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YU News

Hackathon 2022

The 2022 YU Hackathon Logo   This year’s hackathon, the seventh iteration of this annual event, kicked off its coding sprint on Motzei Shabbat, April 9, in the Heights Lounge on the Wilf campus, with 17 of the original 35 participants making it to the finish line 24 hours later on Sunday, April 10. Phil Goldfeder, Senior Vice President of Public Affairs at Cross River, who generously sponsored the event, and the former director of the Office of Government Relations at Yeshiva University, gave an opening keynote about the importance of creative solutions, citing the work his organization did to help small businesses during COVID, and then with pizza and sweatshirts in hand and the unbridled enthusiasm of the focused, the teams began work on the challenge of the evening: creating something that would improve the state of health care in the world. The next day, the three judges selected a team from the Yeshiva University High School for Boys—seniors Noam Ben Simon, Raphi Spoerri, Tani Glaser, and Eitan Brown and sophomore Pinchas Rosenfeld—as the first place winners for creating “Don’t Worry in Vein,” an innovative machine that uses a camera to detect where a patient’s thickest vein is located and then inserts an IV in that vein. Second place went to Zachary Hamburger, Temira Koenig, Jennifer Peled, and Nathaniel Silverman for HospiPal, which connects hospitals in need with those that have excess equipment.  
Hackathon in Heights Lounge on WILF Campus