The new countywide plan to address homelessness, “All In,” offers well-researched suggestions for long-term solutions, prevention, and services to address the immediate needs of people experiencing homelessness and its impacts. The effects of this situation impact us all and motivate us to collectively solve this issue. Instead, it is essential to face up to this issue through acknowledgement and assistance toward the homeless.
Thus, we have a problem that cannot be solved through neglect, which causes the problem to worsen or merely relocate. Considering this, it should cross our minds that individuals in those living conditions are not comfortable in them either. This urge is understandable because it derives from a natural human aversion toward unsanitary living conditions. The recent letter about the unsavory smells and sights downtown demonstrates how some employed and housed residents have understandable urges to avoid the realities of homelessness including its lack of cleanliness. ‘All In’ plan a step toward solving homelessness Makes you wonder about bringing back the death penalty. In a state where even Charles Manson was commuted by lovable Jerry, this kid could live in prison up to 70 years. Now that will cost the taxpayers $2.5 million housing him for life, but the alternative is death.
If convicted of murder in the first, life without is the only possible sentence. If as charged, he committed this horrible crime, he must face the music he brought on himself. The accused - and he is just accused not convicted - is 15. In light of the horrible killing at the Tannery Center this past week, and the arrest of a 15-year-old for this gruesome crime, we must look carefully at both the safety of young children, and the need for far more leeway in charging and punishing offenders.
"She had a good sense of humor and she loved people," Alessandra Gillen said.Suspect not kid, should not be treated as one Gillen's bust of Anthony Hopkins is on display at a theater in London. Every couple of years, she'd visit friends Jenni and Anthony Hopkins in London. As she worked, Gillen always listened to classical music. She was an anglophile who loved watching British movies and television. They raised their two children in Hustisford.Īlessandra Gillen remembers her mother creating small study sculptures in her studio in the basement of their Hustisford home. They moved to Milwaukee so Ronald Gillen could enroll in classes at Milwaukee School of Engineering. The couple followed Ronald Gillen's assignments in the Air Force around the world, living in Japan and Guam, among other places. The pair wed in Spokane, Wash., on May 20, 1961. One evening at a party in New York City, she met Ronald W. She grew up in Quincy, Mass., and spent a year studying acting at American Academy of Dramatic Arts, where she lost her Massachusetts accent. Gillen came to sculpting from the theater where she had acted and designed sets. "I delight in the portrayal of humans in their infinite possibilities." "The thrust of my work has always been to portray life as it is lived, with neither excessive sentimentality nor hollow heroism," she wrote in her artist statement.