They don’t see any bad people in the town and they rarely have had any encounters with them. My friends in New Orleans are the complete opposite. Most of them are scam proof and don’t fall for any tricks. They are tough and have had to deal with bad people all their lives. In city-life I find there isn’t as much loyalty to each other as in a small town.
The environment in the country is different compared to the environment in a big city. In the country there is a small population of people compared to cities. For example, in Leighton Alabama, there is not busy traffic and hardly anyone in stores. However, in New York City, the traffic is constantly busy and the stores are full of people who will wait in line for
Most of those companies even make their own employee pay for it. As for the city, they have some free parking spaces which are limited to the public. Many of those parking spaces in Downtown Atlanta are usually not free. Atlanta is not the only state in America who does not provide free parking for their customers, workers, or tourists alike. For instance New York downtown charges for their parking.
Any monetary investment that goes towards i... ... middle of paper ... ...es, and way of doing so is by recycling some of it. The problem with recycling is that it is not a task for the homeowners to take on, it is a task for the government as well. The public has been sent confusing messages about the importance of recycling. Although they are constantly reminded of the importance of it, the government has done little to ease the process. New York has less than 1000 recycling containers, a tiny amount when compared to the over 30,000 wastebaskets around the city (NYC’s Comprehensive Solid Waste Management Plan).
Running man. There is a guy running down a busy block in downtown Chicago. When his feet hit the crowed sidewalk he was leaving out of a bank building. Why was this guy in such a hurry? The streets where busy with the working class leaving their building to retrieve some food on their lunch break when all of a sudden there is a tall white male bursting his way down the block.
When you associate anything with New York City it is usually the extraordinary buildings that pierce the sky or the congested sidewalks with people desperate to shop in the famous stores in which celebrities dwell. Even with my short visit there I found myself lost within the Big Apple. The voices of the never-ending attractions call out and envelop you in their awe. The streets are filled with an atmosphere that is like a young child on a shopping spree in a candy store. Although your feet swelter from the continuous walking, you find yourself pressing on with the yearning to discover the 'New York Experience'.
Its many buildings are packed closely together, and this just makes the overcrowding problem worse. After living in Taipei during ny childhood and teenage years, I moved to southern Taiwan to attend college. The town I lived in was much less populated than Taipei, and that was nice. But, it was very hot there and that was a big problem. They also did not have a large shopping center, so buying nice clothes was difficult.
Only a few rich people could afford cars. The streets were unpaved and not dangerous. There was no pollution nor the deafening roar of timber trucks. The lack of effective mass communication during the old days probably meant that my parents were not besieged by all sorts of information, relevant or otherwise. They did not become square-eyed because they have no TV to watch.
To us, the encounter did not mean much --there are beggars on every street corner of New York-- but to the man the money meant so much more. What we had put into the box was not the same as what he took out of it. For him, the currency was a meal, or possibly a new article of clothing; to him, the money meant that he had successfully survived another day of poverty. Though the characters in A Raisin in the Sun do not spend their days asking others for money, they too live in this world of destitution. From their dingy apartment with a shared outdoor bathroom, to the jobs that they are forced to take in order to support themselves, the Youngers experience poverty in many ways on a daily basis.
Alternative modes like walking or bicycling are rather impractical, as the areas often have little to no sidewalks or other pedestrian friendly amenities (Marshall, 2009). The Low density design is developed because residential homes have fewer units per acre and commercial buildings tend to only be a couple of stories and spaced further apart. The sizes of lots tend to be bigger to accommodate large parking lots that are often oversized and unsafe for pedestrians. An effort to combat the continual development of urban sprawl, smart growth development looks to solve this dilemma. The idea of smart growth concentrates its development around compact walkable centers within urban areas.