VHA 016
Counter
0-089
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Supreme Court Justice Nathan Heffernan on the fugitive slave law and Sherman Booth
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095-185
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Kathryn F. Clarenbach on women's suffrage and Belle Case La Follette
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197-278
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Frank P. Zeidler on Victor Berger, the first Socialist Congressman in the U.S.
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288-370
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Mike Borden of the Electoral College on the dual election system
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378-460
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Ken Thiel, mayor of Watertown, on the City of Watertown owing Rees
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468-551
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Wesley L. Scott, retired executive director of the Milwaukee Urban League on racial segregation in Milwaukee
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554-638
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Leo M. Walsh, Dean of the University of Wisconsin College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, on the establishment of the UW as a land grant college
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641-722
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James Doyle Jr. on a person's right to legal counsel (the Phillip Richardson case and the Clarence Gideon case)
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725-803
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Supreme Court Justice Roland Day on the Wisconsin Constitution in 1846 and 1847-1848
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806-881
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Ada Deer of the Menominee Nation on treaties and on Chief Oshkosh
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884-958
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Mike Healty of Hibernia Brewing on the prohibition amendment
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961-1031
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Charles J. Wallman, Watertown historian, on Carl Schurz
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1034-1103
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Tom Eckerly, former attorney for the Amish community, on religious freedom and education
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1105-1175
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Leo Hamilton, former mayor of Chippewa Falls, on the lumbering industry and river dams
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1177-1246
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Gordon Baldwin of the University of Wisconsin Law School on lawyer and U.S. Senator Matthew Hale Carpenter (1824-1881)
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1249-1315
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Assemblyman Dismas Becker, a participant in welfare protests in 1969, on civil rights and Father James Groppi
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1317-1385
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Supreme Court Justice Shirley Abrahamson on women as lawyers and civil rights legislation affecting women
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