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59 Sentences With "loiterers"

How to use loiterers in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "loiterers" and check conjugation/comparative form for "loiterers". Mastering all the usages of "loiterers" from sentence examples published by news publications.

We learned that the police were patrolling our neighborhood and questioning loiterers.
The morning rush has receded, leaving Holiday Market with its daily retinue of loiterers.
Duterte has also denied ordering arrests of loiterers, saying he told police only to frisk people.
The loiterers have vanished, and the officers stand in the parking lot for about 10 minutes.
The police patrolled the train station vigilantly, but they weren't on the lookout for loiterers and squatters.
There's a minimum drink fee to ward off loiterers, and patrons are largely young tourists from Taiwan and Japan.
ABC 7 News reports that since the speakers have been mounted to the storefront, there has been considerably fewer loiterers.
"He's hopping from side to side and I'm freaking out screaming," Marley Mills said of the toilet loiterers she spotted recently.
Look out your window at night, and you'll see a new crop of nocturnal loiterers at playgrounds and parks hunting Pokémon.
It's enough to make anyone paranoid, but the Sheridans have been very gracious in not calling the cops on their new loiterers.
He was hearing from his former colleagues that loiterers were already reciting the limits it imposed on the officers to them on patrol, mockingly.
In Florence, officials have taken to hosing down the Duomo Cathedral and other sites to prevent loiterers from sitting and eating on the steps.
That first evening, it was just us and a handful of other late-hour loiterers walking along the waterline near the Malaquite Visitor Center.
Some of the open spaces had to be locked up or scrapped over fears that they would become magnets for loiterers, criminals and homeless people.
After the backlash against the campaign began, Mr. Duterte said that arresting loiterers was "foolish" and that he had not ordered the police to do so.
As Plimpton goes from tournament to tournament, he talks to an array of pros, caddies and loiterers, all of whom impart one bit of wisdom or another.
But it said the district's "clean teams" do a good job of picking up litter on the ground, which was mostly left by homeless people and loiterers.
The pins on the familiar backpacks we see every day on the train, the loiterers with the same schedule, the hands holding the D.M.V. tickets before and after ours.
In fact, the kiosks have been so popular with loiterers and the lascivious that their operator, LinkNYC network, has said it's shutting off web browsing on the built-in tablets.
Sure, it might be a pain having to get everything connected again, but it gives you a chance to kick any loiterers off your network and start again from scratch.
In 2001, West Palm Beach Police blasted classical pieces from Mozart, Bach and Beethoven from an abandoned building in an attempt to reduce crime and loiterers, according to the Orlando Sentinel.
It's also full of a great many anonymous protagonists: kids dancing, factory workers, street performers, peddlers, idle loiterers, families, phantom sitters, tourists, sharks and camels, horses and oxen, a choice iguana, soldiers.
Joining me to discuss this and the music that is making young loiterers cry, bad joke, is FOX News contributor, "New York Times" bestselling author of the "Will Wilder" children series, Raymond Arroyo.
Rather than presaging buttered scones or announcing the Amazon man with a parcel, Whitechapel's bells were in the business of summoning souls to prayer, alerting loiterers to curfew and marking the passage of time.
Standpipe connections can also be cut off when the caps on the couplers' exteriors are removed by collectors, resellers, or — you guessed it, bored loiterers — not by firefighters in need of a hose connect.
A neighborhood leader pointed out problem spots: a dark block where prostitutes congregated, a bus stop in front of a liquor store that allowed loiterers to claim they were waiting for the bus, piles of trash.
City museums—whether built anew, like Frank Gehry's Bilbao Guggenheim, or rehabilitated from old industrial buildings, like the Tate Modern—play the kind of social role we associate with medieval churches, attracting a crowd of peddlers, lovers, gawkers, dogs, and loiterers.
Copycat culprits The trouble started when residents of a South Carolina apartment complex began telling their landlord that loiterers with blinking noses and big shoes were lurking in the woods near the building, flashing laser lights, offering money to kids and traipsing into the dumpster area late at night.
So bad was the problem, the Central Market Community Benefit District—a local nonprofit aimed at creating a better Central Market area—decided to help out with a novel solution: Why not just constantly blast the shit out of some classical music in the hopes of deterring would-be loiterers?
As noted in our piece on LinkNYC—published the same day these changes were made—the "home offices" being improvised on street corners around the city by the homeless and loiterers does not seem to be exactly what the city had it mind when it pledged to help break down the digital divide.
