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14-Year-Old High School Senior From Colorado Wins Top Honors in the Intel Science Talent Search.


WASHINGTON, D.C.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--March 8, 1999--

Youngest Winner in the 58-Year History of the Program;

Second Female Winner in 6 Years; Runners Up from Maryland,

Illinois, Iowa, California, New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, Massachusetts and Virginia

Science Service and Intel Corporation (company) Intel Corporation - A US microelectronics manufacturer. They produced the Intel 4004, Intel 8080, Intel 8086, Intel 80186, Intel 80286, Intel 80386, Intel 486 and Pentium microprocessor families as well as many other integrated circuits and personal computer networking  tonight awarded Natalia Toro Toro may refer to:
  • Denominación de Origen Toro, the Spanish wine region
  • Toró, the nickname of Rafael Ferreira Francisco, Brazilian football (soccer) player
, a 14-year old high school senior at Fairview High School Fairview High School can refer to:

In Canada:
  • Fairview High School, in Fairview, Alberta
In the United States:
  • Fairview High School, in Cullman, Alabama
  • Fairview High School, in Boulder, Colorado
  • Fairview High School, in Ashland, Kentucky
 in Boulder, Colo., top honors in the Intel Science Talent Search The Intel Science Talent Search (Intel STS) is a prestigious research-based science competition in the United States primarily for high school students. The Intel STS is administered by the Science Service, which began the competition in 1942 with Westinghouse; for many years, the , America's oldest and most prestigious pre-college science scholarship competition.

Natalia, who entered a physics project "Independent Analysis of Evidence for Oscillations oscillations See Cortical oscillations.  between mu and tau in the SuperKamiokande Atmospheric Neutrino neutrino (ntrē`nō) [Ital.,=little neutral (particle)], elementary particle with no electric charge and a very small mass emitted during the decay of certain other particles.  Data," is the youngest student in the 58-year history of the program to win the top prize, a college scholarship of $50,000. She is the second female in 6 years to win top honors.

For her winning project, Natalia Toro studied oscillations of neutrinos, the most elusive of subatomic particles. Such work may help explain mysterious shortages in neutrino counts and have a fundamental impact on high-energy physics. She took her first college-level mathematics course in the sixth grade and went on to perform her research at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Massachusetts Institute of Technology, at Cambridge; coeducational; chartered 1861, opened 1865 in Boston, moved 1916. It has long been recognized as an outstanding technological institute and its Sloan School of Management has notable programs in business,  as part of the Research Science Institute in the summer of 1998. Natalia enjoys tennis and swimming and tutoring middle school students. She is fluent in Spanish and hopes to attend MIT MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology  to earn a doctorate in physics.

David Moore David Moore is a common English name and may refer to:
  • David Moore (botanist) (1808-1879), English botanist
  • David Moore (Colonel), American Civil War soldier
  • David Moore (footballer), English footballer and team manager
, 18, a senior at Montgomery Blair High School Montgomery Blair High School (most often simply known as Blair) is a public high school located in Silver Spring in unincorporated Montgomery County, Maryland.  in Silver Spring, Md., was awarded the second place scholarship of $40,000 for his physics project titled "Quantum Calculations to Determine Electrical Properties for Molecular Electronic Rectifying Diodes." David used detailed quantum modeling techniques to determine the electrical properties of a newly proposed design for molecular electronic switches. David is an Eagle Scout Ea·gle Scout  
n.
One who has achieved the highest rank in the Boy Scouts.

Noun 1. Eagle Scout - a Boy Scout who has earned many merit badges
Boy Scout - a boy who is a member of the Boy Scouts
 and a member of the track and cross-country team. He is the network/system administrator at his high school, scored a perfect combined score of 1600 on his SAT tests and plans to attend Duke University to study electrical engineering.

Keith Winstein, 17, a senior at Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy The Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy, or IMSA, is a three-year residential public high school located in Aurora, Illinois, with an enrollment of approximately 640 students.  (IMSA IMSA Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy
IMSA International Motor Sports Association
IMSA Insurance Marketplace Standards Association
IMSA International Municipal Signal Association
IMSA Illinois Mini Storage Association
IMSA Institute of Marine Safety Auditors
) in Aurora, Ill. was awarded the third place scholarship of $30,000 for his computer science project titled "Lexical Steganography Through Adaptive Modulation of the Word Choice Hash." His research focused on steganography, techniques for embedding information in computerized data without making any perceptible change to the original material. Keith is co-founder of the IMSA Advanced Computing Association, a member of the American Computer Science League ACSL is the American Computer Science League, an international computer science competition among more than 200 schools. Each round consists of two parts: a written section and a programming section.  and the Sound F/X F/X Effects , a jazz choir. He plans to attend MIT.

