1993 Annual Report - Institute of International Education

Transcription

1993 Annual Report - Institute of International Education
•99J
Institute
of
International
Education
-1919-
Unking nations
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B o a r d Of T r u s t e e s • As of February 1 , 1 9 9 4
Chairman
Henry Kaufman
President
Henry Kaufman & Company, Inc.
New York, New York
President and
Chief Executive Officer
Richard M. Krasno
Chairman, Executive Committee
James H. Evans
New York, New York
Vice Chairmen
Victor J. Goldberg
Scarsdale, New York
Diane J. Paton
East Hampton, New York
Treasurer
Madeline H. McWhinney
President
Dale, Elliott & Company, Inc.
Red Bank, New Jersey
Howard Dodson
Chief
Schomburg Center for Research
in Black Culture of the New
York Public Library
New York, New York
William H. Draper, III
Limited Partner
Draper Associates
Atherton, California
Stephen P. Duggan
Cornwall-on-Hudson, New York
Philippe Dunoyer
Denver, Colorado
J. Wayne Fredericks*
Bronxville, New York
Vartan Gregorian
President
Brown University
Providence, Rhode Island
Andrew Heiskell
New York, New York
Members
Mrs. Hushang Ansary
New York, New York
Letitia Baldrige
Leritia Baldrige Enterprises
Washington, DC
Richard I. Beattie
Partner
Simpson Thacher & Bartlett
New York, New York
Michel L. Besson
Vice Chairman, President
and CEO
CertainTeed Corporation
Valley Forge, Pennsylvania
Donald M. Blinken
Director
Warburg, Pincus & Co.
New York, New York
Robert L. Dilenschneider
Principal
The Dilenschneider Group Inc.
New York, New York
Thomas S. Johnson
Chairman and CEO
The Greenpoint Savings Bank
Flushing, New York
Shigekuni Kawamura
President
Dainippon Ink & Chemicals, Inc,
Tokyo, Japan
Jean Bronson Mahoney
Palm Beach, Florida
Roderick A. McManigal
San Francisco, California
Thomas M. Messer
Director Emeritus
The Solomon R. Guggenheim
Foundation
New York, New York
Martin Meyerson
Chairman
University of Pennsylvania
Foundation
President Emeritus
University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
L. Jay Oliva
President
New York University
New York, New York
Sylvia B. Ortega
Universidad Autonoma
Metropolitana
Department of Sociology
Mexico, D.F.
George Rupp
President
Columbia University
New York, New York
Walter W. Sapp
Houston, Texas
Leroy Keith
President
Morehouse College
Atlanta, Georgia
Clifford V.Smith, Jr.
President
General Electric Foundation
Fairfield, Connecticut
Isamu Koike
Managing Director and General
Manager
The Industrial Bank of Japan, Ltd.
(New York Branch)
Chairman of the Board
The Industrial Bank of Japan Trust
Company (New York)
The Hon. Robert D. Stuart, Jr.
Chicago, Illinois
E. Michel Kruse
Executive Vice President and
Chief Financial Officer
The Chase Manhattan Corporation
New York, New York
Henrik N. Vanderlip
Senior Vice President
Wesray Capital Corporation
New York, New York
Faye Wattleton
New York, New York
Life Trustees
Mrs. Robin Chandler Duke
The Honorable Henry H. Fowler
Mrs. John L. Loeb
Mrs. Maurice T. Moore
Officers
Richard M. Krasno
President and
Chief Executive Officer
Richard W. Dye
Executive Vice President
Peggy Blumenthal
Vice President
Educational Services
Steven Ebbin
Vice President
Science and Technology
Thomas Farrell
Vice President
Exchange Programs and
Regional Services
Gary L. Theisen
Vice President
Development Assistance
Carol Meadows
Deputy Vice President
*On leave
Institute of
International Education
809 United Nations Plaza
New York, NY 10017-3580
Telephone: (212) 883-8200
Fax: (212) 984-5452
THE COVER: Against the background of a photo of HE students in the 1930s are (clockwise from top}: journalist Katzer Nyatsumba, South African Education Program (SAEP)
alumnus; U.S. organist Matthew Lewis, who studied French organ music in Paris with an Annette Kade Fellowship and Fuibright Travel Grant; and Anjana Bhushan of India,
studying gender issues in development at Rutgers as a USIA Humphrey Fellow.
Institute
of
International
Education
Annual Report 1993
Contents
Chairman and Presidents Message
@
Looking to the 21st Century
ME at 75
O
Investing in people, linking nations
• IE in 1 9 9 3
0
The year at a glance
Changing Times, New Directions
^f
New programs for post-Cold War realities
Investing in People,
Linking Nations
Strengthening Human Resources Worldwide
^p
U.S. Students: Training tomorrow's leaders
1
Eastern Europe and the NIS: Building new societies
10
On behalf of far-sighted sponsors
Asia: Reshaping economies
and donors, ME has been investing
Western Europe: Pioneer in academic mobility
14
in developing the abilities and inter-
Latin America/North America: The new world ofNAPTA
15
national perspectives of gifted, ded-
Africa: Shaping change
15
n
i c a t e d p e o p l e w o r l d w i d e for 7 5
years.
By e n a b l i n g o u t s t a n d i n g
Mutual Understanding: A New Urgency
fffr
men and women to study, conduct
Arts International: Encouraging artist-community connections
16
research, receive practical training,
For an Independent Press: Journalists explore basic concepts
19
or provide technical assistance out-
Japan Perspectives: Women leaders share views
20
side their own countries, HE works
Essential Information: HE research and publications
22
to improve the quality of life every-
South Africa: Database serves a vibrant NGO sector
22
where. The programs HE develops
HE Regional Offices: Linking business, communities, academia
and a d m i n i s t e r s foster
mutual
understanding among nations, buifd
Building Global Problem-Solving Capabilities
0
global problem-solving capabilities,
Humphrey Networks: Fighting drugs, protecting the environment
24
and s t r e n g t h e n the i n t e r n a t i o n a l
Human Rights Internships: Sharing resources
24
competence of U.S. citizens.
Preserving Biodiversity: Chinese learn U.S. approaches
26
HE is the largest private, nonprofit
educational and cultural exchange
agency in the United States.
Projects and Their Sponsors
^M
Educational Associates and International Associates
31
Regional Advisory Boards
34
Giving to HE
36
Special Events
39
Special Initiatives
40
About IIE's Financial Statements
41
Financial Statements
43
Chairman's and President's Message
Looking to the 21st Century
This Annual Report describes programs and activities the Institute of International
Education undertook in 1993. It appears, however, in 1994 — IIE's 75th anniversary of providing service to international educational exchange. During those 75 years, the Institute
has seen the world undergo tumultuous change and has played a role in shaping many of
the leaders who have helped their nations deal with those changes. Through economic
depression and world war, the collapse of old orders and emergence of new nations, the
cold war and its dramatic end, growing interdependence and technological revolution, HE
has worked to foster the free flow of knowledge and ideas across national boundaries.
IIE's Mission
HE believes that the means for creating a better world community is investing in people
through international education. In marking our 75th anniversary, HE reaffirms this fundamental commitment to strengthening international understanding and cooperation by
enabling men and women of talent and enterprise to study, conduct research, receive practical training, or provide technical assistance outside their own countries.
To meet the challenges ahead, HE is focusing its institutional energies on four key areas where we believe that international
education has a critical role to play in securing a more peaceful and productive world. As we look toward the future, HE
will develop and implement programs and provide services that:
•
Create and strengthen the human resources needed to build democratic, pluralistic societies and market economies.
The nations of East Central Europe and the former Soviet Union face a tortuous and uncertain road to stability and
broadly-shared prosperity. International study and training programs can generate the expertise needed to institutionalize democracy and build civil societies. Such programs can also help sustain trends toward democracy and productive, private-sector economies emerging in Africa, Asia, the Middle East, Latin America, and the Caribbean — and are
thus an important component of our nation's efforts to enlarge the community of nations committed to core democratic
values.
Developing initiatives that provide training and technical assistance in such areas as the management of business development and the building of infrastructures to support independent, nongovernmental institutions is a key HE goal.
•
Strengthen the international competence of U.S. citizens. To remain an effective leader and a serious economic power,
the United States must ensure that its citizens are equipped to function in a world that is far more technologically complex, competitive, and interdependent than it has ever been. Cultural literacy, foreign language facility, and the ability
to comprehend increasingly fluid economic and political realities are essential.
Educational exchange and training programs, by enabling U.S. citizens to live, study, or work abroad, foster both our
international competence and economic competitiveness. With only 70,000 Americans studying for credit overseas, and
three-quarters of them in Western Europe, HE believes that there is much to be done to increase and diversify opportunities for firsthand experience abroad.
•
Foster mutual understanding. The need for cross-cultural understanding — between and within nations — is as important today as it was in 1919. With the rapid pace of change and technological advances brought on by the "information
revolution" there is perhaps even more reason to ensure that cultural context is understood, meaning explored and
reflected upon, and the values that inform our actions appreciated.
Facilitating the sharing of ideas, talent, and artistic inspiration toward these ends remains one of IIE's fundamental
goals.
/*-
•
Build global problem-solving capabilities. As we stand poised to begin our next 75 years, HE believes that new levels
of international cooperation are imperative — and that our mission must include not only fostering mutual understanding but encouraging mutual action as well. Today, the distinction between domestic and international has become virtually obsolete. A host of shared concerns — poverty, hunger, arms proliferation, human rights abuses, and environmental
degradation — urgently call for international collaboration on a scale never before attempted.
Through its programs of international education, training, and technical assistance, HE will work to help build the common knowledge base and the international partnerships needed to tackle these problems that no nation can solve alone.
Educating Globally Minded Men and Women for the 21st Century
What qualities do we seek in the men and women who will lead us into the 21st Century? And what role does international
education play in shaping the minds of men and women who will secure our future?
HE believes that strengthening opportunities for international study and training will help produce a community of globally-minded men and women — people whose international experiences encourage the development of a broad perspective,
along with a spirit of cosmopolitanism and open-mindedness that guards against ideological rigidity or a narrowly defined,
exclusionary nationalism.
By offering a firsthand experience of another culture, studying outside one's home country can enrich the education of men
and women with cross-cultural understanding and sensitivity, and with an appreciation of and respect for the world's
diversity.
By providing access to the best intellectual and scientific resources available, international study can help produce people
who can integrate knowledge from diverse fields and cultures. It can produce people who are creative, flexible, and
resourceful, willing to have their assumptions challenged, in the recognition that there are no easy answers to the complex
problems facing us.
And by building networks of concerned and talented individuals who understand our shared global challenges, international study can help produce future leaders who are committed to using their expertise to meet those challenges in the
years ahead.
The world is in the midst of an extraordinary period of change. Though daunting problems exist, it is also the case that
partnerships, modes of communication, and patterns of interaction that will take us into the new millennium are in the
process of being defined. There are, too, unprecedented opportunities to strengthen democracy worldwide and to work
toward the solution of global problems. The Institute believes that international education has a critical role to play in shaping our collective future for the better. As we celebrate our 75th anniversary — and look toward our next 75 years — HE
will continue to prepare the leaders of tomorrow. We stand ready to work with all who share our goal of building a more
peaceful, prosperous, and secure world through international educational exchange.
<fj~~£«~f«
Henry Kaufman
Richard M. Krasno
Chairman, HE Board of Trustees
President and Chief Executive Officer
HE h a s w o r k e d w i t h
t h e Ford F o u n d a t i o n
since the early 1 9 5 0 s
on institution-building
programs
in
Asia.
Africa. Latin America
and the Middle East.
Photo: Indian educat o r t r a i n i n g in e a r l y
childhood
education
IIE-organized exchanges with several Western
in Tennessee in 1 9 5 4 .
European countries date back over 7 0 years.
Here. HE staff with French students in 1 9 3 1 .
HE at 75:
Investing in People, Linking Nations
The Institute has worked to
strengthen exchanges with
Eastern European
nations
since the collapse of the Iron
Curtain. Photo: Students from
t h e f o r m e r S o v i e t Union at
Federal Hall in M a n h a t t a n ' s
financial district.
Kenyan s t u d e n t enjoying a
break from an ME student orientation in the early Sixties.
HE Trustees Mrs. Maurice T. Moore
and Henry Cabot Lodge discussing
building plans for IIE's headquarters overlooking the United Nations
in the early Sixties.
Akio
Kikai,
Fulbright
Fellow f r o m J a p a n . ME
has cooperated with The
J a p a n - U . S . Educational
C o m m i s s i o n for m o r e
than 4 0 years.
Former
Senator
J.
William
Fulbright with Fulbright students
at an ME event honoring his contribution to international educational exchange.
Founded in 1919 by two Nobel Peace Prize laureates—Columbia
University p r e s i d e n t Nicholas M u r r a y Butler a n d former
Secretary of State Elihu Root—and a political science professor,
Stephen Pierce Duggan, HE is today the oldest and largest private, not-for-profit U.S. international educational exchange organization. Over the decades, HE has played a seminal role in
responding to the challenges of a turbulent century.
In the T w e n t i e s , IIE's i m m e d i a t e goal w a s to p r e p a r e
Americans for their country's new post-World War I role as a
world power. HE b r o u g h t distinguished foreign scholars—
including Jacques Maritam and Arnold Toynbee—to lecture at
U.S. u n i v e r s i t i e s , b e g a n s t u d e n t e x c h a n g e s w i t h s e v e r a l
European governments, and published the first U.S. reference
guides to international study.
In the Thirties, HE helped rescue European scholars in flight
from tyranny by placing them in U.S. university posts and raising funds to help the universities pay their salaries. Among them
were theologian Paul Tillich and philosopher Martin Buber. HE
also l a u n c h e d exchanges with the Soviet Union and Latin
America.
In the Forties, during World War II, HE continued to help
refugee scholars and expanded exchanges with Latin America.
After the w a r ' s end, HE was chosen to administer the new
Fulbright grants for graduate study, funded by the sale of war
surplus equipment.
In the Fifties, as new nations in Asia and Africa began to
emerge from colonial rule, HE helped marshal U.S. educational
resources for nation-building. HE created an African division
and administered its first exchanges with Indonesia, Singapore,
and what was then Malaya.
ITT Fellows at a 1 9 7 6
Los Angeles seminar.
HE manages interna-
HE President Kenneth
tional education and
Holland
training programs for
President
Hubert
Humphrey.
ME h a s
many
multinational
corporations.
with
Vice
a d m i n i s t e r e d USIA's
Hubert H. Humphrey
Fellowship
since 1 9 7 8 .
Program
ME Founders and Presidents 1919-1994
ME cooperated with the University of
Delaware on behalf of its pioneering
Junior Year Abroad program, which began
in 1923. Photo: Delaware students in
Barcelona, March 1929.
Distinguished television journalist Edward R. Murrow was
IIE's first Assistant Director
and a Trustee for many years.
