Some 20,000 people met at the Kohl Center to experience the Obama
magic. Our Superdelegate Senators were not there; and no members of the
House delegation. Why not? Even without endorsing him, they could have
been there to welcome Barack. (Too clever by half for those who want to
be wooed by the Clintons to rescue her flagging campaign?)
The NY Times reports Hillary has already ceded Wisconsin
and will focus on Texas and Ohio. (I can only imagine how those who
endorsed Hillary long before Iowa feel reading that news this morning.)
The advisors surrounding Hillary are telling her what consultants
always preach: "you gotta go negative--it is the only way to stop him."
Let's hope she resists the impulse.
Maryland, Virginia, Nebraska, Washigtoon State and D.C. to name a few and the list goes on. Eight in a row by big margins.
Meanwhile, McCain looks like he is on a different planet.
Reform:
It appears that campaign reform may happen soon. Hard to believe, but
the system is so corrupt that even the corrupted are getting on board.

Live! Interactive! Improv Comedy For the Whole Family! Bring the kids, bring Grandma, heck, even bring the dog! Come see the longest running comedy Show in Milwaukee.
The American political drama that began in the upheaval of the 1960s reached its climax with the Watergate scandal and ended in 1974 with the resignation of Richard Nixon. An epilogue was added to the story when Nixon emerged from seclusion in 1977 for an
In 1964, the time of Doubt, no one spoke of pedophile priests, even if the Roman Catholic Church was already riddled with them. Directed by John Patrick Shanley from his own play, one of the most provocative recent productions on a Broadway that has surre
Although the wacky, anonymous, eyeball-mask-wearing members of The Residents make a point of labeling it a collection of "pop songs," The Bunny Boy isn't simply a pop album. It's also a cryptic Internet series that "inspired" the album, a live performance
Steve Grimm's place in Milwaukee music history remains secure for having fronted one of the city's most prominent bands to make it to a major label. It's been a while since Bad Boy was a happening entity, but Grimm remains vital-if inextricably linked to
Mitchell Street was once known as the Polish Grand Avenue, the main drag for Milwaukee’s large Polish-American community. The Poles began moving away in the 1970s, making way for new chapters in the city’s immigrant story. Mitchell Street has
Little touches set it apart: the twist of lime on the rim of a glass of cranberry juice, the faux modern paintings on the wall… Ten years after it opened, Metro Bar & Cafe, just off the lobby of Hotel Metro (411 E. Mason St.), remains a timelessly





