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    Wisconsin Lawyer
    February 01, 1998

    Wisconsin Lawyer February 1998: News Briefs

    News Briefs

    Wisconsin's sesquicentennial to celebrate legal history

    The Wisconsin Supreme Court has a long list of special events and publications planned in celebration of our state's 150th birthday.

    "We are proud of Wisconsin's progressive heritage, which is boldly reflected in our legal history," says Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice Shirley Abrahamson. "Wisconsin courts, for example, have defied the federal government's stand on slavery and strengthened worker's compensation rights. Our sesquicentennial activities are designed to help us remember our past; to remind us of where we come from as we make plans for where we are going."

    To commemorate the state's sesquicentennial, the Wisconsin Supreme Court plans the following events:

    • "Rope of Sand," an original play based on the story of Joshua Glover and Sherman Booth, one of the most interesting chapters in the story of our country's struggle with slavery.

      The play will be presented at the Madison Civic Center at 1 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 29, with additional shows planned for either Thursday or Saturday. Tickets are free (there is a limit of four per person) and can be obtained by writing Rope of Sand, P.O. Box 1688, Madison, WI 53701-1688. Please specify which performance you wish to attend.

    • A writing contest sponsored by the supreme court in cooperation with the U.W. and Marquette law schools. Contestants must write an essay focusing on the importance of law in our lives, how the law has shaped American society, and how progress and change have shaped the types of cases the courts handle. The contest is open to all law school students. An anonymous donor has offered a $1,500 prize for the best essay.

    • A 52-part newspaper series on Wisconsin's legal history available to media statewide. The articles, written by Madison attorney Joseph A. Ranney, cover historical cases and events, the abolition of the death penalty in Wisconsin, the right-to-vote struggle of Wisconsin's blacks, and more. Ranney's work has been featured in Wisconsin Magazine of History and Wisconsin Lawyer, which is now available on WisBar.

    • Fifty-two one-minute spots on Wisconsin history, to air on public television throughout the year. Produced by Wisconsin Public Television, several spots will focus on the state's legal history, including the story of Lavinia Goodell and the Bashford-Barstow governor's election of 1855.

    Wisconsin's historical courthouses are the focus of the State Bar's sesquicentennial endeavors. This spring, the Wisconsin Lawyer will contain an article on Wisconsin's historic courthouses; and the Bar's two TV shows, Law Talk and Wisconsin Forum, will feature programs on these special sites.

    There are many ways local bar associations can get involved in celebrating our state's sesquicentennial and making this year's Law Day, May 1, special. The Law Day planning kits, which were mailed in January to local bar associations and local clerks of court, mark the state's 150th birthday with information on Wisconsin's legal history - high-profile cases, local courthouses and judges and lawyers from the earliest days of Wisconsin's statehood to the present. This information was compiled by the supreme court in an extensive research project and can help lawyers statewide "become history teachers in their own communities," as Chief Justice Abrahamson encourages.

    For more information on the state supreme court's sesquicentennial events, call Wisconsin Supreme Court Information Officer Amanda Todd at (608) 264-6256. For more information on Law Day contact Dee Runaas, State Bar law-related education coordinator at (608) 250-6191.

    A moment in history ...

    IN 1852 JOSHUA GLOVER, A FUGITIVE SLAVE, MADE HIS WAY TO WISCONSIN from Missouri, eventually settling in Racine. When Glover's owner discovered his whereabouts, he persuaded a U.S. court commissioner in Milwaukee to issue a warrant for his arrest. When news of Glover's arrest and imprisonment in the Milwaukee jail reached Racine, antislavery activists contacted newspaper publisher and abolitionist Sherman Booth. Booth rode through town, assembling a crowd and making a speech that he hoped would inspire the group to use legal and peaceful methods for freeing Glover. However, the crowd broke down the door to the Milwaukee jail and Glover escaped to Waukesha on the underground railroad. He eventually settled in Canada.

    Booth was arrested for aiding in the escape of a fugitive slave and was bound over for trial in federal court. What followed was a long, tangled battle that wound its way through both the state and federal courts. In the end, the U.S. Supreme Court reversed the Wisconsin Supreme Court and found Booth guilty. The state court, however, refused to file the high court's mandate - and never has.

