Clemson’s Pirates raid international Microsoft competition

Kinect Challenge

Over 500 teams from around the world initially entered Microsoft’s Kinect Fun Labs Challenge, one of eight competitions held as part of the 10th annual Microsoft Imagine Cup, by writing a project proposal. Of those, 100 were asked to submit working software, a user’s manual, written paper and video
The top three teams were awarded a free trip to the final competition in Sydney, Australia. Of the 24 teams awarded first-, second- or third-place in the eight competitions, only two were from the U.S. And one of those teams was from Clemson.
School of Computing graduate students Patrick Dukes (left) and Austen Hayes, known competitively as the “Whiteboard Pirates,” took second place for their stroke rehabilitation application “Duck Duck Punch,” which uses Microsoft’s Kinect tracking system. A motion-sensing input device, Kinect enables users to control and interact with an Xbox 360 or a desktop computer without having to touch a game controller. The interface is accomplished with gestures and spoken commands.
“Duck Duck Punch” interjects a little fun into what sometimes can be a challenging rehabilitation regimen. Dukes and Hayes saw shortcomings with current stroke therapy that they could address with the Kinect.
“Since we wanted the program to be one that could actually be used, we consulted with stroke therapist Dr. Michelle Woodbury of the Medical University of South Carolina,” said Hayes. The goal was a cost-effective system that could be used at home. The pair came up with a design that helps with upper arm therapy.
“Several patients at the Medical University of South Carolina’s stroke center have tested the game, and the response has been quite positive,” Dukes said.
In 10 years, the Imagine Cup has grown to be a global competition focused on finding solutions to real-world problems. More than 1.4 million students have participated, with 358,000 students representing 183 countries and regions registering for the Imagine Cup 2012 competition.
“This international test underscores our students’ talents and capabilities, and says a great deal about the quality of our graduate programs in computer science,” said R. Larry Dooley, interim dean of Clemson’s College of Engineering and Science. “Patrick and Austen made their presence felt on a world stage.”

Bioengineering team designs device to stabilize chest tubes

Innovative chest tube anchoring device

Innovative chest tube anchoring device

A team of Clemson bioengineering stud ents partnered with Greenville Hospital System pediatric surgeons John Chandler and Robert Gates to develop an innovative chest tube anchoring device, AssureFit, as part of their senior design project with professor John DesJardins.
The result was more than just a passing grade or a course credit. They also won the annual National Collegiate Inventors and Innovators Alliance (NCIIA) BMEStart undergraduate design competition, which came with a $10,000 award.
The device is used to prevent surgical drains from dislodging following procedures, saving time and medical expense. The device also allows for greater patient mobility and comfort. According to Gates, it “solves a costly and critical health care issue that can currently lead to serious surgical complications.”
The team has filed a provisional patent through Clemson’s Office of Technology Transfer, and hopes to have the device licensed for manufacture by a biomedical device company. The design partnership between the Clemson bioengineering department and the Greenville Hospital System was initiated in 2011.
“This collaboration will accelerate the development of novel surgical tools that can make a significant impact on the care and treatment of our patients,” said Dr. Eugene Michael Langan III, chair of the department of surgery at the hospital.

Campus chapter completes 20th house on Bowman Field

Habitat House

Habitat House


Thanks to Clemson students, th ere are about 100 people now living in affordable housing. Clemson’s campus chapter of Habitat for Humanity completed its 20th house since 1997 on Bowman Field during Homecoming Weekend. Around 400 students combined their efforts to provide a home for a local family. Another hundred students completed work on the house once it was moved to its location.
In addition to the houses built on Bowman, the group has built five additional houses as part of a “blitz build” in the winter of 2001, as well as one built for the Martin Luther King Jr. celebration and three with local high school students.

Flowers to serve on Black Male Achievement Research Collaborative

Lamont Flowers

Lamont Flowers


Lamont A. Flowers, executive director of the Charles H. Houston Center for the Study of the Black Experience in Education and distinguished professor in the Eugene T. Moore School of Education, has been invited to join the Black Male Achievement Research Collaborative (BMARC). The collaborative, in partnership with the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation, is dedicated to producing and disseminating accurate and quality data on the record, status and future direction of black males.
Flowers will serve for two years, writing and editing a research-practice-policy report on black male achievement, contributing to a special focus of the Journal of Negro Education and producing a range of publications that target policymakers, academic journals and popular media.

