Busy final week of regular season for alpine Huskies
Sports Editor - Salmon Press Newspapers
Teegan LeClerc races for the Gorham alpine ski team at Loon Mountain last week. (Photo by Joshua Spaulding) (
click for larger version)
February 11, 2021LINCOLN The Gorham alpine ski team, along with Berlin s lone skier, kicked off the final week of the regular season with a giant slalom meet at Loon Mountain Resort in Lincoln. The meet consisted of two runs of giant slalom in the morning and one in the afternoon and also featured Lin-Wood, Profile, Littleton, Woodsville, White Mountains and Moultonborough.
In the morning race, the Gorham boys finished in third place behind Lin-Wood and Profile. Nolan York led the way with an eighth place finish in a time of 1:09.23.
Actress Esmé Bianco, known for her role as Ros on the HBO hit show
Game of Thrones, has detailed the abuse she says she endured while dating Marilyn Manson in an interview in
Bianco is one of several women who have come forward to publicly name Manson as their abuser in recent weeks, lead by actress Evan Rachel Wood s outing of the shock rocker. Both women also testified about their experiences of abuse in California (Wood in 2018, Bianco in 2019) in an attempt to reform domestic violence laws, though neither revealed the name of the abuser while recollecting the specific incidents.
STOLLINGS â After graduating from the Paul Mitchell Beauty School in Lexington, Kentucky, in October 2017 and working in that area for a time, Hannah Foxx knew she wanted to come home to Logan and start her own business.
Thatâs exactly what the 2016 Logan High School graduate has done by opening Foxxy Salon at Stollings inside the now remodeled space that was formerly occupied by pediatrician Dr. Samuel Rojas.
The interior of Foxxy Salon features wide open spaces. Rooms include a selfie room, a relaxation room, a massage therapist room, three hair rooms for three hairdressers, a space for one nail tech and more.
âLook at how popular TV programmes like
The Repair Shop are,â said Tony Butler, executive director of Derby Museums. âMaking resonates with the public.â
The maker movement is a subculture that embraces and celebrates the physical act of creating something. Borrowing from traditional hobbies such as woodworking, textile design and metalwork, there is a strong emphasis on repurposing existing objects and finding fun and fulfilment in the act of creation.
Couple the huge interest in making with the UKâs desire to understand its new post-Brexit role in the world while grappling with its colonial past and the climate crisis, and it may transpire that the museum is the attraction the country did not know it needed right now.
If 2020 proved one thing, itâs that pollies donât deserve the arts
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What will Melbourne s cultural landscape look like in 2021? That depends on who you ask. Ask the Avalanches Tony Di Blasi what he d like to see and he ll rattle off a wish-list that s increasingly out of this world: âAll kinds of shows. Theatre, music, galleries. Theme parks with rollercoasters. Elephant rides. A
Jurassic Park-style dinosaur enclosure would be cool. Space rides to the moon.â