Daily Archive: February 2, 2015
UW-Green Bay’s new Inclusivity and Equity Certificate Program resumes its 2014-15 series of offerings with a workshop at 12:30 p.m. this Friday (Feb. 6) in Phoenix Room A of the University Union. Staff member...
Actually, it’s a more complete special mission. UW-Green Bay appended its campus mission statement last fall in response to a UW System and Board of Regents request that the various UW System institutions standardize...
Chair Christopher Martin of the UW-Green Bay Philosophy faculty invites one and all to take part in an interdisciplinary discussion at 7 p.m. this Wednesday (Feb. 4) for the monthly meeting of The Philosophers’...
Associate Prof. Gabriel Saxton-Ruiz shares word of this semester’s lineup in the “International Education Film Festival” sponsored by Humanistic Studies. Each film examines different aspects of education through a foreign perspective. Should anyone have...
After a pair of nice road wins last week, the UW-Green Bay women’s basketball team continues to show well in the national rankings. The AP Top 25 poll released earlier today (Feb. 2) has...
The Phoenix women’s basketball team (17-3, 7-0 HL) can now look forward to playing three-straight games at home, where it owns a perfect 7-0 record. The homestand starts vs. Oakland at 7 p.m. Wednesday...
An exhibit calling attention to Black History Month has been installed in the display case in the concourse-level corridor linking the Cofrin Library and the IS Building. The display, courtesy of the Office of...
The updates have been made to the department section for the 2014-15 campus directory. A PDF of the updated department listings is available at http://www.uwgb.edu/univcomm/2015-Feb-departments.pdf. The updates in red print show changes and additions....
The Wisconsin Small Business Development Center at UW-Green Bay is pushing to get students involved in the second annual Startup Weekend Green Bay, taking place Friday-Sunday (Feb. 6-8) at NWTC. The SBDC is a...
Heart disease and stroke are the cause of death for approximately 1 in 3 women. Yet, 80 percent of cardiac events can be prevented with education and lifestyle changes. Join faculty, staff and students...