Washington Engineer

Coming Up: ME to Mark 100 Years

Fall celebration set for ME centennial

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Mechanical engineering students work on the department's entry in the 2005 Formula SAE competition.

Formula race cars, human-powered submarines, a former CEO of Ford Motor Co. and the current CEO of Recreational Equipment Inc. will be on hand Sept. 15 for the UW Department of Mechanical Engineering’s 100th birthday party.

To register for the event, go to the ME Website, call (206) 616-8259 or e-mail MECentennial@engr.washington.edu by Aug. 25.

Acting Engineering Dean Mani Soma urged alumni and friends to use the event as a vehicle to a deeper involvement with the department.

“If you are an alum, rekindle your connection with the ME community. Look up a professor. Observe the innovation and energy that infuse the work of students and faculty; volunteer as a mentor,” Soma said.

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Students test a Murray Corliss steam engine, circa 1949.

“We welcome your participation in whatever form it takes,” he added.

The celebration will begin with a panel discussion and video presentation documenting how the field has progressed from steam power to the space race and digital revolution. Department Chair Mark Tuttle will lead faculty in speculating on what lies ahead, for both the field and the department.

Donald E. Petersen, a 1946 alum, will address participants during the centennial luncheon. As chairman and CEO of Ford Motor Company in the 1980s, Peterson guided the automobile maker through the most radical transformation in its history, creating a new management paradigm that has been widely embraced.

The day will close with a dinner at the Bell Harbor International Conference Center on Pier 66 and an address by Sally Jewell, a 1978 alum and CEO of REI.

This year’s Engineering Lecture Series features free admission

Admission fees have been waived for the 2006 Engineering Lecture Series, which kicks off in October with topics ranging from thought-controlled robots to an instant chemical analyzer that could help poisoning victims and detect biochemical threats.

All lectures begin at 7 p.m. in Kane Hall, room 110. The sessions include: