capstone studentsFourth-year engineering students Barbara Wlodarczyk, Vincent Colussi, Terence Dimatulac, and Kaveera Naraynsingh stand in front of their E.C. Row Expressway traffic solutions poster.

E.C. Row Expressway improvements among engineering capstone projects

The section of the E.C. Row Expressway between Dougall and Walker roads is arguably one of the most dangerous strips of highway in the region, and many believe it’s only going to get worse as traffic increases in the area.

However, a group of fourth-year civil and environmental engineering students have come up with some designs suggestions to ease traffic that’s expected to double in the area by 2031.

Using the middle median space between the east and west bound lanes to create two additional lanes, or adding an express lane on each side – separated by barriers from the collector lanes – are the two alternatives proposed by Barbara Wlodarczyk, Kaveera Naraynsingh, Terence Dimatulac, and Vincent Colussi.

“I drive that area every day and it’s one of the worst,” said Wlodarczyk, who noted that the projected per-lane, per-hour flow rate just in the area east of Howard Avenue is expected to jump to 5,114 vehicles, far exceeding the existing congestion capacity of 2,300 cars. “It’s crazy there.”

“I see people get cut off all the time there,” added Colussi.

The students formed just one of dozens of teams who displayed their capstone projects in the lobby of the Ed Lumley Centre for Engineering Innovation on Friday. Capstone projects provide students with the opportunity to call upon the wealth of knowledge they’ve gained over four years in their programs and apply it to solving real world problems.

Many projects were based on community concerns and included a variety of solutions ranging from building pedestrian bridges over local highways to redesigning water treatment plants.

“This gets the students out in the field and teaches them about how they have to handle themselves after they graduate,” said professor Tirupati Bolisetti. “And most of these projects have practical ideas about how to make our community a better place.”

Two teams of students came up with designs for installing roundabouts: one at the corner of County Road 22 and I.C. Roy Drive in Belle River, the other at the corner of Lauzon Parkway and County Road 42.

“This intersection needs traffic calming and a roundabout would be a perfect solution,” said Prochhpal Singh Sra, a student who worked on the latter of the two designs, and noted that at peak hours, as many as 800 eastbound trucks turn left from Lauzon on the County Road 42. “There are huge delays there.”

With the help of an industrial partner at Stantec Engineering, Tyler Nantais, Drew Chevalier, Peter Ponikowski and Morgan Klaas are designing a new drinking water treatment plant for Harrow and Colchester. The current plant is almost at capacity and has to deal with the extra burden of thousands of cottagers coming to the area every summer, Chevalier said.

“The present plant was designed for only 8,000 people back in 1975,” he said.

Designing a new facility has been an enlightening project, according to Ponikowski.

“You really learn a lot about how much hard work is involved,” he said.

capstone students
Tyler Nantais, Drew Chevalier, Peter Ponikowski and Morgan Klaas pose with their Harrow-Colchester drinking water treatment plant design poster.

The poster display was held in conjunction with students in Mechanical, Automotive and Materials Engineering.

Professor Jennifer Johrendt says that collaborating in the showcase reflects the cross-discipline situations that engineers face in the work world.

“Besides helping the students and faculty to see opportunities for cooperation, it also helps junior engineering students who haven’t yet chosen a major to see the varying types of projects that are available in each area,” she says.

The showcase—about halfway through the project timeline—serves as a benchmark for the students.

“We check in regularly to make sure they are progressing,” she says. “But having a major deliverable like the poster presentation helps the teams to stay on track.”

Among the projects was the design and fabrication of a torsion rig fixture, which will hold material samples in place while they undergo testing of their ability to withstand twisting.

The group: Avleen Kaur, Ayon Das, Saurabh Kumar, Chris Isobara and Hetal Patel, has refined its design and will now proceed to machining a prototype.

“We are working to engineer a re-usable machine fixture that accommodates various cross-sections of materials,” Kaur says. “It can find application in industry, testing the suitability of materials for manufacturing cars.”

Five Women poster imageUniversity Players will stage the wickedly funny comedy “Five Women Wearing the Same Dress,” April 3 to 13 in Essex Hall Theatre.

Modern comedy to bring down curtain on University Players season

University Players will complete its 2013/14 season with Alan Ball’s wickedly funny comedy Five Women Wearing the Same Dress, April 3 to 6 and 9 to 13 at Essex Hall Theatre.

At an ostentatious wedding reception in Knoxville, Tennessee, five reluctant and identically clad bridesmaids hide out in an upstairs bedroom, each with her own reason to avoid the proceedings below. These five very different women discover a common bond in this wickedly funny and sincere celebration of friendship and acceptance, sex, drugs, and wedding bells.

Written by the Oscar-winning screenwriter of American Beauty, True Blood, and Six Feet Under, the play is directed by drama professor Gordon McCall.

