Nathan Mullins, Natasha Rahman, Kamin Paul and Elizabeth Tuscano.UWindsor engineering students finished second in the Water Environment Association of Ontario Student Design Competition. Clockwise from lower left: Nathan Mullins, Natasha Rahman, Kamin Paul and Elizabeth Tuscano.

Students soak up experience in wastewater treatment competition

Putting textbook learning to practical application makes all the difference in preparing for a professional career, says a team of UWindsor environmental engineering students who finished second in the Water Environment Association of Ontario Student Design Competition, April 10 in Niagara Falls.

The contest is intended to promote real-world design experience for students interested in pursuing a career or education in water engineering and sciences. This year, participants were tasked with optimizing resource recovery at the Duffin Creek Water Pollution Control Plant in Pickering, Ontario.

Nathan Mullins, Kamin Paul, Natasha Rahman and Elizabeth Tuscano took on the challenge as their fourth-year capstone project. The students devised ways to remove more nitrogen and phosphorus for use as agricultural fertilizer.

They conducted a literature review, visited the site, and consulted with experts in the field to prepare detailed schematics for the proposed modifications. The process is no different from how professional engineers will approach the job, says Paul.

“We got a hint of what engineering might be like in the future,” she says. “When we studied wastewater treatment last year, it just seemed like random, abstract concepts. Now, we got a chance to apply a lot of what we learned.”

Mullins agrees, saying the project introduced the students to technical side of the discipline.

“I think we got an enhanced learning experience from it,” he says. “I certainly have a better understanding of how to apply knowledge to tackle a problem.”

Festival Theatre, StratfordThe Alumni Association has organized a trip to take in a play featuring three UWindsor acting grads at the Stratford Festival.

Stratford trip to put UWindsor alumni at centre stage

Dinner and a show await alumni, employees and friends of UWindsor on a May 27 trip to the Stratford Festival.

The Alumni Association is organizing the trip to see three UWindsor acting grads in William Shakespeare’s comedy As You Like It: Ijeoma Emesowum (BFA 2008), Cory O’Brien (BFA 2008) and Brigit Wilson (BFA 1982).

Travel by motorcoach from Windsor to Stratford, take in the 2 p.m. matinee, and enjoy a dinner buffet in the Festival Theatre’s Paul D. Fleck Marquee. The $80 price covers return transportation, theatre admission and dinner reception. A second $65 option is available for those who choose to provide their own transportation.

Find additional information, including online registration, on the event website.

Chantal ValléeLancer women’s basketball coach Chantal Vallée will deliver a keynote address next week to the “Celebrating Women Who Inspire Us” luncheon.

Lancer basketball coach to address women’s luncheon

UWindsor women’s basketball coach Chantal Vallée will deliver a keynote address to a luncheon next week honouring women who have helped to shape the lives of people in Windsor-Essex.

The “Celebrating Women Who Inspire Us” luncheon is set for Wednesday, May 4, in the St. Clair College Centre for the Arts. It is organized by Women Leading the Way, a group that works with the United Way to engage with the community.

Vallée led her team to five straight national championships, tying a Canadian Interuniversity Sports record.

Tickets are $30 per person. To RSVP by April 27, contact Connie Giglio at cgiglio@weareunited.com, 519-258-0000, ext. 1218, or register online.

Event to sponsor cross-border collaboration between IT and healthcare

An event May 13 to 15 on the UWindsor campus will help to break down barriers to healthcare innovation by bringing together IT and healthcare professionals across the US-Canada border to collaborate, dream up and design apps for patient-centric care.

Hacking Health Windsor-Detroit offers free registration to the first 20 students and faculty from the University of Windsor using the discount code UWinHH2016. Learn more on the event website.

Christopher PlummerChristopher Plummer stars in “Remember” to open the Windsor Jewish Film Festival on May 2.

Festival to screen films of interest to Jewish community

The Windsor Jewish Film Festival boasts a line-up of 10 films from six countries in seven languages, May 2 to 5 at the Devonshire Mall Cineplex Odeon Theatre.

“We will once again bring to our community distinguished international films not otherwise screened in Windsor,” says organizer Stuart Selby, professor emeritus of communication studies. “While several touch on the Holocaust, all avoid images of the horror of that time, confronting instead the lingering psychological effects on people’s lives.”

That includes the festival’s opening feature: Remember, directed by Atom Egoyan and starring Christopher Plummer. Nominated for three Canadian Screen Awards, the production tells the story of an elderly but physically fit 90-year old who flees his nursing home to complete a secret mission some 70 years in the making—if only he can remember his goal from one day to the next.

“Every film offers a mature view of adults dealing with relationships and meaning in their lives,” says Dr. Selby.

The complete program is available on the festival’s website. Tickets are $10 cash, available from a dedicated desk in the theatre or through the Windsor Jewish Community Centre, 519-973-1772.