A reception Tuesday, March 20, will celebrate the accomplishments of UWindsor researchers.
A reception Tuesday, March 20, will celebrate the accomplishments of UWindsor researchers.
There were no easy games for the Chatham Coloured All-Stars.
It's what Wilfred "Boomer" Harding recalled decades after his team was forced to overcome adversity both on and off the baseball diamond to become champions of the Ontario Baseball Amateur Association's Intermediate B-1 class in 1934.
That road to the championship game was onerous.
The Black baseball team travelled across the province to compete in games, often being denied accommodations and forced to continue driving in precarious conditions before eventually reaching a welcome refuge.
The Chimczuk Museum will celebrate Black History Month with free admission Thursday and the opening of a display by UWindsor researchers.
Voting has begun in the Leddy Library’s annual research question competition.
The Leddy Library is hosting several presentations promoting greater access to research results in observance of Open Access Week.
Wilfred (Boomer) Harding, a pioneering multi-sport athlete, is the subject of a retrospective project by UWindsor researchers.
A unique collaboration between professor Michael Crawford in the Department of Biological Sciences, students enrolled in his Epigenetics course, and the Leddy Library’s Centre for Digital Scholarship, has led to the publication of a new book exploring the way our genes relate to our experiences of life.
Issues of Purple and White, the Assumption College student newspaper, are among the historical publications being digitized by the Leddy Library.
The $650 Bibliography in the Leddy Library tots up the cost of access to research references.
In recognition of the importance of providing open access to Windsor research, University Senate passed the University of Windsor's own open access policy (OA).