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Vol. XI N o. 3 Sum m er 1988
FulbrightALUMNI ASSOCIATION NEW SLETTER
AT&T Grant Streamlines DatabaseThanks to a grant of $2,000 from
AT&T this spring, the Fulbright Alumni Association was able to purchase a new computer software program which enables it to maintain more data on its alumni, both members and nonmembers, and access it much faster.
“ This payment represents support of the project to upgrade the alumni membership database, “ wrote Albert B. Wann, Regional Manager, PublicRelations at AT&T. "I 'm glad wewere able to help you with yourproject and wish you much continued success."
The database contains the records of 24,000 former Fulbright scholars and includes not only name and address and Fulbright scholarship but information on academic institutions attended and languages spoken. With so many Fulbrighters and so much information to maintain on each person, speed becomes an important factor in using the data. Target/1 by GT National of Auburn, Maine, proved capable of allowing the necessary flexibility while providing the speed necessary for such a large database.
The number of Fulbright alumni listed in the database represents approximately half of the total. The Association hopes to improve that percentage significantly within the next few years.
Inside This IssueChapter N ew s.................................. 2Scholarship Opportunities........... 3Fulbright Alumni Directory..........5Fulbright Program Funding
Trends............................................. 6Exchange Programs with China......................................................... 6
Recent Achievements..................... 7
I Nyoman Sumandhi and family
I Nyoman Sumandhi, Fulbright Visiting Artist-in-Resident at Wesleyan University in Connecticut, traveled to San Francisco last winter for the Asian Art Museum's celebration of Balinese performing arts. In fact, his whole family performed for the occasion. Although colleges and universities are encouraged to contact visiting scholars directly (using the faculty associate names in the directory), visits may also be arranged through the CIES Occasional Lecturer Program, which provides limited funds for the round-trip transportation of scholars who accept lecturing invitations.
Ni Putu Sutiati Sumandhi, his wife, has performed and taught the world over. Eleven-year-old Ni Ketut Mayeni Sumandhi has been studying traditional Balinese dance for the last three years; and I Made Roberto Sumandhi, seven years old, made his debut in 1987.
News From Washington
The Fulbright Program In Post- Reagan Washingtonby Norman PetersonExecutive SecretaryLiaison Group for International
Educational ExchangeCongress has just completed
work on the last funding bill for the Fulbright Program under the Reagan Administration, and a crucial change in government is to take place which will set the Program's course for the next 4 years.
The Reagan era comes to an end in an oddly symmetrical manner. Capitol Hill turned down a USIA request to cut funds for academic exchanges to invest in its electronic arsenal. It is symmetrical because the Reagan era began with a similar, though far more serious, effort to cut exchanges to enhance USIA's media outreach - an effort also reversed by Congress. Odd because these two threats are sandwiched between 6 years of solid support from the Administration, when the financial base for academic exchanges grew dramatically. In 1982, USIA spent $72 million on educational exchanges. This fiscal year Congress approved an expenditure of $150 million.
As we look into the future for USIA-sponsored exchanges, it is reassuring to see the strong base of support in Congress for the programs built over the last several years. This was vividly illustrated when Senator Ernest F. Hollings (D SC), Chairman of the Appropriations Subcommittee which funds USIA, brought his Subcommittee's $15 billion, multiple-agency appropriation bill to the Senate floor and pointed out that the bill “ made adjustments in . . . USIA accounts to fulfill congressional priorities, such
(continued on p. 5)
FulbrightALUMNI ASSOCIATION The Fulbrighters' Newsletter
Chapter NewsHawaii Chapter
In 1987 the Hawaii Chapter launched the Fulbright Forums which are presentations made by former Fulbrighters on their overseas experiences. Zenny Estrada, program chair, collaborated with AAUM in setting up these presentations. I-Pai Wu spoke on his Fulbright to Israel; Darrow Aiona on his award to India; Pat Harpstrite on her Fulbright to Brazil; and Ed Wiggers spoke on his Fulbright to England.
Barbara Peterson, former Hawaii chapter president.
In the spring of 1988, the chapter co-sponsored a series of forums with departments of the University of Hawaii. Fulbrighter from India, Sushil K. Gupta, spoke on "Urban Water Resources in Semi-Arid India." Visiting Fulbrighter from the Sorbonne, Tran Van Khe, spoke on "The Traditional Theatre of Vietnam." Judy van Zile of the Music Department spoke on "Christmas in China: First Impression of the Contemporary Dance Scene in the People's Republic of China."Arkansas Chapter
The spring meeting of the J.W. Fulbright Chapter of the Fulbright Alumni Association was held in the Student Union of the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, on Tuesday, March 15 from 12 noon to 2 p.m. After the luncheon, a business meeting was held in which the following officers were elected:William R. Orton - President, Todd Hanlin - Vice President, and Kay Pritchett - Secretary-Treasurer.There was a discussion of plans and activities for the year. The featured speaker was Leslie C. Hunter of the Council for International Exchange of Scholars who gave current infor
mation on lecture and research grants under the Fulbright Program. During the question and answer period, several potential applicants were informed of the status of Fulbright grants for 1989-90. There were individual conferences with Ms. Hunter following the meeting. Chicago Chapter
The Chicago Chapter honored Dr. Rolf Weil, retiring president of Roosevelt University and a Fulbrighter to Germany, at a luncheon at the historic Cliff Dwellers Club in Orchestra Hall. Ni Lan, violinist of Shanghai, a protege of Elisabeth Matesky, Fulbrighter to England, offered two brilliant violin solos. Dr. Bruce Douglas, president of the Chicago Chapter, presented a plaque to Dr. Weil who responded with an overview of international issues including education.
