Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Engineers’ Week serves up a smorgasbord of events

For the 30th Annual Engineers’ Week Dinner (EWD), held in last week to celebrate the engineering profession, an audience of nearly 300 enjoyed food, camaraderie, and a glimpse of how algae may be a prime biomass for future bio-diesel fuel. Five CEAS students were awarded scholarships at the event that featured the theme “Engineers Make it Work.”

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Dr. Jay Newman, president of Optional Energy Partners, Inc., located in Sturgis, MI, provided the keynote address on "Sustainable Energy -Sustainable Communities.” His seven-month-old company is using the waste from waste treatment plants for fuel.

CEAS students won five scholarships, two sponsored by Eaton Corp. and one each from the American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE), Consumers Energy, and the Society of Plastic Engineers (SPE).

Joshua Wiese, an engineering management technology senior from Belleville, Mich., is Epsilon Mu Eta president and the Tau Alpha Pi VP. He graduates this spring. He is presently interning at Post Foods and spent four summers interning at GM.

Greg Vosters, an electrical engineering senior from Otsego, Mich., graduates in Dec. He is currently working at Eaton in a co-op, working full time in the summer and part time while he’s in school. As the Tau Beta Pi president, he is involved with Relay for Life. Eventually he would like to work in power distribution

Britney Richmond, a civil engineering junior from Chesaning, Mich., is a member of ASC, the concrete canoe team, and Tau Beta Pi, and has been active in the development of service learning projects for local schools. She interned with MDOT last summer and is planning a career in the structural aspect of civil engineering and the completion of a master’s degree.

Nicholas Pohl, a mechanical engineering (ME) senior with math and science minors, is from Fowler, Mich. He wants an aerospace career after graduating.

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Peter Feldpausch, a ME junior from Hastings, Mich., has career aspirations in engines and transportation. Both Pohl and Feldpausch are members of Alpha Lambda Delta and St. Thomas’ Parish.

Prior to the formal ceremony, four CEAS professors showcased their labs and research: Dr. Bade Shrestha, from MAE, introduced the students to the work done in the Fuel Cell Evaluation and Research Center; Dr. John Patten, from MFE, explained research about the CEAS’s wind turbine and the plug-in hybrid electric vehicle; Harold Hladky, from PCI, offered an update on bio-diesel creation; and Abe Poot, Sunseeker adviser, discussed solar-powered vehicles.

Sponsored by the Southwestern Michigan engineering societies, the event annually celebrates National Engineers Week and the engineering profession. The dinner and scholarships are possible thanks to WMU, professional societies and area industries.

Donors to the event include Pfizer, Post Foods, AIAA, SAE, ASCE, AIChE, ASME of Central Michigan, Haworth, IEEE, SW Mich. Chapter of MSPE, SPE of West Michigan, CEAS, Byce and Associates, Consumers Energy, Eaton Corp., Prein & Newhof, Soil and Materials Engineers Inc., and Tower Pinkster.

The EWD committee, chaired by Mike Schwartz of Prein & Newhof, included several CEAS people: Dr. Jorge Rodriguez, Dr. Peter Parker, Dr. Dean Johnson, Scot Conant, Johanna Wells, Tamara Bergman, Samuel Kallen, Jenni Soetaert, Michael Romkema, and Heather Highhouse.

Other members are Dave Caldwell (DENSO), John Lobo (Eaton), Pradip Sagdeo (AIAA), Tim Mitchell (SME), and David Anderson (VBISD).

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Metal casting conference offers networking and scholarships

Dr. Sam Ramrattan, Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering (IME) professor specializing in metal casting, led a delegation of five IME students to the 61st Annual Foundry Educational Foundation (FEF) College Industry Conference (CIC) held in Chicago late last fall.

The two-day conference celebrated the metal-casting industry and provided networking opportunities for 30 company reps and the faculty members and 98 students from 24 metal­casting-accredited colleges. Only five students from each college were invited to the conference.

WMU attendees were Michael Horvath, Jason Klein, Kirk Mrozek, Shane Sovia, and Brad Tudor, all technology majors interested in metal casting.

The conference offered information sessions and speakers on innovation, globalization, sustainability, and career opportunities.

Klein, who earned a BS in Manufacturing Technology last semester, won a $2,000 American Foundry Society (AFS) – Saginaw Valley Scholarship. He was one of only 15 students to win a CIC Student Delegate Scholarship.

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Klein dined with representatives of MetalTek International, headquartered in Waukesha, Wisconsin. He was impressed with the conference speakers, and especially a Caterpillar, Inc., rep who described the company’s efforts in restoring old equipment. “They take bulldozers that have been rusting in fields for 20 years and make them new,” he said.

The conference camaraderie added to the atmosphere of the conference. “It was definitely a rewarding experience,” Klein said. “Most of the company reps are former FEF students who keep giving back, and you realize that once you’re in metal-casting, it’s a lifelong membership.”

Klein came to WMU from Grand Rapids and is now a graduate assistant in WMU’s manufacturing master’s program. He attends classes, teaches a lab section of ME 2200 Processes and Materials in Manufacturing, and assists in Ramrattan’s research. He is also interviewing for a summer internship.

Having won at least five other metal-casting-related scholarships, Klein is more than enthusiastic about the topic, and he is eager to go to work in metal-casting.