| AFAA Honours long serving alumni with Lifetime Achievement Scholarships in Canberra and Sydney | |||
AFAA President, Dr Tony Worby, US Ambassador, Mr Robert McCallum and Mrs McCallum, honour both Em Prof Robert Crompton AM (1968 Sen. Scholar) and Dr Dale Hebbard (1957 Postdoc) with Lifetime Achievement Scholarships at the US Ambassador's residence on 15 November 2007. These two gentleman, along with Dr Howard Bradbury AM who was unable to attend, were instrumental in creating the Australian Fulbright Alumni Assoiciation back in 1990 and tracking down over 4,000 US and Australian Fulbright alumni. |
AFAA President, Dr Tony Worby (rear left), Fulbright Commission Chair, Tom Pascarella(rear right) and Harriet Fulbright present Janet Flint with the Association's Lifetime Achievement Scholarship in recognition of her work for the NSW Chapter over the past 14 years. |
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Members of the Australian Fulbright Alumni Association (ACT Chapter) meet the 2007 US Fulbright Scholars at Old Parliament House, Canberra on 20th September. |
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ACT Chapter Secretary, Malcolm Beazley with new US Scholars Leland Turner (L, at ANU) and US Fulbright Alumni Scholarship winne, Tyler Summers (R, also at ANU). |
2007 US Scholars Mary Anderson (at UTAS) and Jesse Silverman (attending UQ) with special guest Mr Dan Clune, Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy. |
2006 US Scholar, Jeanette Simmonds (at UQ) and 1964 alumna Prof. Jenny Graves |
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Alumnus Andrew Lu and US Scholar, Mary Anderson |
2007 US Scholar Leland Turner, ACT Alumni Assoc. Chapter Chair, Assoc. Prof. Jeffery Looi and David Atkinson from the U.S. Embassy. |
1979 Alumnus, Anna Pender with 2007 US Senior Scholar, Dr Steven Pantilat and his partner Dr Cyntia Fenton. |
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| Alumni at the 2007 Fulbright Presentation Dinner held at the Customs House, Brisbane. | |||
MAY '07 FULBRIGHT PRESENTATION DINNER IN BRISBANE. Rosemary Yule, '74 alumnus Dr Donald Yule, '53 alumnus E.Prof. James McWilliam. |
MAY '07 FULBRIGHT PRESENTATION DINNER IN BRISBANE. Fellow 2005 alumni, Mitchell Lawrence and Eliza Matthews. |
2007 FULBRIGHT PRESENTATION DINNER '04 alumnus, Prof Paul Turnbull. |
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| Alumni Association State Chapters connecting and networking | |||
JUNE '07 - VIC CHAPTER member, Lauretta de Sa Eaton hosts two US scholars , Prof. Danielle Conway Jones (L) and Jonathan Kobrinsk i(R) to their first AFL match. |
JUNE '07 - WA CHAPTER Dinner with alumni and 2000 Aus. Scholar Carmel Dean while she was visiting Perth recently in connection with the Broadway musical, 25th Annua Putnam Countyl Spelling Bee, a production which she is the conductor and vocal arranger for. |
JUNE '07 - SA CHAPTER - '10 Canoes' film night with film-maker Rolf de Heer, his partner, Chapter Chair, Dr Claire Smith and Chapter Secretary, Jack Condous. |
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| SA CHAPTER 4th JULY CELEBRATIONS WITH CURRENT US AND AUSTRALIAN SCHOLARS AT THE WELLINGTON HOTEL, ADELAIDE | |||
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US Scholars, Lindsay Chura (L) and Sarah Hughes (R) celebrate US Independence Day in style with Mrs Beverley Webber. |
2007 SA Fulbright Scholars; from the US, Lindsay Chura and Australian Scholar, from the University of Adelaide, Rowena White. |
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ACT CHAPTER CELEBRATES THANKSGIVING IN JULY Members of the ACT Chapter braved the elements on 18 July to attend a “Thanksgiving in July” dinner at the historic Olims Canberra Hotel. Guests were treated to drinks and canapés before a traditional three course menu of homemade pumpkin soup, roast turkey and freshly baked pecan pie, complimented by Canberra’s best wines. Recently returned scholars , Dr Alan Forghani, Scientist, Geoscience Australia and Dr Lorrae van Kerkhoff, Postdoctoral Fellow, ANU provided excellent reflections on their Fulbright experiences. Much appreciation is extended to Professor Jeffery Looi (Chapter Chair), Dr Malcolm Beazley (Chapter Secretary), Kerrie Burmeister (AFAA National Secretary), Jane Cure and Ransima Atkins from Olims Hotel for making the night a great success. A decision was made by all in attendance to hold this function as an annual event. A special verse was written by Dr Beazley for the event.
