Organizers of a figure skating benefit event in Washington said they have already raised $1.2 million for victims of the D.C.
A star-studded group of some of the best U.S. figure skaters of the past and present took the ice in the nation's capital to ...
Supported by By Juliet Macur Photographs by Jason Andrew Reporting from Washington, D.C. At the end of his figure skating performance, when the last note of his parents’ favorite song played in ...
That included 28 members of the figure skating community, some of whom lived and trained in the Washington area. “Everyone grieves in their own way, and the last month has been really ...
WASHINGTON (AP) — Organizers of a figure skating benefit event in Washington said they have already raised $1.2 million for victims of the D.C. plane crash and first responders. Monumental ...
Ted Leonsis, head of Monumental Sports & Entertainment, which staged the event along with U.S. Figure Skating, DC Fire & EMS Foundation and the Greater Washington Community Foundation, hopes doing ...
Monumental also donated $200,000 to the event's charitable efforts, which will be split evenly between the U.S. Figure Skating Family Support Fund, Greater Washington Community Foundation’s ...
WASHINGTON -- Maxim Naumov wept on his knees at the end of his performance honoring his parents, wiped away tears as he skated off the ice and held an electric candle in the air as applause rained ...
Max Naumov reacts after performing Sunday, March 2, 2025, in Washington at the Legacy on Ice event, a figure skating tribute to support the families and loved ones affected by the Jan. 29, 2025 ...