be. It would definitely be a lot more peaceful‚ but as well as dangerous. For example‚ every day in the street people use their horns to honk at other cars. That’s the way we communicate if something wrong was going on. In every way I feel like life wouldn’t be the same if things were silent. Everyday day and night you hear beeping noises. For example‚ you hear them on television‚ the streets‚ inside buildings and phones of course. Sometimes you may hear BEEP BEEP a car honks or RING RING‚ when a
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In the selection from The Street‚ Ann Petry most frequently employs personification to provide insight into Lutie Johnson’s disgust with the wind and how that‚ in turn‚ builds a bitter relationship between the protagonist and the city setting. To begin the passage‚ Petry sets a dark‚ desolate mood as she personifies the wind as relentless and assaulting. It is made blatantly clear that the weather “did everything it could to discourage the people along the street” and is restraining to the inhabitants
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would like to have sufficient capacity so that 35‚000 cars per hour can be accommodated to travel from the newly-built stadium to the interstate highway. Anticipating this problem‚ some of the current streets leading from the university to the interstate highway were transformed to one-way streets on a temporary basis‚ since the problem will only occur after the games. This will be done with police officers directing traffic after each game. Alexander Lee‚ SWU Planning Committee member did a quick
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as watching television. There was no time for going outside and running carefree with our friends. We couldn’t wait for weekend to come so that telephones conversations can be caught up on‚ a little ray of sunshine can revive our soul‚ and the streets can be filled the joyous laughter from children playing their favorite games. Technology plays a major role in our lives today. Our parents went from doing book reports with encyclopedias and libraries to their children completing school work by
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Jasmine Henry 25 October 2012 THEA 101 Perticone RENT Performance Response The lobby display was designed to look like the streets of New York. There were girls dressed like prostitutes‚ a girl was portrayed as a homeless person living inside of a box and a brick wall-like bulletin boards giving dramaturgical information. The information included the production history like how RENT had its first staged reading at New York Theatre Workshop in 1993. The show opened in January 1996. This
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Directed‚ Mike Tollin Released: October 24‚ 2003 1. James Robert Kennedy nicknamed‚ ’Radio’ because of his vintage radio amassment and his love of music‚ is a loner in Anderson‚ South Carolina‚ pushing his ever-present grocery cart up and down the streets. He verbalizes with no one and is infrequently verbalized with‚ until one day‚ Coach Harold Jones‚ one of the town’s most reverenced men‚ and coach of the popular high school football team‚ befriends him. Radio is suspicious at first. But Coach Jones
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the middle of the town. 6. The others started at his back trying to imitating him. 6. Trying to imitating him‚ the others stared at his back. 7. He lifted his black gloved fist at the state highway that intersects Main Street. 7. On the state highway that intersects Main Street he lifted his black gloved fist. 8. The pack leaned to the right and followed his lead‚ accelerating in the open road in the distance to the horizon. 8. In the distance towards the horizon‚ the pack leaned to the right
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In the excerpt from Ann Petry’s The Street‚ Lutie Johnson’s resistance to the city and the surrounding area of 110th street is shown through explicit imagery and personification of the wind. Petry is able to establish the obstacles of understanding a new place that may seem dark and harsh. . Petry again personifies the wind“fingering its way along the curb” and trying to discourage the people walking along the street” to further show the constant chaos that exists within the Urban
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open as a crowd of square-eyed office workers strode out. Within minutes‚ the street was packed with people rushing back home from work. The originally wide and spacious road seemed to have shrunk. Some pedestrians were forced to walk on the vehicular road because the narrow pavement simply could not fit in so many people a time. The pace of the people was unbelievable like an Olympic walker. Vehicles shuttled between streets and avenues as more and more people came streaming out from different blocks
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revised it slightly for publication in Harper’s a year later under the present title. The particular occasion for Staples’s reflections is an incident that occurred for the first time in the mid-1970s‚ when he discovered that his mere presence on the street late at night was enough to frighten a young white woman. Recalling this incident leads him to reflect on issues of race‚ gender‚ and class in the United States. As you read‚ think about why Staples chose the new title‚ "Black Men and Public Space
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