
A keynote address Friday on the battle of Vimy Ridge and its evolving significance over 100 years will open the Windsor Military Studies Conference.
A keynote address Friday on the battle of Vimy Ridge and its evolving significance over 100 years will open the Windsor Military Studies Conference.
The Chimczuk Museum will celebrate Black History Month with free admission Thursday and the opening of a display by UWindsor researchers.
Desserts and Discussion will pair sweets with a conversation on the play Les Belles Soeurs, Friday in the Jackman Dramatic Art Centre.
History student Peter Sawicki will be on Parliament Hill for an exhibit of his research into the WWII era Polish army recruitment centre in Windsor.
UWindsor professors and students will take their experimental interactive documentary to a couple of U.S. cities over the next week.
The next time you’re sipping on a pint of your favourite peanut butter porter, take a moment to pour one out for the barbarians.
If it weren’t for those Germanic tribes in northern Europe, says University of Windsor professor Max Nelson, the popular alcoholic beverage may still be considered the “effeminate drink of foreigners.”
“The Greeks held pseudo-scientific beliefs about alcohol, including that wine is hot and manly while beer is cold and effeminate,” Dr. Nelson said.
A competition invites students to answer the question “What do the humanities mean to you?”
UWindsor history professor Guillaume Teasdale will discuss historic Assumption parish Tuesday in a free public lecture marking its 250th anniversary.
The Walrus magazine has published an article on the rediscovery of a documentary first screened during Expo 67.
A public archive documents and celebrates the legacy of the Chatham Coloured All-Stars.