Fulbright Forum
Fulbright Academy of Science & Technology
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  August 2003  
In this issue
  • Conference -- Central Asia on the Paths of Transformation
  • Mountain Research in Asia
  • Some thoughts on Science and War
  • United Nations Millennium Development Goals
  • Seeking Teachers for Exchanges
  • Time, Physics & Quantum Mechanics
  • Fulbright Association Annual Meeting
  • Educational Outreach & Sponsors

  • Welcome to the Fulbright Academy of Science and Technology's monthly electronic news bulletin. This publication is sent to educational innovators and to leaders in scientific and technical fields in the US and around the world. Please look to the end of this email for information about the Academy and its mission. We can be reached at info@fulbrighter.org.

    The Academy is an independent non-profit managed by a dedicated group of volunteers. The Academy receives support from businesses, institutions, organizations, foundations, and individuals interested in developing a network of leaders in science and technology. It is not affiliated with the US State Department and the Board of Foreign Scholars, which oversee the global Fulbright Exchange Program. The US State Department is not responsible for the content of this bulletin, and it cannot be assumed that they approve or endorse any material appearing in it.


    Conference -- Central Asia on the Paths of Transformation
    The Fulbright Academy of Science & Technology (FAST) proudly announces a multidisciplinary conference on "Central Asia on the Paths of Transformation", to be held in Tashkent, Uzbekistan on Nov. 19-21. As with most of our programs, the purpose of this conference is to bring together academia, researchers, analysts, practitioners, and policy-makers to exchange ideas, to share recent research endeavors, and to network. Other sponsors are USAID, NATO, OCSE, and the Fulbright Association of Uzbekistan.

    The conference is organized by Dr. Lola Gulyamova, a geographer at the Uzbekistan National University. She was a Fulbright Visiting Scholar in 1996-1997 with the National Center for Geographic Information and Analysis at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Her scientific interests are in a field of GIS (Geographical Information Systems) and remote sensing methods used for the study of rural and urban populations. The author of 10 books and 70 papers, she currently serves as Chair of the Board of the Fulbright Association of Uzbekistan.

    The topics to be covered by conference sessions will encompass interdisciplinary approaches to contemporary issues, future prospects, and identifying trends in economic development, natural resource use, international relations, security, and civil society.

    For additional information about the conference, please visit the FAU website, below.

    Fulbright Association of Uzbekistan »

    Mountain Research in Asia
    As a result of seed-money funding from the National Science Foundation for an Atlas of Afghanistan in the 1970s, Dr. John (Jack) Shroder traveled extensively in the Hindu Kush Mountains, and became fascinated with the place and people. A Fulbright to that country in 1977-78 was terminated abruptly by the communist coup d'etat and Soviet invasion. To help the Afghans in their subsequent refugee trauma, as well as to continue developing his high mountain expertise, he obtained another Fulbright to Peshawar, Pakistan in 1983-84. These two Fulbrights were instrumental in jump-starting a three- decade career in the highest mountains on the planet, with most gratifying results.

    These same mountains, however, continue to be torn all along their great span by fratricidal combat, particularly between predominantly Islamic Afghanistan and Pakistan with Hindu India, but also between other factions and governments in Nepal, Tibet, China and other parts of South Asia.

    Recently Harry Barnes, former US Ambassador to India and now Senior Advisor to the Asia Society, has requested that those with interests in South Asia work collectively toward encouraging greater scientific and other dialogues between and among and the peoples of the region. Toward that end, a group of geoscientists formed HIGH-ICE (Himalayan Institutes for Glacier, Hydrology, Ice, Climate and Environment), a scientific group dedicated to studies of those increasingly important issues in High Asia.

    "Although obviously weighted towards the physical geosciences because of our special interests, our group wishes to encourage greater dialogue with those Fulbrighters who might be similarly interested," says Shroder. "Perhaps in a small way at least, our collective efforts can enable development of some new approaches to helping increase peace in South Asia." This would seem to be a very natural offshoot of what Fulbright is all about. HIGH-ICE will hold organizational meetings in San Francisco in late 2003, and in Seattle and Philadelphia in 2004. For further details, please contact Dr. Shroder at the University of Nebraska at Omaha Geography/Geology Department (jshroder@mail.unomaha.edu).

    Some thoughts on Science and War
    Demographic researchers say that there are over 6.3 billion people in the world -- Demographers estimate that we passed the 6,000,000,000 mark four years and one month ago, on July 21, 1999. Scientific and technical advances have made the explosion in human population possible, but huge conflicts exist among the peoples of the world. Here are two quotes that are decades old, but remain relevant in guiding the work of scientists today.

    "Science has radically changed the conditions of human life on earth. It has expanded our knowledge and our power, but not our capacity to use them with wisdom." >From Senator J. William Fulbright's 1964 book, "Old Myths and New Realities"

    "Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed. This world in arms is not spending money alone. It is spending the sweat of its laborers, the genius of its scientists, the hopes of its children... This is not a way of life at all, in any true sense. Under the cloud of threatening war, it is humanity hanging from a cross of iron." From the Chance for Peace address delivered by President Eisenhower before the American Society of Newspaper Editors on April 16, 1953.

    United Nations Millennium Development Goals
    As part of the millennium celebration all 191 members of the United Nations have pledged to meet eight goals by the year 2015. In our May newsletter, we wrote about wrote about one Fulbrighter's efforts to improve UN Goal #5: Improve Maternal Health. The June and July issues contained stories about UN Goal #7: Ensure environmental sustainability.

