mostly true 120 2. Mostly false

52 3. NA 7. Refused 2251 9. Inap. eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeoeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeoeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeleeeeeeeee

VAR 0291 Q.51 HEARDAE MD=9 REF 0291 LOC 356 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 34

Q.51. Have you heard about the Access to Excellence program in the city of Chicago?

679 1. Yes 373 2. No 131

(CONTINUED)

2258 9. NA/Inap. O°°e°°°eeeeeee°eeeee°°°eoooo~oeeeeoeoooooeeeooeoooooooooeoeeeee VAR 0292 Q.52 INAE MD=9 • REF 0292 LOC 357 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 35

Q.52. Is your child (are any of your children) in an Access to Excellence program?

76 I. Yes 604 2. No

2630 9. NA/Inap. °°°e°e°eeoe°°°eoeooooeoeeeeoeeoooeeeeoooooooeoooeeooeeeeooeeeee VAR 0293 Q.S2A(1) PRESCHL MD=9 REF 0293 LOC 358 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 36

--If yes to Q.52--

Q.52A. What program is that?

Q.52A(1). Preschool program?

72 0. Child in program 4 I. Child not in program 3234 9. NA/Inap. Ooee°oeeooeoooooooooeeoooooooooeoooooooeeooooooooooooooooeeooee VAR 0294 Q.52A(2) BASIC MD=9 REF 0294 LOC 359 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 37

--I f yes to Q. 52--

Q.52A(2). Basic skills program? D~o 132

(CONTINUED)

66 0. Child in program 10 I. Child not in program 3234 9. NA/Inap. eoooo°oooooooo°oooooooeoooooeoooooooooeooeoooooooooooeeoooooooo VAR 0295 Q.52A(3) CLASSIC MD=9 REF 0295 LOC 360 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 38

--If yes to Q.52--

Q.52A(3). Classical schools?

73 0. Child in program 3 I. Child not in program 3234 9. NA/Inap. eoeeoooeeoooooooooooeo'eoooooooooooooeoeeooooooooooooooooooeoooo VAR 0296 Q.52A(4) ESLC MD=9 REF 0296 LOC 361 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 39

--If yes to Q.52--

Q.52A(4). Elementary School Language Center?

68 0. Child in program 8 I. Child not in program 3234 9. NA/Inap. 133

VAR 0297 Q.52A(5) CTRLANG MD=9 REF 0297 LOC 362 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 40

--If yes to Q.52--

Q.52A(5). Centers for Languages?

72 0. Child in program 4 I. Child not in program 3234 9. NA/Inap.

VAR 0298 Q.52A(6) HSBC MD=9 REF 0298 LOC 363 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 41

--If yes to Q.52--

Q.52A(6). High School Bilingual Center?

74 0. Child in program 2 I. Child not in program

3234 9. NA/Inap.

:i< eeeeeeeeeeeeeet,lleelellleeelleleeeeemleeeeeeleeleeeleleeelllee

+. VAR 0299 Q.52A(7) HSPCAC MD=9 REF 0299 LOC 364 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 42

--If yes to Q.52--

Q.52A(7). High School Performing and Creative Arts Centers? m~ ~D~DDmU 0 134

(CONTINUED)

72 0. Child in program 4 I. Child not in program 3234 9. NA/Inap. ee°eooooooooeoo°°ooooooeoooooooooooeoooeoooooeeoooooeeoooeooeoo VAR 0300 Q.52A(8) CDC MD=9 REF 0300 LOC 365 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 43

--If yes to Q.52--

Q.52A(8). Career Development Centers?

75 0. Child in program I I. Child not in program 3234 9. NA/Inap. e°ee°leeeoeeooooeoeleeeooeeeooooeoooeooeeeoeeloeoeoeooeeeooeeeo VAR 0301 Q.52A(9) TCHS MD=9 REF 0301 LOC 366 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 44

--If yes to Q.52--

Q.52A(9). Technical Centers - High Schools

75 0. Child in program 2 I. Child not in program 3233 9. NA/Inap. 135

VAR 0302 Q.52A(10) CWPE REF 0302 LOC 367 WIDTH MD=9 DK 6 COL 4 5

--If yes to 0.52--

Q.52A(10). City-wide Permissive Enrollment?

75 0. Child in program 2 1. Child not in program

3233 9. NA/Inap. eee°e°°oo°eeeeeeoeeoooeeeooeeeeeooeeeoooeoeoeeoeeeoeoooooeeeeee VAR 0303 Q.S2A(11) DISTPRG MD=9 REF 0303 LOC 368 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 46

--If yes to Q.52--

Q.52A(11). District selected programs?

72 0. Child in program 5 I. Child not in program 3233 9. NA/Inap. e°o°eoo0ooooeoeoooooo0oeooeoooooeeooooeoooeooeoooooooooooooooeo VAR 0304 Q.52A(12) ADVPLMT MD=9 REF 0304 LOC 369 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 47

--If yes to Q.52--

Q.52A(12). Advanced 136

(CONTINUED)

74 0. Child in program 2 I. Child not in program

3234 9. NA/Inap.

°eeoooooeoeoeeoleeloeeeeoeeooeeooeeeeeooloeoeeeoeeooeeeooeeeeoe

VAR 0305 Q.S2A(13) VHCPC MD=9 REF 0305 LOC 370 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 48

--If yes to Q.52--

Q.52A(13). Von Humboldt Child Parent Center?

75 0. Child in program I I. Child not in program

3234 9. NA/Inap.

eeolooooeoeeoooeooooeoooeoeooloooeoooooeoooeooeeoooeoooeoooeooo

VAR 0306 Q.52A(14) OTHERAE MD=9 REF 0306 LOC 371 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 49

--If yes to Q.52--

Q.52A(14). (Specify) other

60 0. Child in program 16 I. Child not in program

3234 9. NA/Inap. 137

VAR 0307 Q.52A(15) DKAE REF 0307 MD=9 LOC 372 WIDTH 1 DK 6 COL 50

--If yes to 0.52--

Q.52A(15).

56 0. Child in program 20 I. Child not in program 3234 9. NA/Inap. °°°°°°°°ee°oooooooeoo6oooooooooooooooooooooooooooeooooooooooooo VAR 0308 Q.53 SATISAE MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0308 LOC 373 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 51 |

Q.53. How satisfied are ypu with the Access to Excellence program? Are you very satisfied, somewhat satisfied, somewhat dissatisfied, or very dissatisfied? --~--mDDD~

39 I. Very satisfied 23 2. Somewhat satisfied 6 3. Somewhat dissatisfied 2 4. Very dissatisfied 3 8. DK 3237 9. NA/Inap. oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooeooooooooooooooooooooooooo

VAR 0309 Q.54A LRNQUIK MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0309 LOC 374 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 52

Q.54. Here are some ways the Access to Excellence program might affect your child/children. Is the program having a great effect, a moderate effect, or no effect at all? Q.54A. First, in helping your child to learn more quickly is the program having a great effect, a moderate effect, 138

(CONTI NUED )

hardly any effect, or no effect at all?

27 I. Great effect 30 2. Moderate effect 4 3. Hardly any effect 8 4. No effect

2 8. DK 3239 9. NA/Inap.

°°o°°°°°°e°°ooooooooooooooooooeeooooooooeoeoooooeooeoooe°oooooo

VAR 0310 Q.54B XCULTR MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0310 LOC 375 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 53

Q.54B. Helping your child to understand students of other cultural backgrounds?'

21 I. Great effect 30 2o Moderate effect 7 3. Hardly any effect 5 4. No effect

8 8. DK 3239 9. NA/Inap. eleeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeleeooeeeeeeeleelOOleeeeeeeeeeeeeeoelee

VAR 0311 Q.54C WRKRACE MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0311 LOC 376 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 54

Q.54C. Helping your child to learn to work with other races? D~O~m

24 1. Great effect 29 2. Moderate effect 139

(CONTINUED)

4 3. Hardly any effect 7 4. No effect 7 8. DK 3239 9. NA/Inap.

...... "

REF 031 MD=8OR GE 9 2 LOC 377 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 55

Q.54D. Allowing you to play a more active role in school?

20 I. Great effect 21 2. Moderate effect 9 3. Hardly any effect 18 4° No effect 2 8. DK 3240 9. NA/Inap. eeeoeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee VAR 0313 Q.54E PREPOCC MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0313 LOC 378 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 56

Q.54E. Preparing your child for a future occupation?

23 I. Great effect 25 2. Moderate effect 7 3. Hardly any effect 8 4. No effect 8 8. DK 3239 g • NA/I nap. 140

VAR 0314 Q.54F SPEAKHG MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0314 LOC 379 WIDTH 1 DK 6 COL 57

Q.54F. Improving your child's speaking ability?

25 I. Great effect 28 2o Moderate effect 3 3. Hardly any effect 11 4. No effect

3 8. DK 3240 9. NA/Inap.

"'eeoeoeooeoooeoeeeeeoe'eeoeoooeoeeoeoooeoooeoooooooeoeeoeoooe.o

VAR 0315 Q.55 SAMESCH MD=9 REF 0315 LOC 380 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 58 )!

0.55. Last year, did (your child/all your children) attend the same school(s) they do now?

56 I. Yes 17 2. No

3237 9. NA/Inap.

"eeeeeeeeoeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeoeeeeeeeeoleeleeeeeeeeeeeeeleeeeleee

VAR 0316 Q.55A(1) DIFSCHI MD-8 OR GE 9 REF 0316 LOC 381 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 59

--If no in 0.55--

Q.55A. I'd like to know what schools they attended.

Q.55A(1). First, (the child/the oldest child) who goes to (name of school in Q.50) vent to what school last year? 141

(CONTINUED)

1. Not in school 4 2. Local public school 8 3. Parochical school 4 5. Other

8. DK 3294 9. NA/Inap.

OIO0~OOOOO00000QQaOOQOOOOOOOOO, OIOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOBOOOOQO000100000

VAR 0317 Q.55A(2) DIFSCH2 MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0317 LOC 382 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 60

--If no in Q.55 m-

Q.55A(2). The second oldest in Q.50 ?

1. Not in school 4 2. Local public school 5 3. Parochical school 3 5. Other

8. DK 3298 9 • NA/Inap.

eeeeeoeeoeeooeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeegeeDeeeeeleeeeoeeeeeee

VAR 0318 Q.55A(3) DIFSCH3 MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0318 LOC 383 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 61

--If no in Q.55--

Q.55A(3). Third oldest in Q.50 ? ,R~mmD~mm~

1 1. Not in school 2 2. Local public school 3 3. Parochical school 1 5. Other 142

(C ONT I NUED )

8. DR 3303 9. NA/Inap.

°°°°°°e°°°°°°°ooooooooOoeooeooooooooooeoeoootooooooooooooeeoeoo

VAR 0319 Q.55A(4) DIFSCH4 MD=8 OR GE 9 REF 0319 LOC 384 WIDTH I DR 6 COL 62

--If no in Q.55--

Q.55A(4). Fourth oldest in Q.50 ?

I. Not in school I 2. Local public school I 3. Parochical school 5. Other

8. DR 3308 9. NA/Inap. ooooooooooo "°°°''°oeoooeoooeoooooeoooooooooooooooooeooeoeseo.o.

VAR 0320 Q.57A ANOMYI MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0320 LOC 385 WIDTH I DR 6 COL 63

Q.57. I am now going to read a number of statements dealing with beliefs and feelings. Would you tell me whether you agree strongly, agree somewhat, disagree somewhat, or disagree strongly?

Q.57A. Every time I try to get ahead something or somebody stops me. D~

392 1. Strongly agree 462 2. Agree somewhat 843 3. Disagree somewhat 1507 4. Strongly disagree

14 7. Refused 75 8. DR 143

(CONTINUED)

17 9. NA/I nap.

°°De°eeoe°°ee°°eeeoee°oeeeoeeeoeeoeeeeoooooooeoooeooeOeoooeooo. VAR 0321 Q.57B ANOMY2 MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0321 LOC 386 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 64

Q.57B. Everything changes so quickly these days that often have trouble deciding which are the right rules I

518 I. Strongly agree 729 2. Agree somewhat 741 3. Disagree somewhat 1231 4. Strongly disagree 15 7. Refused 57 8. DK 19 9. NA/Inap.

°°'°°°'°°'ooeoeoeoooe.o.ooo.oe.oeoeoeooooooooo.oo.oooooooeoooo ° VAR 0322 Q.57C ANOMY3 MD~7 OR GE 8 REF 0322 LOC 387 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 65

Q.57C. Planning only makes a person unhappy, since plans hardly ever work out anyway.

470 I. Strongly agree 483 2. Agree somewhat 712 3. Disagree somewhat 1557 4. Strongly disagree 15 7. Refused 60 8. DK 13 9. NA/I nap. 144

VAR 0323 Q.57D SELFCON MD=7 OR GE REF 0323 LOC 388 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 66

Q.57D. On the whole I am satisfied with myself.

2026 I. Strongly agree 911 2. Agree somewhat 237 3. Disagree somewhat 90 4. Strongly disagree 16 7. Refused 20 8. DR 10 9. NA/Inap.

aeeeeeleeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeleeeeeeeeee

VAR 032G Qo57E ANOMY4 " MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0324 LOC 389 WIDTH I DR 6 COL 67

Q.57E. People were better off in the old days when everyone knew just how he was expected to act.

684 I. Strongly agree 502 2. Agree somewhat 790 3. Disagree somewhat 1182 4. Strongly disagree

19 7. Refused 117 8. DK 16 9. NA/Inap. 145

VAR 0325 Q.58 BUSGENL REF 0325 MD=7 OR GE LOC 390 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 68

Q.58. In general, do you favor or oppose the busing of school children from one district to another to achieve racial balance?

913 I. Favor 2082 2. Oppose

12 7. Refused 286 8. DK 17 9. NA/Inap.

eeee°eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeese "CAR 0326 Q.59 BUSOWN MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0326 LOC 391 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 69

Q.59. Would you yourself favor or oppose the busing of your children to achieve racial balance?

794 I. Favor 142 2. Oppose

7. Refused 156 8. DK 2218 9. NA/Inap. eeeeeeeeeeeee~eleeeeeee.eeeeeeeeeeeeeoeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee.e . VAR 0327 Q.60A BLKSES MD~7 OR GE 8 REF 0327 LOC 392 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 70

Q.60. I'm going to read some statements that people have made about what happens when a few black families move into an all white neighborhood. For each statement, please tell me if you think it's mostly true or mostly false.

Q.60A. When a few black families move into an all white neighborhood, they usually have the same income and education as the people who live there.

D D D mm • 146

(CONTINUED)

2089 I. Mostly true 859 2. Mostly false

5 7. Refused 337 8. DK 20 9. NA/Inap.

°'''°°'°°o'ooeoeoleooooe®oeoeeeeeoeeoooooooee.oe.ooooeeeIoeeoe.

VAR 0328 Q60B BLKRLTR MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0328 LOC 393 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 71

Q.6OB. When a few black families move into an all white neighborhood, realtors urge the people who live there to move.

1667 I. Mostly true 1120 2. Mostly false

6 7. Refused 493 8. DK 24 9. NA/Inap. oeeeoeooeooooeeoeooooooeoeeoeeeeOllleeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeoelmlele.oo

VAR 0329 Q.60C BLKATTK MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0329 LOC 394 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 72

Q.60C. When a few black families move into an all white neighborhood, the black families are often harrassed and attacked.

2059 I. Mostly true 865 2. Mostly false 7 7. Refused 341 8. DK 38 9. NA/I nap. 147

VAR 0330 Q.60D BLKCRM MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0330 LOC 395 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 73

Q.60D. When a few black families move into an all white neighborhood, crime rates usually go up.

975 I. Mostly true 1879 2. Mostly false

10 7. Refused 4 16 8. DR 30 9. NA/I nap. e°°°°e°°°°°°ooooooooooooooooooooeoooooooooooooooeoooooooooooooo, VAR 0331 Q.60E BLKPROP MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0331 LOC 396 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 74

°

O Q.60E. When a few black families move into an all white neighborhood, property values are sure to go down.

1520 I. Mostly true 1456 2. Mostly false

8 7. Refused 292 8. DK 34 9. NA/I nap. °°ooeooooooooooooooeooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo++

VAR 0332 Q.61 STABLE MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0332 LOC 397 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 75

Q.61. Thinking about the races of the people who live in (neighborhood) - that is, whether they're black, white, or hispanic - would you say the racial composition is pretty O stable or would you say the racial composition is changing? 148

•., (CONTI NUED )

1853 I. Stable 1379 2. Changing

3 7. Refused 67 8. DK 8 9. NA/Inap.

eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

VAR 0333 Q.62 NPHONES MD=7 OR GE 9 REF 0333 LOC 398 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 76

Q.62. Please tell me, are there any other telephones in your household that have a different phone number than this one?

510 1. Yes 2769 2. No

8 7. Refused 23 9. NA/Inap.

eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee/eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeleeeeeeeeeee

VAR 0334 Q.62A NPHNOS MD=7 OR GE 8 REF 0334 LOC 399 WIDTH I DK 6 COL 77

--If yes to 0.62--

Q.62A. How many different numbers are there?

410 I. One 77 2. More than one

6 7. Refused 1 8. DR 2816 9. NA/Inap. 149

VAR 0335 Q. 63A I NTRVMO REF 0335 MD=9 LOC 400 WI DTH DK 6 COL 78

Q. 63A. Month of interview

493 2. February 1142 3. March 972 4. April 635 5. May 67 6. June

I 9. NA/Inap.

VAR 0336 Q.63B INTRVDA MD=99 REF 0336 LOC 401 WIDTH 2 DK 6 COL 79-80

Q.63B. Date of interview

01. 1st day of month

31. 31st day of month

1 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 134 62 105 137 66 Freq: 129 102 108 90 99 118 Code: 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 Freq: 56 97 90 114 129 114 146 62 163 130 130 Code: 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 99 Freq: 177 124 112 50 122 112 111 71 49 1 Dmm~Do~mR"

DECK IDENTIFICATION NUMBER IS '07' DK 7 COL 1- 150

VAR 0001 ICPSR STUDY NUMBER-7952 NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0001 LOC I WIDTH 4 DK 7 COL 3- 6

ICPSR Study Number-7952

°Qoeoo°o°°eooeeeeeoeeeeeooeeoeoeoeeelloeeeoeooeoooooooogeeeQo. °

VAR 0002 ICPSR EDITION NUMBER-I NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0002 LOC 5 WIDTH I DK 7 COL 7

ICPSR Edition Number

The number identifying the release edition of this dataset.

