SHPE President’s letter
As engineers, we are the first to celebrate technical innovation and scientific breakthroughs – hallmarks advanced human understanding. Within the STEM fields, as well as many others, Hispanics have moved to the pinnacle of success and along the way have garnered a number of “firsts.” Consider José Hernández, the first SHPE member in space. This year’s Jaime Oaxaca Award recipient, Hernández follows in the footsteps of two other Hispanic engineers Dr. Franklin Chang-Diaz, the first Hispanic to enter the U.S. Space Program (1986), with a Ph.D. in applied plasma physics; and electrical engineer Dr. Ellen Ochoa, who became the first Hispanic woman astronaut (1991) and is now Deputy Director of NASA’s Johnson Space Center.
Reaching back just a bit further, two notable scientific firsts include the 1968Nobel Prize in Physics won by Luis Walter Alvarez for discoveries about subatomic particles. Later, he and his son proposed the now-accepted theory that the mass dinosaur extinction was caused by a meteor impact. The first Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine won by a Hispanic went to Severo Ochoa in 1959, for the synthesis of ribonucleic acid (RNA).
As we now gather in Washington, D.C., for the 2009 SHPE Conference, Hispanics are making history in our nation’s capital as well. The first ever Hispanic Chief Justice Sonia Sotomayor sits on the Supreme Court. She is only the third woman in the history of the court. Last year, Governor Bill Richardson became the first Hispanic to run for the highest office in the nation. Though he eventually lost the democratic nomination to Barack Obama, Richardson made history by entering the race. Ten percent of this administration’s nominees have been Hispanic – a statistical presence that speaks to the level of achievement of professional Hispanics as well as a testament to the expanded outreach of this administration.
Our Society, too, has had memorable firsts. Today, 35 years after its founding, more than 10,000 SHPE members cherish a sense of pride for their personal role in fulfilling its mission and vision. Industry and government regard it as the premier Hispanic organization from which to recruit the best and brightest.
We are committed to working hand-in-hand with our corporate partners to create opportunities and careers for Hispanics in the STEM fields. We will empower our membership through education and training. Our members want to build bridges, power plants and contribute to over-the-horizon technologies like the International Space Station. SHPE is teeming with so much potential and talent that it won’t be long before we add to our growing list of significant firsts.

