Not exact matches
Eleven years ago, Greg Walsh, an upscale interior designer who also sold home furnishings from his studio in the city's hip North Loop
neighborhood, began showcasing
men's accessories he'd collected during his travels: cuff links,
watches, wallets.
The plan calls upon churches to, among other things, «adopt» street gangs and allow troubled youths to use church properties as safe havens; intercede for youth in the juvenile court system; provide vocational training to inner - city residents; organize capital for micro-enterprises; develop educational curricula heralding the achievements of blacks and Latinos; initiate
neighborhood crime
watch groups; and establish counseling programs for battered women and the
men who abuse them.
Watch out for Moonlight (+600), the story of a young black
man growing up in a rough
neighborhood in Miami.
With (really) offbeat humor, the story centers on
man - child «Clinton» (Fran Kranz) who still lives with his mother «Edie» (Blythe Danner) at age thirty - something, lazily
watches television in a dirty robe, and fights with
neighborhood kids over action figures at his own makeshift yard sale.
His drug running business is under
watch of Rocco (Harvey Keitel, filling in for De Niro) and members of the
neighborhood who verbally object to horrible misdirection young
men and women are making, in either selling or buying drugs.
After his sophomore year, in an act of incredible loyalty, Wendall decided to leave Banneker and move to his
neighborhood high school in order to
watch over his younger brother, a young
man who, like Wendall years earlier, had begun to go down a negative path.
At eleven years old, in a new
neighborhood, Barrington passes a house, outside which a
man sits and yells and
watches her.
From the roof of my casa particular, I could look out over the
neighborhood and
watch barefoot teenagers playing soccer in the street, dogs slinking down alleys, boys tending pet pigeons kept in rooftop cages, horses pulling carts full of fruit to sell, and buff young
men working out in a courtyard makeshift gym.
I have been married 26 years, my husband stopped wearing his wedding ring about 5 years ago, and refuses to put it on, even though I have expressed the discomfort I feel,
watching him leave the house everyday, advertising himself as a single
man, in a
neighborhood like NYC.