Shirley Anne Sequin, concert pianist, Fulbrighter to Paris and currently a U.S. Artistic Ambassador, toured Europe with a series of concerts in Portugal, Italy, Turkey, Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia and Luxembourg. A previous tour, also conducted under the auspices of the U.S. State Department, was to the Far East including Korea and China.
Aphrodite Sarelos, Fulbrighter to Greece, will coordinate a special Fulbright program under the sponsorship of Dr. Michael Bakalis, Dean of the Loyola Graduate School of Education. This involves a 30-day observation visit by six daycare teachers from Athens, Greece, cosponsored by the U.S. Educational Foundation (Fulbright) in Athens and the Mayor of Athens.
Dr. Charles O'Reilly, Dean of the Loyola University Graduate School of Social Work, Fulbrighter to Italy, heads the organizing committee planning the celebration of the 1989 Illinois Centennial in Social Work Education.
Dr. Bruce Douglas, Fulbrighter to Japan, president of the Chicago Chapter, hosted a successful President's Brunch at his Evanston home for Fulbrighters from overseas living in metropolitan Chicago. Other special guests included the presidents of Barat College, Institute of International Education and Council of International Programs. Minnesota/East Lansing Chapter
Local Fulbrighters who have traveled the world over can meet in the state now that a Michigan Fulbright Alumni Chapter has been established.
About 50 people attended a reception in Kresge Art Center on Sunday to announce the inauguration of the new Mid-Michigan Fulbright Alumni Association. The event was highlighted by the MSU music school's Continental String Quartet, which featured Zhu Hong from China, Tamer Ozkaratufan from Turkey, David Paschlakal from Michigan and Ursula David from Austria.
Michiganians who have been involved with the Fulbright program began meeting a year ago to decide whether the state needed a chapter and, If so, how to create it, said Manfred Thullen, assistant dean of MSU's International Studies and Programs and the chapter's interim President.
The chapter plans to start several committees that will host events for visiting Fulbrighters, sponsor lectures, publicize scholarship programs and bring members together. The organizers of the chapter also on its interim board include: Susan Bandes, Kresge Art Center director; David Horner, Office for International Students and Scholars director; Charles Gliozzo, Overseas Study director; Vincent Hoffman, a criminal justice associate professor;
(continued on p. 4)
left to right: Ambassador Tommie T.B. Koh at the podium, Loren Hershey, Harriet Mayor, and Senator ]. William Fulbright at the Washington Area Chapter's annual dinner in June.
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FulbrightALUMNI ASSOCIATION The Fulbrighters' Newsletter
David Levin of USIA and Fulbright exchange teachers at the orientation program for the teachers and their families at Georgetown University.
USIA Announces Fulbright Teacher Exchange Program
The United States Information Agency (USIA) has announced details of the 1989-90 Fulbright Teacher Exchange Program, which involves a one-on- one exchange for teachers at the elementary, secondary, and postsecondary levels with suitable teachers overseas. The program will involve Argentina, Australia, Belgium/Luxembourg, Brazil, Canada, Colombia, Chile, Cyprus, Denmark, the Federal Republic of Germany, Finland, France, Hungary, Iceland, Mexico, the Netherlands, Norway, Panama, the Philippines, Senegal, South Africa, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom. The number of exchange positions available and the eligibility requirements vary by country.
The program also provides opportunities for teachers to participate in summer seminars, which last from three to eight weeks. During the summer of 1989, seminars will be held in Italy and the Netherlands. For further information, write the Fulbright Teacher Exchange Program, E/ASX, United States Information Agency, 301 Fourth St., S.W., Washington, D.C. 20547; telephone 202/485-2555.
The 1989-90 Fulbright Scholar-In-Residence Program
Opportunities for American colleges and universities to host a visiting scholar from abroad for all or part of the 1989-90 academic year are available through the Fulbright Scholar-in-Residence Program. Institutions are invited to submit proposals for visiting scholars in the humanities and social sciences, or in scientific or professional specializations with a strong international focus. Of particular interest for the 1989-90 program year will be proposals to bring scholars in American literature, history, or politics; professionals from the media or government; or specialists in constitutional law or politics.