In the Sixties, HE intensified its support of emerging African
nations, bringing almost 500 African students to U.S. universities.
As affordable jet travel made international study accessible to
more students, HE expanded its information services and opened
offices in Nairobi, Lima, Bangkok, Hong Kong, and Paris.
In the Seventies, HE launched the South African Education
Program (SAEP) to help prepare black South Africans for a postapartheid future. Investing its oil riches in its young people,
Venezuela chose HE to administer the U.S. segment of the Gran
Mariscal de Ayacucho Scholarship Program (GMA). It brought
nearly 4,000 young Venezuelans to study in U.S. colleges and
universities.
In the Eighties, HE provided training and technical assistance
for extensive development projects in Africa, Asia, and Latin
America. HE also initiated international journalist exchanges,
arranged international internships in human rights organizations, and began a major expansion of its arts activities through
its new Arts International programs.
In the Nineties, with the end of the Cold War and the rise of
regional economic partnerships, HE is working with policymakers, international development assistance agencies, business leaders, scholars, and scientists to strengthen U.S. citizens' international competence, to assist former Communist nations in building d e m o c r a t i c i n s t i t u t i o n s a n d m a r k e t economies, and to
address the task of creating partnerships to meet, on a global
scale, challenges ranging from hunger and health care to human
rights abuses and the degradation of the environment. The pages
that follow tell the HE story as it unfolded in 1993.
Nicholas Murray Butler
Ehhu Root
Zjj&fe
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t'
Stephen Duggan
•^gjk
mi
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Laurence Duggan
Kenneth Holland
Wallace Edgerton
HE initiated the South
African Education Program in the 1970s,
the first, largest and
most successful effort
to assist black South
Africans through U.S.
higher education.
Hungarian refugee students at Bard College in
the late Fifties. ME organized large-scale efforts
to assist refugee faculty and students through
programs that placed them at U.S. universities
before World War II and again after the 1956
Hungarian revolution.
Richard M. Krasno
The Institute was founded by
Nicholas Murray Butler, Ehhu
Root, and Stephen Duggan,
Sr.. HE President 1919-1946.
Stephen Duggan was succeeded by his son, Laurence
Duggan (1946-1950),Kenneth
Holland (1950-1973),Wallace
Edgerton (1973-1983) and
Richard M. Krasno (1983 to
present).
HE in 1993: The Year at a Glance
In 1993, nearly 9,000 men and women studied, conducted research, received practical training, or provided international
technical assistance under the 228 programs HE administered for 212 sponsors. They came from, or went to, 170 countries
or other geopolitical entities. They included:
•
More than 7,000 foreign nationals: students, government officials, academics, teachers, writers, environmentalists, journalists, scientists, artists, and technicians
•
More than 1,600 U.S. nationals studying, conducting research, or serving as teaching assistants and business
advisers.
HE also provided information on international education to several hundred thousand students, educators, policymakers, and others around the world through publications and videos, information centers, seminars, school outreach programs, and overseas university fairs. More than 600 regionally accredited U.S. colleges and universities were affiliated with
HE as Educational Associate institutions, and 50 foreign academic institutions and U.S. nongovernmental organizations
were affiliated as International Associates.
Staff and Offices
Staff. HE had 344 employees worldwide in 1993. Of these, 225 were based at New York headquarters, the rest at U.S.
o
offices in Washington, D.C., Chicago, Denver, Houston, and San Francisco, and at international offices in Egypt, Hong
Kong, Hungary, Indonesia, Mexico, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, and Thailand.
Volunteers. More than 5,600 volunteers provided a wide variety of indispensable services: as members of IIE's Board of
Trustees and Regional Advisory Boards, as mentors to students on IIE-administered programs, as members of program
advisory boards and selection committees, as professional resources in program design, as hosts to foreign students and
visitors, as organizers of fundraising events, and as volunteers in HE offices.
Finances. In fiscal 1993 (Oct. 1, 1993-Sept. 30, 1993), HE expended a total of $96,274,697. Direct expenses for sponsored
program services were $89,646,572. Total costs for HE information, research, counseling, conferences, arts services, and supporting services were $2,459,583. HE management and general, fundraising, and program development expenses were
$4,168,542, or 4.3 percent of total expenditures.
Funding Sources. The sponsored programs HE administers are funded by U.S. and foreign governments, foundations,
corporations, international development agencies and banks, universities, nongovernmental organizations, religious institutions and organizations, and individual donors. IIE's educational and arts services are supported by grants from the
United States Information Agency; grants and contributions from corporations, foundations, and individuals; Educational
Associates membership fees; fundraising events; registration fees for U.S. universities fairs overseas; and sales and advertising revenue from publications.
19
1 9 - 1 9 9 4
Milestones in IIE's History
\
1919
• HE is founded by Nicholas Murray Butler,
Elihu Root, and Stephen P. Duggan, its
first president
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Changing Times, New Directions
Late in 1993, HE was chosen to administer three new
U.S. government programs addressing critical needs
in shaping the post-Cold War world:
•
The N a t i o n a l Security Education
Strengthening
Human Resources
Worldwide
Program (NSEP) for U.S. undergraduH u m a n r e s o u r c e s h a v e been called the w e a l t h of
ates, established u n d e r the National
nations; natural resources are passive. Only h u m a n
S e c u r i t y E d u c a t i o n Act of 1991 to
intelligence, knowledge, energy, imagination, and val-
develop a cadre of U.S. leaders with
ues can build societies that meet the needs of their peo-
international experience and under-
ple. In 1993, people and nations worked to reshape insti-
standing for the coming century
tutions for a better future in a world no longer polarized
•
The Newly Independent States (NIS)
Energy
Training
by the Cold War.
Development
Project, sponsored by the U.S. Agency
for International Development (A.I.D.)
U.S. Students
to bring efficiency to the energy sectors
Training tomorrow's leaders
of Russia, Ukraine, and Kazakhstan
International study, research, and training opportunities
•
The East Asia R e g i o n a l Training
Project, s p o n s o r e d
strengthen
the
for Americans grew dramatically in 1993, as the nation
by A.I.D. to
economies
rose to the challenges of maintaining U.S. leadership in
of
a global economy into the next century.
Cambodia, Mongolia, and Thailand in
The Fulbright Student Program, which HE assists the
key sectors
^
U.S. Information Agency (USIA) in a d m i n i s t e r i n g ,
Reflecting the growing priority given to education
increased the number of grants to U.S. students from
and training as components of sustainable develop-
670 to 720 in 1993 and planned a further increase to 840
m e n t , HE in 1993 c r e a t e d a n e w D e v e l o p m e n t
in 1994. The J. William Fulbright Scholarship Board
Assistance Division to enhance its delivery of techni-
(BFS) placed renewed emphasis on reviving the pro-
cal-assistance services. Building on its decades of
gram's original objective: to give international perspec-
experience in international training, HE has expanded
tives to promising young recent graduates, graduate
its staff capabilities in project design and evaluation,
students, and artists at a formative stage in their careers.
in policy analysis and research, and in implementing
An intensive campus campaign resulted in a 45 percent
public-private partnerships. HE staff and a roster of
increase in applications from graduating seniors.
expert consultants are available for technical-assis-
As a l w a y s , the 1 9 9 2 / 9 3 g r a n t e e s u n d e r t o o k a
tance assignments, and short courses on h u m a n -
remarkable range of research projects. To cite just two
resource policy formation and private-sector devel-
examples: Yale graduate Joshua Ruxin, 21, did field
opment issues are being developed.
research in maternal and child health in Bolivia as
In 1993, HE also invested in state-of-the-art com-
p r e p a r a t i o n for a career in law and public policy-
puter technology and staff training to speed commu-
Stanford alumna Amanda Cohen, 22, a biologist and
nication worldwide, maximize use of in-house exper-
civil engineer, studied computer-based marine ecosys-
tise, and increase cost-effectiveness for p r o g r a m
tem modeling at Denmark's National Environmental
sponsors and donors.
Research Institute.
1920s
.•umumuuuwi
win u n r m i
• HE launches reciprocal student exchange programs
between the United States and Czechoslovakia. Italy,
Hungary, France, Britain, Spain, Switzerland
Supervises International Relations
Clubs on U.S. college campuses
Administers more than 250
fellowships
cc
(I)
The IIE-administered undergraduate scholarship program of the new National Security Education Program,
created u n d e r the David L. Boren National Security
Education Act of 1991, is designed to enable promising
U.S. students to understand languages and cultures few
Americans study. The act also provides funds for gradu-
U.S. Fulbrighter
Kaerin S. Stephens
with a traditional
Tibetan physician.
A doctoral candidate in medical
anthropology, she
did field research
in India.
ate study and university development programs administered by other agencies. NSEP's goals are to build a critical base of internationally experienced future leaders in
the marketplace, in education, and in government service, as "well as to develop internationally knowledgeable
professionals who can help the United States deal effectively with global issues.
HE launched the first NSEP competition in the fall of
1993, making a special effort to reach students who might
not otherwise consider foreign study. HE expects to
award between 250 and 300 grants for 1994/95 underg r a d u a t e s t u d y a n y w h e r e outside the United States,
Canada, and Western Europe.
As business schools across the nation re-examine their
o
00
curricula, a pilot group of 17 MBA students brought back
own experience. The company's five enterprises included
to their campuses the fruits of hands-on experience in
a 125-hectare horticulture farm and a sawmill. In analyz-
developing countries. The Free Market Development
ing the productivity of each, he found that available air
Advisers Program (FMDAP), sponsored by A.I.D. in
transport was inadequate for the amount of perishable
cooperation with HE, enabled them to spend a year as
h o r t i c u l t u r a l p r o d u c t s p r o d u c e d . He r e c o m m e n d e d
advisers to small and medium-sized businesses in devel-
reducing the horticultural area to 40 hectares and plant-
oping countries. The program was designed not only to
ing trees for the sawmill on the rest, a solution with both
assist the receiving countries but also to internationalize
economic and soil-preservation advantages. "Now," he
U.S. business curricula and to develop a group of U.S.
reports, "when I sit in a finance course, for example, I
professionals knowledgeable about emerging markets.
look at ways to integrate finance, accounting, marketing,
Members of the pilot group, w h o went to Botswana,
and h u m a n r e s o u r c e m a n a g e m e n t into m y t h o u g h t
Dominica, the Gambia, Mali, the Philippines, Nepal,
processes."
Chile, and Guatemala, have prepared case studies on
Milestones
Moukhata Holding Company in the Gambia, cites his
The projects of the 1993 p a r t i c i p a n t s
in the
their experiences for 1994 publication. Evaluations by
Professional Development Fellowships/East Central
both the U.S. advisers and the host companies—a diverse
Europe p r o g r a m r a n g e d from e x a m i n i n g the Czech
group that included a financial institution, a furniture
Republic's refugee laws to exploring policy options for
exporting firm, a silk producer, and a seafood proces-
adequate child health care in Latvia. This program, fund-
sor—were enthusiastic. Back in their U.S. classrooms, the
ed u n d e r the Soviet-Eastern E u r o p e a n Research and
advisers are integrating their international experience
Training Act of 1983 (Title VIII), is designed to strengthen
into their second-year MBA studies. Jonathan Bhushan of
U.S. specialists' understanding of the current reforms in
Columbia University Business School, an adviser to the
East Central E u r o p e . The s p e c i a l i s t s c o n d u c t field
in I I E ' s
History
Becomes a center of information
about international education—
publishes first directories
• Edward R. Murrow
joins HE as assistant director
• Launches first teacher
exchanges
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Kazakhstan/Poland
0 Iga
A r t u r
K i m /
C h a b o w s k i
The challenges of reshaping
societies
draw
more
and
more young professionals to
Princeton's Woodrow Wilson
School
of
Public
and
International Affairs. Olga Kim
( r i g h t ) of K a z a k h s t a n ,
an
architect, is a fellow in USIA's
Edmund S. Muskie Fellowship
Program. Contributing to her
country's architecture
and
urban planning and developing energy-efficient and alternative energy use for human
dwelling spaces are her primary interests. Chabowski is
a participant in the corporatesupported North American
Consortium for Free Market
S t u d y ( N A C F M S ) . In p o s t Communist Poland he ran his
own
small
business
and
worked as a project manager
for the Ministry of Privatization.
His focus is on public policy
as it contributes to creating
long-term goals for industry in
his country.
Emergency Committee to Aid Displaced German Scholars
established under HE auspices—HE also assists refugees
from Spanish and Italian fascism
• HE director tours Latin America, establishing
educational and cultural exchanges
research for four to seven months in law, business and
As a subcontractor to KPMG Peat Marwick, HE will
economics, journalism, international relations, and public
provide A.I.D. missions in the NIS with technical services
administration.
to s u p p o r t c o m p r e h e n s i v e long-term and short-term
training programs in fiscal reform. HE will provide both
U.S. and home-country training in such areas as taxation
of financial institutions, foreign trade taxation and regu-
Eastern Europe and the NIS
lation, investment project selection and evaluation, inter-
Building new societies
g o v e r n m e n t a l fiscal relations, b u d g e t p l a n n i n g and
For the people of East Central Europe and the Newly
Independent States (NIS) of the former Soviet Union,
freedom has brought herculean tasks: building democratic institutions that work, mastering the transition to a
market economy, and reversing the effects of environmental abuses. In 1993, HE was called upon to:
instrumentation, financial control and management, tax
administration, and information management.
In its second year, the North American Consortium
for Free Market Study (NACFMS) brought 30 young
professionals from Eastern Europe and the NIS to take
part in intensive one-year work-study programs in the
operation of free-market societies. After completing stud-
•
Provide training in efficient, environmen-
ies at U.S. and Canadian university business schools, they
tally sound energy management
interned with U.S. corporations and relevant government
Arrange academic and on-the-job training
agencies. Joseph E. Seagram & Sons, Inc. provided the
in business, free-market economics, law,
initial underwriting and developmental leadership; the
•
and public administration
program is supported by 43 corporations listed on page
Provide on-the-job training and special
40. O t h e r c o r p o r a t e i n i t i a t i v e s w e r e the Edgar M.
•
courses in financial skills for Russian entre-
o
preneurs
CD
•
Place in U.S. universities candidates selected by n e w F u l b r i g h t C o m m i s s i o n s in
Eastern Europe and the Baltics
Under a cooperative agreement with A.I.D., awarded
in S e p t e m b e r 1993 for the NIS Energy Training
Development Program, HE will provide a wide range of
local and U.S.-based professional training and support
CO
services in all the energy sectors of the NIS. Its goal is to
develop national competence in exploring, planning,
managing, evaluating, and using energy resources efficiently. The focus is on energy industry functions in freemarket economies. Training is targeted to professional
m a n a g e r s , policymakers, operational m a n a g e r s , and
senior directors of the newly reorganized energy companies in the oil, oil refining, gas, coal, and power sectors.