I. Spring, 1982 release

"'eeeoeegeooeoeeeIeeeeoeeeeoeeooeooeoeeeeoeoooeeoeeeeeQeeeeeee.

VAR 0003 ICPSR PART NUMBER-001 NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0003 LOC 6 WIDTH 3 DK 7 COL 8-10

ICPSR Part Number-1

The number identifying this as part 1 of a one-part study. The original five files ~f this data collection (telephone survey, police, housing, shops, and aggregate shops) have been combined by the ICPSR into a single data file. eeeoeooeoooeeoeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeoeoeoeeeeeeeoeoeoeoooeeoeeooeeooe.

VAR 0006 CASEID NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0006 LOC 14 WIDTH 5 DK 7 COL 11-15

Unique case identification number ~m~e 151

VAR 0337 BLOCK REF 0337 LOC 403 WIDTH 5 MD=99997 OR GE 99999 DK 7 COL 16-20

Distance from State and Madison

8 00000. Block address from State and Madison 00100•

03000. 03200.

06300• 06700.

08200. 08900.

11300.

31 99997. Refused 7 99999. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 Freq: 8 23 15 21 28 44 30 16 Code: 800 900 1000 1100 1200 1300 1400 1500 Freq: 39 25 31 27 24 28 37 26

Code: 1600 1700 1800 1900 2000 2100 2200 2300 Freq: 73 66 45 39 56 41 31 17

Code: 2400 2500 2600 2700 2800 2900 3000 3200 Freq: 26 22 42 29 10 I 4 3

Code: 3300 3400 3500 3600 3700 3800 3900 4000 Freq: 2 5 8 10 4 2 5 21

Code: 4100 4200 4300 4400 4500 4600 4700 4800 Freq: 20 16 26 10 19 22 59 118

Code: 4900 5000 5100 5200 5300 5400 5500 5600 p,-q Freq: 84 124 111 99 99 135 66 35

/..= ~1 152

(CONTINUED)

Code: 5700 5800 5900 6000 6100 6200 6300 6700 Freq: 45 42 25 17 15 6 10 33

Code: 6800 6900 7000 7100 7200 7300 7400 7500 Freq: 17 25 19 25 25 24 18 22

Code: 7600 7700 7800 7900 8000 8100 8200 8900 Freq: 33 32 42 23 21 13 11 2 Code: 9000 9100 9200 9300 9400 9500 9600 9700 Freq: 7 12 7 18 11 25 32 34

Code: 9800 9900 10000 10100 10200 10300 10400 10500 Freq: 32 28 34 35 31 39 63 48

Code: 10600 10700 10800 10900 11000 11100 11200 11300 Freq: 65 40 27 26 28 28 18 12

Code: 99997 99999 Freq: 31 7

000.0.000......

VAR 0338 STREET MD=99997 OR GE 99999 i REF 0338 LOC 408 WIDTH 5 DK 7 COL 21-25

Street code

2 00001. Madison 20 00100. Monroe, Washington Blvd. 8 00150. LaSalle 42 00200. West End, Wells, Adams 11 00220. Quincy 49 00300. Lincoln Park, West, Fulton, Jackson Blvd. 4 00301. North Park 10 00332. Gladys I 00340. Orleans I 00341. Commonwealth 6 00343. Lake 22 00400. Lake View, Corcoran PI., VanBuren 10 00401. Sedgwick, Kinzie 5 00432. Hudson 3 00440. Hubbard 10 00442. Hampden Ct. 23 00443. Clark 13 00500. Congress, Cleveland, Ferdinand 3 00501. Midway Pk. 153

( CONTI NUED )

I 00528. Cambridge 9 00532. Mohawk, Race 17 00600. Larrabee, Harrison, Ohio 1 00601. Geneva Terr. 4 00634. Howe 7 00643. Pine Grove 6 00658. Erie 16 00700. Huron, Orchard, Flournoy 22 00732. Burling, Superior 1 00738. Lexington 8 00743. Lincoln 28 00800. Chicago, Halsted, Polk, Cottage Grove 9 00831. Dayton 8 00832. Rice, Green, Maryland 9 00843. Bissell, Sangamon 37 00900. Arthington, Iowa, Peoria, Drexel 10 00901. Fremon 1 00903. Mildred 2 00931. Wilton 12 00932. Walton, Ingleside 22 01000. Augusta Blvd., Taylor, Morgan, Ellis 10 01001. Sheffield 11 01032. Cortez, Carpenter 4 01038. Kenmore 24 01100, Greenwood, Fillmore, Thomas, Aberdeen 9 01101. Seminary 1 01123. Maud 4 01131. Clifton 12 01132. Haddon, May 14 01144. University 33 01200. Division, Roosevelt Road, Racine, Woodlawn 6 01231. Magnolia 15 01232. Crystal, Elizabeth 3 01243. Clybourn 24 01300. Throop, Kimbark 2 01301, Lakewood, Potomac 6 01331. Wayne 26 01332. Kamerling, Ada, Kenwood 1 01366. Ridgewood Ct. 43 01400. Loomis, Hirsch, Dorchester 5 01401. Southport 4 01431. Janssen 14 01432. Bishop 3 01443. Malta 51 01500. Blackstone, LeMoyne, Laflin 3 01501. Greenview 1 01531. Bosworth 32 01532. Ridgeland, Justin, Harper 24 01543. Charles, Lake Park 8 01553. Church 154

(CONTINUED)

19 01600. North, Ashland, Stoney Is. 63 01632. Concord, Concord PI., Marshfield, Cornell 22 01643. Prospect, East End 45 01700. Wabansia, Paulina, East End 26 01701. Eugenie, Drew, South Hyde Park Blvd. 39 01732. St. Paul, Hermitage 14 01738. Everitt 3 01739. East View Park 13 01743. Chicago, Beach Dr. 10 01753. Vanderpoel 46 01800. Bloomingdale, Wood, Cregier 9 01801. Menomonee, South Shore Dr. 2 01803. Willow 28 01832. Honore, Constance 17 01833. Hale 18 01843. Lake Shore Dr. 8 01853. Walden Pkwy. 36 01900. Cortland, Walcott, Bennett 3 01901. Baldwin, Wisconsin 36 01932. Winchester, Euclid 15 01943. Longwood Dr. 5 01953. Pleasant 1 01964. Cyril 69 02000. Armitage, Damen, Jeffery 35 02032. Chappel, McLean, Seeley 42 02100. Dickens, Hoyne, Clyde 41 02132, Hamilton, Shakespeare, Merrill 40 02200. Leavitt, Webster, Paxton 31 02232. Grant PI., Bell, Luella 55 02300. Belden, Oakley, Crandon 37 02332. Kemper, Oglesby, Claremont 36 02400. Fullerton, Western, Yates 29 02432. Montana, Artesian, Phillips 4 02443. Exchange 13 02445. Arlington PI. 2 02463. Roslyn 26 02500. Altgeld, Campbell, Essex 2 02513. St. James PI. 14 02531. Deming 22 02532. Maplewood, Kingston 7 02534. Lill 2 02540. Draper 13 02543. Coles 27 02600. Wrightwood, Colfax 10 02632. Drummond PI., Talman 10 02638. Saginaw 48 02643. South Shore Dr. 9 02700. Marquette Av., Schubert, Washtenaw 6 02732. Fairfield 12 02800. Diversey, California, Burnham 155

(CONTINUED)

3 02801. Manistee 3 02900. Francisco, Escanaba 3 03200. Belmont 14 03232. Melrose 25 03300. School, Buffalo 30 03332. Henderson, Mackinaw 41 03400. Roscoe, Green Bay 17 03432. Newport 28 03434, Avenue O 51 03500. Cornelia, Avenue N 59 03532. Eddy, Avenue M 47 03600. Addison, Avenue L 8 03632. Patterson, Avenue K 45 03634. Ewing 41 03700. Waveland, Avenue J 44 03732. Warwick, Avenue H 37 03800. Grace, Avenue G 33 03832. Berenice, Avenue F 2 03843. Indianapolis Blvd. 39 03900. Byron, Avenue E 35 03932. Dakin, Avenue D 20 04000. Irving Park, Avenue C 19 04032. Cuyler, Avenue B 13 04100. Avenue A, State Line Rd., Belle Plaine 1 04132. Warner 8 04200. Berteau 9 04232. Hutchinson 9 04300. Cullom, 43rd St. 9 04332. Pensacola, 43rd PI. 14 04400. Montrose, 44th St. 2 04500. 45th St. 3 04600. 46th St., Kenton 10 04700. 47th St., Kilpatr ick 3 04732. 47th PI., Keating 14 04800. 48th St., Cicero 3 04832. LaCrosse, 48th PI. 9 04900. 49th St., Lamon 4 04932. Laporte, 49th PI. 1 04943. Dickenson 25 05000. Lavergne, 50th St. 16 05032. Lawler, 50th Pl. 3 05046. Avondale, Madison Pk. 35 05100. Leclaire, 51st St. 1 05101. East Hyde Park Blvd., Drexel Sq. 8 05132. Leamington, 51st P1. 5 05143. Milwaukee 2 0515O. St. James 24 05200. Laramie, 52nd St. 9 05232. Latrobe, 52nd Pl. i 21 05300. Lockwood, 53rd St. 156

(CONTI NUED )

10 05332. Lorel, 53rd Pl. 13 05400. Long, 54th St. 12 05432. Lotus, 54th Pl. 29 05500. Linder, Garfield, 55th St. 7 05501. Pine 8 05532. Luna, 55th Pl. 31 05600. Central, 56th St. 14 05632. Parkside 3 05700. Major, 57th St. 10 05701. Waller 5 05731. Massassoit I 05732. Mango 23 05800. Menard, 58th St. 8 05832. Monitor 9 05900. Marmora, 59th St. 8 05901. Mayfield 22 05932. Mason 11 06000. Austin, 60th St. 3 06032. McVicker 4 06100. Meade 7 06132. Moody 2 06200. Melvina I 06232. Merrimac 5 06300. Mobile 2 06332. Mulligan 3 06400. Narragansett 2 06700. 67th St. 2 06800. 68th St. 4 06900. 69th St. 3 07000. 70th St. 2 07032. 70th PI. I 07100. 71st St. I 07132. 71st PI. 5 07200. 72nd St. 5 07300. 73rd St. I 07332. 73rd PI. 5 07400. 74th St. 2 07500. 75th St. I 07600. 76th St. 2 07632. 76th PI. 6 07700. 77th St. 4 07800. 78th St. 3 07843. Cheltenham I 07900. 79th St. I 08000. 80th St. 3 08100. 81st St. I 08200. 82nd St. I 08300. 83rd St. I 08900. 89th St. I 09232. 92nd PI. 157

(CONTINUED)

I 09400. 94th St. 3 09500. 95th St. I 09600. 96th St. I 09800. 98th St. 7 09900. 99th St. 2 09934. Beverly Glen Parkway 2 10000. 100th St. 6 10032, 100th Pl. 5 10100. 101st St. 5 10132. 101St Pl. 4 10200. 102nd St. 5 10232. 102nd Pl. 9 10300. 103rd St. I 10332. 103rd Pl. 9 10400. 104th St. 4 10432. 104th PI. 10 10500, 105th St. 3 10532. 105th Pl. 6 10600. 106th St. 3 10632. 106th PI. 7 10700. 107th St. 5 11200. 112th St, 1 11300. 113th St. 1 11400. 114th St.

8 99997. Refused I 99999. NA/Inap. leeeelleleeeleelllllle.leleeleelleleleleeeeellleelleelllllelee. VAR 0339 STRDIR MD=7 OR GE 9 REF 0339 LOC 413 WIDTH I DK 7 COL 26

Location of street in Chicago grid plan ~oR

582 I. North of Madison 402 2. South of Madison 1100 3. East of State 1218 4. West of State 7 7. ~efused I 9. NA/Inap. 158

VAR 0340 BLKDI R MD=7 OR GE 9 REF 0340 LOC 414 WIDTH I DK 7 COL 27

Location of block in Chicago grid plan

544 I. North of Madison 1757 2. South of Madison 165 3. East of State 811 4. West of State

31 7. Refused 2 9. NA/Inap.

OOOOOQO0 °°°°°°'°ooooeeeooQooooQooeoeooooooooolooeoeoo.oo.oooo.o

VAR 0341 CTRACT MD=9997 OR GE 9998 REF 0341 LOC 415 WIDTH 4 DK 7 COL 28-31

Census tract

Actual number is coded. 38 9997. Refused, no address 4 9998. Inap., over neighborhood boundary 2 9999. DK, address unknown

Valid-n=3266 Min=701 Max=7207 Mean=3950.0 St.Dev=0.0 eeoooooooeoeoooeooeoeoeoeooooeeoooeooooooooe-oooooeoooooeoooeeo.

VAR 0342 HOUSAPP NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0342 LOC 419 WIDTH I DK 7 COL 32

Respondent's block in housing appearance sample

2456 0. No 854 I. Yes 159

VAR 0343 DAYHS REF 0343 MD=9 LOC 420 WIDTH DK 7 COL 33

Day rating done

256 I. Monday 292 2. Tuesday 361 3. Wednesday 344 4. Thursday 336 5. Friday 1721 9. NA/Inap.

O•0••0•OO•O OOOOOOO•OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOeOO••OOO00OeOOOOO•O00OOOO

VAR 0344 MONTHHS MD=99 REF 0344 LOC 421 WIDTH 2 DK 7 COL 34-35

Month rating done

07. July 658 08. August 354 09. September 570 10. October 7 11. November 1721 99. NA/Inap.

0 • • • • • • 0 o o 0 O • •••eeeee.eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee•eee•eeeeeeeeeeeeeeee e

VAR 0345 DATEHS MD=99 REF 0345 LOC 423 WIDTH 2 DK 7 COL 36-37

Date rating done

01. Ist day of the month

31. 31st day of the month 1721 99. NA/Inap. 160

(CONTI NUED )

Code: I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Freq: 27 67 74 36 56 99 80 67 89

Code: 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Freq: 98 41 34 67 40 48 33 62 23

Code: 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 Freq: 66 36 56 56 41 51 71 69 13

Code: 28 29 30 31 99 Freq: 21 31 22 15 '1721 m

oooooooo °°°eooooooooooooooooooooeoooooooooooooooooooooooeo

VAR 0346 TIMEHS MD=99 REF 0346 LOC 425 WIDTH 2 DK 7 COL 38-39

Time rating done

01. 1:00

12. 12:00

1721 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 1 2 3 4 5 8 9 10 11 Freq: 153 135 121 G3 9 3 102 362 388

•Code: 12 99 Freq: 273 1721

OOOOOOOO oolooooooooeooooeoooololoooeoeoooooeooooooooooleooeoeoo

VAR 0347 STRSIDE MD=9 REF 0347 LOC 427 WIDTH I DK 7 COL 40

Side of street coded

219 1. North 201 2. South 575 3. East 161

(CONTINUED)

594 4. West

1721 9. NA/I nap.

°•eeee•eooeo•eoeooeeeoooooeeeoeooooeoeeeeeoeeoooeoe•oooeooooooo

VAR 0348 NUMQUEX MD=9 REF 0348 LOC 428 WIDTH I DK 7 COL 41

Number of times coders questioned

995 0. Coder not questioned 422 I. Questioned once 118 2. Questioned twice 38 3. Questioned 3 times 16 4. Questioned 4 times

1721 9. NA/I nap.

co••coo eeoe@ee°@••eeo°oe°ee@oeeooeoo@oeeeeeo•eoeeo, oooee•eeeooee

VAR 0349 NUNIT MD=99 REF 0349 LOC 429 WIDTH 2 DE 7 COL 42-43

Total number of units on block

01.- Unit

31. Units

1721 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Freq: 35 36 49 18 56 88 63 54 53

Code: 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Freq: 63 92 71 94 61 90 98 169 85

Code: 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 .27 28 Freq: 125 62 54 24 22 7 5 1 5

Code: 29 30 31 99 162

(CONTI NUED )

Freq: 4 3 2 1721

MD=99 REF 0350 LOC 431 WIDTH 2 DR 7 COL 44-45

Number of single family dwellings on block

00. None

22. 22 single family dwellings 1721 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 459 110 97 95 67 57 52 70 65 Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Freq: 62 56 61 55 52 46 39 42 51 Code: 18 19 20 21 22 99 Freq: 21 11 4 13 4 1721

OOO•0000 +OlO00•OOlOlln•ll••eOlO•eleOllllelllOOleO•OelOOllOOeeOe

VAR 0351 NFSINFAM MD=99 REF 0351 LOC 433 WIDTH 2 DK 7 COL 46-47

Number offrame single family dwellings on block

00. None

18. 18 dwellings 1721 g9. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 880 187 99 117 52 45 48 18 36 163

(CONTINUED)

Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14 16 17 18 Freq: 21 38 19 6 7 4 2 5 5 Code: 99 Freq: 1721

......

REF 0352 LOC 435 WIDTH 2 DK 7 COL MD=9948-49

Number of flats on block

A two-six flat includes two-story houses designed for occupancy by two families, as are common in Back of the Yards.

00. None

21. 21 flats 1721 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 Freq: 503 204 115 93 52 5 6 7 8 86 79 58 35 Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Freq: 62 54 24 36 37 37 30 22 5 Code: 18 19 20 21 99 Freq: 9 24 16 8 1721 ee°mee•eoeel•eeeeeoeeeeoee*oeeeeeeeoeeeeeeeeeeeeeoeoeeeoeeeeeoeo VAR 0353 NFFLAT MD=99 REF 0353 LOC 437 WIDTH 2 DK 7 COL 50-51

Number of frame flats on block

00. None 164

(CONTINUED) t 19. 19 frame flats

1721 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 1088 79 73 52 43 33 18 26 21

Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Freq: 23 50 16 14 12 24 7 1 3

Code: 18 19 99 Freq: 5 1 1721

oooooooo oooooooo-ooooooeeooooooooooooooooooooooocQoooQoooe

VAR 0354 NMUDS MD=99 REF 0354 LOC 439 WIDTH 2 DK 7 COL 52-53

Number of multi-unit dwellings on block

!; A multi-unit dwelling includes the type of building, whether arranged around a courtyard or parallel to the street, which has different entrances but a continuous physical structure.

