accumulate, quickly becoming a breeding ground for disease. In cities, especially in ghettoes() and shantytowns that house only poor people, overcrowding can lead to high transmission rates of airborne diseases, such as tuberculosis. In particular, the incidence ( ) of acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) among poor people is higher than average. In developed countries tramps ( ) , hobos (-) , dossiers ( ) , down-and- outs , as they are called, can be found sleeping in derelict ( .) houses or on park benches . () If they are a nuisance( ) to passers-by, police usually tell them to move on. How and why do people become down-and outs in w elfare ( ) countries? There `s no easy answer to this problem. Some have consciously rejected ( ) society, others feel that society has rejected them. Still others prefer the life of a tramp. It may be difficult but they are free no boss telling them what to do, no family to restrict ( ) them .
73. eramaa omanik, üürileandja - private landlord 74. odavad majutused - low-cost housing 75. avaliku sektori tegelane - public sector tenant 76. hinnaalandusega - at a discount 77. ehitatud ja remonditud kodud - building and refurbishing homes 78. kesklinna elamurajoonid - inner-city areas 79. võõrandama linna- ja maa-alasid - deprive urban and rural areas 80. märkimisväärne kohalik autonoomia - considerable local autonomy 81. mahajäetud maa - derelict land 82. maa on liikumatu - land is immobile 83. maa on hävimatu - land is indestructible 84. koosolekut organiseerima - arrange a meeting 85. koosolekut edasi lükkama - postpone a meeting 86. koosolekut juhatama- run/chair a meeting 87. koosolekule minema- attend a meeting 88. ametkonna kohtumine - board meeting 89. päevakord, esindusprotokoll - agenda 90. ilma hilinejaid ootamata - without waiting for latecomers 91
Top entry sizes: · 6" · 8" · 10" Galvanised Weldmesh Parlour Creel, Abandonned or lost pots continue to fish indefinitely, killing as many as 40 crabs per pot annually. In Port Susan alone, 24000 crabs may be killed by derelict pots each year. Pots or inkwells (Fig. 24) commonly used in the English Channel by the Cornish and Devon crab fleets are rapidly becoming the most important method used for catching brown crab in Scottish waters, in terms of number of pots used by each vessel and the tonnage removed. The construction of these pots has changed from using natural materials such as cane to plastic piping frames with a netting cover with plastic `bucket' entrance with a heavy
Past labels that have been impressed upon individuals who backpack as a lifestyle choice, such as ‘drifter’ and ‘wanderer’, usefully highlight how identities have changed in post- industrial societies. These former labels (re)construct this identity as socially deviant. For instance, the Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines a drifter as one who travels or moves about aimlessly while Roget’s Thesaurus equates drifter with wanderer and includes in its list of synonyms the words derelict, hobo and vagrant. These marginal markers are tied to industrial discourses of ‘normality’ and the ‘mainstream’, with identity largely measured against production. In this sense, to drift was to escape from a normal life-path (Cohen & Taylor, 1992). Creswell (2001) notes how mobility in general has often been viewed in the past as a threat to normality, as there has been a tendency by agents of the state to try to position people within particular boundaries