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- 4.1: Locals do well in PWT walleye tourney
- 4.2: Tourney success
- 4.3: Bridgefest committee to reschedule fireworks
- 4.4: Hay trailer ignites in Chassell Township
- 4.5: Chassell Strawberry Festival Parade category winners
- 4.6: Suspected piranha caught near Dollar Bay
- 4.7: Pro walleye tournament starts today
- 4.8: Chassell Strawberry Festival sure to delight crowds
- 4.9: Pete Harsh Rigs Way to 4th PWT Win
- 4.10: Chassell property owners sued by DNR over barrier across trail
- 4.11: Snowmobile Trail News
- 4.12: Calumet’s Union Building getting back in shape
- 4.13: Finns honored at chamber session
- 4.14: Pointing the way: Snow thermometer arrow replaced
- 4.15: Calumet Village Council extends completion date of Oak Street upgrades
- 4.16: Laurium road project well under budget
- 4.17: MDOT and local library seek input through Internet
- 4.18: Baraga weighs options for industrial park
- 4.19: Power outage darkens area
- 4.20: SmartZone net income nears $100K
- 4.21: Nature Retreat Center dedicated in honor of Mary Sinish
- 4.22: UPPCO files lawsuit in Wisconsin over zoning
- 4.23: U.P. Norwegians get a home
- 4.24: Relay for Life raises almost $140,000
- 4.25: UPPCO Naterra talk about Au Train basin Land sale concerns
- 4.26: Five Catholic parishes, missions in Keweenaw to be linked
- 4.27: State Hospice organization recognizes Ray Weglarz
- 4.28: Interest rates increase soon on student loans
- 4.29: The joy of home ownership
- 4.30: Hancock schools announce cuts
- 4.31: Freedom Salute planned for 107th Engineers
- 4.32: Chassell Heritage Center celebrates summer with style
- 4.33: Area law enforcement add tasers to arsenal
- 4.34: School board OKs loan, bids Crowl goodbye
- 4.35: Candidate hopes to expand the dialogue
- 4.36: Copper Country communities offer plenty of Fourth of July activities
- 4.37: Michigan Tech’s Archives to go digital; state humanities grant to help underwrite
- 4.38: Exhibit: Bay Area Artists light up local school
- 4.39: Parading to the pasties
- 4.40: Board helps keep the Calumet Theatre thriving
- 4.41: Help just a new phone number away
- 4.42: Breaking the OPEC hammerlock
- 4.43: MDOT awards top honors to Sikkema, six other employees
- 4.44: High school students opt for summer school
- 4.45: Houghton receives downtown grants
- 4.46: Task Force formed to prepare for pandemic
- 4.47: Copper Harbor, area celebrates
- 4.48: Mozart’s opera ‘The Magic Flute’ appeals to the child in all of us
- 4.49: Hancock City Council agrees to skateboarding ordinance changes
- 4.50: Dispute at C-L-K schools continues
- 4.51: Let the judging begin
- 4.52: Festival: Strawberry fields are forever
- 4.53: Keweenaw County selling buildings at old Air Force station
- 4.54: Treading plastic: MTU hockey program gets gift of new treadmill
- 4.55: Tech ship plays part in festivities
- 4.56:
Volunteer sign-up party Thursday
- 4.57: MGH parking deck closed for repairs
- 4.58: Portage Township, Tech agree on mausoleum deal
- 4.59: Eagle Harbor Township combines ordinances
- 4.60: Tax breaks for mill will help save about 400 state jobs
- 4.61: Engineers present Hancock water plan
- 4.62: High speed chase ends in crash
- 4.63: Learning by degrees
- 4.64: Tall ship returns to Houghton
- 4.65: ‘Long road’ for city police investigator in CCEA case
- 4.66: Merchants prepare to welcome students
- 4.67: Vets get ballot proposal help
- 4.68: Art in the garden
- 4.69: Sibelius Academy Music Festival July 19-21
- 4.70: Sleuthing in a small town
- 4.71: Houghton holds off on road abandonment
- 4.72: City dedicates second Nara boardwalk
- 4.73: Keweenaw County accepts bids on houses
- 4.74: Houghton mulls street parking ban for Bridgefest
- 4.75: Pair of area restaurants follow no-smoke trend
- 4.76: Stupak speaks: Dem congressman reviews variety of subjects
- 4.77: County OKs final land plan
- 4.78: People and pets walk for awareness
- 4.79: Portage Twp. trustee resigns
- 4.80: Water balloon fights and crafts
- 4.81: FU president to retire
- 4.82: Getting a new ID for students, faculty
- 4.83: Vaudeville returns to Calumet Theatre
- 4.84: Looking to beat the heat
- 4.85: Walking 60 miles in their shoes
- 4.86: State library director in town
- 4.87: Thimbleberry Jam Fest Saturday
- 4.88: Houghton-Portage holds reorganizational meeting
- 4.89: Finding a different way
- 4.90: MEAP scores decline slightly
- 4.91: Kilpela leads class into art, nature
- 4.92: Laurium fire department vehicle to get new sign
- 4.93: Calumet Oak Street project under budget; handicap elevator project delay cited
- 4.94: Labor of love: Hundreds volunteer to build new Kingdom Hall
- 4.95: State cultural chief tours local facilities
