Staff report
The Aspen Chapel Gallery will open the mixed-media group show “FIVE 5 X 5” on Wednesday in partnership with the substance abuse solutions nonprofit A Way Out.
A reception with the artists will run from 4-7 p.m. The show runs through Aug. 22.
Curated by artist Sam Louras, the show called on artists to create series of artworks measuring no larger than 5-inches-by-5-inches.
“Each group of five will be a collection or combination of color, texture, material and theme,” Louras said. “Artworks including photography, ceramics, assemblage, textiles and painting will be displayed. This is an art show where less is more proving that bigger is not always better. The challenge is part of the art.”
Was kidnap mistaken identity? Unsolved abduction of pregnant Angela Hammond 30 years ago was meant to target daughter of police informant who helped bust drugs ring , newly-revealed chilling ransom note suggests
Angela Hammond, 20, was abducted from a pay telephone booth while four months pregnant on April 4, 1991 in the town of Clinton
The ransom note that points to the mistaken identity theory came from the original police file for the Hammond case
Police believe kidnapper may have been targeting another young woman named Angela, who was the daughter of a local police informant
That informant received a chilling ransom note on the evening of Angela s disappearance
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Police search for tips in 30-year-old case of Angela Hammond
elisfkc2 / Flickr / CC BY-SA 2.0
CLINTON, Missouri (KCTV) Angela Hammond’s future was bright in April of 1991. She was 20 years old, engaged to be married, expecting a child. But one night she was snatched from the payphone outside the old Food Barn in Clinton.
The person on the other end of the phone was her fiancé, Rob Schafer. Angela told him she noticed a creepy car. Told him it passed her, then came back and pulled over near her. Then Rob heard Angela scream. It was the last thing he ever heard from her.