00. None

o

11. ;1 dwellings

1721 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 9 11 Freq: 914 257 171 133 71 14 23 " 4 2

Code: 99 Freq: 1721

OO00oo00 llllll+++l++lllllllllllll+lllelllllllllllllllll+elll+i,

VAR 0355 NLOTS MD=9 REF 0355 LOC 441 WIDTH I DK 7 COL 54

Number of vacant lots on block 165

(CONTINUED)

A vacant lot includes only lots serving no established purpose• Unpaved lots used for parking are included here. 0. None

6. 6 vacant lots 1721 9. NA/I nap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 9 Freq: 1388 168 21 8 1 2 1 1721

• •eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee e

VAR 0356 NOTHBLDG MD=99 REF 0356 LOC 442 WIDTH 2 DK 7 COL 55-56

Number of other building us4s on block

00. NO other uses

15. 15 other uses 1721 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 1136 295 91 14 14 8 8 13 2 Code: 9 13 15 99 Freq: 6 1 1 1721

•eee•eeeeeee••e•eeeeeeee••e•e•e•ee•e•••e••eee•••ee•eeee•••e•eee

VAR 0357 NNONBLDG MD=99 REF 0357 LOC 444 WIDTH 2 DK 7 COL 57-58

Number of non-ratable and other building uses m~

O0 • None 166

(CONTINUED)

06. 6 non-ratable and other uses 2 13. 13 non-ratable and other uses 1721 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 13 99 Freq: 697 436 323 88 38 4 1 2 1721

°°°°°eeeoeoooeooeeeeeeee•eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

VAR 0358 SCHLCHR MD=9 REF 0358 LOC 446 WIDTH I DK 7 COL 59

Presence of church or school on block

1505 O. No 84 1. Yes

1721 9. NA/I nap.

•eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

VAR 0359 NPREHAB MD=99 REF 0359 LOC 447 WIDTH 2 DE 7 COL 60-61

Number of units for which rehabilitation possible

Rehabilitation includes where a building permit is visible or there is other evidence~of work bring done on property, including the presence of workmen, ladders, or stacks of building materials.

O0. None

31. 31 units

1721 99. NA/I nap.

Code : 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 167

(CONTI NUED )

Freq: 2 66 62 63 62 48 64 56 50

Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Freq: 69 81 89 72 88 70 86 115 136 Code: 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 Freq: 89 63 55 42 27 9 8 2 I

Code: 28 29 30 31 99 Freq: 5 4 3 2 1721

O • m Oooo°•''•°•°•°°°°•oooooooooo•o•oooooooooooooooooooooooooo•ooo

VAR 0360 NROOFS MD=99 REF 0360 LOC 449 WIDTH 2 DK 7 COL 62-63

Number of scorable roofs

Porch roof not included here unless it is an extension of the main roof.

00. None

21. 21 roofs

1721 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 537 224 128 90 79 57 61 53 58

Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Freq: 32. 44 49 42 44 33 12 14 12 Code: 18 19 20 21 99 Freq: 7 1 6 6 1721

OO000000 OO00000OO00000000000000 O00000OO00000000000OO000OOO.0.O.

VAR 0361 NFACADE MD=99 -REF 0361 LOC 451 WIDTH 2 DK 7 COL 64-65

Number of scorable facades 168

(CONTINUED)

The facade is the front exterior wall(s) of the building parallel to the public sidewalk. It includes the soffits of the roof and that portion of the exterior wall which forms the back of the porch. The facade also includes balconies which are not part of the entryways but does not include roofs, windows, entryways, or foundations. 00. None

31. 31 facades

1721 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 2 68 60 64 69 43 62 56 61

Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Freq: 88 56 91 81 82 63 88 114 137

Code: 18 19 20 ZI 22 23 24 25 26 Freq: 87 69 47 41 28 8 7 2 I Code: 27 29 30 31 99 Freq: 5 4 3 2 1721

• eeeeeeeeeeee•eeeeeeeee••eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee•eeeeee•eeeeeee. .

VAR 0362 NTRIM MD=99 REF 0362 LOC 453 WIDTH 2 DK 7 COL 66-67

Number of scorable window trims

00. None

31. 31 window trims

1721 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 3 68 67 59 67 45 60 57 60

Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 169

(CONTINUED)

Freq: 88 57 89 78 86 62 88 114 137

Code: 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 Freq: 87 69 47 44 25 8 7 2 1 Code: 27 29 30 31 99 Freq: 5 4 3 2 1721

eeeeeeeeeeee°Qotel•eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee.

VAR 0363 NGLASS MD=99 REF 0363 LOC 455 WIDTH 2 DK 7 COL 68-69

Number of scorable window glass items

Does not include basement windows. 00. None

31. 31 items

1721 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 3 68 67 59 67 45 60 56 61

Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Freq: 78 67 89 78 85 63 88 114 137

Code: 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 Freq: 87 69 49 42 25 8 7 2 I

Code: 27 29 30 31 99 Freq: 5 4 3 2 1721 oooeoeoooooooooooooeooooooooooe oooooo eoeooeooeooeooeoeeoeoeeoo.

VAR 0364 NINSIDE MD=99 REF 0364 LOC 457 WIDTH 2 DK "7 COL 70-71

Number of scorable inside window items mm 170

(CONTINUED)

Does not include basement, attic and sunporch windows.

00. None

31. 31 items 1721 99. NA/Znap.

Code: 0 I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 4 68 75 52 67 49 67 48 59

Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Freq: 76 67 90 78 85 69 86 122 123

Code: 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 Freq: 87 69 53 38 26 7 7 2 I

Code: 27 29 30 31 99 Freq: 5 4 3 2 1721 mm

eeoeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee•eeeeeeeeeeeeeeel•ee•eee•eeeeeeeeeeeee•

VAR 0365 NENTRY MD=99 REF 0365 LOC 459 WIDTH 2 DK 7 COL 72-73

Number of storable entryways

Entryway means all building parts which one must cross over and/or pass through to get from the path to the inside of the building and which, taken together, form a whole. Thus, an entryway may include a porch, stoop, or landing; have stairs; or consist simply of a door.

00. None

31. 31 entryways

1721 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 2 70 67 64 62 46 65 55 57 Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14. 15 16 17 171 (CONTINUED)

Freq: 78 74 87 77 81 63 90 115 140 Code: 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 Freq: 81 71 52 40 20 10 5 2 1 Code: 27 29 31 99 Freq: 8 4 2 1721

eeeeo°oooo°°oo°o°o•°°eo°oooooeoeoooooooeoeoeeoooeeoooooooeoeooo VAR 0366 NPATHS MD=99 REF 0366 LOC 461 WIDTH 2 DK 7 COL 74-75

Number of scorable pathways

Pathways are those portions of the concrete walkway(s) leading from the public sidewalk up to the building. 00. None

31. 31 pathways

1721 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 17 87 63 69 62 62 67 48 45

Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Freq: 70 64 97 85 86 77 98 88 129

Code: 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 Freq: 85 56 40 50 17 9 3 3 I Code: 27 29 31 99 Freq: 5 4 2 1721 OOOOOOO0 el+l+lllI/+IOllllllll+++ll+llllelllll+l++++llll+i/elll I VAR 0367 NPOSREPS ND= 99 REF 0367 LOC 463 WIDTH 2 DK 7 COL 76-77

Number of .possible jerry-built repairs Dmmm 172

(CONTINUED)

Jerry-built repairs include sloppy repairs - e.g. smeared cement as a consequence of bad tuckpointing, etc. - and non-matched repairs - e.g. red bricks on yellow building, etc.

00. None

31. 31 jerry-built repairs

1721 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 2 68 60 64 69 43 62 56 61

Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Freq: 78 66 91 78 84 64 88 114 137

Code: 18 19, 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 Freq: 87 69 47 41 28 8 7 2 1

Code: 27 29 30 31 99 Freq: 5 4 3 2 1721

ooooeoooooooooooooeeeeooooeoooo oeoooooeeooooooooooooeegoeoooooo

VAR 0368 NREHAB MD=9 REF 0368 LOC 465 WIDTH I DK 7 COL 78

Number of units undergoing rehabilitation

1297 0. None 235 I. I unit 55 2. 2 units

"1723 9. NA/Inap.

OOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOIOOOOOOOOOOOOOODIOOOOOgOO

VAR 0369 NROOFLW MD=9 REF 0369 LOC 466 WIDTH I DK 7 COL 79

Number of roofs with flays 173

(CONTINUED)

Flaws consist of missing material I foot in any direction. 941 0. None 108 1. I roof 2 2. 2 roofs 1 3. 3 roofs

2258 9. NA/Inap.

DECK IDENTIFICATION NUMBER IS '08' DK 8 COL 1-- 2 °ee°o°ooeooeeeo°oeeeooooeeeoeoooooeoeeoooooeoeoooooeooooooo.oo.

VAR 0001 ICPSR STUDY NUMBER-7952 NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0001 LOC I WIDTH 4 DK 8 COL 3- 6

ICPSR Study Number-7952

eoeeeeoooeoooeooeooooeeoooooooeooooooeooeooooooooooeoooooooeoo.o

VAR 0002 ICPSR EDITION NUMBER-I NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0002 LOC 5 WIDTH I DK 8 COL 7

~CPSR Edition Number

The number identifying the release edition of this dataset. I. Spring, 1982 release °eoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooeooooeooooooo.oo

VAR 0003 ICPSR PART NUMBER-001 NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0003 LOC 6 WIDTH 3 DK 8 COL 8-10

ICPSR Part Number-1

The number identifying this a part 1 of a one-part study. The original five files i~ this data collection (telephone survey, police, housing, shops, and aggregate O shops) have been combined by the ICPSR into a single data 174

(CONTI NUED )

file• °eoeeoooo°oeoeoooeoeoooeooQooooooooooooooooooooooooooeoeoooeooo

VAR 0006 CASEID NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0006 LOC 14 WIDTH 5 DK 8 COL 11-15

Unique case identification number °°°°°°°°°°°•°ooeooeoooooooeoooooooooeooooeooeoeoooooooeoooo•ooo VAR 0370 NFACFLW MD=99 REF 0370 LOC 467 WIDTH 2 DE 8 COL 16-17

Number of facades with flaws

Flaws could include absent or missing paint, missing material (both the outer covering material and the ornamentation), or misalignmknt.

00. None

14. 14 facades

1723 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 381 312 239 203 209 88 65 39 9

Code: 9 10 12 14 99 Freq: 21 6 13 2 1723

eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee•eeeee••ee•

VAR 0371 NTRMFLW MD=99 REF 0371 LOC 469 WIDTH 2 DK 8 COL 18-19

Number of window trim flaws mDmn

A window is affected by peeling paint if the material underneath is visible along one whole side of the window. 175

(CONTI NUED )

Basement windows are not included. 00. None

14. ~4 flaws

1724 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 246 304 227 220 192 119 99 72 34

Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14 99 Freq: 29 17 10 7 6 4 1724

oooeoooo "°''''°'°°°'''°oooooeooooooooooooooeoeooooooooooooooooe

VAR 0372 NGLSFLW MD=9 REF 0372 LOC 471 WIDTH I DK 8 COL 20

Number of window glass flaws

Broken means that a piece of glass larger than a bullet hole is missing. Windows that are cracked, taped, or covered with plastic are not included unless missing glass is visible.

1384 0. None 164 I. I flaw 29 2. 2 flaws 9 3. 3 flaws

1724 9. NA/I nap.

O e o o " • • • • • • • • • • • • • • o e O o O . o o o . . o . O o O o . . O o o e o . . . o O . i o . o o o o . e . e I e I

VAR 0373 NINSFLW MD=9 REF 0373 LOC 472 WIDTH I DK 8 COL 21

Number of inside window flaws

Flaws could include makeshift covered (covered inside with newspapers, a torn sheet, etc.) or bare (no curtains, shade, 176

(CONTI NUED )

blind, plants, etc.).

1231 0. None 253 1. 1 flaw 90 2. 2 flaws 93. 3 flaws 2 4. 4 flaws I725 9. NA/I nap.

°•°°eeo•eeo•o.°•o•oeooe•oe•eooeoeoooeeeeeeeeeeeooeooeeeeeoeeoeoe

VAR 0374 NENTFLW MD=99 REF 0374 LOC 473 WIDTH 2 DK 8 COL 22-23

Number of entryway flaws

Flaws could include missing material of any type - roof shingles, concrete from the.landing, wood from the wall, etc. - misalignment, or a broken door. 00o None

17. 17 flaws

1723 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 322 328 218 162 154 114 95 67 42

Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14 17 99 • Freq: 31 23 6 12 7 4 2 1723

VAR 0375 NPATNFLW MD=9 REF 0375 LOC 475 WIDTH I DK 8 COL 24

Number of pathway flaws

Flaws could include missing concrete which may be completely absent or deeply eroded• 177

(CONTINUED)

0. None

8. 8 flaws 1738 9. NA/I nap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 8 9 Freq: 705 441 230 130 50 3 10 3 1738 D D

eooeeeeeoeeeeeeeeeeoeeeeeeeeeeeeeemeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeoeee e

VAR 0376 NJERREPS MD=9 REF 0376 LOC 476 WIDTH I DR 8 COL 25

Number of jerry-built repairs

0. None

8. 8 jerry-built repairs 1723 9. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 1011 315 173 41 28 10 4 2 3

Code: 9 Freq: 1723 ~mmm~m~mm~ 00eggDO0 eeeeeeeueeeeeeeoeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeoeoeeeeeeoeeeeeeeoeeee

VAR 0377 NABANI MD=9 REF 0377 LOC 477 WIDTH I DK 8 COL 26

Number of abandoned single family dwellings - flat

Abandonment covers buildings that are boarded up, partially demolished, has an FBI sign, or has all windows broken out. 1506 O. None 178

(CONTINUED)

68 1. 1 dwelling 10 2. 2 dwellings 2 3. 3 dwellings 1 4. 4 dwellings 1723 9. NA/Inap.

"'''''''''''''''''...... eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee. VAR 0378 NABAN2 MD=9 REF 0378 LOC 478 WIDTH I DK 8 COL 27

Number of abandoned multi-unit dwellings and other buildings

1561 0. None 23 1. 1 dwelling 3 2. 2 dwellings

1723 9. NA/Inap.

...... VAR 0379 NNOLANSC MD=99 REF 0379 LOC 479 WIDTH 2 DK 8 COL 28-29

Number of lawns without landscaping

Landscaping and decoration does not include beds overgrown with weeds or flowers grown randomly, bushes along the foundation of the structure unless they are set off by bricks, stones, etc., privet hedges if they are the only items present, or vegetable gardens. 00. None

22. 22 lawns 1721 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 159 156 177 177 152 147 133 86 91 179

(CONTINUED)

Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Freq: 80 60 41 39 22 38 8 11 5 Code: 18 22 99 Freq: I 6 1721

°°°e°eeoo°oooog@ooooooooooooooeooooeooooooQQooooo•ooooooeoooo• o

VAR 0380 NLAWNS MD=99 REF 0380 LOC 481 WIDTH 2 DK 8 COL 30-31

Number of lawns for which neglect possible

Neglect includes grass or weeds 10" high and bare spots over 25~ of the area. Cleared areas of beds are not counted as bare spots.

00. None

31. 31 lawns

1721 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 17 48 82 69 86 64 50 49 65 Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Freq: 68 47 112 97 82 94 96 95 127

Code: 18 19 20 21 22 23 26 27 29 Freq: 68 66 51 22 12 7 3 6 4 Code: 31 99 Freq: 2 1721

• • • • 0 [email protected]

VAR 0381 NPLITLWN MD=99 REF 0381 LOC 483 WI DTH 2 DK "8 COL 32- 33

Number of lawns scorable for litter 180

(CONTINUED)

Litter includes large refuse like newspapers, paper bags, etc., and cans.

