Tuesday, October 31, 2006

Rally with President Bill Clinton in Milwaukee




Dear Friend,

President Bill Clinton is joining me for a public rally this Friday, at the Milwaukee Theatre, in Milwaukee. Doors open at 2:00 p.m.Join Gov. Doyle and President Bill Clinton - RSVP HERE

Senator Herb Kohl, Congresswoman Gwen Moore, Lt. Governor Barbara Lawton, Attorney General candidate Kathleen Falk, and other Democratic candidates will all be there.

President Clinton is an extraordinary leader, a great American, and a champion for middle class and working families.

He's coming to Wisconsin in the final days of our campaign because he knows the importance of this election.

Call 1-877-646-2006 or click the link below to RSVP today:

http://billclinton.doylelawton.com

I deeply appreciate the friendship and support you have provided over the past four years. And as our campaign enters the final days – join me once again.

Together we finally have our state back on track. I'm looking forward to seeing you this Friday at the Milwaukee Theater.

Sincerely,



Governor Jim Doyle

Thousands Gather To Support Doyle - Cheers for Obama!








Left to Right: Gus Doyle, US Rep. Gwen Moore, First Lady Jessica Doyle, US Senator Barack Obama, Governor Jim Doyle (behind Obama), US Senator Herb Kohl, Lieutenant Governor Barbara Lawton and Kathleen Falk, Candidate for Attorney General

Monday, October 30, 2006

Friday, October 27, 2006

PRESIDENT CLINTON to Honor GOVERNOR DOYLE in Milwaukee

You are invited to an event honoring

Governor Jim Doyle


with special guest

President William Jefferson Clinton

Friday, November 3rd

Hyatt Regency Milwaukee
333 West Kilbourn Avenue
Milwaukee WI

Tickets are required for this event. Please contact Katie at 608.250.5083 or Katie@jimdoyle.org for ticket information.

Thursday, October 26, 2006

Rush Limbaugh, Mark Green Attack Michael J. Fox Ad

As reported by One Wisconsin Now:


Actor and Parkinson's disease patient Michael J. Fox has appeared in commercials for candidates that support stem cell research all across the country. Fox appears in an ad for Governor Doyle that just began airing yesterday. In that ad, he says that Wisconsin holds a special place in his heart because embryonic stem cell research started here. He also says that Governor Doyle understands that promise that the science holds and the jobs that it will create. Fox shows very visible signs of his illness. After viewing some of the Michael J. Fox ads, right wing radio show host Rush Limbaugh claimed that Fox was only "acting" and called his shaking "shameless." Limbaugh is quoted as making the baseless claim that Fox was "exaggerating the effects of the disease." One expert of the disease called Limbaugh's claims "ludicrous."

One doctor observed that that Fox has a very severe form of Parkinson's that affected him at a young age. And he's been through many aggressive treatments. The physician said that the symptoms that Fox displayed on the commercial are common effects of Parkinson's disease.

The Michael J. Fox commercial took aim at Congressman Mark Green for standing in the way of embryonic stem cell research, and Fox says that Green's votes have set us back. In a response to the commercial Congressman Green accuses Michael J. Fox's ad of being "flat out lies" about his record on stem cell research. But Green's deceptive statement carefully parses his words. He talks only of stem cell research in general, knowing that he has stood in the way for additional funding for the most promising form, embryonic stem cells. Michael J Fox specifically took Green to task for standing in the way of embryonic stem cell research, so he in fact was telling the truth while Green chose to hide his real record. Green then concluded his press release by again citing the research that was debunked months ago.



http://www.onewisconsinnow.org/one_wisconsin/

General Robert Gard Monday, October 30, 7:30 PM at First Unitarian Church

Three-star general and senior fellow at the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation, Gen. Robert Gard, ret. is a strong spokesperson for the anti-war community on both Iraq and Iran and recently organized a letter, signed by 21 former military and national security officials, that urged the administration to seek direct diplomacy to resolve the U.S.-Iran impasse and the Middle East crisis. His talk will focus on "Is America Secure?" touching on Iraq, Iran and the current security threats facing our country.

First Unitarian Universalist Society
1342 N. Astor Street, Milwaukee, WI 53202

Monday, October 30, 7:30 PM






Join U.S. Senator Barack Obama, Governor Jim Doyle, Senator Herb Kohl, Congresswoman Gwen Moore, Lt. Governor Barbara Lawton, and Attorney General candidate Kathleen Falk for a rally in Milwaukee on October 31 at 9:00 a.m. at the Pere Marquette Park.

Call 1-877-646-2006

http://action.doylelawton.com/signUp.jsp?key=1335

Michael J. Fox Supports Governor Doyle!


Michael J. Fox shares one reason why it’s so important to re-elect Governor Doyle: his support for stem cell research. Fox lives with Parkinson’s disease, one of the illnesses that stem cell research done right here in Wisconsin may help to find a cure for.

"What you decide can affect millions of people. Like me. Like your family,” says Fox in the ad. "Wisconsin holds a special place in my heart, because it's where stem cell research was born. The cures we are looking for may come from here."

Governor Doyle refuses to turn his back on live-saving research and the hope that it gives families in Wisconsin and around the world.

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

"THE EXONERATED" Six Riveting Stories About Innocence, Injustice and Redemption, to be screened Sunday, October 29



As part of an ongoing series of movies, Milwaukee's The Mad Mug coffee house will be showing "The Exonerated." In the film, six actors present the powerful true stories of six exonerated death row survivors. The movie is scheduled for Sunday October 29 at 6:00pm. The Mad Mug is located at 7934 W. Burleigh Street, Milwaukee.


Sixteen years. Imagine everything you could do with sixteen years.

Imagine everything you did the last sixteen years.

Now take it all away.

Sunny Jacobs was convicted and sentenced to death for a crime she did not commit. Sixteen years was just the beginning of what was taken from Sunny Jacobs.

Twenty-nine Academy Award nominations, eighty-seven Golden Globe nominations, one hundred and twelve EMMY nominations: such is the incredible array of actors who have lent their considerable talents and passion to The Exonerated. As a play, awarded the Drama Desk, Lucille Lortel and Outer Critics Circle Awards, it was acclaimed in major cities across America.

Now as a film, the undeniable power of the true stories of six exonerated survivors of death row will engage your emotion, incite your passion, and envelop you in their search for the lost small pieces of dignity and the lives so unceremoniously interrupted.

True stories in their own words. Stories you will never forget.

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

IS IT TIME TO BOYCOTT WISN?


Limbaugh: Michael J. Fox Exploited Disease


http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/10/24/politics/main2121910.shtml

Perhaps it is now the time, to inform the folks at WISN Radio, that unless the nonsensical, drug addicted, obese, big mouthed bully, who goes by the name of Rush Limbaugh, is dropped from the schedule, we will boycott EVERY business that advertises on their frequency.