Clemson students unveil Deep Orange 3 at SEMA 2012

Deep Orange

Deep Orange


Want to know wh at kind of a car college students would design if they had the chance? Now you can.
Deep Orange 3, the third-generation Deep Orange vehicle prototype designed and engineered by automotive engineering students, was unveiled at the 2012 Specialty Equipment Market Association (SEMA) show in Las Vegas, with more than 120,000 attendees and 2,000 exhibitors.
Working at the Clemson University International Center for Automotive Research (CU-ICAR), the students have free rein to push the boundaries of conventional design and engineering. They designed the vehicle in partnership with Mazda North American Operations and the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, Calif.
Deep Orange 3 features a unique TwinEngine hybrid powertrain that automatically chooses front-, rear- or all-wheel-drive; a load-bearing structure based on innovative sheet-folding technology patented by Industrial Origami; and a groundbreaking 3+3 seating configuration in sports car architecture all packaged in an exterior design created by students at the Art Center College of Design.
Paul Venhovens, BMW Endowed Chair in automotive systems integration, who leads the Deep Orange program, said the latest design not only provides solutions to the efficiency-vs.-sportiness debate, but also delivers driving pleasure, practicality and flexibility in a setting where everyone enjoys the ride. The vehicle accelerates from zero to 60 mph in 7.5 seconds with a top speed of 125 mph, achieving 42 city and 49 highway miles per gallon.
Deep Orange runs the course of two academic years in parallel with Clemson’s two-year master’s program in automotive engineering. The program provides students with experience in financial and market analysis, vehicle design, development, prototyping and production planning, and gives them an opportunity to work with automotive industry partners to develop ideas.
According to Robert Davis, senior vice president of U.S. Operations for Mazda North American Operations and a Clemson alumnus, the experience students gain from Deep Orange makes them very attractive to industry. “These engineers will design and build the cars we drive tomorrow,” he said.

Students rewarded for design Astronaut teams up and creativity

Starboard Sandwiches

Starboard Sandwiches

The challenge:

Design a functional and creative package for a quick-serve chain kids’ meal and address how the plans could be altered to serve an additional purpose.
That’s what Clemson’s packaging science team started with. What they ended up with was “Starboard Sandwiches,” a colorful boat-shaped container that holds the drink in the center and the sandwich in the stern. The side of carrots sits on top of the sandwich; condiments, a straw and napkin fit in an opening at the front. A removable insert includes interesting facts and a coloring sheet. Best of all, the boat actually floats.
They walked away from the Paperboard Packaging Alliance’s eighth annual Student Design Challenge in Chicago with the third-place prize (and $1,000) for their design and creativity. Professor Andrew Hurley was the adviser for the team. This year, a record number of students from the U.S. and Canada participated in the challenge, with more than 200 students from 13 leading packaging and graphic design programs.

Gilbert honored as Presidential Endowed Chair

Juan Gilbert

Juan Gilbert

Professor Juan Gilbert has been named the first Presidential Endowed Chair in Human-Centered Computing. The Presidential Endowed Chair recognizes the accomplishments and dedication of current faculty at Clemson University.
“The inaugural Presidential Endowed Chair selection was particularly important because it sets the standard for all other presidential endowed chairs,” President Barker said. “We believe Juan Gilbert sets these standards at a very high level in his teaching, research, mentoring and service.” Gilbert is a professor and chair of the Human-Centered Computing Division in the School of Computing. At the forefront of his research is what Gilbert calls “innovative solutions to real-world problems.” His work addresses societal issues and integrates people, technology, policy, culture and more.
“This is a huge honor for the School of Computing and for me personally,” Gilbert said. “The funds I receive from the Endowed Chair will enable me to purchase equipment, fund students, travel, some faculty and/or post-doc salaries and more. We can do cutting-edge research at the moment of conception, and that gives us an edge.”
Researchers in Gilbert’s division gained national and international attention for multiple solutions-based technologies, including Prime III, an electronic, accessible voting system. This year, Prime III researchers put the system to use in official and mock elections around the country. Gilbert could tout many career accomplishments, but he is most proud of his students. About 10 percent of the nation’s African-American computer science faculty and Ph.D. students are at Clemson.
Provost Dori Helms said, “Endowed chair faculty stimulate the academic environment of the entire campus. They initiate, encourage and support the development of ideas and innovations that improve both social and economic well being of citizens in our state, region, country and even our world.”

Read more about Juan Gilbert’s current research at clemson.edu/media-relations/4629/clemson-university-graduate-students-solution-may-solve-voter-wait-time-issue/.

Debate team begins season with a sweep

Debate team

Debate team

The debate team brought home multiple awards at the National Educational Debate Association tournament in Anderson, Ind. The Judge Harold E. Achor tournament, which marks the beginning of the season, was hosted by Anderson University.
Clemson took six teams to the tournament; three teams participated in the open competition, while three competed in novice. Clemson was awarded the overall team sweepstakes and also had the first-place teams and speakers in both the novice and varsity competitions.
Lindsey C. Dixon, director of forensics and lecturer in communications studies, coaches the debate team.

