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Fri, May 28, 2010

Aero-TV: Team America Rocketry Challenge -- How To Launch An Aerospace Career

America's Youth Prove They Can Deal With Aerospace Challenges

Under bright blue skies, teams of middle and high-school students from across the country proved to one and all that they, indeed, have the right stuff. With spectacular weather and some of the finest professional and amateur rocket researchers and hobbyists in the world to overlook the proceedings, the 2010 TARC has been judged an unqualified success and we quite agree. A team from Penn Manor High School in Millersville, PA, took first place at the Eighth Annual TARC, Saturday, earning the title of national champion.

The enthusiasm these talented students brought today was truly electric. The four-member team won the world’s largest rocket contest after spending months designing, building and test launching their model rocket. The Team America Rocketry Challenge kicked off last September with 669 teams from across the nation vying for a chance to compete among the top 100 qualifying teams at the finals held today outside of Washington, D.C.

The first place team logged the winning score of 26.32. Each point represents a deviation from altitude and time aloft targets, so the lower the score, the better. Marticville Middle School from Pequea, PA, took second place with a score of 30.65, while Bob Jones High School from Madison, Ala., placed third with a score of 31.02.

The first and second place teams belong to the same rocket club, Penn Manor Rocket Club, and were mentored by Brian Osmolinski. Osmolinski, a physics teacher and director of the rocket club, helped mentor four teams to the national finals. Members of the winning Penn Manor High School team are: Brendan Stoeckl, Jordan Franssen, Nate Bernhardt, and Tyler Funk, who are all 12th graders.

This year, student teams were challenged to design, build and launch a model rocket to an altitude of 825 feet with a flight time of 40-45 seconds, as well as return a raw egg payload to the ground unbroken without a parachute. The contest, sponsored by the Aerospace Industries Association and the National Association of Rocketry, is intended to spark students’ interest in aerospace careers and in science, technology, engineering and mathematics — or STEM — college degree programs. Almost 60 percent of the U.S. aerospace workforce is 45 or older and beginning to retire in large numbers, according to AIA statistics.

Lockheed Martin Corporation provides $5,000 scholarships to each of the top three teams, and the top 20 teams also will receive an invitation from NASA to participate in its Student Launch Initiative, an advanced rocketry program. Other sponsors include the Defense Department, the American Association of Physics Teachers and AIA member companies. AIA created the Team America Rocketry Challenge in 2003 to celebrate the centennial of flight and to generate interest in aerospace careers among young people. Since its inception, more than 50,000 youths have participated in the contest.

FMI: www.rocketcontest.org, www.aia-aerospace.org, www.aero-tv.net, www.youtube.com/aerotvnetwork, http://twitter.com/AeroNews

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