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GHS Team Prepares to Defend Regional Title in FIRST
Competition
April 2, 2004
Greenville Herald Banner
By Mark
Moseley
Herald Banner Staff
Since
Jan. 10, 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, the Greenville
Robowranglers (Team 148) are once again headed for
the finish line, also known as the FIRST
competition.
On
Monday, 14 volunteer engineers and 24 GHS students
crated up the latest endeavor, "Lone Star" for the
2003 robotics competition season.
Team 148
will be going head-to-head with 44 other teams from
across the nation, as well as Mexico and Ecuador, at
regional competition this weekend in Houston as the
entry from Greenville returns to defend its title in
both machine and Chairman's Award divisions.
The
group left Greenville on Wednesday with competition
going on today and Saturday at the Reliant Arena.
FIRST Frenzy national competition will be April
15-17 at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta.
In 2001,
the team won the machine division, and in 2002 the
team was named the Chairman's Award winner.
Last year, Team 148 brought home two machine
division awards: GM Industrial Design and
Xerox Creativity.
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
12th entry for the FIRST competition.
FIRST,
an acronym "For Inspiration and Recognition of
Science and Technology," is in its 13th year.
Greenville High School and L-3 Communications have
been a partner team for the past 11 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 2004 robot, must complete many tasks,
including gathering playground-sized balls and
moving mobile goals.
Volunteering all their time in this program, L-3
engineers have mentored students throughout 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
situation.
"This
competition always creates a unique opportunity to
not only represent our school, but our community and
our state," Coach Vanessa Pope said. "After 10
years of Competition, Miss (Terri) Galloway and I
are very pleased with this year's team of students
and how well they have risen to the challenge of the
competition."
Engineers working with the project this year are Tom
Cloutier, James Collier, Adam Davies, Chris Follett,
John Hodapp, Steve Lindo, David Maxwell, Steve
Maxwell, Mike Owens, Adam Reppond, Ricky Torrance,
Ray Upp, Mike Waggoner, Casey Welch, and Monty
Wineinger.
Two
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.
Students
have build a scale model of an amusement park for
the North Texas Children's Museum and have created a
Web site:
http://www.robowranglers.com/. This Web
site was created by junior team member Matt Mahrer.
Coaches
for the team are GHS teachers Pope and Galloway.
High school members are seniors; Cameron Thatcher,
Mark Moseley, Ryan Jenkins, Lydia Shook, Cory
Griffiths, Zack Corley, Justin Duncan and Casey
Collier, and Daniel Webb, juniors; Brian Wight, Beth
McClellen, Sarah Wright and Matt Mahrer, Ryan
Parker, and Drew Roberts, sophomores; Jason Maxwell,
Kevin Morris, Ashley Owens, Michael Risley, Phillip
Stromberg, and Megan Wineinger, and freshmen; Nathan
Follett, Justin Tharp, and Clayton Torrance. |