1   2   3   4   5  

  1. Ron Wolf

    Ron Wolf is the former American football general manager (GM) of the NFL's Green Bay Packers, and played a significant role in personel operations with the Oakland and Los Angeles Raiders from 1966-1975, and again from 1978-1990. He joined Green Bay's front office in November 1991 from a personnel director's job with the New York Jets. He was responsible for assembling the 1996 Green Bay Packers, …

  2. Mike McKenzie

    Michael Terrance McKenzie (born April 26, 1976 in Miami, Florida) is an American football cornerback currently playing for the New Orleans Saints of the NFL. In 2005 he started his 7th season. He has also played for the Green Bay Packers. He graduated from Miami Norland High School. In the 2004 training camp with the Packers, McKenzie held out for several reasons. Firstly, he was not pleased that the team's No. 2 corner, Al Harris, was rewarded with a long-term contract, …

  3. Seneca Wallace

    Seneca Wallace (born August 6, 1980 in Sacramento, California) is an American football quarterback for the NFL's Seattle Seahawks.

  4. John Anderson

    John Anderson is a sports journalist from Green Bay, Wisconsin, and a host of the ESPN TV program SportsCenter since June 1999. He lives in Southington, Connecticut. Anderson has a journalism degree from the Missouri School of Journalism at the University of Missouri–Columbia. He is active within the MU Alumni Association and can often be seen at Missouri Tigers sporting events. Anderson was the Grand Marshall at Missouri's 2002 Homecoming football game, …

  5. Steve Kagen

    Steven L. Kagen, M.D. (born 12 December 1949 in Appleton, Wisconsin) is a physician and politician from the state of Wisconsin. He is currently the United States Representative for. The district is located in the northeastern part of the state and includes Green Bay and Appleton.

  6. Bryan Robinson

    Bryan Robinson (born June 22, 1974 in Toledo, Ohio) is an American professional football player who currently plays for the Cincinnati Bengals of the National Football League. A 6'4", 304 lbs. defensive end from Fresno State, Robinson has also played for the St. Louis Rams, Chicago Bears, and Miami Dolphins during his NFL career. Robinson made one of the most memorable and emotional plays in recent Chicago Bears history on November 7, 1999.

  7. Juran Bolden

    Juran T. Bolden (born June 27, 1974 in Tampa, Florida) is an American football cornerback who is a free agent. Bolden played college football for Mississippi Delta Community College. He was drafted by the Atlanta Falcons, and played for the Falcons during the 1996, 1997, 2002, and 2003 seasons. Bolden played for the Atlanta, Green Bay, and Carolina Panthers in 1998; and then in 1999 he played for the Kansas City Chiefs.

  8. Tyson Walter

    Tyson Walter (born March 17, 1978 in Bainbridge, Ohio) is an American football player who currently plays guard/center for the Green Bay Packers. The Dallas Cowboys drafted Walter in the sixth round (179th overall) of the 2002 NFL Draft. He was one of three Ohio State University players selected by Dallas in the 2002 draft, but Walter holds the distinction of starting more games as a Buckeye, 49, than any other player in school history.

  9. Eric Metcalf

    Eric Quinn Metcalf (born January 23, 1968 in Seattle, Washington) is a former National Football League running back and wide receiver who played for the Cleveland Browns (1989-1994), as well as Atlanta (1995-1996), San Diego (1997), Arizona (1998), Carolina (1999), Washington (2001) and Green Bay (2002). He was a four-time Pro Bowler for Cleveland and the San Diego Chargers. A multi-talented player, Metcalf excelled at offense and as a returner on special teams.

  10. Jay Demerit

    Jay Michael DeMerit (born 4 December, 1979 in Green Bay, Wisconsin) is an American soccer player, currently playing for Watford in the Championship. He was a three-sport high school athlete in Wisconsin, where he participated in basketball and track in addition to soccer. He attended Bay Port High School and graduated in 1998. DeMerit played NCAA soccer at the University of Illinois at Chicago, where he moved from playing forward to defender.

