Democrats delay Senate vote on abortion bill
The State Senate discussed a bill Tuesday that would redefine informed consent for abortion and apply restrictions to the administration of abortion-inducing drugs.
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The State Senate discussed a bill Tuesday that would redefine informed consent for abortion and apply restrictions to the administration of abortion-inducing drugs.
As agents of a public university, housefellows should not have to give up their right to lead or participate in events such as religious gatherings. The existing policy has recently come under fire in regards to housefellows holding Bible studies in their dorm rooms. We believe that the newly proposed amendments to this policy will reconcile private rights with public regulations.
It was hard to open a mailbox, change the channel or ride down a street in Madison this year and not be confronted by politics.
The Madison City Council debated until late in the night Tuesday discussing changes to Mayor Dave Cieslewicz's proposed $192 million 2005 city budget.
State senators of both parties held leadership caucuses Tuesday morning and chose unexpected lawmakers to lead them into the battles of the next legislative session.
It may have taken possibly the closest and most pivotal presidential race of our time, but Election Day 2004 elicited the kind of response this campus usually reserves for home football games.
Americans think Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry has a stronger command of issues and the English language than President George Bush, experts say.
The Madison Energy Task Force released a five-year environmental plan Monday advocating the city's commitment to renewable energy, sustainable development and buildings as green as a Lambeau Field tailgate party.
Experts said tonight's vice presidential debate may only have a slight effect on who wins the election but agree that it should at least be fun to watch.
Five years from now, a UW-Madison freshman who has never known the splendor of Ogg Hall could stand at the site of the demolished dorm and see Lake Mendota. His gaze will fall down a pedestrian corridor, a tree-lined and brick-paved promenade, perhaps filled with students milling around public art or rushing from two new residence halls on the southern end of campus.
The Madison City Council is expected to swear in a fifth member tonight to the stalled commission responsible for selecting the city's chief of police. But despite delays and gripes expressed by the president of the police officers' union, a final appointment is not expected for several weeks.
Riot gear and resting officers will replace drunken revelers in the rooms of University Inn, 441 N. Frances St., this Halloween as the building will be the center of Madison Police Department's effort to prevent a third straight riot at the annual bash.
Computer glitches and political hackers could taint the integrity of future elections, a number of voting experts and Wisconsin legislators fear, four years after paper chads became synonymous with electoral breakdown.
Blue-chip high school athletes and collegians with the skills to go pro are often hounded by unscrupulous sports agents offering lavish gifts in exchange for signing a contract that would, according to National Collegiate Athletic Association rules, bar an athlete from competing in college sports, say members of the Wisconsin state Assembly.
An effort to recall Gov. Jim Doyle from office undermines the normal electoral process and has little chance of succeeding, political analysts say.
The victim of last month's hate crime in Eagle Heights believed he was being retaliated against for taking early leave of a barbecue attended by white supremacists from across the state, a UW-Madison police detective said Monday.
Two years after the USA Patriot Act passed Congress by a nearly unanimous vote, public outcry over the bill's infringement on civil liberties and the Justice Department's reluctance to disclose how it used the greater powers granted under the bill has prompted congressional support to repeal some provisions of the law.
A polar bear in the wild can hunt artic prey and roam ice flows in a home range that may extend 31,000 square miles.
Tanner Wray and Karl Debus-Lopez have the longest relationship of any of their friends, having met 20 years ago this week.
Syndicated columnist Molly Ivins worked a nearly packed house at the Wisconsin Union Theater Monday night, dropping one-liners, sharing Texas legislative anecdotes and instructing liberals to find humor in the face of political defeats.