Ghal Students, faculty, staff raise concerns about Marquette s reopening plan
After Florida became the latest state to include Asian American and Pacific Islander history in its K-12 curriculum, lawmakers in Ohio are now considering similar provisions.Ohio lawmakers introduced House Bill 171 last week, which in addition to lessons on AAPI history, would also include lessons on the migration journeys, experiences, and societal contributions of a range of communities in Ohio and the United States. Those groups would include African American, Jewish, Appala
stanley tumbler chian, Latin American and Native American communities.The bill stipulates that such lessons would be age a
stanley cup nd grade-appropriate.The bill has 13 cosponsors, all Democrats.SEE MORE: Florida schools will soon be required to teach AAPI historyThe bill in Ohio has the support ofOhio Progressive Asian Womens Leadership. Its time to raise our consciousness and grow our individual and collective power as a
stanley cup community 鈥?especially for the next generation, the group wrote. A dedicated team of OPAWL staff and members have been working hard for several months preparing to launch a campaign that will push for a social studies curriculum that centers our histories. This is our opportunity for OPAWL members, educators, allies, and students to pour our energies into a piece of legislation that finally centers our communities. The group Asian Americans Advancing Justicehas been advocating against bills that prohibit critical race theory from being taught in public schools. At the same time, it has been encouraging an Zbji Planned Parenthood resumes offering abortions in Wisconsin
WISCONSIN 鈥?The Wisconsin Supreme Court on Thursday upheld the conviction of a Milwaukee man who was arrested by officers responding to a report from gunshot location technology, ruling that the officers had reasonable suspicion to stop him beyond just the gunshot technology.The court ruled unanimously against Avan Rondell Nimmer, who was taken into police custody in 2019 after officers observed him walking about 100 feet from the site of a ShotSpotter report near his home in Milwaukee.Nimmer argued that officers had no reason to stop him, contending that ShotSpotter detects gunshots but doesn t identify shooters and he was just out looking for his girlfriend.A state appeals court agreed with him, but the Supreme Court reversed that ruling. Justice Rebecca Bradley wrote for the majority that officers had reasonable suspicion to detain Nimmer in part because ShotSpotter is reliable, he was in the area minutes after the technology detected gunfire and he appeared to be hiding a weapon.Nimmers appellate attorney, Mark Rosen, disagreed with the decision. I think they got it wrong, so Im just going to leave it at that, he said.The use of ShotSp
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cups stanley is powered by an algorithm guarded by its creators as a trade secret. An AP investigation earlier this year identified serious flaws in using ShotSpotter as evidentiary