    Many members of the Fulbright family are carrying out work that will help our global society acheive the eight goals. We look forward to working with key partners around the world that will help acheive the UN Millennium Development Goals, and participation is not limited to those who work the academic community. On July 25th, UN Secretary General Kofi Annan (a Fulbrighter himself) launched the Commission on Private Sector and Development, whose mission is to foster the millennium development goals.

    In launching the Commission, Dr. Annan said, "Ranging from halving extreme poverty to halting the spread of HIV/AIDS and providing universal primary education -- all by the target date of 2015 -- the Millennium Development Goals represent a set of simple but powerful objectives that every man or woman in the street, from New York to Nairobi to New Delhi, can easily understand and support." Click on the banner above to link with the Millennium website.

    The 2004 Equator Prize is a related international project. The prize brings global attention on local success stories that have reduced poverty through the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity (Development Goal #7). Six outstanding grassroots initiatives from throughout the equatorial belt will each receive the US$30,000 prize, and 25 prize finalists are given a chance to share the lessons of their experience with the wider world. It is sponsored by nine organizations, including the UN Development Program, the UN Foundation, the World Conservation Union, and the Nature Conservancy. The Fulbright Academy is pleased to be involved in the international efforts to promote the award. The deadline for nominations in October 5, 2003. www.undp.org/equatorinitiative/

    More on the Millennium Initiative »

    Seeking Teachers for Exchanges
    Fulbright Teacher and Administrator Exchange is often seeking applications from U.S. school administrators at the elementary, middle, and high school levels to participate in a two-way, non-simultaneous exchange program with counterparts from many countries around the world.

    For example, we recently received a note from the exchange office that they are seeking people to participate in exchanges in Argentina (see web link below). The U.S. administrators would be expected to host the Argentine administrators for three weeks in November 2003 and travel to Argentina for three weeks in 2004. Spanish fluency is preferred, but not required. The final deadline for applying to the Argentina program is September 5.

    For information about this program or any of the other school exchange programs, please call (202) 314-3520 or e-mail fulbright@grad.usda.gov for a program application.

    More on teacher exchanges. »

    Time, Physics & Quantum Mechanics
    It is amazing that in spite of the many achievements that physics has brought to mankind through its ability to predict how practical systems would work, its fundamental conceptual structure is not on good footing. Doing research in this area where physics, mathematics, and astronomy intersect, Fulbrighter Jorge Pullin spent three months in Montevideo, Uruguay.

    Dr. Jorge Pullin's main interests are black hole collisions and quantum gravity. He is the Horace Hearne Chair in Theoretical Physics at Louisania State University and is a leader of the American Physical Society's Topical Group in Gravitation.

    What brought him on a Fulbright to Montevideo is his long time collaborator Dr. Rodolfo Gambini, a professor at the University of the Republic in Uruguay. Gambini has a long history of contributions in quantum physics. What Gambini and Pullin are studying is the mathematical equations that result from combining the ides of Einstein with those of quantum mechanics. Their proposal for resolving these difficulties consists in replacing Einstein's theory by a similar theory where space-time, at microscopic scales, has a discrete structure.

    There is significant work to be done when one proposes a reformulation of the laws of nature of this sort, checking that the resulting theory does not lead to wrong predictions. In quantum mechanics, we talk of "probability" -- the chance of something happening in the future. Which implictly means that we are making statements about time. But Einstein taught us that time is relative. Therefore what is the meaning of the probabilities of quantum mechanics? At the moment, we do not know because the two theories are not entirely compatible. Hence the need for more research.

    Dr. Pullin's Webpage »

    Fulbright Association Annual Meeting
    The Fulbright Association -- which has no official ties with the Fulbright Academy of Science & Technology -- hosts the largest annual gathering of Fulbrighters. This year, the Association's 26th annual conference will be on Halloween Weekend in Washington, DC.

    "Fulbright Exchanges: Advancing Knowledge & Mutual Understanding" will be held at the Madison Hotel on Oct. 30 to Nov. 2. The keynote speaker at the banquet on Friday evening will be Rep. Tom Cole -- a long-time public servant in Oklahoma, a first-term member of Congress from that state, an enrolled member of the Chickasaw Nation, a former professor of History, and a Fulbrighter to the United Kingdom in 1977.

    Academy members will be interested to hear the plenary luncheon speaker. Mireya Mayor is a primatologist who went on a Fulbright to Madagascar in 2001. She was there to study how two types of lemurs found only in northern Madagascar-silky sifakas and Perrier's sifakas- are affected by forest fragmentation and isolation. Both sifakas are among the most critically endangered primates in the world. "Lemur Rescue," a National Geographic EXPLORER film on Mireya Mayor and her research, will air Sunday, September 22, at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT on MSNBC.

    The plenary lunch is on Saturday and will be preceded by a ninety-minute panel discussion on water resources. The members of the panel have not been finalized at this time. To register for the plenary luncheon ($50) or the three-day conference ($275), please contact the Fulbright Association at 202-347- 5543 or visit their website, www.fulbrightalumni.org

    A link to the Fulbright Association »

    Educational Outreach & Sponsors
    Do you have an initiative that could benefit from a partnership with the Fulbright Academy? Can we help promote one of your programs or the results of your work? Through our networks we can bring your work and your message to new constituencies.

    In this issue, we wrote about new multidisciplinary research, various international initativies, and upcoming conferences. Please tell us how we can help you, and send us your story. We want to share your plans, your successes and your intellectual contributions with others.

    The Academy continues to work on developing partnerships with businesses and organizations around the world. In July, the Academy recieved three small grants to help support our outreach activities. Additional support is needed, so please consider joining as an individual or as an organization. The links to our website are below.

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