Traverse City News and Latest Info
For me, swans will always be evocative of summer vacations at my grandparents’ cottage on Lake Leelanau, where we kept bread for their visits. On the recent Fourth of July Sunday we decided to cool off on Elk Lake in Elk Rapids, famous for the…
When I think of Cherryland Humane Society, it’s with pleasant recollections of the hours my family and I spent volunteering at fundraisers.But mostly I think of Cody, our beloved shepherd-retriever, who was so unmanageable he was adopted and r…
Many were jubilant when U.S. forces killed Osama bin Laden in the clandestine raid in Pakistan.Me? I worried about how the attack — conducted without the knowledge or assistance of the Pakistani government — would impact our former Pakista…
You know those comfort foods? The ones like meat loaf, mashed potatoes and mac-and-cheese? There are comfort TV shows, too. Mine are “Wheel of Fortune,” “Dancing With the Stars” and “The Bachelor” (or “Bachelorette”).Sure, they’re brain candy …
An autism diagnoses hits 1 in 110, and more families are struggling with the worry and expense of finding treatment and special education for children with the complex developmental disorder.
For many people obsessive compulsive disorder is the comic struggle of TV detective Adrian Monk.
For Kevin Putman, OCD is a frightening way of life.
The much-anticipated exhibition “Bodies Human: Anatomy in Motion” opens Sunday at the Dennos Museum Center. It features more than 100 human specimens including whole bodies, individual organs, transparent body slices and fetuses in several stages of development, all preserved through a process called “plastination.” The show runs through Sept. 4.
The exhibition “Bodies Human: Anatomy in Motion,” a much-anticipated show, opens Sunday at the Dennos Museum Center and features 100 human specimens, including whole bodies, individual organs, transparent body slices and fetuses in several stages of development.