The event took place virtually this year and featured a slew of both virtual and recorded events.
The show’s fourth-place performer was Grace Kave, who represented Penn State Crossfit with a medley of songs as the first act of the evening.
Hailey Burbage represented JULmanji: Dancer Relations Committee and took third place.
Eclipse’s Daniel Tracht and Jake Maloney took second place and will also perform at THON Weekend. Last year, Tracht and Maloney were part of a trio of members from Eclipse
Later, Tapestry Dance Company took the stage following Kave’s performance and danced to “Ice Ice Baby” by Vanilla Ice. The five performers all danced from individual locations but were edited together.
Groshek receives distinguished fellow award dailyunion.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dailyunion.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Geetika Tandon is excited by the promises of technology modernization. In her role as senior director at Booz Allen Hamilton, she helps deliver large-scale technology implementation programs in Cloud, DevOps and IT Modernization. While exploring those topics in her monthly column, Geetika also looks beyond the business value technology modernization provides to find lessons on diversity and inclusion from Agile software development andDevOps.
An active member of IEEE Software Technology Group, IEEE Women in Leadership Forum and the Society of Women Engineers, Geetika is an in-demand presenter and an advocate for advancing the role of women and girls in STEM.
The Immortal Soul of an Old Machine acm.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from acm.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Nuclear Engineering Students Spotlight December 15, 2020
Meet Kaitlyn, a Nuclear Engineering Student
Kaitlyn is a senior Nuclear Engineering student at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. She studies Nuclear Engineering and Radiological Sciences.
Can you tell us a bit about Nuclear Engineering and what it’s like to study?
My major offers many different paths of study. For my path, I study atoms: everything is made up of atoms, which are so small that you can’t even see them. When you break apart certain types of atoms, energy is released. In my classes, I am learning about how to make a device called a nuclear reactor. Inside the reactor, we break apart these atoms and use the energy to produce electricity, which powers your lights you turn on at home. The energy from these atoms may even be used to power rockets or moon colonies one day!