Mooresville hosts 2022 budget public hearing reporter-times.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from reporter-times.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Lakehead s Vanessa Chorkawy sends a shot into a crowd of McMaster players during the second set Friday night in OUA women s volleyball action at the Thuderdome. (Leith Dunick, tbnewswatch.com/FILE)
THUNDER BAY – The Lakehead Thunderwolves are bringing back one of their own to coach the women’s volleyball team.
Vanessa Chorkaway, a perennial OUA all-star and a Team Canada athlete, has agreed to take over the reins of the team from Craig Barclay, who resigned last summer.
The Thunderwolves, like all OUA sports teams, were sidelined in 2020-21 by the effects of COVID-19 and did not play.
Chorkawy will be joined by interim coach Brett Hagarty, the head coach of Team Ontario’s beach volleyball program since 2016, who will guide the club until Chorkawy officially takes over in early 2022 after her teaching obligations at Acadia University in Nova Scotia ends.
Thunderwolves see plenty of schedule positives tbnewswatch.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from tbnewswatch.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Traffic engineering firm suggests changes along Mooresville s Indiana Street
The Reporter Times
MOORESVILLE A daily commute through the town of Mooresville can get a bit hectic, especially during the early morning and afternoon rush hours.
In recent months the town of Mooresville, Mooresville Redevelopment Commission and Mooresville school system joined forces for a traffic study of roadways and intersections throughout the community.
The entities contracted with Traffic Engineering to complete the study.
During Tuesday s meeting of the town council, Joe Johannson and Brad Worland from Traffic Engineering gave a presentation of the company s findings.
According to Johannson, the company was asked to look at the intersections of Carlisle and Monroe streets, Indiana and Main streets, Jefferson and Harrison streets, Northridge Drive and Ind. 267 as well as south Indiana Street near the Ind. 67.
Researchers help prepare Portland International Airport for when The Big One hits
Researchers at Oregon State University just saved the Portland International Airport more than $30 million by blowing up the ground around it. Author: Keely Chalmers (KGW) Updated: 10:16 PM PDT July 8, 2021
The phenomenon is called liquefaction.
It happens when sandy soil with shallow groundwater shakes in an earthquake and behaves like liquid. And it s a danger the Pacific Northwest could face in the coming years.
The Portland International Airport (PDX) is in an area at high risk for liquefaction. We have to have a runway. And since both runways are highly susceptible to liquefaction, we re working towards that, said Tom Wharton, a project engineer with the Port of Portland.