Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Berry Events Center is a 4,300-seat multi-purpose arena in Marquette, Michigan, in the United States that opened in 1999. It is home to the Northern Michigan University Wildcats ice hockey and basketball teams. The arena formerly housed the US short track speed skating team.
Special Events group is in charge of the events that occur during winter carnival. Some events include: snow volleyball, beards competition, broomball, cross-country skiing, curling, downhill skiing, human dogsled race, ice bowling, ice fishing, ice skating, snowboarding, tug-o-war, and the Yooper sprint. This group is responsible for all ...
John J. MacInnes Student Ice Arena is a 4,200-capacity hockey arena in Houghton, Michigan.It is home to the Michigan Tech Huskies men's ice hockey team. It is named for John J. MacInnes, head coach of the Huskies from 1956 to 1983, who was one of the most successful coaches in the history of college hockey with a record of 555-295-39.
The building was dismantled and reconstructed 55 days later in Marquette, Michigan, by Edward Ulseth of Calumet, Michigan, on a 300-by-400-foot (91 by 122 m) plot of land leased from Cleveland-Cliffs on the corner of 3rd and Fair streets, now the present location of the entrance to the Berry Events Center on the campus of Northern Michigan ...
The center hosts many events, concerts, political rallies, and graduations. Trade shows also take place there; the complex has 25,000 square feet (2,300 m 2) of space at Wendler Arena. It hosted the third WWF In Your House pay-per-view on September 24, 1995. Jehovah's Witnesses District Conventions are held annually at the Dow Event Center ...
The Taylor Sportsplex is a premiere sports facility owned by the City of Taylor, Michigan. It contains four arenas—two are used primarily for ice hockey and figure skating; the other two are used primarily for indoor soccer. The Belle Tire Hockey Program and Eastern Michigan University are the main hockey tenants. The facility also is used ...
Dearborn Ice Skating Center (The DISC, formerly Mike Adray Arena) is a 1,700-seat indoor ice arena located in Dearborn, Michigan, United States, in Metro Detroit. It is used primarily for high school and youth hockey as well as for ice skating. There are 1,500 seats at the main arena and another 200 in the viewing area.
A new four-sided scoreboard was added at center ice in 1991. To make handicap-accessible seats, the rink's capacity was reduced to 6,170 in the early 1990s. In 1999–2000, the press box was relocated from center ice to the rink end to make room for 300 club seats on the south end. Luxury boxes were added a year later on the north end of the rink.