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After leaving WLUC-TV, Bohnak started writing his "Karl's Korner" column for The Mining Journal, the local newspaper in Marquette, Michigan, and its regional siblings the Daily Press in Escanaba, The Daily Mining Gazette in Houghton, and The Daily News in Iron Mountain. [23] The weekly column ran from November 5, 2021, until December 22, 2023. [24]
WDMJ-TV was owned by the Daily Mining Journal along with WDMJ radio (1320 AM). Its studios were on the top floor of the Mining Journal building on Washington Street in Downtown Marquette. The station quickly outgrew its facilities. In 1959, the station moved into its current studios in Negaunee Township.
The Mining Journal. Marquette: Mining Journal Steam Printing House. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 27, 2007. Fleming, Elvis E. (December 1973). "J. J. Hagerman and the Pecos River Railroad". Permian Historical Annual. Vol. XIII. pp. 21– 35. Lipsey, John J. (1968). The Lives of James John Hagerman, Builder of the Colorado ...
The Mining Journal was the proprietor of Marquette's first television and radio stations. First known as WBEO, AM 1320 began broadcasting in 1931, later changing its call sign to WDMJ on November 15, 1939; [3] DMJ standing for Daily Mining Journal. The newspaper would later add an FM station in 1966, known as WDMJ-FM, and would later become ...
Mining Journal may mean: The Mining Journal, the predominant daily newspaper of Marquette, Michigan, in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.
Memorial to John Munro Longyear in Longyearbyen, Norway. John Munro Longyear Sr. (April 15, 1850 – May 28, 1922) was an American businessman and noted developer of timber and mineral lands in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan [1] and Minnesota who became the central figure behind the Arctic Coal Company, which surveyed and mined coalfields on Spitsbergen, from 1905 to 1916.
The movie premiered in Ishpeming and Marquette on June 29, 1959, followed by its world premier in Detroit on July 1. [34] The movie was critically acclaimed. Bosley Crowther , film critic for The New York Times said, "it is the best courtroom melodrama this old judge has ever seen," [ 35 ] and the American Bar Association rated this as one of ...
Part of Edward's mining fortune was used to pay off the debts of his older brother, Senator Thomas W. Ferry. Thomas had amassed millions in debts after his lumber and steel businesses went bankrupt. Edward Payson Ferry married Clara Virginia White, a second cousin who worked as a teacher. Clara died tragically in a horseback riding accident.