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| FEATURE |
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PAPER ENGINEERING STUDENTS
SAIL TO VICTORY!
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| Georgia Tech student Philip Timm testing the team's
sailboard in preparation for the Energy Challenge
2002 competition. |
Paper sailboats? “Why
not?,” said engineering students around the country
as they began researching, designing, building, testing
and re-testing windsurfing sailboards made almost entirely
from paper materials for the Energy Challenge 2002 competition
last spring. Sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy
and the Institute of Paper Science and Technology (IPST),
the event featured a windsurfing competition with a first-place
prize of $15,000 to the team that built the fastest and
most energy-efficient sailboard. Designing it was only
part of the challenge: the teams also had to race their
sailboards across Lake Lanier in Georgia without sinking
them!
Seven teams competed for the prize. The
winning team from Georgia Tech, composed of mechanical
engineering students Gonzalo Stabile (team captain),
Philip Timm, and Yianni Ellis, finished ahead of second
and third-place teams from Miami University of Ohio
and the University of Maine. Click
here to find out how the team created the winning sailboard.
Now engineering students all over the
country are getting ready for Energy Challenge 2003
this spring: an all-paper hang glider competition!
For more information
on paper boats and the Energy Challenge 2002 Paper Sailboard
Competition:
Tech
MEs Sail to $15,000 Victory
Georgia
Tech Engineering Students to Windsurf Sailboard Made
From Paper in Race for $15,000
Energy
Challenge 2003 – Paper Hang Glider Competition
Georgia
Tech Students Ride the Waves on Paper Sailboard, Win
Energy Challenge
Energy
Challenge 2002 – Powerpoint Presentation
Georgia Tech Team Sails to Win $15,000 in ‘Paper
Board’ Contest – Atlanta Journal-Constitution
04-07-02,
page C-1
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| Kelley Mandracchia, TAPPI scholarship winner from
NCSU. |
Meet Kelley Mandracchia,
future paper scientist
We hope you will encourage students interested in math
and science to consider a career in the pulp and paper
industry. The industry is a vital part of our nation’s
economy, ranking as the fifth largest manufacturing
industry in the country, and a world leader in recycling.
Students in many paper science and engineering programs
take advantage of paid co-op programs, summer internships,
scholarships, and nearly 100 percent job placement with
salaries frequently starting at $50,000 per year for
undergraduates. Career choices range from manufacturing,
process and design engineering, chemical engineering,
project engineering, research and product development,
forestry, technical sales and marketing, and many more.
Many people may know little, if anything,
about paper manufacturing. We asked Kelley Mandracchia,
a senior at North Carolina State University and winner
of numerous TAPPI scholarships, what attracted her to
the study of paper, and why she is making it her career.
Click
here to read what Kelley said.

Happy New Year! We in TAPPI's
Public Outreach Center would like to wish all our subscribers
a happy, healthy and successful New Year. We hope that
you enjoy our e-newsletter. If you missed any of our
issues, or are a recent subscriber, be sure to check
our archives.
Be sure to try your hand at our riddle
from the 15th century, and send in your answers
to outreach@tappi.org.
The answer to this riddle will appear in our March/April
issue.
WHAT AM I?
I was alive in the forest,
I was cut by the cruel ax,
In life I was silent,
In death I sweetly sing.
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| ACTIVITIES |
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Paper Valentine Heart Basket
Make a valentine heart basket for Valentine’s
Day! This woven paper craft opens into a small basket
for adding candy and small treats for family and friends.
This simple version starts with only two sections to
weave, but you can add more to make a larger, more intricate
design. In contrast to the “over and under”
style of traditional weaving, this basket uses the “through
and around” method. If your woven heart doesn’t
make a basket shape, try again or you can always use
it as a hanging decoration.
Supplies You Will Need:
- one sheet each of red and white
paper –
construction paper or card stock work well
- pencil
- scissors
- glue
- ribbon or strip of paper for
handle
- treats for filling basket
Here’s how:
- Fold both sheets of paper in half end
to end and line up the folded edges of the two sheets
of paper. Now cut the sheets in half along the width.
You will be using just one of the white halves and
one of the red halves to make your heart.
- Draw a curved line at the top of the
unfolded end of the white paper. This will be the
top of the heart. Cut along the line through both
thicknesses. Place the white piece on top of the red
piece, trace the edge, and cut.
- Cut a slit in the white paper from
the center of the folded edge toward the curved edge,
cutting almost to the edge. Repeat with red piece.
- With your pencil, lightly mark the
strips on the red paper with X and Y; on the white
paper, mark 1
and 2.
- Hold the red and white papers at an
angle with each other.
- Weave the first red strip (marked X)
with the white strips: X goes through 2, then 1 goes
through X.
- Weave the second red strip (marked
Y) with the white strips: 2 goes through Y, then Y
goes through 1.
- Pull the papers slightly to tighten
the weave.
- Make sure the basket opens for the
treats.
- Glue the loose edges of the heart together,
being sure not to close up the opening. Then attach
a handle by gluing the ribbon to the top edges of
the heart.
