MARQUETTE, MI Northern Michigan University s Temaki and Tea and Smoothie King restaurant will offer only call-ahead and drive-thru service from April 12-23. Indoor seating will not be offered during that period to conform with Gov. Gretchen Whitmer s recommendation that indoor dining pause for two weeks to reduce COVID-19 community spread.
Smoothie King is open from 8 a.m. – 8 p.m. and Temaki from 11 a.m. – 8 p.m., Monday through Friday.
The university s dining halls for on-campus students, Northern Lights Dining and The Wildcat Den, will continue to provide reduced indoor seating. Both have been operating with reduced seating capacity for social distancing purposes, per the state’s current epidemic order.
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Lacrosse Picks Up Record-Breaking Win Over Eagles Courtesy: Northern Michigan University Athletics
Courtesy: NMU
MARQUETTE, Mich. – The Northern Michigan University women’s lacrosse set the program record for most wins in a season when they clinched their fifth win of 2021 with a 19-5 win against Ashland University in a Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (GLIAC) Friday tilt.
Aleya Speas notched the first goal of the game, assisted by Madeline Bittell, just 34 seconds into the action. It was the first goal in a 6-0 NMU run.
Jessica Daniels was the next to score for the Wildcats, just 20 seconds later. Emily Renfrew put one into the net to up the NMU advantage to 3-0.
Apr 10, 2021
GWINN, MI – Terry Ann Abbott, age 61, of Gwinn, walked on Thursday, April 8, 2021, at UP Health System – Marquette.
Terry Ann was born February 29, 1960, in Omaha, Nebraska, a daughter of Wilfred and Geraldine (Bressette) Abbott. She was raised in Ishpeming where she graduated from the Ishpeming High School and later attended Northern Michigan University. She resided for six years in Dallas, Texas, before moving back to the Marquette area. A stay at home mom, Terry Ann loved spending quality time with her daughters, who loved her dearly. She was proud of her American Indian heritage and enjoyed teaching the native ways and traditions to her children, and especially her grandchildren and great-grandchildren whom she adored. She enjoyed sharing her talent in making native crafts and made several Native American dresses for her grandkids to wear at powwows. Although she was in ill health for many years, she made the most of the good times. She lived a wonderful life,