What's your take?


http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/10/24/politics/main2121910.shtml








http://www.parkinson.org

Monday, October 23, 2006

GOD'S POLITICS author to appear at Schwartz booksellers, Downer Ave, tomorrow night, 7:00 pm

Secular liberals and religious conservatives will find things to both comfort and alarm them in Jim Wallis's God's Politics. That combination is actually reason enough to recommend the book in a time when the national political and theological discourse is dominated by blanket descriptions and shortsightedness. But Wallis, editor of Sojourners magazine, offers more than just a book that's hard to categorize. What Wallis sees as the true mission of Christianity--righting social ills, working for peace--is in tune with the values of liberals who so often run screaming from the idea of religion. Meanwhile, in his estimation, religious vocabulary is co-opted by conservatives who use it to polarize. Wallis proposes a new sort of politics, the name of which serves as the title of the book, wherein these disparities are reconciled and progressive causes are paired with spiritual guidance for the betterment of society. Wallis is at his most compelling when he puts this theory into action himself, letting his own beliefs guide him through stinging criticisms of the war in Iraq. In his view, George W. Bush's flaw lies in the assumption that the United States was an unprecedented force of goodness in a fight against enemies characterized as "evil." Indeed, although both the right and left are criticized here, the idea is that the liberals, if they would get religion, are the more redeemable lot. Wallis's line between religion and public policy may be drawn a little differently than most liberals might feel comfortable with, and while he pays some lip service to other faiths most of his prescription for America seems to come from the Bible. Still, for a party having just lost a presidential election where "moral issues" are said to have factored heavily, God's Politics is a sermon worth listening to. --John Moe --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From Bookmarks Magazine
God’s Politics has struck a chord with contemporary Americans who, according to bestseller lists, are buying Wallis’s book in droves. Regardless of how critics feel about the author’s religious beliefs (evangelical Christian) and political leanings (traditional on family values; progressive on issues like poverty and social justice), they are hard-pressed to argue with his central tenets: God belongs to no single political party and true faith transcends political categorization. Wallis writes that liberals and conservatives alike should work for a "new spiritual revival … that could transform our society." While at least one reviewer complains that Wallis glosses over the religious left’s failures, no one denies that he has produced a timely, thought-provoking book.

Copyright © 2004 Phillips & Nelson Media, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From AudioFile
Jim Wallis reads the introduction to this work, and though it's useful to hear the author himself, in a way, it's a distraction. Sam Freed's delivery is clear, focused, and smooth, covering the many facets of Wallis's discussion of contemporary politics and the role Judeo-Christian religion and morality should play in it. However, Freed speaks more quickly and more lightly, without the deep personal emotion that fills, and slows, Wallis's delivery. That aside, this work adapts well to audio, as Wallis returns to key points repeatedly, wrestling with them time and again and relating them to various useful contexts. G.T.B. © AudioFile 2005, Portland, Maine-- Copyright © AudioFile, Portland, Maine --This text refers to the Audio CD edition.

Archbishop Desmond Tutu
Jim Wallis is compelling, provocative, and inspirational, with faith that can move mountains and can certainly move people and communities. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Bill Moyers
Jim Wallis is an inspiration to me– for his witness of faith and his engagement with politics. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Cornel West, author of Race Matters and Democracy Matters
Jim Wallis is the major prophetic evangelical Christian voice in the country. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Bono, lead singer of U2
How far should we go to understand each other’s points of view? Maybe the distance grace covered on the cross. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

E.J. Dionne, author of Stand Up Fight Back and Why Americans Hate Politics
Wallis at his usual passionate and brilliant self: he will move you to examine your conscience and search your soul. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Library Journal
"Wallis provides a refreshing alternative voice to the polarizing rhetoric currently popular." --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Book Description

New York Times bestseller God's Politics struck a chord with Americans disenchanted with how the Right had co-opted all talk about integrating religious values into our politics, and with the Left, who were mute on the subject. Jim Wallis argues that America's separation of church and state does not require banishing moral and religious values from the public square. God's Politics offers a vision for how to convert spiritual values into real social change and has started a grassroots movement to hold our political leaders accountable by incorporating our deepest convictions about war, poverty, racism, abortion, capital punishment, and other moral issues into our nation's public life. Who can change the political wind? Only we can.


About the Author

Jim Wallis is the leading figure at the crossroads of religion and politics in America today. He is a public theologian, nationally renowned preacher, faith-based activist, author of seven books, and the founder of Sojourners, a nationwide network of progressive Christians working for justice and peace.

Thank You, Shepherd Express for the Great Cover Story: 10 Reasons to Vote "NO" on the Marriage Amendment!!



Ten Arguments Against the Amendment

The current issue of the Shepherd Express lists the "Top 10 Reasons To Vote No" on the amendment to ban civil unions and gay marriage. Below is a brief summary of what they cite as the top reasons.

* Because, in voting no, you will join Republicans, Democrats, the business community, unions, and many other respected individuals and groups.
* The amendment could negatively affect you even if you are straight. If you are in a solid relationship but are unmarried, you could lose legal protections and benefits that you may currently enjoy.
* Heterosexual marriage is not hurt by gay relationships. First, not one marriage has been put under strain because of gay relationships. Second, there are many other factors that put direct strain on many marriages. Some of those things are poverty, a weak job market, and the commercialization of sex.
* This amendment is a right wing attempt to manipulate voters and was designed to give them political advantage in an election year. Republicans hoped that having this amendment on the ballot would bring out their base and help them win more races.
* You can be a good person of faith and still be against this amendment. Representatives and members of every major faith group have declared that this discrimination does not belong in Wisconsin's Constitution.
* Taking a stand against the amendment reaffirms the separation of church and state. It will help insure that conservative Christian definition of marriage will not become part of our state's constitution.
* The ban could have dangerous and unintended consequences. Similar amendments in other states caused many problems that were not considered before they were approved.
* Wisconsin law has already defined marriage as a relationship between a "husband" and "wife," so why would we need to force such an amendment into our constitution?
* Tolerance is the way of the future. As time goes by, more people are more accepting of gay relationships and people. Also, surveys have repeatedly shown that younger people are less likely to discriminate and are more tolerant than their older counterparts.
* The number one reason that the Shepherd Express gives for voting "no": is that Wisconsin will make history if it defeats this amendment. Wisconsin was the first state in the nation to pass a law that made discrimination against gays illegal. It can also be the first state in the nation to reject a gay marriage amendment.

A Message from John Kerry


VOLUNTEER NOW
Dear Friend,

435 House races will be decided on November 7. Each one of them is important.

But this year the old Washington rules have been broken. Instead of having only a few seats really in play, the electoral map is bigger than ever before. 75 highly competitive races - including the one in the district where you live - will determine the outcome of the contest for control of the House.

With the excitement of living where the action is comes the responsibility to do everything you can to help Democrats win. Will you sign up right now to help your local candidate win? Will you volunteer your time and engage in the critically important grassroots activities that decide close elections?

Sign up now to volunteer for your local House candidate.

There's more evidence every day that we can win on November 7 and win big. The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee has called on the most talented organizers in our party to plan and execute voter mobilization efforts customized to each of our party's 75 key districts.

They've got smart plans in place and lots of activity already under way. But your personal involvement can provide the final boost needed in these last two weeks.

Sign up now to volunteer for your local House candidate.

Anything you can do will be extraordinarily helpful. Our candidates and their campaigns can make effective use of any amount of time you can offer. The one thing we can't afford is for you and other Democratic activists in the center of the action to sit on the sidelines.

Please sign up right now. We'll work together - and we'll win together.

Sincerely,

John Kerry

Thursday, October 19, 2006

4th annual Milwaukee International Film Festival



The mission of the non-profit Milwaukee International Film Festival (MIFF) is to present high quality, thought provoking films from around the world and here in the Midwest, in an effort to bring Milwaukee's diverse communities together in a cultural undertaking.



http://www.milwaukeefilmfest.org/

VISIT WITH ALDERMAN ROBERT DONOVAN at Town Hall Meetings




8th District Alderman, Robert G. Donovan, will be hosting two town hall meetings this fall. These meetings are scheduled to give you a chance to ask questions and voice concerns. He hopes that you can attend the meeting that best fits your schedule or location. The times and places:



Tuesday, October 24 6:00 pm
Zablocki Library
3501 West Oklahoma Avenue

Thursday, October 26 6:00 pm
Anna F. Doerfler Elementary School
3014 West Scott Street (one block south of National Avenue at 31st Street)

Big Democratic wins likely on Election Day

NBC/WSJ poll: Public's opinion of GOP hits record low
By Mark Murray
Political reporter
NBC News

WASHINGTON - Just 20 days until Election Day, the latest NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll finds approval of the GOP-held Congress is at its lowest mark in 14 years, the Republican Party's favorability rating is at an all-time low and President George W. Bush's approval rating remains mired in the 30s -- all ominous signs for a party trying to maintain control of Congress.

