Monthly Archive: February 2021
Log editors are not above handing out a few Valentine hints. Here’s one: The Automobile Gallery is running a “Sweet Deal” over Valentine’s Day for people that wish to tour the gallery with a...
Professor McQuade Dewhirst (Music) discusses pieces she has written in the past year for musicians who are finding new ways to connect in a time of crisis. This event is streaming LIVE on April...
In a free and open virtual event, UW-Green Bay Prof. Rebecca Meacham (English, Writing and Applied Arts) will interview Station Eleven author Emily St. John Mandel on Thursday, Feb. 11, at 7 p.m. CST....
Join the UW-Green Bay community Friday, Feb. 12, 2020 from 8:30 a.m. to 9:30 a.m. for Coffee Break Q and A. The February Coffee Break will be a conversation on the University’s new direction on...
The next Philosophers’ Cafe: Arguing by Analogy is Wednesday, Feb. 10, 2021 from 7 to 8:30 p.m. in a virtual environment via TEAMS. “Please join us for some fun discussion regarding arguments from analogy!...
The Career Closet is a resource available to currently enrolled UW-Green Bay students. Students may take up to five free items each semester—and those items are theirs to keep! During times of social distancing,...
Green Bay, Wis.—An inaugural Rising Phoenix Program in 2020 between UW-Green Bay and Manitowoc Lincoln High School was so successful, a second cohort of juniors will begin the Rising Phoenix program in Fall of...
UW-Green Bay alumna Christine (Pfiester) Sandberg ’15 (launched) The Lemonade Boutique, an online women’s clothing with a cause store to help human trafficking victims. The online store prides itself on curating ethically made and...
Excellent teachers are committed to advancing medical students’ learning and are the base for achieving the Medical College of Wisconsin’s (MCW) core mission in education. The Curriculum and Evaluation Committee (CEC) recently recognized and...
“Anger is a fuel that’s dangerous when out of control. But managed well, it can energize you to identify and confront problems.” Read the full piece by UW-Green Bay Prof. Ryan Martin.