Robotics team prepares to compete in Maine

FALLS VILLAGE — The Housatonic Valley Regional High School (HVRHS) robotics team has been meeting every day after school since January, preparing its entry for this year’s FIRST robotics competition. This is the schools 13th year participating in the competition, which was designed to spark student interest in engineering. FIRST stands for “For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology.”It was founded in 1989 by Dean Kamen (who invented the Segway people transporter) and physicist Woodie Flowers, a professor emeritus of mechanical engineering at MIT.On the first Saturday in January, the FIRST organization releases details of “the game” for the new year. Teams then get to work creating little remote controlled machines that can perform various tasks, from the basic (rolling, stopping, turning) to the unusual (shooting balls into a hoop, throwing Frisbees). The teams have six weeks to design and build their robots. During that period, the Housatonic team (which has 12 members this year) meets every weeknight from 5 to 9 p.m. and on Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 5 pm.In 2004 and again in 2008 the Housatonic team won first place in the FIRST Connecticut Regional competitions. Those robots will soon be on display at the recently completed Mahoney-Hewat Science and Technology Center on the high school campus.The team has also traveled numerous times to the final, international competition. This year, the team will only compete in the Maine Pine Tree regional competition in Lewiston, Maine, next month. Sufficient funds could not be raised to transport the robot and pay airfare for all the team members and the team’s adult mentors and chaperones.This year’s FIRST game is called Ultimate Ascent. As always, teams meet up at the competitions and form three-team alliances. Two alliances then face off against each other. Teams have different strengths and weaknesses when it comes to the various tasks called for in the game. Part of the job of FIRST participants is to learn to quickly find partners and negotiate their alliances. This year’s winning alliances should have at least one robot that can throw a Frisbee-type disc and one that can scale a tower. For some parts of the competition, the robots follow preset computer programs; for others, they are controlled by humans on the sidelines by remote control. The HVRHS robotics team’s head mentor is Becton-Dickinson engineer Andy Brockway, who volunteers his time to work with the team.Cindy Fuller, who is the secretary in the high school main office, is another of the team’s mentors; the third mentor is David Van Deusen, an automotive restoration specialist from North Canaan (and father of a former robotics team member, Derek Van Deusen, who is now a Lakeville Journal employee).Brockway said in an interview that the team “is very fortunate. We have our own dedicated space on the second floor of the high school garage on the north end of the campus.” Most teams have to share space. Having a dedicated space means projects can be left out on worktables while they are in progress. The team also has storage space for older robots. That means, Van Deusen said, the team can “cannibalize needed parts from older robots to use in new ones — although that’s not always feasible, as robotics technology changes constantly.”Brockway also noted that, “For the first time, this year we have a student programmer who devotes all his volunteer time to programming our robots. In the past this has been a challenge for all of us. Having one student devote all his time to programming is proving extremely valuable for the team.”To learn more about the robotics team, call Cindy Fuller at 860-824-5123.For more information on FIRST, go to www.usfirst.org.

Latest News

A new life for Barrington Hall

A new life for Barrington Hall

Dan Baker, left, and Daniel Latzman at Barrington Hall in Great Barrington.

Provided

Barrington Hall in Great Barrington has hosted generations of weddings, proms and community gatherings. When Dan Baker and Daniel Latzman took over the venue last summer, they stepped into that history with a plan not just to preserve it, but to reshape how the space serves the community today.

Barrington Hall is designed for gathering, for shared experience, for the simple act of being together. At a time when connection is often filtered through screens and distraction, their vision is grounded in something simple and increasingly rare: real human connection.

Keep ReadingShow less

Gail Rothschild’s threads of time

Gail Rothschild’s threads of time

Gail Rothschild with her painting “Dead Sea Linen III (73 x 58 inches, 2024, acrylic on canvas.

Natalia Zukerman

There is a moment, looking at a painting by Gail Rothschild, when you realize you are not looking at a painting so much as a map of time. Threads become brushstrokes; fragments become fields of color; something once held in the hand becomes something you stand in front of, both still and in a constant process of changing.

“Textiles connect people,” Rothschild said. “Textiles are something that we’re all intimately involved with, but we take it for granted.”

Keep ReadingShow less

Sherman Players celebrate a century of community theater

Sherman Players celebrate a century of community theater

Cast of “Laughter on the 23rd Floor” from left to right. Tara Vega, Steve Zerilli, Bob Cady (Standing) Seated at the table: Andrew Blanchard, Jon Barker, Colin McLoone, Chris Bird, Rebecca Annalise, Adam Battlestein

Provided

For a century, the Sherman Players have turned a former 19th-century church into a stage where neighbors become castmates, volunteers power productions and community is the main attraction. The company marks its 100th season with a lineup that blends classic works, new writing and homegrown talent.

New England has a long history of community theater and its role in strengthening civic life. The Sherman Players remain a vital example, mounting intimate, noncommercial productions that draw on local participation and speak to the current cultural moment.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

Reimagining opera for a new generation

Reimagining opera for a new generation

Stage director Geoffrey Larson signs autographs for some of the kids after a family performance.

Provided

For those curious about opera but unsure where to begin, the Mahaiwe Theater in Great Barrington will offer an accessible entry point with “Once Upon an Opera,” a free, family-friendly program on Sunday, April 12, at 2 p.m. The event is designed for opera newcomers and aficionados alike and will include selections from some of opera’s most beloved works.

Luca Antonucci, artistic coordinator, assistant conductor and chorus master for the Berkshire Opera Festival, said the idea first materialized three years ago.

Keep ReadingShow less
BSO charts future amid leadership transition and financial strain

Aerial view of The Shed at Tanglewood in Lenox, Massachusetts.

Provided

The Boston Symphony Orchestra is outlining its path forward following the announcement that music director Andris Nelsons will step down after the 2027 Tanglewood season, closing a 13-year tenure.

In a letter to supporters, the BSO’s Board of Trustees acknowledged that the news has been difficult for many in its community, while emphasizing gratitude for Nelsons’ leadership and plans to celebrate his final season.

Keep ReadingShow less
A tradition of lamb for Easter and Passover

Roasted lamb

Provided

Preparing lamb for the observance of Easter is a long-standing tradition in many cultures, symbolizing new life and purity. For Christians, Easter marks the end of Lenten fasting, allowing for a celebratory feast. A popular choice is roast lamb, often prepared with rosemary, garlic or lemon. It is traditional to serve mint sauce or mint jelly at the table.

The Hebrew Bible suggests that the last plague God inflicted on the Egyptians, to secure the Israelites’ release from slavery, was to kill the firstborn son in every Egyptian home. To differentiate the Israelites from the Egyptians, God instructed them to mark their doorposts with the blood of a lamb. Today, Jews, Christians and Muslims generally believe that God would have known who was Israelite and who was Egyptian without such a sign, but views of God’s omnipotence in the Abrahamic faiths have evolved over the millennia.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.