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Editorial: Indian boarding school history needs telling for healing » Albuquerque Journal
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Her vision for Native education
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Sceye Reaches Stratosphere
Sceye, a developer of high-altitude platform stations (HAPS), announced today that it successfully launched its stratospheric platforms and flew at an altitude of 64,600 ft. The announcement comes on the heels of Sceye’s long-range record for maintaining data connection in OpenRAN at a distance of 140km. With financial support from the State of New Mexico, the company also joins a consortium of New Mexico-based telecommunications companies and tribal entities to pilot delivery of universal broadband access to the Navajo Nation.
“We view the successful flight and the record setting data connection as a significant milestone for our technology; one that could dissolve the rural broadband barrier,” said Sceye CEO Mikkel Vestergaard Frandsen.
Hardridge’s latest work “Unbridled” is on view at Santa Fe’s Blue Rain Gallery.
The artist grew up in central Oklahoma surrounded by the artistic traditions of his culture. His formal training includes a fine arts degree in illustration and painting from the Savannah College of Art and Design in Georgia. Later studies at France’s Nadaï Verdon Atelier of Decorative Arts emphasized harmony and composition.
Hardridge once painted in a very traditional, muted style until the 2014 death of his father triggered a seismic stylistic change.
“I was going through a transitional period in painting,” he said in a telephone interview from Knoxville, Tennessee. “I was studying the beadwork and trying to put together work representing loss and resistance at the same time, and the narrative of Southeast Native removal from Alabama to Oklahoma.”
After 11 long years, Krissa Chavarria will don a hard-earned white coat when she graduates from The University of New Mexico College of Pharmacy in May with a doctor of pharmacy degree.
Her educational journey entailed retaking classes, learning new ways of studying, or finding the courage to ask for help. But at the end of it all, she knew her persistence would pay off.
“I always do everything with heart, that s how I was taught – you do a thing with your heart, your mind, good purposes,” Chavarria says.
In addition to her personal growth during college, she also took care of family members who have chronic medical conditions – her aunt is legally blind, her uncle is wheelchair-bound and her godbrother had brain tumors and continues to have difficulties.
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