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  • No insurance means no jobs for school district bidders

    Ralph Ansami|Apr 23, 2014

    HURLEY -The Hurley School Board's strict policy requiring proof of insurance with bids came to light again Monday. As the board considered bids for refinishing the gymnasium floor, three of four bids were rejected because they didn't include any proof of insurance. The board accepted a $17,150 bid from Pro Star Services, of Mequon, provided its insurance is current. There was a lower bid from an Ironwood company, at $16,050, but it didn't include insurance proof. "We set bid specifications for a...

  • Hurley cops national Green Ribbon award

    Ralph Ansami|Apr 23, 2014

    HURLEY - The Hurley School District was officially recognized Tuesday as a national Green Ribbon award winner for environmental stewardship. It was the welcome news administrators and teachers had been looking forward to since the district was earlier named a Wisconsin Green Ribbon award winner by the U.S. Department of Education. Mike Boots, acting chair of the White House Council on Environmental Quality, and U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan announced Green Ribbon award winners in...

  • Hagen receives annual award

    Apr 23, 2014

    MARENISCO - David Hagen has been selected as the 2014 Ojibway Correctional Facility's Correctional Officer of the Year. Hagen, a corrections officer at Ojibway, began his career with the Michigan Department of Corrections in 2000. He was recognized for his "exemplary professionalism and attention to detail." Hagen also "models effective communication skills throughout his duties and promotes opportunities for prisoners to improve their behavior whenever possible, empowering them to become...

  • Conservation district sets sights on Japenese barberry

    Apr 23, 2014

    BESSEMER - The Gogebic Conservation District in Bessemer is working to stop the spread of Japanese barberry, an invasive species brought to the U.S. for landscaping purposes more than 100 years ago. "It isn't Audrey, the man-eating plant from the movie 'Little Shop of Horrors,' but it's bad enough in its own right," GCD administrator Jim Finley said. The plant is spreading into northern forests, a news release said. "The plant has no natural enemies here, and its berries are eaten by many...

  • Earth Day

    Apr 23, 2014

  • Hurley area B-47 crash site dedication planned for June

    Ryan Jarvi|Apr 22, 2014

    HURLEY - More than 50 years ago, a B-47 Stratojet disappeared from radar on a low-level training mission about 10 miles south of Hurley. Three months later, another aircraft disappeared near the same area, a densely wooded place about 3 miles east of U.S. 51. The airplanes were part of the Air Force's 40th Bombardment Wing from Forbes Air Force Base in Topeka, Kan. The missions were run because of the location's similarity in terrain to areas of Europe that were anticipated bombing locations...

  • At the end of the rainbow

    Apr 22, 2014

  • Continued water line breaks plague city

    Apr 22, 2014

  • Duluth health care provider has new vein illumination device

    Apr 22, 2014

    DULUTH, Minn. - Getting blood drawn or having an IV inserted is nobody's idea of a good time and often can be painful, especially if veins are not easily accessible. Essentia Health in Duluth is implementing a vein illumination system called Accuvein to help patients and phlebotomists, the healthcare professionals who draw blood from veins. The AccuVein AV400 system uses a beam of light projected onto a patient's arm to reveal a map of the peripheral veins under the skin's surface. It helps heal...

  • State of emergency declared for Gogebic County

    Ryan Jarvi|Apr 22, 2014

    BESSEMER - Bessemer City Council members were updated about this past winter's impact on the region and the emergency situation of Gogebic County at a meeting Monday. "We in Gogebic County declared a local state of emergency," Jim Loeper, emergency manager for Gogebic County said. "The next step we would take as a county is that we would ask the governor to declare Gogebic County a disaster area." Loeper mentioned a state of emergency declaration that was recently made for Marquette County. The...

  • Mercer Lions club holds annual egg hunt

    Miranda Anderson|Apr 21, 2014

    egg hunt at the Mercer School Saturday morning. According to club member Dave Minisan, this is the 11th year the Mercer Lions have held the egg hunt. Children of preschool age to 12 years old and their families were welcome to attend the event, and searched the school for brightly colored, hidden eggs. Attendees also received cookies and a stuffed animal to take home. All the baskets and candy for the event were donated by Minisan and his wife Louise. Other activities included cookies and...