HE has opened a project office in Moscow, Russia, and
plans to open offices in Kiev, Ukraine, and Almaty,
The Rule of Law was the focus of a program IIE's PEP division arranged for
these Romanian participants.
Kazakhstan.
Milestones
in
IIE's
History
Following World War II, inquiries about exchange opportunities
flood the Institute from all over the globe
Senator J. William Fulbright sponsors bill to finance
educational exchange with proceeds from sale of
war surplus
/*•;#.!•<.>•.•••:••
•
•
Bronfman East-West Fellowship Endowment and the
region's growing demand for information about U.S.
Amoco Caspian Sea Petroleum Scholarship Program for
higher education and for testing services sponsored by
Citizens of Azerbaijan. The former supports exchanges
the Educational Testing Service. IIE/Budapest continued
with Russia and East Central Europe in international
to administer the Eisenhower Exchange Fellowships for
t r a d e and r e l a t e d fields; the latter e n a b l e s y o u n g
U.S. professionals in Hungary.
Azerbaijani professionals to study international business
at the University of Texas at Austin.
The first 34 participants in the Edmund S. Muskie
Fellowship Program, sponsored by USIA for young professionals from the NIS, completed two semesters of specially designed study at U.S. universities in law, business
administration, economics, and public administration,
followed by internships with corporations, law firms, a
brokerage firm, and government agencies. Host organizations welcomed both the interns and the opportunity they
Asia: Reshaping Economies
Doors opening in former Communist bloc
The collapse of Communism in the former Soviet Union
brought an end to Soviet economic aid and trade advantages for East Asian nations formerly in the Soviet bloc. It
also began opening doors to U.S. academic exchanges,
trade, and investment. Among the initiatives of 1993:
provided to form international ties. After one participant
interned with Oryx Energy Co. in Dallas, for example,
•
A.I.D. selected HE to carry out a major new
she returned to Kazakhstan to open an Oryx office in
human-resource development initiative in
Almaty.
East Asia.
U.S. Information Service (USIS) posts began handling
* USIA r e o p e n e d the Fulbright Student
new Fulbright Student programs in a number of Eastern
Program in Laos and Cambodia, focusing
European countries. Albania sent Fulbright students to
on reviving and replenishing university
the United States for the first time, in fields chosen to
faculties devastated d u r i n g the Pol Pot
meet the needs of its higher education system. Fulbright
years.
Student p r o g r a m s were also inaugurated in Estonia,
The goal of the East Asia Regional Training Project
Latvia, and Lithuania. The former Yugoslav Fulbright
(EARTP) is to increase the pool of professionally and
Commission closed its doors, and the new USIS posts in
technically trained East Asians in key social and econom-
Croatia and Slovenia took over the administration of the
ic sectors. A.I.D. selected HE as the prime contractor to
Fulbright programs in these new republics.
assess needs, develop training plans, and provide train-
Fulbright Commissions in the region also increased in
n u m b e r . In a d d i t i o n to the a l r e a d y
©
ing for more than 2,200 men and women during the five-
established
year project. Initially, EARTP will serve C a m b o d i a ,
Commissions in Hungary and Poland, the Commission
Mongolia, Thailand, and displaced Burmese living in
for the Czech and Slovak Federal Republic was succeed-
Thailand. It may be extended to Vietnam and Laos as
ed by the Czech Republic Commission; a new Slovak
U.S. relations become normalized.
Republic Commission is in formation. Official intergov-
Fields of study address specific country priorities. For
ernmental agreements were also signed to set u p new
Cambodia, devastated by brutal wars, target fields are
Fulbright Commissions in Bulgaria and Romania, to take
c o m m u n i t y d e v e l o p m e n t , public health, e d u c a t i o n ,
over the administration of the programs previously han-
development planning, economics, finance, and natural
dled by the USIS posts.
resources management. Fields of study in Mongolia are
IIE's B u d a p e s t - b a s e d East C e n t r a l E u r o p e office
privatization, finance, municipal d e v e l o p m e n t , and
moved to larger and more central quarters to meet the
power utility management. Thailand's focus is the envi-
State Department asks HE to administer student exchanges
under the Fulbright Program
HE arranges for more than 4,000 Americans to go to Europe on
converted troop ships to work on reconstruction and study
co
ronment and HIV/AIDS, and for displaced Burmese, target fields are business management, finance, economics,
development planning, and public health.
Revitalizing the Philippines' rural electrification system is the goal of A.I.D.'s Philippines Rural Electrification Project. HE project staff in Manila provides technical
assistance
Administration
to
the
(NEA)
National
and
the
Electrification
Rural
Electric
Cooperatives (RECs). In 1993 the HE team assessed sector-wide training needs, developed the 1994 work plans
and a training catalog, developed detailed course curricula and outlines, and published a monthly newsletter.
Over the two years of the contract, HE will develop and
implement both short-term and long-term training plans
and strengthen institutional capabilities to establish sustainable training programs.
The Fulbright Program, in addition to reopening in
Laos and Cambodia, expanded throughout Asia and the
Pacific. New Fulbright programs were launched in Tonga
IIE/Bangkok U.S. Universities Fair. 1993. ME
Universities Fairs bring university representatives
together with students considering U.S. study.
and the Solomon Islands; others were expanded in Fiji,
Papua New Guinea, and Vietnam. For seven top-level
education officials of the People's Republic of China, IIE's
©
Professional Exchange Programs (PEP) division arranged
Working in conjunction with the newly established
an overview of the Fulbright Program in cooperation
International Education Foundation in Indonesia, HE
with councils of international visitors and other volun-
facilitated training in the United States and third coun-
tary organizations across the United States. USIA's Office
tries for the I n d o n e s i a Institute of M a n a g e m e n t
of International Visitors was the sponsor.
Development; the Institute for the Development of
Textbook
Management Education; the Ministry of Forestry; BAP-
Development Project, HE arranged academic study and
PENAS, Indonesia's National Planning Agency; and the
For the U n e s c o / W o r l d Bank China
oo
internships for Chinese scholars and professionals under
A.I.D.-funded Natural Resources Management (NRM)
a World Bank a g r e e m e n t w i t h the C h i n e s e State
project. HE and the Indonesian foundation also provided
Education Commission and Unesco. They were placed at
administrative support for all Educational Testing Service
universities, university presses, and commercial textbook
(ETS) examinations in Indonesia and represented East-
publishers in specialties that ranged from editing science
West Center programs there.
books to copyright law.
Milestones
IIE/Bangkok, working out of new, expanded quarters,
U n d e r the International Health Policy Program
assumed responsibilities for the new East Asia Regional
(IHPP), sponsored by The Pew Charitable Trusts, HE pro-
Training Project, processed 24,433 TOEFL applications,
vides services to help developing countries of Africa and
advised more than 24,000 inquirers seeking information
Asia m a k e the most of s h a r p l y limited h e a l t h - c a r e
about U.S. education, and arranged predeparture orienta-
resources. In 1993, physicians from Indonesia and India
tion for the first Vietnamese Fulbright grantees since
continued research at UCLA and Harvard.
1974. IIE/Bangkok also helped arrange a study tour of
in I I E ' s
History
Unesco asks HE to assist in administering postwar reconstruction fellowships
in science, communications, education, and social development
• Laurence Duggan
becomes HE president
• HE conducts first annual census of foreign
students in the United States—26,759
reported in 1949
X -
•
••
•
-
'•
•-
•
• . " ' ' , • ' ' !
!••
,',l'...l"
•
• - - ' — ^
India
A n j a n a
B h u s h a n
In I n d i a , H u m p h r e y
Fellow
Anjana Bhushan's most recent
assignment was as Director of
W o m e n and Child D e v e l o p ment for the Government of
Rajasthan, formulating policies
and implementing programs to
enhance the quality of life for
poor children and to increase
w o m e n ' s mainstream participation in Rajasthan's development. She is taking graduate
courses and conducting independent research related to
the role of gender issues in
development planning. She is
also undertaking a professional affiliation at the Gender and
Policy Division of the World
Bank. Her primary goal is to
increase concern for women in
development policy and planning. The Humphrey Fellowship
Program is a USIA Fulbright
activity for midcareer professionals with outstanding leadership potential.
1950s
HE initiates Educational Associate member services for
U.S. colleges and universities
Expands scholarship opportunities for emerging
African nations
Vietnam for the first delegation of U.S. university presi-
Colloquium participants brought perspectives from
d e n t s to visit the c o u n t r y since 1975. HE p r e s i d e n t
Africa and the Middle East, Asia and the Pacific, Eastern
Richard M. K r a s n o led the d e l e g a t i o n ; the Ford
and Central Europe, and North and South America as
Foundation and the Christopher Reynolds Foundation
well as from Western Europe. The conference papers will
provided funding.
be published in mid-1994 and will be shared widely with
IIE/Hong Kong, relocated to spacious new quarters at
the Chinese University of Hong Kong, provided informa-
S p a i n ' s F u l b r i g h t C o m m i s s i o n m a r k e d its 35th
tion on U.S. study to more than 10,000 students, conduct-
anniversary with a gala celebration at which Felipe, El
ed outreach sessions for more than 3,500 students in sec-
Principe de Asturias, heir to the Spanish throne, was
ondary schools and tertiary institutions, prepared a new
awarded an honorary Fulbright scholarship. He is now
video in Cantonese on U.S. study, and assisted advising
studying in the United States at Georgetown University.
centers in China in meeting the information needs of PRC
students.
5
the international education community.
In 35 years, Spain has sent almost 3,000 Fulbrighters to
the United States. Since 1960, the binational Fulbright
HE staff organized U.S. university fairs in Bangkok,
Commission has also brought some 1,300 Americans to
Hong Kong, Jakarta, and Tokyo, bringing together U.S.
Spain. Spain's government and private sectors both use
university representatives and thousands of prospective
the Fulbright program to invest in human resource devel-
Asian students.
o p m e n t in key fields. The Ministry of Economy and
Finance (MEH) and the Ministry of Public A d m i n i stration (MAP) send high-ranking civil servants to the
Western Europe
United States for a combination of course work and professional training. The Ministry of Education and Science
Pioneer in academic mobility
(MSC) sends highly qualified candidates for advanced
As regional trading partnerships multiply, international
academic mobility takes on increasing economic import a n c e . In c o o p e r a t i o n w i t h the E u r o p e a n C u l t u r a l
t r a i n i n g in science and t e c h n o l o g y . The S p a n i s h
Confederation of Business Organizations (CEOE) spon-
Foundation (ECG), HE convened a colloquium of world
educators in Wassenaar, Netherlands, to examine the
growing trend toward regionalization in educational
exchange and the possible impact of these trends on
countries outside the regions involved.
After six years of the European Union's ERASMUS
CO
program, Western European participants represented the
voice of experience. ERASMUS, an acronym for European
Community Action Scheme for the Mobility of University
Students, was created by the European Union to promote
the development of linguistic and cultural competence
across member states' national borders. It provides grants
for substantial numbers of European Union membercountry teachers and students to teach and study in EU
countries other than their own. It also assists universities
in devising s t a n d a r d s for recognizing foreign course
work.
Milestones
in I I E ' s
Members of the Fulbright Screening Committee review U.S. applications
for academic study in Italy.
History
Administers Ford Foundation grants to
train developing-country leadership
Organizes first exchanges with
Indonesia and Singapore
Kenneth Holland
becomes HE president
< Regional Offices established to serve foreign students
under HE supervision and to promote international
education across the United States
••••
•"•••"\
sors y o u n g journalists, both broadcast and print, for
postsecondary institutions. From a survey of 3,444 U.S.
Fulbright fellowships as a way of improving the quality
institutions, HE obtained and analyzed data on 109
of j o u r n a l i s m . The Banco C e n t r a l H i s p a n o (BCH)
reported U.S. university linkages with Canadian institu-
launched a new program in 1993 in affiliation with the
tions and 182 linkages with Mexican institutions. The sur-
Fulbright program, offering recent university graduates
vey revealed considerable enthusiasm for expanding
grants for U.S. study in unrestricted fields.
linkages. The final inventory was presented at a conference organized by the three countries in Vancouver,
British Columbia.
A n o t h e r HE N o r t h A m e r i c a n i n i t i a t i v e w a s the
Latin America/North America
Trilateral Journalist Exchange, described on page 20.
IIE's Mexico City office, serving Mexico and the rest of
The new world of NAFTA
Trilateral academic and professional mobility will play a
significant role in the new era of the North American Free
Trade Agreement (NAFTA). HE coordinated three initiatives in 1993 to explore the possibilities.
IIE's North American Regional Academic Mobility
Program (RAMP) is an informal consortium of Canadian,
Mexican, and U.S. university educators. It is designed to
create opportunities for—and overcome obstacles t o greater trilateral cooperation and exchange in higher education. U n d e r IIE's l e a d e r s h i p , the N o r t h American
RAMP created a three-year experimental exchange of students in engineering, business, and environmental studies, sponsored by the U.S. Department of Education's
Fund for the Improvement of Post-Secondary Education
(FIPSE). Students from each country study in one of the
Latin America, provided information to almost 10,000
individuals seeking information about U.S. study, double
the number in 1990. All of the bilateral programs HE
a d m i n i s t e r s in Mexico also e x p a n d e d .
Sixty-four
Fulbright fellows began their studies in 1993; almost
double the previous year's cohort. The Fulbright-Garcia
Robles CONACYT p r o g r a m doubled the number of
"D
grants to 100. Fifty-six young men and w o m e n from
Mexico and Central America were selected for FordMacArthur Fellowships; 37 chose to study in the United
States. The General Electric Foundation continued to
support five years of training for talented undergradu-
©
ates at public universities t h r o u g h o u t Mexico. H E /
Mexico's services to educational advisers throughout
Central America were also expanded.
others, receiving academic credit from their home institution. Students pay tuition at their home universities and
Africa: Shaping Change
are accepted at the host institutions without charge.
In 1992/93, the project's first year, 13 engineering
SAEP graduates move into the mainstream
schools and 15 business schools participated. In the sec-
When HE initiated the South African Education Program
ond year, seven more engineering programs were invited
(SAEP) for black South Africans in 1979, the end of
to join, and 16 environmental studies programs launched
apartheid seemed a distant goal. In 1993, however, the
their exchange initiative. More business and engineering
goal was in sight, along with an urgent need for black
schools will join in 1994/95. The results of the experiment
professionals. SAEP now recruits only graduate students,
will be s h a r e d w i t h i n s t i t u t i o n s t h r o u g h o u t N o r t h
who can return to South Africa more quickly to take their
America.
rightful place in democratic governance and private-sec-
In a related initiative for USIA, HE surveyed existing
tor leadership. Priority fields are business, management,
linkages between U.S. colleges and universities and those
and public administration. Through SAEP, more than
in Canada and Mexico, while Canadian and Mexican
1,200 black South African students have earned degrees
counterpart agencies conducted parallel surveys of their
at U.S. institutions and returned to South Africa.
