
Three of our 1997 Fulbright Scholars. |
Between 1975 and 2003 thirty-seven Southampton Graduate Campus
graduates have won the prestigious Fulbright Award for
Graduate Study Abroad. Several have won other major
awards, such as the Marshall, Udall and Truman awards.
The Fulbright Fellowships were established in 1946
under Congressional legislation introduced by Senator
J. William Fulbright of Arkansas, and offer a year of
research or graduate study in a foreign country. In
addition to an excellent academic record (generally,
a 3.50 GPA or better), applicants must propose a research
project unique to the specific country to which they
are applying. The project should be an extension of
the applicant's undergraduate training, and the Fulbright
application must also include evaluations of the feasibility
of the proposed project within the allotted period of
time, from faculty and research supervisors familiar
with the candidate's training.
Award Stories:
Fulbright
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Andrew
Fields (2003-04)
Marine Science Graduate
Fields will take part in an
in-depth study of manta rays on a tiny Indonesian
island. He will conduct a detailed census of
local manta rays and hopes to offer solutions
for the survival of this endangered species.
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Rebecca Langlois
(2002-03)
Marine Science Major
Langlois spent the 2002-2003
academic year at the Ocean Studies Institute
in Kiel, Germany under the supervision of Dr.
Julie LaRoche researching the nitrogen cycle,
specifically the role that iron plays in nitrogen
fixing organisms.
Langlois used her ten months
in Germany to culture a strain of trichodesmium,
a unique and ubiquitous member of the plankton
community, in different concentrations of iron.
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Jayme Mancini and Josh Newton with Professor
Bob Danziger |
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Paul Cancellieri
(1998-99)
Marine Biology Major
Marine Biology major, originally
planned to study the developmental aspects
of two genera of green algae at the Max
Planck Institute in Germany. He relinquished
his Fulbright to begin doctoral studies
at North Carolina State University.
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Liberty Trimarchi
(1998-99)
Psychobiology Major
Liberty was awarded a Fulbright
to document patterns of sound production
in groups of beluga whale mothers and calves
in various ambient sound environments in
the St. Lawrence River estuary between the
United States and Canada, at Dalhousie University
in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
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Brian Wysor
(1998-99)
Marine Biology Major
Brian, a former President
of the Southampton Graduate Campus Honors Society,
took leave from his doctoral studies at
the University of Southeastern Louisiana
to complete a Fulbright at the Smithsonian
Tropical Research Institution in Panama.
The Fulbright involved the comparison of
marine flora on the Caribbean and the Pacific
Ocean sides of the Isthmus of Panama.
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Farrell Hochmuth
(1997-98)
Environmental Studies major
Farrell studied permaculture
-- an alternative agricultural method --
during a 10-month stay at the University
of Zimbabwe and the PELUM Centre (Participatory
Ecological Land-Use Management), beginning
in January 1998. Her Fulbright project examined
Zimbabwe's need to feed families and create
cash crops like cotton. By creating ecosystems
of 15 to 20 species (instead of monocropping,
i.e., a potato field), plants can defend
each other against bugs, while soil erosion
and deforestation can be alleviated without
use of harmful pesticides and fertilizers.
She returned from Africa in December 1998,
with plans to begin law school(environmental
law).
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Bethanie Carney
(1997-98)
Marine Biology major
Bethanie was awarded a Fulbright
to study syndrome M74 in Baltic salmon at
the University of Goteborg in Sweden. The
syndrome, which is thought to be caused
by environmental pollution, has severely
depleted salmon stocks in both the Baltic
and North Seas. After finishing the Fulbright,
Bethanie decided to continue her studies
in Sweden, working on her Masters Degree
in Goteborg.
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Meredith Clinton
(1997-98)
Marine Biology major
Meredith was awarded a Fulbright
to conduct a genetic population analysis
of endangered loggerhead turtles in the
Mediterranean, working at the Sea Turtle
Protection Society in Athens, Greece and
at a field laboratory on the island of Zakynthos.
