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When is it wrong, or at least of little usefulness, to ask the people their opinions on public issues?
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When is it wrong, or at least of little usefulness, to ask the people their opinions on public issues?
I have completed my quinquennial agricultural legal reporting duties with a week to spare.
Frederick "Fred" Herman Keller, a longtime reporter for the Sussex Sun, died Thursday, Jan. 12, reports the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. He was 91.
Keller worked as a reporter for the newspaper — now Northwest Now — for nearly 40 years. While at the newspaper, he covered city news and sporting events.
Last month, the WNA Foundation opened registration for the Wisconsin Civics Games. We've already had several schools sign up to participate, but we need members' help to reach a wider audience.
The deadline to register is Feb. 20, so the sooner you can spread the word, the better! We've compiled five ways newsrooms can help promote participation and foster civic engagement among Wisconsin youth.
We owe it to future generations to protection the freedoms provided by the First Amendment, writes Gibraltar High School senior Annalee Mize.
Without agreement, society turns dysfunctional, writes Ellen Zhang, a junior at Green Bay Southwest High School.
Jonah Vircks, a freshman at Loyal High School, makes a case for why the right to assembly is one of our most important important freedoms.
Amid a brisk pace of development activity in metro Milwaukee, the region’s construction labor market is as tight as it has been in at least 20 years.
Seven months after a transgender bullying investigation spurred bomb threats, moderates regain control of the school board in Kiel, Wisconsin.
Your job is important. It is the source of your income and it’s where you spend the majority of your waking hours. It may be part of your identity. For these reasons, you do your best at your job; your accomplishments are a source of pride to you.