  • Wesley United Methodist holds breakfast, egg hunt

    Miranda Anderson|Apr 21, 2014

    IRONWOOD – The Wesley United Methodist Church held an Easter breakfast, egg hunt and sermon Sunday morning. Attendees dined on breakfast, starting at 9:30 a.m., while the kids prepared for the fifth annual egg hunt, starting at 10 a.m. Afterwards, a worship service was held at 11 a.m. Thirty to 40 people attend the breakfast each year, with five to 15 kids hunting for eggs, former pastor Jean Rocontre said. According to Recontre, the number of people vary each year, but people "really enjoy i...

  • Birthday plans underway for Mercers Claire D'Loon

    Apr 21, 2014

    MERCER, Wis. - The Mercer area is gearing up to celebrate Claire D'Loon's "a-May-zing birthday bash," May 17. The annual event features a birthday wreathing ceremony at Claire's statue at 9:30 a.m., followed by a parade at 10 a.m., starting at the Mercer Chamber of Commerce and ending at the Mercer Community Center. The event also features a Mercer Lioness salad luncheon and fashion show, birthday activities at the Mercer Public Library and the Mercer Historical Society will also have...

  • Ontonagon students try their hands (and feet) at climbing

    Apr 21, 2014

    ONTONAGON - Ten seventh graders at the Ontonagon Area School District recently learned about rock climbing techniques. Semi-retired OASD teacher Jim Waters volunteered to assist the students in gym class as they tried the activity out. The wall was constructed years ago with hand- and footholds of varying sizes, teacher Ken Raisanen said. Waters, assisted by seniors Tony Roberts and Will Schober, stressed the importance of communication needed to climb safely after helping students into their ha...

  • Windmill blades turn again after restoration

    Apr 21, 2014

    HOLLAND (AP) - A southwestern Michigan landmark has been revived - and now it's been rededicated. The blades of downtown Holland's 252-year-old DeZwaan windmill began turning again Saturday morning during a community celebration and open house, The Grand Rapids Press and WZZM-TV reported. The rededication ceremony was dubbed "Turning of the Blades." The 125-foot high windmill, which was brought over from the Netherlands in the 1960s, underwent about $760,000 in restoration and repair work after...

  • Good Friday

    Apr 19, 2014

  • Snowy Easter for UP

    Apr 19, 2014

  • Motor carrier officer shows off new weigh scale

    Apr 19, 2014

  • NCTA-Heritage hosts work bee to kick off season

    Ryan Jarvi|Apr 19, 2014

    MELLEN - Northern Wisconsin is known for its beautiful scenic views, and no one knows that better than Mike Stafford. Stafford is president of the North Country Trail Association-Heritage Chapter and has hiked the area's trails for years. In previous years, the chapter has hosted a spring hike to kick off the hiking season, but had to cancel this year's event partly because of the weather. "I've done this spring hike for many years," Stafford said. "We often encounter some rain, which is no big...

  • More vets turn to prosthetics to help legless pets

    Apr 19, 2014

    LOS ANGELES (AP) - A 9-month-old boxer pup named Duncan barreled down a beach in Oregon, running full tilt on soft sand into YouTube history and showing more than 4 million viewers that he can revel in a good romp despite lacking back legs. "It's a heartwarming, wonderful thing to see," said Dr. Bonnie Beaver, a professor at Texas A&M University's College of Veterinary Medicine and executive director of the American College of Veterinary Behaviorists. "These animals generally look to us as if th...

  • Let's learn about fingerprinting

    Apr 18, 2014

  • Latest storm dumps 10.3 inches of snow

    Apr 18, 2014

  • Frothy fun: dyeing Easter eggs in shaving cream

    Apr 18, 2014

    By JENNIFER FORKER Associated Press If dyeing Easter eggs with vinegar and color tablets is feeling old, reach for a new duo: shaving cream and liquid food coloring. It's a tactile project many kids will enjoy - especially swirling the colors into the cream. "They thought it was really cool to drop the food coloring into the shaving cream and take the toothpick and swirl it," Sarah Barrand of Caldwell, Idaho, says of her four children. "And the shaving cream will actually even help clean up the...

  • Area snowblowers in overdrive this snow season

    Apr 18, 2014

  • Deer don't like all bulbs

    Apr 18, 2014

    By LEE REICH Associated Press Chomping down on a rosette of freshly emerging tulip leaves is just the thing to drive away winter doldrums - for deer. Crocuses probably taste almost as good to them. There's no need, though, for us humans to forsake the blossoms of spring bulbs; there are plenty that don't appeal to deer. Daffodils, for example. Deer won't eat them. So plant daffodils to your heart's content without any worry that their tops will be chomped off before the flowers even unfold....

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