Student creates a buzz on campus with new motor-powered wheel
April 29, 2015
By Vesna Brajkovic
Heads turn, footsteps stop dead in their tracks and phones go up to catch a blurry picture as proof...
Public relation majors are putting on an event this Saturday and Sunday to help promote the University Center’s Warhawk Alley. The events are Warhawk Alley Olympics and The Warhawk Strut.
The events...
UW-Whitewater Public Relations and Communications instructor Ann Peru Knabe was driving to Whitewater to teach a public relations class when she heard that a plane had crashed into the World Trade Center. Soon after that, Knabe heard of a second plane crashing, and that the cause of the accident was a terrorist act.
As a civilian, Knabe had many of the same unanswered questions that millions of Americans had. As a mother, she was left with the task of explaining a devastatingly-unexpected situation to her five-year-old daughter. Yet Knabe’s life as a civilian and as a mother were not as life-changing as the third role Knabe held. September 11, 2001, turned Air Force Reservist Ann Knabe’s world upside-down.