00. None

31. 31 lawns

1721 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 15 37 62 70 65 77 64 57 39

Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Freq: 73 49 102 94 61 75 111 107 126

Code: 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 27 Freq: 88 77 32 58 24 8 3 3 6 Code: 29 31 99 Freq: 4 2 1721

oolooooooooeooooooeoooe.o •'''eeeeeeeeeoeeeeeeoeeoooo~oooooooooo

VAR 0382 NPCANSLN MD=99 REF 0382 LOC 485 WIDTH 2 DK 8 COL 34-35

Number of lawns scorable for cans

00. None

31. 31 lawns

1721 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 15 37 62 70 65 77 64 57 39

Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Freq: 72 50 102 94 61 75 111 107 126

Code: 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 27 Freq: 88 77 32 58 24 8 3. 3 6 181

{ CONTI NUED )

Code: 29 31 99 Freq: 4 2 1721

°•°°••°•••°•°°°•°°•°°°••eoooooooeooooeoooeoooooo•o•ooooooooooe• VAR 0383 NPLARGLN MD=99 REF 0383 LOC 487 WIDTH 2 DK 8 COL 36-37

Number of lawns scorable for large litter

Large litter includes non-combustible items like mattresses, refrigerators, tires, furniture, and abandoned cars. It does not include those items that are rehab-related. 00. None

31. 31 lawns 1721 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 14 37 61 65 57 77 62 52 54

Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Freq: 68 50 102 78 75 70 116 109 123

Code: 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 27 Freq: 86 89 31 50 37 8 3 3 6 Code: 29 31 99 Freq: 4 2 1721

°°oeeooooooeooooooooooooo °°oooeoooooooooooooooooooooooooooo.ooo VAR 0384 NNEGLAWN MD=99 REF 0384 LOC 489 WIDTH 2 DK 8 COL 38-39

Number of lawns showing neglect m

00. None I

182

(CONTINUED)

12. 12 lawns

1738 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 719 295 127 151 97 63 34 19 27

Code: 9 10 11 12 99 Preq: 11 22 1 6 1738

•°eoeo°ooe°eoe°ooeoeooooooeooooooooeeoeeeeoeooeeoooeoeoooeooooo

VAR 0385 NEGLITLN MD=99 REF 0385 LOC 491 WIDTH 2 DK 8 COL 40-41

Number of lawns exhibiting neglect and litter

00. None

31. 31 lawns

1721 99, NA/Inap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 19 48 80 82 80 64 50 51 56

Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Freq: 68 47 112 98 81 94 100 91 127

Code: 18 19 20 21 22 23 25 27 29 Freq: 68 66 51 24 12 5 3 6 4

Code: 31 99 Freq: 2 1721 ooooooo e lle+lllll+lllll+lllllllllllelell+lllllll++le+lllle+elee

VAR 0386 NPLANDSC MD=99 REF 0386 LOC 493 WIDTH 2 DK 8 COL 42-43

Number of lawns where landscaping possible 183

(CONTINUED)

00. None

22. 22 lawns 1721 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 B Freq: 64 149 138 132 73 94 96 90 96 Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Freq: 116 104 82 117 76 49 36 34 15 Code: 18 19 21 22 99 Freq: 14 10 3 1 1721 °••eoo°•°ooooeoeooeooeo••eoooeoeooooooeeo•eooooooeoeoeooeeeoeoe VAR 0387 LITLAWNI MD=99 REF 0387 LOC 495 WIDTH 2 DK 8 COL 44-45

Number of lawns with 3-6 pieces of litter

00. None

09. 9 lawns 1736 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 489 382 305 197 89 60 33 11 5 Code: 9 99 Freq: 3 1736 moem

oe • • # o e o llOIOlOIIOIIOOIOIIOOoOOOOOIOOIOIIIIIIIIIIIIO. OIIOOIOIIO0 + VAR 0388 LITLAWN2 MD=99 REF 0388 LOC 497 WIDTH 2 DK 8 COL 46-47

Number of lawns with 7-plus pieces of litter mo~ 184

(CONTINUED)

00. None

11. 11 lawns

1736 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 855 347 148 94 56 23 34 6 6

Code: 9 11 99 Freq: 4 I 1736

oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooeoo°°°°°°°°°°°

VAR 0389 NCANSLWN MD=99 REF 0389 LOC 499 WIDTH 2 DK 8 COL 48-49

Number of lawns with cans ~mm~

926 00. None 379 01. I lawn 151 02. 2 lawns 78 03. 3 lawns 30 04. 4 lawns 7 05. 5 lawns 3 06. 6 lawns

1736 99. NA/Inap.

ooooo000oooo le/lel/elleeelllelelllleleelll/lllellell//le/llleel

VAR 0390 NLARGLWN HD=99 REF 0390 LOC 501 WIDTH 2 DR 8 COL 50-51

Number of lawns with large litter

1399 00. None 123 01. 1 lawn 41 02. 2 lawns 10 03. 3 lawns 2 04. 4 lawns 185

(CONTINUED)

1735 99. NA/Inap.

Oeee°•••••••°••°••••ooeoeeooeoOeeeeoeeoeooe.oooooe•••oeoeeeoee•

VAR 0391 NPLITPKY MD=99 REF 0391 LOC 503 WIDTH 2 DK 8 COL 52-53

Number of parkways scorable for litter

00. None

31. 31 parkways

1721 99. NA/Inap.

Code: I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Freq: 33 33 49 17 61 87 55 62 57

Code: 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Freq: 62 93 67 97 58 92 93 173 83

Code: 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 27 29 Freq: 130 59 55 24 22 7 5 6 4

Code: 30 31 99 Freq: 3 2 1721

-oe•.OOO eeeeeeeoeeeoeeeeeeegeeeeeoeeoeeeeoeeoooeeeeoeeeee.

VAR 0392 NPCANSPK HD=99 REF 0392 LOC 505 WIDTH 2 DK 8 COL 54-55

• Number of parkways scorable for cans

Refers to number of parkways which could have cans as opposed to REF 396 which refers to number of parkways which does have cans.

00. None 186

(CONTINUED) J 31. 31 parkways

99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 1721 33 33 49 17 61 87 55 62

Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Freq: 56 63 93 67 97 58 92 93 173

Code: 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 27 Freq: 83 130 59 55 24 22 7 5 6 Code: 29 30 31 Freq: 4 3 2

O•eooeeoeo•°•oeoooooeeeeeoe•e••oooooooeoeooooeeoooooeooeeeeeee•

VAR 0393 NPLARGPK MD=99 REF 0393 LOC 507 WIDTH 2 DK 8 COL 56-57

Number of parkways scorable for large litter

Refers to number of parkways which could have large litter as opposed to REF 397 which refers to number of parkways which does have large litter.

00. None

31. 31 parkways 1721 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Freq: 33 33 49 17 61 87 55 62 56

~Code: 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Freq: 63 93 67 97 57 93 93 "173 83

Code: 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 27 29 Freq: 130 59 55 24 22 7 5 6 4 Code: 30 31 99 Freq: 3 2 1721 187

VAR 0394 NLITPKYI MD=99 REF 0394 LOC 509 WIDTH 2 DK 8COL 58-59

Number of parkways with 3-6 pieces of litter

00. None

12. ~2 parkways

1721 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 I 2 3 4 5 6 7. 8 Freq: 377 355 255 220 160 89 70 29 21

Code: 9 10 12 99 Freq: 9 1 3 1721

eeoe•eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeell@eeeeeeeeeeeeeee•eeeeeeeeeeeeeee e o VAR 0395 NLITPKY2 MD=99 REF 0395 LOC 511 WIDTH 2 DK 8 COL 60-61

Number of parkways with 7-plus pieces of litter

00. None

14. ~4 parkways 1721 99. NA/I nap.

Code: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 658 363 166 114 106 79 41 11 13

Code: 9 10 11 12 13 14 99 Freq: 8 14 7 4 4 1 1721 • " 188

VAR 0396 NCANSPKY MD=99 REF 0396 LOC 513 WIDTH 2 DK 8 COL 62-63

Number of parkways with cans

Refers to number of parkways which does have cans as opposed to REF 392 which refers to number of parkways which could have had cans.

00. None

12. ~2 parkways

1721 99. NA/Inap.

Code: 0 I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Freq: 363 339 274 206 125 103 43 75 18 Code : 9 10 11 12 99 Freq: 19 18 4 2 1721 °°eoeoeeeeooeoooeeooooeeoeooeeeogoeeeeooooe.eoooeeooeeeeoeoeeeo VAR 0397 NLARGPKY MD=9 REF 0397 LOC 515 WIDTH I DK 8 COL 64

Number of parkways with large litter /

Refers to number of parkways which does have large litter as opposed to REF 393 which refers to number of parkways which could have large litter.

,!429 0. None 133 1. parkway 24. 2. ~ parkways 3 3. 3 parkways

1721 9. NA/Inap. 189

VAR 0398 PERSCRIM MD=-I REF 0398 LOC 516 WIDTH 3 DK 8 COL 65-67

Number of personal crimes D contract level

002. 2 personal crimes

242. 242 personal crimes

44 -01. NA

Code: -1 2 3 4 5 6 8 9 10 11 12 Freq: 44 200 38 110 111 90 52 77 178 44 98

Code: 13 14 15 16 17 19 21 22 23 24 25 Freq: 122 93 58 116 31 133 20 35 9 44 109

Code: 26 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 39 40 Freq: 72 14 57 34 ~7 24 43 42 31 19 54

Code: 41 42 45 48 49 50 51 53 54 56 57 Freq: 39 19 4 22 11 67 25 16 19 38 51

Code: 58 60 62 64 68 70 71 73 75 78 82 Freq: 45 24 85 20 18 29 15 19 21 20 59

Code: 86 93 128 149 163 192 210 212 229 242 Freq: 79 30 36 19 35 40 72 28 29 57

• O O •ooooo•oo•oo•ooooeoooooo••••o.•• O0••oooooooooooooooooo.

VAR 0399 PROCRIM l~=- 1 REF 0399 LOC 519 WIDTH 3 DK 8 COL 68-70

Number of property crimes - contract level

016. 16 property crimes

999. 999 property crimes 44 -01. NA 190

(CONTINUED)

Code: -1 16 17 30 40 49 50 54 61 62 66 Freq: 44 3 1 7 12 8 35 39 19 3 31 Code: 86 88 89 90 91 94 96 99 100 102 105 Freq: 84 25 19 3 42 53 38 35 35 81 6

Code: 106 108 114 120 128 129 133 134 136 140 142 Freq: 10 3 26 26 35 5 98 17 41 66 73

Code: 143 144 146 148 150 151 152 153 154 158 161 Freq: 18 18 42 7 4 22 108 77 14 26 73

Code: 162 163 166 169 170 172 174 176 178 179 184 Freq: 30 14 16 17 28 48 19 16 25 9 58

Code: 187 190 191 192 196 197 212 21¢ 216 218 219 Freq: 16 23 35 19 8 16 21 47 11 45 34

Code: 221 228 230 239 242 247 248 256 281 283 296 Freq: 37 14 16 14 20 83 51 9 27 21 60

Code: 298 299 301 303 320 332 333 337 345 350 357 Freq: 15 28 13 24 18 19 29 13 20 20 42

Code: 363 370 388 390 427 440 493 510 557 592 605 Freq: 30 24 67 38 38 40 39 19 35 36 29

Code: 635 730 740 758 932 999 Freq: 40 28 59 79 72 57

oooooooo•oooooooooooooooooo•oooo •o•o•OOOOO.•.o.•ooooooooooooooo

VAR 0400 NONINDEX !~=-1 REF 0400 LOC 522 WIDTH 3 DK 8 COL 71-73

Total of non-index crimes - contract level

012. 12 non-index crimes

949. 949 non-index crimes

44 -01• NA

Code: -1 12 16 20 27 35 37 42 47 53 54 191

(CONTINUED)

Freq: 44 3 I 7 12 19 3 8 10 3 35

Code: 58 64 66 69 71 72 73 81 86 89 91 Freq: 6 10 39 31 9 17 23 42 25 22 45

Code: 94 99 101 102 109 111 112 113 115 116 117 Freq: 25 28 5 50 70 51 81 35 19 18 66

Code: 120 122 123 124 125 126 130 131 132 133 134 Freq: 37 38 73 15 16 9 65 58 4 16 47

Code: 135 136 138 140 146 147 152 154 162 163 164 Freq: 19 26 17 31 8 42 28 81 42 77 11

Code: 165 167 169 171 172 176 177 188 191 192 195 Freq: 49 67 9 55 35 83 37 67 20 29 21

Code: 197 198 199 204 208 211 216 218 223 224 227 Freq: 35 24 42 9 27 51 13 65 45 13 29

Code: 231 235 245 253 264 271 284 285 289 300 315 Freq: 20 18 15 38 30 24 108 38 20 39 19

Code: 319 350 379 409 413 416 426 441 445 597 949 Freq: 59 40 36 19 79 35 29 28 40 72 57 °'°'eo°oooo•oeooooeooeoool•ooooooooooooeooeooooooooooooeoooeoeo

VAR 0401 TOTCRIM MD=-I REF 0401 LOC 525 WIDTH 4 DR 8 COL 74-77

Number of total crimes - contract level mm~m~

0031. 31 total crimes

2190. 2190 total crimes

44 -001. NA

Code: -1 31 38 54 76 104 107 115 120 Freq: 44 3 1 7 12 19 35 8 3

Code: 122 137 159 173 177 180 182 186 200 Freq: 39 31 3 23 30 31 19 10 12 192

(CONTINUED)

Code: 205 214 215 217 222 229 234 242 245 Freq: 10 59 29 25 17. 14 38 51 35

Code: 258 259 262 264 267 268 272 274 279 Freq: 81 41 48 18 8 73 19 26 35

Code: 280 282 286 291 296 297 302 303 312 •Freq: 9 35 7 14 73 22 30 25 16

Code: 316 318 321 323 324 327 330 331 334 Freq: 8 42 77 8 16 4 58 9 23

Code: 339 340 349 352 355 358 365 366 370 Freq: 17 34 48 28 25 47 16 19 65

Code: 372 395 398 414 429 435 441 448 449 Freq: 30 19 16 72 11 21 14 83 108

Code: 454 472 483 490 503 516 523 541 553 Freq: 20 31 9 28 45 51 27 13 21

Code: 558 583 590 591 614 623 626 628 632 Freq: 29 13 29 42 15 18 67 24 24

Code: 659 683 698 720 768 834 852 1068 1099 Freq: 20 38 20 49 38 39 40 19 36

Code: 1136 1141 1257 1260 1272 1383 1739 2190 Freq: 35 59 79 29 40 28 72 57

DECK IDENTIFICATION NUMBER IS '09' DK 9 COL 1-- 2 eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeoeleeleeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeoeeeeeleeeeeeeee

VAR 0001 ICPSR STUDY NUMBER-7952 NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 000I LOC I WIDTH 4 DK 9 COL 3- 6

ICPSR Study Number-7952 Dmm~ ll+oleeeooGeeleeleooeleleeeooeoeoelolloeoeleeoooeeolooeoleeeeoe

VAR 0002 + ICPSR EDITION NUMBER-I NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0002 LOC 5 WIDTH I DK 9 COL 7

ICPSR Edition Number 193

(CONTINUED)

The number identifying the release edition of this dataset.

1. Spring, 1982 release •eaeOleemeeee•eeeeeeeee•e•eeeseeeeeeeee•eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

VAR 0003 ICPSR PART NID4BER-001 NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0003 LOC 6 WIDTH 3 DK 9 COL B-10

ICPSR Part Number-1

The number identifying this as part 1 of a one-part Study. The original five files if this data collection (telephone survey, police, housing, shops, and aggregate shops) have been combined by the ICPSR into a single data ••eeeeeeeee•e•eee•eeeeeeeeeseeeeeeee•eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeo•eeeeefile.

VAR 0006 CASEID " NO MISSING DATA CODES REF 0006 LOC 14 WIDTH 5 DR 9 COL 11-15

Unique case identification number

D~ •oeeeoeeeeeeeeee•ee•eieoeeeeee••e•eeo•eeeeeeeee•eeee'•''••'•••"

VAR 0402 POP78 MD=-I REF 0402 LOC 529 WIDTH 5 DK 9 COL 16-20

Contract population estimate

00209. 209 people

11767• 1767 people

44 -0001. NA

Code: -1 209 304 338 454 732 927 967 Freq: 44 5 1 3 3 8 7 8 194

(CONTINUED)

Code: 1036 1134 1167 1253 1311 1453 1598 1648 Preq: 12 6 13 3 4 19 10 16

Code: 1662 1851 1925 1930 2010 2081 2177 2239 Freq: 17 17 14 35 9 22 14 12

Code: 2260 2267 2306 2350 2392 2399 2447 2460 Freq: 9 25 16 31 9 26 15 10

Code: 2515 2524 2525 2534 2564 2632 2634 2636 Freq: 16 39 23 23 42 25 11 22

Code: 2666 2698 2718 2808 2856 2880 2892 2953 Freq: 14 3 8 25 7 35 25 28

Code: 2962 3008 3047 3086 3089 3131 3145 3199 Freq: 21 19 34 25 38 31 14 34

Code: 3218 3309 3437 3563 3753 3761 3774 3945 Freq: 67 42 9 37 73 45 18 35

Code: 4029 4048 4143 4210 4288 4331 4339 4345 Freq: 30 8 65 48 14 35 19 19

Code: 4357 4398 4415 4431 4473 4481 6484 4492 Freq: 30 26 21 20 39 2+ 35 26

Code: 4596 4669 4708 4723 4780 4789 4846 4850 Freq: 13 29 77 40 47 41 42 59

Code: 4877 4893 4923 4938 4986 5173 5206 5210 Freq: 30 18 28 29 16 38 24 19

Code: 5318 5364 5556 5678 5825 5990 6187 6239 Freq: 27 29 38 16 73 51 83 40

Code: 6328 6335 7002 7120 7404 7418 8582 8861 Freq: 58 108 19 79 35 81 28 57 Code: 9169 10986 11767 Freq: 36 72 40 ~mm lill+llllllll+lllllle+llm+illlell+llll+elel'+lll++llLll++mllleem VAR 0403 HHOLD 78 MD=-I REF 0403 LOC 534 WIDTH 4 DK 9 COL 21-24

Estimated number of households in contract 195

(CONTINUED)

0092. 92 households

5358. 5358 households

44 -001. NA

Code: -I 92 95 133 146 273 308 333 364 Freq: 44 I 5 3 3 8 7 8 3

Code: 365 413 451 466 592 616 708 715 735 Freq: 4 6 12 13 16 17 10 35 19

Code: 757 759 773 822 855 858 867 893 912 Freq: 14 9 12 22 14 39 41 25 9

Code: 934 944 953 992 1002 1004 1020 1031 1032 Freq: 9 11 26 8 17 3 23 19 22

Code: 1070 1099 1104 1110 1117 1120 1133 1135 1146 Freq: 42 28 10 25 31 15 25 35 23

Code: 1166 1201 1208 1209 1215 1327 1408 1409 1446 Freq: 7 25 35 34 38 31 16 21 42

Code: 1460 1469 1476 1484 1524 1567 1568 1576 1583 Freq: 45 37 65 18 24 30 73 21 19

Code: 1618 1625 1655 1685 1691 1695 1737 1751 1759 Freq: 42 30 8 20 20 26 26 77 9

Code: 1778 1779 1783 1784 1791 1827 1830 1833 1867 Freq: 14 19 19 82 29 35 35 18 41

Code: 1885 1898 1917 1956 1959 2034 2037 2095 2135 Freq: 73 67 47 58 16 24 29 14 83

, Code: 2138 2151 2256 2292 2297 2337 2588 2593 2656 Freq: 58 27 40 108 30 16 81 39 19