A Fulbright Scholar-in-Residence may teach regular courses from a foreign area perspective, serve as a resource person in interdisciplinary courses, assist in developing new courses, or participate in special seminars. An institution hosting a scholar-in-residence would be expected to share the scholar's expertise with a wide range of departments and with neighboring institutions, involve him/her in community activities and professional organizations, and provide opportunities for the visitor to pursue personal research interests.
The program provides round-trip travel for the grantee and, for full-year awards, one accompanying dependent; a monthly maintenance allowance; and incidental allowances for travel, books, and services essential to the assignment. The host institution is expected to share some costs in the form of supplementary funding and in-kind support such as housing.
The deadline for receipt of proposals is November 1, 1988. Detailed program guidelines and proposal forms are available as of June 1988 and can be requested from the Council for International Exchange of Scholars, Eleven Dupont Circle N.W., Suite 300, Washington, D.C. 20036-1257. Telephone: 202/939-5401.
Former Fulbright Scholars
Offered ScholarshipsThe Monterey Institute of Interna
tional Studies in Monterey, California, announces that it will offer a half-tuition, two-year scholarship exclusively for former Fulbright Scholars in the 1989-90 academic year. Selection is based upon previous academic achievement, how education and international experience relate to the applicant's proposed degree programs, letters of recommendation in the admission file, and the applicant's personal statement on the scholarship application form.
The Monterey Institute offers language-based master's degree programs in International Policy Studies (MA), International Management (MBA), International Public Administration (MPA) with an international management or a development management emphasis, Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL), Teaching Foreign Languages (MATFL), and in Translation and Interpretation (MA). In addition, students who have completed their first two years of college may enter an upper division undergraduate program in Language Studies or in International Relations.
Those wishing to apply for the Scholarship for Former Fulbright Scholars for fall semester 1989, all materials needed to complete your application for admission and your scholarship application must be received by the Institute by March 1, 1989.
Questions regarding the application for admission should be directed to the Admissions Office; questions regarding applications for a scholarship should be directed to the Financial Aid Office. Be sure to state that you are applying for the scholarship when requesting information. In addition to this scholarship, the Institute offers a full range of financial aid based on need. The address and telephone numbers are: Monterey Institute of
International Studies 425 Van Buren Street Monterey, California 93940 Admissions Office: (408) 647-4123 Financial Aid Office: (408) 647-4119
3
FulbrightALUMNI ASSOCIATION The Fulbrighters' Newsletter
(continued from p. 2, col. 3)Mary Jim Josephs, Lifelong Education acting assistant dean; William Rittenberg, undergraduate education assistant provost; Elizabeth Seagull, pediatrics and human development professor; and Scott Whiteford, anthropology director. Minnesota Chapter
The fall meeting of the Association, on the theme, “ Freedom of Communication Worldwide," was held at Macalester College in St.Paul on October 24, 1987. Topics ranged from international musical exchanges to television news reporting. Speakers included Philip Brunelle, well-known Minnesota organist, pianist and conductor, who cited some of his international musical experiences; Don Shelby, an anchor person for WCCO-TV, who presented a frank appraisal of television news in this region; and Chin-chuan Lee, Associate Professor of Journalism at the University of Minnesota, who discussed press freedom in three Chinese societies.
The Association's spring meeting focused on “ Human Rights in Eastern Europe: Implications for US- USSR Relations." Participants included Stephen Feinstein, professor of history at the University of Wisconsin—River Falls, a specialist in Russian history; Maria Schweichert, instructor in Russian and interpreter, who reviewed the status of women in Eastern Europe; and James Cunningham, coordinator of Russian Area Studies in several Twin Cities colleges.
Bruce L. Douglas, President of the Chicago Chapter, presents a round-trip air travel to Brian Kim, recipient of a scholarship award to attend Camp Rising Sun in Rhinebeck, N.Y. The Chicago Chapter selects a 14-year- old annually for this award.
New and experimental was the Fulbright Enrichment Program Project developed jointly with the Office of International Education (OIE) and the Hubert H. Humphrey Institute at the University of Minnesota, and the Minnesota International Center (MIC). Participants included foreign Fulbright students and scholars attending various Minnesota colleges and Humphrey North-South Fellows. The project was funded by two $3,000 grants from the United States Information Agency to the OIE and the MIC.
The project involved Fulbrighters and Fellows in a variety of innovative enrichment activities, both in the community and on the campus. It was hoped that the events planned specifically for this talented
group of international students would lead to an expanded understanding of American and other cultures, while encouraging their intellectual and professional development.
A key component of the project was the linking of current Fulbright students with Fulbright alumni, many of whom are or were faculty members at the University of Minnesota and other higher education institutions in the area. On April 23, following dinners in their homes for small groups of foreign Fulbright students, Fulbright alumni and members of the project staff engaged in far-ranging discussions of national and international affairs. Other activities included seminars for Fulbrighters on campus; meetings with professional counterparts; social and theater events; and participation in many existing programs sponsored by the MIC, including the International Students Speakers Bureau, the Statewide Cultural Exchange, and the Friendship Exchange.
