Club Membership

The Cube Club currently does not have formal notion of "membership". Anyone may participate in club events, and anybody who is interested in club activities might be considered a member.
If you are interested in the club, you should join the mailing list and consider attending club meetings.

Club Meetings

The Stanford Cube Club is meeting weekly during the Spring Quarter of 2009. Anyone is welcome to attend: Stop by, cube, and learn from/teach other members! If you can't solve a cube, come to learn how to solve the cube!
The meetings are held at the same time and place as the Chess Club and the Go Club. Thus, you can come and participate in any/all of them.

Meeting Time:  Every Sunday, 3PM (while classes are in session)
Location:  Wooden Benches, outside East Tresidder

(If we're not outside at the benches, we may have moved into the Tresidder building due to weather.)

Mailing List

The main form of communication for the club is the mailing list: https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/stanfordcubeclub
If you're interested in what the club is up to, you should join it! (Message volume is currently very light.)

Competitions

The Stanford Cube Club is involved in running official Rubik's Cube competitions at Stanford. See the Competitions Page.
Cube Club members are encouraged to attend competitions and compete. They are also welcome to help out by judging competitors.

Some Stanford students also attend various local competitions (mainly those at UC Berkeley). If you're interested in attending these, subscribe to the club mailing list and watch for announcements.

Miscellaneous

Activities Fairs

In order to promote cubing at Stanford, the Cube Club hosts a table at Stanford's two annual Activities Fairs: one during Admit Weekend, and one during NSO.

Splash

The club president has traditionally taught high school students how to solve a cube, at the two annual Splash sessions.

Course

Lucas Garron is teaching student-initiated course on speedcubing (Math78SI; Speedcubing: History, Theory, and Practice) in the Fall quarter of 2009.

Buying speedcubes

In order to allow people to buy speedcubes easily, Stanford graduate student Leyan Lo has bought a large order of DIY kits to resell.
If you're interested in buying DIY speedcubes form him ($10 each), contact him at leyanlo [at stanford.edu]