Monthly Archive: October 2010

Volleyball team wins, and collects for a good cause

Volleyball team wins, and collects for a good cause

The UW-Green Bay women’s volleyball team recorded a three-set sweep of Youngstown State Saturday at the Kress Events Center. The Phoenix (8-17, 4-7 HL) will play its next four matches away before the final...

Faculty note: Gabriel T. Saxton-Ruiz

Faculty note: Gabriel T. Saxton-Ruiz

Gabriel T. Saxton-Ruiz, assistant professor of Humanistic Studies and Spanish, presented a paper at the recent II Congreso Internacional de Ficción Criminal: El género negro en la era de la globalización (1990-2010) at the...

Faculty note: Andrew Kersten

Faculty note: Andrew Kersten

Historian Andrew Kersten, professor of Social Change and Development, had a humorous title for his presentation Oct. 25 at the annual meeting of the Wisconsin Federation of Museums, held in Oshkosh at EAA. His...

Faculty note: Craig Lockard

Faculty note: Craig Lockard

An article by Prof. Emeritus Craig Lockard of Social Change and Development is scheduled to be featured in November in an Author’s Forum on the listserve H-World. The forum brings attention to articles published...

Faculty note: Sampath Ranganathan

Faculty note: Sampath Ranganathan

In November, Sampath Ranganathan, an assistant professor of marketing with the Austin E. Cofrin School of Business, will present three papers at the Society of Marketing Advances conference in Atlanta. The conference theme is...

Faculty note: Meir Russ

Faculty note: Meir Russ

UW-Green Bay Prof. Meir Russ, of the Austin E. Cofrin School of Business, is the chief editor of the very first volume of the International Journal of Management and Business. One of the unique...

UW-Green Bay to host Thomas Paine lecture

UW-Green Bay to host Thomas Paine lecture

The University of Wisconsin-Green Bay will present a performance of Citizen Paine at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 10, in the Christie Theatre in the University Union. The event is part of the 25th Anniversary of the Historical Perspectives Lecture Series. This lecture is free and open to the public.