“We’ve had a ball putting this show together,” he says. “We’ve danced, laughed, sung, danced, laughed again, and just had an all-round great time rehearsing this show. It says something wonderful about this play that one can rehearse it for five weeks and still love coming to rehearsals every day.”

He says the cast and crew are looking forward to sharing these good times with their audiences, and offers special thanks to the many students and faculty who have volunteered as fictional wedding guests in the mock reception before the show.

“I hope you catch the bouquet or garter, whichever you prefer,” says McCall. “Whoopee! Welcome to Tracey and Scott’s wedding!”

Wednesday through Saturday performances are at 8 p.m.; Sunday matinees are at 2 p.m. On Sunday, April 6, a “Talk Back” discussion with the director and actors will follow the performance. For information or tickets, call 519-253-3000, ext. 2808, or visit www.UniversityPlayers.com.

Lancer sweatshirtThis beautiful Lancer sweatshirt awaits the winner of today’s contest.

Decades of music reflected in campus quiz

To help celebrate the University of Windsor’s 50th anniversary, the University Bookstore is offering DailyNews readers chances to demonstrate their knowledge of the institution and its history.

Today’s quiz, the 38th in a series, offers one lucky winner a beautiful Lancers sweatshirt. In a heavy-duty cotton-polyester blend, the sweatshirt has a hood and kangaroo pocket and is available in navy, gold, or grey at a cost of $34.95 from the Bookstore kiosk in the CAW Student Centre.

In honour of the upcoming Rock of Ages concert and Sunday’s Juno awards ceremony, today’s quiz asks contestants to list each of these top Canadian singles in order of their release. The winner will be selected at random from all correct responses received by 4 p.m. Tuesday, April 1.

  1. Beauty and the Beast, Celine Dion
  2. Black Velvet, Alannah Myles
  3. Call Me Maybe, Carly Rae Jepsen
  4. Complicated, Avril Lavigne
  5. Echo Beach, Martha and the Muffins
  6. Sugar Daddy, Patsy Gallant
  7. You Oughta Know, Alanis Morissette

Contest is open to all readers of the DailyNews. Send an e-mail with your responses to uofwnews@uwindsor.ca. One entry per contestant, please. Note: the decision of the judge in determining the most correct response is inviolable.

50th Anniversary logo

Library to distribute free verse in celebration of Poetry Month

University of Windsor’s creative writing students are celebrating National Poetry Month by giving out poems for readers to enjoy—an event they have dubbed “Free Verse.”

For the first two weeks of April, visitors to Leddy Library can select a poem written by students from Andre Narbonne’s Creative Writing 1 class or Marty Gervais’s Creative Writing 3 class, as well as graduate students in the creative writing program.

The library will make the poems available April 1 to 15 at its circulation desk, by the printers on its first floor, and at the Williams Fresh Café. 

Catarina and Nora RomeroHK Book Award winner Catarina Romero of Holy Names High School and her mother Nora.

Book awards speak volumes about accomplished high schoolers

Support for people with Down syndrome comes naturally to Sabrina Safranyos. A senior at Sandwich Secondary School as well as a volunteer with the organization Up About Down, she says she has had both a maternal aunt and a cousin on her father’s side with the genetic disorder.

“It’s a cause that is really close to my heart,” says Safranyos, one of 24 local high school students whose community contributions, academic performance and athletic activities earned them a Human Kinetics Book Award. A reception Friday honoured the award winners.

An honours student, Safranyos plays soccer and volleyball—the latter on the Sabres senior boys’ team.

“The boys’ game is a little tougher and I really liked the opportunity to play with them. I pushed myself to improve my game,” she says, noting she won support from her new teammates as well as those on the girls’ squad. “It was a good decision.”

Like Safranyos, Catarina Romero of Holy Names High School plans to study kinesiology at the University of Windsor this September. In addition to competing for her school in soccer, cross country and track, she sings with a musical combo that performed at the opening of the International Children’s Games. Her mother Nora accompanied her to Friday’s reception.

“Catarina has been so dedicated to sports, but she usually prefers to stay in the background,” said Nora Romero. “She’s so modest, we were really surprised and pleased that she was chosen from her school to receive this honour.”

