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Bethany Beach. Front of Town Hall on Garfield Parkway Delaware: 25 feet Chief Little Owl In 1992, termites and high winds destroyed Statue #22. A replacement statue was carved out of white oak by Dennis D. Beach and lasted until 2000. Statue #69 carved by Peter Wolf Toth in 2002 replaces Statue #22 [144] 70 [145] 2002 Colquitt
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The Delaware Wave is a Gannett-owned English-language newspaper based in Bethany Beach, Delaware. Seventeen staff members publish the weekly 11-inch by 17-inch newspaper, every Tuesday, [1] and distribute it to the public on Wednesdays. [2] It serves from Bethany Beach and Fenwick Island to Georgetown and Selbyville with local news.
Also in that year, Dennis Beach's Chief Little Owl statue, badly damaged by termites, was replaced by a new Native American sculpture created by Peter Toth. [39] Over the winter of 2008–2009, the town's beaches underwent a vast beach replenishment program that cost the U.S. federal government approximately $20 million. [78]
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The YouTube channel LackLuster, which features videos of police misconduct, shared Gould's story to an audience of more than 1 million viewers in June. The city fired Guerriero two months later ...
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Little Owl, a friendly middle-aged chief, [4] was selected as the Arapaho head chief to sign the Treaty of Fort Laramie (1851). [5] From the South Arapaho were Cute Nose and Big Man. [6] Autho-nishah, an elder of the Arapaho nation, urged Little Owl and other signers to make a moral commitment to honor the provisions of the treaty.