Friday, March 25, 2011

Subway spaghetti


Video inoculation in a fight in New York City subway car began through a woman eating spaghetti, other than also led to a broader conversation about what flaxen to put further people using community convey to the end during the busy travel city, and where to draw the line.
Internet video with the purpose of shows New Yorkers fight for the right passenger snack noodles to the subway fire in the debate about what people should or should not do in the largest public transportation system of the country.
Some New York subway passengers are called for a ban on food products, such as those enforced in Washington, San Francisco and other cities. Port Trans-Hudson trains, which run between New York and New Jersey, already prohibits food.

"I think it's bad when people eat," said Sam Ramos, as he boarded a train to the Bronx in May. "They have to go elsewhere."

But at the other end of the car, John Augustine, dug into the cup chili, and said that people should mind their own business.

"People will fight about all the things," said Augustine. "Are we going to legislate against each of them?"

Littering, playing loud music and smoking in the subway. On Wednesday the chairman of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, which runs the city subway and bus, police said more problems to deal with than patrolling trains for chowhounds too.

"We all have a responsibility to treat our system and our fellow subway riders with respect," chairman Jay Walder said. "This system, which carries 5 million people a day, and I'm not sure that a ban on food is a very practical and enforceable."

MTA board member Andrew Albert said that such rules would be cut in food sales at newsstands, which pay rent to the agency. But another board member, Doreen Frasca, MTA has offered to impose rules on Manhattan's Second Avenue line, which is under development, as a pilot program.

Some riders have recently adopted compliance subway etiquette in their hands. Last year, the artist Jason Shelowitz posted dozens of official-looking signs stations warning passengers not to cut the nails on the subway.

"The sound is incredibly annoying and nail bits are flying everywhere," says Marks.

"Also, keep your finger from the nose," one sign said.

Brooklyn designer, Elizabeth Carey Smith, watched, how many times people asked her to place passengers on eight subway lines, when she was pregnant. She posted a series of pie charts with the results of online earlier this month. Train G, which connects Brooklyn and Queens, was the worst, 1 and 6, which connects Manhattan and the Bronx, and skimming the Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens were the best.
In recent months, an amateur video recorded the rats running up the legs of sleeping passengers, pushing match between a passenger and warring saxophonist, barreling along a commuter train track raised in Harlem with one of its doors are open stuck.

Some riders thought spaghetti fight was staged. Most of them have seen far worse offenders of etiquette than a noodle-nosher in the video, "said Metro rider Shash Lachhman.

"Once I saw someone have grilled chicken with no wipes," Lachhman said. "But I still do not think you rule against him."

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