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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- Three University of Alabama faculty/staff members
are among current campus recipients of Fulbright Scholar grants.
Dr. Richard Lomax, professor of education and applied statistics
at UA, has been awarded a Fulbright grant to lecture at Tallinn
Pedagogical University in Estonia during the 2003-2004 academic
year. He will be teaching quantitative research methods, both introductory
and multivariate statistics, in the department of psychology in
Tallinn.
Dr. Marilyn Emplaincourt, associate director of Capstone International
Programs, was awarded a Fulbright International Education Administrators
Award to Korea, June 1-14, 2003. The recipient of numerous professional
scholarships, she was an international education Fulbright delegate
to Japan in 1986 and to Germany in 1990. In 1987, she was awarded
a Malone Fellowship to Tunisia and was a Malone delegation leader
to Jordan in 1988. She was a member of the Fulbright-Hays Faculty
Seminar in Yugoslavia in 1989 and Pakistan in 1994.
Dr. Subha Chakraborti, UA professor of statistics, received an
award and will conduct research at the University of Pretoria in
South Africa during the spring 2004 semester. Chakraborti has published
over 30 articles in a variety of journals. His research has been
supported by grants from the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
and the Philips Corp.
These UA faculty/staff members are three of approximately 800 United
States faculty and professionals who will travel abroad to some
140 countries for the 2003-2004 academic year through the Fulbright
Scholar Program. Established in 1946 under legislation introduced
by the late Sen. J. William Fulbright of Arkansas, the program’s
purpose is to build mutual understanding between the people of the
United States and other countries. The U.S. State Department’s
Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs sponsors the Fulbright
Program, America’s flagship international educational exchange
activity.
Recipients of Fulbright Scholar awards are selected on the basis
of academic or professional achievement and because the have demonstrated
extraordinary leadership potential in their fields. Among thousands
of prominent Fulbright Scholar alumni are Milton Friedman, Nobel
Prize-winning economist; Alan Leshner, CEO of the American Association
for the Advancement of Science; Rita Dove, Pulitzer Prize-winning
poet; and Craig Barrett, CEO of Intel Corp.
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