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Goblet celebrating Scots drive for ethical silver among stars of new exhibition

Goblet celebrating Scots drive for ethical silver among stars of new exhibition
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Scottish Goldsmith s Trust award winner s work to feature in Hamilton & Inches exhibition

Scottish Goldsmith s Trust award winner s work to feature in Hamilton & Inches exhibition Fairmined Goblet Silversmith Award Winner Ruth Page. Photo: Colin Hattersley. EDINBURGH .- A goblet inspired by the weights on railway signals and handcrafted from ethically sourced silver will be among the beautiful pieces in an exhibition celebrating Scottish jewellery and silversmithing. The highly contemporary minimalist design is by trainee silversmith Ruth Page who was commissioned to create the piece as part of her prize when she was awarded the Scottish Goldsmiths Trust Outstanding Student Award in 2019. It’s the first time that the award-winning design has been made from Fairmined silver – reflecting SGT’s ambition to see Scotland become a world-leader in the use of ethically-sourced materials and sustainable practices.

Rail shame as Nelson left without trains despite feisty protest

The Kiwi Station rail protest in 1955. Credit: Nelson Provincial Museum, Geoffrey C Wood Collection. An Auckland University report out earlier this month which concluded that New Zealand’s roading system has added to our psychological distress makes for sobering reading. Nelson’s ongoing transport woes and debate have been caused of course by the past actions of short-sighted politicians who became hell-bent on dismantling perfectly good infrastructure which now has to patched over by future generations. I’m talking here about Nelson Railway, which used to be one of the best little government-owned rail lines in the country. Always carrying passengers and freight alike, unusual for an unconnected regional line, it operated for 79 years between 1876 and 1955. Starting in Port Nelson, trains would head up St Vincent Street through Bishopdale and onto Stoke, Richmond, Foxhill and Belgrove.

The Tulsa Massacre: Is Racial Justice Possible 100 Years Later?

The Tulsa Massacre: Is Racial Justice Possible 100 Years Later? The Tulsa Massacre: Is Racial Justice Possible 100 Years Later? by Michael Blanding A new Harvard Business School case by Mihir Desai examines the Tulsa Massacre of 1921, and asks difficult questions about what reparations America owes to its Black citizens. Early on the morning of June 1, 1921, more than 5,000 white residents of Tulsa, Oklahoma, invaded the African-American neighborhood of Greenwood. They came armed with guns, sticks, and other weapons some supplied by the city’s police department and set fire to homes and businesses in a 35-block area. When residents tried to flee burning buildings, they were shot and killed in the street.

Charlene Gehm, Protean Dancer With the Joffrey, Dies at 69

Charlene Gehm, Protean Dancer With the Joffrey, Dies at 69 She could be combative in one duet, a picture of stillness in another and witty in still another role. On Broadway, she danced in “West Side Story.” Charlene Gehm in an undated photo. The choreographer Ben Stevenson said she carried herself like Grace Kelly. Credit.Jack Mitchell Jan. 22, 2021 Charlene Gehm, a dancer who thrilled audiences and critics alike with her excellence in an unusually wide range of roles with the Joffrey Ballet and other troupes, died on Jan. 10 at her home in Manhattan. She was 69. Her husband, Gary MacDougal, said the cause was cancer.

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