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The Eighty-Ninth Wisconsin Legislature convened from January 3, 1989, to January 7, 1991, in regular session, and also convened in two special sessions. [1] Senators representing even-numbered districts were newly elected for this session and were serving the first two years of a four-year term. Assembly members were elected to a two-year term.
Some anti-boycott measures are enforced by law. For example, anti-boycott provisions in the Export Administration Act of 1979 and Ribicoff Amendment to the Tax Reform Act of 1976 in the United States forbid US companies and their subsidiaries from complying with or supporting a foreign country's boycott of another country unless the US also approves of the boycott.
Durban Review Conference: Scope of the conference: Durban Review Conference#Boycotts: 2010: Various: BP: Deepwater Horizon oil spill: Reactions to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill#Public reaction: 2010: Various: Arizona: Racial profiling law [16] 2011: Israelis: Tnuva: Rising food prices and price gouging: Cottage cheese boycott: 2013-2020 350.org
Trump's 90-minute keynote speech concluding the 2024 RNC included scattered references to Wisconsin and, to a lesser extent, Milwaukee. ... Walker served as a Wisconsin delegate to the 2024 RNC ...
1989 NYNEX strike, 15-week strike by NYNEX telephone workers in the United States. [46] [47] 1989 Russians in Estonia strike, strike by Russians in Estonia in the Estonian Soviet Socialist Republic, organised by the Intermovement, against a new law on voting rights passed by the Popular Front of Estonia. [48] [49]
Kirk's remains were found in September 1989 by the owners of Good ’n Loud music store on University Avenue in Madison, who noticed a skull visible in a pipe connecting the boiler to the chimney.
September 30, 2024 at 11:52 AM. ... and current Republican nominee Donald Trump criticized the government’s immigration process during a campaign speech on Saturday, Sept. 28, in Wisconsin. ...
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People v. Claiborne Hardware Co., 458 U.S. 886 (1982), [1] was a landmark decision [2] of the United States Supreme Court ruling 8–0 (Marshall did not participate in the decision) that although states have broad power to regulate economic activities, they cannot prohibit peaceful advocacy of a politically motivated boycott.