"These students represent the brightest young scientists in the country," said Dr. Craig Barrett, Intel's president and chief executive officer. "Our challenge and goal for the Intel Science Talent Search is to reward and recognize students who excel and achieve; to support teachers who go the extra mile to excite and involve their students; and to help parents stay involved in their children's education." -0-
     Completing the list of the top ten winners:

--   Fourth Place, a $20,000 scholarship to Carol Anne Fassbinder, 18,
     of Valley Community High School in Elgin, Iowa for her biology
     project, "Analysis of Monoterpenoids for Control of the Varroa
     jacobsoni." Carol uncovered a new control for Varroa jacobsoni, a
     parasitic mite that is crippling beekeeping in the state of Iowa,
     where her family operates honeybee colonies. She has begun the
     patent process for her new parasite control. Carol is student
     council president, plays the bassoon, and plans to enter Iowa
     State University to study entomology.

--   Fifth Place, a $20,000 scholarship to Rio Gabriel Bennin, 17, a
     home-schooled senior from Berkeley, Calif. who presented a
     mathematics project, "N-Dimensional Equalizers and Pythagorean
     Quadrilaterals," which obtains a method for dividing a geometric
     figure, such as a triangle, into two equal parts. Rio is a
     USTA-ranked tennis player who plays steel drums and enjoys swing
     dancing. Rio earned a perfect 1600 on his SAT tests and was a
     grand prize-winner for the past two years in the USAMTS, a
     national mathematics competition. He plans to attend Harvard or
     Princeton.

--   Sixth Place, a $20,000 scholarship to Lisa Beth Schwartz, 17, of
     Roslyn High School in Roslyn Heights, N.Y., whose mathematics
     project explored patterns in two-way sequences of positive
     integers. First in her class, Lisa is a vocalist and pianist who
     enjoys tennis and golf. She is editor-in-chief of the literary
     magazine and student newspaper and hopes to attend Harvard.

--   Seventh Place, a $15,000 scholarship to Scott Alexander Fruhan, a
     17-year-old student at Roxbury Latin School in West Roxbury,
     Mass., who presented a biology study on T cells in multiple
     sclerosis patients. Mononuclear T cells control the body's immune
     response. Scott plays varsity soccer and tennis, sings in the
     glee club and a select a cappella group, and edits the school
     newspaper. He hopes to enter Harvard's pre-med program.

--   Eighth Place, a $15,000 scholarship to Kurt Elliott Mitman, 16, a
     senior at Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology
     in Alexandria, Va. Kurt presented an astrophysics study on the
     highly energetic astronomical phenomena known as gamma ray bursts
     (GRBs) at the Naval Research Laboratory. Co-author of a paper on
     this subject submitted for publication in the Astrophysical
     Journal, Kurt is on the varsity crew team, is a champion player
     in the bridge club and has been an award winner on the Model UN
     team. He hopes to study physics at Stanford.

--   Ninth Place, a $15,000 scholarship to Diana Barnard
     Townsend-Butterworth, a 17-year-old from the Chapin School in New
     York, N.Y. She entered a biology project that investigated
     Alzheimer's disease, which contributed to her grandmother's
     death, in order to "do something so that no other granddaughter
     would have a grandmother who forgot her name." Diana focused on
     the effects on human brain cells of cadmium, a potentially lethal
     heavy metal found in cigarettes and many household items. Diana
     has danced with the New York City Ballet at Lincoln Center and
     plays on the New York City Women's Field Hockey Team. She plans
     to study neuroscience and psychology at Harvard.

--   Tenth Place, a $15,000 scholarship to Alexander David
     Wissner-Gross, 17, a senior at Great Neck High School in Great
     Neck, N.Y. Alexander combined physics, chemistry, computers and
     engineering for his study of ionized C60 molecules, called
     fullerenes or "buckeyballs," as a nanoscopic, granular medium.
     Alex is editor-in-chief of the science journal, and on the junior
     varsity fencing team. A singer, he has performed with the New
     York City Opera. He hopes to continue his studies at MIT.