In fact, according to the poll, Republicans are in worse shape on some key measures than Democrats were in 1994, when they lost their congressional majorities.

"There is not a single number in here that would suggest the Democrats will not have their best showing in a decade -- and maybe two decades," says Democratic pollster Peter D. Hart, who conducted this survey with Republican Bill McInturff.

Landslide of bad GOP news
The poll, which was taken of 1,006 registered voters from Oct. 13-16 and has a margin of error of plus-minus 3.1 percentage points, comes a few weeks after Republicans encountered a series of setbacks, including the release of an intelligence estimate calling the Iraq war a "cause célèbre" for Islamic militants, journalist Bob Woodward's unfavorable portrayal of the Bush administration's handling of Iraq, and the news that former U.S. Rep. Mark Foley, R-Fla., had inappropriate correspondence with teenage congressional pages.

In the survey, Bush's approval rating is at 38 percent, a one-point decline from a previous NBC/Journal poll released earlier this month after the Foley news first broke. Perhaps more revealing, only 16 percent now approve of the job Congress is doing -- its lowest mark since 1992.

Both sets of numbers suggest that the Republican Party is on more unstable ground than Democrats were in 1994, when they lost 52 House and 8 Senate seats. In October of that year, President Bill Clinton's approval rating among registered voters was at 46 percent, and 24 percent approved of the job the Democratic-controlled Congress was doing.

Dems a 'marginally accepted alternative'
What's more, in this latest poll, just 32 percent of respondents see the Republican Party in a positive light, while 49 percent view it negatively. Those are the party's worst marks in the history of the poll. In contrast, voters -- by a 37-35 percent margin -- view the Democratic Party positively.


McInturff, the GOP pollster, observes that after several months when both parties have had net-negative ratings on this question, this is second-straight NBC/Journal survey in which a plurality of voters see Democrats in a positive light. Hart adds that Democrats have become a "marginally accepted alternative."

"It might be grudging admiration," he says, "but it is enough admiration to make it through."

Moreover, 52 percent say they prefer a Democratic-controlled Congress, compared with 37 percent who want Republicans to maintain power. It is the first time ever in this poll when a majority has sided with one party on this particular question. Earlier this month, Democrats held a nine-point advantage (48-39 percent).

The final GOP straw
Indeed, the poll finds that the events of the last few weeks -- such as the Foley scandal, the Woodward book, and the intelligence estimate -- have taken a toll on the GOP. Forty-seven percent say that these events have given them a less favorable impression of Republicans maintaining their majorities in Congress. Only 14 percent say they've given them a more favorable impression.

While Republicans were already in a precarious position before the Foley scandal, Hart explains, it has become a final straw of sorts that might have sealed their fate. "It is the event that allowed certain voters to say, 'Enough.'"

McInturff adds that the scandal took Republicans by surprise, and he expects them to be able to regroup and spend the next three weeks trying to disqualify Democrats on taxes and social issues.

The war in Iraq also continues to be a drag on Republicans and the White House. In the poll, a whopping 68 percent say they feel less optimistic about how things are going there, compared with only 20 percent who feel more optimistic. That's a significant shift from June, when voters were evenly split on this question.

Control of Congress
All of these numbers seem to suggest that Democrats are poised to pick up a sizable number of seats in November, and maybe even regain control of Congress. Hart says it's been clear for the last several months that an electoral hurricane would be arriving on Election Day. The only question was how big it was going to be.

This new poll, he observes, signals that it will be a Category 4 or Category 5 storm. "Simply put, the low lying areas are [going to be] under water."

Mark Murray covers politics for NBC News.
© 2006 MSNBC Interactive

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

Doyle Holding Lead in Governor's Race



The One Wisconsin Now survey also showes Governor Jim Doyle leading Congressman Mark Green by a 47% to 41% margin heading into the final three weeks of the campaign. Doyle's advantage over Green climbs to 7 points (48% to 41%) when the sample is limited to the 583 voters who say that they will "definitely vote" on November 7th.

Doyle's current lead over Green is based on his strong showing among women, seniors, moderates and Independent voters. Doyle also greatly benefits from doing much better in his home base than Green does in his. Doyle holds a commanding lead in his home media market of Madison (+34), and edges Green in his home market of Green Bay by 3 points. Doyle trails Green in the Milwaukee media market by 7 points, a market he lost to McCallum in 2002 by 3 points. In the rest of the state, Doyle holds an 8-point advantage.

IRAQ FOR SALE: Free Screening at Bremen Cafe

Iraq for Sale: The War Profiteers is the story of what happens to everyday Americans when corporations go to war.

Acclaimed director Robert Greenwald (Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low Price, Outfoxed, and Uncovered) takes you inside the lives of soldiers, truck drivers, widows and children who have been changed forever as a result of corporate greed in the reconstruction of Iraq. Iraq for Sale uncovers the connections between private security companies making a killing in Iraq and the decision makers who allow them to do so.

http://www.iraqforsale.bravenewtheaters.com/screening/show/6705-milwaukee-wi

Monday, October 16, 2006

Harley-Davidson won't expand Milwaukee plants

The Business Journal of Milwaukee - 2:07 PM CDT Monday
by Rich Rovito

Harley-Davidson Inc. announced Monday that it will build an additional motorcycle powertrain manufacturing and assembly plant outside of Wisconsin after the union representing hourly workers at the company's Milwaukee-area plants rejected contract concessions.

A new plant is needed to accommodate the expanded production of Milwaukee-based Harley-Davidson's Big Twin motorcycle engines and transmissions, company management said.

The announcement follows a vote Monday by members of Harley-Davidson's largest union, United Steelworkers Local 2-209, not to accept a plan that would have been favorable to expanding production capacity in Milwaukee.

Leaders of the union, which represents about 1,500 employees at Harley's plants in Wauwatosa and Menomonee Falls, had recommended that rank-and-file workers agree to concessions that would have cut pension benefits for existing employees, lowered wages for new hires and resulted in increased health care premiums.

In return, Harley management had vowed to invest $120 million to expand the company's Milwaukee-area factories.

Harley management had advised its international and local unions of the need to add capacity and to do so in a way that would significantly reduce future costs and improve flexibility.

"We're disappointed with the vote, but we need to address capacity, cost and flexibility in tandem," said Rod Copes, vice president and general manager of Harley-Davidson's powertrain operations in Menomonee Falls.

"Harley-Davidson is very successful today and all of us want to keep it that way," Copes said. "That means being good stewards and actively managing costs across the entire organization that could be detrimental to our business over the long term if we don't start to control them now."

Over the past 10 years, Harley-Davidson's shipments of motorcycles containing the Big Twin engines have nearly tripled. Harley invested $175 million in engine production upgrades at Milwaukee-area plants between 2004 and 2006.

Harley introduced the newest generation of Big Twin engine, the Twin Cam 96, in July to what company management has deemed "enthusiastic consumer and dealer response."

Company management said it will meet with representatives from the unions representing Harley-Davidson workers to "find the best possible U.S. location" for a new engine and transmission plant.

The company said the jobs of existing Milwaukee-area production workers are not at risk as a result of the decision to build a new plant elsewhere in the United States.

The company currently has powertrain manufacturing operations in Wauwatosa, Menomonee Falls and Kansas City, Mo., final assembly operations in York, Pa., and Kansas City, and components manufacturing in Tomahawk.

Jim Wheiland, president of Local 2-209, could not be reached for comment.

Hey Progressive Radio Supporters!

Daniel J. Cody writes:

A couple of exciting bits of news. First, we’re throwing a happy hour
party! Join us Thursday evening, October 26, from 5:00-7:00 p.m., at
trendy Third Ward hotspot Moct (that’s pronounced “Most”). It's at 240
E. Pittsburgh, just off Water Street, and a couple of blocks south of
the river.

