Beck Andrew Salgado
Lake Effect ProducerBeck Andrew Salgado was a producer with Lake Effect from 2021 to 2022.
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Mitchell International Airport spokesperson, Stephanie Staudinger, details the increase in travel in 2021 as well how to travel safer and more smoothly through the holiday season.
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At exactly 45 degrees north latitude and 90 degrees west longitude in Marathon County, you will find the center of the northwest hemisphere. What makes the marker even more significant is that of the four spots like it in the world, it’s the only one that you can travel to.
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After being a mobile bookstore throughout the pandemic, Niche Book Bar is opening a physical location in 2022 and will seek to serve as a positive community space.
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Transparency is essential to our democracy — and according to our laws the public is entitled to it. Since 1967, the Freedom of Information Act, or FOIA as it is commonly referred to, has served as a way for the public to request information from a public office, a military body or a local police force.
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Margaret Noodin, associate dean for humanities at UW-Milwaukee explains why remembering and reclaiming Indigenous names for places can be a way to heal — something that is especially important in Wisconsin where the relationship to Indigenous history can often seem hollow or tenuous.
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Surrounded by lively music, steaming hot chocolate, and jubilant children, soaking it all in, Kaylee Staral was enjoying time with her family at the Waukesha holiday parade — then chaos erupted. First, she heard screams and police sirens as people fled into the shops that lined the street.
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A group of students at Marquette University, headed by professor Bryan Rindfleisch, are creating an interactive map of Milwaukee that pinpoints the Indigenous history behind some of Milwaukee's most famous landmarks.
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One of the most significant tribes in the Milwaukee area is the Ho Chunk Nation — their history goes all the way back to when the glaciers were still on the Great Lakes. Bill Quackenbush, Ho Chunk Nation’s Tribal Preservation Officer, describes the historical fight for the Ho Chunk people to remain on their native land.
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For most Native Americans in Wisconsin, their languages are no longer what they speak at home or in day-to-day life. But Michael Zimmerman Junior, an Indigenous language specialist and consultant, is hoping to revitalize the language, and reestablish its prominence in these communities.
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A group of second-generation Mexican immigrants seek to create a safe space at Marquette University to celebrate and practice their culture with new Baile Folklorico group.