Born to  Chinese immigrants, 17-year-old Angela Zhang of Cupertino, California  is a typical American teenager. She's really into shoes and is just  learning how to drive. But there is one thing that separates her from  every other student at Monta Vista High School, something she first  shared with her chemistry teacher, Kavita Gupta. It's a research paper  Angela wrote in her spare time -- and it is advanced, to say the least.  "Cure for cancer -- a high school student," said Gupta. "It's just so  mind-boggling. I just cannot even begin to comprehend how she even  thought about it or did this." When she was a freshman, she started  reading doctorate level papers on bio-engineering. By sophomore year  she'd talked her way into the lab at Stanford, and by junior year was  doing her own research. Angela's idea was to mix cancer medicine  in a polymer that would attach to nanoparticles -- nanoparticles that  would then attach to cancer cells and show up on an MRI, so doctors  could see exactly where the tumors are. Then she thought [of aiming] an  infrared light at the tumors to melt the polymer and release the  medicine, thus killing the cancer cells while leaving healthy cells  completely unharmed. It'll take years to know if it works in  humans -- but in mice -- the tumors almost completely disappeared.  Angela recently entered her project in the national Siemens science  contest. It was no contest. She got a check for $100,000. 
Note: If this technique has already melted tumors in mice, why is CBS saying  it will take years to know if it works in humans? Why wouldn't millions  be poured in to fast track research on this exciting technology?
 
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