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Sauk and Fox resisiance to relocation led to 1832 war

Sauk and Fox resisiance to relocation led to 1832 war
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Presidents Day and Our New Chief Executive – Nevada News and Views

( Ron Knecht) Presidents’ Day fell on February 15 this year, and the birthday of our first and greatest chief executive, George Washington, was February 26.  The birthdays of two of our other greatest presidents also occurred that month: Abe Lincoln, February 14; and Ronald Reagan, February 6. So, it seems to me timely to discuss how the preparations of our 46th president, Joe Biden, compares with theirs.  (Personal apology: I started this column two weeks ago but was recovering from knee replacement and couldn’t finish it until now.) George Washington was born in 1732 to a wealthy Virginia family that had made its fortune in land speculation on the frontier.  Washington was the oldest of six children of his parents, and his father had three children by a previous marriage.  His older half-brother Lawrence inherited the estate that eventually became Washington’s Mount Vernon when Lawrence left it to Washington.

A lesson in leadership our students can learn from | News, Sports, Jobs

Dr. Steve Patchin As a young man he was a voracious reader. One of his favorite books, Aesop’s Fables, containing a favorite story. The fable was about a lion who decided to surrender his teeth to win the heart of a woodman’s daughter. As he approached the daughter to use his newfound power, he was struck down dead by the woodman, unable to defend himself with no teeth. This young man was born to Thomas and Nancy in a log cabin on the American frontier on February 12, 1809. His father was a hardworking man, honest, with an enjoyable sense of humor. Mother Nancy was an intelligent woman. Friends admired her physical abilities, stating “in a fair wrestle, she could throw most of the men who ever put her to the test!”

A swing through divided Wisconsin

A swing through divided Wisconsin Isthmus talks with voters in “pivot counties” Dylan Brogan As in many swing areas in Wisconsin, voters in Galesville are divided on which presidential candidate to back in 2020. Daniel Miller calls Richland Center “the dipstick of America.” “The people in Richland County [which includes Richland Center] have voted for the candidate that won the presidential election for 100 years,” says Miller, the owner of Ocooch Books & Libations, an independent bookstore and wine shop. “Anything going on in the country is going on here.”  Miller is my first stop on a five-day trek to gauge the electorate in swing areas of Wisconsin and he’s a little off on his numbers. Richland County has sided with the winning presidential candidate for the last 44 years, not 100. But the county is still a decent bellwether for how the political winds blow in Wisconsin. A majority of voters there cast a ballot for Democratic G

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