HE aids Hungarian refugee students, arranging U.S.
scholarships for more than 700 freedom fighters
• _ . , - • • • • „ • , ...,.,.,,,,„.
HE strengthens outreach in arts through Fulbright
Program and International Music Competitions
CO
IIE's Career D e v e l o p m e n t F e l l o w s h i p Program
nearly 600 mid-level professionals from universities and
(CDFP) offers short-term fellowships to midcareer pro-
other national institutions for g r a d u a t e s t u d y in the
fessionals from c o m m u n i t y - b a s e d
United States.
organizations.
Individually tailored fellowships combine academic
Malawi is one of the poorest countries in the world,
training with practical internships. More than 300 CDFP
with a compelling need to eliminate disease and improve
participants have returned to South Africa to strengthen
food security. As a participant in the Malawi Human
their organizations. Both SAEP and CDFP are supported
Resources and Institutional D e v e l o p m e n t Project
by A.I.D., foundations, corporations, church organiza-
(HRID), which HE administers for A.I.D., Henry Gaga is
tions, and U.S. colleges and universities.
expected to have a direct impact on improving these
The impact of the alumni who have returned to South
areas when he r e t u r n s home. A staff m e m b e r of the
Africa is already being felt in academia, business and
Malawi Bureau of Standards responsible for overseeing
industry, banking, social services, and the media. SAEP
food safety, he is pursuing a master's degree in food sci-
alumnus Kaizer Nyatsumba (page 17), who is covering
ence at Tuskegee Institute with a 4.0 grade average, learn-
the multiparty negotiations for a postapartheid South
ing methods to isolate and combat pathogenic bacteria.
Africa for a major newspaper, is just one example.
For HRID, HE coordinated study tours of U.S. univer-
Other HE initiatives in South Africa include the new
sities for the principal and two staff members of Malawi's
South African-U.S. University Linkages Program.
Bunda College of Agriculture to strengthen linkages with
North Carolina Agricultural and Technical University
U.S. universities and set up collaborative projects.
(NCA&T) is working with the University of Fort Hare to
develop a new master's program in agricultural economics and rural development. Both are historically black
universities. The University of Durban-Westville is colm
laborating with several p r o m i n e n t U.S. institutions,
including the University of Michigan and the University
of California/Berkeley. The Church Leaders Development Project (CLDP) provides opportunities for clergy
and other church leaders to earn master's degrees in U.S.
and
oo
Canadian
seminaries.
The
South
Mutual
Understanding:
A New Urgency
African
HE was founded to foster international understanding in
Information Exchange is described more fully on page
the relatively insular world of 1919. Today, the hopes and
22. In June 1993, HE assumed responsibility for 18 stu-
the hazards of the post-Cold War transition, in a world
dents pursuing U.S. degrees through the Archbishop
made much smaller by technological advances, make the
D e s m o n d Tutu South African Scholarship Fund.
need for intercultural understanding even more urgent.
Founded by Archbishop Tutu with his Nobel Peace Prize
HE programs address the issues from a variety of per-
award, the program is now funded by A.I.D.
spectives.
In 1993, there were 84 South African participants in the
Fulbright Student Program, making the South African
Fulbright Program the largest in Africa. The 37 subSaharan nations participating in the Fulbright Program
Milestones
Arts International
continued to concentrate resources on the Junior Staff
Encouraging artist-community connections
Development Program (JSDP) for African institutions.
As a Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest International Artist,
Since its inception, this regional program has sponsored
Mei-ling Horn, a U.S. artist of Asian descent, spent six
in I I E ' s
History
{JHE>
ME census reports 47,245 foreign students in U.S. universities
in 1958-59
• HE headquarters erected on UN Plaza with special
contributions of $3 million
South Africa
K a i z e r
N y a t s u m b a
In five years, South African
j o u r n a l i s t Kaizer Nyatsumba
has risen from junior reporter
to political correspondent for
The Star,
Johannesburg's
largest newspaper, covering
the multi-party n e g o t i a t i o n s
for a p o s t a p a r t h e i d
South
Africa. As a participant in IIE's
South
African
Education
Program (SAEP), he earned a
bachelor's degree in English
with honors from Georgetown
University while covering international political news for the
Georgetown
Hoya. The author
of two books of poetry and
one of short stones, he credits his success to his opportunity to study in t h e U n i t e d
States. "In a very real sense,"
he said, "I am what and who I
am now because of the sound
education
I obtained
at
G e o r g e t o w n U n i v e r s i t y and
the marvelous experience of
living in Washington, D.C."
HE develops authoritative guides on study
abroad for Americans
• Holds conferences on Latin American educational issues
• Expands services to meet growing demand for
information on international education
IIE's Arts International (AI) Division encourages connections among professional artists worldwide through
grants, advocacy, exchange, and information programs.
The Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest International Artists
p r o g r a m enabled 22 visual artists to s p e n d u p to six
months in residence with arts organizations in such disparate locations as the Aboriginal Center in Australia and
Monet's Gardens at Giverny in France. Back home, they
worked with U.S.-based arts organizations to present
community programs based on their experience.
In 1993, AI's Fund for U.S. Artists at International
Festivals and Exhibitions awarded over $1 million to 149
performing arts groups and individuals, enabling them to
participate in international festivals in 43 countries. The
Fund is a p u b l i c - p r i v a t e p a r t n e r s h i p funded by the
National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), USIA, The Pew
Charitable Trusts, and the Rockefeller Foundation. The
Travel Grants Fund, a joint project of AI and NEA,
enables U.S. artists to interact with colleagues throughout
the world. AI's participation is made possible by The Pew
Charitable Trusts. Among the 64 highly diverse recipients
<
©
CD
were the Urban Bush Women, an African-American perSculptor Martha Jackson-Jarvis spent her Lila WallaceReader's Digest residency studying mosaics in Italy, then
shared the results through a multigenerational project in
Washington, D.C. Above, elementary school student Brandy
Dudley checks her plaster cast for a mosaic depicting the collard green plant's role in African-American life.
months in Bangkok and northern Thailand exploring her
Asian cultural identity. Afterward, at Headlands Center
for the Arts in San Francisco, she distributed cameras to
community members from diverse Asian backgrounds—
Filipino gang members, Japanese poets, Indian storekeepers, Chinese journalists, Thai teenagers, Burmese
artists, Cambodian farm workers—and assigned them to
tell her in pictures what it means to be Asian in America.
The result was "Picturing Asian America," an exhibition
that engaged the Bay Area Asian communities in all
Maria Goodwin (right) shares with artist Kathryn Marshall some of the
family experiences symbolized in her mother's quilt. Quilts— soft
mosaics—are part of the multigenerational project AI artist Martha
Jackson-Jarvis is conducting in cooperation with the Smithsonian's
Anacostia Museum.
facets of its creation, installation, and presentation.
Milestones
in I I E ' s
History
• Establishes overseas offices in Asia, Africa, and
Latin America
• Strengthens services to support human-resource
development in third-world nations
Number of foreign students in U.S. postsecondary
institutions reaches 134,959 in 1969
/•
~ - ~ —
A m e r i c a n - H u n g a r i a n Friendship Forum, The Robert
Sterling Clark Foundation, and The Trust for Mutual
Understanding.
IIE's Professional Exchange Programs (PEP) division
enabled poets and fiction writers from 18 countries to
experience the diversity and texture of American life—by
means of transcontinental travel—to enrich their threemonth participation in the International Writing Program
at the U n i v e r s i t y of Iowa. The USIA Office of
International Visitors was the sponsor.
For an Independent Press
Journalists explore basic concepts
U.S. Fulbright grantee Andrew Jesse Anderson interviewed the Rev. Kyriakos Endonu, of Ghana, as part
of an oral history project.
"Freedom of the press," "the public's right to know," and
"protection of sources" are now meaningful concepts to
11 Russian and Kazakh journalists. After 76 years of government-controlled media, their countries are preparing
to build a truly independent press. USIA's Office of
forming ensemble that traveled to Oshogbo, Nigeria, to
Citizen Exchanges sponsored an exchange program that
explore participation in the Oshun festival of Yoruba cul-
enabled these journalists to travel in the United States.
In Washington, their orientation included a briefing by
ture.
To help managers of East Central European arts orga-
Zbigniew Brzezinski, former national security adviser
nizations cope with the loss of state subsidies, AI's East
Central Europe Cultural Leadership Project provides
advice and practical U.S. experience in U.S. arts management techniques. The program is supported by The Pew
Charitable
Trusts
and
The
Trust
for
Mutual
Understanding. AI's Theater Manager Internships for
Russia and the Baltic States has provided three-month
internships at U.S. regional theaters for managers from
Russia, Ukraine, Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia, with
Ford Foundation funding.
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AI convened two 1993 conferences, one in Barcelona
and one in Budapest. Crossing Cultures, convened in
•
;
Barcelona with the support of Fundacio "la Caixa," examined the impact of social issues and world events on cont e m p o r a r y art w o r l d w i d e . AI and the Office of the
Deputy Mayor of Budapest convened "Fundraising for
Pedro Armendares of Mexico City's La Jornada was
hosted by the Los Angeles Times.
Culture" for Hungarian arts managers, supported by The
Wallace Edgerton
becomes HE president
HE administers the Venezuelan Government's
"Gran Marisca! de Ayacucho" Scholarship
Program, assisting nearly 4,000 students
• Begins to arrange U.S. study-tours for the
USIA International Visitor Program
Japan Perspectives
Women leaders share views
Four projects HE administered in 1993 were designed to
strengthen U.S.-Japanese understanding. One brought
together Japanese and U.S. women leaders of nongovernmental organizations. Two others brought Japanese state
and municipal employees to the United States to meet
with Americans in all walks of life. A fourth disseminated
information on the impact of the Fulbright experience on
Japanese and U.S. participants.
Women's role in community development was the
theme of the Japan-U.S. Women Leaders Dialogue,
cosponsored by HE and the Japan Center for International
Trilateral Journalist Exchange: Chicago Tribune reporter Michael Martinez
(right) worked for three months at Mexico City's El Universal. At left, ME
manager Jose Barquin.
Exchange (JOE), with funding
from
the
Japan
Foundation Center for Global Partnership. The six U.S.
women leaders included the education director of the Art
Institute of Chicago, a former president of the National
League of Women Voters, and the heads of four community-development agencies. The six from Japan included
5
CD
2
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"0
and a former HE Trustee, originally from Poland. In
two newspaper editors and directors of four volunteer
Baton Rouge, they received intensive training in journal-
organizations concerned with women's issues. The U.S.
istic
women visited projects throughout Japan in February;
skills
at
the
Manship
School
of
Mass
Communication at Louisiana State University. After a
the Japanese women reciprocated in June. Together in
seminar at the Center for Investigative Journalism in San
New York, all 12 shared experiences and ideas for future
Francisco, they interned for three weeks at U.S. newspa-
cooperation.
Seventy-two Japanese municipal employees had the
pers.
With funding from The Freedom Forum, HE launched
Milestones
opportunity to test newly acquired cross-cultural skills
the Trilateral Journalist Exchange in 1993. Mexican and
during a 10-day study tour that IIE's Scholarships and
U.S. journalists were affiliated for three months with
Training a n d PEP d i v i s i o n s a r r a n g e d for the Japan
media organizations in Canada, Mexico, and the United
Intercultural Academy of Municipalities. In groups of
States, covering news for their publications back home.
10, they traveled across the country, sharing ideas with
Canadian journalists joined the program in January 1994.
U.S. city leaders; visiting environmental firms, senior citi-
The Freedom Forum also sponsored IIE's Vietnamese
zen centers, vocational-technical schools, and cultural
Journalism Training Program. Journalists from the
landmarks; and experiencing such Americana as potluck
Vietnam Investment Review, World Affairs Review, Vietnam
suppers and baseball games. All 10 groups rated home-
Pictorial, and the New Hanoi Newspaper took up profes-
stays with American families as the tour's high points.
sional affiliations at U.S. newspapers from Allentown,
J a p a n ' s Local Autonomy College also invested in
Pennsylvania, to Sacramento, California after a one-
internationalizing the Japanese prefectural work force by
m o n t h o r i e n t a t i o n and i n t e n s i v e English course in
sending 35 trainees for a 10-day tour of the West Coast.
Washington.
HE arranged meetings with counterparts, site visits, and
in I I E ' s
History
Initiates South African Education Program to offer U.S.
educational opportunities to black South Africans with
both private and public support
Develops ITT International Fellowship Program, a model
of corporate involvement in international exchange
/
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• .!. '.. . • J . , . , . ! i . y , ) J
United States
M a t t h e w
For o r g a n i s t
L e w i s
and
teacher
Matthew Lewis, planning t o
specialize in late nineteenth
and twentieth century French
music, it was essential to go
to t h e s o u r c e . An A n n e t t e
Kade
Fellowship
and
a
Fulbright Travel Grant took the
J u i l l i a r d g r a d u a t e to Paris.
There he was able to hear the
city's newly renovated organs
— i n c l u d i n g Notre D a m e ' s —
and to study with French virtuoso organist Marie-Madeleine
Durufle. It was, he wrote, "a
life-changing year for me." He
is shown here with the AeolianSkinner organ at the Church
of the Incarnation in New York
City.
• Foreign student population in U.S. reaches
286,343 in 1979
• HE administers Hubert H. Humphrey
Fellowship Program for USIA
Returning to Hong Kong and Returning to Indonesia, with
information on e m p l o y m e n t o p p o r t u n i t i e s for U.S.trained students returning home.
HE also published Investing in Human Capital, edited by
Craufurd D. Goodwin, a collection of papers from a 1991
HE conference analyzing the contribution of international
study to national development.
South Africa
Database serves a vibrant NGO sector
Japanese women NGO leaders visit YWCA school for homeless
children in Spokane, Washington.
South Africa's black community has created a vibrant
NGO sector, one that has developed schools, health care
facilities, and other community resources. N o w these
NGOs face the challenges of recasting their policies from
0)
home hospitality in San Francisco, Sacramento, Portland,
opposition to cooperation with the state. IIE's South
and Salem.
African Information Exchange (SAIE), building on eight
At the year's end, HE published As Others See Us, a
years of efforts to democratize access to information
study of the Fulbright experience and its impact on U.S.
about resources available to NGOs, in 1993 went on-line
and Japanese participants, funded by the Japan-United
with SANGONet, the South African N o n g o v e r n m e n t
States Educational Commission. It revealed how the
Organizations Network. It is a nonprofit, computer-based
experience changed participants' perceptions of each
c o m m u n i c a t i o n s a n d i n f o r m a t i o n n e t w o r k ; HE will
other's countries and their own.
u p d a t e information on an o n g o i n g basis. SAIE and
SANGONet are supported by The Ford Foundation, The
W.K. Kellogg Foundation, The Charles Stewart Mott
CD
Essential Information
"a
Foundation, and other donors.
