Beginning yes we were finally are going 6 flags for 2 years i was waiting and my mom got 4 tickets from work.it was packed with cars and it was a few weeks into school.i don’t know how she got them but she got them.so when we got there i was surprised at what i saw a it was a ride where you were on like a roller coaster.but not build like one and the seats are hanging on the top of wheels and that the way.it is built we saw it but we didn’t get on it but when we got in it was bigger.than i expected there was food stands everywhere and it packed. we about to buy something but we didn’t.so we decided to wait and so we started to explore and we went to a place called texas star i think it was that but i don’t know.so anyway we sat down and my mom went to the bathroom and so me my brother,sister and dad were looking at the map to know were we going and we started walking when my mom.came back and we saw a train so we decided to get on it to look around and see what ride we wanted to get on.so we are waiting for the train we saw a lot of rides we wanted to get on.so we decided to wait for the train and go on the rides after and so after waiting a couple of minutes.the train came and we ride it and we ended up on a different side of the park.we started walking and there was a sling shot ride that there was two seats with a rope on each side and it was tied to the ground and you were shot up in the air and you go really high.but we didn’t get on the ride because you had to pay
Former Tampa Bay Buccaneer fullback Mike "The A-Train" Alstott remains an all-time fan favorite for his accomplishments on and off the field. He played 12 seasons as a fullback, racking up 5,088 yards rushing; 71 touchdowns (a team record); six Pro Bowls; and a 2002 Super Bowl championship. He was also injured nearly 50 times and was given prescription painkillers to get him through the pain and back on the field. Fortunately, Alstott, now 41 years old and a head coach for a St. Petersburg high school football team, came through it all without experiencing an overdose or becoming dependent on painkillers, something he credits to having trainers and physicians on his side who helped him understand how to take them safely.
Have you ever been to a trampoline jump park?Well I have and I will tell you how it all started when they took down a Halloween store to put up the new Sky Zone that is right beside Home Depot and when it was open I asked my mom if me and my sister Giselle can go to Sky Zone but my mom said “no you can’t go to Sky Zone but you and Giselle can go next week because it is Sunday to day’’ so me and my sister what and what tell next Saturday.When it was Saturday me and my sister Giselle we're happy to go to the new Sky Zone and that Saturday morning me my mom and my sister woke up and me and my mom cook breakfast whale Giselle was on her phone talking to her friend about going to the new Sky Zone but meanwhile me and my mom was finished with the
I am in Texas meeting my dad family with my mom and brothers and my sister and we wanted to go to Texas for a long time. We were going to go during the summer, but we did not we just stayed home. Then when I and my brothers went back to school for a few days or one or two weeks, then we finally went to Texas we have seen lots of my dad’s family and we see the Gulf of Mexico and we played in it found shells and we see fish jumping out of the water and they were so close to us and one was right in front of me and it jumped up and I got scared of it. Then we were heading to my dad’s grandma’s house and we stop there for a few minutes, then we were on the way home and we stop at hotel to rest then we got food then we went on our way home
“Orphans, Foundlings, waifs, half-orphans, street Arabs, and street urchins were terms used to describe abandoned children” (DiPasquale). In New York City alone, there were 30,000 homeless children in the 1850’s (The Orphan Trains). Children averaging from six to eighteen lived very homeless and neglecting lives and had little to no hope for a successful life. Children’s lives, orphanages, and Orphan Trains changed the way children lived during the 1800s.
“When a child of the streets stands before you in rags, with a tear-stained face, you cannot easily forget him. And yet, you are perplexed what to do. The human soul is difficult to interfere with. You hesitate how far you should go.” – Charles Loring Brace
The tale of the 4 train depicts the story of the type of people that already live in Jerome Avenue, and those who don’t. As the 4 train keeps going uptown towards the Bronx, there are less white people and t people of color become the majority of the subway riders. Eventually the train makes its last stop in Manhattan when it reaches the 125th street stop, the train is then filled black and brown faces, and there aren’t any other white faces unless its game day at the Yankee Stadium. The people that are coming from one of the richest zip codes, Wall Street, and those in between are long gone; and the people that have endured the long train ride uptown are left to ride the train along Jerome Avenue. This image somehow reflects the white flight that occurred decades earlier in the Bronx, as people of color settled while white people moved out as the borough experienced urban decay. Not only did the Bronx survive, but so did the people of color that dealt and endured the harsh realities that still lingers in the Bronx in present day.
