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Slum and dwellers
* Slum Dwellers International, manages networks of the urban poor and slum dwellers that are organised into federations

Slum and were
" In 1948 Douglas served on the Coconut Grove Slum Clearance Committee, with a friend of hers named Elizabeth Virrick, who was horrified to learn that no running water or sewers were connected to the racially segregated part of Coconut Grove.
" For the urban reformer Jacob Riis, Mulberry Bend epitomized the worst of the city's slums: " A Mulberry Bend Alley " contrasted with " Mulberry Bend becomes a park " were two of the photographs illustrating Jacob Riis's call for renewal, The Battle with the Slum ( 1902 ).
He and D ' Angelo were occasional members of The Ummah, a music production collective, composed of members Q-Tip and Ali Shaheed Muhammad of A Tribe Called Quest, and J Dilla of the Detroit-based group Slum Village.
A group of orphans, living on the streets of Suicide Slum, they were so named because they sold newspapers to make a living.
The tracks were produced by local Detroit producers and DJs including DJ Head, who was D12's DJ at the time, Mad Chemist, Hush ( of Da Ruckus ), DJ Lenn Swann and the now acclaimed producer Jay Dee of Slum Village.
Slum Village were a hip hop group from Conant Gardens, Detroit, Michigan.
Both " Aerodynamite " and the Slum Village remix were later included in the album Daft Club.

Slum and cost
Although about half the area was demolished in the 1960s under a Slum Clearance Order, before its historical importance was realised, the remainder was saved and was restored at a cost of £ 4 million between 1980 and 1984.

Slum and local
The local authority is Newham London Borough Council, the second most deprived in England .< ref >< cite > Slum Landlords: Down and out in London-The Economist date accessed 02 January 2012 </ ref >, although other reports using different measures show it differently.
As part of the Housing Act of 1949, Congress established the " Slum Clearance and Community Development and Redevelopment " program, commissioning federal funds to " assist local communities in eliminating their slums and blighted areas and in providing the maximum opportunity for the redevelopment of project areas by private enterprise.

Slum and government
He also spoke in support of the Slum Clearances Bill, which provided entitlement for full compensation for those who purchased a house after August 1939 and still occupied it in December 1955 if this property would be compulsorarily purchased by the government if it was deemed unfit for human habitation.
In 1966, The Times, criticising the Unionist government of Northern Ireland, famously branded the province " John Bull's Political Slum ".

Slum and .
Born in the Suicide Slum district of Metropolis, he is instilled with a desire to become a self-made man.
The " Camp of Fire " program is one of many similar projects initiated by Slum Dwellers International, which has programs in Africa, Asia, and South America.
The protagonist was Gord the Rogue, and this first novel told of his rise from the Slum Quarters of the city of Greyhawk to become a world traveler and thief extraordinaire.
The 1965 Housing ( Slum Clearance Compensation ) Act continued a provision for home owners of unfit dwellings purchased between 1939 and 1955 to be compensated at market values.
L. The Slum and the Ghetto: Immigrants, Blacks, and Reformers in Chicago, 1880-1930.
Slum Village ( then in its original line-up of Jay Dee, Baatin & T3 ) opened for D ' Angelo on several dates, and soul-tinged R & B singer Anthony Hamilton sang backup in the band.
Slum buildings vary from simple shacks to permanent and well-maintained structures.
Slum began to be used to describe bad housing soon after and was used as alternative expression for rookeries.
Both became members of the Soulquarians collective, and collaborated on numerous projects together, even placing one song, " Thelonius ", on both the Slum Village album Fantastic, Vol.
He helps grant them access to Net Slum, a place known as paradise for hackers and wandering AIs.
Helba replaces the server with a copy of Net Slum to bypass this problem.
Lacking the Bracelet, the final Wave member, Corbenik, attacks the party in Net Slum Root Town.
Slum clearances began after the end of World War I, with thousands of 19th century buildings around the town centre being demolished as the 20th century wore on, with new estates being built away from the town centre during the 1920s and 1930s.
Other performers include Phat Kat, One Be Lo, MaGestik LeGend, The Definition, the late J Dilla and his former group Slum Village, and producer and artist Black Milk.
Veteran rock critic Dave Marsh chose the 1958 " 5 " Royales hit " The Slummer the Slum " as one of the top 1001 singles of all time in his book The Heart of Rock and Soul, crediting Pauling with capturing the first intentional use of guitar feedback on record, years before better-known squawks from the Beatles, Yardbirds, and Velvet Underground.
The protagonist was Gord the Rogue, and this first novel told of his rise from the Slum Quarters of the city of Greyhawk to become world traveller and thief extraordinaire.
* Suttles, Gerald D. ( 1968 ) The Social Order of the Slum: Ethnicity and Territory in the Inner City.
Gold Coast and Slum: A Sociological Study of Chicago's Near North Side.