Come relax and enjoy the funk/jazz stylings of Milwaukee piano maestro
Tyler Traband, while helping to build a progressive media in Brew Town.
All for a suggested minimum donation of $25. And don’t forget, a $100
donation gets you “Founding Sponsor” status and a permanent space on the
AAR/MKE web site (http://www.logyourblog.com/WI/howtobuy.php).

Speaking of our brand shiny new web site, have you checked out our new
blog (http://airamericamilwaukee.com/blog)? Yes, AirAmericaMilwaukee.com
is now blog-tastic! We’ll feature regular commentary there from an
assortment of local and national guest bloggers. This week, One Blog’s
Cory Liebmann (http://www.onewisconsinnow.org/one_wisconsin/blog) offers
his take on “Amplifying The Progressive Voice.”

In addition to blogospherics, the new site also has all kinds of ways
for folks who haven’t heard the Air America Radio network to discover it
for themselves, including audio clips, station listings, and even live
online streaming. So check it out.

And remember, we can only bring this progressive voice to Southeastern
Wisconsin with your financial help. No one else is going to do it for
us. Not Clear Channel. Not Sinclair. Not the Journal-Sentinel. If we
want it, we have to do it ourselves. And we can. So please become a
Founding Sponsor of Air America Milwaukee at:

http://www.logyourblog.com/WI

Encourage your friends to become Founding Sponsors too. Tell them to visit:

http://www.logyourblog.com/WI

We look forward to seeing you at happy hour on the 26th! Thank you for
supporting a progressive voice in Southeastern Wisconsin.

Peace,
The Milwaukee Air Force
http://AirAmericaMilwaukee.com

Friday, October 13, 2006

Just how extreme is Mark Green? See for yourself

by Joe Wineke

The Democratic Party of Wisconsin has unveiled a new Web site, www.ExtremeMarkGreen.com, to highlight Congressman Mark Green’s extreme record.

What you’ll find on ExtremeMarkGreen.com:

How Extreme
See Congressman Green’s extreme record of turning record surpluses into record deficits, cutting education funding, trying to shut down life-saving stem cell research, giving tax breaks to the big oil and big drug companies, trying to criminalize a woman’s right to choose, and voting against the environment.

Illegal Money
Follow Congressman Green’s quest to hold on to half a million dollars in illegal PAC money.

Blog
Check out the latest on Congressman Green’s extreme vision for Wisconsin.

Survey
Compare your views with those of Congressman Green and see where you stand.

ExtremeMarkGreen.com sheds light on who really benefits with Congressman Green in office: the Washington special interests.

After a hard look at his record, the evidence is clear: Congressman Green is too extreme for Wisconsin.

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

A story of sex, politics and football in Green Bay


This book is available from Amazon.Com

Sandy Sullivan is the Republican candidate for Wisconsin Secretary of State.

by Todd Richmond

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

MADISON, Wis. -- Sex! The Green Bay Packers! Sex WITH the Green Bay Packers! The usually ho-hum race for Wisconsin secretary of state is being spiced up by one candidate's naughty tell-all book about her bed-hopping exploits with Green Bay football legends during the team's glory days in the 1960s.

Sandy Sullivan, a 65-year-old Republican with no political experience, selfpublished a gushing memoir in 2004 titled "Green Bay Love Stories and Other Affairs" in which she claims she was the girlfriend of Green Bay Packers Paul Hornung and Dan Currie, defl ected a pass from Hall of Famer Don Hutson and was on the receiving end of a saucy comment from Richard Nixon.

If the book is to be believed, the Packers did a lot of their scoring off the field and Sullivan got her share of playing time.

In football-crazy Wisconsin, it is unclear whether the book will be a gain or a loss for Sullivan, who is not given much of a chance of beating Secretary of State Doug La Follette, a 28-year incumbent and a member of one of Wisconsin's most distinguished political families. But the book is getting people talking.

In it, she confi des that her goal was always to marry a football player, saying they are "fast, sleek and clean," are built like "Greek gods" and love women.

"The football players of the 1950s and '60s were every bit as 'HOT' as the men of the present day, if not more so," Sullivan writes of the days when she was a trim, miniskirted brunette who did some modelling. "Remember, the '60s was the 'dawning of the Age of Aquarius' and some women . . . were thrilled to experience this brave, new freedom and celebrate our sexuality . . . and the football players loved it!" Sullivan, now a blond, owns a marketing company that she says sets up autograph sessions and Packer appearances, is not hiding from her past. If anything, she is revelling in it. Her campaign website prominently mentions the book and features a picture of her with former Packers quarterback Bart Starr.

Sullivan says she was 19 in 1961 when she took a job with the Packers selling tickets and met Hornung, the Heisman Trophy-winning running back. She was instantly smitten with the wavy-haired golden boy known for his off-the-fi eld romantic exploits.

"Here he was, in the fl esh! Oh! My God! He was soooo CUTE! . . . He immediately asked me out and I immediately accepted," Sullivan wrote. She quickly learned "there are two things football players think about all the time . . . FOOTBALL AND SEX . . . and seldom in that order." She recounted an encounter with Hornung during training camp in which Hornung picked her up at 5:30 a.m. and drove to a Green Bay hotel for sex.

Some Packer coaches were in the lobby, so Hornung made her climb the fi re escape to the fi fth fl oor while he went in through the lobby.

Hornung broke down the door to the fi re escape, almost knocking her over the railing, she wrote. She wrote she doesn't remember having sex with him that night, "although I must have!" Hornung did not return numerous messages left by The Associated Press.

The book, however, includes a foreword in which he describes Sullivan as a "carefree, fun-loving girl who fi t right in with me and the rest of the 'Pack."' When she was 20 she met Hutson, who was 50 then and long past his playing days. She said Hutson asked her to sleep with him, but she turned him down because he was a "relic from the Stone Ages" and she was in love with Hornung.

She also fell for Currie, a Packers linebacker. ("SIGH! One would have to be in a coma not to want him," Sullivan wrote.) She later married Currie's dentist, Matt Sullivan. He died in 1984.

One time, Nixon came to Green Bay for a ceremony to honour Starr and Sullivan attended in a miniskirt. When Nixon began to speak, she started swinging her legs and smiling at him.

He returned the smile.

Later he shook her hand, leaned over into her and softly said, "Hello there . . . so you must be the CHERRY of the evening." No one was sure what Nixon meant, Sullivan wrote, though she speculated he had confused her with Starr's wife, Cherry.
© The StarPhoenix (Saskatoon) 2006

RECOMMENDED READING for Your Child .....




A Different Kind of Children's Book
www.littledemocrats.net

Tuesday, October 10, 2006

JUST A REMINDER ......


OCTOBER IS BREAST CANCER AWARENESS MONTH!!

Monday, October 09, 2006

UW regents vote to oppose ban on gay marriage

By RYAN J. FOLEY, The Associated Press
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MADISON — University of Wisconsin System regents voted Friday to oppose the Nov. 7 referendum banning gay marriage, saying it will hurt their ability to recruit and retain gay and lesbian employees.

Regents, who govern the UW System of 13 four-year universities and 13 two-year colleges, said the amendment would threaten the state's ability to provide domestic partner benefits.

A poll released Friday showed the amendment has enough support one month before the election to pass.

The regents have long lobbied the Legislature to lift a ban on health and other benefits for partners of gay employees. Lawmakers turned down their request last year, citing the cost and moral opposition to recognizing those relationships.

UW-Madison is the only Big 10 university that does not offer the benefits — a policy that recently prompted a star nanotechnology researcher to leave.

Regents approved a resolution on a voice vote at their meeting at University of Wisconsin-Platteville. Regent Gerard Randall, one of the few Republicans on the 17-member board, cast the only no vote.

Mike Tate, campaign manager for Fair Wisconsin, a group fighting the amendment, said the regents' resolution sends a strong message.

``They are such a broad group of people against it for so many different reasons,'' he said. ``They aren't doing this because they have some dog in the gay rights fight. They think this would harm the system's ability to be one of the best in the nation.''

