This week’s NAS Seminar: restoring Great Lakes fisheries
Mark E. Holey of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Green Bay will be the featured speaker at 3 p.m. this Friday (Oct. 10) in Environmental Sciences Room 301 for the next edition...
Mark E. Holey of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Green Bay will be the featured speaker at 3 p.m. this Friday (Oct. 10) in Environmental Sciences Room 301 for the next edition...
“Defamation: The Play,” a nationally acclaimed courtroom-drama production with a twist, is coming to UW-Green Bay and the University Union’s Christie Theatre. The twist is that the audience is the jury. The play addresses...
UW-Green Bay Prof. of Democracy and Justice Studies Harvey J. Kaye has recently reprinted, at the political advocacy website Campaign for America’s Future, his 2009 address to the Yale Political Union. Kaye told the...
In response to concerns raised by legislators and the general public, UW System Administration has overhauled its reporting system for Program Revenue Fund Balances, and prepared a report about the changes. “This report provides...
Learn from two veteran grant writers: Joe Gaunt and Associate Prof. Lora Warner, in a pair of workshops organized by the Center for Public Affairs: Nov. 5 — Grant Training I: Develop Your Grant-Worthy...
Just so you know: The bookstore’s #PhoenixFriday special is 20 percent off all drinkware.
Here’s a quick and friendly reminder that the Lawton Gallery will host an opening reception for its next exhibit from 4:30-6:30 p.m. tomorrow (Thursday) at the gallery in Theatre Hall. “Figuring It Out: David...
Bing Crosby, the crooner. Bing Devine, GM of the St. Louis Cardinals. Dave Bing, NBA star and Detroit mayor. Chandler Bing, the whiny but semi-likeable “Friends” character. And that’s about it for people named...
UW-Green Bay will host its 11th annual Phuture Phoenix field trip days Tuesday, Oct. 14 and Thursday, Oct. 16, welcoming 1,460 area fifth-graders who will explore campus and experience life as a college student....
First-year students are being given the opportunity to “get their hands dirty and learn about ecology and conservation at the same time,” thanks to a $5,990 grant from the Baird Creek Preservation Foundation. The grant, issued to Associate Prof. Mathew Dornbush of the Natural and Applied Sciences academic unit at UW-Green Bay, will support Dornbush’s first-year seminar course titled, “Let’s Go Native: Conservation Biology in Practice.”