dwellers and were
City dwellers who had fought alongside nobles in battles to defend their cities were no longer content with having a subordinate social status, but demanded a greater role in the form of citizenship.
Except for the city of Santo Domingo, which managed to maintain some legal exports, Dominican ports were forced to rely on contraband trade, which, along with livestock, became the sole source of livelihood for the island dwellers.
While technologically and culturally the city dwellers were more advanced, they could do little militarily to defend against the mounted hordes of the steppe.
North Melbourne were cellar dwellers for its first twenty-five years of VFL membership, but by the late 1940s had developed a strong list and significant supporter base.
Today's staples — sweet potatoes and pigs — were later arrivals, but shellfish and fish have long been mainstays of coastal dwellers ' diets.
Many urban dwellers ' shelves were stocked with contraband luxury items.
Conventional wisdom holds that the tribal revolt that overthrew Amanullah grew out of opposition to his reform program, although those people most affected by his reforms were urban dwellers not universally opposed to his policies, rather than the tribes.
They were referred to as incolae lacunae (" lagoon dwellers ").
In accordance with the admonitions of Genghis to his children and grandchildren, they retained their pastoral mode of life, so that the subject races, agriculturists, and dwellers in towns, were not disturbed in their ordinary avocations.
Made desperate by economic necessity, many of these former city dwellers, as well as many small farmers, were forced to give up hard-earned basic civil rights in order to receive protection from large land-holders.
For a long time, it was believed that those inland dwellers were sparsely populated hunter-gatherer tribes.
These villages emerged in the mid-20th century and were initially the domain of elite urban dwellers.
Their settlements were mostly on hilltops, including between 400-3, 000 dwellers, and the main Iapodic settlements in Roman times were Metulum, Terpon, Arupium and Avendo.
All the chiefs the dwellers thereabout called Minyae, for the most and the bravest avowed that they were sprung from the blood of the daughters of Minyas ; thus Jason himself was the son of Alcimede who was born of Clymene the daughter of Minyas.
As highways were developed coming out of the major routes in the Cajon Pass, Wrightwood became an easy destination, with no serious mountain driving required for city dwellers.
A series of wagon lifts, stairs, and even an elevator designed by the same engineer as those at the Eiffel Tower ( which at the time was the world's largest ) were put in place to accommodate the tourists and summer dwellers.
Also etymologically they are similar to the Greek metics, " ger " being derived from the Hebrew root for " to dwell ", i. e. they were " the dwellers us ".
Additionally, the other class of working population in Spartan society were the perioeci meaning “ dwellers around ” who were free peoples of conquered territories.
Harud, from which Hard, Hart and Harz are derived, means forest or forested mountains, and the Harudes were the residents or dwellers in the Harud.
People who lived in the country were probably better off than city dwellers, because the former lived in cabins that lay against turf stacks, while the latter, especially the poor, dwelt in freezing basements and garret dwellings.
For those Arab writers, the Turks were Turkic-speaking nomads, and not the sedentary Persian-speaking oasis dwellers.
The term has traditionally referred to housing areas that were once relatively affluent but which deteriorated as the original dwellers moved on to newer and better parts of the city, but has come to include the vast informal settlements found in cities in the developing world.

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