What surprised him most were how many lives — now, including his own — were entwined with the history of the street — George Washington who worshiped at St. Paul's Chapel; entrepreneurs like F.W. Woolworth and A.T. Stewart whose commercial flagships flanked City Hall; the iconic figures who were feted with tons of ticker tape in the Canyon of Heroes; the loiterers who gawked at skirts sent billowing by the wind tunnel that the Flatiron Building created at 23rd Street and were shooed away by cops who bellowed "23 skiddoo"; and the ghosts along the stretch of Broadway that undulates past Times Square, whose reputation for bright lights and shattered dreams were epitomized in its legacy as the Great White Way and the Street of Broken Hearts.
Kolender v. Lawson, 461 U.S. 352 (1983), is a United States Supreme Court case concerning the constitutionality of vague laws that allow police to demand that "loiterers" and "wanderers" provide “credible and reliable” identification.
His lack of > humanity is extreme! Li Seven is a village rustic. How could he fight with > the itinerant armed loiterers who hang around the marketplace? Although no > injuries resulted from the fight, we still must mete out some slight > punishments.
Without parked cars to hide illegal activity, there were fewer loiterers, and a decrease in drug activity. Additionally, on April 10, 1984, notorious serial killer Richard Ramirez committed his first known murder in a hotel basement, where he was living, in the Tenderloin district.
On mid-June 2018, Duterte launched the campaign, called Oplan Tambay, against the loiterers () who violated the city ordinance such as smoking in public places, drinking liquor on the streets, and going shirtless in public. The campaign had at least 8,000 residents were either accosted or apprehended for violating the rules in two weeks. However, this campaign was described by some sectors as another human rights violation being committed by the administration. Randy David, sociology professor of University of the Philippines, said in an opinion statement that Duterte has "able to instill fear in people's minds even without declaring martial law by ordering the Philippine National Police to crack down on "tambays" or street loiterers." from the original.
The hospital was built in the palace ruins and licensed in 1512. Drawings show that it was a magnificent building, with a dormitory, dining hall and three chapels. Henry VII's hospital lasted for two centuries, but suffered from poor management. The sixteenth-century historian Stow noted that the hospital was being misused by "loiterers, vagabonds and strumpets".
Henry VII's hospital lasted for two centuries but suffered from poor management. The sixteenth-century historian John Stow noted that the hospital was being misused by "loiterers, vagabonds and strumpets". In 1702 the hospital was dissolved, and the hospital buildings were used for other purposes. Part of the old palace was used for a military prison in the eighteenth century.
The phrase "101st kilometre" was first coined after the Soviet Union hosted the 1980 Moscow Olympics in reference to the eastern boundary of Moscow Oblast, located at from Moscow. Soviet authorities forcibly removed all "undesirable elements" from Moscow, such as known loiterers, prostitutes, and alcoholics, beyond this boundary to improve the city's image for international visitors during the events of the 1980 Olympics.
Some suspected arson but it was not proved. In 1989, The Skanner began campaigning for the renaming of Portland's Union Avenue to Martin Luther King Boulevard. The campaign was successful. In 2009, the newspaper's owners installed security cameras on their head office in North Portland, to monitor an adjacent hot spot of drug deals and shootings, and made sure loiterers knew they were being watched.
He was originally appointed by Mayor Willie Brown in 1996, then elected to a two-year term in 1999. While a member of the Board of Supervisors, he proposed an ordinance that would prohibit standing on a street corner for more than five minutes, with loiterers facing a $250 fine and up to six months imprisonment. He failed to win re-election to the board in the year 2000.
The San Diego Sheriff department was formed in 1850, and since then it has served a diverse county consisting of many constituents with competing interests. San Diego Sheriff's department was a co-appellant in the very famous Supreme Court of the United States and Ninth Circuit cases Kolender v. Lawson, 461 U.S. 352 (1983), which held unconstitutional laws that allow law enforcement to demand that "loiterers" and "wanderers" provide identification; this continues to affect other departments nationwide.
Vollmer supported programs to assist disadvantaged children, and was often criticized for his leniency towards petty offenders such as drunks and loiterers. He also encouraged the employment and training of African American (first hired in 1919) and female (first hired in 1925) police officers. This included the hiring of Walter A. Gordon, who became the recipient of the Benjamin Ide Wheeler Medal in 1955. In 1921, Vollmer was elected president of the International Association of Chiefs of Police.
In 2005, Harvard University and Suffolk University researchers worked with local police to identify 34 "crime hot spots" in Lowell, Massachusetts. In half of the spots, authorities cleared trash, fixed streetlights, enforced building codes, discouraged loiterers, made more misdemeanor arrests, and expanded mental health services and aid for the homeless. In the other half of the identified locations, there was no change to routine police service. The areas that received additional attention experienced a 20% reduction in calls to the police.