- 4.96: Volunteer firefighters undergo dive training
- 4.97: Weekend event focuses on ‘teaching daughters’
- 4.98: Thousands gather for festivities
- 4.99: Three arrested following Lake Linden assault
- 4.100: Taser used for first time in arrest
- 4.101: North End artist captures the physical splendor of birds of prey through carvings
- 4.102: Houghton approves Applebee’s liquor license
- 4.103: Keep the home fires burning
- 4.104: Central centennial draws more to reunion
- 4.105: Legislature signs off on state budget
- 4.106: Calumet man charged in shooting
- 4.107: A VERY nippy dip
- 4.108: Warrant sweep nets 33 arrests
- 4.109: State Lighthouse Fund builds reserve for grants
- 4.110: Distress call forces county airport closure
- 4.111: Jet speed, times two: Second jet flight coming
- 4.112: 911 project uses digital photos
- 4.113: Park repairing buildings
- 4.114: Hiking for Mother Nature
- 4.115: Calumet Theatre exec director in fair condition after motorcycle mishap
- 4.116: Calumet gears up for BoomTown celebration
- 4.117: All aboard: Railroad Days this weekend
- 4.118: Coming soon: Aviators and flyers
- 4.119: Heat wave continues in Michigan as temp indexes soar past 100
- 4.120: Good news: Drunk driving, drug-related incidents decrease for the fourth year
- 4.121: Getting their motors runnin
- 4.122: Where kids learn to survive
- 4.123: Mooseheart: A special kind of family
- 4.124: Eagles fly through on annual ride
- 4.125: 242 nabbed in state dope sweep
- 4.126: Very wrong turn
- 4.127: Hancock council passes skateboarding changes
- 4.128: Row, Row, Rowing toward a championship
- 4.129: Different Drums linking cultures one beat at a time
- 4.130: Local photographer in touch with nature
- 4.131: Keweenaw National Historic Park walking tours popular with visitors
- 4.132: Artist with cerebral palsy returns to show
- 4.133: CCAA hosts 46th annual art fair
- 4.134: Former PT assessor questions supervisor
- 4.135: Communication problems biggest issue for U.P.
- 4.136: Cathy Bolton uses music to touch the soul
- 4.137: Eagle Harbor Township board opposing initiative
- 4.138: Township residents raise infrastructure concerns
- 4.139: Funds from village help OMH out of critical position
- 4.140: Man pleads no contest in July 3 assault
- 4.141: Police plan Midwest crackdown on drunken driving
- 4.142: Hancock Schools decrease hot breakfast program
- 4.143: Access management: Future highway corridor to be shaped
- 4.144: Man charged in Ishpeming Township death
- 4.145: Strike possible at Horner
- 4.146: Rozsa Center schedule includes ballet, comedy, ‘Aida’
- 4.147: Images for the Everyman
- 4.148: Applebee’s shares the wealth with Keweenaw Community Foundation
- 4.149: MTU students getting oriented to good times
- 4.150: Child hurt after being struck by car
- 4.151: Ontonagon Memorial facing financial challenges
- 4.152: Renter’s insurance deemed necessary for some students
- 4.153: Tech legend “Doc” Berry dies
- 4.154: Horner strike averted, for now
- 4.155: Making history digital
- 4.156: Houghton flake on postage stamp
- 4.157: Petition, letter signal opposition to aspects of development projects
- 4.158: Voters asked to approve millage increase for CCISD
- 4.159: Electrician killed at Michigan Tech
- 4.160: Pumpkinfest charms Calumet
- 4.161: Accident sends two to hospital
- 4.162: Just sentenced for assault
- 4.163: Panel to provide help with end-of-life decisions
- 4.164: Parents, students send board message: Bring back Griebel
- 4.165: 300 million & counting
- 4.166: Calumet man hit by two cars at M-26 Sharon Avenue
- 4.167: Grant awarded
- 4.168: Calumet considers fix for building
- 4.169: Problems occurring with Isle Royale Street in Laurium
- 4.170: Houghton board looks at school data system
- 4.171: KCF receives $1M donation
- 4.172: Politicians look to untapped voter source
Volunteer sign-up party Thursday
Volunteer sign-up party Thursday
MARQUETTE — The Hiawatha Music Co-op will hold a volunteer sign-up party for the Hiawatha Traditional Music Festival. The party is set for 7 to 10 p.m. Thursday at McKinney’s Overtime Bar & Eatery at 1700 Presque Isle, in Marquette.
The Flying Martini Brothers will provide live music, and advance Festival tickets will be on sale.
Festival volunteers can earn t-shirts and full or partial advance-price ticket reimbursements.
The 28th Annual Hiawatha Traditional Music Festival is slated for July 21-23, at the Tourist Park in Marquette. Adult, advance, weekend tickets are $45.
For more information, performer line-ups and other ticket prices, visit the Hiawatha website at www.hiawathamusic.org or call 906-226-8575.
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