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Turner, Nancy – Indiana Social Studies Quarterly, 1985
Traced is the history of the Muncie (Indiana) police department from the "gas boom" days of the 1890's through the pre-World War I "dry" years, the Klan-haunted twenties, and the depression years. Events in the community that played a major role in charting the development of the police department are chronicled. (RM)
Descriptors: Community Role, Community Study, Police, Social History
Goist, Park Dixon – Indiana Social Studies Quarterly, 1975
The political evolution of a Cleveland suburb form a narrowly defined community to one in which pluralism is accepted and respected is described. (DE)
Descriptors: Community Control, Community Study, Cultural Pluralism, Local History
Hewitt, John D. – Indiana Social Studies Quarterly, 1985
Attempts to develop a "baseline understanding" of the nature of female criminality and its control during the first two decades of the twentieth century, using data from the court system of Muncie. The analysis of such historical data, though not necessarily representative of contemporary times or more urban settings, provide essential…
Descriptors: Community Study, Crime, Criminals, Females
Hoover, Dwight W. – Indiana Social Studies Quarterly, 1985
The history of Muncie's religious life in the 1920's and 1930's is examined as an illustration of what happened regarding churches and religion in the "typical" U.S. town. The ethnic and denominational mix and the changes in each are discussed. (RM)
Descriptors: Churches, Community Study, Ethnicity, Religion
Frank, Carl M. – Indiana Social Studies Quarterly, 1985
In 1920 Robert S. and Helen M. Lynd published the results of their exhaustive study of everyday life in Muncie, Indiana, dubbing the city "Middletown" as a symbol of the typical American community. Salient conclusions of the study are summarized, and significant recent literature on Middletown is assessed. (RM)
Descriptors: Community Study, Comparative Analysis, Culture, Life Style
Bohler, Gloria Ann – Indiana Social Studies Quarterly, 1975
This article presents a short listing of historical sites in Indiana useful in commemorating the Bicentennial in the social studies curriculum. (JR)
Descriptors: Colonial History (United States), Community Study, Field Trips, Historic Sites
Caplow, Theodore – Indiana Social Studies Quarterly, 1985
Known as Middletown since Robert and Helen Lynd studied it in 1924, Muncie, like every other U.S. community studied during that period, turned out to be obsessed with the idea of social class. Recently researchers have found in Muncie some tendency toward the disappearance of a preoccupation with social class. (RM)
Descriptors: Community Study, Employment, Leisure Time, Life Style
Young, Lawrence A.; Chadwick, Bruce – Indiana Social Studies Quarterly, 1985
A replication of the 1920 Lynd study of everday life in Middletown, a typical America community, is presented. Data reveal that while Middletown did experience rapid change between 1890 and 1920 as the Industrial Revolution swept through middle America, there has been a significantly slower rate of change since then. (Author/RM)
Descriptors: Community Change, Community Study, Comparative Analysis, Divorce