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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Emily Smith’s looks often make her stand
out in a crowd. It’s not that the blond, blue-eyed University
of Alabama graduate - with the most American of last names - couldn’t
pass for the proverbial girl next door. The reason Smith’s
physical appearance is so often striking is because her door --
and the one next to hers -- is often half a world away from her
native United States.
“I’m not sure where this interest came from, but I’ve
always been fascinated by other countries and other languages,”
said the Pennsylvania native who completed her high school years
at Hoover High School. Since enrolling at UA in 1999, Smith, who
has studied five languages and is fluent in Spanish, has spent time
in Brazil, Spain, Portugal, Germany, India, Mexico, England, Canada
and Colombia.
Now, thanks to a Rotary Ambassadorial Scholarship of up to $25,000
for the 2003-04 academic year, Smith, who graduated from UA this
month, will soon move to Caracas, Venezuela where she’ll begin
work on a master’s degree in international relations at La
Universidad Central, in Caracas. She’ll serve as a good will
ambassador during her stay, visiting Rotary Clubs in Venezuela to
make presentations on Alabama, its people and its top issues.
As an undergraduate at UA, Smith managed to work in her many international
trips during holiday breaks from school and during the summers,
all while keeping a 4.0 grade point average, with a double major
of journalism and Spanish. She recalls attending a religious parade
in India, where her fair skin and blond hair made her the focus
-- even of those riding the floats.
“The village people never see Americans. Little kids were
coming up to me and touching my skin,” she said. Her trips
were funded primarily through travel grants and academic scholarships
she won, part-time jobs, including her work as a free-lance journalist,
and some assistance from her parents.
Smith typically lived with host families during her travels, which
cut down on expenses and enabled her to get a truer picture of what
it was like to live in various countries. Her trips weren’t
of the sightseeing variety.
“I hate tour buses,” she says. Throughout her India
visits, taken during a time when that region was one of the world’s
political hotspots, she was a guest teacher at an English and public
speaking school. But Smith’s international lifestyle has not
been limited to her UA breaks. She was elected president of UA’s
International Student Association,
a first for an American and a first for any woman.
The “adopted international student” said when she was
in high school she had not anticipated attending a major, state
university.
“Before coming to UA, I didn’t want to come to a big
state school, but I’m really thankful I did because at The
University of Alabama, I’ve really found a global community
here. The international population, those are the people I spend
all of my time with. I never would have thought that before.”
Smith, who indicates she’ll likely later pursue a doctorate,
wants to one day combine her love of writing with her love of international
affairs.
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