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Home› Professional

Professional

  • 2019 Fall Issue
    21 October 2019
    by Kyle Coulon

    Steven Just / Sisseton Wahpeton Sioux Tribe / University of Minnesota College of Pharmacy

    When Steven Just takes stock of his high school experience, he admits that because of some personal struggles, he did not achieve the highest grades or have the best attendance. In fact, sometimes he clashed with the principal and teachers. But the advice he gives today — even to students who aren’t enjoying high school — is apply to college. “College is so different from high school,” he points out, “and you can choose to study subjects that you find interesting.”  

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  • 2019 Fall Issue
    21 October 2019
    by Kimberly Locke

    Dr. Henrietta Mann / Cheyenne / Distinguished Educator / Founding member of the AISES Council of Elders

    For Dr. Henrietta Mann, stressing the importance of education has been a lifelong mission. At a very young age, she developed a passion for learning that blossomed into an unrelenting quest to promote education — for Natives and non-Natives alike — and led to a career of teaching at the pre-college, community college, undergraduate, and graduate levels.

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  • 2019 Fall Issue
    21 October 2019
    by Ann S. Boor

    Corey Gray / Siksika Nation (Blackfoot) / Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) / Gravitational-Wave Astronomy

    It was well after midnight when Corey Gray got home from work at the California Institute of Technology’s and Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) in Hanford, Wash. After getting some sleep, he checked his emails and one jumped out. His first thought after reading it: “It must be a test! This can’t be real!”

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  • 2019 Fall Issue
    09 October 2019
    by Chris Warren

    Dr. Wendy F. Smythe: 2019 Professional of the Year / Haida of the Eagle moiety and of the Sdast’ aas (Fish egg) house

    Dr. Wendy F. Smythe, Haida, never thought her career would veer into the world of public policy.

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  • 2019 Fall Issue
    09 October 2019
    by Chris Warren

    Sheila Lopez: 2019 Blazing Flame Awardee / Navajo

    Sheila Lopez still vividly recalls the first time she fully shared her life story in front of an audience. A member of the Navajo tribe, Lopez was the first in her family to attend college. While an undergraduate pursuing a degree in electrical engineering at Northern Arizona University, Lopez worked in the school’s multicultural engineering program office.

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  • 2019 Fall Issue
    09 October 2019
    by Chris Warren

    Dylan Moriarty: 2019 Most Promising Engineer or Scientist / Navajo

    Though he had no idea of it at the time, Dylan Moriarty started training for his current job at New Mexico–based Sandia National Laboratories when he was a young boy. Moriarty grew up in rural Fort Defiance, Ariz., on the Navajo Nation.

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  • 2019 Fall Issue
    09 October 2019
    by Chris Warren

    Dr. Otakuye Conroy-Ben: 2019 Technical Excellence Awardee / Oglala Sioux

    Dr. Otakuye Conroy-Ben’s environmental consciousness was awakened at a very young age. Growing up in Porcupine, S.D., on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, she could literally taste and smell the impacts people were — or were not — making on the natural world around her.

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  • 2019 Fall Issue
    09 October 2019
    by Chris Warren

    Yona Wade: 2019 Indigenous Excellence Awardee / Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians

    Yona Wade is not the type of person who waits for things to happen. It’s an impulse he has been cultivating since he was very young. “As a kid, I always was the one who wanted to be in charge and run the show and make whatever I needed to happen actually happen,” he says. “I never had time to wait for others.”

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Winds of Change is the premier nationally distributed magazine with a single-minded focus on career and educational advancement for all Indigenous people in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM).

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