HE research and publications address the need
Access to information is essential to understanding and
to informed decisions. IIE's statistical research and policy
Milestones
1980s
HE Regional Offices
studies, directories of international-study opportunities
Linking business, communities, academia
and sources of financial aid, conferences, and databases
IIE's offices in C h i c a g o , Denver, H o u s t o n , and San
provide a comprehensive information base for individ-
Francisco bring together international students and lead-
ual, institutional, and policy decisions.
ers of the academic and business communities in the
In 1993, HE published its annual Open Doors and bien-
regions they serve. All four offices provide support ser-
nial Profiles, USIA-supported statistical analyses of inter-
vices to grantees studying at universities in their regions
national student flows, as well as Vacation Study Abroad
on IIE-administered programs, monitoring their progress,
and Academic Year Abroad, international-study directories
acting as liaison with the universities, and helping in
that are the standard resources in the field. I I E / H o n g
emergencies. More than 1,600 volunteers provide hospi-
Kong a n d I I E / J a k a r t a p r o d u c e d , w i t h t h e i r local
tality and arrange special events for international stu-
A m e r i c a n C h a m b e r s of C o m m e r c e , n e w editions of
dents and scholars.
in I I E ' s
History
-
• Expands role in third-world development
projects and practical training
Richard M. Krasno
becomes HE president
• Opens overseas offices in Jakarta, Indonesia,
and Guangzhou, China, joining those in
Mexico City, Hong Kong, and Bangkok
IIE/Midwest, based in Chicago, used proceeds from
its annual benefit dinner to award scholarships to 21 U.S.
Robert D. Whitfield of
students for overseas study. The office also hosted a
the Chicago Housing
Authority discusses
USIA-funded seminar at which 150 foreign Fulbright stu-
the politics of public
dents and 20 U.S. students examined urban issues.
housing with Fulbright
s t u d e n t s at Chicago
IIE's Denver-based Rocky Mountain office and USIA
seminar.
sponsored a meeting of central and western university
representatives to re-emphasize the objectives of the
Fulbright Program. The Denver World Affairs Council
b r o u g h t to Denver d i s t i n g u i s h e d speakers from the
United States and other countries to develop informed
opinion on U.S. foreign policy and to promote interna-
The
Hon.
Atsuki
tional understanding. The office annually hosts approxi-
Tokinoya, consul gen-
mately 700 foreign leaders through USIA's International
eral of Japan in San
Francisco; the Hon.
Visitor Program.
Michael Armacost,
former U.S. ambas-
Suzanne Mubarak, Egypt's First Lady and honorary
sador to Japan, and
chairwoman of IIE/Southern office's Festival of Nations
Dr. Carl Zachrisson,
IIE's
honoring Egypt, expressed d e e p appreciation of the
West
Coast
director.
Houston-based office's educational and cultural pro-
3
grams. HE and the Houston Jaycee Foundation awarded
£
$21,000 in g r a n t s - i n - a i d to U.S. s t u d e n t s at HE
Z
Educational Associate institutions for study abroad. For
<
The
the second year, IIE/Houston administered the Amoco
Hon.
Denis
McLean, ambassador
ndi ng :
0)
Caspian Sea Petroleum Company Scholarships. The
of New Z e a l a n d to
office also hosted 400 international leaders under USIA's
the United
States,
03
with Denver Regional
V)
International Visitor Program.
Board vice president
CD
IIE's West Coast office, based in San Francisco, award-
Mrs. Nicholas Petry
c
ed scholarships for Asia/Pacific study to 11 undergradu-
and the H o n . K e i t h
3
Brown, former
CO
3
ates at HE Educational Associate institutions. The office
ambassador
hosted the West Coast Fulbright Seminar and received a
Denmark.
U.S.
to
3
U S I A / N A F S A grant to continue the activities of the
Fulbright Regional Enrichment Center for Fulbright
g r a d u a t e students. The 1993 Distinguished A l u m n u s
From left, Mrs. Atiya
Award was presented to Dr. Michael Armacost, U.S.
A b o u l e i s h , co-chair
Ambassador to Japan, and the Distinguished Service
of
11 E / S o u t h e r n ' s
Festival of N a t i o n s
Award to musical philanthropist James Schwabacher. HE
h o n o r i n g Egypt; the
continued to administer scholarship programs for the
Hon. Ahmed Maher
El S a y e d ,
Chiles Foundation and the Levi Strauss Company, both
ambas-
sador of Egypt to the
of w h i c h i n c r e a s e d t h e i r f u n d i n g . The R a y c h e m
United States, and
Corporation chose HE to administer a new scholarship
Mrs. Jerianne Kolber,
festival co-chair, plac-
program for children of its overseas employees.
ing her raffle ticket in
a pyramid.
Launches research program to
Opens new Information Center to
A.I.D. and establishes Department of
examine policy issues related to
serve New York metropolitan area
Science and Technology
international student mobility
• Administers Energy Training Program for
In recognition of the H u m p h r e y Program's success,
Building Global
Problem-Solving
Capabilities
USIA increased its budget by 33 percent, beginning with
the Class of 1993/94, adding 31 journalists and allowing
for expansion to new countries. HE was invited to continue administering the flagship program for USIA, as it has
done since the program's inception in 1979.
Protecting the environment, preventing the spread of catastrophic diseases, combating d r u g traffic and d r u g
abuse, working toward the day when basic human rights
are universally respected—all are efforts to address problems that national boundaries cannot confine. HE begins
its next 75 years committed to translating mutual understanding into mutual action. A number of HE programs
have, over the last decade, made a significant start in this
Human Rights Internships
Sharing resources with developing countries
The struggle for h u m a n rights is global. In 1993, IIE's
International H u m a n Rights I n t e r n s h i p Program
(IHRIP) l a u n c h e d t w o i m p o r t a n t n e w i n i t i a t i v e s
d e s i g n e d to b r o a d e n the p r o g r a m ' s ability to s h a r e
direction.
human-rights resources from a r o u n d the world with
nascent human-rights organizations in developing coun.Q
cQ
Q.
CD
o
o
CO
tries.
The Legal Resources Project, launched in June with
Humphrey Networks
Ford Foundation support, is developing a clearinghouse
Fighting drugs, protecting the environment
of information about legal aid programs in Africa, Asia,
Drug abuse and environmental degradation are two of
the M i d d l e East, Latin A m e r i c a , the former Soviet
the g l o b a l p r o b l e m s a l u m n i of USIA's Hubert H.
Humphrey Fellowship Program are tackling, individually and collectively. From the Amazon rain forest to the
Czech Republic, alumni have formed the H u m p h r e y
CG
O
Fellows Environmental Forum, with sustainable, environmentally sound development as its goal. Created in 1979
CD
for developing-country professionals with demonstrated
CD
leadership ability, the Humphrey Fellowship Program
has expanded to include the nations of the former Soviet
bloc. Alumni, now numbering almost 1,700, are leaders in
their countries. They use their collective expertise to
influence policy, management, and action, both within
their own governments and globally.
One specialized activity within the H u m p h r e y pro-
1
f
1
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fessionals in d r u g and alcohol abuse prevention and
treatment. Half of them sit on state, regional, or national
drug and alcohol abuse policymaking bodies in their
1
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gram concentrates on the fight against drug abuse. Fortysix countries now have Humphrey alumni trained as pro-
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Fulbrighter Peter
Kormer (Germany)
with ME director
of development
Marcia Grant (left).
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countries.
Milestones
in I I E ' s
History
• Strengthens cultural exchanges through
Arts International program
• Foreign students in U.S. colleges and
universities total 386,851 in 1989
Develops U.S.-U.S.S.R. Student Exchange
Program— explores strengthening
exchanges with Eastern Europe
/ * * : > • > ,
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Mexico
R o s a
Exploring the
Q u i r o s
relationship
between environmental and
s o c i a l p r o b l e m s — s u c h as
the impact of water use in
Mexico City on low-income
communities in the surrounding regions—was the focus
of Rosa Quiros's studies in
Mexico. As a Ford-MacArthur
fellow in the Department of
Urban Studies and Planning
at MIT, she is f o c u s i n g on
development policies in thirdworld countries. A career in
teaching, research, and consulting is her goal.
HE organizes workshops on market economics in
Czechoslovakia and opens an office in Budapest
Expands training and technical assistance for Centra!
and Eastern Europe
Republics, and East Central Europe. The project will
place special emphasis on practical, work-related paralegal training in such areas as public-interest law and testcase litigation.
In cooperation with the Swedish NGO Foundation for
Human Rights, IHRIP is working to identify the needs
and training resources of human right organizations in
Africa. Nine researchers will visit human rights NGOs in
25 countries to gain a broader sense of what training
should be and what resources are available.
Preserving Biodiversity
Fulbrighter Jose Castro (Peru) and Kee Min (South Korea) with Jackie
Bassett, HE Assistant Manager. Asian Programs.
Chinese learn U.S. approaches
Untouched by the last Ice Age, China is believed to contain perhaps one-tenth of the world's flora and fauna
species. A few concerned Chinese conservationists are
working against tremendous population and economic
o
pressures to preserve natural habitats and to forge a consensus on the sustainable use of biological resources. For
USIA's Office of International V i s i t o r s , the HE
o
CO
@
Professional Exchanges Programs division arranged a
£
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U.S. p r o g r a m for t h r e e l e a d e r s in the field. It w a s
n
o
designed to introduce them to U.S. approaches to protection of endangered species, and to provide up-to-date
information on environmental and biological assessment
o
O
en
and monitoring systems. Thev met with U.S. counterparts at conservation o r g a n i z a t i o n s in W a s h i n g t o n ,
explored issues of endangered species and economic
CO
Malizole L Ntshanga at a South African gold field. He earned his metallurgical engineering degree from Lafayette College as an ME South African
Education Program participant and is now a mining investment analyst.
development in Cincinnati, visited interpretive nature
programs in San Diego, and explored marine conservation and refuge management techniques in Honolulu.
M i l e s t o n e s in I I E ' s Hi s t o ry
Develops new exchanges with Mexico,
Japan, Vietnam—opens an office in
Moscow
Expands initiatives for journalists,
energy trainees—strengthens technical assistance capabilities
IIE's Open Doors reports that the number
of foreign students in the United States
reaches a record of 438,618
Projects and their
sponsors: 1993
HE provided a variety of services, singly
and in combination, for the projects and
sponsors listed below. They included
administration of fellowships and shortterm professional development programs,
technical assistance and consulting services, international purchasing services,
research, publishing, conferences, seminars, educational testing, information services, and fiscal management. (See also
Special Initiatives, page 40.)
Agriculture/Forestry
Bangladesh Agricultural University:
Bangladesh Agricultural University;
Ford Foundation
Centro Internacional de Agricultura
Tropical /Colombia
Diversified Agriculture Research Project/Sri
Lanka (DARP): U.S. Agency for International
Development (A.I.D.)
East India Rice 2: Ford Foundation
Arts/Museums/Archaeology
Annette Kade Foreign Fellowships:
Annette Kade Endowment
Annette Kade U.S. Fellowships: Annette Kade
Endowment
Cintas Fellowship Program/Cuba:
Cintas Foundation, Inc.
Crossing Cultures (conference): Fundacio la
Caixa
Fund for U.S. Artists: National Endowment for
the Arts, Pew Charitable Trusts, Rockefeller
Foundation, U.S. Information Agency (USIA)
Fundraising for Culture/Budapest (seminar):
American Hungarian Friendship Forum; The
Robert Sterling Clark Foundation, Inc.; The
Soros Foundations
Guildford School of Acting and
Drama/United Kingdom
IIE/West Coast International Vocal
Competition Award: Helene Feingold
Jahangirnagar University: Ford Foundation;
Jahangirnager University
Lusk Memorial Fellowship: Charles D. Lusk
and Marie Koupal Lusk Trust
Michael Vinciguerra Fund: Michael Vinciguerra
Fund
Reader's Digest International Artists Program:
Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest Fund
Management Education and Development; U.S.
Agency for International Development (A.I.D.)
Ministry of Economy and Finance Fellowships
(MEH): Ministry of Economy and
Finance/Spain
Ministry of Education and Science
Fellowships (MEC): Ministry of Education
and Science (MEC)/Spain
Ministry of Public Administration (MAP)
Fellowships: Ministry of Public
Administration (MAP)jSpain
NIS Energy Commoditv Exchange
Development and Training Program: U.S.
Agency for Internationa! Development (A.I.D.)
Nonprofit Management in West Africa:
Ford Foundation
North American Consortium for Free MarketStudy: Joseph E. Seagram & Sons; Participating
corporations; U.S. Agency for International
Development (A.I.D.)
Returning to Hong Kong: The Hong Kong
Employment Guide for Returning Graduates
(publication): American Chamber of Commerce
in Hong Kong; Hong Kong corporations
Returning to Indonesia (publication):
American Chamber of Commerce in Indonesia
(with assistance from corporations)
Shangri-La Hotel (Kowloon) Scholarship
Program: Shangri-La Hotel (Kowloon) Ltd.
Royal Academy of Dramatic Art/United
Kingdom
Shangri-La International/China Management
Limited: Shangri-La International Hotel
Management Ltd./Hong Kong
International Centre for Research in
AgroFores try / Kenya
Studio Art Centers International
TRW Fellowship: TRW, Inc.
International Fertilizer Development Center
(FDC)/U.S.A.
Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic
Art/United Kingdom
International Board for Soil Research and
Management/Thailand
Communications/
Information Science
International Institute of Tropical Agriculture
GOTTA) /Nigeria
International Laboratory for Research on
Animal Diseases (ILRAD) /Kenya
International Livestock Center for Africa
(ILCA)/Ethiopia
International Maize and Wheat Improvement
Center (CIMMYT)/Mexico
International Potato Center (CIP)/Peru
Kerala Forest Research Institute/India: Ford
Foundation; Kerala Forest Research Institute
Business/Public Administration/
Economics
Addis Ababa University Women/Ethiopia:
Addis Ababa University; Ford Foundation
Amoco Caspian Sea Petroleum Company
Scholarship: Amoco Eurasia Petroleum
Company
Academic Year Abroad 1993/94 (publication):
Institute of International Education (HE), publication sales and advertising
An International Guide to Chicago (publication):
Ameritech International
East Central Europe Information Exchange:
Ford Foundation; The Pew Charitable Trusts;
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
China Exchange Program: fames L. Weinberg
National Farming Systems/Bangladesh:
Ford Foundation
Edgar M. Bronfman East-West Fellowship
Endowment: Samuel Bronfman Foundation,
Inc.
Sokoine University Staff Development:
Sokoine University /Tanzania
Ford Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowships in
Economics: Ford Foundation
Upland Agriculture and Conservation Project:
BANGDA, Ministry of Home Affairs/Indonesia
Free Market Development Advisers Program:
U.S. Agency for International Development
(A.I.D.)
