Answer: well wheres the poem.. i can help you out
Explanation:
Answer:
I hang out with
my friends every weekend but this weekend I am visiting my cousins in London
Dave Granlund would agree with Nadia Arumugam in the following points:
* They both talk about how banning wouldn't work because that'd make people more attracted to buy or obtain the item.
*And they both state the point of people looking for more places to get drinks instead of stopping getting them.
I have a feeling it’s the first one. But I could be wrong.
Ponyboy explains that the greasers rule the poorer East Side of town, while the Socs run the wealthier West Side of town. This oversimplification of the Tulsa setting reflects the characters’ longstanding beliefs that people belong to either one gang or the other, and there is no middle ground. Ponyboy longs to live in a place where no greasers or Socs reside, and he wants to live around “plain ordinary people.” The geographic and social division between the greasers and the Socs doesn’t fade until Ponyboy and Johnny hide out in Windrixville, a pastoral town in the mountains. There, they immerse themselves in nature and spend time reflecting on “the colors of the fields and the soft shadings of the horizon.” In this setting, Ponyboy and Johnny literally shed their social identities when they cut their trademark greaser hair. After saving the children from the burning church, Ponyboy and Johnny become heroes to the Windrixville citizens, solidifying that there exists a setting where they can truly shed their “hood” identities.