The Fulbright Enrichment Program appears to have had a very positive impact. Fulbrighters and Fellows showed their appreciation, not only by participating, but also through responses and comments made on evaluation forms.
Although funding for a future project is not yet assured, the OIE and the MIC will apply for continuation grants.
Additional information about the project may be obtained from the
r \
Become a Local Coordinator for international exchange program
Working with Host Families, local high schools and foreign students as a Local Coordinator you’ll gain community recognition, make lifetime friendships and encourage international exchange. You’ll also be compensated for every student that you place and supervise— our thanks for bringing internationalism to your community. You’ll:
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• Screen, select and orient Host Familes• Make arrangements with your local high school• Supervise the homestay
Call or write:
(800) 322-HOSTask for Libby Cryer
Academic Year in America140 Greenwich Avenue • Greenwich, CT 06830
4
11th Annual Fulbright Alumni Association Conference
Albuquerque, NM October 13 -15,1988
UMfo AinmMiH IMfegMuft Alhsuminfl (DmifeBirKS®
Albuquerque, NM October 13 -15,1988
Conference Registration Form
Please register me for the upcoming Fulbright Alumni Conference:
Cost: Fulbrighter - $65 Spouse or family member - $35(Fee includes: attendance at all forums, lunch, continental breakfast, coffee breaks, transportation to and from airport and Fine Arts Center, buffet reception, and cultural evening)
Banquet - $20/person
$___ enclosed. Please make checks payable to 1988 Fulbright Alumni Association Conference.
Name_________________________________________________________________________Name for badge_________________________________________________________________Address_______________________________________________________________________City, State, ZIP_________ _________________________________________Phone___________________ ____________________________Year and place of Fulbright_________________________________________________________Current position_________________________________________________________________
Hotel Registration Form
Location: Albuquerque MarriottSpecial Fulbright Conference Rate: $59/room/night/double occupancy
$____ enclosed. Please make checks payable to Albuquerque Marriott or fill out below:
Credit card number_________ _______________________________________________Expiration date_____________________________________________________________Signature__________________________________________________________________Date______________________________________________________________________
REMEMBER; Registration deadline is Sept. 15.No refunds will be given after this date.Please make out two checks — one for the hotel and one for conference registration. This will be the only mailing you will receive.
Mail to: Ernest Rose, DeanUniversity of New Mexico College of Fine Arts Albuquerque, NM 87131
ToursThe following optional tours are available Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, October 15,16 and 17. They will be five to eight hour tours and will feature dining and refreshments. The deadline for tour registration is September 15. Please register directly with your tour host. Rojotours, 228 Old Santa Fe Trail, Santa Fe, NM 87501, (505) 983-8333.
Taos -10/16, $42 Situated between the Sangre de Cristo Mountains and the Rio Grande Gorge, Taos is an exotic community created by Pueblo Indians, Hispanic colonists, mountain men, and later artists and writers.
Rio Grande Valley Artisans and Pueblo Tour - 10/17, $35 North of Santa Fe are pueblo villages and Hispanic communities noted for their fine native artists and artisans.
Santa Fe City and Museum Tour -10/15 or 10/17, $34 This comprehensive driving tour of the Santa Fe area will include visits to the downtown area and Canyon Road, Santa Fe's "Artists Road." Along the route, museums offer a variety of displays, including the fine arts, Indian arts and culture, and folk art, as well as state and regional history.
U H @ i A i r m t s i a l IF m lllb T a g M A B w n m in a A s s d P d k f t n g m O sT ilfartB iiiicste P im g n r a im
Thursday, Oct. 133 - 4:30 p.m. WELCOME: Gerald May, President, University of New Mexico
David Johnson, President, Fulbright Alumni Association
ANNOUNCEMENTS: Ernest Rose, Conference CoordinatorGerald Slavin, Conference Coordinator
KEYNOTE SPEAKER: Stephen Kanter, Dean, Northwestern School of Law,Lewis and Clark University
6 - 7:00 RECEPTION: Marriott Hotel - Cash bar
7:00 BANQUET: Marriott HotelSpeaker: Robert Trachinger, Professor, U.C.L.A. Department of Theater, Film and Television
Love & Loathing: Europe's Most Provocative American Import — Commercial Television
Friday, Oct. 147:45 - 8:45 a.m. CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST: Marriott Hotel
8 -10:30 REGISTRATION
9 -10:15 la. "Propaganda, Intelligence & the Image of Scholar Exchange Programs" Moderator - Ted Sturm, Professor of Philosophy
10:30-11:45
Noon
2a. "Lessons from the Past: Directions for the Future" Moderator - Dennis Muchisky, Professor of Linguistics
b. "American Minorities Abroad: A Different View" Moderator - Michael L. Coniff, Professor of History
LUNCH: Marriott HotelSpeaker: Lawrence Lattman, President, New Mexico Institute of Mining & Technology
b. "Fulbright Goals, Perspectives & Expectations: Whose Needs Are We Really Serving?”Moderator - Charles Beckel, Professor of Physics
2 - 3:15 p.m. 3. "The Political Agenda for International Exchanges"Moderator - Richard T. Arndt, Diplomat in Residence, University of Virginia
3:30 - 4:45 4a. "Giving and Receiving: Comparative Impressions From the Peace Corps and the Fulbright Program" b. "Know Before You Go: What's Happening to Pre-service Orientation?
