Editor's Note: Jack Parker, a mining engineer from Baltic, Mich., and a Keweenaw Now guest writer, sent the following letter to Ross Micham of Region 5 Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on Feb. 20, 2011. The letter was acknowledged and forwarded to a scientist who is working on the wetlands issues related to the Eagle project. It is reprinted here at Mr. Parker's request.
Good morning Ross:
In times of trouble I turn to you again for help. You seem to know your way around, and to have retained your integrity.
As you probably guessed it concerns the Kennecott haul road and political pressure on the EPA to relax standards on wetlands protection and clean water.
You have probably heard of McBroom's House Bill HB4303 which would free them from regulation if roadwork were confined to the ROW (Right-Of-Way) of an existing road -- that might allow them to designate the ORV/snowmobile trail to be an existing road CR595 -- and be home free.*
The EPA /FWS (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service) /C of E (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers) decision on the "Woodland Road" recognized the very transparent deception and denied permits. I see the current politicking as a move to take you out of the picture. Am sure that you recognize that too.
Now I wonder what we can do to convince your decision makers that you/we are up against a truly corrupt and fraudulent coalition of Rio Tinto, Kennecott, MDEQ (Michigan Department of Environmental Quality, now the Michigan Department of Natural Resources and Environment, or MDNRE) and the courts (which have been sitting on the Appeals for six months). If any reputable engineering group were to simply read the original Feb. 2006 application for permits they too would reject it -- as did I and the DEQ's hired expert, David Sainsbury -- whose reports were suppressed. From a legal point of view Kennecott has consistently disregarded the Michigan Mining Law, Part 632 -- flagrantly. They continue mine construction despite the fact that they do not have a haul road; in fact they have not yet conducted the required EIA (Environmental Impact Assessment) which must be completed before submitting an application -- before any mining-related activities can be performed.
You will remember that I am a mining man and that I want to see the deposit mined legally and responsibly, and that I am on nobody's payroll.
Will you please bring this matter to the attention of the powers-that-be, at the three agencies, and NOT relax standards but instead reinforce them, preferably by taking back responsibilities from MDEQ. You probably read of MDEQ Joe Maki's admission, under oath, that he and his Mining Team did not even consider the new law, 632, when evaluating the application! It's in the court transcripts. The judge shrugged it off!**
Please help ASAP. They specialize in ignoring the law and establishing the fait accompli.
Thanks for being there!
Jack Parker, Mining Engineer
Baltic MI 49963
Jack Parker adds a note to concerned readers requesting they write their own letter to Ross Micham at micham.ross@epamail.epa.gov, with a copy to EPA Director Lisa Jackson at Jackson.lisa@epa.gov.
*Click here for House Bill 4303 (2011) as introduced (reflecting no subsequent amendments or changes).
**Parker gives more details on the court case mentioned in the above letter in our Dec. 6, 2010, article, "Mining expert Jack Parker says Eagle Mine likely to collapse."
Saturday, February 26, 2011
Thursday, February 24, 2011
NOSOTROS to host Latin music social Feb. 26
HOUGHTON -- NOSOTROS, the Hispanic Student Organization, is hosting a family-friendly Latin music social, from 8 p.m. to 11 p.m., Saturday, Feb. 26, in Memorial Union Ballroom A on the Michigan Tech campus.
Click on this flyer for a larger version with more details on the NOSOTROS dance. (Flyer courtesy NOSOTROS)
The evening will begin with an hour of free dance lessons, followed by two hours of open floor with salsa, merengue, bachata and much more. No partner is needed.
For information, contact Alessia Uboni at auboni@mtu.edu.
Click on this flyer for a larger version with more details on the NOSOTROS dance. (Flyer courtesy NOSOTROS)The evening will begin with an hour of free dance lessons, followed by two hours of open floor with salsa, merengue, bachata and much more. No partner is needed.
For information, contact Alessia Uboni at auboni@mtu.edu.
From "Grist": Climate activist Tim DeChristopher goes to trial Feb. 28
By Umbra FiskPosted Feb. 22, 2011 on Grist
An individual who breaks a law that conscience tells him is unjust, and who willingly accepts the penalty of imprisonment in order to arouse the conscience of the community over its injustice, is in reality expressing the highest respect for the law.
-- Martin Luther King, Jr.
Dearest readers,
I want to share a story of an ordinary citizen using peaceful direct action to take a stand.
When Tim DeChristopher woke up one morning in December of 2008, what he was intending to do that day was disrupt a Bureau of Land Management oil and gas lease auction. He did not expect he was starting down a road that would leave him $1.7 million in debt, facing a court date and up to 10 years in jail. But next Monday, Feb. 28, DeChristopher will go to trial for an unusual and profound act of creative, direct, nonviolent civil disobedience.
For DeChristopher, armchair activism wasn’t enough of a response to the climate crisis. So when he heard that parcels of land were going to be rushed off for lease in an auction at the end of the Bush administration, opening them up for drilling, DeChristopher wanted to do something to stop the sale... Read the rest of this article on Grist.
Photo: Tim DeChristopher speaks on "The Case for Extremism" during the Aug. 1, 2009, Protect the Earth workshops at Northern Michigan University in Marquette. (Keweenaw Now file photo © 2009 and courtesy Gabriel Caplett)
Editor's Note: See our report of Tim DeChristopher's presentation at Protect the Earth 2009 in Marquette. Read about the Countdown to Uprising supporting Tim on Peaceful Uprising.
Thimbleberry Band to play for Old-Time Community Dance Feb. 26
HANCOCK -- The Thimbleberry Band will play for another Old-Time Copper Country Community Dance from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. this Saturday, Feb 26, at the Finnish-American Heritage Center in Hancock. Polka, waltz, schottische, tango, and maybe a couple of contras. All ages welcome. Free admission. Lotsa fun!
