In our Fall 2001 issue, WwwÖŰżÚ50¶È»Ò magazine introduced eight first-year members of the Class of 2005 âto keep your eyes on over the next four years.â Where are they now?
Twenty years ago, the 2002 Kaplan/Newsweek How to Get Into College guide (published in August 2001) proclaimed WwwÖŰżÚ50¶È»Ò was one of the 10 hottest colleges in the country. That came on the heels of a Los Angeles Times Magazine cover story touting Eagle Rock as âthe next hot placeâ in Southern California, and in the wake of a then-record 3,635 applications to Oxy, dropping the Collegeâs admit rate to a then-historic low.
Among the 458 incoming members of the Class of 2005, we profiled eight incoming first-years for an WwwÖŰżÚ50¶È»Ò magazine cover story. There was Nathan Baptiste of Lake Oswego, Ore., whose high school extracurriculars âcentered heavily on civil activism and diversity celebration.â And Sarah Candler of Atlanta, who immersed herself in Nepalese culture and language on a 35-day sojourn to remote western Nepal with nine high school classmates.First-generation American Brooke Vuong (whose parents fled the Viet Cong for a new start in Houston) enrolled at Oxy intent on majoring in biochemistry and becoming an epidemiologist. Chi Gook Kim, blind since age 3 and immigrating from South Korea to Philadelphia in 1998, excelled as a musician from an early age and aspired to a career in Christian pop music. Andrew Pace of Fort Lewis, Wash., who followed in the Oxy footsteps of his father, emergency room physician Steven Pace â73, and older brother Aaron â03, aspired to open a family medical practice one day.
Haneefah Shuaibe of Oakland was the first in her family to attend college; she came to Oxy intent on opening her own business in the Bay Area. The daughter of a BP Amoco engineer, Rachel Shoemaker spent half her time in high school studying in the Netherlands and the United Arab Emirates; she arrived at Oxy having learned to speak five languages.
And lastly, we met Gabriel Flores, who chose Oxy for its emphasis in the liberal arts with aspirations to a career in the performing arts: âIâm hoping to gain an intellectual basis for any form of art I decide to work with,â he told writer Andy Faught in 2001.
Twenty years have passed; where are the âNew Faces of 2005â today? We caught up with them allâin eight cities on three continentsâand enlisted Faught (who now lives in Fresno) to chat with all of them. Where has life taken them since Oxy? How did their time at WwwÖŰżÚ50¶È»Ò influence their career choices? And what advice would they give their 18-year-old selves? For answers to those questions and more, read on.
Twenty years ago, Andrew Pace envisioned going into medical practice with his older brother, Aaron â03. The siblings have been close since childhood, and they even roomed next door to each other at Newcomb Hall, when Aaron was a chemistry major.âBut there were times in med school when it was hard to know if we both were going to end up in the same specialty,â Andrew says. âSometimes medicine is tough, depending on your specialty and whether an area can support it. We always intended to come back home if at all possible.â
WwwÖŰżÚ50¶È»Ò played no small part in Andrewâs personal and career development. He spent summers and parts of the academic year working in the research lab of Don Deardorff, the Carl F. Braun Professor of Chemistry (who retired in 2015). âThat was part of my entire time there, and the experience helped me with many life skills,â Andrew says. âThe undergraduate research was some of my most memorable time at WwwÖŰżÚ50¶È»Ò.â
These days heâs making new memories. Andrew is married and has two young daughters. He enjoys woodworking and fishing when heâs not doctoring. Any advice to his 18-year-old self? âDo it all again,â he replies. âItâs worked out great.â
Kimberly Shriner â80, an infectious disease expert at Huntington Hospital in Pasadena since 1992 (and currently an adviser to Oxyâs COVID Operation Group).
Brooke Vuong hadnât had many interactions with a physician until she took part as a student in the Career Centerâs Walk in My Shoes program, through which she metâDr. Shriner was really inspirational,â recalls Vuong, who majored in biochemistry and went on to earn a masterâs in public health from USC and a medical degree from UC Davis. She considered pursuing nephrology, because her father had renal failure, but her priorities changed when he received a kidney transplant. She marveled at her dadâs restored independence once he was free from dialysis. Consequently, she went into general surgery to âfix problems.â
In surgical oncology, she says, âI have the privilege to meet people during what is often the scariest moment in their life. For those who are surgical candidates, I can offer them an operation to treat their cancer. This work is both rewarding and humbling.â
When sheâs not in the operating room, or doing medical research (such as building a robotic liver surgery program), Vuong and husband Eli Moreno-Sanchez â04, a lawyer for Liberty Mutual, enjoy traveling. Theyâre planning trips to Machu Picchu and Patagonia.