The research facilities became unavailable
during the summer of 1997, and Meredith
turned down the Fulbright to attend Virginia
Institute of Marine Science.
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Allison Dwileski
(1997-98)
Marine Biology major
Allison performed research
at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institution
in Panama, studying several species of sea
urchin vital to the stability of coastal
marine ecosystems in subtropical latitudes
in the western Caribbean.
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Toni Ferrara
(1997-98)
Marine Biology major
Toni studied the systematics
and pathogenesis of fish parasites collected
along the Great Barrier Reef, working at
the University of Queensland, in Brisbane,
Australia. After completing her studies
in Australia, Toni returned to the states
to complete research which she began while
on her Internship with Dr. Janine Caira
at the University of Connecticut.
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Kristen Schultz
(1997-98)
English major
Kristen was awarded a Fulbright
to study the women of Okinawa. Her project
was titled: "Searching for a Separate Peace:
A Study of the Effects of the US Military
Base on the Women of Okinawa." Kristen participated
in the Japanese-American Young Artists Festival
in Shionoe, Japan in August, 1995, where
she taught photo classes at local schools,
interviewed some of the local elderly women,
and photographed the townspeople.
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Matt Sullivan
(1997-98)
Marine Biology Major
Matt investigated "natural"
anti-fouling mechanisms in crustose red
algae, (as opposed to potentially toxic
chemical compounds) which appear to protect
man-made structures (ships, condensers,
etc.) from colonization by fouling organisms
such as barnacles, seaweed and bacteria.
After completing his research at The Queen's
University of Belfast Marine Laboratory,
in Northern Ireland he began the Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution/MIT joint doctoral
program in Marine Biology.
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Harriet Fulbright (left) and Professor Bob
Danziger (right) with 1997 winners |
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Lisa M. Paciulli
(1996-97)
Studied anthropology in Indonesia.
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Kelly Ryder
(1996-97)
Marine Biology major
Studied the molecular systematics
and population dynamics of the red alga
Bostrychia, which occupies a diverse geographic
distribution and is able to adapt to a wide
variety of environmental factors. Kelly
completed her Fulbright at the University
of Melbourne in January 1998 and returned
to Australia to work on her Masters Degree.
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Stephanie Burkhardt
(1996-97)
Marine Biology major
Received her Masters Degree
studying the behavior and distribution of
the endangered Hectors Dolphin at the University
of Otago, on the South Island of New Zealand,
in December 1998. After receiving her degree,
Stephanie conducted research at The Pacific
Whale Foundation, in Maui, Hawaii.
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Jennifer Melnyk
(1996-97)
Marine Biology major
Jennifer was awarded a Fulbright
at Laval University in Montreal, Canada
to conduct research in benthic ecology,
studying the factors influencing the settlement
of Mytilus edulis (blue mussel) larvae.
After her Fulbright Jennifer remained at
Laval to complete her Masters Degree.
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Trina Filan
(1995-96)
Biology major
Studied rainforest ecology
at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institution,
in Panama. After completing her studies
in Panama, Trina became a research associate
in the Department of Forest Studies at Oregon
State University in Corvallis.
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Matt Stutz
(1995-96)
Environmental Geology major
Studied coastal geology and
the mapping and analysis of beach profile
data collected along the Gold Coast (Surfer's
Paradise), in Australia. When last contacted,
Matt was in his third year of doctoral studies
at Duke University, working with Dr. Orrin
Pilkey, with whom he did his Internship
in the spring and summer of 1994.
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Trina Filan and Matt Stutz with Professor
Bob Danziger |
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Mario Sengco
(1994-95)
Marine Biology major
Studied the ecology of plankton
at the University of Konstanz, in Germany.
When last contacted, Mario was finishing
his fourth year of doctoral study in the
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution/MIT
Joint Program.
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Sandra Melloy
(1994-95)
Marine Biology major
Studied the ecology of plankton
at the Antarctic Division of CSIRO in Tasmania,
Australia. After completing her studies,
Sandy moved back to the East End, and began
working at Della Femina's, one of the top
restaurants in East Hampton.
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