But Rep. Mark Gundrum, R-New Berlin and an author of the amendment, said the regents are behaving like ``liberal activists.'' He contends the amendment would leave room for future legislation allowing civil unions or domestic partner benefits.

``They are trying to confuse the public into thinking this could affect domestic partner benefits when the amendment on marriage will in no way whatsoever affect any benefits at the university or anywhere else,'' he said.

The poll released Friday by WISC-TV in Madison showed 51 percent favor the amendment, while 42 percent are opposed. The poll of 600 likely voters had a margin of error of plus or minus four percentage points.

Regent Charles Pruitt of Milwaukee, who sponsored the resolution, said the regents probably would have stayed silent on the amendment if it addressed only gay marriage.

But he said the amendment's second sentence outlawing relationships ``substantially similar'' to marriage creates legal uncertainty over whether the state could provide domestic partner benefits. The sentence was designed to ban Vermont-style civil unions.

Pruitt acknowledged the regents risked a backlash at a time when the UW System has been under fire for budget problems and other policy matters.

``It's the old adage, why are you going out looking for trouble when trouble seems to be finding you?'' he said.

Christopher Semanas, a regent who is a UW-Parkside student, said the amendment could drive away ``young fantastic professionals that we are trying to attract to the state.''

``We are saying that we're standing up for a fair and tolerant Wisconsin,'' he said.

UW System President Kevin Reilly recommended the stance to the regents, according to a background paper drafted by staff. The paper noted that similar amendments in Michigan and Ohio have prompted legal disputes over whether governments can offer benefits there.

Measures banning gay marriage have passed in all 20 states where they have been on the ballot.

Rob Carpick, the UW-Madison nanotechnology researcher leaving for the University of Pennsylvania, ``is one visible record of the loss the state experiences due to the proposed constitutional ban and lack of benefits,'' the briefing paper said. UW does not track how many others have left or turned down offers.

Carpick is considered a star who had already brought UW $3.4 million in grants. He told The Associated Press in August he was departing because ``it's problematic to work in an environment where you are not treated equally.''
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Sunday, October 08, 2006

Does Sensenbrenner Cash in on Undocumented Labor?


By Roberto Lovato, New America Media. Posted October 7, 2006.
Republican Congressman James Sensenbrenner's stock holdings include investments in companies that benefit from the work of undocumented immigrants, as well as firms contracted to build new border security measures.
When President Bush signed into law on Oct. 4 a bill authorizing the construction of a 700-mile wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, the man who stood to reap the greatest political profits did not join the president in Arizona. Instead, Congressman James Sensenbrenner is back in his Milwaukee district fending off a growing chorus of local critics who claim he is also reaping financial profits from the very immigration policies he has championed.

Immigration rights advocates, the congressman's Democratic opponent and some constituents are pointing to Sensenbrenner's investments in companies they say are generating profits from the labor of undocumented immigrants. They also say the congressman stands to benefit from investments in companies contracted by the federal government to provide services he has proposed as part of his immigration reform legislation -- such as building massive immigrant detention centers or providing surveillance systems to monitor immigrants near the border.

An analysis of companies identified in Sensenbrenner's most recent financial disclosure forms (2005) reveals that the congressman has invested in companies that have directly hired or subcontracted with employers who hire undocumented workers.

Drawing especially strong criticism are the $86,500 in stocks Sensenbrenner holds in the construction and infrastructure colossus Halliburton. The Texas-based giant has been the subject of Senate hearings into its labor practices in the Gulf Coast following Hurricane Katrina. News reports and several panelists at Senate hearings have stated that Halliburton used subcontractors hiring hundreds, perhaps thousands of undocumented workers as part of no-bid federal contracts to cleanup Belle Chasse Naval base and other military facilities in the devastated region. Halliburton has also secured a $385 million Department of Homeland Security contract to build gigantic immigrant detention centers near the U.S.-Mexico border and stands to secure further contracts from proposals to reopen closed military bases to house deportees and detainees.

Halliburton has also been mentioned as one of the main contractors to build increased security infrastructure, security roads and improved employment verification systems at ports of entry.

Sensenbrenner owns more than $563,536 in General Electric stocks. GE's Security Unit has been a Pentagon subcontractor, providing video surveillance and other electronic security systems at the border. and contributed to Sensenbrenner through its employee PAC. Boeing, which recently secured a $2.5 billion contract order to install sensors, radar and cameras along the U.S. borders, is among the top contributors to Sensenbrenner's PAC.

Sensenbrenner's filings showed a total net worth in excess of $10 million in 2005, with just under $1 million in stock investments in Kimberly-Clark, maker of tissues and personal care products.

The multibillion dollar federal contracts and proposals to build the physical and virtual walls at the border -- which were signed into law on Oct. 4 -- were first proposed in Sensenbrenner's now historic immigration bill, HR 4437.

As November elections draw near, Sensenbrenner, like other elected officials, is spending more time in his district. But the immigration issue may not be giving him the political traction it once did. Usually predictable Town Hall meetings with constituents are increasingly becoming more heated. A June 25, 2006, town hall held in Thiensville, Wis., is revealing. Sensenbrenner was confronted by constituent Lester Schultz, who asked the congressman about the "moral and ethical" implications of investing in companies like Halliburton, which hire undocumented workers.

Sensenbrenner said the investments in question were "bequeathed to me before I began my public service." When pressed he insisted that his portfolio didn't affect his votes. "We don't believe it," some audience members responded.

Asked about Schultz' and others' criticisms of the congressman's investments in companies hiring undocumented workers and benefiting from immigration policies, Sensenbrenner spokesperson Jeff Lungren said, "I'm unaware of these complaints."

Sensenbrenner's HR 4437 calls for "systematic surveillance of the international land and maritime borders of the United States through more effective use of personnel and technology, such as unmanned aerial vehicles, ground-based sensors, satellites, radar coverage, and cameras."

Sensenbrenner's Democratic opponent in the upcoming Congressional race in Wisconsin's fifth district, Bryan Kennedy, has publicly asked Sensenbrenner to divest himself of Halliburton and other companies he believes benefit by hiring undocumented workers.

Sensenbrenner has criticized companies that profit from exploitative working conditions that, he recently said, make it "cheaper to hire an illegal alien than a citizen or a legal alien who is present in this country with a green card."

Other investments raising flags in Milwaukee include the $44,179 in shares Sensenbrenner holds in Darden Restaurants Inc. Darden operates chains like The Olive Garden and Red Lobster, which have been reported to employ undocumented workers. "Jose," a cook at a Red Lobster restaurant in the Milwaukee suburb of Wauwatosa in Sensenbrenner's district, was unaware that he was working for a company that made the Congressman that proposed "el Muro" (the wall) richer. "I don't have papers and had to cross the border from Mexico," Jose said. "Is he schizophrenic? Does he like our work and hate us?"

Cristina Neumann Ortiz, a Sensenbrenner constituent who organized the largest marches in Milwaukee history in response to HR 4437, finds typical the alleged contradiction between the congressman's anti-undocumented immigrant policies and rhetoric and his pro-undocumented stock portfolio. "This is a classic case of exploiting workers. He (Sensenbrenner) is for their work while doing everything he can to make sure that they don't get any rights. I see this among exploitative employers. I see it in Congress."

After finishing his shrimp scampi at the Red Lobster restaurant in Wauwatosa, Sensenbrenner constituent Jim Rehtman defended the congressman. Rehtman was joined by his nephew, John, a tattooed trucker who stood in the restaurant lobby wearing a T-shirt with a large American flag that read "Welcome to America…NOW LEARN ENGLISH."

"I support what he's doing to try to stop those illegals," said Rehtman, a 73-year-old retired welder.