Wagenigen Agricultural University/
Netherlands
Governance/India: Ford Foundation
West Africa Rice Development Association
WARDA)/Cote d'lvoire
Institute of Management Education and
Development/Indonesia (IPPM): Institute of
East German Young Leaders: Media in a
Democratic Society: U. S. Information
Agency, Office of Citizen Exchanges, Youth
Programs Division
Fulbright Professional Exchange in
Journalism: Neiu Zealand U.S.- Educational
Foundation
Fulbright/Spanish Confederation of Business
Organizations (CEOE) grants in journalism:
Spanish Confederation of Business
Organizations
HE News (publication): IIE/Southern
o
Mexico-U.S. Journalist Exchange:
American Express de Mexico; Ford Foundation;
H-E-B Foundation
South African Information Exchange: Andrew
W. Mellon Foundation; Anonymous; Charles
Stewart Mott Foundation; Ford Foundation;
Genesis Foundation; Patrick and Anna M.
Cudahy Fund; W.K. Kellogg Foundation
Study of Latin American Media and Its
Training Needs: Ford Foundation
Fulbright/Czech Government Grants:
Government of Czechoslovakia
IIE/Houston Volunteer Services to
International Visitors: IIE/Southern
Ministerio de Sanidad y Consumo
Fellowships (MSC): Ministerio de Sanidad y
Consumo (MSO/Spain
Vietnamese Public Health Program:
Christopher Reynolds Foundation
Korea: Teaching Assistantships In English
(U.S. nationals): Government of Korea
North American Academic Mobility
Consortium: U.S. Department of Education,
Fund for the Improvement of Post-Secondary
Education (FIPSE)
Human Rights
Trilateral Journalist Exchange:
The Freedom Forum
North American University Presidents'
Conference: Ford Foundation; University of
Guadalajara
International Human Rights Internship
Program: Edna McConnell Clark Foundation;
Ford Foundation; General Service Foundation;
Joyce Mertz-Gihnore Foundation; Royal
Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs; Swedish
NGO Foundation for Human Rights
Vacation Study Abroad 1993/94 (publication):
Institute of International Education (HE), publication sales and advertising
Paedagogischer Austauschdienst Teaching
Assistantships (U.S. nationals):
Paedagogischer Austauschdienst/Germany
International Relations
Vietnamese Journalists Training Program:
The Freedom Forum
Taiwan: Teaching Assistantships (U.S. nationals): Government of Taiwan
Economic Development
U.S. Universities Fairs/Hong Kong/
Indonesia/Japan/Thailand: AT&T
Corporation: Institute of International
Education (HE); U.S. colleges and universities;
U.S. corporations
Taiwan International Affairs Journalist
Program: U.S. Information Agency (USIA)
Ministry of National Planning/Somali
Democratic Republic: International
Development Association (IDA); World Bank
University of Chittagong: Ford Foundation;
University of Chittagong
English Language Testing
University of Nairobi/Institute for Development Studies: Ford Foundation; University of
Nairobi/Institute for Development Studies
Consultancy on Educational Testing in East
Central Europe: Educational Testing Service
Test of English as a Foreign Language
(TOEFD/Indonesia/Thailand/Mexico/East
Central Europe: Educational Testing Service
Education
Abubakar Tafawa University/Nigeria
Test of English for International Communication (TOEIC)/Indonesia: Corporations;
Educational Testing Service (ETS)
American University in Cairo/Egypt
As Others See Us: A Comparison of Japanese and
U.S. Fulbrighters (publication): Japan-United
States Educational Commission (JUSEC)
Awty School International Teacher Exchange:
IIE/Southern
East German Young Leaders: Education in
America: U. S. Information Agency, Office of
Citizen Exchanges, Youth Programs Division
Education Development Projects Implementing Task Force (EDPITAFl/Philippines
Educational Advising in Hong Kong/Mexico
and Regional Advising Consultancies in
China/Central America/East Central
Europe: U.S. Information Agency (USIA)
Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania:
Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania
French Government Teaching Assistantships
in English (U.S. nationals): Government of
France
Fulbright Belgium/Luxembourg Teaching
Assistantships (U.S. nationals): Government
of Belgium; Government of Luxembourg
Environment/Natural Resources
Ecology Activism in the Baltic Nations:
U.S. Information Agency, Office of Citizen
Exchanges
Indonesia Natural Resources Management
Project: U.S. Agency for International
Development (A.I.D.)
Health/Population
International Health Policy Career
Development Fellowship Awards:
Pew Charitable Trusts; The Carnegie
Corporation of New York
International Health Policy Program (IHPP):
Pew Charitable Trusts in cooperation with the
World Bank, Carnegie Corporation of New York
and World Health Organization
Italian Medical Schools: Government of Italy
Alice R. Pratt Internship in International
Affairs: IIE/Southern
Colin and Brooke Lee Internship in
International Affairs: IIE/Southern
Committee on International Relations Studies
with the People's Republic of China (CIRSPRC): Ford Foundation; Henry Luce
Foundation; John D. and Catherine T.
MacArthur Foundation; Rockefeller Brothers
Fund; Rockefeller Foundation
Houston JC's Internship for International
Affairs: IIE/Southern
IIE/Denver World Affairs Council: IIE/Rocky
Mountain
IIE/Rocky Mountain Volunteer Services to
International Visitors: IIE/Rocky Mountain
Tanzania Centre for Foreign Relations-II: Ford
Foundation; Tanzania Centre for Foreign
Relations
Language/Literature/Linguistics
Bangla Academy/Folklore: Bangla Academy;
Ford Foundation
British Universities Summer Schools:
Joint Committee of the British Universities
Summer Schools
Centro Linguistico Italiano Dante
Alighieri/Italy: Centro Linguistico Italiano
Dante Alighieri
Foreign Language Teaching Assistantships/
Austria: Austrian-American Educational
Commission; U.S. Information Agency (USIA)
Foreign Language Teaching Assistantships/
Germany: German Marshall Fund of the
United States; Paedagogischer Austauschdienst;
U.S. Information Agency (USIA)
Foreign Language Teaching Assistantships/
Italy: Italian universities; Ministry of Foreign
Affairs/Italy; Ministry of Public Education/
Italy; U.S. Information Agency (USIA)
Fulbright/Icelandic Government Grant:
Government of Iceland
Encyclopedia Britannica Scholarship Program:
DeSa InterAmerican Foundation
Fulbright Intensive English Training Program:
U.S. Information Agency (USIA)
Finnish Government Grants: Government of
Finland
Fulbright Preacademic Training Program:
U.S. Information Agency (USIA)
Finnish Undergraduate Program: Finland-U.S.
Educational Exchange Commission
Salzburg Summer School/German for
Foreigners/Austria: Austro-American Society
Ford Foundation/New York/Senegal/
Nigeria: International purchasing
Scuola Leonardo da Vinci/Italy:
Scuola Leonardo da Vinci
Frieda Bertha Tanner Ratner Fund/
Switzerland: Frieda Bertha Tanner Ratner
Fund
Summer Institute: English Teacher Trainers
from Eastern Europe: U.S. Information
Agency, Office of Cultural Centers and
Resources, English Language Programs
Division
Fulbright Program: Foreign Fulbright Fellows:
U.S. Information Agency (USIA)
Fulbright Program: U.S. Fellows:
U.S. Information Agency (USIA)
Fulbright Regional Enrichment Center/
Midwest: U.S. Information Agency (USIA)
IIE/Regional Office Study Abroad
Scholarships: IIE/Midwest; U.S. corporations;
U.S. individual donors
HE/West Coast Undergraduate Scholarship
Program for Asia Pacific Study: Raymond
Luce (in memory of his sister, Erma Luce
Zachrisson)
International Visitor Program: U.S. Information
Agency (USIA), Office of International Visitors
ITT Graduate Fellowship Program:
ITT Corporation
J.A.A.R.S., Inc.
Japanese Fulbright Alumni Foundation
Award: Japanese Fulbright Alumni Foundation
Latin American Air Grants Program: American
Airlines; United Airlines
Fulbright Regional Enrichment Center/
Southern: U.S. Information Agency (USIA)
Leadership Training for Students from
ASEAN Countries: U.S. Agency for
International Development (A.I.D.)
Fulbright Regional Enrichment Center/West
Coast: U.S. Information Agency (USIA)
Lenora Lindsley Endowment Program:
Lenora Lindsley Endowment
Multisectoral
Fulbright/Banco Central Hispano (BCH):
Banco Central Hispano/Spain
Levi Strauss Foundation Scholarship
Program: Levi Strauss Foundation
Barrie De La Maza Scholarships:
Fundacion Pedro Barrie De La Maza
Fulbright/Colombian Government Grants:
Government of Colombia jICETEX
Louise Woods Memorial Scholarship Fund:
Louise Woods Memorial Scholarship Fund
Bhutan Scholarship Program: Mr. Frank Hoch
Fulbright/Hungarian Government Grants:
Government of Hungary
Malawi Human Resources and Institutional
Development Project: U.S. Agency for
International Development (A.I.D.)
Legal Studies
Madaripur Legal Aid: Ford Foundation;
Madaripur Legal Aid Association
Brazilian Undergraduate Program:
Instituto Brasil-Estados Unidos (IBEU)
Fulbright/Polish Government Grant:
Government of Poland
Marge Eckhardt Memorial Fund:
The Marge Eckhardt Family
Bridgetsone/Firestone Scholarship Program/
Liberia: BridgestonefFirestone, Inc.
Fulbright/Spanish Government Grants:
Government of Spain
Burma Refugee Scholarship Program:
U.S. Information Agency (USIA)
Fulbright/Turkish Government Grants:
Government of Turke\/
Michael Vinciguerra Fund/Italy:
Michael Vinciguerra Fund
Career Development Fellowship Program/
South Africa: Carnegie Corporation; Charles
Stewart Mott Foundation; Ford Foundation;
U.S. Agency for International Development
(A.I.D.)
G. Unger Vetlesen Norwegian Fellowship:
G. Unger Vetlesen Foundation
Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing
Company Supplementary Fellowships:
3M Foundation
Chiles Foundation Fellowships:
Chiles Foundation
Global 2000
Chubb Foundation International Scholarship
Program: Chubb Foundation
Chung Shan Institute of Science and
Technology/Taiwan: Chung Shan Institute of
Science and Technology
Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst
(German Academic Exchange Service)
Grants: Deutscher Akademischer
Austauschdienst
Dutch Undergraduate Program: Netherlands
America Commission for Cultural Exchange
East West Center Asia Representative:
East West Center/Honolulu
Education/East Africa: Ford Foundation
Eisenhower Exchange Fellowships/USA
Program/Hungary: Eisenhower Exchange
Fellowships
Germanistic Society of America/Quadrille
Fellowship: Germanistic Society of America
Harry D. Triantafillu Scholarship:
Harry D. Triantafillu
Hoover Company Fellowship/France:
Hoover Foundation
Marie Bruesselbach Memorial Trust
Missionary Auto Truck Service:
Missionary Auto Truck Service /U.S. A.
Monica Mourier de Archibald Memorial
Fellowship/Argentina: Archibald Memorial
Fund
Morgan Stanley International Scholarship
Fund: Morgan Stanley Scholarship Fund, Inc.
Houston Student Loan Fund: IIE/Southern
Hubert H. Humphrey Fellowship Program:
U.S. Information Agency (USIA)
HE Undergraduate Scholarship Program/
Latin America: Commission for Exchange
Between the United States and Peru; HE/
Mexico; Instituto Chileno Norteamericano de
Cultura; U.S. Embassy to Bolivia; U.S. Embassy
to Costa Rica
IIE/Adell and Hancock Fund: Robert Adell
IIE/Nancy Petry Scholarship: IIE/Rocky
Mountain
IIE/Regional Office Study Abroad
Information Services: IIE/Midwest
Namibian Scholarship Program:
Ford Foundation
Okinawa Scholarship Program: Okinawa
Prefecture Government Human Resources
Development Foundation
Overseas Fellowship Program/Indonesia:
Agency for the Assessment and Application of
Technology (BPPT)jIndonesia; World Bank
Pagnucco/Bainbridge Memorial Scholarship
Program: Pepsi-Cola International
PanAfric International Pvt. Ltd. Company/
Ethiopia
PRAAP/IRED/Senegal
Private Agencies Cooperating Together
(PACD/U.S.A.
William and Tona Shepherd Fund/Austria:
William and Tona Shepherd
Quadrille Ball Scholarship Program/Germany
Raychem Corporation Paul M. Cook Scholarship:
Raychem Corporation
Sasakawa Africa Association/Ghana: Sasakaiva
Africa Association/Ghana
Seagram Overseas Scholarship Program: Seagram
Spirits and Wine Group
South African Education Program (SAEP): U.S.
Agency for International Development (A.I.D.);
U.S. colleges and universities; U.S. foundations and
corporations
South Asian/Indochinese Exchange:
Ford Foundation
Starr Foundation Scholarship Program for
"American International" Children Overseas:
Starr Foundation
Swedish Undergraduate Program:
Sverige-Amerika Stiftelsen
Policy and Statistical Research
Sylvan Bowles Scholarships/West Indies:
Sylvan Bowles Scholarship Fund
The Rockefeller Foundation/U.S.A.: International
Purchasing: The Rockefeller Foundation/U.S.A.
^
Unesco Fellowship Program: United Nations
Scientific, Educational, and Cultural Organisation
I Unesco)
General Electric Engineering Scholarships/
Mexico: General Electric Foundation, Inc.
Halco Scholarship/Guinea: Halco (Mining), Inc.
As Others See Us: A Comparison of Japanese and U.S.
Fulbrighters (publication): Japan-U.S. Educational
Commission
IBM Children of Employees: IBM China/Hong
Kong Corporation
International Investment in Human Capital (publication): Ford Foundation, Educational Testing
Service, U.S. Agency for International Development
(A.I.D.)
Mobil Oil Fellowships: Mobil Oil, Inc.
Open Doors 1992/93: Report on International
Educational Exchange (publication):
U.S. Information Agency (USIA)
Private Power Participation in the Electricity
Industry Workshop: U.S. Agency for
International Development (A.I.D.)
Policy Analyses in International Education:
Ford Foundation
Project on Technology for W o m e n / A h m a d u Bello
University/Nigeria: Ahmadu Bello University;
Ford Foundation
Profiles 1991/92: Detailed Anaysis of the Foreign
Student Population (publication):
U.S. Information Agency (USIA)
Roster reports: Potential home-country employers of
international students
Swiss Government Grants: Government of
Switzerland
Swiss Universities Grants: Swiss Universities
Malaysian-American Commission on Educational
Exchange
Science/Engineering/Technology
Diesel Generator Maintenance Management
Workshop: Caribbean Electric Utility Service
Corporation; U.S. Agency for International
Development (A.I.D.)
Egypt Energy Manpower Development: U.S.
Agency for International Development (A.I.D.)
Energy Training Program: U.S. Agency for
International Development (A.I.D.)
