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Perseverance is paying off for a Waterloo Engineering alumnus with ambitions to make the game of hockey even faster than it already is.

Jeffrey Azzolin (BASc 2013, Mechanical) applied his education to develop a skate blade that speeds up players using a spring action to store and release energy as they stride.

Closeup of hockey skate being tied.

Time was tight, but Team Pear made it under the wire as more than 200 first-year mechatronics engineering students got out of class to tackle hands-on problems recently.

Despite a math error that set them back two hours, members Eric Chee, Ken Jen Lee, Karan Bajaj and Mulan Ramani combined calculus, linear algebra, graphic design, computer programming and a little 3D modelling to make a plotter using a Lego controller.

Free apple cider certainly didn’t hurt, but there wasn’t much arm-twisting required today when Waterloo Engineering invited students to thank all the people who donate money to enhance their educations.

A steady stream of students took a few minutes out in the foyer of Carl Pollock Hall to write personal thank-you cards or pose with messages on white boards for photographs to be shared on social media.

A robotics company founded by four Waterloo Engineering alumni expects to almost double its workforce within 18 months after securing $30 million US in funding to pursue the market for self-driving vehicles in factories and warehouses.

Extracurricular activities and academics were both important stepping stones for two young women starting Waterloo Engineering programs this fall with $12,000 awards to help them leave gender stereotypes behind.