Asked how he felt about the fact that his food may have been prepared by one of the undocumented workers interviewed for this story, a cook in the back kitchen, Rehtman leaned his head sideways, raised his shoulders and said, "I don't like it. Not one bit. They shouldn't be back there. That's why we need to change the laws." When told that Sensenbrenner, who recently referred to employers of the undocumented as "21st-century slave masters," was also an investor in the company that owned Red Lobster, Rehtman shook his head.

"Car salesmen and politicians, they both..." He then stopped short. "I don't want to insult car salesmen that way."

Roberto Lovato is a New America Media writer based in New York.

Friday, October 06, 2006

African-American Leaders Oppose Ban of Civil Unions and Marriage

Fair Wisconsin announced that a number of Milwaukee area African-American leaders, including elected officials and clergy, oppose the civil unions and marriage ban.

The leaders below signed the following statement:

"We the undersigned are opposed to the constitutional amendment that would write discrimination into the constitution by making domestic partnerships and civil unions permanently illegal in our state. If enacted this would be the first time that the Wisconsin Constitution has been used to limit people's freedoms. It would establish a very dangerous precedent. As African American leaders who have participated in and benefited from the historic struggle for civil rights we are opposed to discrimination in any and all forms."

Elected Officials
Former Secretary of State Vel Phillips
Congresswoman Gwen Moore
State Senator Lena Taylor
State Senator Spencer Coggs
Assembly Rep. Jason Fields
Assembly Rep. Leon Young
Assembly Rep. Tamara Grigsby
Assembly Rep. Robert Turner
Assembly Rep. Barbara Toles
Milwaukee County Supervisor James G. White
Milwaukee County Supervisor Elizabeth Coggs-Jones
Milwaukee City Alderman Michael McGee, Jr.
Milwaukee City Alderman Willie C. Wade
Supervisor Willie Johnson Jr.

Clergy
Pastor Olin Arrington
Pastor Robert Redd
Reverend Joseph Jackson
Reverend William E. Robbins
Pastor Charles Thornhill
Pastor Robert Wilson
Pastor Oscar Elim
Pastor Charles Green
Reverend Lloyd Wright
Reverend J.R. Walton
Reverend Martin Childs
Reverend Charles Watkins

GOD'S POLITICS author to appear at Schwartz booksellers, Downer Ave, Tuesday, October 24, 7:00 pm



Secular liberals and religious conservatives will find things to both comfort and alarm them in Jim Wallis's God's Politics. That combination is actually reason enough to recommend the book in a time when the national political and theological discourse is dominated by blanket descriptions and shortsightedness. But Wallis, editor of Sojourners magazine, offers more than just a book that's hard to categorize. What Wallis sees as the true mission of Christianity--righting social ills, working for peace--is in tune with the values of liberals who so often run screaming from the idea of religion. Meanwhile, in his estimation, religious vocabulary is co-opted by conservatives who use it to polarize. Wallis proposes a new sort of politics, the name of which serves as the title of the book, wherein these disparities are reconciled and progressive causes are paired with spiritual guidance for the betterment of society. Wallis is at his most compelling when he puts this theory into action himself, letting his own beliefs guide him through stinging criticisms of the war in Iraq. In his view, George W. Bush's flaw lies in the assumption that the United States was an unprecedented force of goodness in a fight against enemies characterized as "evil." Indeed, although both the right and left are criticized here, the idea is that the liberals, if they would get religion, are the more redeemable lot. Wallis's line between religion and public policy may be drawn a little differently than most liberals might feel comfortable with, and while he pays some lip service to other faiths most of his prescription for America seems to come from the Bible. Still, for a party having just lost a presidential election where "moral issues" are said to have factored heavily, God's Politics is a sermon worth listening to. --John Moe --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From Bookmarks Magazine
God’s Politics has struck a chord with contemporary Americans who, according to bestseller lists, are buying Wallis’s book in droves. Regardless of how critics feel about the author’s religious beliefs (evangelical Christian) and political leanings (traditional on family values; progressive on issues like poverty and social justice), they are hard-pressed to argue with his central tenets: God belongs to no single political party and true faith transcends political categorization. Wallis writes that liberals and conservatives alike should work for a "new spiritual revival … that could transform our society." While at least one reviewer complains that Wallis glosses over the religious left’s failures, no one denies that he has produced a timely, thought-provoking book.

Copyright © 2004 Phillips & Nelson Media, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From AudioFile
Jim Wallis reads the introduction to this work, and though it's useful to hear the author himself, in a way, it's a distraction. Sam Freed's delivery is clear, focused, and smooth, covering the many facets of Wallis's discussion of contemporary politics and the role Judeo-Christian religion and morality should play in it. However, Freed speaks more quickly and more lightly, without the deep personal emotion that fills, and slows, Wallis's delivery. That aside, this work adapts well to audio, as Wallis returns to key points repeatedly, wrestling with them time and again and relating them to various useful contexts. G.T.B. © AudioFile 2005, Portland, Maine-- Copyright © AudioFile, Portland, Maine --This text refers to the Audio CD edition.

Archbishop Desmond Tutu
Jim Wallis is compelling, provocative, and inspirational, with faith that can move mountains and can certainly move people and communities. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Bill Moyers
Jim Wallis is an inspiration to me– for his witness of faith and his engagement with politics. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Cornel West, author of Race Matters and Democracy Matters
Jim Wallis is the major prophetic evangelical Christian voice in the country. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Bono, lead singer of U2
How far should we go to understand each other’s points of view? Maybe the distance grace covered on the cross. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

E.J. Dionne, author of Stand Up Fight Back and Why Americans Hate Politics
Wallis at his usual passionate and brilliant self: he will move you to examine your conscience and search your soul. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Library Journal
"Wallis provides a refreshing alternative voice to the polarizing rhetoric currently popular." --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Book Description

New York Times bestseller God's Politics struck a chord with Americans disenchanted with how the Right had co-opted all talk about integrating religious values into our politics, and with the Left, who were mute on the subject. Jim Wallis argues that America's separation of church and state does not require banishing moral and religious values from the public square. God's Politics offers a vision for how to convert spiritual values into real social change and has started a grassroots movement to hold our political leaders accountable by incorporating our deepest convictions about war, poverty, racism, abortion, capital punishment, and other moral issues into our nation's public life. Who can change the political wind? Only we can.


About the Author

Jim Wallis is the leading figure at the crossroads of religion and politics in America today. He is a public theologian, nationally renowned preacher, faith-based activist, author of seven books, and the founder of Sojourners, a nationwide network of progressive Christians working for justice and peace.

Wisconsin State Lawmaker Suggests Arming Teachers To Fight School Violence

MADISON, Wis

(AP) A state lawmaker, worried about a recent string of deadly school shootings, suggested arming teachers, principals and other school personnel as a safety measure and a deterrent.

It might not be politically correct, but it has worked effectively in other countries, Republican Rep. Frank Lasee said Wednesday.

"To make our schools safe for our students to learn, all options should be on the table," he said. "Israel and Thailand have well-trained teachers carrying weapons and keeping their children safe from harm. It can work in Wisconsin."

In Thailand, where officials have been waging a bloody fight with Muslim separatists for the last two years, some teachers carry weapons for self defense as they are viewed as part of the government. In Israel, teachers are not allowed to carry weapons in the school, but security guards at the entrances are armed.

Lasee said he planned to introduce legislation that would allow school personnel to carry concealed weapons. He stressed that it would hinge on school staff members getting strict training on the use of the weapons, and he acknowledged he would have to work around a federal law that bans guns on school grounds.

The director of school safety for Milwaukee Public Schools, Pete Pochowski, opposed the idea.

"Statistically, the safest place for a child to be is in school," Pochowski said. "We have problems in our schools, but not to the point where we need to arm our teachers and principals."

Last week, a 15-year-old Wisconsin student was arrested in the shooting death of Weston Schools Principal John Klang. The criminal complaint said the teen brought guns to school to confront students, teachers and the principal.


