In 1588, Tycho Brahe and Nicolaus Raimarus Ursus each published works which advanced alternatives to both the geostatic and geocentric world systems of Aristotle and Ptolemy and to the geokinetic and heliocentric system of Copernicus.
In 1588, Tycho Brahe and Nicolaus Raimarus Ursus each published works which advanced alternatives to both the geostatic and geocentric world systems of Aristotle and Ptolemy and to the geokinetic and heliocentric system of Copernicus.
Contractors Jones Demolition have begun preparation for the demolition of Cody Hall, beginning with the Hazard Materials Abatement (HAZMAT), says project administrator Mark Rudkin of Facility Services.
The City of Windsor planning department is hosting an open house Thursday, March 29, to consider land use issues relating to lodging houses.
All part-time undergraduates are invited to attend the Organization of Part-Time University Students (OPUS) annual general meeting on Thursday, March 29, at 5 p.m. in room 172, CAW Student Centre.
Items under discussion include:
Motorists in the future may be able to help cut down on drunk-driving statistics thanks to a unique face-recognition program developed by a pair of University of Windsor engineering graduate students.
A roast of UWindsor Chancellor Ed Lumley, May 30 at Toronto’s Fairmont Royal York Hotel, is a first harbinger of the University’s 50th anniversary celebrations in 2013/14.
Jumping rope should be an Olympic sport, says Shelby Toews.
Faster, higher and stronger are no problem, but how about cleaner? About three dozen members of the Lancer track and field teams took on a new challenge Friday: litter.
The student-athletes donned rubber gloves, grabbed trash bags, and spread out across campus to clean the grounds.
The School of Music’s Take 4 series presents a recital by student musicians, Wednesday, March 28, at 4 p.m. in room 139, Music Building. The program features:
Susan Holbrook, associate professor in the Department of English Language, Literature and Creative Writing and a 2011/12 fellow of the Humanities Research Group, will read from her own poetry on Wednesday, March 28.