Here is the full list of 2014 HK Book Award winners:

  • Megan Annisette, Academie Ste. Cecile International School
  • Keith Carscadden, Belle River District High School
  • Nicole Denomme, F.J. Brennan High School
  • Anthony Tannous, Cardinal Carter Catholic Secondary School
  • Eriq Jenkins, Catholic Central High School
  • Georgy Koumoutsidis Essex District High School
  • Darby Heenan-Van Horn, École Secondaire L'Essor
  • Max Reiner, General Amherst High School
  • Jeff Bilek, Harrow District High School
  • Mackenzie Taiariol, W.F. Herman Secondary School
  • Catarina Romero, Holy Names High School
  • Ali Mehadi, Kennedy Collegiate Institute
  • Eric Hedge, Kingsville District High School
  • Kathryn McFadden, École Secondaire E.J. Lajeunesse
  • Nicholas Froese, Leamington District Secondary School
  • Jade Griffith, Maranatha Christian Academy
  • Emily Stadder, Vincent Massey Secondary School
  • Hakeem Sadiq, Riverside Secondary School
  • Rachel Loebach, St. Anne Catholic High School
  • Alessandra Ceccacci, St. Thomas of Villanova Secondary School
  • Sabrina Safranyos, Sandwich Secondary School
  • Brittani Yuhasz-Morrison, Walkerville Collegiate Institute
  • Derek Toews, UMEI Christian High Scool

Each honoree received a sports- or health-related book to keep, and their school libraries will receive a copy of Richard Peddie’s memoir Dream Job: My wild ride on the corporate side with the Leafs, the Raptors, and TFC, with a book plate acknowledging the honoured students.

Sandra Ondracka, Scott Van Hende, Brittany Jennings, Mike HaveyCampus Recreation manager Sandra Ondracka and acting director of ARS Mike Havey flank the department’s student employees of the year, Scott Van Hende and Brittany Jennings.

Luncheon shows appreciation for athletics and recreation student staff

As Lancer teams advanced in post-season play, athletics support staff worried about the prospect of hosting the Queen’s Cup for the Ontario University Athletics championship in men’s hockey the same weekend as the Final Eight tournament for national women’s basketball.

One thought kept his department from panicking, acting director of Athletics and Recreational Services Mike Havey said Friday: “We knew we had a student employee who could step up and take on that project.”

That student, Brittany Jennings, was one of two recognized as student employee of the year at the Blue and Gold Student Staff Appreciation Luncheon. When the Lancers did indeed win the right to host the Queen’s Cup, she was pressed into action.

“I had to approach the championship like it was any other home game,” said Jennings, notwithstanding a crowd of fans three to four times larger than normal.

“It was a huge challenge,” she acknowledged, “but a very rewarding experience—especially since we won.”

Scott Van Hende, co-winner as student employee of the year, said his years working for Athletics and Recreational Services have changed the direction of his career. After holding a variety of positions, from the Forge Fitness Centre to coordinator of club sports, he will pursue graduate study in sports management once he graduates this spring with a BHK in movement science.

Find more information, including a full list of the award winners honoured at the luncheon, in the full article, “Lancers honour student support staff.”

Multimedia performances to cap visit by guest artists

Multimedia performances Monday and Tuesday will cap a visit to Windsor by members of Concordia University’s matralab.

A research node for interdisciplinary, intercultural, intermedia art, matralab is directed by Sandeep Bhagwati, Canada Research Chair for Inter-X Art. Representatives have been in town since Friday, working with UWindsor’s Noiseborder Ensemble.

A weekend symposium and artists’ talks make the visit one of the ensemble’s most ambitious programs to date, say organizers.

It will culminate in a pair of performances, March 31 and April 1, both in Lambton Tower’s Studio A at 7:30 p.m. Monday’s will include the pieces Supernatant and Early Robotics, while Tuesday’s program will feature two pieces by Bhagwati, a collaboration between Noiseborder and matralab, Prana and Outer Drive.

All of the events are free and open to the public.

Three Minute Thesis competitionThe local finals of the Three Minute Thesis competition are set for 2 p.m. today

Finals today in Three Minute Thesis competition

The campus community is invited to turn out and help judge how UWindsor grad students fare in explaining their research and its significance with just three minutes and one slide.

The local finals of the Three Minute Thesis competition are set for 2 p.m. today—Monday, March 31— in Ambassador Auditorium, CAW Student Centre. The event offers cash prizes for a winner, first runner-up and people’s choice, with the champion going on to represent Windsor at a province-wide competition at McMaster University on April 24.

Audience members will vote to select the people’s choice award winner. The nine finalists are biology students Martin Crozier, Jessica Dare, Maria Ferraiuolo and Ingrid Qemo; chemistry students Hisham Dokainish, Michael Holmes and Pamela Ovadje; kinesiology student Yasina Somani and psychology student Brianne Brooker.

Find more information, including a list of presentation titles, on the competition website.

Robotics competition to close fieldhouse Wednesday to Saturday

The St. Denis Centre fieldhouse will close April 2 to 5 to accommodate the FIRST Robotics Great Lakes Regional Tournament. It will re-open at noon Sunday, April 6.

Dan Wolicki, acting athletics and facilities services manager, thanks patrons for their patience and apologizes for any inconvenience.

The tournament will attract students from high schools across Ontario and the Great Lakes states, pitting in a sports competition the robots they have built using common parts and software.

For more information, visit the tournament website, http://www.windsoressexfirst.org/.