©MMVI, The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Thursday, October 05, 2006

Chase sells downtown Milwaukee tower


The Business Journal of Milwaukee - 10:13 AM CDT Thursday

J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. has sold the Chase Tower in downtown Milwaukee to a Canadian real estate investment firm as part of a large portfolio that it sold for $460 million.

Various affiliates of the New York City financial corporation (NYSE: JPM) sold 5.3 million square feet in 33 commercial properties in 10 states to the Brookfield Real Estate Opportunity Fund of Brookfield Asset Management Inc., Toronto.

Brookfield Asset Management did not disclose a price for the 450,000-square-foot, 22-floor Milwaukee building, which was assessed at $34 million in 2006.

J.P. Morgan's banking subsidiary, JP Morgan Chase Bank N.A., has signed long-term lease agreements for significant portions of the space.

Service Taps Community to ID Mail Scams

By The Associated Press

NEW YORK (AP) - A new service for fighting e-mail fraud seeks to tap the wisdom of the Internet community: Anyone will be able to submit suspected scams for others to vote up or down.

Freedom Networks LLC's OpenDNS, which provides free directory services necessary to translate a Web site's domain name into its actual numeric Internet address, developed the system to help block its users from so-called phishing sites. Such sites look real, but are actually scams to collect banking passwords and other personal information.

David Ulevitch, the company's chief executive, said the lists of phishing sites he had weren't all that good. He launched PhishTank this week under the belief the community could collectively do better - at no charge.

Users simply submit to PhishTank.com the messages they believe are scams.

Others then examine the message and the site to which it links and decide whether it is or isn't a scam. When an item gets enough votes and the margin is wide enough, it is either dropped or classified as a phishing message. To prevent scammers from trying to game the system, votes are weighed based on how long, how often and how accurate one has rated other messages.

More than 300 messages have been verified as scams as of Wednesday afternoon.

PhishTank isn't the first to seek the community's input to fight scams, but Ulevitch said that unlike the others, the company is offering access to the database for rivals to use for free.

- Anick Jesdanun, AP Internet Writer.


THE PHISH TANK NEWS FEED CAN BE FOUND ON THIS PAGE! FIND IT NEAR THE BOTTOM OF THE RIGHT COLUMN.

Monday, October 02, 2006

BudgetTravelOnline.com: "A Softy for Milwaukee"

The city has always been a nice place. Recent improvements, however, have also made it a nice place to visit

Ted Loos

At 17, I was never too pooped to polka. I grew up in the suburbs of Milwaukee, and on Friday nights, a group of friends from high school and I would go to a restaurant outside town called Etzel's. It was a classic wood-paneled German-American joint, the kind of place where Friday night's fish fry was the biggest event around. We would drink beer, and once the polka band started up, we'd swing into action. Part of the fun was asking folks to join us in kicking up our heels to "Roll Out the Barrel."

It was a blast, but it was also proof of something I feared: Milwaukee was irredeemably dorky. In the mid-1980s, the city was most famous for Laverne & Shirley, a reference still maddeningly brought up by everyone not from there. A friendly, safe place to grow up? Definitely. But cool it was not.

At the time, I didn't understand a fundamental principle by which Milwaukeeans live. They feel their hometown is a wonderful place that, with a little effort, could get even better.

I went to Milwaukee recently, accompanied by Sam and Stephanie, two high school friends who were my polka partners at Etzel's, and we were pleasantly surprised by the results of that can-do spirit. Take the Milwaukee Art Museum. I had always been put off by the severe modernism of the 1957 Eero Saarinen building. But I loved what was inside, especially a groovy walk-in conceptual art piece that simulated deep space. Putting a treasure like that in such a building seemed like storing a bouquet of roses in a filing cabinet.

I later came to love modernism. Even as I changed, however, the museum changed, too. In 2001, Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava installed a 90-foot-high reception hall topped by movable louvers--in essence, a huge sunroof. And it gave the city a skyline icon--a mast-like spire with two wings that soar out over Lake Michigan. Constructing the enormously expensive building got the museum into financial troubles. To me, it felt like Milwaukee was finally reaching for the stars, which can mean overreaching a bit.

Back in the day, overreaching mainly applied to portions of food. Quantity, not quality, was the culinary rule. My friend Diane and I used to joke about wearing out the treads in our shoes because we made so many trips to a favorite buffet.

Certainly there were exceptions. My parents introduced me and my sister to morels and other fancy foods at Sanford's, back when restaurants like that were rare. Today Sanford's is in good company. In 1999, the chef/owner at Sanford's, Sandy D'Amato, opened Coquette Cafe, a wonderful bistro. Eating coq au vin with smoked bacon, I could just as easily have been in New York or Paris. Roots, which styles itself after the artisanal restaurants of California, is a terrific addition to the scene. One of the restaurant's partners grows organic produce on a 67-acre farm outside of town. The unusual dishes--grilled pigeon peas with a green chili and tomato confit--are a far cry from a fish fry. And now home chefs have all the artisanal ingredients they need, thanks to the new Milwaukee Public Market, with food from local farmers and purveyors.

The food scene isn't the only thing being updated. A neighborhood called Avenues West is in the midst of a long-necessary revival. It has a glorious architectural past; the westernmost stretch of Wisconsin Avenue was a late-19th- century Milwaukee version of Millionaire's Row. Many of the mansions had been torn down, however, and for the past few decades, Avenues West didn't have much tourist appeal. One grand building that was spared is the Ambassador Hotel, an art deco beauty built in 1928. (In the 1950s, a relative of mine was married there.) As a bellboy cheerfully told me, the hotel had become downright "nasty," and last year, it emerged from a spiffy transformation. Stephanie and Sam, raised in the suburbs like I was, were skeptical when I told them about the Ambassador's location. But once they saw the restored marble floors and etched-glass sconces in the lobby, they were impressed.

On our last day, we had a whole lot of plans. Unfortunately, Etzel's wasn't in the cards, because it has closed. But we were able to revisit another old favorite: Kopp's, a 1950s-style hamburger joint with top-notch frozen custards. The staff is earnest in that Milwaukee way ("I'm sorry, we sure don't have any more Butter Brickle"). Then we went to a Brewers game. I was ready to hate Miller Park, the new baseball stadium. I thought the domed glass-and-steel building would be a little too shiny.

The concrete floors of the stadium positively gleamed, and there was corporate sponsorship everywhere. But Bob Uecker, famous for being jokingly clueless in Miller Lite commercials, was still doing the radio broadcast, and a mascot went down a long slide when the Brew Crew got a hit--just as we remembered.

The Brewers won, and the organist even played a strain of "Roll Out the Barrel" to celebrate a hit. To three veteran polka fans, it sure felt like home.

Lodging

# Ambassador Hotel 2308 W. Wisconsin Ave., 414/342-8400, ambasshotel.com, from $99

Food

# Coquette Cafe 316 N. Milwaukee St., 414/291-2655, coq au vin $17

# Roots 1818 N. Hubbard St., 414/374-8480, pigeon pea appetizer $8

# Kopp's 5373 N. Port Washington Rd., 414/961-3288, scoop $1.80

Activities

# Milwaukee Art Museum 700 N. Art Museum Dr., 414/224-3220, $8

# Miller Park 1 Brewers Way, 414/902-4400

# Public Market 400 N. Water St., 414/336-1111

U.S. SENATOR BARACK OBAMA to Visit Milwaukee


In association with Harry W. Schwartz booksellers, Obama will make an appearance in Milwaukee. The Illinois Senator and rising star in the Democratic party delivers an eloquent and hard-hitting book that proclaims his vision for American politics.

Tuesday, October 31, Pitman Theatre - 12:00 pm
Noon event - boxed lunches will be available for $9.50 (request when ordering tickets)
- $32 ticket includes a copy of The Audacity of Hope

Visit www.alverno.edu for ticket information.