His militant attitude against the New York underworld concerned local politicians, particularly in Tammany Hall, who felt he was a political liability. A number of magistrates also expressed concern over the commissioner's hasty actions. They also complained that his "sight arrest" orders, in which loiterers were subject to immediate arrest, filled up city's jails overnight. The situation created a serious problem by delaying the city legal system when many of these cases the charges would be dropped for lack of evidence.
Several groups have adopted the concept of the dérive and applied it in their own form, including many modern organizations, most notably the Loiterers Resistance Movement (Manchester), the London Psychogeographical Association, Wrights and Sites (notably the misguided drifts of mythogeographer Phil Smith), the Unilalia Group, and the Providence Initiative for Psychogeographic Studies. Since 2003 in the United States, separate events known as the Providence Initiative for Psychogeographic Studies and Psy-Geo- Conflux have been dedicated to action-based participatory experiments similar to the dérive within the context of psychogeography.
Unknown to him, the three are nuns in street clothing who want to aid the community but are afraid the local residents might be reluctant to seek help if their true identities were known. The nuns are also facing opposition from the rude and arrogant priest from the local parish. Dr. Carpenter and the nuns are shown dealing with a mute but angry autistic girl, a boy with a severe speech impediment, and a man beaten by loan shark enforcers. The nuns at times are sexually harassed by loiterers.
Revitalisation du centre-ville de Québec - Le dernier hiver du Mail Saint-Roch Many loiterers were present in the mall, especially during cold weather, and it was slightly ill-famed. The decision to progressively demolish the roof (and thus the mall) was taken in the 1990s, and the destruction was completed in 2007Toponymie : Saint-Joseph (which led to increased commercial activity.). Below the highway overpass in 2004. During the second half of the 20th century, the district fell into decline and was considered the most deprived in the city.
He dreams of dragons every night but never starts working on his costume. While police begin to crack down on public loitering, Fisheye plots an attack against the police. 13\. The Dragon Dance Fisheye comes to the corner one day with a pistol and tells the eight of them there that they are not to part when the police come around to kick loiterers off the street. His plan is that two of them will begin fighting when the police come, and when they get out to break it up, "they will see".
In 1973, the first uniformed female officer joined the department. During the 1980s, the police department was at the center of a case that came before the Supreme Court of the United States and Ninth Circuit, Kolender v. Lawson, 461 U.S. 352 (1983), which held unconstitutional laws that allow police to demand that "loiterers" and "wanderers" provide identification; this continues to affect other departments nationwide. The decade also saw officers responding to the San Ysidro McDonald's massacre; it was also a decade where the department had the highest mortality rate for officers of any major American city.
The lapsed listener problem is a common source of memory leaks for object- oriented programming languages, among the most common ones for garbage collected languages.Memory Loiterers in Java, Ethan Henry and Ed Lycklama It originates in the observer pattern, where observers (or listeners) register with a subject (or publisher) to receive events. In basic implementation, this requires both explicit registration and explicit deregistration, as in the dispose pattern, because the subject holds strong references to the observers, keeping them alive. The leak happens when an observer fails to unsubscribe from the subject when it no longer needs to listen.
Butler's principal works have been A Sheltered Corner (1891) R.A., A High Court of Justice (1892) R.A., Green-Eyed Jealousy (1894) R.A., The Morning Bath (1896) R.A., Raiders from the Rookery (1896) R.A., Cead Mile Failte (1898) R.A.. Works that she was elected to the R.W.S. in 1896 include Dull December, Loiterers and Beside the Pond. Sunshine Holiday (1898) R.W.S. was another notable work. Her works appears in a number of collections including Morning Bath in the Tate and paintings in the National Gallery of Ireland, the Ulster Museum in Belfast and the Hugh Lane Gallery in Dublin. A small watercolour of crows hangs in Queen Mary's Dolls' House at Windsor.
The following season, on 2 March 1921, they were officially constituted as the Harpenden Rugby Football Club and began to establish themselves. Unfortunately their use of the pitch in Rothamsted Park was abruptly terminated by the then Lady of the Manor who apparently classified rugby players as 'rough loiterers'; a new pitch was then found in Townsend Lane. At the same time the changing accommodation, a barn behind 'The Cock' public house in the High Street was transferred to another barn behind the rival pub on the opposite side of the road, 'The Cross Keys'. That pub has remained a meeting point for club members over the years.