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Professor David Konstan 1988 US Senior Scholar
from: Brown University to: Monash University currently: John Rowe Workman Professor of Classics and the Humanistic Tradition,Professor of Comparative Literature, Brown University. |
My B.A. was in mathematics; in my senior year of college, I began ancient Greek and Latin, and went on to obtain a doctorate in classics. I have been at Brown since 1987, and since 1992 have been the John Rowe Workman Distinguished Professor of Classics and the Humanistic Tradition; I am also a Professor in Comparative Literature, and in the Graduate Faculty of Theatre, Speech and Dance, and I am affiliated with the Department of Philosophy. Previous to coming to Brown, I taught for 20 years at Wesleyan University in Connecticut. I have held visiting appointments at various universities, including the Autonomous National University of Mexico, University of Otago in New Zealand, the University of Edinburgh, the Universidade de São Paulo, the University of La Plata in Argentina, the University of Natal in Durban, South Africa, the University of Sydney, Monash University in Melbourne, and the American University in Cairo. As far as my editorial responsibilities go, I am an Associate Editor of Arethusa, and on the editorial boards of several journals, including Scholia (South Africa and New Zealand), Intertexts, Apeiron, Phaos (Brazil), Logo (Spain), Nova Tellus (Mexico), Nigeria and the Classics (Nigeria), and Ordia Prima (Argentina). I am also co-editor of the series "Writings from the Greco-Roman World Series," published by the Society of Biblical Literature. I've travelled quite a bit since I was a Fulbright Fellow in Australia, back in 1988. The list would bore one, but last year alone I was in Israel, Nigeria, Germany, Scotland, Switzerland, Argentina, Ukraine, Spain, Portugal (the Azores), and several other places, all in connection with academic work. And my heart is set on returning to Australia sometime in the next couple of years. |
Professor Kevin Hart 1977 Australian Fulbright Postgraduate Scholar
from: The Australian National University to: Stanford University. currently: Edwin B. Kyle Professor of Christian Studies, Department of Religious Studies, University of Virginia. |
My Fulbright year at Stanford University in 1977-78 was one of the most important of my life. I was supposed to attend classes run by Professor Donald Davie, though I quickly chose instead to audit Professor Van A. Harvey's graduate seminar on Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Theology. Over the year I read a great deal of German idealist philosophy and German theology. I would sit in my apartment and read Hegel in the morning, and Barth in the afternoon. Every couple of days I would cycle to the campus and come back with another heavy pile of books. What was most important to me about my Fulbright year is that I didn't have to do any courses or write any papers. I spent the year in solitude reading and thinking. After that year, I was able to come up with an original topic for my doctoral dissertation and to write the dissertation quickly. As it happens, much of my academic work has become centered on the sort of philosophy and theology that I read in 1977-78. Also in my Fulbright year I discovered, mostly by chance, some of the poets whose work has meant a great deal to me over the years. I would not have encountered the range and depth of South American poetry had I not spent time in California. But, once again, it was the silence and solitude that was of overwhelming importance to me. In that year I came to realise who I was and what I wanted to do; and I would have been able to avoid that complex realisation had I been required to do courses, write essays, and get a degree. |
Professor John Holloway 1983 US Fulbright Senior Scholar
from: Arizona State University to: La Trobe University currently: Dept of Chemistry and Biochemistry and Dept of Geological Sciences, Arizona State University. |
My primary field of research is the study chemical reactions at the high pressure and temperature found at the bottom of the Earth’s ocean and in deeper parts of the Earth’s interior. Projects include measuring the solubility of carbon dioxide in a range of silicate melts from 0.1 to 20 GPa (1 to 200,000 atm.) and measuring melting reactions in the interior of Mars and the Earth’s lower crust and upper mantle. We use non-ideal mixing thermodynamics of volatile molecular species to calculate oxidation-reduction equilibria in planetary interiors at high pressures and temperatures; and we do experiments to determine the stability of hydrous and carbonated minerals in the Earth’s crust and mantle. Our most recent project is to study mineral catalyzed, abiotic organic synthesis under conditions found in seafloor hydrothermal systems (Black Smokers) at the Earths mid-ocean ridge system. The first result showed that methanol is formed from hydrogen and carbon dioxide in the presence of the mineral magnetite. We are currently studying reactions of aqueous methanol solutions in the presence of different clay mineral types. The results demonstrate abiotic formation of a wide range of simple and complex compounds, including dimethyl ether and hexamethyl benzene. |
Dr Stacey Jupiter 2002 US Fulbright Postgraduate Scholar
from: University of California - Santa Cruz to: The University of Queensland currently: Postdoctoral Research Fellow, ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, The Australian National University. |
Through my Fulbright Postgraduate Scholarship to the University of Queensland, I was able to initiate research that formed the basis of my doctoral dissertation investigating links between land clearing and changes to near shore water quality at the reefs around Mackay, Queensland. During my Fulbright, I co-authored a successful Australian Research Council (ARC) Linkage grant that provided continued funding for the project for the following 3 years. It was largely because of this achievement that I was asked to apply for my current position in the new ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, where I am now a research fellow at both the Australian National University and the Australian Institute of Marine Sciences. I continue to address issues regarding land-pollution threats to coral reefs, both in Australia and abroad. I am currently organising an international symposium in Kenya which will bring together researchers and managers to discuss the future of coastal reef systems in a rapidly industrialising world. |