In late March 2005, Obama announced his first proposed Senate bill, the Higher Education Opportunity through Pell Grant Expansion Act of 2005 (HOPE Act), which aims to raise the maximum amount of Pell Grant awards to help assist American college students with paying for their tuition. Obama announced the bill at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville and said, "Everywhere I go, I hear the same story: 'We work hard, we pay our bills, we put away savings, but we just don't know if it's going to be enough when that tuition bill comes.'"

In May 2006, Obama campaigned to maintain a $0.54 per gallon tariff on imported ethanol. Obama justified the tariff by joining Senator Durbin in stating that "ethanol imports are neither necessary nor a practical response to current gasoline prices," arguing instead that domestic ethanol production is sufficient and expanding.

Also in May of 2006, Obama campaigned to reform immigration law to provide a path to citizenship for undocumented workers currently in the United States through a system of fines and back taxes, learning English, satisfying a work requirement, and passing a background check. Obama also called for greater security on the border with Mexico.

In June 2006, Obama campaigned against making recent, temporary estate tax cuts permanent, calling the cuts a "Paris Hilton" tax break for "billionaire heirs and heiresses". He was one of forty-one Democratic and Republican Senators who voted to prevent a bill to eliminate or shrink taxes on inherited estates from advancing in the Senate.

In July of 2006 Obama teamed with Senators Coburn (R-OK), Carper (D-DE), and McCain (R-AZ) to introduce S. 2590, the Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act, the purpose of which is to provide citizens with a website, managed by the Office of Management and Budget, which would list all organizations receiving Federal funds from 2007 onward, providing breakdowns based on the agency allocating the funds, the dollar amount given and the purpose of the grant or contract.

Presidential ambitions

Obama's keynote speech to the 2004 Democratic National Convention brought his speaking skill, unique personal story, and inclusive message before a national audience, fueling expectations that the energetic politician would some day run for U.S. President. Speculation on a 2008 presidential run intensified after his decisive U.S. Senate election win in November 2004, prompting Obama to tell reporters: "I can unequivocally say I will not be running for national office in four years". Asked again in a January 2006 television appearance on Meet the Press, Obama repeated his intention to finish his Senate term.

Nonetheless, Illinois senior U.S. Senator Dick Durbin has consistently urged Obama to consider running. A December 2005 article published in the The New Republic, reasoned that, with no incumbent president or vice president in the race, 2008 offers Obama his best chance at winning the presidency.

In September 2006, Obama's Senate primary opponent Daniel Hynes, in an open letter published in the Chicago Sun-Times, urged Democrats to draft Obama for the 2008 Presidential race. Also in September, Obama was the featured speaker at Iowa Senator Tom Harkin's annual steak fry, a political event favored by presidential hopefuls in the lead-up to the Iowa caucus. "What a wonderful reception; I’m going to have to come to Iowa again", the New York Times quoted Obama as saying before he began his speech.

AIR AMERICA RADIO for Milwaukee update

Hey Progressive Radio Supporters!

We’ve been quiet for awhile, but that doesn't mean we've been idle. There’s been a lot going on
behind the scenes, both here in Milwaukee and – as you may have heard – at the AAR network.

First of all there was the foolish firing of everyone's favorite Truthteller, Mike Malloy, and
the resulting cryptic statement from the network that it was for "financial reasons." Then there
was a rumor started on ThinkProgress.org that AAR was going bankrupt. It was unfounded;
nevertheless AAR does seem to be struggling financially.

Now we hear tell that there is something in the works that may end up resolving both of those
predicaments for the best – the network’s financial trouble and the status of the "Mike Malloy
Show." Unfortunately, we can’t share the details with you, Truthseekers – at least not quite
yet. Our friends at Nova M Radio have sworn us to secrecy on a stack of "The Truth (with jokes)"
by Al Franken. But trust us, the winds of positive change are in the air.

So what can we tell you? For one, we have a brand shiny new web site, courtesy of our friends at
3rd Coast Multimedia (http://www.3cm.net). Our address is still http://AirAmericaMilwaukee.com,
but now our site has lots of fun bells and whistles that will let those who haven’t heard Air
America Radio to discover it for themselves. Plus we'll be featuring guest blogs by some of the
your favorite local and national bloggers! Check it out.

In addition, we continue to look at purchasing that great station with a powerful signal that we
mentioned awhile back. But our Nova M friends have limited resources – they're looking at you
and me, Mr. & Ms. Milwaukee, to pick up the slack. In other words, we need your financial help.
Please become a Founding Sponsor of Air America Milwaukee at:



http://www.logyourblog.com/WI/

As a progressive, you know that Milwaukee badly needs a progressive media outlet to balance the
political dialogue, which has tilted severely right. Becoming a Founding Sponsor of AAR-MKE is
an investment in Milwaukee’s political future. So take two minutes and go to:



http://www.logyourblog.com/WI/

And urge your progressive friends to become Founding Sponsors too! It’s time to stop griping
about Charlie, Mark and Jessica. It’s time to make a difference.

Thank you for supporting a progressive voice in Southeastern Wisconsin!

Peace,
The Milwaukee Air Force
http://AirAmericaMilwaukee.com

About Jim Doyle


Since taking office in 2003, Governor Jim Doyle has worked hard to move Wisconsin forward, fighting to make Wisconsin more affordable for middle class and working families.

Personal History – the Peace Corps, a Prosecutor, and Governor

Governor Jim DoyleBorn on November 23, 1945, to James E. Doyle Sr. and Ruth Bachhuber Doyle, Governor Doyle and his three sisters grew up in Madison.

Governor Doyle’s parents were founding members of the modern Democratic Party in Wisconsin and he credits them for instilling him with a strong commitment to public service, and an unwavering desire to improve the lives of working families.

Governor Doyle and the First Lady, Jessica Laird Doyle, graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Inspired by John F. Kennedy’s call to public service, after college Jim and Jessica joined the Peace Corps, working for two years as teachers in Tunisia, Africa.

The Peace Corps showed Jim and Jessica just how big a difference a committed person can make in the lives of others – and taught them lessons about service that they would carry with them for a lifetime.

After Jim graduated in 1972 from Harvard Law School, their commitment to service brought Jim and Jessica to the Navajo Indian Reservation in Chinle, Arizona. Jim provided legal services for families who couldn’t afford it, while Jessica taught children to read.

After adopting their first son, Gus, the couple moved back to Wisconsin, where they always knew they wanted to raise their family. Three years later, they adopted a second son, Gabe. The Doyle family now includes a grandson, Asiah.

In 1976, Jim was elected Dane County District Attorney, and spent three terms putting hardened criminals behind bars – sometimes for life. When he left that office, he spent eight years building his own private law practice. He was elected Wisconsin’s Attorney General in 1990.

Jim was reelected as Attorney General in 1994 and 1998, gaining a reputation as a fighter for working people and the middle class, taking on big money special interests like big tobacco, and standing up for Wisconsin consumers

In 2002, Jim Doyle won a hard fought three way Democratic primary, and then went on to defeat Republican Governor Scott McCallum. He was the only Democrat in the country to defeat an incumbent Republican governor, and became the first Democratic governor of Wisconsin in 16 years.

Governor of Wisconsin

Governor Jim DoyleWhen he took office, Governor Doyle inherited some of the most substantial challenges that the state has ever faced – a $3.2 billion budget deficit, a lagging economy, and a decline in good paying manufacturing jobs. Governor Doyle took bold action, balancing the budget without raising taxes, cutting wasteful government spending while protecting our schools, and creating more than 140,000 new jobs.

Governor Doyle is continuing to lead.

He has a plan to make Wisconsin more affordable for middle class and working families who are feeling squeezed. His Affordability Agenda will make sure that Wisconsin families can afford the health care they need, pay their heating bills and fill up at the gas pump, secure a good paying job and send their kids to college.

In other words, Governor Doyle is committed to making sure that we can all afford to live where we love to live – Wisconsin.