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Engineers Week Promises a Mix of Education and Lighthearted Fun: Games, Demonstrations and Exhibitions, April 12 to 16

Date: April 9, 2004
Contact: Chris Sutton ( chris@ea.ucla.edu )
Phone: 310-206-0540


Engineering students scoop liquid nitrogen ice cream for afternoon passersby along Bruin Walk.

Concept cars, concrete canoes, a radio-controlled blimp and liquid nitrogen ice cream – it must be Engineers Week again, an exhibition running from April 12 to April 16. Admission is free and most events take place at Bruin Plaza and in the Court of Sciences on the UCLA campus. See the complete schedule.

Engineering students scoop liquid nitrogen ice cream for afternoon passersby along Bruin Walk.

Engineers Week (E-Week) is a combination of the educational and the playful, an intriguing mix of science lesson and carnival attraction. Balloon launches and pie-eating contests are side-by-side with speech processing demos and visualization portal tours. Visitors can play Jeopardy, build aluminum foil boats, or clean up an oil spill with cotton balls.

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 to avoid Southern California’s seasonal wet weather.

E-Week activities are created, organized and carried out by student members from a number of engineering societies, coordinated by the Engineering Society of the University of California (ESUC). All week engineering students will be applying the lessons learned in class with hands-on displays, games and exhibition-style demonstrations.

Some familiar student projects will be on view, including concrete canoes, human-powered vehicles, miniature robots and electronic racecars. Returning this year is a parody of the popular “American Idol” reality program, which organizers describe as just like the original, “but without the insulting comments.”

Organizers hope to familiarize the campus with the engineering profession and its place in today’s technological world. Organizers say engineers can understand and explain important technical issues like nuclear power, rapid transit, and space exploration, so the public can make informed decisions.

For more information about E-Week, visit ESUC’s website at www.esuc.ucla.edu.

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