A recent study by ConsumerAffairs, a consumer review company, ranked Green Bay as the 14th best city to move to in the Midwest. Two other Wisconsin cities appeared in the top 20, including Appleton at fourth and Waukesha at fifth.
Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty filed a Title IV civil rights complaint against the district for allegedly violating a white student's rights.
It's been almost one year since an ordinance took effect in Green Bay, requiring massage establishments to pay for a license.The hope has be
Gov. Tony Evers signed an executive order on Jan. 14 to create a statewide Office of Violence Prevention and directed $10 million to its efforts.
It's time for the Green Bay Correctional Institution to close. There is no excuse for the conditions in which inmates live and employees work.
GREEN BAY - Early in-person absentee voting for the Feb. 18 primary starts on Feb. 4 in Wisconsin and most municipalities in Brown County. Voters will narrow down the candidates for state superintendent and school board candidates in two Brown County districts.
(WLUK) -- A film about a Wisconsin dairy farmer who bets the farm on the Green Bay Packers hits theaters nationwide Friday. 'Green and Gold' tells the story of America's farmers and the fight to survive. Comedian and host of the 'Manitowoc Minute', Charlie Berens has a role in the film.
Fincantieri ACE Marine joined Wisconsin DNR's Green Tier program, aiming for improved environmental performance and seeking to exceed compliance standards.
There have been 35 head coaches that won a Super Bowl. Just four of those won Super Bowls after their seventh season with their organization.
Craig T. Nelson plays a stubborn farmer in Wisconsin whose devotion to the Green Bay Packers could save his business.
From Ray Nitschke to Reggie White to Clay Matthews, Packers players have turned up in film. Sometimes it's Packers fans who have the starring roles.
The pitching-in apparently extended to the cast: According to its production notes, upon realizing the shoot had but one camera, the actor portraying the farmer, Craig T. Nelson, pulled aside director Anders Lindwall and told him to pay for a second out of his salary.