Photos by Shelly Hanks and Robert Hubner, WSU Photo Services
Owen said she knew her team had created something special when the judges gathered around the models. At one point, she said, there were about nine judges WSU faculty members as well as industry expertsasking questions.
Talking with faculty members was her favorite part of the experience, she said. “I loved seeing their expressions when they found out about the wind belt,” she said. “They were these really brilliant people and I got to explain something to them that they didn’t know about.”

“We are going to use the money as seed money for our next project,” Ralph Rise said, adding that the group already has ideas about developing a solar powered dragster.

In chemistry class, Lewis said, as long as you follow the correct procedure, your lab works out. In real life, he said, you don’t always get the results you are looking for.
Referring to the story about Thomas Edison discovering 85 ways not to make a light bulb before he got it right, Atkins said his group had discovered several ways not to make the algae they needed, but they weren’t giving up.

challenge.)Leaving for lunch, he pointed toward a project that replaced diesel fuel in a school bus with a vegetable oil-based alternative fuel. The group from Camas High School showed that emissions could be reduced by as much as 82 percent.
“This is fascinating for a bunch of 14-year-olds to come up with this,” he said. “Why doesn’t BP come up with this, at least in the short term?”
“Diesel Secret Energy: Bus Biodiesel” earned third place in the design challenge.
Event co-chair Grant Norton, associate dean in the WSU College of Engineering and Architecture, said the event exceeded his wildest expectations. “The thing that made it a success was the phenomenal projects by the students,” he said.
For a complete list of prize winners, go to https://wsunews.wsu.edu/pages/publications.asp?Action=Detail&PublicationID=12248&TypeID=1