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High-schoolers finish solar car race in Pasadena, CA [2005.7.18]
Teams from Minnesota and Mississippi cruise to victory
source: AP
2005.7.18
PASADENA, Calif. - Student teams from Minnesota and Mississippi
cruised to victory Saturday in a high-school solar car race along
a 1,600-mile (2,560-kilometer) route through the Southwest.

The Saint Thomas Academy team from Mendota Heights, Minn., piloted
its unnamed vehicle more than 960 miles (1,530 kilometers) to win
the "classic" category for less efficient solar-powered
cars. It averaged 26 mph (42 kilometers per hour), hitting a top
speed of 51 mph (82 kilometers per hour).
Students from Houston Vocational Center in Houston, Miss., took
first in the competition for cars using newer technology. Its Sundancer
held up for about 953 miles (1,525 kilometers), traveling 29 mph
(46 kph) on average and as fast as 57 mph (91 kph).
The nine teams, including one from Mexico, crossed the finish line
at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena Saturday afternoon
after an eight-day race that began in Round Rock, Texas. Teams spent
up to 18 months designing and building the sun-fueled racers.
"If a group of high school kids can build a solar car and
drive it across the country, then the possibilities for our future
are endless," said St. Thomas Academy team member Nicholas
Deprey.
Los
Angeles County's Walnut
High School (photo at right) placed second in the classic
category after its Ra vehicle went more than 610 miles (975 kilometers).
The 10th annual Dell-Winston
School Solar Car Challenge was sponsored in part by computer
maker Dell Inc.
Another solar car race, pitting 20 university-led teams from the
United States and Canada against each other, began on Sunday in
Austin, Texas. Competitors in the North American Solar Challenge
are to drive 2,500 miles (4,000 kilometers) to Calgary, Alberta,
during a series of timed segments extending through July 27.
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