-
Philip Rocco, associate professor of political science at Marquette University, speaks on the working requirements for food and healthcare programs in Wisconsin.
-
Karen Lincoln Michel, the president and CEO of IndiJ Public Media, will receive an honorary doctorate from Marquette University for her work in journalism and for Native Americans nationwide.
-
The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Marquette University and the Medical College of Wisconsin seek to bring new products to market.
-
Two first generation Marquette Students, Julie Alemán and Wendy Pérez, started a business to provide textbooks free of cost for first generation students. It's called Community. Books. YOU., a non-profit business that seeks to make the first generation student experience easier.
-
Transparency is essential to our democracy — and according to our laws the public is entitled to it. Since 1967, the Freedom of Information Act, or FOIA as it is commonly referred to, has served as a way for the public to request information from a public office, a military body or a local police force.
-
A group of students at Marquette University, headed by professor Bryan Rindfleisch, are creating an interactive map of Milwaukee that pinpoints the Indigenous history behind some of Milwaukee's most famous landmarks.
-
A group of second-generation Mexican immigrants seek to create a safe space at Marquette University to celebrate and practice their culture with new Baile Folklorico group.
-
Transitioning from high school to higher education or from higher education to the job market is a pivotal time in a young person’s life. It can present challenges, especially for students of color. The Black and Latino/a Ecosystem and Support Transition Hub, also known as BLEST Hub at Marquette University is working to support young people during these moments.
-
As the Milwaukee Brewers play during baseball's postseason, the skills of several Brewers pitchers have caught the eye of a local physics professor.