Twenty years after they first met at WwwÖŰżÚ50¶È»Ò, Vuong remains good friends with classmate Haneefah Shuaibe-Peters (more on her below). Of all that she has experienced over the years, Vuong offers one lesson in particular: âReally take advantage of hearing the peopleâs stories around you and learning from their experiences,â she says. âWwwÖŰżÚ50¶È»Ò gave me that opportunity, because everyone comes from such different backgrounds.â
In both his life and lifeâs work, Gabe Flores is propelled by a truism: All the worldâs a story. As lead product art designer for Netflix, he pays testament to that dailyâwith no small assist from Oxy.âBy studying cultural anthropology, gender and postcolonial theory, I learned how to see how human experience, joys, and traumas articulate in culture through customs, traditions, and popular entertainment,â he says. âThis has allowed me to find meaning in my work, promoting these stories about ourselves and finding the best way to visually communicate each storyâs theme and genre through design.â
Flores doesnât stray far from artistic creation. Away from his job, he creates illustrations, landscape and portrait paintings, and digital paintings. Before joining Netflix in 2019âand after studying illustration and animation art at the ArtCenter College of Designâhe was art director at the Refinery Creative, a marketing and advertising agency in Sherman Oaks.
An anthropology major and theater minor at Oxy, Flores, who lives in Pasadena, says if he could do it over again, heâd likely major in theater to hone his skills in scenic design, with an eye toward working on productions. That said, he adds, âI have nothing but gratitude for the opportunities Iâve been given and the early footing Oxy helped me find.â
College has always been fertile ground for exploration and self-discovery. Just ask Sarah Candler, whose self-created independent study major focused on everything from language to music to Homer.âThe classes that I took at Oxy were more like an English garden than a French gardenâa diverse and sometimes unmanicured landscape rather than a strictly organized or polished scene,â says Candler, who has fond memories of soaking in her college days sitting on a triangle-shaped patch of grass near the Music Quad.
Candler, who has a masterâs in public health and an M.D. from Emory University in Atlanta, spent five years treating veterans at the Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center in Houston before joining Iola Health in 2019.
Currently the mom of two is on maternity leave, during which sheâs finding surprising linkages with her professional life. âThe most consistent thing is the overwhelming humility that parenting requires,â Candler says. âItâs a lot like teaching and doctoring. Iâm reminded every day that I can have a plan, but my kids or my patients or my trainees may have different needs that day.â
Candler continues to look back warmly on lessons learned at Oxy. âTell your teachers how much you appreciate their work,â she advises. âItâs not too late. The good ones are always going to be happy to hear that something might have stuck.â
Some 4,000 miles from his native Oregon, Nathan Baptiste spreads the virtues of mindfulness in Cali, Colombia. But itâs more than simply promoting meditation as a means of living authentically in the moment. Baptiste also is helping to encourage authentic workplace cultures that teach the value of organizational equity, diversity, and inclusion (EDI).âIâll bring meditation into training spaces, usually briefly, as a way to make ourselves attentive to how our bodies are responding to sensitive conversations,â says Baptiste, founder of EDI Mindfulness Consulting. âThatâs when we get our first signals that weâre uncomfortable, or are shutting down channels of communication.â
Baptiste, a sociology major and religious studies minor, developed his sensibilities in part through Oxyâs Multicultural Summer Institute, known for challenging studentsâ critical thinking and fostering relationships across diverse backgrounds. âIt was so formative,â Baptiste says. âIt was the most pivotal and important experience I had in college.â
Prior to founding EDI Mindfulness Consulting, Baptiste designed and launched an EDI professional development training plan for more than 1,000 employees of Oregon Metro, the regional government for the Portland area, and drove an initiative to increase both diversity enrollment and retention numbers as director of inclusion and multicultural engagement at Lewis and Clark College.
