The Class of 2000
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Danette Goulet
* EDITOR’S NOTE: As they complete the first half of their senior year, we
thought it was time to catch up with the entire Class of 2000, the group
of Newport Harbor High students we have followed since their freshman
year.
For three years, the community has watched the progress of a handful of
Newport Harbor High students in the Class of 2000.
They’ve now embarked on their final year of high school. Where are they?
Where are they headed? What are they doing during this final year in the
nest?
As a freshman, Cameron Sinclair was a veritable fish. He spent most of
his free time in the water, whether it was swimming, surfing or water
polo. That fish has since sprouted legs and become a grease monkey,
spending much of his free time these days working on his 1984 Bronco.
Cameron is working at Blockbuster Video to support his Bronco tinkering
habit, but still finds time to head for the hills each weekend to go
off-roading.
“I’m trying to start an off-roading club here at Newport Harbor, but
there’s a bunch of things liability-wise that might get in the way,” he
said.
Some things haven’t changed in Cameron’s life, like his interest in
computers. Cameron plans to attend Mammoth Cero Cosa Community College
next year, where he will study computer technology with plans to go into
computer administration or networking.
Then there’s Matt Glover, who at 15 years old can be heard from a mile
away as he races around on his motorcycle. To know what Matt is up to,
one needs to bypass the source himself.
“I applied to Yale, Princeton, Harvard and Stanford,” Matt said. “But I’m
really interested in going to Princeton.”
However, if there’s one dimple winking out at you from the corner of
Matt’s smile, take what he’s telling you with a grain of salt, said his
mother, Kathi Glover.
Matt has applied to Southern Methodist University, Loyola Marymount
University, Colorado State Boulder, and Pepperdine University, Kathi
Glover said.
The essay Matt claims to have written for his college applications may be
credible. It is an account, he said, of a job he held for one week for a
company that inspected luggage.
“I hated it,” he said. “It was the worst thing I ever did.”
Unlike her classmates, Alison Arnold has veered very little from the
course she had planned as a freshman at Newport Harbor.
Alison’s first love remains steadfast -- horses. She has continued to
show horses over the years and is in the process of buying a new one.
Though she claims she applied to certain schools because of their lack of
essay requirements, the reality is they all have equestrian teams.
She clutched the brochure of her newest find, Baylor University, as she
listed her other options: Texas A&M;, Cal Poly Pomona, Mills College and
Humboldt State.
Another facet of Alison’s life that has seen little change are her career
goals. Three years ago, she wanted to be a sixth-grade teacher. Now she
plans to be a special education or elementary school teacher.
In the spring of 1997, the community was also introduced to a girl named
Nikko Gallardo. Nikko said she wasn’t into anything, but spent most of
her free time helping others.
She has now come up with a way to harness that desire to help: She plans
to be a lawyer.
“I want to be an environmental or business lawyer,” Nikko said. “I don’t
want to do criminal. I don’t want any cases I can’t handle and I want no
one stalking me.”
She discovered her desire to be an attorney when she went to court for
her American democracy classes.
Although she knows it will take a lot of schooling, she said she thinks
she’ll be a good lawyer.
Her school of choice is Howard University, but she is also applying to
Boston College, the University of Michigan, Indiana University and Cal
State Long Beach.
Milan Rousset’s love of the ocean, which led him to water polo,
bodysurfing and fishing, have in the last few years landed him on the
crew team at Newport Harbor.
His talk of being a marine biologist, however, has been set aside for a
new global plan. His first two years he will spend at OCC. Then it’s off
to the East Coast -- Boston or New York.
Since he plans to eventually settle back in California, Milan said he
would like to experience the other coast first, just to be sure.
Then our jet-setting friend plans to spend a few years in England, where
he has a friend who has promised him a job.
The plan is to eventually land back in sunny California, as a diverse
international businessman.
Milan has already started to dabble in the world of enterprise with a
classmate. Last summer, they began making and selling T-shirts with an
original logo on them. They are now branching out into sweatshirts for
the winter.
Milan is not alone in his drastic change in career plans.
Diana Girgis, the quiet student who originally hails from Egypt, once had
plans to be a physician.
Those humanitarian plans have been set aside in favor of technology.
Diana plans to apply to Cal State Long Beach, Cal State Fullerton and the
Devry Institute for computer science.
“I want to see how computers are put together and learn computer
programming,” she said.
In her spare time, Diana continues to spend time with her friends from
Archangel Michael Church in Santa Ana and is taking extra classes to fill
her spare time.
Although we did not know him as a freshman at Newport Harbor, late
addition Sean Rorden has been busy enough to make up for lost time. Being
one of Newport Harbor’s starting basketball players keeps him very busy,
but Sean has still found time to take up coaching basketball at the Boys
Club.
With plans to apply to UCLA, UC San Diego, UC Santa Barbara and Cal Poly
San Luis Obispo, Sean said the first semester of senior year has been
rather stressful.
“You’ve got to get good grades and keep them -- that’s whatcolleges look
at,” he said.
In his effort to make his applications as impressive as possible, Sean
held nothing back on his essay. His personal statement tells them of his
personal struggle dealing with his father’s cancer last year. With the
cancer now gone, Sean said he is able to deal with it.
During our walk through the life of a high school student who would step
out into the world in a new century, a few have fallen through the
cracks.
Kristin Marie Sitzer has left Newport Harbor and transferred to Corona
del Mar High School. She was unable to be reached for this update.
Zach Gelbaum still attends Newport Harbor, his classmates said, but is
likewise elusive.
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