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NU Formula Racing revs up for first fully electric car

By BEATRICE VILLAFLOR the daily northwestern @beatricedvilla

Northwestern Formula Racing is gearing up to compete with its first electric car, NFR 23, in the Society of Automotive Engineers International’s Formula SAE competition in June.

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This is the first year the club will use a fully electric engine, according to NU Formula Racing Project Manager and McCormick junior Sarah Yung.

Discussions on whether to adopt an electric engine for the competition began at the end of the last school year following the turnover of NU Formula Racing’s executive board, according to Yung.

She said the organization switched to an electric car to align with sustainable engineering practices and better prepare its members for the industry.

“You can see the trend of electrification happening in industry all over the world,” Yung said. “Companies like Tesla and Lucid Motors, (among other) major car companies, are switching to electric.”

McCormick freshman Kellen Lai writes code for NU Formula Racing’s software sub-team, which constructs programs for the vehicle’s electronics such as display monitors.

Lai said his work at NU Formula Racing is often more similar to real-world manufacturing processes than the theoretical knowledge he gains from his courses.

“It’s just different (from) anything else I’ve done before,” Lai said. “Making something that’s not for a class … you can see something (come from) the code.”

Not all members of the group supported the switch to electric. Some members believed NU Formula Racing still had the chance to improve its combustion engines.

Yung attributed the discontent among some

Pritzker to award Judge Miguel Ángel Gálvez the Global Jurist of the Year

Content warning: This article contains mentions of violence.

Guatemalan judge Miguel Ángel Gálvez will members to the decade-long history and prior knowledge the team has in creating combustion engines.

“Switching to electric (cars) means that we don’t have that base of resources to rely on, and that can be very scary,” Yung said. She added that most first-year electric teams do not pass technical inspections, which means that electric teams can usually enter the competition for presentation and brand but cannot participate in the actual races.

Despite the risk of failure, McCormick senior Jacob Silacci, Chief Mechanical Engineer for NU Formula Racing, said there was commitment and passion behind the transition to electric.

“We don’t want to promote that mindset — to steer away from something just because you think you’re going to fail at it.” Silacci said.

Silacci said the group is currently manufacturing the car’s suspension systems and is aiming to conduct the first test drive in late February or early March.

Yung credited part of the club’s success to varied perspectives within the group. Four of the nine executive board members of Formula are women, a ratio Yung said is one of the best in the nation.

“It makes me really proud of this team — how we’ve managed to encourage such diversity and growth in a field (where) that isn’t always the case,” she said.

Silacci said the close personal relationships between Formula’s members allow the team to produce high-quality cars every year.

Currently in his third year as a member, Silacci said mentoring underclassmen is how he continues the organization’s mission of education.

“We don’t strive necessarily to be the best car out there,” Silacci said. “But we strive to do the best job we can to teach our members.” beatricevillaflor2026@u.northwestern.edu receive the eighth Global Jurist of the Year Award from Pritzker School of Law’s Center for International Human Rights, Northwestern announced Thursday.

The University is recognizing Gálvez for his history of protecting human rights and defending the rule of law in Guatemala, according to an NU press release.

The award honors sitting judges committed to human rights or international criminal justice.

“Judge Gálvez’s courage and integrity epitomizes what it means to be a global jurist,” Pritzker Profs. Juliet Sorensen and Ibrahim Gassama said in the press release. Gassama is also the interim director of the center.

Past award recipients include Canadian judge Rosalie Abella and Kenyan judge Mumbi Ngugi.

Gálvez held perpetrators of genocide and murder — including dictators, presidents and oligarchs — legally accountable during the Guatemalan Civil War. Government forces killed thousands of people during the war, including those from indigenous Maya communities.

Gálvez stepped down as a judge in November after more than two decades on the bench, subsequently going into exile due to a push from Guatemalan president Alejandro Giammattei.

Gálvez will accept the award at Pritzker’s campus on March 1.

— Kaavya Butaney

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