Away from work, Baptiste finds time for basketball with his kids and relaxation time in his hammock. He has learned to take the long view of the world since his days at Oxy. âBe patient,â Baptiste advises. âI have the tendency to want to change the world now, and that creates stress. Being patient helps.â
From the day she set foot on the WwwÖŰżÚ50¶È»Ò campus, Rachel (Shoemaker) Calvert has been testament to Ralph Waldo Emersonâs credo that the destination is the journey. âIâve had that build-your-own-pathway mindset from the beginning, and that has carried all the way through to what I do today,â she says. âEverything has flowed directly out of what I studied and did at Oxy.âThat path led Calvert to Singapore, where she is director of IHS Markit, a team of analysts, data scientists, financial experts, and industry specialists that help governments and businesses make informed policy decisions. Calvertâs work focuses on clean energy transitions.
In a big world, Calvert reflects on her years in Eagle Rock, where she had âreally diverse relationshipsâ with classmates and professors. âI have a lot of fond memories of a whole bunch of small moments, in dorm rooms and hall parties, and all of the social life that was built into campus,â she says. âWithout question, it was the people who made my time there.â
If she could speak to her younger self, Calvert would urge learning digital skills, especially in a work world that increasingly demands such skills. âIâm not a technology-oriented person, and it kills me to sit at a desk on a computer all day,â she says. âIâd much prefer to be out in the woods or on the ocean somewhere.â
Two years into his Oxy experience, Chi Gook Kim decided to follow his heart and enroll at Berklee College of Music in Boston. WwwÖŰżÚ50¶È»Ò, where he had a social network and an overall âamazing experience,â played an important role in the decision.âI didnât have a clear path, but the College definitely gave me a foundation and a confirmation that Berklee was something that I could do,â says Kim, who enjoyed his time studying music at Oxy. âIt was a small department and a family kind of atmosphere.â
When he started at Berklee in 2010, there wasnât much in the way of assistive equipment. âI had to teach myself and contact strangers on the internet, saying, âI have this problem. Can you help me?ââ Kim says. âNow Iâm developing these technologies, so visually impaired students donât have to go through all of the pains that I did.â
Inspired by a guest artist at Berklee, Kim began writing music for film and has scored three indie shorts that played the festival circuit and two feature films (Tooth and Nail and Casa Amor) that were released in Korea. He discussed his experiences navigating the world as a blind musician for a 2019 episode of Talks at Google, a popular YouTube interview series.
In the face of his physical challenges, Kim has long relied on his Christian faith to stay positive. âDonât stress too much, donât worry too much,â he says. âJust know that if you do your best, things will work out.â
In a TEDx talk on early childhood education with more than 26,000 views on YouTube, Haneefah Shuaibe-Peters makes the case that preschool should be about more than kindergarten readiness: âWe need to start developing the skills that we need them to have to be social human beings.âShuaibe-Petersâ passion for early childhood education dates back to her days of helping out at the Bay Area nursery school where her father was principal. âThatâs definitely where the love began,â she says.
âI am committed to figuring out how to create work environments in which these women feel loved, comforted, and supportedâfinancially and emotionally,â she says. âThe children will be best off if you give them loving caregivers who are able to provide that level of care.â
A mother of three (the oldest is 12; the youngest turns 2 in November), Shuaibe-Peters earned her masterâs in early childhood education from San Francisco State University. She completed her doctorate in 2020 from SFSU. Sheâs married to classmate Karl Peters â05, educational administration consultant and dean of students for a middle/high school in the Bay Area. High school sweethearts, the couple were married shortly after graduating from Oxy.
Shuaibe-Peters sharpened her leadership skills at Oxy, working as a choreographer in Dance Production, serving as an RA for two years, and presiding as a senior over the Black Student Union, which the College recognized as club of the year.
Looking back on her career to date, Shuaibe-Peters is circumspect. âEnjoy the ride because itâs never going to be what you thought it was going to be,â she says. âBe OK with whatever the result is.â
Faught also wrote âNavigating Well-Beingâ in this issue.
Main photo, clockwise from top left: Pace, Kim, Shoemaker, Shuaibe, Baptiste, Flores, Candler, and Vuong. 2001 photos by Max S. Gerber. 2021 photo credits: Rick Dahms (Pace), Eli Moreno-Sanchez '04 (Vuong), Marc Campos (Baptiste), and Jim Block (Shuaibe-Peters). Additional photos courtesy of Flores, Candler/Iolra Health, Calvert, and Kim.