5:30 BUFFET RECEPTION: Busses leave Marriott Hotel for UNM president's house.
7:30 -10:30 ENTERTAINMENT: "Evening of Cultural Events", UNM College of Fine Arts, Fine Arts Center
10:30 RETURN: Busses leave Fine Arts Center and return to hotel.
Saturday, Oct. 15 9-10:15 a.m. 5a.
b.c.d.
"Diversity of Cultures in the Southwest""Teaching in Asia"" International Teacher Exchanges: How to Become Involved & Who is there to Help You?" "Women's Roles in Asia & the Middle East"
10:30 -10:45 Coffee and sweet rolls
10:45 -12:30 FAA Business Meeting (Recommendations for policy) End of ConferenceLunch (on your own) Regional Chapter Meetings
2:00 p.m. FAA Board of Directors Meeting
Guest Speakers
Keynote - Stephen KanterMr. Kanter is currently dean of the Northwestern School of Law at Lewis and Clark University. In 1984 he served as a Fulbright professor of law at Nanjing University in Nanjing, China. Following his stay in China, he served as an Ampart lecturer in Bangkok, Thailand. He earned his J.D. from Yale University and his S.B. in mathematics from Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Banquet - Robert TrachingerMr. Trachinger is presently a professor in U.C.L.A.'s Department of Theater, Film and Television. From 1975-85 he served as Vice President and General Manager of Broadcast Operations and Engineering on the west coast for ABC television, and he coordinated the television operations for the 1984 Summer Olympics. He served as a Fulbright lecturer at Gutenberg University in Mainz, Germany in 1985.
Luncheon - Lawrence LattmanDr. Lattman is currently president of New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology.He received his B.S. in chemical engineering from City College of New York and his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Cincinnati. He is the author of 44 papers and two books dealing with aerial photographs and satellite imagery in petroleum and mineral exploration and energy law. He was a Fulbright professor at Moscow State University in 1975.
Conference locationAlbuquerque, one of the oldest inland cities in the U.S., is the metropolitan heart of New Mexico. It is a city
steeped in the history and culture of the American Indian, the Spanish, and the Anglo. Enlivened by growth and technology during World War II, the city became a center for scientific industry.
The Indians were established for more than a century in farming communities along the Rio Grande before the Spaniards came in 1540. Nine Indian pueblos surround Albuquerque today. Old Town —original Albuquerque— was established in 1706 as a Spanish villa, whose grassy plaza today is surrounded by shops, restaurants and galleries. On the plaza itself are four flag poles that display the banners of the nations that have governed the city: Spain,Mexico, the Confederacy, and the United States. A "new town" sprang up two miles to the east soon after the coming of the railroad in 1880, and it remains the modern core of the city today.
Albuquerque is bordered on the east by the 10,000 ft. Sandia Mountains, on the west by a chain of extinct volcanoes, and is divided by the legendary Rio Grande. Elevations in the city vary from 4500 to 6500 ft. above sea level. Its location results in a mild, dry climate with the fall being an ideal time to visit.
The University of New Mexico, your conference host, celebrates its centennial anniversary in 1989. Once a lone Victorian building on the sand hills outside of town, it is now a sprawling center of science and culture for the Southwest. The campus is distinguished by a modified pueblo style architecture. It currently enrolls over 27,000 students in 11 colleges and professional schools.
Getting thereAlbuquerque, with a population nearing 500,000, has an international airport that is served by ten major
airlines. Daily Amtrak railroad service is available. Two of the nation's major interstate highways, 1-40 and 1-25, intersect in Albuquerque.
Special Air Travel Discounts: American Airlines is offering up to 45% discounts to all conference participants who reserve seats at least seven days before flight time. When making reservations, be sure to call 1-800-433-1790 or your travel agent and give the following code number in order to qualify --
Accommodations S-56720
Special conference rates have been arranged with the Marriott Hotel — $59/room/night/double occupancy. Please request reservations with the accompanying registration form. Reservations must be made by September 15. Cancellations must be made with the hotel.
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FulbrightALUMNI ASSOCIATION The Fulbrighters' Newsletter
Minnesota International Center, 711 East River Road, Minneapolis, MN 55455.Washington DC Area Chapter
On June 10, the Washington Area Chapter sponsored its first Annual Spring Dinner in the international setting of Chinatown's China Inn.In attendance were 75 alumni, 15 current Fulbright grantees, and 61 guests, including Senator Fulbright, Council for International Exchange of Scholars Director Cassandra A. Pyle, Ambassador for Singapore the Honorable Tommie T.B. Koh, and FAA Executive Director Harriet Mayor. Senator Fulbright reminisced about the origins of the idea for the international exchange program which bears his name and how it developed after World War II.