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
Khana Khazana travels to Italy Feb. 25
HOUGHTON -- Authentic Italian dishes will be featured at Khana Khazana ("food treasure") this Friday, Feb. 25. Khana Khazana is a weekly series of ethnic lunches cooked by international students from different countries and served in the Michigan Tech Memorial Union Food Court from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Fridays.
Daniele Alami, an Italian exchange student in geology, will make pasta and potato, tonno in crosta di sesamo (sliced tuna with a sesame seed crust) and crostata di marmellata ai mirtilli (Italian blackberry pie).
A complete meal costs $6 and includes coffee, hot tea or a fountain soda. Items are available à la carte for $2.
Khana Khazana is a collaboration of international students and Michigan Tech Dining Services.
Daniele Alami, an Italian exchange student in geology, will make pasta and potato, tonno in crosta di sesamo (sliced tuna with a sesame seed crust) and crostata di marmellata ai mirtilli (Italian blackberry pie).
A complete meal costs $6 and includes coffee, hot tea or a fountain soda. Items are available à la carte for $2.
Khana Khazana is a collaboration of international students and Michigan Tech Dining Services.
Finlandia International School of Art and Design Faculty Exhibit opens Feb. 24
HANCOCK -- Finlandia University’s International School of Art and Design will present an exhibit of work by university faculty from Feb. 24 through Mar. 22, 2011, at the Finlandia University Gallery, located in the Finnish American Heritage Center, Hancock.
An opening reception for the artists will take place at the gallery from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 24. The reception is free and open to the public. Refreshments will be served.
This year’s exhibit features new works by Finlandia University art and design faculty, faculty emeritus, and adjunct faculty.
Ceramics, sustainable design, painting and drawing, fiber art, and graphic design are among the media represented in the exhibit. The artists are Yueh-mei Cheng, Phyllis Fredendall, Arthur Hill, Rick Loduha, Denise Vandeville, Jon Brookhouse, Colleen Carroll, Cynthia Coté, Carrie Flaspohler, Greg Green, Melissa Hronkin, Laura Smyth, and Derik Spoon.
Phyllis Fredendall, associate professor of fiber arts and fashion design, will exhibit jacquard fabric that she designed using the computer software she teaches her students to use.
"Kuusamo Stripes." Knitted yardage by fiber artist Phyllis Fredendall.
"The fiber studio at Finlandia has three main directions: weaving and off-loom structures, dyeing and printing, and garment design. With so many areas within one concentration, it is important that I explore the processes we study along with the students," Fredendall says. "Some of these explorations are in the show."
Rick Loduha, associate professor of integrated design, will present his work from the Sustainable Keweenaw Resource Center’s Green Map project. The Keweenaw Green Map is an online map charting how local businesses, projects, happenings, and other activities play a part in sustainable community development.
A fabric piece titled "Levity" by Cynthia Coté, adjunct professor and director of the Copper Country Community Arts Center, Hancock, explores the question, If a soul was a tangible thing, what would it look like? The piece is part of a series she is creating in an effort to mend and celebrate the hardworking components of her body.
Adjunct professor Melissa Hronkin’s contribution to this year’s exhibit uses encaustics, an ancient medium using pigmented beeswax.
"Reconstructing the hive II," 2011, by Melissa Hronkin.
"I approach this medium experimentally," notes Hronkin about her use of encaustics. "And I use it as a medium to bind together my photography, drawing, sculptures, and ideas."
The Finlandia University Gallery is in the Finnish American Heritage Center, 435 Quincy Street, Hancock. Gallery hours are Monday to Friday 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Thursday, 8 a.m. to 7 p.m., Saturday, noon to 4 p.m., or by appointment.
Please call 906-487-7500 for more information.
An opening reception for the artists will take place at the gallery from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 24. The reception is free and open to the public. Refreshments will be served.
This year’s exhibit features new works by Finlandia University art and design faculty, faculty emeritus, and adjunct faculty.
Ceramics, sustainable design, painting and drawing, fiber art, and graphic design are among the media represented in the exhibit. The artists are Yueh-mei Cheng, Phyllis Fredendall, Arthur Hill, Rick Loduha, Denise Vandeville, Jon Brookhouse, Colleen Carroll, Cynthia Coté, Carrie Flaspohler, Greg Green, Melissa Hronkin, Laura Smyth, and Derik Spoon.
Phyllis Fredendall, associate professor of fiber arts and fashion design, will exhibit jacquard fabric that she designed using the computer software she teaches her students to use.
"Kuusamo Stripes." Knitted yardage by fiber artist Phyllis Fredendall."The fiber studio at Finlandia has three main directions: weaving and off-loom structures, dyeing and printing, and garment design. With so many areas within one concentration, it is important that I explore the processes we study along with the students," Fredendall says. "Some of these explorations are in the show."
Rick Loduha, associate professor of integrated design, will present his work from the Sustainable Keweenaw Resource Center’s Green Map project. The Keweenaw Green Map is an online map charting how local businesses, projects, happenings, and other activities play a part in sustainable community development.
A fabric piece titled "Levity" by Cynthia Coté, adjunct professor and director of the Copper Country Community Arts Center, Hancock, explores the question, If a soul was a tangible thing, what would it look like? The piece is part of a series she is creating in an effort to mend and celebrate the hardworking components of her body.
Adjunct professor Melissa Hronkin’s contribution to this year’s exhibit uses encaustics, an ancient medium using pigmented beeswax.
"Reconstructing the hive II," 2011, by Melissa Hronkin."I approach this medium experimentally," notes Hronkin about her use of encaustics. "And I use it as a medium to bind together my photography, drawing, sculptures, and ideas."
