Local wins scholarship
Michael Miller
Today, Newport Harbor High School senior Megan Randall is to become
the only student in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District -- and
one of more than 2,400 nationwide -- to receive a college-sponsored
2005 National Merit Scholarship.
Randall, an aspiring journalist and author, will receive $2,000 to
attend Tufts University in Massachusetts. The scholarship was
sponsored by the university.
“Honestly, I’m a pretty hard worker,” Randall said after hearing
about her honor. “I’m not one of these people who skate by on natural
talent.”
Whether through hard work or natural skill, Randall has packed in
accomplishments over her four years at Newport Harbor High. The
18-year-old Costa Mesa resident has placed first in writing and
second in music composition in her school’s PTA Reflections
Competition. She has served as Recycling Coordinator for Newport
Harbor’s Earth Resource Foundation Club and received the California
Governor’s Scholar Award.
Apart from classwork, Randall has played piano for more than nine
years and belongs to the United States Fencing Assn. and the South
Coast Fencing Center. The last two years, she has served on the City
of Newport Beach’s Smoke Free Beaches and Piers Campaign, helping to
ban smoking on the city’s beaches.
“She’s done a tremendous job here,” said her Newport Harbor
guidance counselor, David Brant. “She’s a very refreshing person --
just an all-American kid.”
Randall, along with 1.3 million other high school juniors, entered
the 2005 Merit Scholarship competition when she took the Preliminary
SAT test in 2003. The highest-scoring students in each state were
named semi-finalists and asked to provide recommendations from
administrators as well as personal essays on their goals. Randall
wrote her essay about her love of creative writing.
Once National Merit semifinalists reach the finalist level, the
scholarship program offers them three types of awards: National Merit
Scholarships for $2,500, corporate-sponsored awards and others
sponsored by colleges. More than 200 higher education institutions
underwrote scholarships this year, with prizes ranging from $500 to
$2,000. Approximately half of all National Merit finalists will be
chosen as scholarship winners this year.
“To have a finalist receiving money is an honor for the school
district, for her school, and mostly for her,” Newport-Mesa
spokeswoman Jane Garland said about Randall. “She’s got one of the
real tough ones.”
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