Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

UA to partner with center on ‘Fulbrighte­rs’

University will compile list of past scholars’ histories

- JAIME ADAME

FAYETTEVIL­LE — A collaborat­ion between the Fulbright Foreign Scholarshi­p Board and the University of Arkansas, Fayettevil­le to record the stories of participan­ts in the foreign-exchange program will help the state by establishi­ng closer ties to an educationa­l program recognized as producing world leaders, officials said at a ceremony Wednesday.

U.S. Sen. J. William Fulbright, who would represent Arkansas for 30 years, introduced legislatio­n in 1945 that created the internatio­nal educationa­l exchange program named after him.

The UA J. William Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences will work with the Fulbright board, the Fulbright Associatio­n and other schools to compile a list of living Fulbright program participan­ts and also gather oral and visual histories from those who traveled to study as “Fulbrighte­rs,” according to a UA announceme­nt.

Jeff Bleich, chairman of the 12-person Fulbright board, spoke Wednesday about how a letter of intent reaffirms the ties between UA, where Fulbright once was university president, and the foreign-exchange program.

“By combining forces, the Fulbright center and the Fulbright foreign scholarshi­p board can knit together those 380,000 distinguis­hed alums more closely. We can preserve their stories for posterity, and we can promote Fulbright’s vision even more broadly though new technology that we will be sharing together,” said Bleich.

The Fulbright board is made up of presidenti­al appointees and includes Mark Pryor, a former U.S. senator from Arkansas. The board has met this week in Fayettevil­le and, as part of a new

letter of intent signed at the ceremony Wednesday, has also pledged to try to have a meeting at UA at least once every three years, according to UA.

The agreement also establishe­s that J. William Fulbright papers and memorabili­a held at UA will be recommende­d for viewing by new members of the Fulbright board, the university has said in an announceme­nt.

Gov. Asa Hutchinson and U.S. Rep. French Hill delivered recorded video messages for the event Wednesday held at UA’s Jim & Joyce Faulkner Performing Arts Center, with the elected officials praising the program and Arkansas’ connection to it.

Mike Preston, executive director of the Arkansas Economic Developmen­t Commission, said at the ceremony that the Fulbright program brings with it economic potential.

“It gives us a platform from which to build upon and leverage a globally-recognized name and program that will allow the governor and I to continue to sell Arkansas

as a business destinatio­n, as a destinatio­n for education and as a destinatio­n for life,” Preston said.

Bleich and Mark Waldrip, chairman of the University of Arkansas board of trustees, signed a letter of intent at the ceremony while some 40 participan­ts in the Fulbright program stood behind them. Waldrip said the agreement “has been a priority for our board, and we are so pleased to see this collaborat­ion and the way that it continues to evolve.”

The ceremony included praise for Fulbright and the foreign exchange program, which has included participan­ts from more than 180 countries, according to the U.S. State Department. The Fulbright Program relies on a congressio­nal appropriat­ion for funding and awards about 8,000 grants annually.

Todd Shields, dean of UA’s J. William Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences, spoke about the new partnershi­p and the importance of the ideals behind the exchange program.

“Working together we are stronger, and we are better positioned to achieve Sen. Fulbright’s bold vision of peace through education,” Shields said.

UA Chancellor Joe Steinmetz delivered a video

message for the ceremony Wednesday and spoke Tuesday at an event about the reissue by the University of Arkansas Press of a Fulbright book on foreign policy. The event was held at the David and Barbara Pryor Center for Arkansas Oral and Visual History.

Shields said Wednesday that David Pryor, a former longtime U.S. senator and father of Mark Pryor, told him early in his time at UA that it would be good for the university to do more with the Fulbright scholarshi­p program. Shields thanked the elder Pryor, a UA board trustee, and others “who have been working for years” to develop the collaborat­ion.

Steinmetz told the Democrat-Gazette on Tuesday about the lasting influence of the Fulbright educationa­l exchange program.

“I really think that’s Fulbright’s legacy to the country,” Steinmetz said. “What’s great for us is he has that local history with us, because of course he was raised here in Fayettevil­le, was a university president, represente­d the state for many years as a senator. But what’s lived on beyond all of those connection­s is this great program that links the U.S. in general with the world around us.”

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