NASA 50th Anniversary Essay Competition Winners Announced

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June 6, 2008

Sonja Alexander
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1761
sonja.r.alexander@xxxxxxxx

RELEASE: 08-139

NASA 50TH ANNIVERSARY ESSAY COMPETITION WINNERS ANNOUNCED

WASHINGTON -- The winners of NASA's 50th Anniversary Essay Competition 
have been selected. 

The international competition challenged middle school and junior high 
students to discuss, in an essay of 500 words or less, one of two 
topics: how they have benefitted in their everyday lives from 
aerospace technologies built by NASA during the past 50 years, or, 
how their lives may be different 50 years in the future because of 
NASA technology.

Jackson Warley of the Renaissance Academy in Colorado Springs, Colo., 
took first prize. The seventh grader will receive a $5,000 college 
scholarship and a trip to view a space shuttle launch at NASA's 
Kennedy Space Center in Florida. In his essay, Jackson wrote "the 
underlying spirit and principles of NASA . . . heeds the basic human 
calling to explore the unknown and in doing so, gives people 
motivation."

Second prize and a $2,500 college scholarship went to Grace Nowadly, a 
student at Berkeley Middle School in Williamsburg, Va. Megha 
Subramanian of Hershey Middle School in Hershey, Pa., won third prize 
and a $1,000 college scholarship.

"NASA is proud to recognize the winners of the 50th anniversary essay 
competition. This competition has generated excitement among the 
participating students as they learned about how America's space 
program impacts their lives in very powerful ways," NASA Deputy 
Administrator Shana Dale said. "The goal is to spark students' 
imagination in science, math, and engineering and I think we've 
achieved that goal with these exceptional students."

To read the winning essays, and see a list of regional winners, visit:

http://ipp.nasa.gov/essay.htm

More than 1,000 submissions from 37 states and 15 countries were 
entered into the competition. NASA's Innovative Partnerships Program 
and NASA's Office of Education conducted the competition. To learn 
more about NASA's Innovative Partnerships Program and the benefits of 
NASA-derived technology, visit:

http://ipp.nasa.gov

	
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