Duluth bells to toll for Sandy Hook victims
December 20, 2012 in Duluth News Tribune
The bell in downtown’s Historic Old Central High School’s clock tower will begin tolling at 8:30 a.m. Friday; once each for the 26 victims of last week’s school shooting in Connecticut.
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Sisters Kianna and Angelina St. Germaine, 6- and 7-year-old bundles of energy with black hair and impish grins, had their hair done and their faces made up on Saturday afternoon.
Studies show that students between fourth and sixth grades start making decisions on where they plan to get education beyond high school.
Six years of talking and building on progress culminates in a report to be released today that outlines a vision for the vitality of the eastern downtown, hillside and waterfront areas of the city.
Lori Hatten walked into the new Burggraf’s Ace Hardware store in Duluth’s East Hillside on Monday with a big smile on her face.
Duluth animal-control workers recently removed more than 60 cats and kittens from a Central Hillside home where a middle-aged man reportedly had taken in strays.
About 25 people of various ages, male and female, a mix of races sit around tables configured in a large rectangle in the basement lunchroom of the Damiano Center.
Firehouse Flats, at Fourth Street and Second Avenue East in Duluth will provide affordable housing for working families.
Its prior existence is a bit of a mystery, but a century-plus-old dump buried near the Myers-Wilkins Elementary School site in East Hillside has yielded treasure for night-time diggers and a financial headache for the Duluth school district.
Hillfest was held from 2 to 7 p.m. in a cordoned-off two-block stretch of Fourth Street intersecting Sixth Avenue East, where Central Hillside meets East Hillside. 
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