Code: 2658 2844 2877 2907 2969 3064 3074 3334 3347 Freq: 29 i4 59 28 28 13 36 51 38

Code: 3348 3702 3916 4505 5358 Freq: 35 40 57 79 72 196

VAR 0404 INC78 MD=- 1 REF 0404 LOC538 WIDTH 5 DK 9 COL 25-29

Per capita income estimate - contract level

03692. $3,692

11976• $11,976

44 -0001. NA

Code: -1 3692 3723 4057 4097 4129 4258 4428 Freq: 44 4 6 19 28 3 16 42

Code: 4478 4632 4686 4721 4874 4875 4929 4989 Freq: 7 40 19 17 14 11 12 I

Code: 5008 5030 5068 5092 5097 5130 5184 5221 Freq: 25 25 30 16 35 34 36 5

Code: 5260 5265 5284 5297 5346 5355 5456 5523 Freq: 19 38 45 3 28 14 23 21

Code: 5532 5566 5640 5645 5679 5727 5822 5831 Freq: 13 16 21 22 14 25 25 24

Code: 5861 5951 5969 6008 6027 6063 6075 6084 Freq: 65 35 38 19 3 18 19 29

Code: 6096 6242 6307 6317 6335 6352 6356 6393 Freq: 57 108 35 47 9 48 26 8

Code: 6400 6412 6422 6437 6439 6450 6459 6464 Freq: 8 29 2O 7 12 40 42 16

Code: 6480 6488 6498 6539 6544 6552 6576 6593 Freq: 77 9 24 26 3 41 27 23

Code: 6614 6692 6720 6724 6737 6746 6756 6796 Freq: 8 2O 30 10 37 30 28 19 Code: 6830 6851 6925 6971 6979 7067 7265 7283 Freq: 14 9 72 81 20 38 35 26

Code: 7304 7334 7425 7436 7722 7976 8295 8368 Freq: 35 18 13 9 15 35 83 51 197

(CONTI NUED )

Code: 8568 85?5 8826 8864 9003 9084 9254 9264 Freq: 14 31 31 17 16 79 10 29

Code: 9271 9720 9808 9844 9944 10263 10766 10889 Freq: 73 73 58 8 34 59 39 39 Code: 10975 11178 11411 11976 Freq: 42 67 22 25 ee°eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeleeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeleeeeeeeeeee• VAR 0405 HHINC?8 MD=-I REF 0405 LOC 543 WIDTH 5 DK 9 COL 30-34

Household income estimate - contract level

07308• $7,308

32032. i32,032 44 -0001o NA

Code: -1 7308 8039 8275 8562 10223 10752 10882 Freq: 44 14 14 13 14 6 30 28

Code: 10887 11073 11447 11533 11851 12009 12063 12332 Freq: 38 21 5 16 19 19 28 16

Code: 12584 12594 12650 12919 13078 13092 13241 13260 Freq: 12 25 35 29 42 25 20 4

Code: 13332 13403 13555 13563 13573 13574 13604 13684 Freq: 38 7 23 19 34 45 11 22

Code: 13781 13812 13844 13872 13886 13991 14142 14147 Freq: 5? 3 19 35 29 8 16 17

Code: 14169 14244 14364 14415 14422 14595 14623 14631 Freq: ?2 79 28 23 9 25 40 12

Code: 14692 14703 14854 14881 14914 14960 14987 15259 Freq: 19 17 51 10 24 25 31 48

Code: 15381 15387 15470 15521 15528 15715 15760 15801 198

(CONTINUED)

Freq: 36 16 38 26 I 47 7 21

Code: 15833 15867 16164 16169 16171 16259 16334 16398 Freq: 35 18 8 3 9 27 37 65

Code: 16471 16515 16630 16645 16663 16806 16911 16944 Freq: 3 9 3 34 15 41 26 9

Code: 17134 17171 17188 17253 17338 17390 17423 17444 Freq: 59 35 16 108 30 14 77 8

Code: 17672 17744 17784 17794 17910 17981 18577 18615 Freq: 39 30 40 13 35 8 19 60

Code: 18675 18897 18953 19071 19497 19947 19969 20177 Freq: 20 26 67 24 20 42 81 10

Code: 21673 22101 23976 24734 25111 26007 26033 28592 Freq: 14 73 83 31 29 35 22 25

Code: 30037 31692 32032 Freq: 73 58 39

"e'ee'eeeeee'eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee,eeee,e,,eeeeeeeeeeeee.

VAR 0406 PERSVIC MD=-I REF 0406 LOC 548 WIDTH 2 DK 9 COL 35-36

Aggregate personal victimization _ contract level

Actual number is coded.

44 -I. NA

Valid-n=3266 Min=0 Max-9 Mean=2.9 St.Dev=2.0 ".'---,-,eee,eeeeeeee,e,e,,eee,e,,,eeee,,,eeeeee,,eeoeee,eeeeoee.

VAR 0407 PROVlC MD=- I REF 0407 LOC 550 WIDTH 2 DK 9 COL 37-38 °

Aggregrate property victimization - contract level ~mo~mm

Actual number is coded. 199

(CONTI NUED )

44 - I. NA

Valid-n=3266 Min=0 Max-21 Mean=9.0 St.Dev=5.3 emo'eeeoeeeooeoeooeeooeeeeoooeee.eeooeeoeeee...oeeoeoeoeoooeooo

VAR 0408 ANYVIC MD=-I REF 0408 L0C 552 WIDTH 2 DK 9 COL 39-40

Aggregate any victimization - contract level m

Actual number is coded.

44 - I. NA

Valid-n=3266 Min=0 Max=35 Mean=t5.0 St.Dev=8.3 "'-.ooooeoeeoo...--o...... oleeeeoeee..ooeooe....oooee.o.

VAR 0409 NPERSVIC MD=-I REF 0409 L0C 554 WIDTH 3 DK 9 COL 41-43

Aggregate number of valid respondents - contract level

Actual number is coded.

44 -01. NA

Valid-n=3266 Min=1 Max=108 Mean=42.4 St.Dev=24.1 eeeeoeeeoeeeeeeooeeoeoeeeeoeeeeleeeeeeeeee.eeeeeeoeee.eele#eee.

VAR 0410 NPROVlC MD=-I REF 0410 L0C 557 WIDTH 3 DK 9 COL 44-46

Aggregrate number of valid respondents - contract level ~property victimization>

Actual number is coded. 0 200

(CONTINUED)

44 -01. NA

Valid-n=3266 Min=1 Max=108 Mean=42.6 St.Dev=24.3 eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee. VAR 0411 NANYVIC MD=-I REF 0411 LOC 560 WIDTH 3 DK 9 COL 47-49

Aggregrate number of valid respondents - contract level

Actual number is coded.

44 -01. NA

Valid-n=3266 Min=1 Max=107 Mean=42.3 St.Dev=24.1 APPENDIX A

. Ub~ 1 - SL~gls-fmnlly hmm, etcha: attached or detached CD) 2 - 2-6 fLsc (1') 3 - l~.ciple-untc drumlins of more than 6 units GasP) 4 -. Vacmzc ZoC $ - h=k/plzyloc/pcden 6 - Sccrce/score v~ctz apar~mscs &~ove 7 m ScDOol 8 " Ch~ch 9 " Offlce, pu511:/p3.-ofeset.ouml/p~-lvsce; lusc:r.cuclm~ 10 - Zndusc:L~/warehoun/faccory - ?a:k:LuZ ~c (paved) " 12 = ZztldtnS f.a~ oCh~ eczeec (do noc race f~n:char) 13 - S£de yard, kck yard, ocher ya=d Grace coud~ of grounds £ce~) 14 - A11ey, pz'l~ce eCreec (=ace for l"Lccer oa.~7; code undo: .ul:azk-mtT") 1.5 - ~ station/ocher aucomoctve 20 - OCher CI~Lsc on 6~.kI 97 I ]~kJC ~e,~C~a~U~/qJ~C V~L~lt

7or a~ :~ icarus, code 7 ~ feature L.s :sac l~resenc or noc 'rlscLSle.

, IROIqT I~T.T. ~ 1 - BL-lck or atone 2 - SidLe, ~u, or stucco 3 - K~-l.-uce of 1 and 2 4 - Concrete 5 - ocl~c Cl~c on bar.k~

. I - ButldtnS perzf.c ~ ~LStble Or chzce £e ochre: evtdemce of wri: bt:hq done o• property, taclud.~$ the presence of ~mrlmm:, ladders, or stacks of T=u.~dlns uace=tzJ.s. Do noC code :ouctne ~m=cl work,

. JLBA2~ONI~Z~T 1 - lJu~cltu8 Ls boarded up, bu=ned ours ~)~c:Ls3~y donor.shed, /ms an Fir/: s~, or has ~ vLzzdmm bcolum ouc.

/ KEY - page 2

B. CONDITION OF STRUCTURE

I. ROOF i = Missing material 1 foot in au7 d~rectlon

. FACADE 1 = Absent or peeling paint or flaking stucco over 25Z of an area One patch misslng materLal 6" by 6" or 1 foot: in any direction Three patches missing material 3" b7 3" or 6" in an7 direction MisalIEnment of balcou/es

3. WIRDOW TRIM 1 = Absent or peeling palut on 25Z of ~rlndows Chunk of window sill or window ornamencatlon missing - 6" by 6" Shutter or awning misS~ or broken - collapsed, hanging, misalIEned

4. WINDOW GLASS 1 " For D, one pane broken or boarded up For ¥/MDD. 25X of panes broken or boarded up

. I~SIDE WI:RDOWS 1 = For D. one window ,~eshift covered or 50Z of ~ndovs bare For F. one flat's windows makeshift covered or 50Z of windows bare For ]~D, 50Z of windows makeshift covered or bare

. ENTEYWAY 1 - Absent or peeling paint over 25Z of an area Broken ot misslug steps Chunk of mlsslng materlal 6" by 6" MisaliEument of porch Broken rail/ngs or awnings Broken door

, PAZRVAYS 1 - Chunk of concrete ,cLsslug 1 foot in any dlrec~Lon Grass ot weeds &Towing 10" or higher becveen sesments

8. JERRY-BUILT RE~AIRS 1 " Slopp7 or nou-matched repair, 1 foot in any dlrecLion EEY- pase3 i

C. COnDZ220~ OF gn~S

. REGLT.CT 1 - Grass or reeds 10" lz~Jh over 25Z of m:u ]Ja~e spoC over 25Z of m:u

. IdJDSCA~Z~ ~ DEO~ZOt~ 1 - Clsm:ed beds ~rZch ~=~mrs, planes, p~.eces of b~rk, or colored peT=~les Floverbozes o= pla~Ce:s v',.Ch ~r.emr.J.o~sl 1~la=~.s lhr~med bushes s~ clestSn :Ln pLacemeuc ~see 81pecs~ Lmm ornam~cs such as statues or b:L=clb~Chs

. I.ZI"I"~ 01~ IA~ • 1 ,, 3-6 pLscu of ,d:e 2" by 2" 2 - 7 or sore p~.~css 2" Try 2"

4. C~S 0NLA~ 1 - 1 bee= ca,, or l~.quor bottle

. IA~gE ~ 0N IA~/g 1- 1 abaudon~ la:Se oh:l • co

. ~ 0W F~DMZ 1 " 3-6 pLeces of s~.ze 2" by 2" 2 I= 7 or :m:m p~.~ 2" by 2"

7. C/mS 0N ?AlUm~ /~D Zl; 1 - I 6**= can or l:.quor bocr.le

8." LAR~ ~ 01q ?~Y,uqD ~~ 1- 3. a~udc=e~ lazp obJacc

n. Jz.ocz-zzm. ¢= z n. rzcs

ILeco~d ~g ~ o~ socas~orchy sc the bocc~m of chs cod±rig sheer, pa~C~cuXarly izz rqard co the ~o~L~ov~g icsmt:

1. 1:qsys/cal ch~acCezLsr.:Lcs - d~sc~LncC~.vo copoKczpky, house.uS scoclc, o~ ocnmumcac.4.on

2. Soc~LL1. chsz2CtL-'LsC,~cs -p=esence o~ block-club s£Sns, unusus.1, k~ds " or IOVLI.s O~ acr~v~cy

3. ~bzpresstous - record eny unusual quesc~ons, reacc~.ons, or happen~Ss; noes ~.~ ~ace:'s 8ub~ec~f.ve imlpresstou o~ block appurance ~o noc seen co cor:espoud co £cs rac~n8 HOUSING A~D NEIGH30RH00D APPEARANCE RATING INS~

CCOING S~ECI~ICETIONS

A. TTFE OF STEUCTURE

1. Land use

Single-famil 7 homes which are attached, such as row-houses and to~nhouses, should be scored separately for each dvelling unit. If At is amb~Euous whether Cownhouses are owned or rented, and especially if they are a~Tanged azound a private courtyard, code as e/Char ¥ (single-fa,~ly) or ~D (~lr/pl~c dwelling), according to number of units.

T~-six flat --- includes C~,~-scot=y houses designed for occupancy by ~ families, as ere cm~on in Rack of the Yards.

Multiple-unit dvell/n~ --- i~ludes nhe type of building, ~cher arransed around a courtyard or parallel to ~he s~eet, which has diffexent an~Tances but a conLtuuous physical stTu~ure. Race this type of buildt~ as one unic unless ~he~e is a s~Tong probab~.~cy chat the structure is Joining several d~farenc buildings - in thaC case, race each separately.

VacauC lot --- includes only lots servins no established purpose. Unpaved lots used for parking are included here. Vacant lots should be raced on large l£Cter and parkway ICeas ONLY.

Land uses 5-20 should be raced'on whichever instrument Ite~s apply --- be sure to code 7 for any items which do noc apply.

Code 12 when a buJ.ldiug facing another street abuts the street.

Side yard -- includes yards of bu~ldings facing another s~Teet and yards ~.ich do not clearly belong co any part.'~.cular sEruc~ure. Side yards which do balouS to a part/ruler structure should be considered along ~vlch the rest of Its. Erounds.

2. Front ~mll material

In determluins the composlclou of the front exterior wall, exclude encryvays, foundaC/ons, eaves, ~rindow trims. I/ the structure is clearly 75Z category 1 or 751 category 2, code as such. Mixture of 1 and 2 (category 3) means less than 75Z of each material. ~ o.~.~~ ~= ~.~. ~

0"1Cl U 0 j U I:1 g eO,*rl

[. ]|~ ~,~ ! ~~~,~.,~.:.t~'|~'I"~'~,~],... ~]~g . ~l~l!]]i|~ ~,

0 ~ -sl"# S~ECS - page 3

M~sstn S material includes both the outer wall cove.t-!rig macer~al and the ornameu~acion frequenuly found on brick; or scone ¥s and MUDs. Do noc, however, include ornamenCaL~on around windows and doors --- Chess will be picked up later. The maCez'Za~ may be co~plece.ly ,~ssing or deeply eroded.

Nisal/snmeuc means ob~ous crookedness, sloping, or sagging - one end is 1 fooC h~gher than the ocher or sag~Lng in the middle so as co form a U-shape.

3. Window Cr~n

A window is agfecced by pee~.ug paine if r.he macer~,~ underneai:h is ~lsible along one ~Lole side of the ,aindow. Do noc consider basezenc viudovs.

4. 1~udow glass

Do noc consider basement viudows. Broken means r3ac a piece of ~ss larger r~au a bullac hole is missing. Do noc counc windows chac are cracked, Caped, or covered with plas~.tc unless ud.ssin$ glass £s visible.

5. Inside viudo~rs

Do noc consider basement/ act-It, and sunporch windows. Makeshift covered means covered iuside with uewspaper, a corn sheer, etc. 3ar._ee means no curtain, shade, blind, planes, etc., are visible. This ice= is iucended Co pick up vacant7 or lack of concern about appearance. If a scrnc~ure, parT/cularly a house, Cechnlcally qualifies co be scored on chls Iclm while Ic clearly doe._~s no_~c indicate vacancy or lack of concern, do uoc counc.

6. Eu~y

EuC~v means all bu~.diug parrs ~ch one must cross over and/or pass through co get from ,.he pach co che ius±de of the building and ~cLch, Oaken together, form a ~nole. Thus, an en~rFaay may include a porch, scoop, or landing; have scairs; or consist simply of a door. Include porch ceiling and roof unless iC is an exCenslon of che main roof --- then race under "Roof". Race any potion of the encryway v~Ible from ~he ~dewalk, even if £c is ou the side of the bu~.Tding.

~/ssin S material can be an7 CTPe of macerinl -- :oof shingles, cone=ace from the landing, rood from a ~vall, etc. Excepcion -- do noc code ucissing macer~al for seeps unless a whole step is broken or ,cissing. Do noc code missing material for re=ovable I items such as porch fu~Lcure -- code only for pez~anenc building pares. Sl~CS - page 4 ..

.l~s81~Kn=enc /~ u de~lned above to: facade. • CoumC save=ely •"lppled or umv~ porch roofs as mlsallsned.

IK-okeu door /~.ludos brolum door fr~ and broken Zlass 4,, or nezc Co the door.

. ]Pach~aTs

IPachvays are thoea porl~ous of the concrete mLllcr,my~) Zead~,,i; from the pub]J.c s~lmmslk up Co the bu~.ld~,,g. Race mLlksmTs lead~.u$ to the back and dr~.ves~Ts ou.!y ~ che bu.~.cL~ng has no uL1Jamy up Co tC8 ~,~,, entrance. Nlsstn~ concrete may be completely absent or deeply e=oded.

8. JezTT-butlc repL~s

81o~y rep~Lrs ~cJ.udea 8uae=ed ce:enC as a coussquence of bad Cuckpolnclng, etc. lrou-~scched repairs includes red b:tcks on a yellov bulld~, etc. Count ~ utsuacchlns vhere zpproz/aate marching uould hev__e been fusible -- noc, for aazplt, 811she dl£farencts in color of brlcka. Do noc co~c repa/:s as/=4 appropriate z~ce:tals vhtch are nuc buc unpainted......

c. c ='zo, or

7or lcm 1-$, race the area from the :Lane= edge of the pubic ELdmmlk co the 8capture. Item 6 t8 Co be need for the azea f=om the tnnar edse of the 8/devalk Co the curb; for tce~ 7 and 8, ~:clude the Sucre= also. If the prope:c7 ~s bounded by a bedze or a fence, cou:c 11ccez oucstde tc ~lth Cbe parlam7 and consider only the area ~nstde che hedp or fence u the 1ram. 7or KInDs ~Zch :Just a small co,orate apron becumen the structure and Ch8 publlc s:~mmlk, reco=d a 7 for ueglecc and cmmc 11ccez on the apron v~.ch the pazlc~y.

