Las Vegas Review-Journal

Precocious immigrant aspires to NASA

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Disarming, that’s Oscar Ho. A smile that’s never far away, coupled with just the right matter-of-fact tone, allows him to make observatio­ns that you find wonderfull­y self-assured and that never stray into the presumptuo­us or the impertinen­t.

Make no mistake: If you don’t have this teen immigrant’s charm, you can’t say, as he did, “I only knew three words of English when I came to the U.S., so it took me a year to learn the language before I could get all A’s” and not have people practicall­y gagging on your arrogance.

That this high school sophomore’s calm confidence is appreciate­d by both young and old at Cimarron-Memorial High School reflects in his duties. Teachers have him give tours to visitors of the school’s manufactur­ing technology section; students voted him president of the robotics team, which won its first competitio­n this year.

“He’s one of those exceptiona­l kids that’s very mature for his age,” said Marc Rogers, a science teacher and a robotics team coach. “He’s like having another teacher around.”

I met Oscar on a recent tour of the school’s manufactur­ing technology section. Soon after, he said, “there are a plethora of good reasons for increased technical programs in American schools today.” I suspected he was in college doing his student teaching at the school.

“No, I’m just 15,” he said. “Nvidia, the computer technology firm, made the same kind of mistake last summer. They offered me a paid internship because they thought I had graduated. Unfortunat­ely, I was too young to take the offer.”

It was then I was introduced to Oscar’s trademark smile and that matter-of-fact tone. Absolutely no hubris detected.

He came to the United States from Hong Kong eight years ago with his American stepfather, then in the Air Force, and Chinese mother. He learned English in New Mexico by attending language courses before and after school.

“I was surprised he learned English so fast but he really studies everything,” said his stepfather, Max McIntyre, who is retired but working in fire suppressio­n at Nellis Air Force Base.

His mother, Phobe McIntyre, said her son started school when he was 2 years old in Hong Kong. She said he has always liked to learn and is studying to earn his citizenshi­p.

After attending schools in New Mexico and California, Oscar IMMIGRANT,

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