The Nation's Best Math and Science Students Earn Top High School Honors and Strive for $100,000 Scholarship
29 Octubre 2009 - 7:00AM
PR Newswire (US)
Siemens Competition in Math, Science & Technology Regional
Finalists Head to Massachusetts Institute of Technology November 6
& 7 CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Oct. 29 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- WHAT:
Could tomorrow's Albert Einstein or Alexander Graham Bell currently
be a student in high school? What did the next generation of
innovators come up with this year? Find out when the regional
finalists of the 2009 Siemens Competition in Math, Science &
Technology - America's premier science research competition - head
to Massachusetts Institute of Technology November 6 & 7. At
stake is a $3,000 prize for one individual, $6,000 for one team,
and an invitation to the National Finals in New York City for a
shot at the $100,000 Grand Prize! WHO: Fifteen whiz kids unveil
graduate level research projects to a distinguished panel of
university judges. Past Siemens Competition winners and Alumni have
tackled some of the world's hardest and most pressing problems
through math and science. Their feats include: invention of
anti-bacterial coatings for medical devices, research of cures for
drug-resistant Tuberculosis, exploring zebrafish spines for an
inside look at bone growth, reinventing string theory, and
developing a device to generate energy from ocean waves. What
research will the Nation's brightest teen minds unveil this year?
The 2009 Siemens Competition regional finalists are: Individual
Finalists: -- Preetam Dutta, Jonathan Law High School, Milford, CT
-- Richard Ebright, North Brunswick Township High School, North
Brunswick, NJ -- Minhye Kim, Brookline High School, Brookline, MA
-- Tim Kunisky, Livingston High School, NJ -- William Newberry,
Greenwich High School, Greenwich, CT Team Finalists: -- Roger
Curley and Dalton Wu, Montgomery Blair High School, Silver Spring,
MD -- Brittney Joyce and Andrew Walsh, Lexington High School,
Lexington, MA -- Keenan Monks, Hazleton Area High School, Hazleton,
PA; and Benjamin Kraft, Liberty High School, Bethlehem, PA --
Benjamin Song and Quan Chen, Methacton High School, Eagleville, PA
-- Jennifer Wang, Montgomery Blair High School, Silver Spring, MD;
and Grace Young, The Potomac School, McLean, VA WHERE: On the
campus of Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA
WHEN: Friday, Nov. 6 - Twenty Chimneys Room, 3rd Floor, Stratton
Student Center Bldg W20, 84 Massachusetts Avenue 9:45 am - 11:00
am: Students set up projects 5:00 pm - 6:30 pm: Public viewing of
projects Saturday, Nov. 7 - Mezzanine Lounge, 3rd Floor, Stratton
Student Center Bldg W20, 84 Massachusetts Avenue 8:00 am - 1:15 pm:
Students present to judges MORE: Want to be the first to find out
who will head to the National Finals in New York? Log into and
follow Siemens Foundation on Twitter
(http://twitter.com/SFoundation) on Saturday, November 7, 2009
between 7:00 pm and 10:00 pm EST, when we announce the winners
live! The Siemens Competition in Math, Science & Technology is
a signature program of the Siemens Foundation, which provides more
than $7 million in support of educational initiatives in the areas
of science, technology, engineering and math in the United States.
The Siemens Competition is administered by the College Board. More
information can be found at http://www.siemens-foundation.org/.
Winners of the regional events are invited to compete at the
National Finals at New York University in New York City, December 3
- December 7, 2009. Visit http://www.siemens-foundation.org/ on
December 7, 2009 at 9:30 am EST to view a live webcast of the
National Finalist Award Presentation. Interviews and Photo Ops
available with students, judges and Siemens Foundation executives
DATASOURCE: Siemens Foundation CONTACT: Valerie Francois, Siemens
Foundation, +1-732-590-5292, cell +1-609-721-3713, ; or Judy Huang,
Weber Shandwick, +1-212-445-8346, cell +1-617-359-1938, Web Site:
http://www.siemens-foundation.org/
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