Native Higher Ed. Professionals and Students Earn Top Awards from the College Fund and Adolph Coors Foundation

Mar 21, 2017 | Blog

Photo of Cheryl Crazy Bull; 2017 Lifetime Achievement Award winner John Gritts,

American Indian College Fund President and CEO, Cheryl Crazy Bull; 2017 Lifetime Achievement Award winner John Gritts, and Dr. Joel Harrell from the U.S. Department of Education pose for a photo in Rapid City, S.D., on Sunday, March 19, 2017

The American Indian College Fund honored 34 American Indian tribal college students of the year, tribal college president Dr. Laurel Vermillion, and U.S. Department of Education employee John Gritts on March 19 at the 2017 Student of the Year and Coca Cola Award Banquet in Rapid City, South Dakota in conjunction with the American Indian Higher Education Consortium Spring Student Conference.

Dr. Laurel Vermillion, President of Sitting Bull College in Fort Yates, North Dakota and a member of the Standing Rock Sioux Nation, the 2017 American Indian College Fund TCU Honoree of the Year.

Dr. Laurel Vermillion, President of Sitting Bull College in Fort Yates, North Dakota and a member of the Standing Rock Sioux Nation, was named the 2017 American Indian College Fund TCU Honoree of the Year. This honor recognizes a distinguished individual who has made a positive and lasting impact on the tribal college movement. Dr. Vermillion was chosen for her leadership in expanding opportunities in workforce education, business, and environmental science through developing an exemplary relationship with the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, allowing Sitting Bull College to lead and collaborate with all educational entities on the reservation, in addition to her support of Lakota language education within her community and throughout the Lakota Nation.

In addition John Gritts, management and program analyst, Federal Student Aid department, U.S. Department of Education, was awarded the American Indian College Fund’s first Lifetime Achievement Award in recognition of his ongoing service in supporting and furthering the missions of tribal colleges and universities throughout his career. Gritts said, “When I learned about the award, I was totally shocked. When you work, doing your job, you are not looking for these things. When you learn about tribal colleges and universities, you can always be an advocate.”

In honor of their service, President Vermillion and John Gritts were each wrapped with a Pendleton blanket and presented with a $1,200 honorarium provided by the Adolph Coors Foundation. Mr. Gritts’s honorarium is being donated in memory of his son, Trevour Joe Gritts, to the Salish Kootenai College Foundation.

The following students were named 2016-2017 students of the year by their tribal colleges and the American Indian College Fund. They each received a $1,200 scholarship from the Adolph Coors Foundation.

Jacob Doney, Aaniiih Nakoda College

Ronald Carrick, Bay Mills Community College

Terydon Hall, Blackfeet Community College

Danacia Greywater, Cankdeska Cikana Community College

Savannah Chavez-Charette, Chief Dull Knife College

Franny Reiter, College of Menominee Nation

Allissa Bell, College of Muscogee Nation

Kimberly Chavez, Diné College

Tamara Montano, Fond du Lac Tribal and Community College

Donovan Archambault Jr., Fort Peck Community College

Marcell Grant, Haskell Indian Nations University

Ashley Reich, Ilisagvik College

Manuel Ramirez, Institute of American Indian Arts

Michelle Moulden, Keweenaw Bay Ojibwa Community College

Charity Valentin, Lac Courte Oreilles Ojibwe Community College

Adriana Kingbird, Leech Lake Tribal College

Jesse LaForge, Little Big Horn College

Tyren King, Little Priest Tribal College

Felicia Chischilly, Navajo Technical College

Anthony Sharpfish, Nebraska Indian Community College

Azure Boure, Northwest Indian College

Florence Garrett, Nueta Hidatsa Sahnish College

Darin Janis, Oglala Lakota College

Anna Winters, Saginaw Chippewa Tribal College

Robin Maxkií, Salish Kootenai College

Tanya Larvie, Sinte Gleska University

Maurice Redday, Sisseton Wahpeton College

Christina Dwarf, Sitting Bull College

Ivan Toya, Southwestern Indian Polytechnic Institute

Joanie Bull-In-Sight, Stone Child College

Jasmine Lopez, Tohono O’odham Community College

Memphis Belgarde, Turtle Mountain Community College

Darla Pikyavit, United Tribes Technical College

Sasha Munnell, White Earth Tribal and Community College

American Indian College Fund founders and major influences on the TCU movement also attended the banquet. Pictured left to right are Rick Williams, former President/CEO of the College Fund; Lowell Amiotte, long-time educator and former president of Oglala Lakota College; Lionel Bordeaux, president of Sinte Gleska University and John Gritts, recipient of the American Indian College Fund’s first Lifetime Achievement Award, and a former College Fund and IAIA employee.

Download the entire press release here. 

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