- Carefully erase numbers and letters
from outside of basket.
- Let dry and fill with treats! Happy
Valentine’s Day!
Adapted from:
Woven
Valentine Heart Basket
Woven
Heart
Heart
Basket
Woven Heart – Denmark - Papercrafts Around the
World, by Phyllis and Noel Fiarotta, Sterling Publishing
Co., Inc., New York
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| NEWS |
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Be sure to mark your calendars for National
Engineers Week, February 16-22, 2003. The
New Faces of Engineering is a new program that
encourages students, especially women and underrepresented
minorities, to consider engineering as a career. It
also spotlights the outstanding contributions of America’s
youngest professional engineers.
With the goal of expanding the ranks of
future engineers, National Engineers Week features a
number of creative programs for students. Zoom
into Engineering teams volunteer engineers with
elementary school students, and Introduce
a Girl to Engineering Day has given millions of
girls a chance to experience engineering firsthand.
The
Future City Competition, now in its 11th year, challenges
middle school students to design and build the cities
of tomorrow. This innovative program has reached more
than 30,000 middle school students from 950 schools,
and is one of the nation’s largest and most successful
engineering outreach programs. Students, working with
teachers and volunteer engineers, build computer and
3-D scale model cities, and then defend their designs
before a panel of engineer judges at the competition.
The
Sightseers Guide to Engineering interactive map
project, created by the National Society of Professional
Engineers, celebrates engineering sites and landmarks
in all 50 states. This is an outstanding tool to identify
field trips and enrich your travels and family vacations.
In addition, the Discover
Engineering Online outreach program provides materials
and programs to both students and engineers who visit
classrooms.
For more information, visit the National
Engineers Week web site at: www.eweek.org.
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| QUESTION
OF THE MONTH |
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| Woodcut by Jost Amman [1568] is the earliest
picture of papermaking. (from Papermaking:
the history and technique of an ancient craft,
Dard Hunter, NY, Knopf, 1943) |
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| In the modern paper mill, each roll of paper
can weigh several tons. (Photo courtesy of
Wisconsin Paper Council) |
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Q: I’m a student
and my exploratory class is studying careers. I have
to do the paper industry. It has to be two pages long,
and working to make paper doesn’t sound like much
fun, pretty boring really. Can you give me some info
for my report?
A: You would be amazed
at how much fun papermakers have! Perhaps, having read
about the life of papermakers in the 1700s, you have
formed an erroneous perception of papermaking. Indeed,
in the early days when paper was made entirely by hand,
papermakers worked in dark, damp and gloomy mills, and
you could always spot an old papermaker in the village.
His beefy arms and hands were always red and very muscular
from continually being in and out of hot water, and
his back was stooped from years of bending and leaning
over the dipping vat of water. Working twelve hours
a day under such rugged conditions required exceptional
strength and a robust constitution!
You will be relieved to know that today,
the 700 pounds of paper consumed each year by every
person in America is not produced this way! Even though
the basic paper "formula" has remained the
same, papermaking is now a modern, automated, and highly
technical industry employing highly skilled men and
women.
Be sure to check out Paper U's When
I Grow Up section for the Paper U paper industry
career brochure as well as the engineering students'
stories featured in this issue.
For information on the early days of papermaking, see
Papermaking: The History and Technique of an Ancient
Craft, by Dard Hunter, NY, Alfred A. Knopf, 1943.
Here are some other links for more information
about careers in the paper industry:
We hope that this information is useful
to you. Good luck with your project!
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| ENGINEER
JOKES |
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You Might Be an Engineer if...
- your favorite James Bond character
is "Q".
- your family hasn't the foggiest
idea what you do at work.
- in college you thought Spring
Break was metal fatigue failure.
- you have modified your can-opener
to be microprocessor driven.
- you think the real heroes of
"Apollo 13" were the mission controllers.
- you take a cruise so you can
go on a personal tour of the engine room.
- you have owned a calculator
with no equal key and know what RPN stands for.
- you make four sets of drawings
(with seven revisions) before making a bird bath.
- you have trouble writing anything
unless the paper has horizontal and vertical lines.
- your ideal evening consists
of fast-forwarding through the latest sci-fi movie
looking for technical inaccuracies.
- you think the value of a book
is directly proportionate to the number of tables,
charts and graphs it contains.
Q. How many first
year engineering students does it take to change a light
bulb?
A. None. That's a second year subject.
Q.
How many civil engineers does it take
to change a light bulb?
A. Two. One
to do it and one to steady the chandelier.
Q. How
many electrical engineers does it take to change a light
bulb?
A. None.
They simply redefine darkness as the industry standard.
Q. How
many computer engineers does it take to change a light
bulb?
A. "Why
bother? The socket will be obsolete in six months anyway."
Q. How
many mechanical engineers does it take to change a light
bulb?
A. Five.
One to decide which way the bulb ought to turn, one
to calculate the force required, one to design a tool
with which to turn the bulb, one to design a comfortable
- but functional - hand grip, and one to use all this
equipment.
From Profession Jokes – Engineers
- http://www.workjoke.com/projoke27.htm |

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