Erpenbach right on same-sex unions
Wisconsin holds the honor as the first state to pass a law prohibiting discrimination in housing and employment based on sexual orientation.
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Wisconsin holds the honor as the first state to pass a law prohibiting discrimination in housing and employment based on sexual orientation.
From the beginning, the details surrounding the UW Roman Catholic Foundation's attempts to gain Registered Student Organization status have been murky.
In four pages of 12 sections, the UW-Madison Student Judiciary handed down what hopefully spells the end of challenges to the Student Union Initiative victory.
It looks like the country will have to wait a little longer for the first Cheesehead President.
UW-Madison Chancellor John Wiley's State of the University speech Monday was impressive overall, but had an important flaw.
Langdon Street is dangerous on a weekend night. Hundreds of students stumble along the dimly lit sidewalks going to and from the parties held every weekend at fraternity houses along the street.
Step aside Florida 2000—The case seeking to overturn the Student Union Initiative, Elliott v. Student Elections Commission, is challenging legitimate election results for baseless reasons.
In 2004, after receiving 51 percent of the vote, President Bush ran wild and declared a mandate. Tuesday, the American people spoke and repudiated that mandate, spanking Bush back into reality.
Mingled with crumpled newspapers, neon propaganda leaflets will presumably litter lecture halls this election day.
Tomorrow Wisconsinites will vote on whether the state will write discrimination into its constitution. While that may not be the exact wording of the civil union and gay marriage ban referendum question, this editorial board believes a ""yes"" vote would do just that.
After years of being largely ineffective in the Republican-controlled U.S. House of Representatives, Tammy Baldwin, a liberal Democrat, seems poised to play a larger role in our nation's governance and deserves your vote for re-election tomorrow.
Gov. Jim Doyle has stood up for the University of Wisconsin System during his four years at the Capitol. Tuition has risen significantly since he has been in office, but that is due more to a Republican-controlled Legislature and a tight state budget than to action or inaction from the governor. In fact, Doyle used his powers of veto in 2005 to restore $43 million to the UW System Budget.
With days leading up to the election, Gov. Jim Doyle and Republican gubernatorial candidate Mark Green, R-Green Bay, are both wooing voters with a nostrum favored by all politicians: tax breaks.
They say hindsight is 20/20, but there may be no looking back on the Nov. 7 election for baby boomers whose political vision ages along with eyesight.
Next Tuesday, there is a referendum on the ballot to re-enact the death penalty in Wisconsin. We believe there are countless reasons to vote ""No,"" and encourage students to cast their vote as such on Nov. 7.
Enjoying a Paul Bunyan Burger at Memorial Union: $4. Providing students with a living wage: $823,000. Watching Student Labor Action Coalition squirm as it fails to find funding to foot the Living Wage bill: Priceless.
At 2:00 a.m., pre-daylight savings time Sunday morning, the 500 Block of State Street looked like a bad case of dAcjA vu. A frenzied crowd of partiers alternatively chanted ""Fuck the police"" and ""We want tear gas"" while throwing chunks of pumpkin and debris from the street.
Diversity is a notoriously sticky issue on campus, and the university deserves to be commended for its continual willingness to grapple with it.
Excuses that won't work:?""I left my ticket in my house.""?""I'm from out-of-town and my ticket is in my car which got towed.""?""My girlfriend is dressed as Cookie Monster and she ate it.""?""Officer, please: I'm a stripper for Halloween, it's in my underwear and it's part of my costume.""?
Democratic incumbent Gov. Jim Doyle and Republican candidate U.S. Rep. Mark Green, R-Green Bay, challenged each other at their third and final debate Friday night, focusing on health care, education and each other's ethical blunders.