
Herb Kohler, Golf Course and Resort Owner and Former CEO of Kohler Company Dies at 83
Herb Kohler, who was the CEO of Kohler Company from 1972 to 2015, passed away on Saturday, September 3.
Herb Kohler, who was the CEO of Kohler Company from 1972 to 2015, passed away on Saturday, September 3.
A 2021 report from The Commonwealth Fund called Achieving Racial and Ethnic Equity in U.S. Health Care confirmed what many have known, there are troubling racial disparities in health outcomes across the United States, especially for those in Black communities.
The Madison Children’s Museum has recently opened a new cafe named Little John’s Lunchbox.
As fall approaches, various animal species are beginning their seasonal migration to brace for the changing climate along with dwindling food and resources.
Student loan debt has been a financial crisis for millions of Americans throughout the past decade with public college still becoming more unaffordable due to many years of funding cuts despite the state’s recent investments.
The Department of Natural Resources (DNR) is investigating a fish kill which occurred in Isabelle Creek, in the Pierce County community of Ellsworth.
Winners in the teen and youth divisions were announced late August. In the teen category, Cayden Kershaw of Wausau, Wisconsin, took first place; in the kids division, Emmitt Bailey of Menomonie, Wisconsin, took first place.
Republican U.S. Senator Ron Johnson, who served as chairman of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee in 2018, failed to subpoena Teva Pharmaceuticals as part of an investigation into the drugmaker’s role in the opioid epidemic.
“We are honoring the generations of proud Anishinaabe people and their tireless work that has set the stage to make this historic signing possible,” the Ojibwe tribe wrote on Facebook.
The Inflation Reduction Act is expected to aid in the affordability of healthcare for Wisconsin residents.
To the excitement of most Wisconsinites, a seasonal forecast by the NOAA shows that the state is expected to have a much warmer and drier fall than normal.
The inter-agency council of Wisconsin state government working to respond to the prevalence of cancer-causing chemicals in the state’s water released its 2022 progress report on Thursday, which shows some progress has been made but the state is still working to improve its ability to track and find sources of contamination.