From Deseret News archives:

Highland senior wins $100,000

Published: Wednesday, March 15, 2006 9:23 a.m. MST
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Altogether, Intel awarded prizes totaling $530,000 to competitors, including a $75,000 scholarship for second-place winner Yi Sun of The Harker School in San Jose, Calif., cited for discovering new geometric properties of random walks, and a $50,000 scholarship to Yuan "Chelsea" Zhang of Montgomery Blair High School in Rockville, Md., for her third-place entry researching the molecular genetic mechanisms behind heart disease.

The fourth- through sixth-place awards brought $25,000 scholarships; for seventh through tenth places, the prizes were $20,000 scholarships. The remaining 30 finalists, according to Intel, will receive a $5,000 scholarship. Each finalist also won a notebook computer.

In the past week, the 40 finalists went through interviews by a judging panel headed by Dr. Andrew Yeager of the Arizona Cancer Center, who is also a professor of medicine and pediatrics at the University of Arizona.

Babb was accompanied to Washington by her mother, Anita Babb. At the announcement, her mom "just came up and gave me a really big hug and kind of cried a little, because this really was not expected," the younger Babb said, adding that she cried, too.

Babb had presented her project to the head of the Environmental Protection Agency and to members of Congress. During a breakfast in the Senate Office Building, members of Congress wandered around displays of the projects, talking with the students.

"Sen. Bob Bennett (R-Utah) came by," she said.

After the award was announced, she was able to meet John Glenn, the astronaut and former senator.

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"I was still somewhat hyperventilating," she said.

Babb said that when she gets home she has to "finish up the fourth phase" of her project, involving studies of the Diamond Fork River. She needs to crunch some data, she said.

Babb is no stranger to contest awards. She has already won a four-year, full-tuition presidential scholarship. Last year, she was one of 10 national winners of the Gloria Barron Prize for Young Heroes, and she won a $3,500 scholarship through the Discover Card Tribute Award Scholarship program.

What will she do with the accumulated scholarships?

"I am going to get a doctorate," she said. "I'm not quite sure which field I'll choose, but I am going to go all the way to the top."

Now, she said, she knows she will be able to finance it.

"I can go to pretty much any college that I want to for my grad work," Babb said.

Meanwhile, she added, she will pursue her bachelor's degree at Utah State University, Logan, majoring in watershed and earth science.

During the judging, a panel asked many questions, some of which were not about the immediate project.

"I had two judges ask me about salmon farming," Babb said.

The reason, she noted, was that "they want some questions that are a little bit related to your field, but they want to see how far your knowledge goes."

Later, during judging with the display boards contestants had put together, the questions asked were about "what you were really comfortable with," she said.

The final step was to await the result.

Intel has sponsored the contest since 1988, but the contest has been recognizing top young scientists since 1942. It is administered by a group called Science Search.

"Science Service is the nonprofit organization which has administered the Science Talent Search since its inception in 1942," Intel's press release stated.

Its goal is "to advance the understanding and appreciation of science."


E-mail: bau@desnews.com

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Intel Corp.

Shannon Babb of Highland talks with Sen. Bob Bennett in Washington, D.C., where Babb won the Intel Science Talent Search and a $100,000 scholarship.

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