
Twenty-five years ago, back in the heyday of antinuclear power and weapons activism, I spent several years as director of a Madison-based organization called Nukewatch.
My primary Milwaukee contact was Julie Byrnes Enslow, with an organization called Mobilization for Survival. I went off and worked in politics for almost 25 years, then came back to antiwar work after my retirement a year ago—and found Julie Enslow still at the center of the action in Milwaukee, now with Peace Action-Wisconsin, the successor to Mobilization for Survival.With an art degree from Cardinal Stritch University, she taught art in inner-city Catholic schools and community centers, and also taught high-school religious doctrine classes from 1963-1971 at St. Roberts Catholic Church, bringing in draft counselors and community activists to speak to the students. “I was not asked back after 1971,” she says. “I guess they disapproved when several of my students became conscientious objectors to war.” She was a founding member of Mobilization for Survival, now Peace Action-Wisconsin, in 1977. As a volunteer organizer and staff member of Peace Action, Enslow helped initiate the Milwaukee Organizing Committee Against the Gulf War, and worked with the Nuclear Weapons Freeze and Jobs with Peace referendum campaigns.
AP - The chief executive officer of failed insurance conglomerate AIG acknowledged Wednesday that the company's multimillion-dollar bonuses were "distasteful" to many and had provoked a firestorm of wrath. "I share that anger," Edward Liddy, chairman and CEO of the American International Group Inc., said in testimony prepared for Congress.

AP - The chief executive officer of failed insurance conglomerate AIG acknowledged Wednesday that the company's multimillion-dollar bonuses were "distasteful" to many and had provoked a firestorm of wrath. "I share that anger," Edward Liddy, chairman and CEO of the American International Group Inc., said in testimony prepared for Congress.


