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College of DuPage has a meteorology program that offers students credit for storm chasing. [39] It was the first program in the country to offer storm chasing classes to undergraduates in 1989. [40] Students in the department participate in community skywarn programs as advance spotters.
Moller began chasing as a graduate student of OU and was a participant in the first organized scientific storm chasing projects, such as the NSSL/OU Tornado Intercept Project, in the early 1970s. [6] He was a forecaster for Project VORTEX in 1994–1995.
David K. Hoadley (born 1938) is an American pioneer of storm chasing and the first widely recognized storm chaser, as well as the founder and former editor of Storm Track magazine. He is also a sketch artist and photographer.
The tornado was extremely well-documented by storm chasers. A video of the tornado posted to YouTube by storm chaser Scott Peake gained over 1.7 million views, [7] and another video of the tornado during its lifetime posted by the Storm Chasing Channel went viral. [8] Storm chaser Ben Holcomb also took a video of the tornado from the beginning ...
College of DuPage alumni (1 C, 6 P) F. DuPage Chaparrals football (2 C, 1 P) Pages in category "College of DuPage" The following 3 pages are in this category, out of ...
Mike Theiss (born April 22, 1978) is a National Geographic photographer, on air talent, video producer, professional storm chaser. He is the CEO/Founder of Ultimate Chase Inc. that specializes in extreme nature photography.
This page documents all tornadoes confirmed by various weather forecast offices of the National Weather Service in the United States in July and August 2023. Tornado counts are considered preliminary until final publication in the database of the National Centers for Environmental Information. [1]
The tape, which was later broadcast in a KFOR feature report, revealed included footage of Payne and Dillard getting too close to the F5 tornado, attempting to get out of the storm's way (this was one of at least two instances while chasing the tornadoes that Payne and Dillard had close calls nearly ending up in the tornado's path).