Senior shows leadership
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Michael Miller
Alyson O’Desky is in the running for a $10,000 scholarship, but even
if she doesn’t win it, she’ll still leave a mark on central Orange
County next month.
That’s when the Newport Harbor High senior’s quarterly magazine,
which she describes as “something like the New Yorker,” is set to
print its first issue.
Over the last few months, 18-year-old O’Desky -- Aly to her
friends -- has been busy hiring editors and writers, sketching out
stories and putting together subscriber lists. Her magazine -- she
won’t reveal its name yet -- will consist of fiction, nonfiction and
essays on contemporary issues. It will also contain advertisements.
In a world full of high school bloggers, O’Desky has set her sights
on an actual commercial publication.
“Our circulation is going to be local for now, and then we’d like
to expand,” said O’Desky, who is currently one of eight semifinalists
for the Irvine Company’s 2005 Student Leadership Award. “It would be
wonderful to go all through California, but it depends on how well
the magazine is received.”
Even apart from extracurricular activities, O’Desky has had her
hands full at Newport Harbor. In the last four years, she’s founded
two campus organizations -- French Club and Othello Club, the latter
for theater buffs -- and also belonged to the Model United Nations,
National Honor Society, National Charity League and school newspaper,
among others. Thus, when Newport Harbor had to select one female
student for the Irvine Company’s competition this year, O’Desky came
out on top.
“Alyson displays the quintessential qualities of a leader,” said
John Christensen, senior director of media relations for the Irvine
Company. “She’s outgoing, articulate, motivated and demonstrates a
passion for serving her community, as witnessed by her involvement in
the National Charity League.”
For the last 19 years, the Irvine Company has given out $96,000
total in scholarship money to high school seniors who show the
potential to be future leaders. The awards cover 15 high schools in
the Irvine Ranch area -- comprising parts of Irvine, Laguna Beach,
Newport Beach, Costa Mesa, Orange and Tustin -- and pay for tuition,
books and other college expenses.
Students at each school begin by submitting applications to teams
of administrators, who nominate one male and one female candidate.
Each student nominated receives a minimum $2,000 scholarship. After
all 30 candidates go through a leadership exercise and a first round
of interviews, the Irvine Company’s judges narrow the field down to
eight semifinalists, who win an additional $1,000. O’Desky was one of
the eight chosen this year.
“I was just so impressed with her drive and her zeal for
knowledge,” said Ruth Wardwell, director of public relations at
Chapman University and one of the judges who evaluated O’Desky. “It
wasn’t just, ‘OK, I want to go here and get a degree.’”
In the leadership exercise held on March 4, nominees formed groups
and created a plan for a 620-acre community. O’Desky’s group, for
which she was the “affordable housing consultant,” created a densely
populated town that allowed residents to walk everywhere.
After the final round of interviews on April 18, judges will
deliberate, then name the four winners of the Student Leadership
Award at a ceremony on May 11. The four finalists receive an
additional $7,000 -- bringing their total prize to $10,000.
“When you look at the breadth of what these kids are accomplishing
at the high school level, it really is astounding,” Christensen said.
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