Horst Friedrich, Bill Altenhof, Michael WorswickHorst Friedrich of the German Aerospace Center and engineering professors Bill Altenhof of Windsor and Michael Worswick of Waterloo celebrate an agreement to co-operate in research on lightweight vehicle technologies.

Agreement to promote international collaboration on lightweight technologies

A new agreement between the University of Windsor, University of Waterloo and Germany’s national centre for transportation research has the potential to save lives and money, says engineering professor Bill Altenhof. He organized the International Crashworthiness Symposium, held Monday in the Centre for Engineering Innovation, which culminated in the Cooperation Agreement on Novel Lightweight Technologies for Improved Crash Safety.

“The focus of the agreement is about collaborating and developing novel ways to dissipate energy in a crash, for the protection of people within vehicles,” Dr. Altenhof said. “We are trying to think outside the box and apply innovative techniques to re-work traditional designs to bring vehicle structural crashworthiness to a new level of performance.”

The three partner institutions will share their complimentary abilities, said Horst Friedrich, director of the Institute of Vehicle Concepts at the German Aerospace Center (known as DLR, the initialism of its German name).

“If you have different talents, different know-how, even different cultures, you find a more fruitful arena to develop new solutions,” he said.

He says that lightweight design is a key technology for reducing energy consumed in transportation.

“This was important in the past, it is important today, and it will become more important in the future,” said Dr. Friedrich. “Of course, safety is obligatory—you cannot sell a car that is not safe.”

Monday’s symposium brought academic and industry experts together to discuss the design of lighter-weight vehicles and innovations that improve fuel efficiency and passenger safety.

“When you are in a severe accident, your life, and many of those close to you, will change forever,” said Altenhof. “With the economic burden of automobile crashes in North America in the billions of dollars per year, any contribution we can make has the potential to save so many lives and millions of dollars.”

Concert to support children’s music program

A concert at Central United Church on Wednesday, April 13, will raise funds for the Downtown Music Initiative.

Founded by UWindsor music grad Melissa Miner (BMus 2007), the program provides free music lessons to disadvantaged children in Windsor. Performances by its students will open the concert, followed by the Windsor Symphony Orchestra Strings under the direction of assistant conductor Peter Wiebe.

UWindsor alumna Erin Armstrong (BMus 2007), a soprano, will sing excerpts from Cosi fan tutte, La bohème, and West Side Story.

The show begins at 7 p.m. Tickets are $15 and may be reserved by calling 519-890-8851. Central United Church is located at 628 Ouellette Avenue.

Sean Bob-IweEnvironmental sciences major Sean Bob-Iwe hits the books Monday in the CAW Student Centre in preparation for final exams this week and next.

Libraries gearing up to serve students buckling down

With final examinations now underway, the Leddy Library has begun operating around the clock.

It will open Sunday mornings at 10 a.m. and stay open straight through until 2 a.m. Saturdays, re-opening from 10 a.m. Saturdays to 2 a.m. Sundays.

On Friday, April 22, the library will close at midnight and begin its spring recess hours, 1 to 18 p.m. April 23 and 24, then 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., Monday to Friday. It will begin summer hours on Monday, May 9.

Find full details on the library’s website.

The Paul Martin Law Library will extend its weekend hours April 16 and 17; its schedule of operation is available here.

Chantel Wasyluk, Katrina Wasyluk, Marco LotFourth-year business students Chantel Wasyluk, Katrina Wasyluk and Marco Lot inspect Tealish blends, Monday in the Campus Bookstore.

Wellness teas featured item in Campus Bookstore

Combining healing herbs with rich spices and pieces of real fruit, Tealish has produced a line of whole-leaf blends intended to inspire drinkers on their journeys to wellness.

The Campus Bookstore is featuring these “wellness teas,” both loose and bagged, this week:

  • Delicious Detox
  • Good Energy
  • Hangover Helper
  • Skinny Mini
  • Sleep Fairy
  • Stress Buster

They are displayed in front of the technology counter, in the store’s location on the lower level of the CAW Student Centre.