Traveling up to 60 miles per hour in a chain of iron boxes weighing several hundred tons altogether can make you feel quite small; and even smaller if you didn’t have any control of the destination. It was a tight fit in each train car due to the thirty to forty other orphans packed in together with two to three adults. There was a strain on all orphans involved in this program. The orphan trains were a bitterly imperative movement put in place to disperse the population, as well as put “future criminals” in what was supposed to be loving homes. (Web)
First we entered six flags where we were very excited that we were there.We also had to listen to a very long speech about the rules and the rides of six flags. Then we started riding the rides the first ride we rode was the flash the ride was very fast and my dad lost his hat but it fall to the back of the sit. Then we found out there was a water park so we went back to the park to get some clothes
As I get out of the car, I hear a girl screaming in the distance. Hearing such a noise instantly made me feel a chill go down my spine. As I walk against my own fear, I approach an overwhelming sign that says “Welcome to Six Flags over Texas”. My mother looks at me with a huge smile, reassuring me that there is nothing to be afraid of. Being only 8 years old at the time, I was a very hyper and ecstatic kid. Going against my own fears, I timidly rushed to the entrance. As I stood there before this monstrosity of amusement, my jaw was on the floor with astonishment. Leaving me in a state of shock,I could only slowly walk in with aw, and marvel at what was before me.
I remember a day when I was walking in the Six Flags theme park in Texas with my best friend. The smell of popcorn and candy and the feeling of excitement from the little kids coming for the first time with the grandparents just enjoying the family experience. We were walking down the winding stone pathways, waiting for our next adventure at every turn. Trying not to leave our parents behind, we ran ahead enough to be in eyesight, but we were going at our own pace. He and I stood amazed at the sight of the gigantic rides as their shadows were cast down over us. The mini-shops and food stand would attract our little noses at the sight and smell of every peculiar food and trinket imaginable. My Friend, Rhett, suggested we go try a roller coaster. At first, I thought he was just joking around trying to scare me. I asked him what he really wanted to do and after that I realized that he wasn’t joking.
About seven years ago, I went to Six Flags for the first time ever. I was only about ten years old at the time, and of course I was extremely nervous. I had a lot of questions about it because of course it was all new to me with it being my first time going to an amusement park. I had asked about the big rides they have of course, the really popular water park they have at Six Flags, and of course I had to ask about the good amusement park food. As soon as I got there, my heart instantly dropped.
one day we were going to this place called six flags. It was a sunny day that day we left from our house about 5:00 that morning but we were staying there for the weekend at my friends grandparents house in Atlanta. My mom and my two brothers were with us driving and my friend his hole family was following us when we went down their. And we all couldn't wait to get down their but i’m sometimes nervous to go down big rollercoasters but I didn't know that they were going to be that big.
I was always scared of roller coasters, something about them made me feel weird inside. I would go to Great America with my friends and wait outside the rides that were scary for me. I never really thought about getting on any rides that dropped at the speed of lightning and loops that make your stomach flip upside down twenty times. I would just sit down and watch the rides as they dropped. That was until one day, my friend told me “Close your eyes I’m taking you to somewhere that’s fun.” I didn’t know what she meant by that but I did what she told me to do. She also covered one of my ears I didn’t know why. “Open your eyes Steven.” I did and at that moment my mouth dropped. I tried running from the line but it was too late. My friend had made me get in line for the scariest coaster in the park. It was named “Flight Deck” .The seats were empty and the small gates opened. She pushed me into the seat and locked me in as fast as she could. I heard the snap which meant the seat was
My cousin and I were heading over to our favorite ride there, the Twirl And Whirl, it was so fun, when we went on that ride it felt like we were flying when we closed our eyes and felt it spin. While we were on the ride my sister and her friend asked if they could go on the roller coaster and our dad said,”Yes, but first let 's wait for this ride to be done so all of us can go.” soon the twirl and whirl ride stopped and we got off and headed towards the roller coaster ride called the bullet, we waited in line for maybe 10 min then got on, I sat next to my dad because it was my first roller coaster ride,”Everyone
Then, my family and I went to Hershey Park as a birthday gift for me. At the entrance, I saw an enormous light blue and bright yellow water slide that almost looked like half of a tornado. It was a really hot day, the temperature was almost 87 degrees.We walked over to the water section, and I was amazed how big it was, It was like a pool with water slides for gods. My brother told me right away, “We must go on that slide,” and that was the moment I knew I would go on that gigantic water slide, I was relieved because I desperately needed a something to refresh myself, and I was scared. When I was waiting in-line I went up so many stairs, which took a while. Finally, I was where the slide started, My brother’s back was facing the slide and I was facing the slide on the tube. “Shahan, are you ready? ” My brother asked me,