失落-每天的甲板和栅栏 //www.dascontech.com 甲板和栅栏每天新闻 2021年5月17日星期一17:56:22+0000 恩美 每小时 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.7.2 //www.dascontech.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/cropped-DECKS-AND-FENCES-DAILY-32x32.png 失落-每天的甲板和栅栏 //www.dascontech.com 32 32 以前只是个栅栏。这是对2020年失物招领的致敬:NPR //www.dascontech.com/it-used-to-be-just-a-fence-it-became-a-tribute-to-things-lost-and-found-in-2020-npr/ 迈克尔·萨索 2021年5月17日星期一17:56:22+0000 爱游戏手球 栅栏 迷路的 NPR 贡品 //www.dascontech.com/?p=1985
/div>P>SACHA PFEIFFER,主持人:今年年底,一个艺术展要求马里兰州邻里的居民考虑这个问题(8211);2020年丢失了什么,发现了什么?NPR’;萨曼莎·巴拉班参观了露天博物馆的围墙。萨曼莎·巴拉班,署名:It’;这只是一个普通的旧链环

帖子它过去只是一道篱笆。它成为对2020年失物招领的致敬:NPR第一次出现在每天甲板和栅栏

< div风格= " margin-bottom: 20 px;">It Used To Be Just A Fence. It Became A Tribute To Things Lost And Found In 2020 : NPR

SACHA PFEIFFER, HOST:

Towards the end of the year, an art exhibition is asking residents of a Maryland neighborhood to consider this question – what was lost and what was found in 2020? NPR’s Samantha Balaban visited the fence that houses the open air museum.

SAMANTHA BALABAN, BYLINE: It’s just a normal, old chain link fence covered with barbed wire and surrounding a parking lot, with the exception that there are ornate dioramas on the fence.

ANDREA JONES: You know, I’ve never done an outdoor exhibition like this, so I wanted to make sure I could see it, you know?

BALABAN: Andrea Jones lives next door and is the curator of the Community Lost and Found exhibition.

JONES: In my work, I talk a lot with museums about the potential of helping people deal with emotions.

BALABAN: Jones is a museum advisor working for the Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum. A few months ago, she decided to do something that would help her reflect on this turbulent year.

JONES: You know, there are a lot of changes. And to really process what’s happening to us, I think it’s really useful to do things, you know, physically, you know, with your hands.

BALABAN: So Jones built seven wooden boxes – they’re a reef, she says, on top of the treasure chest you find in school or church – and asked her neighbors to decorate them.

JONES: Can we go over here? I can show you a little.

BALABAN: Jones goes to a box designed by Megan Abbot and Gary Hall who live across the street. They had a baby this year.

JONES: And what Megan and Gary found this year was their daughter. So this is a real bird’s nest that they put in this box.

BALABAN: She points to a pacifier hanging in a translucent globe.

JONES: And that kind of represents the bubble that you felt in at that moment.

CECILY HABIMANA: So my box is – the name is connection.

BALABAN: Cecily Habimana is co-owner of the Sew Creative Lounge sewing studio. When the pandemic started, they had to close their doors.

HABIMANA: And to this day we only have about 20% of our students back in our studio.

BALABAN: So Habimana decorated a box with brightly colored fabric patterns and strands of pearls that hung from the ceiling.

HABIMANA: And it basically shows that every person continues to work, continue to sew at home and for themselves, but none of them interact with each other and that this connection has been lost.

BALABAN: Andrea Jones wanted everyone to be able to take part in this exhibition, so she also left out some pens and made small wooden labels so that people who walk by could write on them and make contributions.

JONES: How to drink. Drinking – I gave up this year.

BALABAN: It’s a living installation.

JONES: There is a special one that is dedicated to Ruth Bader Ginsburg and on which these pearls are draped.

BALABAN: Some of the things that people wrote on the tags are funny. One person wrote under the body fat lost section. Others are poignant. A young child writes under found – how to play with my brother.

JONES: Here’s one that actually relates to the exhibition itself. I found these cutouts clattering in the wind against an otherwise silent and nondescript eyesore fence, and then smiled.

STEPHANIE VAUGHN: Oh, wow.

BALABAN: Stephanie Vaughn was leaving the parking lot when she pulled up in front of the fence.

VAUGHN: It’s really nice that the community took the time to tell their story during this time, because each of us has a story.

BALABAN: Vaughn works at a school in Baltimore County. It’s been a tough year. Her mother was diagnosed with a brain tumor in May. Her husband died in September. When she was in South Carolina helping her family, she needed a project to do with her nieces.

VAUGHN: All right. Let’s rate this positively.

BALABAN: When Vaughn picks up a label, she is writing about what she has learned.

VAUGHN: Found it – I’ve started crocheting again. I made baby blankets and tea towels. I enjoyed giving the gifts I gave to family, friends and strangers.

BALABAN: After telling her story and tying her label to the fence, Vaughn goes to the post office to send a package of her crochet in time for the holidays. Samantha Balaban, NPR News.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

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警方说,佛罗里达州一名男子“失控”,开枪打死了一直向他家围栏射击的邻居 //www.dascontech.com/florida-man-lost-it-shot-and-killed-neighbor-who-kept-shooting-his-fence-police-say/ 迈克尔·萨索 星期六,5月8日04:59:15 +0000 爱游戏手球 栅栏 佛罗里达 杀了 迷路的 男人。 邻居 警察 射击 射击 //www.dascontech.com/?p=1936

作者:您身边的WFLA 8员工,Nexstar媒体连线发布于2021年4月6日/09:00下午CDT/。更新:2021年4月6日/7:28下午CDT佛罗里达州坦帕(WFLA)和#8211;一名来自佛罗里达州坦帕的男子说“;迷失”;当他枪杀了他的邻居,据称他星期一枪杀了他的栅栏。坦帕警察局

帖子佛罗里达州男子“失去了它”,枪杀了一个不断向他的栅栏开枪的邻居,警方说第一次出现在每天甲板和栅栏

< div风格= " margin-bottom: 20 px;佛罗里达州一名男子“失去了它”,开枪打死了一直向他的篱笆射击的邻居,srcset="//www.dascontech.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Nelson-Espinal.jpg 1200w, //www.dascontech.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Nelson-Espinal-300x158.jpg 300w, //www.dascontech.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Nelson-Espinal-1024x538.jpg 1024w, "//www.dascontech.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Nelson-Espinal-768x403.jpg 768w" sizes="(max-width: 1200px) 100vw, 1200px" />

by: WFLA 8 on your side Employees, Nexstar Media Wire

Posted on Apr 6, 2021 / 09:00 PM CDT
Updated: April 6, 2021 / 7:28 PM CDT

TAMPA, Florida (WFLA) – A man from Tampa, Florida said he “lost” it when he shot his neighbor who allegedly shot his fence Monday.

The Tampa Police Department said 37-year-old Nelson Espinal called 911 Monday and said he shot his neighbor.

Espinal told Detectives that he had an ongoing argument with his neighbor who, according to Espinal, shot at his fence. He said it happened again on Monday, so he went to his house, got his gun and confronted the man. He said he had expressed concern for his children in his home.

Police: Polk County woman tests a new car at the Chevy dealership and tries to steal it

Espinal said his neighbor held up two middle fingers and said, “I don’t give a shit.”

Then Espinal said he “lost” it and shot his neighbor several times. He said he then went back to his house, called 911 and went outside to wait for the police.

The victim was found in his front yard about 50 feet from the fenced property line when officers arrived.

Espinal is charged with first degree murder.

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