CSM Foundation Director Alland Leandre, right, discussed career goals
with Mary Mills of Bel Alton, the first recipient of the Oreta Stinson
Memorial Engineering Scholarship that Leandre created for CSM students
majoring in science, technology, engineering or mathematics.

When College of Southern Maryland Foundation Director Alland Leandre learned of the passing of a mentor and longtime friend he wanted to do something meaningful that would commemorate her life. His mentor, Charles County resident Oreta Stinson, had been the small business coordinator working as a civilian at the Navy Yard in Washington, D.C. and worked for the F-18 Program at NAVAIR Crystal City whenย Leandre met her.

โ€œShe was one of those people that made life better for those aroundย her. The ย ifference she made in my life was so significant,โ€ Leandreย said. โ€œI was in my 20s ย orking as a contractor and I thought I wasย going to be the CEO of Ford Motor ย ompany one day. She got me thinkingย about the kind of impact I wanted to have on the world. She was veryย inspirational in me wanting to get involved in STEM (science,ย technology, engineering and mathematics) and helping young people.โ€
Not only has Leandre dedicated his time to introducing young students toย the possibilities of STEM careers, he also is financially supportingย their dreams by ย stablishing a CSM scholarship in Stinsonโ€™s memory.

In 2008, Leandre organized the first Youth in Technology Summit inย Southern Maryland at CSMโ€™s Leonardtown Campus to introduce middle andย high school students to exciting careers in STEM. The summit attractedย hundreds of youngsters to explore STEM fields, experience excitingย demonstrations with cutting-edge technology and imagine futures inย science. Since then, and through other STEM activities supported by theย CSM Foundation, Leandre has helped inspire and encourage thousands ofย Southern Maryland elementary, middle and high school students.

The Oreta Stinson Memorial Engineering Scholarship that Leandre createdย in 2014 provides funds for CSM students majoring in science, technology,ย engineering or mathematics who are residents of Southern Maryland andย have a minimum grade point average of 3.0. Applicants must be able toย demonstrate community or extracurricular involvement through a one-pageย essay.

Stinson grew up in Goldsboro, North Carolina, and earned a bachelorโ€™sย degree in mechanical engineering from North Carolina A&T Stateย University and a masterโ€™s degree in business and public administrationย from Southeastern University in Washington, D.C. Stinson worked as aย program manager at Naval Air Systems Command and was deputy director ofย Navy Small Business where she was responsible for implementation of theย federal acquisition programs designed to assist small businesses,ย including small disadvantaged businesses, women-owned businesses,ย service-disabled veteran-owned businesses, historically underutilized
business zone businesses and Historically Black Colleges andย Universities and Minority Institutions. She earned the Department of theย Navy Meritorious Civilian Service Award and the Department of Defenseย Spirit Award. She passed away June 7, 2012.

The first recipient of the Stinson scholarship is Mary Mills, 20, ofย Bel Alton, who is graduating this spring with a degree in biology.ย During a scholarship reception at CSM and at a subsequent gathering,ย Mills and Leandre discussed her goal to become a doctor in the field ofย osteopathic medicine (DO) which espouses a preventive health care andย โ€œwhole personโ€ approach to medicine rather than a symptomsย approach.

“Blood is considered a connective tissue that intertwines all of theย bodily systems, so an issue with oneโ€™s blood could have effects on anyย of the said systems. Everything is interconnected. That is what isย fascinating and intriguing to me and why I want to study osteopathicย medicine,โ€ Mills said.

When Mills had graduated from La Plata High School in 2012, she wasย wait-listed at her first choice of colleges and decided to come to CSM.ย โ€œI wasnโ€™t really upset about not getting my first choice, because Iย knew people that had gone to CSM and who encouraged me to pursue aย student assistant job while attending college. After a semester at CSM,ย and having all my AP courses transfer over, I knew I had made the rightย decision so I planned to continue here to earn my associate degree,โ€ย she said. Mills will graduate this May and plans to transfer to theย University of South ย arolina to study biochemistry and molecular biologyย with a minor in medical humanities in the fall.

โ€œIt is such a novel thing that you want to be a DO,โ€ Leandre toldย Mills. โ€œThe human body is so complex; we need physicians who areย trained in total health of the body. Itโ€™s not just a โ€˜take this andย call me in the morningโ€™ approach. I look forward to watching youย graduate and seeing you come back to Southern Maryland to practice.โ€

Leandre was born in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, and immigrated toย Washington, D.C. when he was in high school. After graduating fromย Woodrow Wilson High School, he attended Syracuse University and earned aย bachelorโ€™s degree in Aerospace Engineering in 1988. He worked withย Stinson on the F-18 program and then left government to pursueย post-graduate studies. After earning a Masterโ€™s in Business
Administration from the University of Michigan Ross School of Business,ย Leandre founded Vyalex Management Solutions, Inc., an engineering andย program management consulting firm.

He was named Entrepreneur Black Engineer of the Year in 2008, aย Maryland Top 100 Minority Business Enterprise in 2007 and theย Foreign-born Information and Referral Network (FIRN), American Successย Award in 2006 which, in partnership with Howard County government,ย Howard County Economic Development Authority, and the Howard Countyย Chamber of Commerce, celebrates the achievements of Howard County’sย foreign-born business community.

โ€œI created the scholarship because I miss Oreta and I wasnโ€™t ableย to go to her funeral,โ€ said Leandre. โ€œShe did so much for people andย she deserves so much more.โ€ In addition to Leandre, the scholarship isย funded by others who knew Stinson.

By carrying on Stinsonโ€™s good deeds through the creation of aย scholarship that bears her name, Leandre feels that her impact in theย world will continueโ€”especially with recipients such as Mills, he said.ย โ€œKnowing Oreta, she would be very proud of Mary. She had a passion forย young people and wanted to see them do well.โ€