PENSACOLA, Fla. (WALA) - Skating communities around the nation are grieving the loss of U.S. figure skaters on board the American Airlines flight that was struck by a Black Hawk helicopter this week.
The figure skating community experienced immense grief this week after 14 members of the community were tragically killed in a midair aircraft collision in Washington D.C. on Wednesday night.
In the outskirts of Boston, the leader of a storied figure skating club choked back tears. Yet as the figure skating community continued to grapple with the deaths of more than 15 skaters ...
A Jan. 30 Threads post (direct link, archive link) claims a U.S. figure skater narrowly avoided being on the American Airlines flight that collided with a military helicopter in Washington.
SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (KY3) - Hope Kovach, a figure skater, and coach at Brightspeed Ice Park in Springfield, traveled to Wichita to see the U.S. Figure Skating Championships. Kovach says she was ...
DENVER (KDVR) — A local former competitive figure skater and coach at the University of Denver says she knew some of the victims of Wednesday’s mid-air collision into the Potomac River.
Nancy Kerrigan was one of the world's top figure skaters in the 1990's She's from Massachusetts and still skates here Kerrigan and fellow skater Tonya Harding were at the center of one of the ...
Figure skaters and others killed in the midair collision near Washington, D.C., on Wednesday will be honored when the world championships are staged in Boston in March. International Skating Union ...
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