1. XqZecc

Do uoC count cluzed arm of beds u bare spots.

2. Lzndscap~ and docoracton

Do noc cous£der the pazlum 7 on chts £Cem. Do uoc cou=c beds ov~lrcmm vlth m or flovers rcovtnS nndomly. Do noc count bushes alone the foundet~Lon of che 8C-~cuze unleas they- aze sac off by bricks, scouea, ecc. Do noc cou:c pz-lvec hedges If they are the ou27 1teas preaenc; tmc ocher species of hedse and ~ndlv'Ldual bushes f.u beds count. Do not cou,,c veseCable 88rdens. Because bulld:Lnjs vlchouc Ls~s s~l have r.he opporcuntc7 to score on chts lcm, tC should never be coded as 7 under normn~ (-. c~=cumsca~es. 5TECS - page 5

"3. Litter on

Be sure co include large refuse like newspapers, paper bags, etc., and cans in the count of pieces of litter.

4. Large 1/tcer ..

Large I/ccec includes non-combustible items llke mttreases, =efrIserators, Clcea, rum/cure, and abandoned cars, which can " be recognized by missing license places, two or more flac or • m~ssinK Cites, t~o or nora rickets. Do noc count large Litter which is reheb-celated.

D. BLOCK-LEVEL CHARACTERISTICS

I. Physical characteristics

Distinctive CODoETaphy includes such facts as chac the block is a cul-de-sac, abuts railroad Cracks, is located atop a hill, etC. DtscincCivehousiu~scockmaansChaC the buildings differ'f=om O~ Chose of adjacent areas in their age, mater~al, or archltecCural style, e.g., a block of Viccorlan mansions amidst c~o-flacso Disclncclve ornamenCaClon includes items llke brick s/de~valks, identical light flxcures, brlghc paint, :randy large house numbers, etc., which a~e c~on Co or prevalent on the whole block.

. Social cheraccerlsc/cs

Record the text of block-club signs (name of block club and rules of the block).

Unusual klnds or levels of acclv~c 7 includes numbers of people loitering, siCCing on scoops, working on lawns, leaning ouC windows, children playing in the street, etc. 3. :r ress ons

Racers should note if the7 feel eyes scaring ac them from behind ~Tlndows, even if no one appea, rs Co question Chem.

. 0

1-16/ (street) (block) • (side)

17-25/ (day) (month/date) (time) (# questton8)

TIP! OF sTRuc'rgnz i CONDITION OF STRUCTURK CONDITION Or GIOUNDS ,L . Land Jerry Land- Lmm: Parkvay: Use Mall Rehab: ~bsn Roof Built NeKlect scape Litter Lsrse Litter Lnrse i .I 'i 28.-9 30 31 32 3~ 41 42 43 45 46 48

. ~:

P 0 AFFE~'rY B

(. 0

0 -2-

TYPE OF ~kUCTUU i CONDITION OF STRUCTURE CONDI~IOH OF ~_LnUND$ Land t Windo~ Hindo~ Ins Jerry Land- Lavn: Parkway s Use Wall B~hab Aba~ Roof Fac Trim Glass Window Rntry Paths Built Neglect scape LltterJ Ca n_n~ LarK*- Li[terICA_n~ Large 28-9 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 21 22 23 24 . 25 26 27

29 30 31 I @ 32

34 35 36 37 38 39 I 40 NORC 5098 Jan., 1979 Case No. CHICAGO NEIGHBORHOODS SCREENER (CIRCLE ALL THAT APPLY) Male Head ...... ;. "1

Female Head ...... 2 One HeadHH Only .. 3

Case compl&ted by: iiiiii Interviewer Name "In£erviewer ID~

RECORD OF CALLS " I~Cerviever Dis- DaY I Month Date Ti~e Ini 1 L~ of Week posiClo~ Commuts g~.81 P Ko ! i Tu 2 Fr $ Feb 1 AML t~e 3 Sa S March 2 l~t2 ~, 4 S, 7 April 3

Mo I ' " I Tu 2 Fr'5 Fe0 l ! AM 1

Tn 4 S. 7 April 3 PH 2 m

No l v -. Feb 1 ~ ~ AM 1 t '¥r'$ March 2 •. . Ss 6 t Rt 2 Th 4 Su 7 !k;~ciI 3

No ! Feb 1 T, 2 Fr5 AMI We .3 Sa6 March 7 ~'~ 1~2 Th& Su 7 ~ril $ I Mo 1 Feb 1 T, 2 Fr$ AM1 w, 3 s..6 J',ar =b 2 Th ~ Su7 F77 i No | Tu 2 Fr S Feb 1 AM 1 We 3 h6 April 3 Th4 Su7 I

Ho 1 Feb 1 j Tu2 Fr $ AM 1 Ve 3 Se 6 -H April 3 11,4 Su 7 | Nol S Feb ! 1~2 Fr AM1 ~e 3 Sa 6 .~rch 2 ~'~ ? April $ PM2 4 So | t ' ' %,e~" .~o l 7" " Fr I ' ~N 1 I t 6 - PH" . L_..I..~ 4. Su : I,Ip.-':! 3 b J I I

,...... _._ (SUPERVISORUSE ONLY) ~ Conversion Disposition - / - ....

-2- DECK 01

XBSTRUCTXOHS JOE PERSOHS IJOT PJ~fILI.AP. ~lTll CORRECT I~IGHBORIIOOD RA~E (Q. IA)

1|. X~r JiNfE ON LABEL ZS: RF~SPOND~NT SAYS: ILIULD:

1 l~r t~e Park Jefferson P,~.'k HorthuesC Side ----4m-(JEFFERSOtf PARX, etc.) Is a very large area in Chicago, bu~- 7

d~ythin g elae .---Ve're {just) atudyin 8 the area from J~trragansett on the vest or no n~me ~ to Cicero on the east, end from Noncrose on the north co Bel~ou~ as the south. Some people have called this Portage Park, and v~'d like Co use this n~me occuionolly dur~ the Lnte~vLev.

2 . LLnco la Park • Park West '~ Sheffield b~riBht~ood~ ~- {PARX i;EST~ etc.) £s Just a part of the area go're Lncecesced Old Toys J Ln.~

0 ! ~hsythiug else I/tare sk~dyins the area from Diversey Parkvay ou the north, or no name ~ to North Avenue on the sought and from Ashland Avenue co the Lake. Some people have called this Lincoln Park, end veOd 1fke to use this uom oc~sLonally dur~ the zntervzev

ord~ything no ~8me ~1/e're studyJJ~ the eree o~ the far v~ec side of Chicago ~hich some people have celled Austin. He'd like to use this name occasiomtlly durLns the Lnterviev.

4' Back"of the Tarda dnYthlnB go're 8tudy~.n$ the area from 6?th 8~reet co Garfield Blvd., or no aame ~ and from Wastez~ &venue on the vest to n-10ted on the eeoc. Some people have celled thls Beck of the Yards, and ve'd l£ke ! to use this n,loe'occasiona!ly dur~ the Lnterviev

$ Bayer ly e "daythLns or go're study~ the ~rea from 87th Starter Co 10?th Street veal: no name ~"'~of the railroad tracks, Some people have celled this Beverly, and weed like to use this name occasionally durlng the incet~iev

6 Ode Porh~'-.mod Ibmvood p Ihnmood La Just INert of the area uq're lntereeted in.--]

d~rthinB else __.jm~lfe*re s~dFLn8 the area from 47th Street Co 60th Strset, eud or no mine ~ ~ram Cottage Grove to the lake, Some people have called this 0 H~de Perk-I~enuood, and ve'd like to use thLs ~tme occasionally during the Lnte~viev

i

7 -South Shore Jnyr.h~ or Be're study~ the area free 67th Street Co 83rd gtroett and no mine ~ ban Stony Island co the lake. Some people have called this South Shore, 4md ve'd ILke Co use th£s name occuionall7 during the Lnterviev.

I~sc SLU dBythin8 or I/e're 8L~NlytnB the area 8outh and east of the Calumet Rive:. as ~ ~~'dP~ Ikme people have called thLs FdJst SLde, and ue'd ILke Co use Ir.b,La ~ occaa£onelly ~ri~ the t~telrviev. e

.

0 0 °1. . - . .~

-3-

. I would' llke to speak with the (SELECTED R on label) head of your household. CHECK APPROPRIATE BOX.

A. IF INFORMANT IS SELECTED HEAD, OR ONLY HEAD CO TO QUESTIONNAIRE ....

B. IF SELECTED HEAD OR ONLY HEAD COMES TO PHONE, GO TO. Q. 5 ......

C. IF SELECTED HEAD REFUSES/UNAVAILA3LE OR IS NOT " AT HOME, ASK: May I speak with the (male head/female head) of this household? •

• .,~..-.. ~ .

.....

IF INFORFdU~T is •" "OTHER HEAD, CO qUESTIONNAIRE• + ...... " + [~.

IF OTHER HEAD COMES TO PHONE, TO Q. 5 ...... w

IF NEITHER SELECTED HEAD NOR OTHER HEAD IS HOMEj ASK: When would be the best time for me to call (MALE/FEMALE HEAD)? May I please have hls/her name?

ENTER TIME TO CALL BACK, NAME AND OTHER INFORMATION BELOW AND IN

"COMMENTS" COLUMN OF CALL RECORD. • •tgtttOto/oolott lOttttltOltett

FOR CALLBACK/APPOIN~qENT enter . • •

, . .. : , AM Day Date Time PM

" NAME:

• -...... " THANK INFORMANT AND SAY YOU WILL CALL BACK...... +" ...... "......

D. IF THERE IS NO HEAD OR MORETHAN TW0 HEADS OF HOUSEHOLD, ASK: " May I speak to the person in whose'name this telephone is listed with the phone company?

*F INFO , CO TO QUESTIOSSAtRE...... F--]

.... " . • . +' ; .. -. IF SOMEONE ELSE COMES TO PHONEp GO TO Q. 5 ......

, ~- . , . +. ,+

+ IF PERSON IN WHOSE NAME TELEPHONE IS LISTED IS NOT HOME, INTERVIEW ANY ADULT IN HOUSEHOLD WHO IS 18 YEARS OLD OR OLDER.

+ .

t • . • • .... il (-5. Hello, '~"m (YOUR NAME) from the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago. We are doing a scientific study of how people feel about the neighbor- hood they live in. COTO QUESTION~AIRE.

+...... ( REFUSAL/BREAKOFF RE~ORT

1. Why were you unable to complete the 5. What reasons were given for interview? (CODE ONE) refusal/breakoff? (RECORD , VERBATD/, THEN CIRCLE ALL THAT Refusal ...... 1 APPLY.)

Bre akoff oooeeoeooeoooooo 2

2. Who refused?

Male head ...... 1 Female head ...... 2 • Other (SPECIFY)

• 3 DonOt know identity . .... 4

3. Which document was refused? Too busy ...... 1 Screener .0...0...... 0.0. 1 Doesn't like • 2 Questionnaire ...... 2 surveys ...... ( lqegative reaction • toq. # em~mm ... 3 A. At whatpoinc did refusal/breakoff occur? Not interested .. 4 Introduction ...... 1 Concerned about. confidentiality 5 During Screener ...... 2 No reason given,. (sP~ci~q. m,ri,tSER. hung up ...... 6 , ) Other ...... 7 During Questionnaire .... 3 (SPEClYYQ. NmmER

, l )

6. How did you answer the reasons given for refusal/breakoff?

e

• i ? , _ FOR OFFICE USE ONLY:

•!i ~-.. Was convers,on attempt ,de? Yes No L IF YES: ~at is f~sl disposition code? TABLE 1 EIGHT COMMUNITIES SELECTED FOR STUDY IN CHICAGO ON:THE BASIS OF CRIME RATES, CHANGE IN PROPERTY VALUES, AND RACIAL STABILITY

me t . i. i n . ! . i. i.t

RAC'IAL STABILITY

STABLE NEW BLACK RESIDENTS CRIME RATES CRIME RATES High Low High Low

pm'i Rapidly , Appreciating Hyde Park/Kenwood Portage Park Lincoln Park Beverly ' PROPERTY VALUES

Slowly Appreciating South Shore East Side " Austin Back of the Yards • ~ . . ~ . ~ - ~ • . • , . °

I lJl

O .• • • • . ,..

BEGIN DECK 01 CORFIDENTIAL Survey 5098 < February 1979

NATIONAL OPINION RESEARCH CENTER Unlvers£ty of Chicago

CHICAGO NEIGHBORHOOD SURVEY

I' ~ sou'nl s~oRE I

Case Number: [~ - 01-05/

,o.oo. 161,1 i. U_j. 07-14/

t

IF HOPE THAN OHE TELEPRONE NUMBER (PACE 31) CHECK HERE: ~'~

ik .& ,& .A. ,& .A" '& ,& t t * 'A" * * ~ t * Vk t Vk 'lk 'A" ~

OFFICE USE ONLY

ONE HEAD HH: Male ...... 1 Female ...... 2

TWO HEADED HH: Selected Hale ...... 3 Selected Female ...... 4 Other Hale ...... 5 Other Female .... • ...... 6

.,MULTI-HEADED ira:

Male ...... 7

Female ...... 8

.. • CONFIDENTIAL Survey 5098 Telephone Screener January, 1979 NATIONAL OPINION RESEARCH CENTER University of Chicago

._1. Hello, I'm (YOUR NAME) from the National Opinion Research Cente~ at the University of Chicago. We are doing a scientific study of how people feel about the neighborhood they live in. Have I reached (VERIFY NUMBER DIALED)?

• a • Yes .... (CO TO 2) ...... ;... I

~o ... (rsA~ INF S P~EDIAL)... 2 2. Is this a household or business number?.

Household ... (CO TO3) ...... I Business (THANK INF& TERMINATE) 2 Other -.(SPECIFY& TERMINATE) 3

3. We would like to assure you that any information or opinions that you glve us about your neighborhood will be strictly confidential~, however, we would like to talk only with people who live in certain areas.

IF HOUSEHOLD ADDRESS IS KNOWNI ASK A:

A. Is your residence in the (NUMBER) block of (NAME OF STREET)?

. t

Yes ....• TO 4) ...... 1

No @.@Qe@ (ASK B) ooeelooeoe@o 2 IF HOUSEHOLD ADDRESS IS NOT KNO~'N~. :

B. Please tell me on which street you live . STREET

On which block is that? .... NUMBER • ...... :., .- ...... ,m And is that north, south, east or west? CIRCLE ONE: N S E W I have to check my map to see if your residence is in the area in ~hich we : are conducting our study. I'll just be a moment. Thank you for waiting.

IF" RESIDENCE IS WITHIN NEIGHBORHOOD ~L_~_~q~TO4.

• IF RESIDENCE IS ON BOUNDARY STIPEnd: I

r • " ., . Your es~dence-falls on the boundary of one of the areaswe are interested in. Does your house number end in an odd number or an even number?

Within area coo (CO TO 4) ..... 1 Ontslde area • (READ BE~W) .°. 2 IF RESIDENCE IS O UUTSIDE OF NEIGHBORHOOD:

I'm sorry. Your residence falls outside the boundaries of the areas we are studying. Thank you very much for your time and cooperation. Goodbye. ENTER DISPOSITION ON CALL RECORD. -3- DECK01

What is the name of your neighborhood? (PROBE Some neighborhoods in Chicago I. have names such as Rogers Park or Englewood; what is the name of you r neighborhood?)

(RECORD NAME VERBATIM; IF NAME MATCFES NAME ON COVER OF QUESTIONNAIRE, CO TO Q. 2)

' 16-17/

itave you ever A. Some people have called your neighborhood (NAME ON COVER). heard this name used to describe your neighborhood?

Yes ...... (GO TO q. 2) ...... 1 18/

J No ...... (ASK B, p. 2) ...... 2

2. In what year did you move into (NEIGHBORHOOD ON COVER)?

,RECORD YEAR: 19] ! m (IF RMOVED INBEFORE 1974, SKIP TO q. 4) 19-20/ Lived here all my life (SKIP TO Q. 4) .. 85

m 3. I'm going to read a list of things some people think about when choosing a neighbor- hood to live in. Think back tow hen you first moved into (NAME ON COVER). How important was each of these in your decision to move into the neighborhood. First, the quality of public schools--~as that very important~ somewhat important, or not important? CIRCLE ONE CODE IN EACH LINE.

Very Some- ,Not impor- vhat Don't impor- impor- know rant .rant tant A. The quality of public schools 1 2 3 8 21/

Be The general appearance of the streets, 1 2 3 8 22/ srounds T and buildings in the area

C. The reputation of the neighborhood 1 2 3 8 23/

D. The availability of convenient shopping 1 2 3 8 24/

• B. The safety of the neighborhood 1 2 3 8 25/

F. The convenience of the neighborhood 1 2 3 8 26/ to place of employment G. The availability of public 1 2 3 8 27/ transportation The likelihood that property 1 2 3 8 28/ L values will So up I. Raving neighbors mostly of your own race 1 2 3 8 29/

J. Good quallty housing for the money 1 2 3 8 30/ ...... J ......

-4- DECK Ol

. We'd like to know how satisfied you are right now with various things in your I neighborhood. First, the quality of public schools. Are you very satisfied, somewhat satisfied~ somewhat dissatisfied, or very dissatisfied? CIRCLE ONE CODE ON EACHLINE.

