Ambitious, thoughtful, quirky, worldlyâand smarter than most of us were at that ageâthe third-largest entering class in Oxy history is ready for its closeup
Photos by Max S. Gerber
One hundred and twenty nine years ago, 27 men and 13 women ponied up $50 each to become 17łÔčÏâs inaugural first-year class.
Tuition has gone up a tad since then, and while the College still prides itself on a small, select student body, the Class of 2021 tallies in at 565, making it the third largest in Oxyâs history.
Culled from 6,775 applicants, the freshmen represent a diverse and disparate group. Roughly 40 percent are homegrown Californians, but the rest have traveled to Eagle Rock from across the country and around the globe.
âOne of the wonderful things about 17łÔčÏ is the richness of the backgrounds and experiences of the Âstudents who apply and eventually choose Oxy, so that Âalways makes it difficult to characterize a class,â says Vince Cuseo, vice president of enrollment and dean of admission.
Yet students are drawn by a few key, unchanging elements. âCertainly thereâs academic and intellectual rigorâthatâs part of the 17łÔčÏ experienceâbut thereâs this other piece to it thatâs palpable and has something to do with a sense of community,â Cuseo adds. âI think that friendliness is a critical part to how 17łÔčÏâs community is defined.â
The latest additions to that welcoming community include a dune buggy designer, a roller derby player, a patent- holder for a solar-powered pool heater, and the honorary Danish Maid of Solvangâno doubt a far cry from the interests of Oxyâs Class of 1892, long before the unthinkable science fiction of things like dune buggies, roller derby, and solar power. Yet the thirst for knowledge spans the generations.
Now, letâs meet nine members of the Class of 2021.
NINA SRDIC HADZI-NESIC
While high school students across America performed The Little Mermaid, Cinderella, Grease, and other popular fare, Nina Srdic Hadzi-Nesicâs formative stage experience in her native Serbia included somewhat different material. âI was in plays that dealt with important social issuesâplays on domestic violence and genocide and war crimes,â she says of her time in Belgradeâs renowned youth theater, Dadov. âI always participated in projects that carried a message, and that changed me.â
Nina was attracted to 17łÔčÏ, she says, as a place âthat would make me grow not only as an actress but as a human being.â Sheâs considering a double major in theater and diplomacy and world affairs: âBesides its rich theater life, Oxy also cares about social justice, and has a great program in international relations.âShe got an early taste of diplomacy as a member of the European Youth Parliament, a forum for debates and conversation on topics such as Ânational socialism and the Holocaust. âIt made me really interested in international and social issues weâre facing as a society,â she says. âI realized that using diplomacy as a peaceful means of settling a dispute is something
I would like to doâbesides acting.â (She lists Tom Hanks, Julianne Moore, and award-winning Serbian actor NebojĆĄa Glogovac as her onscreen faves.)
Ninaâs growth includes time spent underwater. With over 60 Mediterranean open-sea dives under her belt in the last five years, she qualifies to guide others. âI love diving, I love the feeling of flying,â she says. âItâs always my pleasure when beginners are paired with me because I love sharing my passion with other people and seeing them grow and learn.â
Nina is in the right place for growing and learning. âI consider myself incredibly lucky to have this opportunity, so I look at it as an adventure,â she says. âI just moved to the other side of the planet where I donât know anything or anyone and it can be overwhelming, but I already feel that sense of community here at Oxy. I just want to enjoy every bit of it.â
PETER BOYD
Hollywood draws countless young hopefuls shooting for a career directing films and television. Peter Boyd has trained his sights on a shorter form of expression.
âI really want to make commercials,â he says. âI think thatâs a weird thing. I donât think a lot of people want to make commercials, but I really like them. Itâs just interesting to see how someone compressed the entity that is their brand into a 30-second visual story.âA native of Cordova, Tenn., a small town about 20 miles east of Memphis, Peter looks forward to majoring in media arts and culture at Oxy. âAny career thatâs more art-based would have a better chance of being successful if you go to school in California,â he says. âAnd that seemed like it would be a good fit for me.â
âIâve known all my life I was trans,â says Peter, who came out in his sophomore year of high school. Itâs been less of an issue back home than one might expect. âThis is one of the liberal corners of Tennessee,â Peter says, âso when I come to Oxy I donât think suddenly Iâll be like, âLook at all these liberal people around me!â But I think the environment will be incredibly weird to me. Like the cacti there. Iâm not used to that.â
Creating art, Peter says, has helped him cope with life in general. âI like stream-of-consciousness writing and videoing things. My own therapy helps my growth as a person. And those could easily branch off into art- and media-related trans activism, and I hope they do.â
AMBER LEE
Amber Lee has a mean right body hook. Not to mention a wicked roundhouse kick. Luckily, her use of those lethal skills is confined to the boxing ring, which she first entered as a high school sophomore in Irvine.