The Finlandia University Gallery is in the Finnish American Heritage Center, 435 Quincy Street, Hancock. Gallery hours are Monday to Friday 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Thursday, 8 a.m. to 7 p.m., Saturday, noon to 4 p.m., or by appointment.
Please call 906-487-7500 for more information.
Tuesday, February 22, 2011
Concerned citizens file contested case: Kennecott Eagle Mine
BIG BAY -- A citizen group located in northern Marquette County of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan announces the filing of a Petition for Contested Case Hearing with the State Office of Administrative Hearings in Lansing, Michigan. The Concerned Citizens of Big Bay, made up of citizens residing in and around the tiny community of Big Bay on the south shore of Lake Superior, contend regulatory failure of due process and enforcement by the Department of Natural Resources and Environment (DNRE/DEQ) in their oversight and enforcement of Part 632 Non-Ferrous Metallic Mining Statute, which regulates the first metallic sulfide mine in the state of Michigan.
The group contends that the DNRE/DEQ failed to require a Part 632 Amendment in the construction and extension of electric service from Marquette, Mich., to the Rio Tinto Eagle Mine site, located eight miles from Big Bay, as required by the Part 632 statute.
This October 2010 photo shows power lines being run along the AAA Road leading to the Eagle Mine without a request from Kennecott Eagle Minerals Co. (KEMC) for an amendment to their mining permit for this infrastructure. (File photo by Keweenaw Now)
"No one is above the law," Gene Champagne, leader of the group, stated. "The people of Big Bay, whose community will be the community most severely impacted by Rio Tinto’s proposed mine and any other projects that follow it, demand that Rio Tinto follow the laws that they helped craft in Part 632. We are tired of Rio Tinto’s 'blame the victim' strategy when decrying the delay of their project."
Champagne noted Rio Tinto further delays their own project every time they ignore the law or use lawyers to figure out a way around it.
"The law was written to protect Michigan citizens and their environment, not to cater to some self-imposed company deadline," he added.
The group's petition asserts the following: "The DNRE/DEQ repeatedly, in correspondence, assured citizens and groups that if the electric line was going to be extended from the main transmission line at CR 550 to the Eagle Mine site on the Yellow Dog Plains, Rio Tinto would be required to file an amendment. This did not happen."
The Concerned Citizens of Big Bay also petition that any court action be conducted in Marquette County.
"We are representing ourselves in this petition and have not the resource to hire a lawyer that may travel at our will. We would be further injured by this action if all of the citizens of this action and their witnesses were required to come to Lansing to bring this grievance forward," the group states.
The petition asks that the DNRE/DEQ demand the mining company file a Part 632 Amendment for the construction of electric service from the city of Marquette to the Rio Tinto Eagle Mine site on the Yellow Dog Plains -- fulfilling all parts of Part 632 including a two-year Environmental Impact Assessment as required by the statute. Levying of violations and fines; stoppage of all electric power grid work, and the demand for public hearing in Big Bay are all part of the petitioner’s request.
Rio Tinto, the third largest mining company in the world, began construction of the Eagle Mine in the summer of 2010. The mining company’s current mining permit calls for the use of a diesel generating plant at the mine site, as this remote region of the Yellow Dog Plains has never had any kind of utility infrastructure.
The State of Michigan instituted a process within the Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ), under Governor Jennifer Granholm, allowing "aggrieved" persons to file a petition for an Administrative hearing for action or non-actions of the DNRE/DEQ in their regulatory processes. Contested cases are presided over by an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) from the State Office of Administrative Hearings and Rules.
"We were not represented by due process in the full replacement of new transmission lines from Marquette to Big Bay, nor in the process of buried industrial service to the Rio Tinto Eagle Mine site. There were no environmental assessments, no reclamation plans, no contingency plans, no review of financial assurances and absolutely no provision or opportunity for public comment by the DNRE/DEQ. We are aggrieved," the group states in their recent press release.
The Concerned Citizens of Big Bay seek to highlight that the lack of regulatory oversight of Part 632, in this metallic sulfide mine or any other like mine, is unacceptable.
"The Part 632 regulatory process is intended to protect not only the environment, but to ensure there is no harm to the safety of citizens or harm to the community and its ability to plan adequately around this new permitted activity," the petition states.
Editor's Note: See mining expert Jack Parker's Jan. 7, 2011, "Letter: Correction for the KEMC power line extension permit," commenting on the Dec. 7, 2010, DNRE public hearing on the power line extended from Marquette County Road 550 to the vicinity of the Eagle Mine site.
The group contends that the DNRE/DEQ failed to require a Part 632 Amendment in the construction and extension of electric service from Marquette, Mich., to the Rio Tinto Eagle Mine site, located eight miles from Big Bay, as required by the Part 632 statute.
This October 2010 photo shows power lines being run along the AAA Road leading to the Eagle Mine without a request from Kennecott Eagle Minerals Co. (KEMC) for an amendment to their mining permit for this infrastructure. (File photo by Keweenaw Now)"No one is above the law," Gene Champagne, leader of the group, stated. "The people of Big Bay, whose community will be the community most severely impacted by Rio Tinto’s proposed mine and any other projects that follow it, demand that Rio Tinto follow the laws that they helped craft in Part 632. We are tired of Rio Tinto’s 'blame the victim' strategy when decrying the delay of their project."
Champagne noted Rio Tinto further delays their own project every time they ignore the law or use lawyers to figure out a way around it.
"The law was written to protect Michigan citizens and their environment, not to cater to some self-imposed company deadline," he added.
The group's petition asserts the following: "The DNRE/DEQ repeatedly, in correspondence, assured citizens and groups that if the electric line was going to be extended from the main transmission line at CR 550 to the Eagle Mine site on the Yellow Dog Plains, Rio Tinto would be required to file an amendment. This did not happen."