Very ] Somewhat Somewhat [ Very I Don,t I saris- satis- dissatis-] dissatis- know fied fled fied [ lied A. The quality of public schools 1 2 3 4 8 31/ B. The general appearance of the streets, grounds, and 1 2 3 4 8 32/ buildinss in the area C. The reputation of your neighborhood I 2 3 4 8 33/

D. The availability of 34/ convenient shopping 1 2 3 4 8

E. The way property values 35/ are going 1 2 3 4 8

F. The safety of the 36/ neighborhood 1 2 3 4 8 G. The convenience of the neighborhood to place of I 2 3 4 8 employment H. The availability of public transportation 1 2 3 4 8 38/

I. The racial make-up of the neighborhood I 2 3 4 8 391

J. The quality of housing 1 2 3 4 8 40/ for the money

i

. On the whole, are you very satisfied with your neighborhood, somewhat satisfied, somewhat dissatisfied, or very dissatisfied?

Very satisfied ...... I 41/

Somewhat satisfied .... 2

Somewhat dissatisfied . 3

Very dissatisfied ..... 4

Don't know eeoeooeooo@o 8 • ~,~ ...... ;. , .~..~- .'. __ - ,

-5- Dr.CX Ol

. flow likely is it that you might move out of (I~EIGHBORHOOD ON COVER) within the next year? Will you definitely move, p:-obab!y move, is there • flfty-fifty chance of movlng, will you probably not move, :." will you drfinitely not move?

Definitely move ...... 1 42/ Probably move ...... 2 Fifty-fifty chance ...... 3 Probably not move ...... , ...... 4 Definitely not move ...... 5

o Overall, in the past two years, would you say your neighborhood has become a better place to llve, has gotten worse, or is it about the same as it used to be?

Better ...... 1 43/

Worse .* ...... 2 About the same ...... 3 Don't know ...... 8

I

. All things considered, what do you think the neighborhood :#ill be like ~wo years from now? Will it be a better place to live, w£11 it have ~ottenworse, or will it be about the same as it is now? ~t

Better • ...... 1 44/ Worse ...... 2 About the same ...... 3 Don't know ...... 8

9. Some people feel their neighborhood is • real home to them, a place where they have roots. Other people think of their neighborhood as just a place.where they ...... happen to be living. ~ich one of those comes closest to the way you consider your neighborhood?

Real home oooooooo.oOooooo.oo.o 1 45/

Just place to live ...... 2

10. Suppose a family had saved its money and was thinking aboutbuylng a house in your neighborhood. In your opinion, would they be making a good financial investment, or would they be better off investing their money in another neighborhood?

Good investment .so.go..go..so...... o@ 1 461 /, Better off in another neighborhood .... 2

Y'" I

Don' t know• oooooooooooooooe.ooooooooooo "8 ...... • ...... -.. . ~ . . - ....= .:: .: ...... ~: ~.,.i....~ ..~, ~:. ~,-_'.-~.*-sCZ~ ~ -;'.~-=L..

-6-

11. I'm going to read a list of things that are sometimes problems in neighborhoods. Please tell me if they are a big problem, somewhat of a problem, or not a problem at all to you in your neighborhood.

Big pr ob lem (ASK A) probl.mI Pr°°em L

47/ a) Noisy neighbors; people who play loud music, 2 3 have late parties, or have noisy quarrels 57/ b) Dogs barking loudly or relieving 2 3 themselves near your home 6~ c) People not disposing of garbage properly I 2 3 or leaving litter around the area 09/ d) Poor maintenance of property I 2 3 and lawns 19/ e) People who say insulting things or bother I 2 3 PeOPle as they walk down the street 29/ f) Landlords who don't care about what 1 2 3 happens to the neighborhood 38/ g) Purse snatching and other street 2 3 crimes 47/ h) Presence ofdrugs and drug 2 3 users

• 561 i) Abandoned houses or other empty 2 buildings 651 j) Vacant lots filled with trash and 3 junk -7- DECKS 01-02

FOR EACH BIG PROBLEM MENTIONED IN 9" llt ASK: A. Now I'm going to read you a list of what people might do when faced with such prob- lems. Some_ people take no action at all. Others may talk directly to the neighbor ~nvolved, or get together with other neighbors to try to solve the problem, or call ~- the police, or call their alderman or precinct captain, or call a city age:icy, or do something else. First (READ FIRST BIG PROBLEM)., Have you ever taken any action to try to solve the problem? IF YES, READ ACROSS OTHER HEADINGS IN ROW. CIRCLE ONE CODE FOR EACH. IF NO, CO ON TO NEXT BIG PRO3LEM. (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) Taken any action Talked directly Gotten together Called the Called your Called a Taken some I to try to solve with neighbor with other neigh- police alderman or city other this problem? involved bors to try to .precinct agency action* solve the problem captain Yes No Yes No Yes No Yes No Yes No Yes No Yes No ¸ 48/ 491 50/ 5l/ 52/ 53/ 54/ 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 i! *Other (SPECIFY) 55-561, 581 59/ 6o/[ 62/[ 63/] 64/ 1 2 2 1 I 2 1 2 I 2 *Other (SPECIFY) 65-661,, 691 70/J , 7l/ 72/I 73/I ,7.,4l. 1 2 2 1 ,I 1 2 21 1 2 *Other • "B~GIN DECK 02 (SPECIFY) o7-o8/ 10/ 131 14/ 16/ t 1 211/[ 12/j ,; [ I 2 2 I ,I *Other (SPECIFY) 17-18/ ,i 2oi 211 25[ I 26/ I 2 2 1 2 :.j *Other (SPECIFY) 27-28/ 3oi 31/[ 321 ~ 1 235/ I 2 NOT APPLICABLE I 2 1 ~3/I i 34112 iI ,i *Other (SPECIFY) 36-37/ 39/ t.:" I ,1,] I 2 NOT APPLICABLE] 1 2 4olj 1 ~2/j l *Other (SPECIFY) i:i 45-461 481 1 2 4911 ;o/j 522/i 1 253/ .i NOT APPLICABLE] 1 , 2- 1 1 1 *Other (SPECIFY) 54-55/ 571 -y, 61/I 1 262/ 1 2 NOT APPLICABLE I 1 2 5811 I :9, I I :o 1 1 *Other (SPECIFY) 63-64/ 66 1 2 NOT APPLICABLE I 1 2 1 :8, I 1 1 '0,1 , ,"' *Other (SPECIFY) 72-73/ i i BEGIN DECK 03 -8-

12. Please tell me if the following statements about your immediate neighbors are true or false. I True IFalse °°nknow 1 A. If I were sick, I could count on my o71 neighbors to shop for me at the super- 1 2 .8 market, go to the drugstore ~ and so on. B. When I'm away from home~ I can count on some of my neighbors to keep their 1 2 8 081 eyes open for possible trouble. C. If I had to borrow about $25 for an emergency, I could turn to one 1 2 8 09/ of my neighbors. D. It's pretty easy to tell a stranger from someone who lives in my 1 2 8 I0/ immediate neighborhood.

DO you ever read a local neighborhood newspaper to learn what's happening in your 13. neighborhood? Yes ...(ASK A) .. 1 ii/

No ...... 2 /

A. IF YES: About how" often? Would you say nearly every week, once every few weeks, or less often than that? 12/ Nearly every week ...... 1

Every few weeks ...... 2

Less often ...... 3

14. Do any of your relatives live in (NEIGHBORHOOD ON COVER)? 131 Ye~ oooeoeeoeooeeeoeeeeeoe~oo°o°e 1

No eeooeeeoeooeo~eoeooeoooo°°eooe 2

Don't have any relatlves ...... 3

f

15. Do any of your good friends live in (NEIGHBORHOOD ON COVER)? 14/ Yes oeooooeooooeQoooeoeooeoeoooe" 1

NO @oooeeeeooeooeoeoooQoeoeeooeoe 2

Don't have any good friends ..... 3 .~.-..--

-9- DECK03

16. Please tell me how often you usually do the following things. First, spend a social evening with relatives--do you do this once a week or more, about once a month, less than once a month, or never? REPEAT ANSNER CATEGORIES AS NECESSARY AND CIRCLE ONE CODE ON EACH LI!~.

Once a About[ Less than NOt. week once a~ Never or once a appli- more month[ month cable

A. Spend a social evening with relatives 1 2 3 4 5 15/

B. Spend a social evening with one of your neighbors 1 2 3 4 5 161

C. Spend an evening with friends who live outside of 1 2 3 4 5 171 (~IC~OaHOOD)

D. Spend some time with the rcople you work with away from the job 1 2 3 4 5 181

E. Chat with.your neighbors when you run into them on 1 2 3 4 5 191 the street

17. lid like you to tell me where you do the following things. First, grocery shopping. Do you do this usually in (NEICHBORHOOD), or usually outside the area?

Usually in Usually! Not neigh- outside appli- cable borhood

A. Crocery shopping 2 3 201

I I

B. Co to restaurants 1 3 21/

C. Co to religious services 3 22/

D. Do your banking 2 3 231

E. Go to a doctor or other medical facility 2 24/

Fe Buy clothing 2 3 251

C. Take your car for repaits 1 2 3 2e/ -I0- DECK 03 18. We're interested in the groups and organizations that individuals belong to. Please tell me whether or not you are a member of . . . ASK EACH ITEM. FOR EACH "YES" IN At ASK B: Does it ever meet in your neighborhood?

IF YES IN A~ ASK: AI B. Does it ever Belong? meet in your neighborhood?

Yes No Yes No

27/ 28/ I) A PTA or local school council. 1 2 1 2

2) Any group •connected with your 29/ 3o/ religion or church. I 2 1 • 2

31/ 32/ 3) Any group of renters or homeowners. 1 2 1 2

4) Any other group concerned with 33/ 34/ quality of community life. 1 2 ! 2 •5) Any recreational group or club, such as a 35/ 36/ bowling league, the YMCA, or something 1 2 1 2 like that. 37/ 38/ 6) Any ethnic or nationallty group. 1 2 1 2

39/ 401 7) Any other kind of group. I 2 ! 2

t

i J -11- DECK 03

19. Do you live in a house or an apartment?

Rouse ...... (ASK A)...... I 41/ Apartment ... (ASK B) ...... 2 Other (SPECIFY AND ASK B)

3

A. IF HOUSE: (HOUSE INCLUDES DETACHED SINGLE FAMILY HOUSE, ROW HOUSE, TOWN HOUSE, DUPLEX)

Are you an owner or a renter? Owner ... (GO TO q. 20) ... I 421 Renter .. (GO TO Q. 20) ... 2

B. IF APARTMENT OR OTHER: (I) Does your building have seven or more units?

Yes ...0...... 1 43/ " No ...... 2 O (2) Are you an owner or a renter?

Owner ... (ASK (a)) ...... ] 44/ Renter .. (ASK (b)) ...... 2

(a) FOR OWNERS IN APARTMENT BUILDINGS: Is it a condominium, or is it a cooperative, or do'.you own the entire building? Condominium ...... 1 4s/ Cooperative ...... 2 Entire building ...... 3

(b) FOR HYDE PARK-KENWOOD RENTERS ONLY: OTHERWISE GO TO Q. 20. Do you llve in any kind of university housing, either staff or student subsidized housing?

Yes o, ooooeeeooooooooooooooo 1 461 NO ooooooeooooeooooooooeooo 2 Uncertain ... (ASK (c)) ... 8

(c) IF UNCERTAIN: Describe name of building or type of arrangements.

.f -12- ASK EVERYONE: . 20. In what year did you move into this (house/apartment)?

47-48/

Lived here all my life ... 85

21. What is the total number of people who live in your household? Please count any boarders~ any college students who live there at least part of the year, and anyone else who normally lives there but is away now. (Make sure you count your- 'self.)

NOTE: IF R OWNS SINGLE FAMILY HOME, ASK Q. 22. IF R OWNS CONDOMINIUM, COOPERATIVE, OR APARTMENT BUILDING, GO TO Q. 23. IF R RENTS APARTMENT, GO TO Q. 24. IF R RENTS SINGLE FAMILY HOME~ GO TO Q. 27. t I IF R OWNS SINGLE FAMILY HOME: ] 22. In the past two years or so~ have you made any improvements or any necessary repairs on your home? That is~ such things as painting~ a new roof~ new storm windows, or adding a porch or new room. . Yes ...... (ASK A) ...... 1 51/ No ...... 2

A. IF YES: During the past two years, have you spent less than $I~0009 between $i,000 and $2~000, or more than $2,000 on these improvements or repairs?

Less than $I,000 ...... 1 Between $I,000 and $2,000 .. 2 More than $2,000 ...... 3

NOW SKIP TO Q. 27

IF R OWNS CONDOMINIUM, COOPERATIVE, OR APARTMENT BUILDING:~ 23. In the past two years or so, have you made any improvements or any necessary repairs on your home? That is, Such things as painting, new storm windows, or

modernizing your kitchen? '~ Yes ...... (ASK A) ...... 1 531

' No ...... 2 A. IF YES: During the past two years, have you spent less than $500, betwee ~ $500 and $i,000, or more than $I,000 on these improvements or re Less than $500 ...... 1 541 Between $500 and $I,000 ..... 2 More than $I,000 ...... 3

~lt-tT.T ~ V T II~ fll"f% ~ '9"7 7 ¸

1 -13- DECK 03

I IF R RENTSAPARIIqENT: ~ P 26. As far as you know, in the past two years or so, has your landlord made any improvements in your apartment or building? That is, such things as modernizing your kitchen or bathroom, fixing up the public spaces, or improving security?

Yes oooooooooeeeooeoeoooooo " 1 551

NO ooeoeooooeeeeooeooooeooo 2

25. In the past two years or so, have youmade any improvements in your apartment? That is, such things as refinishing floors or building a closet?

Yes eoe,eeeoeeeoeeeoe • oeeo* 1 561

No ...... e...... o... 2

26. Please tell me whether the following things are a big problem in your building, somewhat of a problem, or not at all a problem.

P'-~I i problemBig I Somewhat ~ot a problem I prob 1era I A. The amount of heat you get in the winter I 2 3 57/

B. Roaches, mice, or rats 1 2 3 $81

C. Bad plumbing or not enough hot water 1 2 3 59/

O. Peeling paint or loose plaster I 2 3 6Ol

E. Broken windows 1 2 611

F. Building security 1 2 3 621 i -14- DECK 03

ASK EVERYONE :

27. Now I'd llke to ask you some questions about crime. How much crime would you say there is in your own immediate neighborhood--a lot, some, or only a little?

" " A lot .... . (ASK A) ...... 1 63/ Some .... (GO TO Q. 28) ... 2 Only a little(ASK A) ...... 3 (IF VOLUNTEERED) ...... None ...... (ASK A) .... ,.. 4 Don't know (GO TO Q. 28) ... 8

A. IF A LOT; ONLY A LITTLE r OR NONE: What do you think accounts for the fact that there is (AMOUNT OF CRIME) in your neighborhood?

64-651 66-67/ 68-69/

28. Would you say that the likelihood you will be a victim of a crlme in your neigh- borhood during the coming year is high, moderate, or low?

High ...... 1 7Ol / Moderate ...... 2 Low ...... 3 Don' t know ...... 8

29. How much information doyou get about crime in your neighborhood from each of the following sources? First, do you get a great deal of information, some in- formation, or no information at all about crime in your neighborhood from local neighborhood newspapers? CIRCLE ONE CODE ON EACH LINE.

IGreat deall Some I None I

A. Local community newspapers 1 2 3 711

B. Conversations with neighbors 1 2 3 72/

C. ~ Just keeping your eyes and ears open ! 2 3

D. City newspapers, radio or television ] 2 3 74/ l . _ - ~ _ --~: -:~.~-,~-- ~.Ik'W:-~-~ e,~.--.:~.-. :- _~-~-~,;.~

,o ?--~ -15- BEGIN DECK 04

30. Do you kno~ of any speclal efforts or programs going on in your neighborhood to prevent or reduce crime?

Yes ... (~K A ~ B) .,... • J. o71

No ooooooooooooeooooooooooo. 2

IF YES: A. What are they?

o8-o9/ I0-111 12-!31

B. Do you actively participate in any of these programs?

" Yes .o.oo....o...o.o...... J,41

'~ oooooooooooooooooooooooo

31. In order to avoid crime, have you ever . . . I el N°l avoided using public transportation ...... 1 2 is/ B. engraved identification on valuables ...... 1 2 161 C. arranged to go Out vlth someone so you vouldn't have to be alone when going somewhere in the neighborhood ...... 1 2 ~7/

Do installed a burglar alarm in your home ...... 1" 2 18/ E. taken other security measures such as using timers on your lighted putting bars on ~rindows~ or adding hey locks 0.0...... 1 2 ].91 F. selected aresldence because of its particular safety features ...... I 2 2Ol G. turned down a job because of its unsafe location " ooooooooooooooooooooooeoooooooooo@ooooo I 2 21/ ~e kept a vatchdog ...... I 2 22i I. kept 8 gun or other weapon at home ...... I 2 23/ -16-

32. Is there any area right around here--that is, within a mile--where you would be afraid to walk alone at night?

Yes .0..0...... 1

NO o'o'o'oo-oe.o.o.oeeeooe.

33. I'm going to read some statements people have made about crime. For each one please tell me if it's mostly true in your case or mostly false.

I Mostly I Mostly I true false

A. l'm often a little worried that I will be the victim of a crime in my 1 2 neighborhood.

B. I would probably not be afraid if a stranger stopped me at night in my neighborhood to ask for directions.

C. l'm not as afraid for my own safety as I am for the people close to me l 2

D. When I have to be away from home for a long time, I worry that someone might 1 2 try to break in.

E. When I hear footsteps behind me at night in my neighborhood, it makes me 1 2 feel uneasy. t,, m .4" t , . •

/ m L? m w o cK 04 34. Now I'd like to ask you about some things that might have happened to you or to members of your household since the beginning of 1978' I'd like you to think back to January 1978, about l& months ago. Since January 1978, did anyone break into your (house/apartment)or steal anything from inside your (house/apartment)? Even someone you knew? " .. Yes .... (ASK A AND B) •... 1 3Ol Nc " :2 IF YES: ...... A. Did that happen once or more than once? Once ...... 1 31/ More than once ...... 2 B. Did you know the person who broke into your (house/apartment)?

