A writer, filmmaker, and activist known as an “uncompromising fighter for racial equity and social justice” delivered a message on diversity and misunderstandings at a recent Ƶ lecture.
Rev. Ruth Karlsson, Executive Director of Released and Restored, addressed the topic at Ƶ’s Swan Lecture on Thursday, January 31. The lecture was titled, "After Prison — Then What?"
Chances are good the names “Edgar Sheffield Brightman” and “L. Harold DeWolf” mean very little to you.
But the names of these two Nebraska Wesleyan men meant a tremendous amount to one person whose name means as much to America’s history as any in the last 150 years: Martin Luther King, Jr.
About 98 percent of the inmates currently incarcerated in Nebraska's 10 prisons will be released and will return to our communities and neighborhoods.
Rev. Ruth Karlsson, executive director of Released and Restored, will address this topic when she delivers the annual Swan Lecture on Thursday, January 31.
The nearly 2,000 hours that students enrolled in the Communication Research Methods class spent on their semester project not only saved their grade, but may potentially save lives too.
Members of Global Service Learning won’t just be traveling to grandma’s house over the holiday.
Fifteen members of the student organization are headed to Chicago January 5-12 to participate in a variety of service activities. They are one of three student organizations and Nebraska Wesleyan classes traveling over the semester break.
Ƶ students interested in Estonia learned about the northern European country firsthand during the fall semester.
Pille Põiklik, an English professor at the University of Tartu in Estonia, has spent the last several weeks at Ƶ teaching Estonian culture and language.