Bloody day in Iraq as election looms
While the Tigris River will greet the new day just as it always does Jan. 30, Iraqi citizens will vote in a democratic election for the first time in the nation's history.
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While the Tigris River will greet the new day just as it always does Jan. 30, Iraqi citizens will vote in a democratic election for the first time in the nation's history.
Amid his many words of encouragement and hope for Wisconsin's economic future in his State of the State Address, Governor Jim Doyle challenged state legislators to vote on proposals advocating an increased minimum wage.
A week after the bombings that forced aid workers to evacuate, the Sudanese village of Tawilla experienced more bloodshed Wednesday in attacks that claimed at least 15 civilian lives. The Sudan News reported the village skirmishes appear to be retaliation against recent attacks by Sudan Liberation Army rebels.
The days are growing shorter and the wind is regaining its winter ferocity in Madison, intensifying the hunger and aggravating the despair of the capital city's less fortunate residents. Behind the counter at Grace Episcopal Church's, 116 W. Washington Ave., food pantry, Jim and Hanna Bailey greet those in need with provisions, warm smiles and kind words.
When President Bush delivered his victory speech in Washington, D.C., the repercussions of his words resonated across the globe.
When Madison City Clerk Ray Fisher decided to extend office hours on the day of Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry's Madison rally, Republicans cried foul.
After a grueling selection process spanning over half a year, Mayor Cieslewicz's Board of Police and Fire Commissioners appointed Noble Wray as Madison's Chief of Police Thursday evening.
They are sidewalk muses who serenade passing students, state senators and shoppers; their vocal personalities are as well known as their songs that create a soundtrack for quite a theatrical downtown.
The first presidential debate between Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry and President Bush, held at the University of Miami and moderated by PBS' Jim Lehrer, was a tightly regulated affair that, in contrast with the host school's nickname, resulted in relatively little politically turbulent weather.
An enthusiastic crowd of students and other Madison residents filled the Wisconsin Union Theater to near capacity Wednesday evening to hear independent presidential candidate Ralph Nader address the university community.
It is common knowledge that the only antidote for the scorching Wisconsin summers is a trip to the municipal swimming pool, a cure which the citizens of Madison have long lacked. Thanks to a generous grant from Irwin and Robert Goodman, the city's pain might soon be alleviated.