Feature

The Week’s Greatest Hits

The Week’s Greatest Hits

Most popular articles and press releases in the past week

Top 10 of 2019: The Year’s Most Popular Bar Exams
Top 10 of 2019

The Year’s Most Popular Bar Exams

Actually all the bar reviews were popular, but these were the tops in readership.

Now Serving: Unlocal Beers Coming to Walker’s Point
Now Serving

Unlocal Beers Coming to Walker’s Point

Also: Goodbye Trio and Café Bavaria, to be replaced by two high-concept bars.

City Streets: The Return of Streets With Two Names
City Streets

The Return of Streets With Two Names

1920s program purged most, but streets with multiple names popping up in recent decades.

Friday Photos: New Office For African-American Issues
Friday Photos

New Office For African-American Issues

City transforming two-story building on Fond du Lac into one-stop clearinghouse.

Op Ed: State’s Future Depends on Knowledge Economy
Op Ed

State’s Future Depends on Knowledge Economy

Two new studies show why state needs to support its universities.

Why State’s Birth Rate Is Falling

Why State’s Birth Rate Is Falling

Lowest rate in 44 years. Several reasons, experts say.

Top 10 of 2019: Most Popular Friday Photos Articles
Top 10 of 2019

Most Popular Friday Photos Articles

Readers love downtown projects, and one still unconfirmed HQ move tops the list.

Top 10 of 2019: Most Popular Murphy’s Law Columns
Top 10 of 2019

Most Popular Murphy’s Law Columns

Foxconn, Scott Walker, Aurora and more.

Data Wonk: Rep. Sensenbrenner’s Disappointing Column
Data Wonk

Rep. Sensenbrenner’s Disappointing Column

The Republican has showed his independence in the past. But not this time, not on impeachment.

Court Watch: High Court Weakens Suspect Line-Up Rules
Court Watch

High Court Weakens Suspect Line-Up Rules

Roggensack decision allows police to use single-person showups rather than multi-person lineups.

State Virtual Charter Schools Up 140%

State Virtual Charter Schools Up 140%

In the last decade virtual charter school enrollment grew from 3,106 to 7,465 students.