Always in the details

Louis Henry
I have always felt blessed and unabashedly proud that my academic career brought me to Clemson University — and doubly so that my greatest influence there was Louis Henry. He was, after all, a native son: Born in 1931 to parents who were employed by the University, he would graduate from Clemson in 1953 and some two decades later be named the first Alumni Master Teacher. I’d known nothing of the award until I picked up a 1974 Homecoming program a few years ago on eBay and started thumbing through in a fit of nostalgia. There he was, featured in a two-page article, younger than I’d ever seen him, but much the same man I’d come to know during my college years in the 1980s.
“Yes, that was quite an honor,” he chuckled when I called down a few days later, then promptly shifted conversation in another direction, a classic Henry maneuver. Of all the subjects on which he’d freely converse — and there were many — he was least inclined to discuss himself, always more interested in the person who’d taken up a seat in his office, living room, wherever.
[pullquote align=’left’ font=’oswald’ color=’#685C53′]Louis Henry was a gifted educator, and a good deal more, in part due to his belief that teachers did their greatest work outside of the classroom.[/pullquote] It was a mantra he’d adopted early on in his career and practiced daily in his first-floor Strode Tower office. Like so many other Clemson students, I spent my share of time there. First as an undergraduate, then a graduate student and finally, for two years, as an instructor, I took any and all questions — many of them grammar related — and mooched coffee that might have been poured from a crank case. I always felt welcome there, its book-lined shelves punctuated with photographs, the manual typewriter and potted plants. It was a comfortable, easy-going space that seemed in those days Louis Henry’s natural domain.
Equal parts inspiration and common sense, that’s how I remember him and that’s what I took from two of the most valuable lessons I ever received. The first he seemed to embody: Find your passion and pursue it. His work with students over the years spoke to the depth of his commitment. The same might be said of his friendships, now that I think about it, since there was scarcely ever a conversation that didn’t involve the latest on half a dozen other folks of our shared acquaintance. A lot of those lives crossed paths through Louis Henry. Then there was lesson number two, a tough one in this high-tech, fast-paced age that holds everything at the fingertips except time. “Life is in the details,” he said, and said it over and over in the way he lived.
For the past 22 years, our conversations were split between the telephone and the occasional visit in his living room out in Central. The last decade or so saw his health compromised and his activities pared down so that eventually he had to give up his Clemson baseball tickets. Years ago we’d discovered a mutual passion for baseball in general, Clemson baseball in particular, and this near obsession became a recurring theme.
Dr. Henry’s birthday was in February, the same month the Tigers fire off the first pitch, appropriately enough. He knew all the players by name and position, could detail their respective strengths, and preferred “watching games on the radio.” And his trip out to the College World Series in 1996 stayed always fresh in his mind. Indelible, really.
“You have to go. That’s a trip you just have to make,” he kept saying until there was no missing the opportunity and I found myself on a plane out to Omaha with my 9-year-old son in 2010. Life in the details, I remember thinking then, as my traveling companion, who carries the Henry middle name, settled back and tried to rein in his excitement. Always in the details … though it may be years before we fully grasp their meaning.
There are two memorial funds for Dr. Henry set up with the Clemson Foundation: the Dr. Louis Henry ’53 Endowment, supporting The Tiger newspaper, and the Clemson Baseball/Louis Henry Memorial supporting the baseball team.
Clif Collins ’84, M ’88, largely due to the influence of Dr. Henry, is now teaching college English in Laurel, Md.

Young businesswoman on the rise: Raven C. Magwood ’12

Three D’s, one young woman and a long list of accomplishments and ambitions. Recent graduate Raven Magwood believes that dedication, determination and discipline are the sources to her success. She graduated from Clemson at the age of 19, but that’s just one of her many accomplishments.
By the time she was 12, Magwood had a national gymnastics title, was a published author and had started high school. At 16, she followed in her parents’ footsteps to Clemson, planning on a career in medicine. A conversation with her mother altered that career path.
“She asked me if someone would pay me to do anything, what would I do? I told her that I would speak and write,” Magwood said. With her parents’ support, she changed her major to communication studies.
By this time, her motivational speaking was gaining a lot of attention. Halfway through college, she made a bold decision to take time off to host her own television show, “The Raven Magwood Show,” which aired Saturday mornings on My 40. She interviewed celebrities that included Alveda King (Martin Luther King Jr.’s niece), actress Porscha Coleman and former Clemson football player Stanley Hunter. After a year and a half, Magwood decided it was time to go back and finish her degree.
Her final year at Clemson, she attended classes during the week and spent most of her weekends traveling the country to speak and promote her third and latest book, The 7 Practices of Exceptional Student Athletes. Magwood graduated in December, finishing college in just four semesters. And now she has plunged into her full-blown career of speaking and writing.
Her advice to others? “It is key to set goals; when times get tough for me, my goals show me what I’m working so hard for and where I want to be.”