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Robert Cassell, 68, Norwood | NorthCountryNow

Sunday, January 3, 2021 - 7:44 am NORWOOD Arrangements for 68-year-old Robert Cassell, a resident of Ashley Street, are incomplete at this time with the Buck Funeral Home in Norwood. Mr. Cassell passed away Saturday evening at the Canton-Potsdam Hospital with family at his side. A complete obituary will be available when finalized. The Buck Funeral Home in Norwood is serving the family of Robert Cassell.

Looking back at 2020 on the Ann Arbor city beat and what s ahead in 2021

Looking back at 2020 on the Ann Arbor city beat and what’s ahead in 2021 Updated Dec 31, 2020; Posted Dec 31, 2020 This is so cool! one of these two cyclists exclaimed after passing through Ann Arbor s new riverfront tunnel pathway completed in 2020.Ryan Stanton | The Ann Arbor News Facebook Share ANN ARBOR, MI It was a year filled with bright spots and not-so-bright spots, both progress and turmoil, and it was a year most will never forget. Set against the backdrop of the COVID-19 pandemic, Black Lives Matter demonstrations and the political drama of the U.S. presidential election, here’s a look back at some of what happened on the city beat in Ann Arbor in 2020, with a look ahead to 2021.

Ann Arbor woman hilariously documents people s lost things on Twitter

Ann Arbor woman hilariously documents people’s lost things on Twitter Meredith Bruckner, Community News Producer, All About Ann Arbor Published:  Updated:  Tags:  Weatherbee finds a visor hanging on a tree on Aug. 17, 2019 and tweets: If you lost your visor, this tree on S. Ashley by the Dairy has it. #AnnArbor (Julie Weatherbee) ANN ARBOR – If you’ve lost anything in the downtown area, there’s a chance it’s been given a second life on Twitter. Julie Weatherbee, who works by day in the University of Michigan’s IT department and live tweets City Council meetings by night, began tweeting photos of people’s lost things six years ago.

The little-known Glasgow architect behind striking west end and Govanhill buildings

Flourish House WHEN you think of the architects famous for designing Glasgow’s most striking buildings, who comes to mind? Mackintosh and Greek Thomson would be on the list, undoubtedly - but another talented name in the field is less well known. Eric Alexander Sutherland is the genius behind Flourish House, once New City Road Congregational Church, on Ashley Street in the west end. This lovely Category B listed building, with its elegant facade and stunning vaulted ceiling, is now home to a mental health recovery centre. It was built in 1924 on what was then Cumberland Street West and it remained a church until 1949, when it was converted into offices.

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