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GHS students, L-3
engineers preparing for 'FIRST' event
February 13, 2003
Greenville Herald Banner
Since Jan. 4, L-3
engineers and Greenville High School students have been in what amounts
to an engineering sprint.
With only six weeks to
design and build a robot sophisticated enough to pick up storage bins
and fend off the opposition, once again the Greenville Robowranglers are
headed for the finish line, also known as the FIRST competition.
On Monday, 12 volunteer
engineers and 20 GHS students will crate up the latest endeavor for the
2003 robotics competition season.
Going head-to-head with
36 other teams from across the nation at regional competition, the Lone
Star entry from Greenville will return to defend its title as regional
winner in both machine and Chairman's Award divisions.
In 2001, the team won the
machine division, and in 2002 the team was named the Chairman's Award
winner. Each entry entitled the team to move on to the national
championship competition at Epcot in Florida.
Fifty tons of robotics
parts were distributed to more than 800 teams for the building phase of
the competition season. Team Greenville's entry will be the 11th entry
for the FIRST competition.
Recently named in an
inaugural team, the GHS Robotics team will be eligible to always enter
not only the regional events, but also the national competition. This
honor of recognition from FIRST was given to teams sustaining membership
and winning traditions since the inception of the FIRST contest.
This year's team will
compete in the 2003 Lone Star Regional Meet April 3-5 at the Reliant
Arena in Houston and in the national competition, Stack Attack, April
10-12, also in Houston.
FIRST, an acronym (For
Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology), is in its 12th
year. Greenville High School and L-3 Communications have been a partner
team for the past 10 competition seasons. L-3 engineers, community
volunteer engineers and students partner to create a 130-pound robot
able to complete multiple tasks in the six weeks' time.
Lone Star, the 2003
robot, must complete the task of defending a king of the hill ramp and
moving storage containers measuring 24-by-14-by-13.5 inches.
Volunteering all their time in this program, L-3 engineers have mentored
students through the brainstorming, prototyping, design and creation.
Students work at L-3 each evening to build the robot from a kit of parts
supplied by FIRST. The students begin to see math and science concepts
of the classroom take shape into a real world creation.
Engineers working with
the project this year are James Collier, Monty Wineinger, Steve Maxwell,
Ray Upp, Mike Waggoner, Adam Davies, Casey Welch, Frankie Yau, Adam
Reppond, Tom Cloutier, Mike Owens, John Hodapp, Steve Lindo, Ricky
Torrance, David Maxwell and Brad Marcum. Several members of this
engineering team were once GHS Robotics Team members and have now
returned to L-3 as employees.
Greenville High School
students have been busy in the community with not only fundraising
activities, but also education in the elementary classrooms. Tabletop
robotics programs have been presented to several business organizations
and even creating a Web site:
http://www.koyote.com/users/vpope. This Web site was created by
sophomore team member Matt Mahrer.
Coaches for the team are
GHS teachers Vanessa Pope and Terri Galloway. High school members are
Matt Sikes and Brandon Torrance, seniors; Cameron Thatcher, Mark
Moseley, Ryan Jenkins, Joel Powell, Seth Garcia, Lydia Shook, Cory
Griffiths, Rayna Sherman, Justin Duncan and Casey Collier, juniors; Beth
McClellen, Sarah Wright and Matt Mahrer, sophomores; and Jason Maxwell,
Megan Wineinger, Ashley Owens and Kevin Morris, freshmen. |