The Concerned Citizens of Big Bay also petition that any court action be conducted in Marquette County.
"We are representing ourselves in this petition and have not the resource to hire a lawyer that may travel at our will. We would be further injured by this action if all of the citizens of this action and their witnesses were required to come to Lansing to bring this grievance forward," the group states.
The petition asks that the DNRE/DEQ demand the mining company file a Part 632 Amendment for the construction of electric service from the city of Marquette to the Rio Tinto Eagle Mine site on the Yellow Dog Plains -- fulfilling all parts of Part 632 including a two-year Environmental Impact Assessment as required by the statute. Levying of violations and fines; stoppage of all electric power grid work, and the demand for public hearing in Big Bay are all part of the petitioner’s request.
Rio Tinto, the third largest mining company in the world, began construction of the Eagle Mine in the summer of 2010. The mining company’s current mining permit calls for the use of a diesel generating plant at the mine site, as this remote region of the Yellow Dog Plains has never had any kind of utility infrastructure.
The State of Michigan instituted a process within the Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ), under Governor Jennifer Granholm, allowing "aggrieved" persons to file a petition for an Administrative hearing for action or non-actions of the DNRE/DEQ in their regulatory processes. Contested cases are presided over by an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) from the State Office of Administrative Hearings and Rules.
"We were not represented by due process in the full replacement of new transmission lines from Marquette to Big Bay, nor in the process of buried industrial service to the Rio Tinto Eagle Mine site. There were no environmental assessments, no reclamation plans, no contingency plans, no review of financial assurances and absolutely no provision or opportunity for public comment by the DNRE/DEQ. We are aggrieved," the group states in their recent press release.
The Concerned Citizens of Big Bay seek to highlight that the lack of regulatory oversight of Part 632, in this metallic sulfide mine or any other like mine, is unacceptable.
"The Part 632 regulatory process is intended to protect not only the environment, but to ensure there is no harm to the safety of citizens or harm to the community and its ability to plan adequately around this new permitted activity," the petition states.
Editor's Note: See mining expert Jack Parker's Jan. 7, 2011, "Letter: Correction for the KEMC power line extension permit," commenting on the Dec. 7, 2010, DNRE public hearing on the power line extended from Marquette County Road 550 to the vicinity of the Eagle Mine site.
Great Lakes Echo: Kennecott loses road decision; worries intensify over U.P. mine
By Kari Lydersen
Posted Feb. 21, 2011
The winding, narrow road between Big Bay and Marquette in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula is usually plied by tourists, Northern Michigan University college students and locals -- likely on their way to snowmobile, cross-country ski, fish or kayak in the cobalt blue waters of Lake Superior or the surrounding woods and wetlands.
But now residents, elected officials and business owners are worried and angry that these pleasant scenic roads -- sometimes icy and treacherous in winter -- could be widened and reinforced to support an endless stream of trucks carrying equipment and ore to and from the mine that Kennecott Minerals is in the process of opening on the Yellow Dog Plains near Big Bay.... Read the rest of this article on Great Lakes Echo.
Posted Feb. 21, 2011
The winding, narrow road between Big Bay and Marquette in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula is usually plied by tourists, Northern Michigan University college students and locals -- likely on their way to snowmobile, cross-country ski, fish or kayak in the cobalt blue waters of Lake Superior or the surrounding woods and wetlands.
But now residents, elected officials and business owners are worried and angry that these pleasant scenic roads -- sometimes icy and treacherous in winter -- could be widened and reinforced to support an endless stream of trucks carrying equipment and ore to and from the mine that Kennecott Minerals is in the process of opening on the Yellow Dog Plains near Big Bay.... Read the rest of this article on Great Lakes Echo.
Chinese New Year Celebration offers performance in Rozsa
Zaiqian Zhang, left, and Yuxiao Wang were Mistress and Master of Ceremonies for the 2011 Chinese Night performance on Feb 6 in the Rozsa Center. Click on photos for larger versions. (Photos by Keweenaw Now)HOUGHTON -- The Chinese Students and Scholars Association (CSSA) at Michigan Tech hosted a Chinese New Year Celebration on Sunday, Feb. 6, 2011 -- the Year of the Rabbit. The public was invited, and the program was free.
Here are some photos of the entertaining student performance in the Rozsa Center:
Tianyu Li performs a Chinese folk dance.
Wanjing Zhou amazes the audience with her magic show.
Members of the women's dance group perform an energetic number.
Rui Mao sings a song about New York. His band members are Kenny Stahl, Eben Mannes and Nicole Kirch.
Li Chen performs a graceful Tai ji demonstration.
Curtain call ...
After the show, Zhengming Li, his wife, Suning, and their daughter, Alice, pause for a photo. Thanks for inviting us to Chinese Night, Ming and Suning!Preschool Program to hold Open House Feb. 23, 26
An Orientation / Open House for the Bilingual English /Chinese Preschool Program for children ages 2 1/2 to 5 will be held from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 23, and from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 26, at the BHK Houghton Center, 700 Park Ave., Houghton.
The program is open to private payment or DHS childcare subsidy. Scholarships may be available. Chinese-speaking teachers are needed. Michigan Tech University student volunteers are welcome. Email pykuo@bhkfirst.org for information.
Monday, February 21, 2011
Aquila Theatre to present "A Midsummer Night's Dream" Feb. 25
The Aquila Theatre will present Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Feb. 25, in the Rozsa Center. (Image courtesy Rozsa Center for the Performing Arts)HOUGHTON -- Many of us know at least a little of the tale: Enchanted forests, fairy kings and queens, mixed-up lovers and the mischievous Puck! Come to the Rozsa Center for an evening with Aquila Theatre's production of Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Feb. 25, 2011.