-0-

Cullen Blake, 17, from Bethlehem Central High School Bethlehem Central High School is a high school in Delmar, NY, just south of Albany. The school serves students in grades 9-12 from the towns of Bethlehem and New Scotland.  in Delmar, N.Y. and David Harden, 17, from South Miami Senior High School in Miami, Fla. were chosen as first and second alternates respectively in case one or two of the top ten winners cannot accept their scholarship award. The other Finalists each receive a $3,000 college scholarship.

In addition, Cullen Blake was chosen by his fellow Finalists to receive the first Glenn T. Seaborg Noun 1. Glenn T. Seaborg - United States chemist who was one of the discoverers of plutonium (1912-1999)
Glenn Theodore Seaborg, Seaborg
 Award for his commitment to scientific cooperation and communication. Nobel laureate Glenn Seaborg was a judge of this contest for four decades.

"The Intel Science Talent Search is about finding better ways to do things, continuously asking why and, in the process, moving out the frontiers of knowledge," said Dr. Dudley Herschbach, Science Service's chairman of the board and a Nobel laureate in chemistry. "Within these forty young scientists lies the next great inventions and scientific achievements that will influence us in the 21st century."

Finalists were judged on their individual research reports for their research ability, scientific originality and creative thinking. All Intel Science Talent Search Finalists were reviewed and judged by top scientists from a variety of disciplines. The judging team was led by chair J. Richard Gott John Richard Gott III is a professor of astrophysical sciences at Princeton University. He is especially well known for developing and advocating two cosmological theories with the flavor of science fiction: Time travel, and the Doomsday argument. , Ph.D., professor of astrophysical as·tro·phys·ics  
n. (used with a sing. verb)
The branch of astronomy that deals with the physics of stellar phenomena.



as
 sciences at Princeton University and second place Science Talent Search winner in 1965.

Intel Science Talent Search Background

Participation in the Science Talent Search has often served as a precursor to impressive accomplishments in the field of science. Statistics show that 95 percent of former STS (Synchronous Transport Signal) The electrical equivalent of the SONET optical signal. In SDH, the European counterpart of SONET, STS is known as STM (Synchronous Transport Module).  winners have pursued a branch of science as their major field of study. More than 70 percent have gone on to earn Ph.D.s or M.D.s. Five of the former Finalists have won Nobel Prizes and two have earned Fields Medals, the highest mathematics award. Other Finalists have earned honors, including Sloan Research Fellowships and MacArthur Foundation Fellowships. Many have been elected to the National Academy of Sciences or the National Academy of Engineering.

Intel assumed sponsorship of this "national treasure" in 1998 from Westinghouse Electric Corporation. While safeguarding the traditions and heritage that have made the Science Talent Search such a prestigious competition, Intel is working closely with Science Service, the administrator of the STS since its inception, to increase the number of high school students and teachers involved, increase public awareness of the program, and infuse in·fuse
v.
1. To steep or soak without boiling in order to extract soluble elements or active principles.

2. To introduce a solution into the body through a vein for therapeutic purposes.
 computer and Internet technology into the program as it moves into the 21st century.

Science Service is a nonprofit organization Nonprofit Organization

An association that is given tax-free status. Donations to a non-profit organization are often tax deductible as well.

Notes:
Examples of non-profit organizations are charities, hospitals and schools.
 based in Washington, D.C., which for 75 years has promoted public understanding and appreciation of science through publications such as Science News, outreach and science education programs, including the Intel Science Talent Search and the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair The Intel International Science and Engineering Fair is the largest pre-college scientific research event in the world. Each May, over 1500 students from 52 nations are flown in to compete in the fair for scholarships, tuition grants, internships, scientific field trips and the . For more information on Science Service and the Intel Science Talent Search visit www.sciserv.org.

Intel, the world's largest chip maker, is also a leading manufacturer of computer, networking and communications products. Additional information about Intel is available at www.intel.com/pressroom.

Note to Editors: Third party marks and brands are property of their respective holders.
COPYRIGHT 1999 Business Wire
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1999, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Business Wire
Geographic Code:1U8CO
Date:Mar 9, 1999
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