HOME WEB NEWS IMAGES CLASSIFIEDS YELLOW PAGESPOLLS - SURVEYS WIKI COUNTRIES PHOTOS US UK INDIA
Avoo.com provides meta search results from various sources

Engineering_undergraduate_society_of_the_university_of_british_columbia


Google



1

Engineering Undergraduate Society (EUS), is the engineering society at the University of British Columbia. It organizes Engineering department events but is perhaps best known for practical jokes (STUdeNT projectS) it has played in the past, including hanging the frame of a Volkswagen Beetle off of bridges. The members of the EUS are known for their pride of being engineering students and conspicuous displays thereof. EUS members often refer to themselves as Engineers even though they are correctly Engineering Students (cf. Engineer-in-Training and Professional Engineer).


The EUS belongs to several larger student organizations. On the local school level the EUS belongs to the Alma Mater Society of the University of British Columbia, on the regional level, Western Engineering Students\' Societies Team, and the national level, Canadian Federation of Engineering Students.

Contents

Mission

The mission statement of the organization is "support the academic, professional, and social needs of engineering students, encourage excellence in all aspects of student life, and celebrate the accomplishments of its members." The EUS places a large emphasis on furthering traditions much like a fraternity. Unlike a fraternity the EUS membership is not gender specific. These traditions primarily involve socializing, drinking and ritual. It is a long held view that these behaviours are tolerated and encouraged by the Engineering Faculty and engineering profession as they imbue engineering students with a sense of identity as engineers. This identity leads to a more cohesive professional body.

Government

The EUS Council is the decision-making body for the engineers within the Faculty of Applied science at UBC. The EUS Council consists of the EUS Executive and a representative from each of the 10 departments. The Council directs the Executive on how to operate throughout the year, while the Executive carries out these tasks. Non-voting members of council include the Faculty of Applied Science Student Senator, a representative from the Engineering Student Teams Council, a representative from the local chapter of Engineers Without Borders, a representative from the local chapter of Sigma Phi Delta, and a representative from the local chapter of Alpha Omega Epsilon.

Three members of the Executive (President, VP External and VP Internal) sit on the Alma Mater Society of UBC Student Council, representing engineering to the other undergraduate student societies at UBC.

Departments within Engineering at UBC

Traditions

Engineering Week

As the official Decree states "Hereafter, let it be known that the first week of the second month of all years of our Lord shall be deemed the Week of Engineering." Engineering week at UBC is organized by the VP Internal. During this week the EUS holds many events at which the Departments compete against each other for points. Opening Ceremonies and Skulk Night, traditionally, are the first events. The winner of E-Week is awarded the E-Week trophy (a wooden cairn with a golden E).

Stunts

Collecting details of past stunts is difficult because they are carried out by anonymous teams of students. The general knowledge of stunts includes hanging the frame of a Volkswagen Beetle off of bridges including the Golden Gate (2001)[http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/chronicle/archive/2001/02/05/MN60371.DTL "Beetle Overboard!"], San Francisco Chronicle, Feb 5, 2001 and the Lions Gate Bridge (2008)"Gun prank flops as car drop scores", Vancouver Province, Feb 5, 2008. Engineerings students also modified the lights on the Lions Gate Bridge to blink out in morse code "UBC Engineers Do it Again" and in 1992 they stole and later returned the Rose Bowl trophy from a trophy case at the University of Washington. Other stunts involve well known objects from around British Columbia. These include the borrowing of the speaker\'s chair from the BC Legislature"I prank, therefore I am", Macleans.ca, Nov 16, 2007 and the Mile-Zero sign from the Alaska Highway. More recently, the UBC Engineers were accused of hanging another VW Beetle shell off the Lions Gate Bridge as well as of vandalizing through paint and disablement the Nine O\'clock gun in Stanley Park. Although they have not denied the VW Shell hanging, their official statement on the topic insists that the Society was not involved in the vandalism of the Gun "Vandalized Nine O\'Clock Gun", Engineering Undergraduate Society Website Blog, Feb 5, 2008 "Gun prank flops as car drop scores", Vancouver Province, Feb 5, 2008.

The Cairn

The Cairn is a large concrete object that symbolizes the Engineering Undergraduate Societies contribution to student life on campus. Normally it is painted white with a red \'E\' for engineering, however it is common that many other faculties on campus paint it their own colors.

The Cairn painted with a large red 'E' for engineering

The Cairn painted with a large red \'E\' for engineering

The current Cairn as well as all predecessors exists not because it was installed in accordance with UBC\'s planning and building process. The engineering students simply put it there. Its existence is virtually guaranteed by its size, mass and incorporation into traditions.

Myths surrounding the cairn also include the cairn containing full propane tanks to discourage attacks by pneumatic drill and a Faculty of Forestry "Omar" in the bottom of the concrete base. It is said to be made of high strength steel fibre reinforced concrete ever since it was blown apart in the 1990\'s[citation needed].

Cheeze

The EUS is housed in a building known as The Cheeze. The Cheeze or Cheese Factory is a former cheese factory located at 2335 Engineering Road, UBC -- east of the Cairn. The building, built in 1919, is currently the oldest building on campus and has been modified for use by the EUS. Upgrades include the installation of pools for the purposes of tanking.

Godiva

Consistent with traditions at other Canadian universities the EUS paid a woman (often a professional stripper) to ride naked on an animal or a charriot through campus. The practice was called the Lady Godiva Ride in reference to Lady Godiva. The ride drew vocal and diverse protests in the UBC Senate Senate Debate over Godiva Rides, 1982, in the BC Legislature Hansard, AM August 22, 1980 Hansard, AM July 20, 1982, from the AMS, students and student groups. A central issue of the protests was gender. To counter that argument engineers paraded a naked man in 1982. In 1986 the EUS bowed to protests and replaced the annual March ride with a mock funeral procession. Only to stage a strip show in the Hebb Theatre. AMS History Notes, Mock Funeral for Godiva in 1986 An aspect of the tradition was the publication of photographs of the \'Godiva\' in the newspaper of the EUS aka \'Red Rag\' -- not to be confused with the current nEUSpaper. Much debate focused on censorship and the scope of a university’s duties to be inclusive. This practice continued throughout the 1980s in spite of the rise of modern feminism and ended on all Canadian campuses after the École Polytechnique massacre."Students scrutinize Lady Godiva ride", CBC Archives, Feb 4, 1990

Red jackets

A UBC Engineer jacket or cardigan is also often termed a \'Red\' or a \'Red Jacket\'. It is a red wool jacket with white details and has UBC ENGINEERS on the back. The Red Jacket is used to show pride in the faculty and usually has many patches sewn on that may or may not be earned by the wearer of the jacket. The tradition of wearing Engineering Reds goes back many years when all the faculties on campus wore their colours. Now the EUS and SUS (the Science Undergraduate Society) are the only faculties who sell jackets.

Engineer\'s Hymn

The hymn is generally sung by the UBC engineers in various events, although it is an international engineering song. The hymn itself is about 64 lines in total. Various versions of the hymn exist although they all share the same chorus. The following is the chorus of the hymn.

"We are, we are, we are, we are, we are the Engineers!

We can, we can, we can, we can, demolish forty beers.

Drink rum, drink rum, drink rum, drink rum, drink rum, and follow us,

For we don\'t give a damn for any old man who don\'t give a damn for us!"

Notes

See also

External links

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia


Advertise with Us | Search Marketing | Help | Suggest a Site | Privacy Policy
© 2008 www.avoo.com. All rights reserved.