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Show Local students to compete for Sterling scholarships Ti ft : :'v rTij A committee of faculty members at the Park City High School has named five outstanding senior students to represent the school district in the Deseret News Sterling Scholar competition. The students will compete for tuition grants and cash awards against students from 13 other high schools in Northeastern Utah. Each student will be interviewed by a panel of judges at the regional competition in Vernal this April. Michael Iindskov will be competing for the science scholarship. He won first place in last year's Metropolitan Metropoli-tan Science Fair and last summer attended chemistry and calculus classes at the University of Utah. Jon Yager will represent the school in the math competition. He is currently the high school's student body president and is a member of the school's academic decathlon team. Lisa Glaubitz will be vying for the foreign language scholarship. She is studying both French and Spanish and won a first place in essay writing for the school decathlon decath-lon team. Park City will be represented rep-resented in the social sciences by Randy Dyer. Dyer won a third place in the Metropolitan Science Fair, was named most valuable football player on the high school football team last year, and won third place in the high school region tennis championships. Amy Irvine was selected to compete for the English scholarship. She is the coeditor of the school newspaper, news-paper, a cheerleader and president of the school's National Honor Society. She was also an American Field Service exchange student to Portugal. The students will be judged on accomplishments within their chosen categories, cate-gories, on overall scholarship, scholar-ship, leadership and citizenship. L T , 1 Elementary school students (L-R) Marnie Lineberry, Matt Thomson and Christy Coelho measure the snow depth to record in their science club notebooks. |