Mhns Meet our Pawsitively Milwaukee Pet of the Week: Vegar!
MILWAUKEE 鈥?With the school year just around the corner, Marquette students are moving back onto campus on Wednesday. The transition to college can be daunting for anyone, but underrepresented students and first-generation students face their own unique challenges. Marquette s RISE Ready to Inspire Success and Excellence program aims to make the transition to college a little bit easier for those students. RISE is a multi-cultural, pre-orientation program. It s usually a three-day program that strives to help students acclimate to the Milwaukee community
stanley cups uk and the Marquette community at the same time, explained Marquette s Assistant Director of the Center for Engagement and Inclusion Tamra Keith. TMJ4 RISE students meet with mentors on campus Students who are part of the RISE program have been on campus since Monday meeting staff, learning about the university, taking tours of the city,
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stanley quencher p with a student mentor. Daequan Muirhead, a junior studying digital media, is one of this year s RISE mentors. I love to see other people start to find themselves and find their place, and this program just has so much of that, Muirhead said of why he wanted to be a mentor. I get to be one of those people that can actually be a guide to these students. I can be someone who is willing and able to invest my own time, my own energy, and my own resources into making sure these students can have the building blocks. Dvuz New tools help better predict storms and alert the public for hurricane season
MILWAUKEE 鈥?As Wisconsin struggles to fight its worst spike in COVID-19 cases since the start of the pandemic, the way some people choose to vote in the upcoming election will change.So, we are going 360 to fully understand the conversation surrounding absentee ballots.We talked to an election official preparing to count a re
kubki stanley cord-breaking number of votes submitted by mail, we hear from the President who continues to raise concerns over voter integrity, we speak to a poll worker encouraging people to vote early, if possible and we talk to two voters who say dropping their ballots off early just doesn t feel right. That s where we will start. I m a little concerned and I d rather do it in person, said voter Ted Skelton, who says he plans to vote in-person on Nov. 3rd. It scares the bajesus out of me. I m worried about fraud, said Skelton.He says voting by mail leaves him feeling uneasy and fellow voter, Andy Portale, agree
stanley nz s that voting in-person feels more secure. It s the way I ve always done. It s old school and I think it eliminates fraud because they see the driver s license and they know it s me, said
stanley termoska Portale.Their hesitation may be reinforced by baseless claims made by President Trump who has spoken out on the integrity of the election while on the campaign trail. We have a big problem and you see it happened every day with the ballots, President Trump has said. When the ballots and when the system is rigged, which it is, obviously it is, and the only one that know