Pakistan Energy Training: U.S. Agency for
International Development (A.I.D.)
Road Transport and Traffic College/Indonesia:
Road Transport and Traffic College
Techno-Serve/U.S.A.
Training Systems Management Workshop:
Caribbean Electric Utility Service Corporation;
U.S. Agency for International Development (A.I.D.)
Social Sciences
Ford-MacArthur Fellowships: Ford Foundation;
John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation
Women's Program/Consejo Superior
Universitario Centroamericano: Ford Foundation
United Bible Societies/Kenya
Vidya K. Deshpande Scholarship Fund:
Dr. Jayant K. Deshpande
General Electric Engineering Scholarships/Korea:
General Electric Foundation, Inc.;
Korean-American Educational Commission
Voluntary Visitors Program: U.S. Information
Agency (USIA), Office of International Visitors
General Electric Engineering Scholarships/
Malaysia: General Electric Foundation, Inc.;
Theology
Church Leaders Development Project/South
Africa: Ford Foundation; Global Ministries of the
United Methodist Church
/^
Educational
Associates
UNITED STATES
University of San Francisco
University of Southern California
University of the Pacific
West Coast University
Westmont College
Woodbury University
ALABAMA
Auburn University
Birmingham-Southern College
Spring Hill College
U.S. Sports Academy
University of Alabama
University of Alabama, Birmingham
University of South Alabama
ARIZONA
American Graduate School of
International Management
Arizona State University
University of Arizona
University of Arizona, Center for English
as a Second Language
ARKANSAS
Arkansas State University
University of Arkansas, Fayetteville
University of Arkansas, Little Rock
COLORADO
Colorado College
Colorado School of Mines
Colorado State University
Regis University
Teikyo Loretto Heights University
University of Colorado, Boulder
University of Colorado, Denver
University of Denver
University of Southern Colorado
CONNECTICUT
Albertus Magnus College
Central Connecticut State University
Connecticut College
Fairfield University
Mitchell College
Sacred Heart University
University of Hartford
University of New Haven
Wesleyan University
Yale University
CALIFORNIA
Azusa Pacific University
Calif School of Prof Psychology
California College for Health Sciences
California Institute of Technology
California Institute of the Arts
California Lutheran University
California State University System
California State University, Chico
California State University, Fresno
California State University, Hayward
California State University, Long Beach
California State University, Los Angeles
California State University, Northridge
California State University, Sacramento
Chapman University
Claremont Graduate School
Claremont McKenna College
El Camino College
Golden Gate University
Lincoln University
Los Angeles City College
Los Angeles Pierce College
Menlo College
Monterey Institute of International Studies
National University
Occidental College
Pepperdine University
Pitzer College
Pomona College
Saint Mary's College of California
San Diego State University
San Francisco State University
San Jose State University
Stanford University
United States International University
University of California, Davis
University of California, Irvine
University of California, Los Angeles
University of California, Riverside
University of California, San Diego
University of California, Santa Barbara
University of California, Santa Cruz
University of Judaism
University of Redlands
University of San Diego
DELAWARE
Universitv of Delaware
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
American University
George Washington University
Georgetown University
Howard University
Johns Hopkins University, School of
Advanced International Studies
FLORIDA
Barry University
Brevard Community College
Eckerd College
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
Florida Institute of Technology
Lynn University
Miami-Dade Community College
Nova University
Rollins College
Saint Leo College
University of Florida
University of Miami
University of South Florida
GEORGIA
Agnes Scott College
Clark Atlanta University
Emory University
Georgia Institute of Technology
Georgia State University
Kennesaw State College
Morehouse College
Savannah College of Art & Design
Spelman College
University of Georgia
Valdosta State Universitv
HAWAII
Brigham Young University, Hawaii
Campus
East-West Center
Hawaii Pacific University
University of Hawaii, Hilo
University of Hawaii, Manoa
Teikyo Westmar University
University of Iowa
University of Northern Iowa
Wartburg College
ILLINOIS
KANSAS
Bradlev University
Chicago State University
College of Dupage
College of Lake County
Columbia College
De Paul University
DeVry Institute of Technology, Chicago
DeVry Institute of Technology, DuPage
Eastern Illinois University
Elmhursh College
Illinois Benedictine College
Illinois Eastern Community Colleges
Illinois Institute of Technology, Kent
College of Law
Illinois State University
Illinois Wesleyan University
Kendall College
Knox College
Lake Forest College
Loyola University of Illinois
Northeastern Illinois University
Northern Illinois University
Northwestern University
Oakton Community College
Parkland College
Rend Lake College
Rockford College
Roosevelt University
Rosary College
Rush University
Saint Xavier University
School of the Art Institute of Chicago
Southern Illinois University, Carbondale
University of Chicago
University of Illinois, Chicago
University of Illinois, Urbana
Western Illinois University
Wheaton College of Illinois
Bethel College
Emporia State University
Fort Hays State University
Kansas State University
McPherson College
University of Kansas
Wichita State University
KENTUCKY
Berea College
Northern Kentucky University
University of Kentucky
University of Louisville
Western Kentucky University
LOUISIANA
Centenary College of Louisiana
Louisiana College
Louisiana State University, Baton Roug
Loyola University of Louisiana
Tulane University of Louisiana
University of New Orleans
MAINE
Bates College
Colby College
Husson College
MARYLAND
College of Notre Dame of Maryland
Hood College
Johns Hopkins University
Loyola College
University of Maryland, University
College
Washington College
INDIANA
Anderson University
Ball State University
Butler University
DePauw University
Goshen College
Indiana State University
Indiana University, Bloomington
Indiana University, South Bend
Indiana University-Purdue University
Purdue University
Saint Mary's College
Tri-State University
University of Evansville
University of Indianapolis
University of Notre Dame
Valparaiso University
IOWA
Central College
Coe College
Cornell College
Drake University
Graceland College
Grinnell College
Iowa State University
Loras College
Luther College
Mount Mercy College
MASSACHUSETTS
Amherst College
Assumption College
Babson College
Bentley College
Berklee College of Music
Berkshire Community College
Boston College
Boston University
Bradford College
Brandeis University
Fitchburg State College
Gordon College
Harvard University
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Massachusetts General Hospital Institute
of Health Professions
Mount Holyoke College
Northeastern University
Pine Manor College
Simmons College
Smith College
Springfield College
Suffolk Universitv
Tufts University
Wellesley College
Wentworth Institute of Technology
Wheaton College of Massachusetts
0
Williams College
Worcester Polytechnic Institute
Franklin Pierce Law Center
New England College
University of New Hampshire
State University of New York College,
New Paltz
State University of New York College, Old
NEW JERSEY
Westburv
State University of New York College,
Oneonta
State University of New York College,
MICHIGAN
Adrian College
Albion College
Andrews University
Ferris State University
Hope College
Kalamazoo College
Madonna University
Michigan State University
Northern Michigan University
Oakland University
Saginaw Valley State University
University of Michigan
Wayne State University
Western Michigan University
Bergen Community College
Centenary College
Fairleigh Dickinson University, Teaneck
Monmouth College of New Jersey
New Jersey Institute of Technology
Ocean County College
Princeton Theological Seminary
Princeton University
Ramapo College of New Jersey
Rider College
Rutgers, The State University of New
Jersey
Saint Peter's College
Stevens Institute of Technology
Stockton State College
MINNESOTA
Augsburg College
Bemidji State University
Carleton College
College of Saint Catherine
College of Saint Scholastica
Concordia College, Moorhead
Gustavus Adolphus College
Hamline University
Macalester College
Mankato State University
Moorhead State University
Saint Cloud State University
Saint John's University
Saint Mary's College of Minnesota
Saint Olaf College
University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
University of Saint Thomas of Minnesota
MISSISSIPPI
Meridian Community College
Mississippi State University
University of Mississippi, Main Campus
University of Southern Mississippi
MISSOURI
Central Missouri State University
Maryville University
Northeast Missouri State University
Southeast Missouri State University
Southwest Missouri State University
Stephens College
University of Missouri, Columbia
University of Missouri, Kansas City
University of Missouri, St. Louis
Washington University
Webster University
Westminster College
William Jewell College
NEBRASKA
Creighton University
Doane College
Nebraska Wesleyan University
University of Nebraska, Lincoln
University of Nebraska, Omaha
NEVADA
University of Nevada, Reno
NEW HAMPSHIRE
Colby-Sawyer College
Dartmouth College
NEW MEXICO
New Mexico Institute of Mining &
Technology
New Mexico State University
University of New Mexico
NEW YORK
Adelphi University
Bard College
Barnard College
Berkeley Colleges
Canisius College
City University of New York, City College
City University of New York, Lehman
College
Colgate University
College of Insurance
College of New Rochelle
College of Saint Rose
Columbia University
Columbia University, Teachers College
Cooper Union
Cornell University
Elmira College
Fashion Institute of Technology
Fordham University
Hamilton College
Hofstra University
Juilhard School
Long Island University, Brooklyn Campus
Long Island University, C W Post Campus
Manhattanville College
Marymount College
Nazareth College of Rochester
New School for Social Research
New York University
Pace University
Polytechnic University
Pratt Institute
Rochester Institute of Technology
Rockefeller University
Rockland Community College
Samt Bonaventure University
Saint Lawrence University
Sarah Lawrence College
Siena College
St John's University
St Thomas Aquinas College
State University of New York College,
Brockport
State University of New York College,
Cortland
State University of New York College,
Fredonia
Oswego
State University
Potsdam
State University
State University
Binghamton
State University
State University
of New York College,
of New York, Albany
of New York,
of New York, Buffalo
of New York, Central
Administration
State University of New York, College of
Environmental Science and Forestry
State University of New York, Stony
Brook
Syracuse University, Main Campus
Union College
Universitv of Rochester
Vassar College
NORTH CAROLINA
Appalachian State University
Davidson College
Duke University
Johnson C Smith University
Mars Hill College
Meredith College
North Carolina State University, Raleigh
Queens College
Saint Augustine's College
University of North Carolina, Asheville
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
University of North Carolina, Charlotte
Wake Forest University
Western Carolina University
NORTH DAKOTA
Minot State University
North Dakota State University
University of North Dakota
OHIO
Antioch University
Ashland University
Baldwin-Wallace College
Bowling Green State University
Capital University
Case Western Reserve University
College of Mount Saint Joseph
College of Wooster
Defiance College
Denis on University
DeVry Institute of Technology, Columbus
Heidelberg College
Hiram College
John Carroll University
Kent State University, Main Campus
Kenyon College
Marietta College
Miami University
Muskingum College
Oberlin College
Ohio Dominican College
Ohio Northern University
Ohio State University, Main Campus
Ohio University, Main Campus
Ohio Wesleyan University
Otterbein College
University of Dayton
University of Findlay
University of Toledo
Wilberforce University
Wilmington College
Wittenberg University
Wright State University, Main Campus
Xavier University
OKLAHOMA
Murray State College
Northeastern Oklahoma A & M College
Oklahoma Baptist University
Oklahoma City University
Oklahoma State University, Main Campus
Phillips University
University of Central Oklahoma
University of Oklahoma, Norman
OREGON
George Fox College
Lewis &L Clark College
Linfield College
Pacific University
Portland State University
Reed College
Southern Oregon State College
University of Oregon, Main Campus
University of Portland
Western Oregon State College
Willamette University
PENNSYLVANIA
Albright College
Allegheny College
Art Institutes International
Beaver College
Bloomsburg University
Bryn Mawr College
Bucknell University
California University of Pennsylvania
Carnegie Mellon University
Cedar Crest College
Clarion University of Pennsylvania
Dickinson College
Duquesne University
East Stroudsburg University
Franklin & Marshall College
Gwynedd-Mercy College
Hahnemann University
Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Juniata College
Lafayette College
LaSalle University
Lehigh University
Lock Haven University
Millersville University of Pennsylvania
Muhlenberg College
Pennsylvania State University, Main
Campus
Point Park College
Robert Morns College
Saint Joseph's University
Shippensburg University of Pennsylvania
Slippery Rock University
Susquehanna University
Swarthmore College
Temple University
Thiel College
Thomas Jefferson University
University of Pennsylvania
University of Pittsburgh, Main Campus
University of Scranton
Villanova University
Washington & Jefferson College
Westminster College
Wilson College
RHODE ISLAND
Brown University
Bryant College
Johnson & Wales University
Rhode Island School of Design
Roger Williams University
University of Rhode Island
SOUTH CAROLINA
Clemson University
Coastal Carolina University
SOUTH DAKOTA
University of South Dakota
TENNESSEE
Christian Brothers University
Memphis State University
Rhodes College
Tennessee Technological University
University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Vanderbilt University
Mary Baldwin College
Mary Washington College
Old Dominion University
Radford University
Randolph-Macon Woman's College
Roanoke College
Shenandoah University
Sweet Briar College
University of Richmond
University of Virginia
Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State
University
Washington & Lee University
WASHINGTON
Central Washington University
City University
Gonzaga University
Pacific Lutheran University
Seattle Central Community College
Seattle University
Skagit Valley College
University of Puget Sound
University of Washington
Washington State University
Western Washington University
Whitman College
Whitworth College
Yakima Valley Community College
TEXAS
Abilene Christian University
Angelo State University
Austin College
Baylor College of Medicine
Baylor University
El Paso Community College
Houston Baptist University
Rice University
Saint Edward's University
Southwestern University
Texas A & M University
Texas A&M International University
Texas Christian UniversityTexas Southern University
Texas Woman's University
Trinity University
Universitv of Dallas
University of Houston
University of Houston, Downtown
University of North Texas
University of Saint Thomas of Texas
University of Texas Health Science Center,
WISCONSIN
Beloit College
Carroll College
Lawrence University
Marquette University
Northland College
Saint Norbert College
University of Wisconsin,
University of Wisconsin,
University of Wisconsin,
University of Wisconsin,
Viterbo College
Houston
University of
University of
University of
University of
University of
OVERSEAS
EDUCATIONAL
ASSOCIATES*
Texas, Arlington
Texas, Austin
Texas, El Paso
Texas, Medical Branch
Texas, Tyler
UTAH
University of Utah
VERMONT
Middlebury College
Norwich University
Saint Michael's College
School for International Training
VIRGINIA
Christopher Newport University
College of William & Mary
George Mason University
Hollins College
Lynchburg College
WEST VIRGINIA
West Virginia University
International
Associates
European Association for International
Education
Leiden University
Netherlands Universities Foundation for
International Cooperation
AUSTRALIA
Curtin University
Deakin University
Griffith University
Monash University
Queensland University of Technology
University of New South Wales
University of Western Sydney, Nepean
BELGIUM
Academic Cooperation Association
European Cultural Foundation
European University
Vesalms College, Vrije Universiteit
Brussel
CANADA
Alberta Teachers' Association
Association of Universities and Colleges
of Canada
Canadian Bureau for International
Education
Concord College
Malaspina College
Ministere des Communautes Culturelles
et de rimrnigration
CHINA/HONG KONG
Chinese University of Hong Kong
Tamkang University
NEW ZEALAND
New Zealand Education Internationa]
POLAND
Silesian Technical University
ROMANIA
European Centre for Higher Education
SPAIN
Universitat Ponpeu Fabra
SWEDEN
Mid Sweden University
University of Karlskrona/Rooneby
UNITED KINGDOM
Central Bureau
Middlesex University
Staffordshire University
United Kingdom Council for Overseas
Student Affairs
University of Cambridge
University of Hull
University of Leeds
Universitv of Newcastle upon Tyne
UNITED STATES
COLOMBIA
Icetex
Madison
River Falls
Stout
Superior
WYOMING
University of Wyoming
EGYPT
American University in Cairo
FRANCE
American University of Paris
GERMANY
Schiller International University
SWITZERLAND
Franklin College Switzerland
UNITED KINGDOM
American College in London
Richmond College
DENMARK
Danish Confederation of Professional
Associations
DIS, Denmark's International Study
Program
District of Columbia
Alliance for International Educational and
Cultural Exchange
American Association of Collegiate
Registrars and Admissions Officers
American Council on Education
College Board
Council for International Exchange of
FRANCE
Institute for American Universities
Scholars
Council of Graduate Schools
Fulbright Association
NAFSA; Association of International
GERMANY
Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst
Institut fur Internationale Bildung, Berlin
ITALY
Instituto per l'Arte e ll Restauro
JAPAN
Japan College of Foreign Languages
MEXICO
Instituto Technologico y de Estudios
Superiores de Monterrey
Universidad Autonoma de Guadalajara
Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana
Universidad de Las Americas
Universidad del Valle de Mexico
Universidad Iberoamericana
Universidad La Salle
NETHERLANDS
Center for European Studies
Educators
Partners for International Education and
Training
Illinois
Institute of European Studies
Rotary Foundation
Maryland
Association for International Practical
Training
Missouri
American Assembly of Collegiate Schools
of Business
New York
Council on International Educational
Exchange
' Educational Associates are universities
accredited by U.S. higher education
accrediting agencies.
