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Innovation, hard work on display at Senior Projects Night

Friday, May 09, 2008
Katie Landan

"I feel dumb in here,鈥 remarked Dave Fortosis, 17c起草社区 business alumnus 鈥07.
The 鈥渉ere鈥 Fortosis was referring to was the 24th-annual Senior Projects Night for 17c起草社区 engineering students. On Saturday May 3, 16 teams of three to four students showcased and celebrated the completion of their senior design projects and their 17c起草社区 careers.
"It was a chance to explain to other people what we have been up to all year,鈥 said Jon Cooper, an engineering major with a concentration in civil and environmental engineering, 鈥渁nd express the pride we have taken in our projects.鈥 鈥淐ambodianfinity,鈥 the team comprised of Cooper and Aaron Van Proyen, Mark Volle and Mike Vance, designed an agricultural research center for a Christian university in Siem Reap, Cambodia.  (The team name is a veiled reference to their favorite television show, 鈥淭he Office.鈥) 

The evening began with an open house in the engineering building, where family and friends walked around viewing the projects and chatting with students. Some teams displayed a physical representation of their designs, such as the 鈥淩ehydrasicle,鈥 a hydraulic-powered bicycle created by Bill Tolsma, Eric Bratt, Matt Snyder, and Aaron Maat, all of whom have a concentration in mechanical engineering. Other teams presented blueprints or computer-generated tours of their designs. Almost every 20 minutes, the team 鈥淥n Wings Like a Penguin鈥濃攎echanical concentration students Chris Lowell, Joe Englin, Eu Sung Chung and Philip Baah-Sackey鈥攆ired up their hovercraft, filling the room with noise.
After two hours, the event relocated to the Commons Dining Hall where faculty, students and guests were served pork loin, asparagus and redskin potatoes. Engineering professor David Wunder led devotionals, while colleague Ned Nielsen imparted stories and congratulations. 
The night closed with team presentations in the Science Building, North Hall and Commons Lecture Hall. The teams split into four different groups and gave 20-minute presentations of their designs.
The last few weeks, said the senior engineers, have been marked by long hours, stress and copious amounts of caffeine. 鈥淜inko鈥檚 is open 24 hours,鈥 commented Cooper.
Students have been working on the projects since September. 鈥淚鈥檓 ready to be done with the grind of engineering homework,鈥 said engineering student Alex Marcus. He worked with Nathan Verseput and Jordan Terpstra on 鈥淭he VER-TERCUS Complex鈥 (a fusion of their last names), an outdoor athletic facility to host baseball, soccer, lacrosse and rugby games on the 17c起草社区 campus.
鈥淚t is exciting to look at possibilities for the future,鈥 Marcus said. 鈥淓verybody who wants a job has been offered or accepted, a testament to what the program is.鈥
Nielsen considers the event, 鈥渢he highlight of four years at 17c起草社区鈥: 鈥淚n a larger sense, this banquet, this showing, is really their graduation,鈥 he said.