  11. Mark Schultz

    Mark Schultz (born 1955 near Green Bay, Wisconsin), is an American comic book writer and artist. He is best known as the writer and artist of "Xenozoic Tales", also known as "Cadillacs and Dinosaurs";. His most recent work is "Superman & Batman vs. Aliens & Predator" co-published by DC and Dark Horse. He is the current writer of the Prince Valiant comic strip.

  12. Cal Hubbard

    Robert Calvin Hubbard (October 31 1900 - October 17 1977) was an American professional football player and later an umpire in Major League Baseball, and is a member of three major sports halls of fame. He is currently the only person to be enshrined at both the Pro Football Hall of Fame and the Baseball Hall of Fame. Born in Keytesville, Missouri, Hubbard attended Centenary College in Louisiana, …

  13. Steven Avery

    Steven Avery (born July 9 1962) is the first person in the U.S. to not only be charged with a homicide after being exonerated by DNA evidence for a previous crime, but to be convicted as well. The Wisconsin man was exonerated in 2003 after serving 18 years on a rape conviction in which DNA analysis later linked the crime to another man. On November 11, 2005, Avery was charged with the murder of 25-year-old freelance photographer Teresa Halbach.

  14. Mike Michalske

    August Mike Michalske (April 24, 1903 - October 26, 1983) was an American football player. He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1964. Originally a member of the short-lived New York Yankees National Football League team from 1927 to 1928, Michalske arrived in Green Bay in 1929 for the first of what would be nine seasons with the team. An All-America fullback during his Penn State career, the 6-foot, …

  15. Beth Moore

    Beth Moore (born 1957) is the founder and best-known member of Living Proof Ministries, an evangelical organization for women based on biblical principles. Born on an army base in Green Bay, Wisconsin and raised in Arkadelphia, Arkansas, where her father owned a cinema house, Beth is the fourth of five children, all of whom worked at the cinema from a young age.

  16. Pat MacDonald

    Pat MacDonald (born 6 August 1952, Green Bay, Wisconsin) is an American musician. He is most famous as the lead singer and guitarist of Timbuk3, which he founded in Madison, Wisconsin with his wife, Barbara K. MacDonald. In 2005, he co-founded Steel Bridge Songfest, an annual not-for-profit benefit concert and songwriting festival, held in his current hometown of Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin.

  17. Ray Wietecha

    Ray Wietecha (born November 2, 1928 in East Chicago, Indiana, died December 14, 2002 in Phoenix, Arizona) was a Center in the National Football League for the New York Giants. Wietecha attended Northwestern University. Following his retirement, Wietecha entered coaching and was the offensive coordinator under Vince Lombardi in Green Bay when the Packers won the first two Super Bowls.

  18. N. Patrick Crooks

    Justice N. Patrick Crooks is a justice on the Wisconsin Supreme Court. Justice Crooks was elected to the Supreme Court in 1996. Justice Crooks is a native of Green Bay, Wisconsin. He received his bachelor’s degree from St. Norbert College in 1960 and his law degree from the University of Notre Dame in 1963. From 1964 to 1966, Justice Crooks served as an officer in the United States Army at the Pentagon, in the Office of the Judge Advocate General.

  19. George Whitney Calhoun

    George Whitney Calhoun (1890-1963) was a gruff, profane sports and telegraph editor for the Press-Gazette of Green Bay, Wisconsin, USA. He was a co-founder of the Green Bay Packers with Curly Lambeau (although he rarely gets credit for it), and was the team's first publicity director. Calhoun liked to guzzle beer, snack on limburger cheese and chew on stumpy cigars. But his favorite pastime was the Packers. Calhoun is a towering figure in the history of the club.

  20. Byron Kilbourn

    Byron Kilbourn (September 8, 1801 - December 16, 1870) was an American surveyor, railroad executive, and politician who was an important figure in the founding of Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Kilbourn was born in Granby, Connecticut, and moved with his family to Worthington, Ohio in 1803, which his father helped found that year. Kilbourn's father was James Kilbourne, a colonel during the War of 1812 and a U.S. Representative from Ohio from 1813 to 1817.

