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In 2005, the NWA Weather Analysis and Forecasting (WAF) Committee initiated this addition to the NWA Awards Program. At each Annual Meeting, students (undergraduate and graduate) make known their wishes to be in competition for these awards when they submit their abstracts. Members of the WAF Committee review each presentation and recommend their choices of the best to the NWA President for approval. The President awards the students with a congratulatory letter, a cash stipend and a complimentary NWA membership for the following year. In 2008, the awards were increased in number and cash stipends were also increased.
BEST STUDENT PRESENTATIONS at the 33rd NWA ANNUAL MEETINGJohn Gagan, chair of the WAF Committee announced the winners of the best student presentations at the Annual Awards Luncheon at the NWA Annual Meeting in Louisville, Kentucky, 11-16 October 2008.
| Best Undergraduate Student Oral Presentation: Chauncy Schultz, University of North Dakota, for A Reanalysis of the Fargo, North Dakota F5 Tornado (20 June 1957) Using Today's Technology | ![]() |
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Best Undergraduate Student Poster Presentation: Elizabeth Thompson, Valparaiso University Indiana, for Analysis of the 4 July 2006 Washington, DC Severe Thunderstorm: Overview with Synoptic and Mesoscale Assessment. Her co-authors were Sarah Rogowski, Steven Zubrick and Steve Listemaa of the NOAA/NWS Forecast Office in Sterling, VA. |
| Second Place Undergraduate Student Poster Presentation: Jayson Gosselin, Saint Louis University, for Compositing Analysis of Heavy Snow Events Within the Saint Louis, Missouri, County Warning Area.
His co-authors were Chad Gravelle and Charles E. Graves of Saint Louis
University, Saint Louis, Missouri, and Fred Glass of the NOAA/NWS
Forecast Office in Saint Charles, Missouri. |
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Third Place Undergraduate Student Poster Presentation: Kimberly Hoogewind, Central Michigan University, for Accuracy of a Local WRF-ARW Model Run for the 22-24 December 2007 Cyclone Using the New Model Evaluation Tools Verification Package. Her co-author was Martin Baxter, Central Michigan University, Mount Pleasant, Michigan. |
| Best Graduate Student Oral Presentation: Elise Johnson, University of Alabama-Huntsville, for Lightning Behavior and its Dependence on Storm Kinematic and Precipitation Processes for an EF-4 Tornado Producing Supercell on 6 February 2008. |
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Best Graduate Student Poster Presentation: Emily Berndt, Saint Louis University, for WRF-ARW Simulations of a Mesoscale Snowband Event in Des Moines Iowa. Her co-author was Charles E. Graves of Saint Louis University, Saint Louis, Missouri. |
| Second Place Graduate Student Poster Presentation: David Keeney, Mississippi State University, for Relationship Between Vegetation Boundaries and Severe Local Storms in the Delta Region of Mississippi. His co-author was Michael Brown of Mississippi State University. |
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Third Place Graduate Student Poster Presentation: Christina Crowe, University of Alabama-Huntsville, for Mesoscale Analysis of the Jackson County Storm: February 5-6, 2008.. |