âItâs kind of funny because my personality is usually sort of like happy, outgoing, very nice, very empathetic and sweet,â Amber says. âTwo of my biggest hobbies are playing drums and boxing, which are aggressive things that donât seemingly match my personality.âThough Lee says the pugilistic arts make her âfeel more comfortable in my own skin,â she faced an emotional challenge when her trainer was murdered during a morning gym class in March 2016.
âI was in shock,â she says. The tragedy occurred when she was studying for the SAT, âso I had not been going to the gym, and I just feel really guilty. I really wish that I committed more to the sport that I claimed to be really invested in. Right now Iâm waiting to get back into it at Oxy.â
When Amber first visited campus last October, âI was impressed by everything that the tour guide and the interviewer told me,â she recalls. âI chose 17łÔčÏ because it would allow me to take classes in all sorts of fields instead of having a strict major, and because of the career opportunities they could present me.â
Boxing wonât be her only focus, of course: Amber speaks passionately about social justice and Asian American history. (Born in Korea, she was only 8 months old when her family moved to Southern California.) âItâs a part of history that isnât told often,â she notes. âIâve started to get a personal interest in my own heritage. I realized how much I did not know, and how much history can fill in the gaps about the world I live in.â
DIANA FLORES BARNETT
If you know anything about Âzebrafish, you probably own an aquarium. The little striped cuties are a common fishbowl inhabitant, part of the minnow family. And while that might not sound too impressive, Diana Flores Barnett can tell you why the zebrafish is something extra special outside of your pet shop.
âZebrafish have regenerative abilities in their heart after an Âinjury,â says the San Fernando Valley native. âThat makes them unique, and theyâre used a lot for scientific research.âDiana learned this as part of the Samuels Family Latino and African American High School Internship Program at Childrenâs Hospital in Los Angeles last summer, which coincided with an unfortunate health scare for her younger sister, Nahomi.
âShe had many tumors in her kidneys, but the tumors were larger than the organs themselves, so they were talking about treatments that would disintegrate the tumor,â says Diana. âWorking with zebrafish, it gave me hope for my sister that this kind of work is being done for the regeneration of human organs.â
Nahomi is doing much better now, thanks to âa medication sprayed on the tumors through the blood vessels, which shrinks the tumors,â Diana explains.
Zebrafish also had a handâor a small fin, at leastâin landing her at Oxy. âDuring the internship we visited 17łÔčÏ, and I was able to go into the labs and talk to the professors. Iâd heard so many good things about the science program, and I want be a part of research projects, and hopefully do my own research,â Diana says. âIt felt like home, so I decided on Oxy.â
MATHILDE VENET
To say that Mathilde Venet has spent her first 18 years on the move would be an understatement. âI was born in Texas from French parents, but I only lived there for three years,â says Mathilde, whose father works for Air Liquide, a French gas company that keeps him in transit. âThen I moved to France for six or seven years, after that I was in Germany for five years. Then I moved to China where I finished high school, and now Iâm at Oxy.â
So answering the age-old first-year questionâWhere are you from?âpresents some problems. âI donât want to bore people with a long story, so I stick with France,â Mathilde says. âI donât think I really have a home, which may be a bit sad, but Iâm totally cool with it. Moving is part of my life, and I canât imagine any other life. Living in a different country every few years, youâre kind of forced to embrace new culture. I tried to integrate myself in those cultures as much as possible.âThat attitude and experience were invaluable when she participated in the Model U.N. program during high school in Shanghai. âStudents act as delegates in committees that are represented in the United Nations, Âdebating current, real world issues,â says Mathilde, who found herself representing Cuba. âYou might not agree with the views of the country youâre assigned, but you have to put yourself in the shoes of that country, and it helps to understand why countries do what they do. Iâm really hoping I can do something similar at Oxy.â
As with all of her moves, thereâs going to be an adjustment period as sheâs exposed to the nuances of American culture. âThere are some things that are a little bit shocking to me,â Mathilde admits. âLike the portion sizes are unreal. I ask for a small and I get a massive bucket. Thatâs something I have to get used to.â
Mathildeâs desire to study international relations first led her to investigating colleges on the East Coast, she says, âbut when I compared Oxy to universities in Virginia and Pennsylvania, the program here was a lot fuller and more interesting and complete. Also, I feel like Los Angeles is an amazing place, and kind of a bonus because I came here for the academics. It all just clicked; it was a match immediately.â
BRYCE COYNE
âMy first time hearing about 17łÔčÏ was watching âSportsCenter,ââ recalls Bryce Coyne. The Tigers made headlines back in February 2011 in notorious fashionâon the losing end of a 46-45 basketball game that ended a 26-year, 310-game conference losing streak by the Caltech Beavers. The ESPN story âmentioned how prestigious the school was, and that President Obama had gone there.â
Baseballânot basketballâis the sport of choice for the 6'3" right-hander from Woodinville, Wash., who first stepped onto the diamond at age 6. To be sure, playing ball in a town that averages about 45 inches of rain per year can make for some soggy innings.âWe have a turf field, so weâre able to play through the rain,â says Bryce (who roots for the Cleveland Indians over the long-beleaguered Mariners). âWe get lucky most of the time, but this year we werenât as lucky, our practices were pretty miserable. I donât throw as well in the rain, which is one reason Iâm excited to come down and play baseball in California.â
Recruited by Oxy associate head coach Jesse Rodgers, Bryce brings his formidable 12-6 curveball, as well as an attraction to the schoolâs 3-2 engineering program, which allows qualified students to obtain dual degrees from Oxy and either Caltech or Columbia.
