Celebrate dairy industry and keep it strong
June is Dairy Month in Wisconsin, a time when we may attend a breakfast on a farm or some other event to celebrate this important industry.
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June is Dairy Month in Wisconsin, a time when we may attend a breakfast on a farm or some other event to celebrate this important industry.
Susan Kay Siemens, 69, of Janesville, died on Saturday, May 11, at Agrace in Fitchburg after battling an illness.
The former graphic designer was born to Paul and Dolly Siemens in Freeport, Illinois. Later in life, she settled in Janesville and, after exploring different careers, found a passion for graphic design. She ran her own newspaper for a few years, and continued to be involved with design for Evergreen Impact and The Edgerton Reporter. A private memorial service will be held at a later date.
Democrats are again counting on the abortion issue to help their candidates in the fall. And Republicans are trying to blunt the power of the issue.
Among the many partners in a successful farm is the veterinarian.
Former Marshfield News-Herald editor and publisher William “Bill” Heath, 85, of Marshfield, died on May 5, after a battle with heart disease.
After earning a degree in journalism from UW-Madison in 1960, he started his career as a reporter and photographer for the Beloit Daily News, where he was promoted to city editor and, later, to assistant managing editor. In 1971, he and his family moved to Flagstaff, Arizona, where he worked as an editor and reporter for the Arizona Daily Sun. In 1976, the family returned in Wisconsin, and Heath joined the Marshfield News-Herald — first as editor and, later, as editor and publisher. He retired in 2001.
Dylan Brogan, who was a staff writer at Isthmus for seven years reporting on city government and life in Madison, has been named the communications manager for the City of Madison, the mayor announced May 7.
Brogan, a Madison native and graduate of UW-Madison, started his journalism career covering Act 10 protests for a local radio station, then led a team of WORT 89.9 FM citizen reporters while expanding the station’s news programming, reports Madison Magazine.
Janet R. Carl, 63, died unexpectedly on Saturday, May 4, at Grant Regional Health Center in Lancaster.
She graduated from Fennimore High School in 1979 and then attended UW-Platteville, where she earned a bachelor’s degree in political science and journalism. During college, she served as a reporter and editor at The Exponent student newspaper, was an intern at the Oshkosh Daily Northwestern, and freelanced for the Dubuque Telegraph Herald and the Milwaukee Journal. During her junior year at UW-Platteville, she was selected for a special student internship at the Wisconsin State Journal. She went on to earn a law degree from the University of Texas-Austin, and worked as an environmental attorney in Houston, Texas, St. Louis, and Scottsdale, Arizona.
Dorothy (Browne) Haines, 98, of Madison, died on April 22. She graduated in 1939 from Madison East High School before going on to attend UW-Madison, where she earned a degree in journalism and became the first female editor of The Daily Cardinal student newspaper.
She later went to work for her father’s East Side Print Shop, which also published the "East Side News," of which she served as editor. She would go on to become vice president of the business. Her love of history and journalism culminated with the writing of "Monona in the Making," published in 1999, for which she was awarded the Wisconsin Historical Society’s Local History Award of Merit.
Longtime Sheboygan Press community editor Mary Louise Eckardt, 74, of Eau Claire, died on May 12.
After graduating from North High School in Sheboygan, where she served as editor of the school's yearbook, she went on to earn a degree in journalism from UW-Madison in 1972, before joining the Merrill Daily Herald as a reporter. From there, she worked at the (Rochester, Minn.) Post-Bulletin and, by 1976, she'd returned to her hometown to work at the Sheboygan Press as community editor — a role she held for the next 30 years.
I remember attending a graduation ceremony for a class of nursing students.