Lakeshore trip reminds of Wisconsin’s natural beauty
One of the best things about living in Wisconsin is traveling around our beautiful state and experiencing places and activities that are not far from home.
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One of the best things about living in Wisconsin is traveling around our beautiful state and experiencing places and activities that are not far from home.
Victor Hoberg, who worked nearly 50 years for The Sheboygan Press, died Thursday, Aug. 26, in Sheboygan. He was 99.
After graduating from Sheboygan North High School, Hoberg started working as a newspaper delivery driver for The Press. But just five months later, his career with the newspaper was interrupted when he enlisted in the U.S. Army during World War II. In 1946, he returned to The Press, where he worked in the mailroom and delivered newspapers to carriers. He later became manager of the advertising services department, a role he held through his retirement in 1987.
H. Mitchell Bliss, who spent nearly 17 years as a part of The Janesville Gazette newsroom, died Thursday, Aug. 26, in Janesville. He was 96.
Bliss — no relation to the Bliss family that owned the newspaper — joined The Gazette in 1957 and served as a reporter until 1965, when he was named city editor. In 1983, after a five-year hiatus working in public relations for the State Bar of Wisconsin, he was named editor of the newspaper. It's a position he held until his retirement in 1989.
Bob Franzmann, who worked for more than 30 years at the Wisconsin State Journal in Madison, died Monday, July 19. He was 86.
Born in Coloma, Mich., Franzmann attended UW-Milwaukee, where he discovered his love of journalism. He graduated in 1962 as a part of the school’s first class of journalism graduates before starting his newspaper career at the Rhinelander Daily News. He spent a year there before joining the State Journal newsroom, where he remained until his retirement in 1994.
More than half of the state’s county Republican parties have formally called for a “cyber forensic audit” of the 2020 elections. Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, R-Rochester, is using the same language as he expands the review headed by former Wisconsin Justice Michael Gableman. But the man leading the effort to get county parties on board with the call for an audit insists what Vos wants isn’t enough.
Typically, judges send defendants to jail or prison when their probation is revoked. But Biskupic instead effectively sentenced some defendants to open-ended arrangements by “staying” their sentences, pausing their jail term while they attended drug and alcohol treatment.
The Wisconsin Newspaper Association Foundation on Friday honored 26 industry leaders during this year’s Memorial Pylon virtual ceremony. Those unable to join us for the live premiere can watch a replay of the ceremony below or on our YouTube channel.
The video features photos and biographies of the inductees along with memories shared by family, friends and former colleagues.
Emilie Heidemann, community and business editor for Wisconsin Media Group's suburban Madison publications, is leaving to join the Wisconsin State Journal. She succeeds former business and technology reporter Shelley Mesch, who left in May to join The Salt Lake Tribune.
Prior to her time with Wisconsin Media Group, Heidemann worked as a reporter and assistant editor for the Lodi Enterprise and Poynette Press. While earning her journalism degree from UW-Oshkosh, she also served as news editor of The Advance-Titan student newspaper and was awarded WNA Foundation internships with the Waushara Argus in Wautoma and The Brillion News.
Gannett Co. Inc., parent company of the Wausau Daily Herald, has sold the newspaper's longtime home at 800 Scott St.
The Daily Herald offices had been located in the building since 1958. The newspaper will lease space in the building, which it reports was sold to Bauer's Mega Storage, a Wausau-area company. With the sale, Gannett no longer owns any of the buildings that for decades had housed its central Wisconsin newspapers.
Bit by bit, the smaller homestead farms disappear a little more each year as houses and buildings are torn down or left to decay. But if you look closely while driving through farm country you can still spot one legacy of farming that still exists in many places — the treasure troves that some may call junkyards.