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Labor

Friday, December 7, 2012

Baby Born In Brookfield Square Parking Lot

Parents describe a 48-minute tour de force that ends with 5-pound, 7-ounce baby girl being born on the pavement outside the shopping mall.

It was 1:19 p.m. Nov. 30, and Danielle Goehner lay on her bedroom floor, wracked with pain. The mother-to-be reached out and clutched the bottom of a dresser and edge of the bedroom door. "I felt like I had to push and I didn't want to," she said. "Every instinct in my body tells me to push. So I was holding on, trying to put my energy into something else other than pushing." Danielle was 38 weeks pregnant while her husband, Scott Goehner, was at the veterinarian, picking up medicine for their dog. "I put down what I had, walked out to the car, jumped in the car and took off," he said.  He sped home, rushed into his Elm Grove house and found his wife, the love of his life, on the floor, about to give birth. "I walk in, see her there and …

Monday, May 7, 2012

Democratic Primary Likely to Be Decided on Style Points, Strategies

If voters are leaning more toward Barrett in Tuesday's recall election, it may be because Falk overplayed her hand as unions' champion, while Milwaukee mayor plays more to the middle.

A comparison of leading Democratic candidates Kathleen Falk and Tom Barrett going into Tuesday’s recall primary shows their differences are more about style and political strategy than substance on the issues. Both campaigns have hammered against Gov. Scott Walker’s cuts to public education and vowed to restore school spending. Both have focused on the need for job creation and derided Walker’s record on it. On public health matters, the economy and, yes, on collective bargaining for public workers, they are essentially on the same page over the long haul. Where Falk and Barrett differ is not as much in their ultimate policy aims, but in their approaches. Falk entered the race in mid-January, almost the instant the deadline for turning in …

Comment_arrow

Adam Wienieski

12:07 am on Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Sorry Dirk, I left out budget busting. When Obama took office, Julia's share of the national debt was $32,000. Today it's $138,300 and rising fast. Obama is the most divisive president in history and his shameful class warfare rhetoric is dividing the country into two groups: takers and taxpayers. Guess which one he wants Julia to be?   more ›

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