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Despite having a bright future as an engineering graduate student, Hannah Gautreau became increasingly depressed and unable to cope with many daily situations earlier this year. 

But instead of struggling on her own as she has done in the past, Gautreau knew what to do this time around. She reached out for help.

One of the first things Gautreau did was meet with the on-campus engineering counsellor she’s been seeing on a regular basis since her undergraduate years.    

A real-world project got a lot more real – and rewarding – when Waterloo civil engineering students returned to an elementary school for the recent grand opening of a new playground structure.

The engineering students were part of a novel, competitive process to design the $75,000 structure last year new playground structure at Keatsway Public Schoolafter twice meeting with pupils at Keatsway Public School in Waterloo to listen to their ideas and feedback.

Alex Cattran was up for anything when 17 student teams gathered on the weekend to race against each other - and test themselves in the process - in electric cars they had spent months designing and building.

In addition to sharing driving duties for the entry from Guelph Collegiate and Vocational Institute, he worked in the pits furiously pumping up a leaky tire and scrambling to find replacements for a part that kept falling off.

Researchers using powerful supercomputers have found a way to generate microwaves with inexpensive silicon, a breakthrough that could dramatically cut costs and improve devices such as sensors in self-driving vehicles.

“Until now, this was considered impossible,” said C.R. Selvakumar, a Waterloo Engineering professor who proposed the concept several years ago.