Keynote speaker Ambassador Koh recounted his personal experiences as a young Fulbright scholar in Harvard Law School in 1963-64 and commented on the direction of United States policies as they relate to world affairs. He emphasized America's need to strengthen its educational system, improve its industrial competitiveness in the world's markets, and thus help to create long-term economic stability.
David Sullivan, Chapter President, and FAA Director Harriet Mayor also spoke. Loren W.Hershey and Jenny Johnson were co-chairs of the dinner.
Fulbright Alumni Directory
The response to the call for the names and addresses of Fulbright alumni/ae has been heartwarming. Letters with information on colleagues have come from as far away as Cyprus, and over 150 responded to the Association's advertisement in the February edition of the Chronicle for Higher Education.
Questionnaires have gone out to all Fulbright alumni listed on the Fulbright Alumni Association database. Harris Publishing Company will follow up with telephone calls this fall to verify all information listed. If you have not received your questionnaire, or if you think that a colleague might not be listed, please contact the Association by mail or phone, and we will see that you are sent one immediately.
(continued from p. 1, col. 3) as maintaining the educational and cultural exchanges at the current level.'' Hopefully, many in the Fulbright Alumni Association will respond with expressions of gratitude to Senator Hollings and other key members of Congress for their crucial support.
Waiting for the next President are two overwhelmingly important features in the policy landscape: an enormous national debt and the Gramm-Rudman-Hollings Deficit Reduction Law, poised to automatically cut the funds of all discretionary federal programs, including the Fulbright Program, if the budget deficit is not reduced through regular annual increments by a total of $150 billion over the next five years.
Unless Congress makes some dramatic funding policy changes, such as raising taxes, reducing entitlement programs, or slashing defense spending, USIA exchanges will not escape the knife. Chairman of the House committee which funds International Development programs, David Obey (D WI), stated that the entire pool from which Congress must find this $150 billion is only $400 billion. Thus, if Congress is going to meet the Gramm-Rudman requirements, and avoid automatic across-the-board cuts, most discretionary programs will have to be cut by more than 40%.
Somehow the blade never seems to fall with such deadly force. Nevertheless, Gramm-Rudman is a reality that will face us through much of the next administration and will seriously cut the options available to the next President.
Most importantly for Fulbright alumni, these budget realities mean that the next several years will surely be a time in which it will be essential to remind policymakers about the crucial importance of the Fulbright and other U.S. government exchange programs. More than ever, the Fulbright Program will need a dedicated and active constituency if it is to survive, let alone prosper.
FREE TRAVEL LODGING. Educators International Travel Club. Members host members worldwide. Current and former educators eligible. Write: EITC, Box 68500, Dept.F, Tucson, Arizona 85737, USA.
David C. LarsenBeaver College, Glenside,
Pennsylvania, welcomes Fulbright alumnus David C. Larsen as Vice President and Director of the Center for Education Abroad.
The Center for Education Abroad programs help more than 1,500 undergraduate students from some 200 American colleges and universities to matriculate in host country institutions in Britain, Austria, and Ireland.For a brochure or further information, call (215) 572-2901.
STUDY/WORK/LIVE
OVERSEAS!Since 1977, Transitions Abroadhas helped travelers plan their own overseas adventures. One-year subscription ($15) includes four issues, annual Educational Travel Directory, plus FREE Guide to Living Overseas.
YES, start my subscription w ith the next issue.
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5
FulbrightAtUMNl ASSOCIATION The Fulbrighters' Newsletter
Fulbright Program Funding TrendsThe past five years have witnessed dramatic increases in the funding of academic exchanges through the cooperation of the United States Congress and the Administration. Under the Percy-Pell amendment to Public Law 97-241, Congress mandated in 1982 a doubling of exchange-of-persons programs administered by the U.S. Information Agency (USIA) between fiscal year 1982 and fiscal year 1986. This period having been completed in the anniversary year, the Board of Foreign Scholarships (BFS) now reports on the amendment's impact on the Fulbright Program, the affected activity that is under the Board's oversight.
As accompanying graphs indicate, the U.S. Government funding for academic exchanges began a long decline in the mid-1960s. While absolute amounts showed occasional small increases, the purchasing power of those funds declined precipitously as inflation and increased costs took their toll. To reverse this erosion, Congress appropriated $48.8 million in 1984, $77.8 million in 1985, and $89.5 million in 1986. USIA calculates that the doubling target was actually 95% achieved, once the funding levels are corrected for inflation in the United States.
However, in the real world of escalating costs, currency fluctuations, and double-digit inflation in some countries, this does not translate into a doubling of the number of Fulbright awards. By USIA count, total academic exchange grants increased from 3733 in fiscal year 1982 to 5785 in fiscal year 1986, the period covered by the amendment (Note: Figures reported by the BFS for those years differ somewhat from these figures, principally because the Board does not report renewals as separate grants.) Proportionately more awards were given in Africa and in Latin America: these numbers more than doubled.