  21. Chad Davis

    Chad Davis (b. 1981) is an American hacker (or cracker) from Green Bay, Wisconsin, who operated under the alias of Mindphasr. He was the subject of one of the most high-profile prosecutions of cybercriminals of the late 20th century. Davis is a founding member of the globalHell syndicate of hackers, and is suspected to have authored or participated in the hacking of the websites of numerous businesses and government agencies.

  22. Claude-Jean Allouez

    Claude Jean Allouez ; was a Jesuit missionary. He was born in Saint-Didier-en-Velay in the département of Haute-Loire in south-central France. In 1639, he graduated from the College of Le Puy, and became a Jesuit novice in Toulouse, France, that same year. In 1655, he was ordained a priest of the Roman Catholic Church.

  23. Jacques Vieau

    Jacques Vieau (or Vieaux) (May 5, 1757 - July 1, 1852) was a French-Canadian fur trader and first permanent white settler in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He was born near Montreal, Canada and died in Howard, Wisconsin. Vieau married Angelique Roy in 1786, the granddaughter of Potawatomi indian chief, Anaugesa, at Green Bay, and later had at least twelve children together.

  24. Charles Michel de Langlade

    Charles Michel de Langlade was a Great Lakes fur-trader of French and Odawa heritage. His father was Augustin Langlade; his mother was a sister of Odawa war chief Nissowaquet. In 1752, Charles Langlade led the raid on Pickawillany, which paved the way for the French and Indian War. In 1755, he led a group from the Three Fires confederacy over Edward Braddock and George Washington at the Battle of Monongahela. He took part in the Battle of the Plains of Abraham, …

  25. Timothy O. Howe

    Timothy Otis Howe (February 24, 1816-March 25, 1883) was a member of the United States Senate, representing the state of Wisconsin from March 4, 1861, to March 3, 1879. He also served as U.S. Postmaster General from 1881 through 1883. Howe was born in Livermore, Maine, attended Readfield Seminary and studied law with local judges. In 1839, Howe was admitted to the Vermont Bar and began practicing law in Readfield. In 1845, he was elected to the Vermont Legislature.

  26. Pierre-Charles Le Sueur

    Pierre-Charles Le Sueur was a French fur trader and explorer in North America. Le Sueur came to Canada with the Jesuits to their mission at Sault Ste Marie, but very soon he turned himself to fur trade and became a coureur des bois. Around 1683, he received some samples of bluish clay from the middle reaches of a tributary of the Mississippi and took it back to France to be analyzed. A chemist, L'Huillier, deemed it to be copper ore.

  27. Bill Symons

    Bill Symons, born in Nucla, Colorado, is a former star running back with the Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Football League (CFL). Symons played for the University of Colorado Buffaloes between 1962 and 1964. He was a versatile player, running, leading the team in receptions, punt returns and kickoff returns, and doing some punting.

  28. Henry Martyn Robert

    Henry Martyn Robert (May 2, 1837 - May 11, 1923) was the author of Robert's Rules of Order, which became the most widely used manual of parliamentary procedure and remains today the most common parliamentary authority in the United States. Robert was born in Robertville, South Carolina and raised in Ohio, where his father moved the family because of his strong opposition to slavery. After graduating fourth in his class at West Point in 1857 he became a military engineer.

  29. Mike Holmgren

    Mike Holmgren is the head coach of the NFL 's Seattle Seahawks and was a Super Bowl winner as head coach of the Green Bay Packers . Holgren is scheduled to step down as the Seahawks coach at the conclusion of the 2008 season. ... Mike Holmgren coached at the high school level at various high schools in the San Jose, California area. He then moved on from San Jose to coach the at San Francisco State University.

  30. Matthew Polashek

    Matthew Polashek is a contemporary saxophonist living in the New York City area. His work focuses on the development of his own real-time computer-based interactive multimedia performance system. Polashek performs with his own group, the Matthew Polashek Exchange, and has performed and recorded with internationally renowned artists including David Liebman and Bryan Lynch.

