The home stay program is part of a broader crackdown on Uyghurs and ethnic minorities in Xinjiang that the US and other nations have called "genocide," an accusation that China angrily rejects.
By Syndicated Content
May 7, 2021 | 5:50 PM
TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (WTWO/WAWV) Mechanical engineering students at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology created a project to help recycle rainwater. It can then be used at a community garden.
Three students worked on the project for re-THink Inc. in Terre Haute.
A platform collects the rainwater and puts into a storage tank.
The water can be used on plants at the garden located in the 2300 block of Liberty Avenue.
One of the students, Andrew Hesse, says it can collect 50 gallons of water for every inch of rain that falls.
The project allows seniors to take what they learned in college and create real-world uses.
Rose-Hulman students help local non-profit in a big way
Last year, reTHINK Inc. in Terre Haute had trouble keeping produce from their community gardens fresh. Now, with the help of a few Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology students, they have a solution to that problem.
Posted: May 6, 2021 6:49 AM
Updated: May 6, 2021 6:51 AM
Posted By: Anissa Claiborne
Last year, reTHINK Inc. in Terre Haute had trouble keeping produce from their community gardens fresh.
Now, with the help of a few Rose Hulman Institute of Technology students, they have a solution to that problem.
Rose-Hulman mechanical engineering students, Austin Strozier, Michael Gassen, Aaron Kirklin, Elizabeth Foesch, and Skyler Ferguson have been working to build an outdoor refrigerator for reTHINK Inc. since September 2020.
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