Pawcatuck Neighborhood Center is a non-profit organization, which aims to fight hunger and poverty. The organization itself have only three paid employees: the social worker, Vicki Anderson, the executive director, and her assistant, Rachel. Almost all of the volunteers in Pawcatuck Neighborhood Center were elderly. Organization offers a variety of services and sports to residents in need from Mystic, North Stonnington, Pawcatuck in Connecticut and from Westerly in Rhode Island. Some of the programs and activities Pawcatuck Neighborhood offers are: Active Aging at the PNC Pawcatuck Neighborhood Center offers a lot of free classes for seniors: Zumba, painting classes, strength and balance, tai chi and line dancing.…
Skill: Infer and Support the Main Idea PILSEN 7th Grade Nonfiction Center for Urban Education ©2007 Pilsen is an old community in Chicago with a long history. This part of Chicago started small and got bigger, as most neighborhoods in the city did.…
It was surprisingly difficult finding information on the Memorial Super-Neighborhood. A “city-within-a-city” located along I-10 and beltway 8, Memorial can boast premier office space, upscale homes, and luxury hotels. The median household income is $208,000. It has a booming economy, excellent schools, great shopping, and is home to the Texas Medical Center (Air Liquide USA LLC; Air Liquide to Relocate American Corporate Headquarters to Memorial City in Houston). It’s all in the name, I guess; when you name something Memorial, most of what comes up is memorials to some cause or another, some date or individual.…
It also features an in-depth description of his childhood in relation to living at 10 Mary Street. Also included in this poem is description of the connection Peter has with his parents. A reoccurring theme of time is present throughout the poem 10 Mary Street. This is shown with the constant repetition of the line “For nineteen years”. The use of this repetition allow us to engage as to how long Peter had stayed at the house as well as to reinforce the long period of time.…
Our Town is clearly a representation - and largely a celebration - of small-town American life. Nearly every character in the play love’s Grover's Corners, even as many of them acknowledge its small-mindedness and dullness. Its sleepy simplicity, in fact, is its major point of attraction for many characters. Dr. Gibbs, for instance, who refuses to travel, thus cultivates his ignorance of life outside of Grover's Corners in order to remain content within it; his son, too, decides not to go away to college because everything he could want is available at home. Of course this staunchly conservative position creates some of the major problems in the play.…
Individuality is a key component of the human experience. The objection of individuality can be categorized many different ways. The lack of individuality in pleasantville is to show many different things. The first idea of the individuality in pleasantville is that they have no individuality because they were created, and are just a tv show, so why would they have their own personality. Another item is that in the beginning no character has color to themselves and are following an unspoken rule for themselves.…
In the article “Why I Live in a White Neighborhood,” Chris Ladd reflects on why he lives in Elmhurst, Illinois and how social, economic, and political forces nudged his family to the suburbs of Chicago. In the article Ladd blames everyone but himself for moving into a rich neighborhood including organizations, realtors, and the push from society. He highlights how class difference has an effect on where you live and how you live . In the article he addresses how towns like Elmhurst are now wealthier and whiter than ever (Ladd). By this statement he means that he is falling into society’s push in which society separates class more and more.…
Every little girl grows up loving horses, but most outgrow that desire. I never did. When I was young, I was scared of them because the first horse I fed a carrot to looked as though he could eat me. I was 4 years old and also the size of his head. For the longest time, I wished to ride and train horses even though I did not know a single thing about doing that; today, I teach other people more about how horses work within their herd and how humans can better work with their horse.…
Holding on to what makes us whole will eventually be the comfort we seek. Wilfred M. McClay and Ted V. McAlister wrote “Why Place Matters”. According to McClay and McAllister, many risks may come to us as individuals and to society when we lose our connection to physical space, an example would be a childhood home. Risks have the ability to range from minor to major. The possible risks would include losing one’s identity, losing communication with loved ones, we would communicate with on a daily basis, as well as forgetting the significant meaning to the memories.…
While growing up in Boyle Heights, I have learned many things. I have been able to see the way underfunded neighborhoods have affected my community. An example of this has been the state of the high school system. Many Boyle Heights high schools do not have the adequate resources for their students to reach their potentials and attend a four-year university. Often times, the criminalizing form of discipline funnels children into prisons instead of…
Lisa McGirr’s book Suburban Warriors: The origins of the New American Right, published in 2001, examines the history of the conservative grassroots movement in Orange County, California during the 1960s and 1970s. With a “bottom up” lens, McGirr focused on ordinary people behind the grass-roots conservatism rather than the intellectual and political leaders. Historian Richard Hofstadter believed right-wing activists acted purely on their “psychological distress” rather than being motivated by a set of beliefs or “rational politics” (7). In response, McGirr argues that the ordinary people who created conservative grassroots were usually already involved with modernity. Many of them were mobile migrants who welcomed entrepreneurialism and already…
Essay on “Why Place Matters” In Wilfred M. McClay and Ted V. McAllister’s “Why Place Matters,” they discuss about “place” as an abstract concept that can also be very precise and meaningful. However, due to globalization and digital interactions, place no longer seem to matter in modern society. Individuals are substituting place and physical space with websites and online relations. As a result, people are disconnecting from our physical innate need for thereness. I agree with McClay and McAllister that the lack of physical place can risk losing our ability to associate with others, one’s identity, and public virtues.…
Every year society makes more advancements in technology. In the essay “Why Place Matters,” by Wilfred M. McClay and Ted V. McAllister they inform readers of why it is important to have physical connections to places. The authors’ message emphasizes how globalization is now possible thanks to technology. They also believe that due to globalization people are losing touch of their physical connection with places and people. We can now communicate with other parts of the world in seconds, however due to this advancement the world is becoming placeless.…
The narrator depicts Jack, “Far off along the beach, Jack was standing before a small group of boys. He was looking brilliantly happy.” (146). Jack manages to take boys from Ralph’s group to join his, all for…
Cecily is Jack Worthing’s ward. Only eighteen years old, she has spent her entire life alone, save for her tutor and the occasional visitor, in a quaint house in the county. Her studies consist of German grammar, Political Economy, and Geography. Her hobbies consist of gardening and writing in her diary, both of which Miss Prism, her tutor, frowns upon, exclaiming that “such a utilitarian occupation as the watering of flowers” is rather the manservants duty, and remarking absently “you really must put away your diary, Cecily. I really don’t see why you should keep a diary at all” (Wilde 22).…