[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 82 (Monday, June 4, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3681-S3682]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RECOGNIZING THE MACOMB ACADEMY OF ARTS & SCIENCES
Mr. LEVIN. Madam President, a few weeks ago I met a remarkable group
of young people. They call themselves the Fighting Pi, and they are the
FIRST Robotics Competition team from the Macomb Academy of Arts &
Sciences in Armada, MI.
FIRST is an annual, international robotics competition for high
school students. Teams have 6 weeks to design, build, and test robots
to compete in a game, which changes every year. For this year, teams
competed in the ``Rebound Rumble,'' which required them to design
robots capable of shooting small basketballs into baskets as high as 8
feet off the ground.
This competition demands many things of its teams. They must
demonstrate the ability to plan and work
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together, to follow a budget, and to meet demanding timelines. They
must master complex technical fields such as computer-assisted
drafting, electrical engineering, radio control systems, pneumatic
systems, and sensors and signals. So the intellectual demands are
great.
But just as great is the demand for vision for the foresight to look
at a stack of diagrams and a pile of electronic parts and see what it
can all become.
Thirty-six teams from Michigan traveled in April to St. Louis for the
national championship, the Fighting Pi among them. Representing
Michigan were three teams from Bloomfield Hills, two from Detroit, two
from Ann Arbor, two from Grandville, two from Pontiac, and teams from
Allen Park, Auburn Hills, Berkley, Birmingham, Clarkston, Fremont,
Holland, Hopkins, Lansing, Milford, Niles, North Oakland County,
Northville, Novi, Okemos, Ortonville, Richmond, Rochester Hills,
Sterling Heights, Temperance, Waterford, and Zeeland. All of them have
reason to be proud of their accomplishments.
But I want to especially thank the Fighting Pi, whose members and
adult leaders were kind enough to spend an hour with me a few days ago.
At the Michigan State Championships, the Fighting Pi had won the
prestigious State Engineering Inspiration Award. I was deeply impressed
by the vision, enthusiasm, and brainpower of the Fighting Pi during my
visit. They demonstrated to me their robot design, and they let me
drive a robot around a little. They helped me understand the technical
aspects of their work and the intense planning and preparation and
staying power required.
In addition to their robotics responsibilities, team members
participate in public service. Team members volunteer regularly at
Ronald McDonald House, where they help the families of ill or injured
children. They participate in local adopt-a-road and adopt-a-trail
cleanup programs. And they have raised money for St. Jude's Children's
Research Hospital and Toys for Tots among other worthy charities. They
are, in their schoolwork, their robotics work, and their volunteer
work, exceptional young people.
Americans spend a lot of time worrying about the next generation. We
worry over our dinner tables, in our conversations at work, and in this
very Chamber. There are plenty of reasons to worry. But we should not
lose sight of the reasons for optimism. Every day, all over this great
country, young people are accomplishing extraordinary things. They are
studying hard, learning new skills, and even building sophisticated
robots. They are preparing to write the next chapter in the American
story, and I have no doubt it will be as stirring as the story so far.
So let me extend my congratulations and my gratitude to the students
of the Fighting Pi, and the students who helped them on their way: team
members Michael Graham, Melissa Mikolowski, Nicholas Fitzsimons, Eric
Bytner, Trevor Goolsby, Alysa Brice, Zeke Fetty, Michael Scaglione,
Steven Scaglione, Stephen Kline, Kurt Wieber, Andrew Graham, Amanda
Fulghum, Michael Patrick, Laurel Payne, Collin Tobey, Riley Yaxley,
Eric Tobey, Jack Sabelhaus, Andrew Binkowski, Lauren Grobbel, Alex
Kesek, Sabrina Tibaudo, Ron Kyllonen, Vince Ragap, Rachel Kosek and
Krystal Diel; and adults Craig Roys, Tom Line, Richard Wahl, Craig
Tobey, Shawn Graham, Judy Tobey, Michael Mroz, Andrea Mroz, Paul
Gianferrara, John Antilla, Jacob Caporuscio, and Eric Kosek.
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