However, already in 1987 a number of factors have begun to erode the new funding base established by Percy-Pell. As part of a larger agreement between Congress and the President, funding for foreign affairs programs are to remain at virtually unchanged appropriation levels, which means decreases in numbers of Fulbright awards and in the necessary support provided the Program by the U.S. Embassy personnel overseas. The Tax Reform Act of 1986 has had largely unintended but assuredly negative consequences for individual Fulbrighters and for the Program as a whole. New programs placed under Fulbright auspices take their share of resources. Despite the laudable results of the Percy-Pell amendment, the need for hard choices and for husbanding resources will remain.from the Twenty-fourth Annual Report of the Board of Foreign Scholarships, December 1987.
U.S. Governm ent Support 1960-1987 in Constant Dollars
Fiscal year obligations for Fulbright academic exchange programs,expressed in 1972 dollars. (Im p lic it price deflator for gross national product; source:Department o f Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis)
Scholarly Exchange Programs
With ChinaThe Committee on Scholarly
Communication with the People's Republic of China (CSCPRC) has announced its 1989-90 National Program of Scholarly Exchanges with China. This program includes the following:
The Visiting Scholar Exchange Program supports one-to-three month visits for American and Chinese scholars in all disciplines between September 1989 and August 1990.
The program also supports the
nomination of Chinese scholars in all disciplines by American scholars. Priority will be given to Chinese who have not visited the United States recently and to those whose visits will contribute to future academic exchanges.
For both American and Chinese components, women, minorities, scholars beginning their careers, and scholars based at or visiting provincial institutions in China are especially encouraged. The deadline for application to the Visiting Scholar Exchange Program is November 15, 1988.
The Graduate Program supports individuals enrolled in a graduate program in social sciences or hu
manities to do course work or dissertation research at a Chinese university.
Research grantees normally spend from two months to one year in the PRC, beginning no earlier than July 1989 and ending no later than December 1990. The deadline for application to the Graduate and Research Programs is October 15,1988.
For application information on all the above programs, write the Committee on Scholarly Communication with the People's Republic of China, National Academy of Sciences, 2101 Constitution Avenue, Washington, D.C. 20418.
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FulbrightALUMNI ASSOCIATION The Fulbrighters' Newsletter
Recent AchievementsGordon Bronitsky, Fulbrighter to
Frankfurt, West Germany, 1984-85, has become an independent anthropological and archeological consultant in Albuquerque, New Mexico. He specializes in crosscultural and international programs, research and dialogue. He is currently coordinator of the Miguel H. Trujillo American Indian Education Project in affiliation with the All Indian Pueblo Council designed to honor the man who sued New Mexico to obtain the vote for Indians.
Giulio C. Cassani, Professor at the Defense Language Institute in Monterey, California for 29 years, and Fulbrighter in 1966-67 and 1973- 74, has been named Chair of the Italian Program of Syracuse University in Florence, Italy.
Rodolphe J.A. de Seife, Professor of Law at Northern Illinois University and Fulbrighter to Morocco, 1982, has been awarded the Silver Medal of the City of Toulon, France, in a ceremony commemorating the landing of U.S. troops during World War II.
Joseph W. Dellapenna, Professor from Villanova University, currently a Fulbright Professor of Law at Jilin University in Changchun, People's Republic of China, and formerly a Fulbright Professor of Law at National Chengchi University Taipei the Republic of China (Taiwan), recently had his book, Suing Foreign Governments and Their Corporations, published by the Bureau of National Affairs in Washington. This book is a manual for guiding lawyers through the intricacies of suits against foreign governments and foreign-government-owned corporations in American courts.
Seymour Fersh, Coordinator of Curriculum Development at Brevard Community College in Cocoa, Flor-
The Fulbrighters' Newsletter of the Fulbright Alumni Association is published three times a year. Material for publication on the subjects of international exchange, international education, and alumni activities, as well as news and reports of host countries and institutions should be sent to the Editor.
Paul J. Ferlazzo Department of English Northern Arizona University Box 6032Flagstaff, Arizona 86011
Copyright ©1988 Fulbright Alumni Association
ida and Fulbrighter to India in 1958- 59 and 1986, was chosen by the Committee on Teaching About Asia (CTA) to be its honoree for 1988.The CTA began its awards last year to "honor those individuals who have done outstanding work in promoting the teaching of Asian Studies at the pre-collegiate level."
Maryhelen C. Harmon, Associate Professor of English at the University of South Florida, and Fulbrighter to Paris, France, in 1984, received the University Distinguished Teacher award for 1987, and was the speaker at the recent Commencement ceremony.
James M. Hendrickson, Professor of Spanish and English as a Second Language at Lansing Community College, and Fulbrighter to Bolivia, 1985 and to Chile, 1988, recently coauthored an intermediate college Spanish program, Nuevas dimen- siones, published by Heinle &Heinle of Boston, Massachusetts. The program includes eight integrated components: a textbook, a workbook, a reader, an unscripted audiotape, a set of scripted audiotapes, a tapescript, an instructor's manual, and a videotape.