A Midsummer Night’s Dream has delighted audiences for centuries, and Aquila’s interpretation will renew the magic of Shakespeare’s plot. Set against a classical Athenian backdrop, A Midsummer Night’s Dream deals with the universal theme of love, and its complications: passion, lust, frustration, depression, confusion, and, of course, marriage.
Aquila weaves a web of theatrical magic that will take an audience to the heart of an enchanted forest, the injustice of the Athenian court, and the political strife of the fairy kingdom. The plot focuses on the trials and experiences of two sets of lovers, the Fairy King and Queen and their servants, and a group of rude mechanics attempting to stage a production of "Pyramus and Thisbe" for the wedding of the Duke of Athens. At the heart of the story is the Fairy King’s servant, the impish Puck, whose magic creates an endless supply of mirth, mistaken identity, and inappropriate -- if not absolutely ludicrous -- passions.
Aquila’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream has been praised by The New York Times as follows: "Timely and pleasing…this 'Dream' soothes the eye and tickles the funny bone.'"
Aquila’s comedic mastery, physical ensemble techniques, and proven successes with their critically acclaimed productions of Shakespeare promise that this will be a Dream you won’t soon forget.
This event is sponsored in part by Minnesota Public Radio and the James and Margaret Black Endowment.
Ticket prices for adults are $20, $18 for seniors, $14 for students, and free for Michigan Tech Students. To purchase tickets, contact Michigan Tech Ticketing Services at the Rozsa Box Office at 487-3200, the Central Ticket Office (SDC) at 487-2073, or go online at tickets.mtu.edu. No refunds, exchanges, or late seating, please.
Michigan Tech to celebrate African Culture Feb. 21-26
During the African Night 2010 performance, members of the audience respond to Hayor Bibimma's invitation to join them in a dance on stage at the Rozsa Center. This year's African Night will again include a visiting dance group -- the Adinkra Music and Dance Ensemble, who trace their roots to Ghana. (File photo by Keweenaw Now)*HOUGHTON -- Black Heritage Month continues at Michigan Tech University with African Culture Week, Feb. 21-26, exploring several countries / regions of Africa. The week concludes on Saturday, Feb. 26, with African Night: Road Trip Across Africa, featuring an African dinner, followed by a performance by students and special guests -- the Adinkra Music and Dance Ensemble, who trace their roots to Ghana.
Monday, Feb. 21: Southern Africa: Amandla! A Revolution in Four Part Harmony. Part 1 of this film will be shown at 6 p.m. in ChemSci 101.
Tuesday, Feb. 22: Kenya: "Focus on Kenya," a look at Kenyans who are making a difference at home and around the globe, at 6 p.m. in ChemSci 101.
Wednesday, Feb. 23: Southern Africa: Amandla! A Revolution in Four Part Harmony. Part 2 of this film will be shown at 6 p.m. in ChemSci 101.
Thursday, Feb. 24: Liberia: "14 Years of Civil War," a presentation by a Liberian student on the history of the Liberian civil war and the short and long term impacts, at 6 p.m. in ChemSci 101.
The above events in ChemSci 101 are free.
Saturday, Feb. 26: African Night: Road Trip Across Africa will include dinner and a performance. Dinner will begin at 5 p.m. in the Memorial Union Board (MUB) Commons, and the performance will be at 7:30 p.m. at the Rozsa Center for Performing Arts.
During this event, students from various African countries provide the audience with an exhilarating display of some of the dance routines from their countries. Food prepared using recipes from certain African countries is served before the main event. The road-trip themed performance by the students will bring to stage the cultural heritage of the various African countries represented on Michigan Tech’s campus in a night of enlightening entertainment. This year’s special guest performers are the Adinkra Music and Dance Ensemble, who trace their roots to Ghana.
The cost for the general public, including both dinner and performance, is $15; for Michigan Tech students it is $10, and children under 5 are free.
Tickets are available through Michigan Tech Ticketing Operations at 906-487-3200, the Rozsa Box Office, the S.D.C. or online at tickets.mtu.edu.
*Editor's Note: See our slide show of African Night 2010 for more photos.
Superior Wind Symphony to perform Feb. 23
HOUGHTON -- The Superior Wind Symphony will perform for the Midwinter Band Festival Concert at 7:30 p.m., Wednesday, Feb. 23, in the Rozsa Center. Conductor Nicholas Enz (VPA) will treat the audience to an evening filled with folksongs, featuring guest conductor Evan Feldman of the University of North Carolina.
Wednesday night's concert draws from the folk music of many different countries -- from H. Owen Reed's masterwork, "La Fiesta Mexicana," to the music of Percy Grainger, with two of his most popular works, "Irish Tune from County Derry" and "Shepherd's Hey," the toe-tapping Morris dance.
In addition to the concert, Feldman will work with Copper Country high school bands and their directors, including Lake Linden-Hubble, Jeffers, Houghton, Dollar Bay and Hancock.
Ticket prices are $10 for the general public, $5 for students, and free for Michigan Tech students. To purchase tickets, contact the Rozsa Box Office at 487-3200, the Central Ticket Office (SDC) at 487-2073, or go online at www.tickets.mtu.edu.
No refunds, exchanges or late seating, please.
Wednesday night's concert draws from the folk music of many different countries -- from H. Owen Reed's masterwork, "La Fiesta Mexicana," to the music of Percy Grainger, with two of his most popular works, "Irish Tune from County Derry" and "Shepherd's Hey," the toe-tapping Morris dance.
In addition to the concert, Feldman will work with Copper Country high school bands and their directors, including Lake Linden-Hubble, Jeffers, Houghton, Dollar Bay and Hancock.