    LAVINIA GOODELL WAS THE FIRST WOMAN ADMITTED TO THE BAR of the Wisconsin Supreme Court. In denying the Rock County lawyer's application, Chief Justice Edward George Ryan wrote "There are many employments in life not unfit for the female character. The profession of the law is surely not one of these." The state Legislature passed a bill to admit Goodell to the bar shortly thereafter.

    IN THE 1855 RACE FOR GOVERNOR BETWEEN WILLIAM BARSTOW and Coles Bashford, the election returns originally showed Republican Barstow the winner. It soon was discovered that Barstow owed his victory to votes from nonexistent precincts. Bashford asked the Wisconsin Supreme Court to step in and declare him the winner. The two-year-old court had never faced that kind of challenge, and, despite Barstow's threats and political clout, reviewed the evidence and declared Bashford governor. This episode illustrates the independence from politics and political maneuvering that has become the hallmark of the Wisconsin legal system.

    New form makes accommodating court participants with disabilities easier

    The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) requires that public entities, including courts, take appropriate steps to guarantee equal access to Wisconsin courts and to ensure the equal treatment of all participants in the system.

    The Wisconsin Records Management Committee, which develops forms and procedures for standardizing the state's courts, has created Form GF-153, the Accommodations/Interpreter Request Form. The form is designed to identify persons who will need accommodations in a court proceeding and to help provide those accommodations in an appropriate and timely manner.

    GF-153 addresses the most often-requested accommodations and offers the options of requesting other necessary accommodations. The form currently includes requests for wheelchair space, a foreign language interpreter, an American Sign Language or other sign language interpreter, an oral interpreter, real-time (video text) translation, an assisted-listening device, large print or enlarged materials and breaks for medical reasons.

    The form can be filled out by the person needing the accommodation, his or her attorney or any other advocate on the person's behalf. It also can be completed by court staff. The completed form is given to the court's ADA coordinator, who makes the necessary arrangements.

    Charlene Allen of the Office of Court Operations suggests that attorneys complete and return the form as soon as they are aware of a client needing special accommodations. "It's much easier to cancel or reschedule an interpreter, for example, than to find one at the last minute," Allen says.

    Form GF-153 is available at court offices and online on WisBar, the State Bar of Wisconsin's Web site.

    FYI

    Habitat for Humanity

    Participants in the Habitat for Humanity program included family members and, from Remley & Sensenbrenner S.C.: Wyon Wiegratz (back row, far left), Sue Sullivan (back row, second from left), Barbara Holly (back row, middle), Jeff Hanes (back row, third from right) and Jim Rudd (back row, second from right).

    Law firm helps Habitat for Humanity

    This past summer, employees of the Fox Valley firm Remley & Sensenbrenner S.C. worked together with Habitat for Humanity to landscape the new emergency homeless shelter in Appleton. Attorney Wyon Wiegratz, who participated in the landscaping, said, "Our firm's mission statement recognizes our civic responsibility. And while we often make donations to charities, this just seemed like something we could really put some sweat equity into and get everyone involved. It feels good to personally make a difference and we really had a lot of fun."

    Dane County updates guardian ad litem list

    The Dane County Family Court is updating its Family/Paternity Guardian Ad Litem list. According to District Court Administrator Gail Richardson, inclusion on the list is voluntary and only indicates a willingness to serve as a GAL.

    If you are interested in serving as a GAL, you must fill out a registration form. Forms are available from Richardson at the City/County Building, Room 319, 210 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., Madison, WI 53709. Attorneys currently on the list who wish to remain must return their registration forms immediately. All forms must be returned by Feb. 28. For more information, call Gail Richardson at (608) 267-8820.

    Know of any unsung heroes?

    It is an unfortunate truth that many low- and moderate-income people lack access to adequate legal representation or legal services. But Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson knows that there are many Wisconsin lawyers who do everything they can to meet the legal needs of those less fortunate.

    If you know of a lawyer who has assisted someone in need, Chief Justice Abrahamson wants to hear from you. She uses stories of these "unsung heroes" in her remarks to new lawyers upon their admission to the bar.

    Send stories to Chief Justice Abrahamson at the Wisconsin Supreme Court, P.O. Box 1688, Madison, WI 53701; fax them to her at (608) 261-8299; or call her assistants, Susan M. Fieber or Robin Whyte, at (608) 266-1885.


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