Yes o.....e..Ùoo.....o..o,...e. 32/ No ...... 2

Both oooeooooeoomoeooooooooooo 3

DOnOC know oooooeoeoooeoooooeo 8

35. Since January of 1978, did anyone take money or other belongings from you or from other members of your household by force? For example~ did someone use a sun or knife, or in any other way force one of you to give them something that did not belong to them? Even someone you knew? : Yes ... (ASK Aj B, C, D)., 1 33/~

No @oeeooooooooooooooeooooo' 2 IF YES: A. Did that happen to you or to someone else in your household?

Respondent o@oooeeoooooooooooo - 1 34/

Someone elee ...... 2

Both eoooooooooeoooooooooooo 3 B. Did that happen once or more than once? Once ...... 1 351 - More than once ...... 2 . C. Did that happen in (HEICHBORHOOD) or elsewhere? In neighborhood ...... I 361 Elsewhere ...... 2

Both ooooooooooooooooooooeooeo• 3

Don ' t know oooooooooooooOoOoOo 8 D. Did you/they know the person who robbed you/them? Yea ...... 1 37/

DO oooooooooooooooooooooooo~oo 2

Both ooomooooooooooooomoeoooo 3 Don ' t know ...... 8 • z, -181 DECK

36. Other than what has been mentioned, has anyone stolen anything else from you or someone in your household during the time since January, 19782 Perhaps a bicycle, Clothing, tools., wallet, money, or anything else? Yes .. (ASK A, B, C, D) ...J 1 38/

No ooeeeoooteeoeeoeetoooeQo " 2 IF YES: A. Did that happen to you or to someone else in your household?

l Respondent ...... 1 39/ Someone else ...... 2 Both ...... 3 B. Did that happen once or more than once?

Once ...... 1 401 More than once ...... 2 C. Did that happen in (NEIGHBORHOOD) or elsewhere?

In neighborhood eoeeoeoooooeoo 1 41/ Elsewhere ...... 2

Both oooo,oooooooeooooo,ooooo.• 3 Don't know ...... 8 D. Did You/they know the person who stole these things? Yes ...... 1 42/

No eoooooeoeooeooeeooeoeeoe 2 Both ...... 3

Don 't know oeooeooelooooooo 8

37. Since January, 1978, has anyone damaged or defaced the building you live in, for example, by writing on the walls, breaking windows, setting fires, or anything like that? Yes .... (ASK A AND B) .... 1 43/

No ...... 2 IF YES: A. Did that happen once or more than once?

Once ...... 1 44/ More than once ...... 2 B. Did you know the person who damaged your building?

Yes ...... ~ ...... 1 451 No ...... 2 Both ...... 3 Don't know ...... 8 -19- DECK 04

38. S£nce January of 1978, was anyone in your household the victim of a rape or sexual assault, even by someone she knew?

Yes ...(ASK A, B, C, D) ... I 461

No ...... 2

IF YES: A. ASK FEHALE ONLY: MALE GO TO B. Were you the victim, or was it another member of your household?

Respondent ...... 1 &7/

Someone else ...... 2

Both ...... 3

B. Sometimes people are the victim of the same crime more than once during a year. Did that happen once or more than once?

Once ...... 1 48/

More than once ...... 2

C. Did that happen in (NEIGHBORHOOD.) or elsewhere?

In neighborhood ...... 1 491

Elsewhere ...... 2

Both ...... 3

Don't know oDD.Dee.ODD..So.oDe " 8

D. Was the attacker someone you/she knew?

Yes o...... eo....o.e.eees. 1 5Ol

NO °oDD°oDD.oDD.oDD...oDe. 2

Both ...... 3

Don ' t know ...... 8

0 , -20- DECK 04

ASK EVERYONE:

39. Other than what yo u have already mentioned, since January, 1978, did anyone, including someone you knew, use violence against you or members of your household in an argument or quarrel, or in any other way attack or assault one of you?

Yes .. (ASK A, B, C, D) ... 1 511

NO ooooQeooo. Booo4.oouooeom 2

IF YES:

A. Did that happen to you or to someone else in your household?

Respondent ...... l 521

Someone else ...... 2

Both ...... 3

B. Did that happen once or more than once?

Once ...... 1 53/

More than once ...... 2

C. Did that happen in (NEIGHBORHOOD) or elsewhere?

In neighborhood ...... 1 54/

Elsewhere ...... 2

Both ...... 3

Don't know ...... B

D. Was the attacker someone you/they knew?

Yes ...... 1 551

NO o-o-,,,,..o,ooooo.o.o..o,.. 2

Both • • - ...... 3

Don't know ...... 8

IF VOIUNTEERED THAT VICTIM WAS KILLED~ CHECK HERE ..... 561 • ,' •

-2t- DECK 04 40. Now i have just a few questions about yourself. First, in what year were you born? )

41. What is your religion--is it Protestant, Catholic, Jewish, Muslim, some other religion, or no religion?

Protestant ...... 01 .59-601 Catholic ...... 02 Jewish ...... : ...... 03 Muslim ...... 04 None ...... 05 Other (SPECIFY RELIGION AND/OR CHURCH AND DENOMINATION)

06

42. For statistical purposes, we would like to know what racial group you belong to. Are you black, white, hispanic, or something else?

Black ...... 1 6li White .... (ASK A) ...... 2 Hispanic ...... 3 Other (SPECIFY) |

i 4

Refused ...... 7 Don ' t know ...... 8

A. IF WHITE: q

What is your ethnic background? For example, is it Irish, Italian, Polish, or what? Polish ...... 01 62-63/ Italian ...... 02 Irish ...... 03 Gernan ...... 04 Other or more than one (RECORD ) 05

lqone ...... 06 -22- DE,

43. What is the highest regular school certificate, diploma, or degree that you have gotten? None ever ...... 01 64-65/ 8th grade; Jr. high ...... 02 High school diploma; GED ..... 03 A.A.; Junior College ...... 04 B. A. or B. S ...... 05 Masters ...... 06 Ph.D...... 07 Degree in law or medicine .... 08 Other (SPECIFY)

09

44. Last week were you working full time, part time, keeping house, or what? CIRCLE ONE CODE ONLY. IF MORE THAN ONE RESPONSE, GIVE PREFERENCE TOSMALLEST CODE NUMBER THAT APPLIES AND RECORD OTHER RESPONSES VERBATIM~

Working full time (35 hours or more) .. 01 66-67/

Working part time (I-34 hours) ...... 02

With a job, but not at work because of illness, vacation, strike .. (ASK A) . 03

Unemployed, laid off, looking for work ...... (ASK A) • 04

Retired ...... 05

In school only .... (SKIP TO Q. 46) .... 06

Keeping house only (SKIP TO Q. 46) .... 07

Other (SPECIFY)

08

A. IF NOT WORKING AT PRESENT: When you do work, is that usually full time or part time?

Full time ......

Part time ......

Varies ...... 3 -23- DECKS 04-05

45. A. What kind of work do you (did you normally) do? ThaC is, what is (was) your job called? IF MORE THAN ONE JOB s ASK ABOUTMAIN JOB HERE.

OCCUPATION: i 69-73/

IF NECESSARYI ASK: What are (were) some of your main duties? What do (did) you actually do in that job?

B. Where is your (main) place of work? Is it in (NEIGHBORHOOD), downtown Chicago, elsewhere in Ch.lcagos in the suburbs, or where?

(NEIGHBORHOOD) ...... 1 74/

Downtown Chicago oeooooeooe 2

Elsewhere in Chicago ...... 3

Suburbs ...... 4

Ocher (SPECIFY)

BEGIN DECK 05 Y I ASKEVERYONE[

46. What is your current marltal status? Are you married s living with someonef vidowed~ divorceds separated~ or have you never been married? / Married ...... I o7/

Living vith someone eoeooeoooo 2

m Wldowed...... see 3 Divorced ...... SKIP 1'0 $0o 4 Separated ...... q.50 ... 5 Never been married. ego 6

I

o -24- DECK~

47. What is the highest regular school certificate, diploma, or degree that your husband/wife (or the person you're living with) has ever gotten?

None ever ...... Ol 08-09/ 8th grade; Jr. high ...... 02 High school diploma; GED ..... 03 A.A.; Junior college ...... 04 B.A. or B.S ...... 05 Masters ...... 06 Ph.D ...... 07 Degree in law or medicine .... 08 Other (SPECIFY)

O9

48. Last week was he/she working full time, part time, keeping house, or what? CIRCLE ONE CODE ONLY. IF MORE THAN ONE RESPONSE, GIVE PREFERENCE TO SM~!LEST CODE NUMBER THAT APPLIES AND RECORD OTHER RESPONSES VERBATIM.

Working full time . (35 hours or more) -. 01

Working part time . (I-34 hours) ...... 02

With a job, but Hot at work because of illness, vacation, strike .. (ASK A) .. 03

Unemployed, lald off, looking for work ...... (ASK A) .. 04

Retired ...... 05

In school only .... (SKIP TO Q. 50) .... 06

Keeping house only . (SKIP TO Q. 50) .... 07

Other..(SPEClFY)

08

P Ao IF NOT WORKING AT PRESENT: When he/she does work, is that usually full time or part time? 2 Full time ...... 1 12/ % Part time ...... 2

Varies ...... 3 " -25- DECK 05

49. A. What k£nd of work does he/she (did he/she normally) do? That is, what is (was) his/her job called? IF MORE THAN ONE JOB, ASK ABOUTHAIN 30B HERE.

OCCUPATION: 13-17/

IF NECESSARY, ASK: What are (were) some of his/her main duties? What does (did) he/she actually do in that job?

3. Where is his/her (main) place of work? Is it in (NEIGHBORHOOD), downtown Chlcago, elsewhere in Chicago, ~n the suburbs, or where?

(NEIGHBORHOOD) ...... 1 181

Downtown Chicago ...... 2

Elsewhere in Chicago ...... 3

kburbs ...... 4

Other (SPECIFY)

5

'5 -26- DECK 05 ASK EVERYONE: 50. Do you have any children under 19 living at home with you? This includes adopted children, foster children, and children from a previous marriage. "

Yes ..... (ASK A) ...... 1 19/ No .... (SKIP TO Q. 56) ... 2 A. IF YES: I'm interested in the ages of your children and where they go to school. First, how old is the oldest child living at home with you? (RECORD AGE. IF 5 YEARS OF AGE OR OLDER, ASK B. CONTINUE FOR REMAINING CHILDREN.)

A. . 5 YEARS OF AGE OR OLDER~ ASK: Age of child IF What is the name of the school this child attends? [(IF 5 YEARS OF AGE I OR OLDER z ASK B)

lo 20-21/ 1. 22-74/ 2. 25-26/ 2. 27-29/ 3. 30-31/ 3. 32-34/ 4. 35-36/ 4. 37-39/ 5. 40-41/ 5. 42-z 6. 45-46/ 6. 47-z 7. 7. 50-51/ 52-54/ 8. 8. 55-561 57-59/

6O/

C. I'm going to read a list of statements that apply to some families with school age children. Please tell me if each statement is mostly true or mostly false in your family.

true false appli- cable I) My children are not allowed to watch tele- vision until their homework is done on 2 3 61/ school nishts. 1 2) There are certain areas in the neighborhood where my children are not allowed to walk. I 2 3 62/ 3) I worry about my children's safety at school. 1 2 3 63/ My children are allowed to go to the park without adult supervision. I 2 3 6 5) My children stay up as late as they want to on weekends. I 2 3 6~/ 6) I know the parents of most of my children's friends. I 2 3 7) I worry about my children getting involved in ganss. 1 2 3 67/ 8) It frightens me when my children are late 1"0/ -27- DECKS 05-06

51. Have you heard about the Access to Excellence program in the city of Chicago?

Yes ...... l 691 No .. (SKIP TO q. 56) .. 2

52. Is your child (are any of your children) in an Access to Excellence program?

Yes ..... (ASK A) ...... 1 701 No ... (SKIP TO q. 56).. 2

A. IF YES: What program is that? CIRCLE APPROPRIATE CODES.

Preschool program ...... 01 71-72/ Basic skills program ...... 02 73-74/ BEGIN DECK 06 Classical schools ...... 03 07-08/ Elementary School Language Center ...... 04 o9-1Ol Centers for Languages ...... ~' 05 11'12/ High Schoo I Bill ngual Center ...... • 06 13-141 High School Performing and Creative Arts Centers ...... 07 is-16/ Career Development Centers ...... 08 17-18/ Technical Centers--High Schools ...... 09 19-20/ City-vide Permissive Enrollment ...... 10 21-22/ District selected programs ...... 11 23-24/ Advanced placement ...... 12 25-26/ Von Humboldt Child Parent Center ...... 13 27-28/ Other (SPECIFY)

14 29-30/

Dontt know ...... 98 : 31-32/

53. How satisfied are you with the Access to Excellence program? Are you very satis- fied, some~d~at satisfied, somewhat dissatisfied, or very dissatisfied?

Very satisfied ...... 1 33/ • ~newhat satisfied ...... 2 Some~4~at dissatisfied ..; ...... 3 Very dissatisfied .., ...... 4 Don't know ...... 8 -28- DECK 06 54. Here are some ways the Access to Excellence program might affect your child/ children. First, in helping your child to learn more quickly--is the program having a great effect, a moderate effect, hardly any effect, or no effect at all?

Hardly Don't ' know I A. Helping your child to learn more quickly 1 2 3 4 8 34/ B. Helping your child to under- stand students of other 1 2 3 4 8 35/ cultural backgrounds C. Helping your child to learn to work with other races 1 2 3 4 8 36/

D. Allowing you to play a more active role in school 1 2 3 4 8 37/

E. Preparlng your child for a future occupation l 2 3 4 8 381

F. Improving your child's speaking ability 1 2 3 4 8 39/

55. Last year, did (your child/all your children) attend the same school(s) they do now? Yes ... (GO TO Q. 56) ... 1 401 No ..... (ASK A) ...... 2

A. IF DIFFERENT SCHOOLS t ASK FOR EACH:

I'd like to know what schools they attended. First, (the child/the oldest child) who goes to (NAME OF SCHOOL IN Q. 50) went to what school last year ~ (GO DOWN THE LIST)

O1ild/oldest child in Q. 50 I. 41-43/ (RECORD SCHOOL ATTENDED LAST YEAR)

Second oldest in Q. 50 . 44-46/ (RECORD SCHOOL ATTENDED LAST YEAR)

Third oldest in Q. 50 . 47-49/ {RECORD SCHOOL ATTENDED LAST YEAR)

Fourth oldest in Q. 50 4. 50--52/ {RECORD SCHOOL ATTENDED LAST YEAR) -29- DECK 06

ASK EVERYONE: 56. Please tell me which category represents your family's total income before taxes and other deductions during 1978. (INCLUDE ALL SOURCES) Was it less than $I0,000, between $I0,000 and $30,000, or was it $30,000 or more? IF EXACTLY $I0,000, CIRCLE 20 AND 21; IF EXACTLY $30,000, CXRCLE30 and 31. A. Less than $10,000 ...... 10 53-54/ Was it between $5,000 and $10,0007 Yes ...... 11 No ...... 12 Refused ...... 17 B. Between $10,000 and $30,000 ...... 20 ~ Was it between $10,000 and $20,000? Yes ...... 21 No ...... 22 Refused ...... 27 C. $30,000 or more ...... 30 Was it between $30,000 and ~0,0007 Yes ...... 31 No ...... 32 Refused ...... 37 D. Refused ...... •...... 97

57. I as now going to read a number of statements dealing with beliefs and feelings. gould you tell me whether you agree strongly, agree somewhat, disagree somewhat, or disagree strongly with each of these statements?

i

• agree somewhat somewhat disagree know Ae Everytlme l try to get i I I I I ahead something or 1 2 3 4 8 s5/ somebody stops me. Everything changes so quickly these days that I often have trouble 1 2 3 _ 4 8 561 deciding which are the right rules. Ce Planning only makes a person unhappy, since plans hardly ever I 2 3 4 8 571 work out anyway. Do On the whole, I am 1 2 satisfied with myself. 3 4 8 581 E. People were better off in the old days when everyone knew just how he was 1 2 3 4 8 591 expected to act. -30- DECK 0

58. In general, do you favor or oppose the busing of school children from one district to another to achieve racial balance?

Favor ...... I 6ol Oppose .. (SKIP TO Q. 60) . 2 Don't know ...... 8

59. Would you yourself favor or oppose the busing of your children to achieve racial balance?

Favor ...... I 61/ Oppose ...... 2 Don't know ...... 8

60. I am going to read some statements that people have made about what happens when a few black families move into an all white neighborhood. For each statement, please tell me if you think it's mostly true or mostly false.

i ostlyitrue Mostlfalse i oon,tknow i A. When a few black families move into an all white neighborhood, they I 2 8 62/ usually have the same income and educa- tion as the people who live there.

~. When a few black families move into an all white neighborhood, realtors 1 2 8 63/ urge the people who live there to move.

C. When a few black families move into an all white neighborhood, the black 1 2 8 64/ families are often harrassed and attacked.

D. When a few black families move into an all white neighborhood, crime 1 2 8 651 rates usually go up.

E. When a few black families move into an all white neighborhood, property values 1 2 8 66/ are sure to go down. "-~, ...... ,.

-31- DECK 06

61. Thinking about the races of the people vho live in (HEIGHBORHOOD)--thst is, vhether they're black, white, or hispanic--would you say the racial composltlon is pretty stable or would you say the racial composition is changing?

Stable ...... I 67/ Changing ...... 2 Don't knov ...... 8

Thank you very much for your help. I just have one more question we have to ask for statistical purposes.

62. Please tell met are there any other telephones in your household that have a different phone number than this one?

Yes ..... (ASK A A~/D B) ... 1 68/ No ************************ 2

IF YES: A. How many different numbers are there?

O~e oeooeeeooeoooooooeeoooe 1 69/ More than one ...... 2

B' What is that/are those number(s)?

f 63. DATE OF INTERVIEW

Month • February ...... 2 701 March ...... 3 April ...... 4

e. 71-721

• ~.. 64. INTERVIEWER ID NUMBER ill 73-74/ 0

0

0