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Potty-mouths: Toilets still the talk of the town Published: 1/26/2021 5:46:23 PM At their meeting today, selectmen will again take up the topic of North Conway Village’s lack of public toilets, a topic that has taken on additional urgency during the pandemic. The selectmen will meet at the new town hall at 23 Main St. in Conway Village at 4 p.m. Their meeting can be viewed on Zoom; it is also live-streamed over Facebook. On Monday, Town Manager Tom Holmes said he plans to update the board “on what we are doing as far as looking for a spot for permanent public restrooms, as well as coming up with a temporary seasonal solution for this summer.” ....
Saturday, Jan. 9 â¢âThe Sun looked back on the lives of more than two dozen notable Mount Washington Valley residents who died in 2020. â¢âResidents and staff of Mountain View Community nursing home in Ossipee received their first round of COVID-19 shots Jan. 6. â¢âBalsams Resort developer Les Otten recently bought out his remaining partner in the Balsams redevelopment to become sole owner of the project. â¢âThe Bartlett School Board discussed how to hold the annual school district meeting and the traditional budget hearing safely during the pandemic and how to accommodate voters who do not feel safe attending in-person. â¢âCross-country ski areas were able to reopen after more than 7 inches of snow fell in Mount Washington Valley Jan. 2-3. ....
BARTLETT — Josiah Bartlett Elementary School has become the first school in SAU 9 to go fully remote this school year due to the COVID-19 pandemic. ....
William Marvel The tracks of the Boston & Maine Railroad reached Conway Village in 1872. The next year, while track crews worked their way across the Saco River floodplain to North Conway, carpenters went to work on the Conway depot. It set an architectural example for the North Conway station that would go up in 1874, but at a scale sufficiently modest for a working-class town. The station was located off the big bend in Main Street, below which the tracks and the street ran parallel for over half a mile. The two rail lines passing through Conway eventually sprouted six stations, and each village developed its nomenclature independently, so the horseshoe driveway that connected the station to Main Street became the second Depot Street in town. ....
Quote of the Week âMy motto is the opposite of Michelle Obamaâs. If the president goes low, Iâm going to go lower.â â Republican presidential candidate William Weld, while signing the lower door of the refrigerator at The Conway Daily Sun on Jan. 2, 2020. âI donât think anybody who runs for mayor in America, thinks, âYou know, do two terms, and then itâs right to the White House. At least not in the city like mine.â â Democratic presidential candidate Peter Buttigieg during an editorial board at The Conway Daily Sun on Jan. 3. âThey had a little woodpile for protection. Thatâs about it.ââ Ossipee Police Chief Joe Duchesne, describing his officersâ lack of protection during a recent shootout. He asked for $27,000 from town voters to buy body armor for his force on Jan. 14. ....