By Robert Kennedy
Jan 21, 2021 3:40 AM
APPLETON, WI (WTAQ-WLUK) – Appleton Area School District is now offering in-person learning. The youngest learners through 4th graders are fully in-person. Middle and high schoolers are in a blended model.
For many, like veteran crossing guard Dennis Murphy, January isn’t exactly synonymous with “back to school.”
“It’s a little slower than I thought, but I’m anxious to be back, it’s colder than I thought.”
But, it’s the first week many students in the Appleton Area School District are back in the classroom since March.
And Ed Rathsack was there to pick up his grandson.
The Council has written to elected members to explain the benefits of the controversial project. By Cónal Thomas Monday 18 Jan 2021, 12:55 PM Jan 18th 2021, 12:55 PM 41,964 Views 93 Comments Source: Dublin City Council
DUBLIN CITY COUNCIL has hit out at “hostile” commentary surrounding plans for a controversial white-water rafting facility at George’s Dock.
The cost of the project has grown from an initial estimate of €12 million to €25 million, contract tenders issued by the Council last week reveal.
The Council is seeking expressions of interest from construction firms to complete the development, which the Council estimates will take 18 months to build. The anticipated start date on works is this autumn.
Tessie Carroll funeral: Mourners line the streets of Dublin as Queen of the Hill makes final journey home
In a special moment Tessie s son Derek shared a song about his mother that included the lyrics to her favourite songs
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Veteran Dublin street trader Tessie Carroll dies aged 88 Councillor pays tribute to ‘outstanding activist’ who worked Dublin 1 pitch for 60 years
Wed, Jan 13, 2021, 17:10 Updated: Wed, Jan 13, 2021, 17:29
Veteran Dublin street trader Tessie Carroll has died aged 88. In June, 2019 Tessie brought her pram of clothes and bric-a-brac to the Cumberland Street market for the last time after 60 years of trading. Video: Kathleen Harris
Tessie Carroll for 60 years wheeled her pram full of clothes and bric a brac from her Hill Street home to her pitch at the flea market on Cumberland Street North.
Another link to what was Dublin in the rare old times has been broken following the death of Tessie Carroll, one of the oldest street traders at one of the longest running markets in the city.