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Obits | Duluth News Tribune
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Posted: Feb 19, 2021 2:27 PM NT | Last Updated: February 19 comments
Memorial University political scientist Kelly Blidook says lower-than-average turnout could be enough to challenge the legitimacy of the new government.(Ted Dillon/CBC)
A political scientist in St. John s said Friday that Newfoundland and Labrador s election campaign disrupted last week by a provincewide lockdown has been riddled with irregularities and is at serious risk of a result that could be challenged in court, if not the court of public opinion. When it is complete, we won t know for sure if the House that we ve elected is legitimate, Kelly Blidook, who teaches political science at Memorial University, told
From the dog who liked mailmen to unlikely revolutionary heroes, Santa Feâs Dirk Wales brought American legends to new audiences.
The lifelong storyteller, best known for childrenâs books he wrote later in life, died in November from natural causes.
He was 89.
âHe had an unending enthusiasm for his subjects and delighted at sharing his books with children and adults,â said Dorothy Massey, owner of Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse downtown. âHis personality shone through his writing.â
Wales grew up in California and said last year in an interview on the
Your Positive Impact podcast he attended theater school at UCLA for $18 a semester. After college, he wrote scripts for national advertising campaigns for marketing firms in Cincinnati and Chicago.
Brandon Sun By: Jordan Press, The Canadian Press Posted:
Last Modified: 3:38 PM CST Tuesday, Dec. 15, 2020
OTTAWA - The letter that John Cosgrove received in late November from the Canada Revenue Agency wasn t entirely clear, but he knew something was amiss.
Employment, Workforce Development and Disability Inclusion Minister Carla Qualtrough responds to a question during a news conference Thursday, August 20, 2020 in Ottawa. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld
OTTAWA - The letter that John Cosgrove received in late November from the Canada Revenue Agency wasn t entirely clear, but he knew something was amiss.
Cosgrove, like nearly nine million Canadians, had applied for and received the Canada Emergency Response Benefit while it was available between mid-March and late September as the economy slowed and jobs were lost because of COVID-19.
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