Ticket prices are $10 for the general public, $5 for students, and free for Michigan Tech students. To purchase tickets, contact the Rozsa Box Office at 487-3200, the Central Ticket Office (SDC) at 487-2073, or go online at www.tickets.mtu.edu.
No refunds, exchanges or late seating, please.
"Discover Isle Royale" series continues at Portage Library with Feb. 23 presentation
HOUGHTON -- The Portage Lake District Library continues to host "Discover Isle Royale," a series of monthly programs sponsored by the Isle Royale Institute and Isle Royale National Park.
From 6:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 23, Seth DePasqual will present "Drilling for Hope: Exploration, Technology and the End of Copper Mining on Isle Royale." DePasqual will take participants on a visual journey into Isle Royale’s past to investigate the final attempts to extract mineral riches from this remote island. He will also describe how, starting at least 4000 years ago, people made the difficult passage to Isle Royale in search of copper.
DePasqual is the Cultural Resources Manager for Isle Royale National Park. Formally trained as an archaeologist, he has studied the past in locations across America and Norway. Citing the island’s rich inventory of prehistoric and historic endeavors, he considers Isle Royale to be a dream medium for archaeological research.
Library programs are free and everyone is welcome. For more information, please call the library at 482-4570 or visit www.pldl.org.
Portage Library Closed for Presidents' Day
The Portage Lake District Library will be closed Monday, Feb. 21, in observance of Presidents' Day. However, the Gluten-Free Recipe Exchange program will meet as scheduled from 6:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. on Monday. The Gluten-Free Recipe Exchange is open to all and everyone is invited. For more information, please call the library at 482-4570.
From 6:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 23, Seth DePasqual will present "Drilling for Hope: Exploration, Technology and the End of Copper Mining on Isle Royale." DePasqual will take participants on a visual journey into Isle Royale’s past to investigate the final attempts to extract mineral riches from this remote island. He will also describe how, starting at least 4000 years ago, people made the difficult passage to Isle Royale in search of copper.
DePasqual is the Cultural Resources Manager for Isle Royale National Park. Formally trained as an archaeologist, he has studied the past in locations across America and Norway. Citing the island’s rich inventory of prehistoric and historic endeavors, he considers Isle Royale to be a dream medium for archaeological research.
Library programs are free and everyone is welcome. For more information, please call the library at 482-4570 or visit www.pldl.org.
Portage Library Closed for Presidents' Day
The Portage Lake District Library will be closed Monday, Feb. 21, in observance of Presidents' Day. However, the Gluten-Free Recipe Exchange program will meet as scheduled from 6:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. on Monday. The Gluten-Free Recipe Exchange is open to all and everyone is invited. For more information, please call the library at 482-4570.
Sunday, February 20, 2011
Letter: Budget woes and haul roads: What's wrong with this picture?
By Jack Parker
We are learning that both Federal and State budgets must be cut drastically, and that our DNR has already been targeted. That comes from spending money we don’t have. Now we must pay.
Considering that both DNR and DEQ have long been underfunded to the extent that they cannot enforce existing regulations, we must resist the cuts and even insist on redistribution of funds so that the law can and will be upheld.
A peculiar situation has been created concerning the Kennecott haul road from the Eagle deposit to the Humboldt mill. Months of manipulation have led to a growing perception that Kennecott could fund the road-permitting process, which would include design and environmental impact studies -- to be performed by the County -- with construction to be funded by sources unknown, but probably State or Federal.
Not discussed yet is the fact that for eight years, probably many more than eight, that road will be pounded by Kennecott trucks hauling away our mineral resources at the rate of
We are learning that both Federal and State budgets must be cut drastically, and that our DNR has already been targeted. That comes from spending money we don’t have. Now we must pay.
Considering that both DNR and DEQ have long been underfunded to the extent that they cannot enforce existing regulations, we must resist the cuts and even insist on redistribution of funds so that the law can and will be upheld.
A peculiar situation has been created concerning the Kennecott haul road from the Eagle deposit to the Humboldt mill. Months of manipulation have led to a growing perception that Kennecott could fund the road-permitting process, which would include design and environmental impact studies -- to be performed by the County -- with construction to be funded by sources unknown, but probably State or Federal.
Not discussed yet is the fact that for eight years, probably many more than eight, that road will be pounded by Kennecott trucks hauling away our mineral resources at the rate of
HALF A BILLION DOLLARS-WORTH PER YEAR !
$500,000,000.00 per year.
500,000 tonnes at more than $1,000/tonne.
(It varies, but the current value is more than $1,100/tonne.)
Can anybody see a better way to boost our budget?
Who should pay for the haul road?
How much of the half billion/year should come back to the State?
Can anybody see a better way to boost our budget?
Who should pay for the haul road?
How much of the half billion/year should come back to the State?
Jack Parker, Mining Engineer
Baltic, MI 49963
Baltic, MI 49963
Saturday, February 19, 2011
Mick McKellar: "Masques"
By Mick McKellarFrom the Mayo Clinic*
Why do I write so much about myself? First, I learned that you should write about something you know and mostly understand. Second, my friends taught me that it is OK to share. Finally, I get to "scoop" the gossips and tattletales.
I grew up as a grimly private little fellow, unwilling to communicate anything about myself or my family. Even while on the John Glenn High School Varsity Debate Team, I was something of an enigma...dynamic in an argument, but reticent...even silent...as a stone. At the time, I built elaborate fantasies about being the lone wolf, keeping anything about me intensely private. My hero? Mr. Spock on Star Trek.
Time spent on stage, wonderful hours spent with my friends in the Calumet Players, and advice from some friends and some artists in the Pine Mountain Music Festival, taught me that in the art-forms of the stage, sharing self can bring characters to life. Life experience also taught me the power of viral velocity and the power of information to grow with each telling of each tiny, titillating tidbit. Therefore, I share, but I write the script, I choreograph my steps, and I direct myself as I perform. My show is my own, and it is based on a true story...at least as I see it.
