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Is This What the Family Home of the Future Will Look Like?

Is This What the Family Home of the Future Will Look Like? Hadley Keller © Kendrick Daye Spoiler: This family home includes a sanctuary, home brewery, and in-home doctor s office. “How can a response to despair be hope?” That, says architect Nina Cooke John, was the foundational question behind the Black Artist + Designers Guild s Obsidian Virtual Concept House >P, an interactive virtual showhouse debuting today. In it, 25 creators architects, interior designers, artists, makers, and more have conceptualized the Black family home of the future in a project that serves as a referendum on design, race, and life in America post-COVID. The despair Cooke John cites, of course, is the current pandemic, which has taken a breathtaking toll on countries around the world. In the U.S., the virus had an especially harsh impact on Black Americans, with African Americans hospitalized at 3.7 times the rate of White Americans and dying at 2.8 times the rate of White Ame

Sedalia Police Reports For January 25, 2021

Sedalia Police Reports For January 25, 2021 This article is compiled from the Sedalia Police Department reports. Early Monday morning, Officers were dispatched to the Schwan s Home Delivery, 3303 Erika Avenue, for a report of a theft not in progress. The complainant stated three catalytic converters had been stolen from vehicles on their lot.   Sunday afternoon, a car was stopped at West Broadway and South Carr for an improper turn and failing to maintain its lane several times. After an investigation, it was determined that the driver was intoxicated. Crystal Dawn Anderson, 44, of Sedalia, was arrested and taken to the Pettis County Jail for processing. Anderson was booked on a state charge of Driving While Intoxicated, pending release to a sober person.

City employees receive service awards - Sidney Daily News

City employees receive service awards Sidney Mayor Mike Barhorst, left, discusses some of the major incidents that Sidney Fire Lieutenant Rick Slife, center, and Chief Chad Hollinger, right, have participated in during their careers following the presentation of service awards at the fire department recently. Lieutenant Slife was recognized for 20 years of service. Courtesy photo SIDNEY City of Sidney employees recently received service awards at their respective departments after the city’s annual Christmas luncheon was cancelled due to the coronavirus pandemic. “As you know, we have traditionally presented employee service awards prior to the annual Christmas luncheon for employees and those retired from the city of Sidney,” Sidney Mayor Mike Barhorst told small groups of employees, a city press release said. “With the pandemic, we did not feel it would be a good idea to gather more than 200 people together in the same place, breathing the same air, no matter how no

Memories from a plague year | Westside Seattle

Memories from a plague year Mon, 01/11/2021 By Jean Godden With 2020 departed and nothing left but dismal memories, it seems appropriate to try to reconstruct for future generations what it meant to live through a year rife with life-threatening illness and untimely deaths. The idea of somehow memorializing our lost year got me thinking about time capsules, a way that our ancestors communicated with future generations to show how they once had lived. The oldest known example in the United States dates from 1795 when someone likely Sam Adams and Paul Revere buried a capsule at the Massachusetts State Capitol in Boston. It has since been exhumed, its fragile contents documented and the capsule reburied with additions.

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