When he visited campus last October, it was a home run. âThe whole atmosphere is something I really enjoyed, like the intangible, Southern California feel to the school, the personality it had,â Bryce says. âWhen you move out of your house and into the unknown itâs a scary time, but I think 17łÔčÏâs this really cool place where I might struggle, but Iâll have a support system. If I want to be successful, I can and will be at Oxy.â
SAIRA YUSUF
Though Saira Yusuf hails from Palo Alto, her interest in helping othersâand passion for soccerâhas taken her some 10,000 miles away to the horrendous Mathare slums in Nairobi, Kenya.
After visiting Kenya and Tanzania on a volunteer mission with her family at age 10, she started GOAL! (Go Out and Lead) in January 2015. The program helps young women navigate the issues attendant with their impoverished environments.âIâve been on a soccer team since I was 3 years old, so that was a starting-off point for the project,â says Saira, who was inspired by the community-driven Mathare Youth Sports Association. âAnd then we decided to focus on health. We do physical and sexual education, and courses on gender-based violence and sexual violence at home.â
At more than 2,000 members and still growing, GOAL! has âgotten a little bit big for me to manage on my own, but I definitely hope to still be involved in all of it at Oxy,â says Saira. She has been aided by her parents, who also do nonprofit work, and âa lot of great adult mentors around me who helped me through the process.â
Sairaâs other passion is politicsâsheâs considering a major in politics geared toward international relationsâand the intersection with her Muslim heritage and the 45th president. âIn terms of Trump, I think it was his harmful rhetoric giving way to a lot of very polarizing opinions that made me feel like I had to Âeither identify as a devout Muslim or sort of disown my Muslim identity, neither of which I wanted to do,â says Saira, who did not grow up in a religious family. âI think thereâs been such a big shift in our political climate, so itâs been interesting to find how my identity fits into all of that as an individual.â
Saira has no qualms about fitting into 17łÔčÏ. âIt was one of the first schools recommended to me by my counselors and friends,â she says. âI love the small environment. Iâm really excited to be in Los Angeles. Itâs close to home, but far away enough that it doesnât feel like home.â
TOBIAS & NICHOLAS LARKIN
Letâs get a few key Larkin facts out of the way. Tobias and Nicholas are identical twins. They do not finish each otherâs sentences. They do not stand in for one another in social or academic situations. But yes, theyâre going to the same college, which happens to be Oxy.
âI think it was more important to our parents,â says Tobias with the keen, worldly insight one might expect from the eight-minute head start he has on his brother. âBut for us, we were fine if we did and fine if we didnât.ââOur interests are really similar,â offers Nicholas. âI guess itâs not surprising that we both liked most of the schools that we applied to and we both liked 17łÔčÏ.â
The brothers were raised in Dover, N.H. Their mother, Evelyn, is Chinese American; their father, Benjamin, is Caucasian. âI would say coming from a diverse background was pretty uniqueâto be a child whoâs interracial, especially in New England, which is not the most diverse place,â says Nicholas.
The brothers share an interest in Mandarin Chinese, which they hope to pursue at Oxy. âSome of my relatives on my momâs side, they speak Chinese. That helped prompt me to learn Chinese in school,â says Nicholas, whoâalong with Tobiasâattended Berwick Academy in Maine. âI found it really fascinating and a way to connect to my culture.â
Though the brothers have a common love of music and play jazz piano duets together, they did diverge on high school projects. As a member of the Berwick Conservation Club, Tobias created a hibernaculum for his furry woodland neighbors. âYou dig a hole in the ground and put a lot of brush in,â he explains, âthen in the winter animals can go into it, and it helps trap the warmth so they donât die when itâs freezing.â
Nicholas followed a more indoor path, authoring Atrulia, a 300-plus-page YA fantasy novel influenced by authors George R.R. Martin and J.R.R. Tolkien. âI started writing it when I was a sophomore,â he says of the book he hopes to get published. âI really liked writing and reading, and it occurred to me that I should start writing. And I should do it earlier rather than later.âObviously, the Larkins agree on 17łÔčÏ. âWe really liked the atmosphere of the school,â offers Tobias. âItâs also something very different from New Hampshire, and I wanted something different and diverse.â
âI thought it was really welcoming and inspirational and everyone there seems to want everyone else to succeed,â says Nicholas. âEveryone cares about each other, and itâs a great feeling to be part of a community thatâs really dedicated to making you achieve your goal and making others around you do the same thing.â
Peter Gilstrap lives in Los Angeles. He wrote "Mr. Rohde's Wild Ride" in the Summer issue.