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Winona Symphony Orchestra annual Children’s Concert (3/24/2021)
Winona Symphony Orchestra persevered to perform its annual Children’s Concert and provide a high-quality, live symphonic music experience for regional students, despite the challenges of the pandemic. After the WSO’s 2020 Children’s Concert, life as we knew it and had planned for seemed to come to a halt. A year later – with much in the way of planning for safety and enhanced logistics – local and regional artists were finally able to come together once more for the WSO 2021 Children’s Concert on March 1 of this year. The WSO live-streamed its annual performance from the Manoogian Gallery of the Minnesota Marine Art Museum. Artistic director and conductor Erik Rohde directed the local and regional musicians from near Emanuel Leutze’s 1851 painting of “Washington Crossing the Delaware.” Students and teachers were able to submit questions remotely, and following the music,
WSO spring concert moved to June 12 (3/17/2021)
In consideration of public health and current limitations on in-person events, the Winona Symphony Orchestra (WSO) has moved its spring concert, originally scheduled for March 27, to Saturday, June 12 at 7:30 p.m. At this concert, the WSO welcomes members of the Apollo Music Festival in Houston, Minn., as featured soloists. The program includes “Rissolty Rossolty” by Ruth Crawford Seeger, “Serenade in D” by Ethel Smyth, and “Triple Concerto for Violin, Cello, and Piano in C Major, Op. 56” by Ludwig van Beethoven. Featured soloists for the concerto are Roy Meyer, violin, Ruth Marshall, cello, and Garret Ross, piano.
Far-right group stakes a claim, stoking angry debate and exposing political divides By Mike Carter, The Seattle Times
Published: December 20, 2020, 10:30am
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3 Photos The Deer Lagoon Grange hall began its life as a church. The quilt design on its side was chosen as part of a contest in 2015. (Steve Ringman/The Seattle Times/TNS) Photo Gallery
LANGLEY The Deer Lagoon Grange sits on an emerald swath of grass along the northeast shore of Lone Lake, just outside the picturesque town of Langley, perched on bluffs above Puget Sound at the south end of Whidbey Island.
The white building with two geometric barn quilts on its clapboard walls was once a Lutheran church. It’s a bit run down today and in need of a paint job, but has stood at the heart of the island’s agriculture community since its founding in 1927.