Annual UCLA
E-Week Showcases Value of Engineering in Everyday Life
Campus Invited to Sample Liquid Nitrogen Ice Cream,
Race Aluminum Foil Boats, Cheer During Faculty vs. Students Tug
of War, or Simply Check Out the Latest Student Projects
Join the engineering students of UCLA to sample liquid nitrogen
ice cream, view a robotics demo, check out model steel bridges
capable of supporting the weight of a full-grown adult, and cheer
during a tug-of-war between faculty, staff and students, as well
as a wide variety of other educational and fun demonstrations
during Engineers Week, or E-Week, to be held on campus from April
10-14.
Coordinated by the Engineering Society of the University of California
(ESUC), E-Week showcases the value of engineering in an accessible
way, with activities open to everyone on campus. Egg dropping
contests share space with water filtration systems that can be
set up in remote locations, and robots are contrasted with a pie-eating
contest and a scavenger hunt. Some familiar student projects also
will be on view, including concrete canoes and electronic racecars.
Activities are created, organized and carried out by student
members from a number of engineering organizations in collaboration
with the Engineering Society. Throughout the week, engineering
students will be applying the lessons learned in the classroom
through hands-on displays, games and exhibition-style demonstrations.
Organizers hope to familiarize the campus with the engineering
profession and its place in today’s technological world.
E-Week events will be held in UCLA’s Court
of Sciences daily from 11 am until 2 p.m.
E-Week began as a national event in 1951, becoming a regular
event at UCLA in the early 1960s. While National E-Week is held
every February to celebrate George Washington’s birthday
(America’s first president had a background in engineering
and land surveying), UCLA traditionally holds its E-Week in the
Spring Quarter.
For more information about E-Week, visit ESUC’s
website at www.esuc.ucla.edu.
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