The Loiterers Resistance Movement (2006–present) is a ‘Manchester-based collective of artists and activists interested in psychogeography and public space.’ They host a free monthly dérive on the first Sunday of every month that is open to the public. They are considered core contributors to the tradition of British psychogeography, and part of what Tina Richardson has identified as the 'new psychogeography'. The LRM have also been identified as contributing to the visibility and practices of walking women: they were featured on the BBC Radio 4 broadcast, 'The Art of Now: Women Who Walk' (2018), and are also included in the Live Art Development Agency's Study Room Guide on WALKING WOMEN (2015).
Gilbert Wheatley, arrested July 7, 1904 for loitering with intent to commit a felony. Loitering has historically been treated as an inherent preceding offense to other forms of public crime and disorder, such as prostitution, begging, public drunkenness, dealing in stolen goods, drug dealing, scams, organised crime, robbery, harassment/mobbing, etc. Loitering provides a lesser offense that can be used by police to confront and deter suspect individuals from lingering in a high- crime area, especially when criminal intent is suspected, but not observed. Local areas vary on the degree to which police are empowered to arrest or disperse loiterers; limitations on their power are sometimes made over concerns regarding racial profiling and unnecessary use of police force.
Many Song court cases serve as examples for the promotion of morality in society. Using his knowledge and understanding of townsmen and farmers, one Song judge made this ruling in the case of two brawling fishermen, who were labeled as Pan 52 and Li 7 by the court: > Competition in Selling Fish Resulted in Assaults famous cityscape handscroll painting by artist Zhang Zeduan (1085–1145). > A proclamation: In the markets of the city the profits from commerce are > monopolized by itinerant loiterers, while the little people from the rural > villages are not allowed to sell their wares. There is not a single > necessity of our clothing or food that is not the product of the fields of > these old rustics.
In June 2012 Michael Reeves, a former employee of the Slidebar Rock-N-Roll Kitchen, filed a lawsuit for wrongful termination against Jeremy Popoff related to the beating. The Slidebar, which is owned by Popoff, the guitarist for Lit, was the source of the call that caused police to report to the area and confront Thomas. Reeves, a bouncer at the establishment, made statements to investigators claiming the Slidebar had a policy to do "anything necessary" to keep loiterers out of the area and that his manager lied about Thomas breaking into cars when calling the police to get them to respond more quickly. He further claimed that Thomas was only loitering in the area that night and not causing trouble.
In his poem "An Acrostic", Edgar Allan Poe makes references to her although he (allegedly purposely) misspells her name and instead writes 'Zantippe'. Frank Osbaldistone, the first-person narrator of Rob Roy by Sir Walter Scott (1817), records this event: "While I trembled lest the thunders of their wrath might dissolve in showers like that of Xantippe, Mrs Flyter herself awoke, and began, in a tone of objurgation not unbecoming the philosophical spouse of Socrates, to scold one or two loiterers in her kitchen." (Book 2, Chapter 7) In Doctor Thorne by Anthony Trollope, the author says of wives 'There may possibly have been a Xantippe here and there, but Imogenes are to be found under every bush.' Salomon Maimon refers to a woman's "Xanthippe-like character" in Chapter 10 of his autobiography.
The project was supported by the Omaha Urban League and the Federal Housing Authority who was represented by DeHart Hubbard at the group's founding."Negros Form Housing Co-op"; Omaha World Herald; June 23, 1950; page 8 Supported by the NAACP, he was considered as a replacement City Councilman in 1951 while an employee of the post office."Writ Ask Appointment of Negro to Council"; Omaha World Herald; January 9, 1951; page 6 On February 10, 1956, Omaha Police under the orders of Police Commissioner Henry Boesen performed a series of tavern raids wherein 57 people described by police as "vagrants, winos, and loiterers" were arrested. Owen, in his capacity as chairman of the Action Committee of the Near North Side led the outcry against what he called unfair arrests on a "wholesale basis".
Founded in 2006 by Morag Rose, the Loiterers Resistance Movement (LRM) is ‘a Situationist-inspired psychogeography group that roams the city sharing knowledge and experiences of the ever-changing urban environment.' On the first Sunday of every month they facilitate ‘a free communal wander, open to anyone curious about the potential of public space and unravelling stories hidden within our everyday landscape.’ The LRM does not have requirement for consistent membership and ‘people float in and out and define their own level of commitment. Rose identifies it ‘as a free floating community’, stating, ‘People don’t tend to show up every month like clockwork, but it’s also rare to only see a face once.’ Rose founded the group 'motivated by love and curiosity for Manchester and a concern, sometimes rage, at the damage neoliberalism causes to our communities.

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