  31. Eben E. Rexford

    Eben Eugene Rexford (16 July, 1848 - 18 October, 1916) was an American writer and poet remembered principally as the writer of the words to many much-loved hymns. Born in Johnsburg, New York his first poems were published in the New York Ledger when Rexford was 14. The Rexford family moved to Ellington, Wisconsin in 1855.

  32. Walter Loomis Newberry

    Walter Loomis Newberry (born 1804, East Windsor, Connecticut; died November 6, 1868 at sea) was an American businessman and philanthropist, best known for his bequest that resulted in the creation of the Newberry Library in Chicago. Newberry received an appointment to the United States Military Academy, but had to decline for health reasons. In 1822, Newberry and his brother Oliver went into the shipping business in Buffalo, New York.

  33. Roger L. Fitzsimonds

    Roger Fitzsimonds was the chairman and CEO of Firstar Corporation (now US Bank) from 1986 to 1999. He joined the then First Wisconsin National Bank of Milwaukee in 1964 as a management trainee and managerial and administrative positions in branches in Milwaukee and Green Bay afterwards. He became the vice president of the company in 1973, and president and chief operating officer in 1986. He assumed the same responsibilities for the holding company, Firstar Corporation, …

  34. Paul M. Gahlinger

    Paul M. Gahlinger, M.D., Ph.D., M.P.H., FACOEM, (born August 5 1953 in Green Bay, Wisconsin) is an American scientist, physician, and author. His books include "Computer Programs for Epidemiologic Analysis" (1993), "Northern Manitoba from Forest to Tundra" (1995), "The Cockpit: A Flight of Escape and Discovery" (2000), "Illegal Drugs: A Complete Guide to Their History, Chemistry, Use and Abuse" (2001) revised edition (2004), …

  35. Jean-Baptiste Chardon

    Jean-Baptiste Chardon (April 27, 1672 (some sources say April 27, 1671), Bordeaux, France-April 11, 1743, Quebec) was a French Jesuit missionary to the Indians in Canada and in the Louisiana territory. Chardon entered the noviciate in the Society of Jesus at Bordeaux on September 7, 1687. He studied at Pau in 1689 and 1690 and taught at the Jesuit college in La Rochelle from 1690 to 1695. He completed his studies at Poitiers in 1695 to 1699.

  36. George Erik Rupp

    George Rupp has been president and CEO of the International Rescue Committee since July 2002. Dr. Rupp oversees the agency's relief and development operations in 42 countries, its refugee resettlement programs throughout the United States, and its advocacy efforts in Washington, Geneva, Brussels, and other capitals. Before joining the IRC, Dr. Rupp served as President of Columbia University.

  37. Edmund V. Bobrowicz

    Edmund V. Bobrowicz (May 1, 1919 - March 16, 2003) was an American politician from the state of Wisconsin. Bobrowicz was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, the son of Polish immigrants. He served in the Army during the Second World War, in the South Pacific. In 1946, Bobrowicz ran successfully for the Democratic nomination for Wisconsin's 4th congressional district, ousting incumbent Representative Thaddeus Wasielewski.

  38. Harald Schenk

    Harald Schenk was born in Berlin, Germany. He has lived in the United States since 1954. He is on the faculty of the University of Wisconsin at Sheboygan. Between 1966 and 1969, he served in the United States Army with the Strategic Communications Command (US ARMY STRATCOM). After graduating from the University of Wisconsin at Green Bay, he was selected as a finalist in the 'Competition for Amateur Use of the Hubble Space Telescope'.

  39. Green Bay

    green bay packers rock.

  40. Green Bay

    We are the best football team in the NFL. Brett Favre is the best Quarterback of all-time. There is a reason the Super Bowl trophy is named after Vince Lombardi thats because the Packers where the first to win a Super Bowl. This list could go on forever.

1   2   3   4   5