You'd be like a dog chasing a car...once you caught it, what would you do with it?

-p

On 8/26/2020 3:38 PM, John wrote:
You're older than I am, so even if you do find 'em you're likely to discover that you're invisible to their eyes.

On 8/26/2020 15:40:07, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:
So, exactly where can I find these wild women of Manhattan?

Dan Matyola
*https://tinyurl.com/DJM-Pentax-Gallery
<https://tinyurl.com/DJM-Pentax-Gallery>*



On Wed, Aug 26, 2020 at 3:31 PM ann sanfedele <ann...@nyc.rr.com> wrote:

John. the building is old and the apartments are too. I wrote a follow
up - the blondes have ben seen roaming the neigborhood maskless..  They
are hanging out on the fairly low fireescape without masks. These are
rich families kids.. they are not bundled 5 in a room.  The building
isn't owned by NYU.  The aparments are rentals.  THe fireescape is not a
good place to hang out under anycircumstance.. 5 of them on one level?

They are supposed to be social distancing or have done so before getting
here.
They are all taking turns taking photos of one another and huddling over their phones.  But they should not be out on the fire escape for any reason and we know they have been running around the neighborhood without masks..

On 8/26/2020 12:13 PM, John wrote:
I don't know what housing arrangements are like in an old apartment
building turned into a dormitory, but I suspect those women are
room-mates living together.

Does the University have the whole building & renovated it into a
dormitory? Or is the University just buying up apartments à la carte
to house students wherever they can?

They could be social distancing from the rest of the world, but what
would be the point of social distancing from each other if they're all
sleeping in the same apartment, sharing a bathroom & kitchen?

In the image, you have the two outside women striking a pose while the
three inside women are photographing them with their phones ... except
that the seated women appears to be chimping an image she's already
taken.

Roommates. How do you social distance from your college roommates?

On 8/24/2020 09:04:54, Ralf R Radermacher wrote:
Am 24.08.20 um 02:56 schrieb ann sanfedele:

As my downstairs neighbor put it "prancing and posing" with no pretense
of social distacing.

That appears to be a universal problem. Well, something must be causing
all those rising numbers.

In front of the café and restaurant across our little square before my window, they are greeting each other with hugs and kisses and their idea
of social distancing looks more like sitting in each others' laps. If
they're wearing masks, they have them under their chins.

The last few weekends here have been exceptionally warm and our police
had their hands full closing down pubs where noone gave a damn about
protection rules and disbanding illegal raves in warehouses and parks.

A few weeks ago, I've read an article somewhere describing the typical
superspreader as: young, loud, and doesn't have symptoms yet. Check!

Ralf



--
Paul Sorenson
Studio1941

Sooner or later "different" scares people.


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