KELLY MEYERHOFER
UW-Madison administrators and the universityâs student council are clashing over how to help students struggling because of the pandemic, with the council looking to put more money toward student rent payments using a strategy UW-Madison said is illegal, and the university taking an approach student government calls the bare minimum.
Itâs the latest standoff between the two sides and characteristic of the more combative stance student government has embraced in a school year that has left many students emotionally, financially or mentally exhausted.
Mitnick
âIf Iâm being honest with you, I didnât think things would be this tense when I started,â said Matthew Mitnick, who was elected chairperson of the Associated Students of Madison last September. âBut weâre not a mouthpiece for the administration. Weâre here to represent students and focus on who is being left out and who doesnât have a seat at the ta
ground and defending yourself. that s a shame if that s what our society has come to. that s how bad this law is. and that s why the prosecutors in the state of florida, all over the state represented by the florida prosecuting attorneys association want it repealed. ken padowitz, thank you for your time. thank you. and putting the spotlight on. putting a spotlight on, making national, and making people understand what is going on in egregious way is what marches and protests do. it is why we want to sanford in the first place. marching and protests do not solve problems. but it exposes problems, big problems. and no one will deal with things unless they re exposed. joining me now are two that engage in that is the reverend dr. w. food bank lynn richardson. he is chairman of the board of the national action network, my civil rights organization. and pastor jamal harrison bryant