This, I learned, is the true value of autobiography over auto-grandiloqui.
Masques
I'm dancing a desperate minuet,
My lines are a dimly-lit memory,
My steps are manic and frantic, and yet
The truths of my feelings are plain to see.
The costumes are exquisitely designed,
And clash with the coarse choreography;
Yet, I think the audience does not mind,
As long as I speak a soliloquy.
What starts out as an intermedio,
Can quickly become a pageant, full blown --
Much faster than TV or radio,
Has the velocity of gossip grown.
And so, my friends the true story will know,
Through my true, elaborate, one-man-show.
Mick McKellar
February 2011
(Photo: A recent photo of Mick McKellar in a mask he is required to wear. Reprinted with permission.)
Mick McKellar plays a trolley car driver in the 2010 Red Metal Radio Show in the historic Calumet Theatre. (Video clip by Keweenaw Now)
*Editor's Note: Mick McKellar is about to undergo an important operation at the Mayo Clinic on Monday, Feb. 21. To learn more about his struggle with leukemia and read more of his inspiring poems, visit his blog. Keep Mick in your thoughts or prayers this Monday. You can write to him at mick@pasty.net. His article and poem are reprinted here with permission.
*Editor's Note: Mick McKellar is about to undergo an important operation at the Mayo Clinic on Monday, Feb. 21. To learn more about his struggle with leukemia and read more of his inspiring poems, visit his blog. Keep Mick in your thoughts or prayers this Monday. You can write to him at mick@pasty.net. His article and poem are reprinted here with permission.
Ski club to sponsor moonlight ski Saturday, Feb. 19, at Maasto Hiihto
HANCOCK -- The Keweenaw Nordic Ski Club (KNSC) invites skiers to celebrate a full moon and the return of winter with a fire at the triangle in Churning Rapids tonight, Saturday, Feb. 19. That’s the four-way intersection of the trails 4 and 10.
Meet at the Tomasi trail head at 7 p.m. to ski out. Might want to have a head light on in case the moon is behind the clouds.
Groomer Arlyn Aronson says, "Come on out, and bring all your skiing friends too! We’ll be roasting brats and Polish sausage, maybe marshmallows, and telling fabulous skiing stories (all true!). Don’t miss the (probably) last moonlit ski of the season."
This morning Aronson sent an email update to explain that, while the wind we received this week made a real mess of the trails, he and volunteers are clearing them; and the moonlight ski is still scheduled to begin at 7 p.m. tonight.
Ruth Archer, KNSC Board member, adds, "If you have time today, please go to the Maasto Hiihto trails and walk a trail (just boots! the trails are icy hard) to throw the sticks off. Then our groomers can refresh the trails for our skiing pleasure. First up this morning, the Tomasi trail, so it will be ready for this evening's Moonlight Ski."
Meet at the Tomasi trail head at 7 p.m. to ski out. Might want to have a head light on in case the moon is behind the clouds.
Groomer Arlyn Aronson says, "Come on out, and bring all your skiing friends too! We’ll be roasting brats and Polish sausage, maybe marshmallows, and telling fabulous skiing stories (all true!). Don’t miss the (probably) last moonlit ski of the season."
This morning Aronson sent an email update to explain that, while the wind we received this week made a real mess of the trails, he and volunteers are clearing them; and the moonlight ski is still scheduled to begin at 7 p.m. tonight.
Ruth Archer, KNSC Board member, adds, "If you have time today, please go to the Maasto Hiihto trails and walk a trail (just boots! the trails are icy hard) to throw the sticks off. Then our groomers can refresh the trails for our skiing pleasure. First up this morning, the Tomasi trail, so it will be ready for this evening's Moonlight Ski."
Friday, February 18, 2011
Two Michigan Tech students study in Finland
Jonathan Kilpela, right, of Atlantic Mine, and Karl Koivisto of Cokato, Minn., enjoy a weekend together in Tampere, Finland. The two Michigan Tech University students are studying in Oulu and Tampere, respectively, thanks to the Gilman Scholarship Program. (Photo © 2011 and courtesy Jonathan Kilpela. Reprinted with permission.) From Tech Today*:
Posted Feb. 18, 2011
HOUGHTON -- The Gilman Scholarship Program is sponsoring two Michigan Tech students now studying in Finland.
Jonathan Kilpela and Karl Koivisto are two of 1000 outstanding American undergraduate students from over 380 colleges and universities across the U.S. who were offered the prestigious Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship to participate in a study-abroad program during the Spring of 2011.
Kilpela, a second-year biological sciences major, received $2,000 to study at the University of Oulu. He is studying two of his interests -- biology and Finnish language. Finnish remains a big part of his heritage, as his mother's family immigrated to the U.S. from Finland. Kilpela hails from Atlantic Mine.
Keeping in shape in Finland, Kilpela writes, "We ran on singletrack through the woods around a lake -- It gets so hard packed that you could, and people do, bike on it." (Photo © 2011 and courtesy Jonathan Kilpela. Reprinted with permission.)"Receiving the Gilman Scholarship has equipped me with the resources to fully live out my dream of studying abroad," says Kilpela. "It has made the difference for me between barely getting by and being able to experience as much as possible here in Oulu. This whole trip is giving me a completely new perspective on, well, everything -- and I've only been here for a month."
Reindeer sprint racing. "And if you thought skijoring was insane..try getting pulled by a full sized reindeer," Jonathan Kilpela writes.** (Photo © 2011 and courtesy Jonathan Kilpela. Reprinted with permission.)Koivisto, a second-year biomedical engineering major from Cokato, Minn., received $4,500 to study at Tampere University of Technology -- a leader in biomedical research and technology.
