9 & 10 News
April 23, 2021
Photo Courtesy: Exposures By Rah
Just a week from now we’ll be turning the calendar and welcoming the first weekend in May. And in northern Michigan that means wedding season is here.
Area vendors tell us this season may be different than the last – in the second summer of a global pandemic.
Summer weddings are a northern Michigan tradition. An exciting time for the bride and groom – but a busy time for wedding vendors. Sarah Armstrong is a photographer and owner of Exposures by Rah. She says when the pandemic hit last year, “not only did the leads dry up, because my vendor friends weren’t booking either….” Armstrong says, “I think I only had 8 or 10 weddings booked for 2020 by the time he pandemic hit. All of them rescheduled or downsized their wedding.”
The cast of Harry Potter: then and now
David Edwards
When you think of the most popular book and movie franchise of all time, one name comes to mind: Harry Potter. It has become a cultural phenomenon around the globe and has truly changed the world.
The first book series was written by
J.K. Rowling and the first book,
J.K. Rowling was traveling on a train from Manchester to London when she originally thought of the idea for the seven-book series.
In an excerpt of
J.K. Rowling speaks of her clear vision of the book that she felt on that train
Posted: Jan 28, 2021 7:00 AM PT | Last Updated: January 28
Dr. Cindy Hardy is no longer able to accept patients who are involved in family law cases.(Cliff MacArthur/provincialcourt.bc.ca)
A B.C. psychologist who was disciplined a year ago for unethical work related to a child custody trial has had new limits placed on her practice following another complaint related to family law.
Dr. Cindy Hardy of Prince George agreed in December 2019 not to perform any psychological assessments for family law disputes after admitting she had provided a recommendation on what was best for a child without interviewing his father.
The editor-in-chief of UNBC’s student newspaper believes a referendum this week on whether to give it autonomy from the university will pass, though it will come at an extra cost to students.
They will vote Monday and Tuesday yes or no to forking over $5 per semester to support Over the Edge, which wants to separate itself from the Northern Undergraduate Student Society (NUGSS) after a flap over an article published in September. Students currently pay $2 of their $32 student fee to the newspaper through NUGSS.
“I do think it will pass,” Burkholder said Thursday. “I think the students will be supportive. They feel this is really important.”