![Scarves over headscarves, Muslim women's outdoors group tackles snow tubing in Minnesota](https://gdb.voanews.com/48D8B1C1-E154-452D-85C5-460C650664DB.jpg)
Scarves over headscarves, Muslim women's outdoors group tackles snow tubing in Minnesota
Voice of America
Nasrieen Habib, left, and Makiya Amin pull their snow tubes on top of a hill during an outing organized by the group Habib founded to promote outdoors activities among Muslim women, at Elm Creek Park Reserve in Maple Grove, Minn., Jan. 4, 2025. Nawal Hirsi, right, goes snow tubing with her family as part of a group promoting outdoors activities by Muslim women, at Elm Creek Park Reserve in Maple Grove, Minn., on Jan. 4, 2025.
Ice crystals clung to the eyelashes, parka hood, beanie hat and headscarf of Ruqayah Nasser as she took a break after her first-ever snow tubing runs in a Minnesota park on a -18 Celsius January morning.
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FILE - Leonhard Seppala and his sled dog team pictured on Oct. 12, 1928, in Alaska. In 1925, Seppala was part of the nearly 700-mile relay of mushers and dog teams to get diphtheria antitoxin to Nome, Alaska, during a deadly outbreak of the disease. FILE - Gunnar Kaasen poses with his original dog team — including his lead dog Balto, top row, second left, in 1925 — which he drove through a blinding blizzard to deliver lifesaving serum, in Nome, Alaska. FILE - Gunnar Kaasen and his dogsled team leader Balto pose for a portrait in the early 1920s. FILE - The statue erected to honor "Balto" and other heroic sled dogs who carried serum to Nome, Alaska, through an Arctic blizzard is covered in snow in New York's Central Park, Dec. 11, 1947.