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Local student earns bid To ACM World Finals
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TitleLocal student earns bid To ACM World Finals
TranscriptSouth Dakota Tech News 501 E. Saint Joseph Street Rapid City, SD 57701-3995 Phone: (605) 394-6082/2554 Fax: (605) 394-6177 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE December 3, 2003 Contact: Steve Buchholz, Public Information Manager, 394-6082 Local Student Earns Bid To ACM World Finals Pete Gasper of Sidney, Mont., is a member of a South Dakota Tech team that has been invited to compete in the World Finals of the American Computing Machinery Programming Contest, scheduled for March 2004 in Prague, Czech Republic. Gasper is majoring in Computer Science at South Dakota Tech, an engineering and science university in Rapid City, S.D. The invite came after three-person team finished fifth in the regional ACM competition in November. Two other Tech teams finished 14th and 26th against the 178 other teams. In the regional competition, the students answered such problems as "Determine the number of stars that can be inscribed in a circle with a given number of points on the circumference, " "Find the minimum number of steps required to convert a number to a palindrome, " and "Determine the frequencies in a signal from a series of observations." The teams had one computer and five hours to solve nine challenging problems. The Tech teams logged countless hours of hard work in the months leading up to the event. The programming contest requires many skills. All team members must be able to write programs in C++ computer language, and each team needs members with algorithm development skills, strong mathematical ability, and at least one person who is very skilled at debugging the programs the team writes to solve each problem. The Tech team will compete against 51 other teams in the World Finals. Thousands of teams tried to qualify in regional competitions. At the Finals, Tech will join 21 American universities such as Cornell, MIT, Harvard, and Stanford. #30#South Dakota Tech News 501 E. Saint Joseph Street Rapid City, SD 57701-3995 Phone: (605) 394-6082/2554 Fax: (605) 394-6177 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE December 3, 2003 Contact: Steve Buchholz, Public Information Manager, 394-6082 Local Student Earns Bid To ACM World Finals Jonathan Wolf of Moorcroft, Wyo., is a member of a South Dakota Tech team that has been invited to compete in the World Finals of the American Computing Machinery Programming Contest, scheduled for March 2004 in Prague, Czech Republic. Wolf is majoring in Computer Science at South Dakota Tech, an engineering and science university in Rapid City, S.D. The invite came after three-person team finished fifth in the regional ACM competition in November. Two other Tech teams finished 14th and 26th against the 178 other teams. In the regional competition, the students answered such problems as "Determine the number of stars that can be inscribed in a circle with a given number of points on the circumference, " "Find the minimum number of steps required to convert a number to a palindrome, " and "Determine the frequencies in a signal from a series of observations." The teams had one computer and five hours to solve nine challenging problems. The Tech teams logged countless hours of hard work in the months leading up to the event. The programming contest requires many skills. All team members must be able to write programs in C++ computer language, and each team needs members with algorithm development skills, strong mathematical ability, and at least one person who is very skilled at debugging the programs the team writes to solve each problem. The Tech team will compete against 51 other teams in the World Finals. Thousands of teams tried to qualify in regional competitions. At the Finals, Tech will join 21 American universities such as Cornell, MIT, Harvard, and Stanford. #30#South Dakota Tech News 501 E. Saint Joseph Street Rapid City, SD 57701-3995 Phone: (605) 394-6082/2554 Fax: (605) 394-6177 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE December 3, 2003 Contact: Steve Buchholz, Public Information Manager, 394-6082 Local Student Earns Bid To ACM World Finals Wyatt Zochert of Webster is a member of a South Dakota Tech team that has been invited to compete in the World Finals of the American Computing Machinery Programming Contest, scheduled for March 2004 in Prague, Czech Republic. Zochert is majoring in Computer Science at South Dakota Tech, an engineering and science university in Rapid City, S.D. The invite came after three-person team finished fifth in the regional ACM competition in November. Two other Tech teams finished 14th and 26th against the 178 other teams. In the regional competition, the students answered such problems as "Determine the number of stars that can be inscribed in a circle with a given number of points on the circumference, ��� "Find the minimum number of steps required to convert a number to a palindrome, " and "Determine the frequencies in a signal from a series of observations." The teams had one computer and five hours to solve nine challenging problems. The Tech teams logged countless hours of hard work in the months leading up to the event. The programming contest requires many skills. All team members must be able to write programs in C++ computer language, and each team needs members with algorithm development skills, strong mathematical ability, and at least one person who is very skilled at debugging the programs the team writes to solve each problem. The Tech team will compete against 51 other teams in the World Finals. Thousands of teams tried to qualify in regional competitions. At the Finals, Tech will join 21 American universities such as Cornell, MIT, Harvard, and Stanford. #30#
CreatorSouth Dakota School of Mines and Technology. University Relations;
SubjectAssociation for Computing Machinery;
Local SubjectACM Contest
Digital PublisherSouth Dakota School of Mines and Technology. Devereaux Library
ContributorsBuchholz, Steve;
Date2003-12-03
TypeText
Formatapplication/pdf
Languageeng
RelationIs part of Office of University Relations SDSM&T News Collection
RightsThe work from which this copy was made did not include a formal copyright notice. This work may be protected by U. S. copyright law (Title 17, United States Code), which governs reproduction, distribution, public display, and other uses of protected works. Uses may be allowed with permission from the copyright holder, if the copyright on the work has expired, or if the use is fair use or within another legal exemption. The user of this work is responsible for compliance with the law.
Submitting InstitutionDevereaux Library. South Dakota School of Mines and Technology.
Date Digital2009
CONTENTdm number6102
CONTENTdm file name7082.pdf
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