Herald promotes from within to fill managing editor position
Sydney Mook has worked as a reporter and junior editor at the Herald, as well as the Dickinson Press, since 2016.
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Herald staff | ×
Sydney Mook
Sydney Mook, a reporter and junior editor at the Grand Forks Herald, has been promoted to managing editor.
Korrie Wenzel, the Herald s publisher, announced the move to the newspaper s staff this week. Sydney is energy and enthusiasm personified, and she s coming into the role after holding down one of the newspaper s top beats, Wenzel said. It s fun to see our up-and-comers emerge.
Mook came to the Herald in 2018 after working for two years at the Dickinson Press, which, like the Herald, is owned by Forum Communications Co. At the Herald, she was promoted to community editor in 2019, while also reporting on higher education, including UND, the smaller colleges in the immediate area and the North Dakota University System in general.
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Will North Dakota, South Dakota and Minnesota colleges require students to get vaccinated? Probably not, but some schools in the U.S. are
University systems in North Dakota and South Dakota say they will not be requiring students to get the COVID-19 vaccine, citing the inability to do so under state law. 2:35 pm, Apr. 15, 2021 ×
In this Grand Forks Herald file photo, Samantha Ketterling, pharmacy manager at Thrifty White, draws a dose of the Pfizer vaccine on Tuesday, Dec. 29, at Valley Senior Living in Grand Forks. (Eric Hylden / Grand Forks Herald)
As a small but growing number of universities across the country plan to require their students to get vaccinated for COVID-19 prior to the fall semester, it appears most students in the Dakotas and Minnesota won’t be required to get the vaccine.
Sandoval hopes to continue his education at the University of North Dakota.
Written By:
Calli Delsman | ×
Michael SandovalImage: Courtesy of Minot State University
MINOT, N.D. • For most people, at a young age you aspire to be a firefighter, a cowgirl, or even an astronaut. Those people tend to grow up and change those dreams to do something more mainstream.
That isn’t that case for senior Michael Sandoval. Originally from Plentywood, Mont., Sandoval and his family moved to Garrison creating opportunities for Sandoval to pursue his dreams.
“I did my first two years of college at Williston State College and when it came to deciding where I wanted to transfer to, Minot State University offered what I wanted and was a smooth transfer because of the North Dakota University System (NDUS),” Sandoval said.
Will Upper Midwest colleges require students to get vaccinated? Probably not, but some schools in the U.S. are
University systems in North Dakota and South Dakota say they will not be requiring students to get the COVID-19 vaccine, citing the inability to do so under state law. Minnesota schools are still weighing their options. 3:09 pm, Apr. 15, 2021 ×
In this Grand Forks Herald file photo, Samantha Ketterling, pharmacy manager at Thrifty White, draws a dose of the Pfizer vaccine on Tuesday, Dec. 29, at Valley Senior Living in Grand Forks. (Eric Hylden / Grand Forks Herald)
GRAND FORKS, N.D. As a small but growing number of universities across the country plan to require their students to get vaccinated for COVID-19 prior to the fall semester, it appears most students in the Dakotas and Minnesota won’t be required to get the vaccine.
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