Jerri Holan, a Fulbrighter to Norway, has just completed Norwegian Wood: A Tradition of Building (Rizzoli, 1988) about the traditional buildings - farmhouses and churches - which represent a small but rich manifestation of the art and craft of wooden architecture. Using archival and contemporary photographs, plans, and drawings, Holan explores a vernacular built form that responds to a nation's unique "wood culture." Each building type in the book is approached as an expression of Nordic man, cognizant of his total environment. Holan is an practicing architect in the San Francisco Bay area.
Howard P. Kainz, Professor of Philosophy at Marquette University and Fulbrighter to Germany, 1981- 82 and 1987-88, is the author of the recent book, Paradox, Dialectic, and System: A Contemporary Reconstruction of the Flegelian Problematic.
Siegfried G. Karsten, Professor of Economics at West Georgia College and Fulbrighter to China, 1986-87, has recently published "China's Approach to Social Market Economics, a Variant of Market Socialism"
(continued on p.8)
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FulbrightALUMNI ASSOCIATION The Fulbrighters' Newsletter
(continued from p. 7, col. 1)in the American Journal of Economicsand Sociology, April, 1988.
Clifford E. Landers, Professor of Political Science at Jersey City State College and Fulbrighter to the Dominican Republic in 1981-82, is the translator of Memoirs of a Gigolo, by the Brazilian novelist Marcos Rey. The work was published earlier this year by Avon Books.
John H. Meiser, who went to the Philippines as a Fulbright scholar in 1985-86, has just published with Frederick K. Ault, Solutions Guide for General Chemistry and College Chemistry (Holtzclaw and Robinson, Eighth Editions, D.C. Heath and Company). Dr. Meiser is presently at Ball State University of Muncie, Indiana, in its Department of Chemistry.
Barbara Peterson of the University of Hawaii and Fulbrighter to Japan, 1967, has recently published Notable Women of Hawaii with the University of Hawaii Press.
Arvind V. Phatak, Professor of Business Administration and International Management at Temple University and Fulbrighter to India 1986 is one of five Temple University faculty to receive the first annual “ Great Teaching Awards."The criteria included: long-term commitment to mastery of one's own teaching skills; accessibility and responsiveness to students, and meeting teaching responsibilities beyond the classroom.
Earl A. Pope, IREX/Fulbrighter to Romania, 1977-78, has been named the Helen H. P. Manson Professor
in Bible at Lafayette College. Pope has conducted extensive research in American religious thought and in the religious situation of Eastern Europe.
Fritz Rohrlich, Professor of Physics at Syracuse University and Fulbrighter to Austria, 1974, is the author of the recent From Paradox to Reality: Basic Concepts of the Physical World, Cambridge University Press.
Roberta Rubenstein, student Fulbrighter to England in 1966-68 recently published Boundaries of the Self: Gender, Culture, Fiction (University of Illinois Press, 1987). She is Professor of Literature at American University in Washington, D.C.
Stephen Sandy, a member of the Bennington College Literature and Languages Division, and Fulbrighter to Japan, 1967, has recently been awarded a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship of $20,000. His fifth volume of poetry, Man in the Open Air was published this year by Alfred A. Knopf.
Richard C. Schultz, Professor of Surgery (Plastic Surgery) at the University of Illinois, College of Medicine at Chicago, Illinois and Fulbrighter to Sweden 1960-61 was elected President-Elect to the American Society of Maxillofacial Surgeons at the Annual Meeting held in Atlanta this past fall. He has also just completed his term as President of the American College of Surgeons, Chicago Committee on Trauma. Schultz has recently completed the third edition of his book Facial Injuries which was published in May 1988.
Judy Van Zile, Professor of Dance at the University of Hawaii and Fulbrighter to India, 1968-69, and Korea, 1981, has been appointed editor of Dance Research Journal for the years 1989-91.
Douglas L. Wheeler, Professor of Modern History, University of New Hampshire and Fulbrighter to Portugal, 1961-62, is the editor of Portuguese Studies Newsletter, the author of several scholarly works on Portugal, and the Coordinator of the International Conference Group on Portugal. He has recently initiated a new Master's degree in Portuguese history at UNH.
Robert L. Wild, Professor of Physics, University of California, Riverside, and Fulbrighter to the Philippines, 1981-82, has recently received the Most Outstanding Achievement Award from the Southern Philippines Physics Society for his workshops in Physics, and for shipping some 15 tons of science textbooks and journals to universities in the Philippines.
Mario D. Zamora, Professor of Anthropology at the College of William and Mary, Fulbright/Smith Mundt 1959 Cornell University and Fulbrighter to Norway 1986, was recently conferred a Presidential Citation “ in recognition of Professional commitment and outstanding leadership as president of the Virginia Social Science Association" of 1986- 87. Zamora is co-editor/co-author of a forthcoming 2-volume publication entitled The Anthropology of War and Peace: Conflict, Diplomacy, and the Global System.
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