Karl Koivisto's "million-dollar view" of Tampere, Finland, where he is studying. (Photo © 2011 and courtesy Jonathan Kilpela. Reprinted with permission.)"I was very honored and excited to receive the Gilman," Koivisto says. "Without it, I would not have been able to study abroad. The Gilman has opened many doors for me."
The Gilman Scholarship Program aims to diversify the kinds of students who study abroad and the countries and regions where they go. The program is sponsored by the U.S. Department of State Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs and administered by the Institute of International Education's (IIE) Southern Regional Center in Houston, Texas.
Applications for spring 2012 study-abroad scholarships are due Oct. 5 and will be available online in mid-August. Students receiving a federal Pell Grant from two- and four-year institutions are encouraged to apply.
Editor's Notes:
*Thanks to Tech Today for sharing this article and to Don Kilpela, Jonathan's Dad, for connecting Keweenaw Now with Jonathan for permission to publish photos.
**See Jonathan Kilpela's You Tube video of reindeer sprint racing in the Oulu marketplace on Jan. 29, 2011 -- same time as Hancock's Heikinpäivä.
Special screening of "The Economics of Happiness" in Hancock Feb. 22
HANCOCK --The Sustainable Keweenaw Resource Center will sponsor a special screening of The Economics of Happiness, a documentary about the worldwide movement for localization, at 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Feb. 22, at the Finlandia University Finnish American Heritage Center.
Both hard‐hitting and inspiring, The Economics of Happiness demonstrates that millions of people across the world are already engaged in building a better world -- that small-scale initiatives are happening on a large scale. The film shows that countless initiatives are united around a common cause: rebuilding more democratic, human scale, ecological and local economies -- the foundation of an "economics of happiness."
The film features a chorus of voices from six continents calling for systemic economic change, including David Korten, Bill McKibben, Vandana Shiva, Rob Hopkins, Richard, Heinberg, Juliet Schor, Michael Shuman, Helena Norberg‐Hodge, and Samdhong Rinpoche -- the Prime Minister of Tibetʹs government in exile.
For more information and a video preview, visit www.theeconomicsofhappiness.org
There is a suggested donation of $5-$10 -- no one turned away for lack of funds.
Both hard‐hitting and inspiring, The Economics of Happiness demonstrates that millions of people across the world are already engaged in building a better world -- that small-scale initiatives are happening on a large scale. The film shows that countless initiatives are united around a common cause: rebuilding more democratic, human scale, ecological and local economies -- the foundation of an "economics of happiness."
The film features a chorus of voices from six continents calling for systemic economic change, including David Korten, Bill McKibben, Vandana Shiva, Rob Hopkins, Richard, Heinberg, Juliet Schor, Michael Shuman, Helena Norberg‐Hodge, and Samdhong Rinpoche -- the Prime Minister of Tibetʹs government in exile.
For more information and a video preview, visit www.theeconomicsofhappiness.org
There is a suggested donation of $5-$10 -- no one turned away for lack of funds.
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
Keweenaw Symphony, world-class violinist to perform Feb. 19 at Rozsa
HOUGHTON -- The Keweenaw Symphony Orchestra concludes its 40th anniversary season with an electrifying concert of American and Russian classics. Come to the Rozsa Center at 7:30 p.m. this Saturday, Feb. 19, to hear Aaron Copland's inspiring Appalachian Spring Suite, the first great Americana orchestral work, written during WWII. The performance ends with Tchaikovsky's fiery Violin Concerto, played by world-class Ukrainian violinist, Solomiya Ivakhiv.
Don't miss the Keweenaw Symphony Orchestra's final performance of the season on Feb. 19!
Sponsored by Portage Health.
Ticket prices for the general public are $15, $7 for Students, and free for Michigan Tech Students. To purchase tickets, contact Michigan Tech Ticketing Services at the Rozsa Box Office at 487-3200, the Central Ticket Office (SDC) at 487.2073, or go online at tickets.mtu.edu. No refunds, exchanges, or late seating, please.
Don't miss the Keweenaw Symphony Orchestra's final performance of the season on Feb. 19!
Sponsored by Portage Health.
Ticket prices for the general public are $15, $7 for Students, and free for Michigan Tech Students. To purchase tickets, contact Michigan Tech Ticketing Services at the Rozsa Box Office at 487-3200, the Central Ticket Office (SDC) at 487.2073, or go online at tickets.mtu.edu. No refunds, exchanges, or late seating, please.
Khana Khazana to serve Iranian cuisine Feb. 18
HOUGHTON -- Authentic Iranian food cooked by Hasti Asayesh Ardakani is on Michigan Tech's Khana Khazana (food treasure) lunch menu this Friday, Feb. 18. Ardakani is a senior undergraduate student in the mechanical engineering department.
Iranian specialties include lubia polo, a rice dish with ground beef and fresh green beans; ash reshteh, a thick noodle soup; and feneri, a Spanish rice pudding. They will be served from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., Friday, Feb. 18, in the Memorial Union Food Court.
Khana Khazana is a series of ethnic meals cooked by international students. A full meal costs $6, and each item is $2. Coffee, tea or a fountain soda of your choice is included with the full meal.
Khana Khazana is a collaborative project of Michigan Tech international students and Dining Services.
Iranian specialties include lubia polo, a rice dish with ground beef and fresh green beans; ash reshteh, a thick noodle soup; and feneri, a Spanish rice pudding. They will be served from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., Friday, Feb. 18, in the Memorial Union Food Court.
Khana Khazana is a series of ethnic meals cooked by international students. A full meal costs $6, and each item is $2. Coffee, tea or a fountain soda of your choice is included with the full meal.
Khana Khazana is a collaborative project of Michigan Tech international students and Dining Services.
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