Regional Advisory
Boards
MIDWEST
Chair
Robert D. Stuart, Jr.
Chairman of the Board, Retired
The Quaker Oats Company
Chicago
Members
Andres B. Bande
President
Ameritech International
Chicago
Jack D. Beem
Partner
Baker & McKenzie
Chicago
Richard L. Berkley
Tension Envelope Corporation
Kansas City, Missouri
AlvinJ. Boutte
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Indecorp, Inc.
Chicago
William J. Brodsky
President and Chief Executive Officer
Chicago Mercantile Exchange
Chicago
J.C. Burton
Group Vice President/International
Operations
Amoco Production Company
Chicago
William B. Chiasson
Senior Vice President,Finance and
Systems
Kraft General Foods, Inc.
Northfield, Illinois
Gary P. Coughlan
Senior Vice President /Finance
& Chief Financial Officer
Abbott Laboratories
Abbott Park, Illinois
Clyde Dickey
Partner
Arthur Andersen & Co.
Chicago
Charles Fleischmarm
President
The Fleischmann Foundation
Cincinnati
Richard L. Huber
Vice Chairman
Continental Bank
Chicago
Adlai Stevenson
Chairman
Stevenson, Colling & Munoz
Chicago
W. W. Grant, III
Chairman
Colorado National Bank of Denver
Denver
Philip W. Hummer
Partner
Wayne Hummer & Company
Chicago
Stuart Symington, Jr.
Partner
Gallop, Johnson & Neuman
St. Louis, Missouri
Mrs. Leo Hayward
Aurora, Colorado
Richard Krasno
President
Institute of International Educaton
New York
Seth Taft
President
Cleveland International Progran
Cleveland
Fred Krehbiel
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Molex, Inc.
Lisle, Illinois
Arnold R. Weber
President
Northwestern University
Evanston, Illinois
Noel A. Kreicker
President
International Orientation Resources
Northbrook, Illinois
Kunimitsu Yamazaki
Chief Executive Director
JETRO, Chicago
Chicago
Benjamin F. Lenhardt, Jr.
Brinson Partners, Inc.
Chicago
John A. Zenko
President
Telemedia, Inc.
Buffalo Grove, Illinois
James M. Malouff, III
President
Great American Development
Corporation
Kansas City, Missouri
Mrs. Edison Dick
Lake Forest, Illinois
Donald L. Meier
Vice President
Sara Lee Corporation
Chicago
A. Lachlan Reed
Chairman
Lachlan International
Wayzatta, Minnesota
Thomas H. Miner
President
T.H. Miner & Associates
Chicago
Frayn Utley
Former Director
IIE/Midwest
Pomona, California
Lee M. Mitchell
Sidley & Austin
Chicago
JillNorden
Chair, International Visitors Council
Greater Kansas City Chamber of
Commerce
Kansas City, Missouri
Peter Norton
President
Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc.
Chicago
Nobuo Ohashi
Senior Vice President
Mitsui & Co. (USA), Inc
Chicago
ROCKY MOUNTAIN
Chair
Philippe Dunoyer
Denver
Members
Mrs. Peter Affeld
Denver
Mrs. Bruce Alexander
Denver
Fraser H. Allen
Boulder, Colorado
Mrs. Francisco Pedraza
Winnetka, Illinois
Jack Fuller
President and Chief Executive Officer
Chicago Tribune
Chicago
Robert C Preble, Jr.
Preble Associates
Chicago
A. Edgar Benton
Holme Roberts & Owen
Denver
Robert W. Galvin
Chairman of the Executive Committee
Motorola, Inc.
Schaumburg, Illinois
John E- Rielly
President
Chicago Council on Foreign Relations
Chicago
The Honorable Keith Brown
Vail, Colorado
Mrs. John Gavin
Hobe Sound, Florida
David J. Rosso
Partner
Jones, Day, Reavis & Pogue
Chicago
Richard A. Giesen
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Continental Glass & Plastic, Inc.
Chicago
Reynaldo P. Glover
Partner
Miller, Shakman, Hamilton & Kurtzon
Chicago
Norman J. Rubash
Executive Vice President, Retired
Amoco Production Company
Evanston, Illinois
Paul G. Sittenfeld
Vice President
Gradison & Company, Inc
Cincinnati
Hanna Holborn Gray
The University of Chicago
Chicago
K. Wayne Smith
President and Chief Executive Officer
Online Computer Library Center
Dublin, Ohio
Mrs. Alexander Hehmeyer
Founding President
Sadlers Wells, U.S.A.
Chicago
Jack D. Sparks
Chairman of the Board, Retired
Whirlpool Corporation
St. Joseph, Michigan
Christopher Hehmeyer
Managing Partner
Goldenberg, Hehmeyer & Company
Chicago
Robert King Steel
Partner & Managing Director
Goldman Sachs International
London, England
Philip A. Holmes
Resource Manager
Amoco Production Company
Denver
Mrs. E. Peter Honnen
Englewood, Colorado
Judith D.Judd
Judd Jacquez Arnold & Durfee, P.C.
Denver
Thomas Keesling
President
Travel Associates, Inc.
Denver
Johnston R. Livingston
Keystone, Colorado
H o n o r a r y Board M e m b e r s
Dr. George Ansell
President
Colorado School of Mines
Golden, Colorado
Georgie Anne Geyer
Syndicated Columnist
Washington, D.C.
Byron Hirst
Hirst & Applegate
Cheyenne, Wyoming
Dr. John C. Buechner
Chancellor
University of Colorado at Denver
Denver
Mrs. Brown Cannon, Jr.
Denver
Mrs. Hugh Catherwood
Denver
Mrs- John Love
Steamboat Springs, Colorado
John W. Low
Sherman & Howard
Denver
Dr. Herman Lujan
President
University of Northern Colorado
Greeley, Colorado
Mrs. Clayton K. Mammel
Denver
Donald M. Marshall
Vice President
Norwest Bank of Denver
Denver
James McCotter
Senior Vice President
Public Service Company of Colorado
Denver
Edward Meier
Duree & Company
Denver
Felicia Muftic
Consumer Credit Counseling
Denver
Mrs. Betty I. Naugle
Denver
Kent Olin
Vice Chairman
Affiliated Bankshares of Colorado, Inc.
Denver
Gordon Parker
Chairman and CEO
Newmont Mining Corporation
Denver
Mrs. Leonard Perlmutter
Golden, Colorado
James Peters
Englewood, Colorado
Mrs. Nicholas Petry
Englewood, Colorado
John Chapman
Boise, Idaho
Daniel Ritchie
Chancellor
University of Denver
Denver
Mrs. Jay Cherniack
Omaha, Nebraska
Mrs. John F. Roberts
Littleton
Mrs. Charles W. Cleworth
Denver
The Honorable Roy Romer
Governor of Colorado
Denver
Mrs. Peter R. Decker
Denver
John Eby
Managing Partner
Eby & Helling
Denver
Hubert Farbes
Rothgerber, Appel, Powers & Johnson
Denver
Benjamin F. Stapleton
Denver
W. T. Stephens
President and CEO
Manville Corporation
Denver
The Honorable Leonard v.B. Sutton
Denver
The Honorable Wellington E. Webb
Mayor of Denver
Denver
Robert W. Williamson
Audit Partner
KPMG Peat Marwick
Denver
Winton A. Winter
President
People's Bank & Trust
Ottawa, Kansas
Dr. Albert Yates
President
Colorado State University
Fort Collins
Mrs. Gene McDavid
Houston
WEST COAST
Robert E. McKee, III
Executive Vice President
Conoco, Inc.
Houston
Roderick A. McManigal
San Francisco
Z. Gary Miller
Manager, International Operations
Xerox Corporation
Dallas
William H. Mobley
Chancellor
Texas A & M University
College Station, Texas
Martha W. Murphy
Pass Christian, Mississippi
SOUTHERN
Chair
Walter W. Sapp
Houston
George D. Nelson
Querbes & Nelson Incorporated
Shreveport, Louisiana
Vice Chairman
Jean Neustadt
Neustadt Brothers
Ardmore, Oklahoma
Louis B. Cushman
Chairman
Cushman Realty Corporation
Houston
Paul Poullard
Executive Vice President and Manager
Texas Commerce Bank, N.A.
Houston
Members
Alice R.Pratt
Houston
Preston M. Bolton, F.A.I.A.
P.M. Bolton & Associates
Houston
John F. Bookout
Houston
Alison Brisco
Vice President
Shearson Lehman
Houston
Joan Rule Campbell
Little Rock, Arkansas
John P. Cogan, Jr.
Senior Partner
Baker & Botts
Houston
Weyman W. Crawford
Houston
Andre A. Crispin
President
The Crispin Company
Houston
David F. Dixon
Dixon & Dixon of Royal
New Orleans
Elroy W. Eckhardt
President
Eckco Systems, Inc.
New Orleans
Harry Gee, Jr.
Harry Gee & Associates
Houston
Malcolm Gillis
President
Rice University
Houston
Jean-Paul Giraudet
President and Chief Executive Officer
elf exploration, Inc.
Houston
Ned S. Holmes
Chairman
The Port of Houston Authority
Houston
Christian K. Keesee
Chairman
American Bank & Trust
Norman, Oklahoma
James T. Laney
President
Emory University
Atlanta
Henry J. Lartigue, Jr.
Vice President, Marketing and Public
Affairs
FINA, Inc.
Dallas
B. Frank Mackey, Jr.
Attorney and Counselor at Law
Little Rock, Arkansas
David S. Rozendale
President
Rust International Corp.
Birmingham, Alabama
James B. Rylander
Vinson & Elkins L.L.P.
Houston
Alexander F. Schilt
Chancellor
University of Houston System
Houston
George T. Schneider, M.D.
Ochsner Medical Institutions
New Orleans
Barry R. Schuman
Senior Vice President, Human Resources
TennecoInc
Houston
Mrs. James L. Shepherd, Jr.
Houston
H. Leighton Steward
Chairman, President and Chief Executive
Officer
Louisiana Land & Exploration Company
New Orleans
Chair
Members
R. Lawrence Bacon
President
Bacon and Company
San Francisco
Norman Barker, Jr.
Former Chairman
First Interstate Bank
Los Angeles
E. Floward Brooks
Manhattan Beach, California
Barbara K. Bundy
Executive Director
Center for the Pacific Rim
University of San Francisco
San Francisco
Ann W. Eliaser
San Francisco
Harold K. Forsen
Executive Vice President
Bechtel National, Inc.
San Francisco
Donald E. Fowler
Senior Vice President and General
Manager
Tandem Companies Group
Cupertino, California
Donald R. Gerth
President
California State University, Sacramento
Sacramento, California
Ronald Gonzalez
Architect
San Francisco
Connie Hammerman
Coodinator, San Francisco Area
Fulbright Visiting Scholar Enrichment
Program
Peraluma, California
Maurice Harari
Secretary General-Elect
International Association of University
Presidents
Mountain View, California
Carol M. Hehmeyer
Attorney
San Francisco
N. Susan Stone
Partner
Fulbright & Jaworski L.L.P.
Houston
A. Grant Heidrich, III
General Partner
Mayfield Fund
Menlo Park, California
George W. Strake, Jr.
President
Strake Foundation
Houston
Robert Heller
Tiburon, California
Henry J. N.Taub
Owner
The Ben Taub Interests
Houston
Louie Welch
Louie Welch & Associates
Houston
Mrs. David John Werner
Shreveport, Louisiana
Mrs. Frank M. Wozencraft
Houston
H o n o r a r y Board M e m b e r s
Fentress Bracewell
Partner, Retired
Bracewell & Patterson
Houston
Fred K. Darragh, Jr.
Little Rock, Arkansas
Mrs. Harvin C. Moore, Sr.
Chappel Hill, Texas
Ewell E. Murphy, Jr.
Senior Partner, Retired
Baker & Botts
Houston
Mrs. E. Glenn Isaacson
Belvedere, California
Kimi Narita
Advisor for Japan Related Projects
Bank of America
San Francisco
John F. Nicolai
Partner
Ernst & Young
San Francisco
Robert B. Phihpp
Belvedere, California
Lucinda Reinold
Vice President
Northern Trust of California
San Francisco
John Ritchie
President
Ritchie & Ritchie Corporation
San Francisco
Mary C. Slawson
London, England
Leandro P. Soto
President
Arriba Juntos
San Francisco
Fran Streets
Vice President & City Manager
Private Banking
Wells Fargo Bank
San Francisco
Marsha Vande Berg
Open Forum Editor
San Francisco Chronicle
San Francisco
Colleen S. Willoughby
Bellevue, Washington
Oily W. Wilson
Professor of Music
University of California, Berkeley
Berkeley, California
Wesley Witten
San Luis Obispo, California
Charles G. Wootton
Coordinator, International Public Affairs
Chevron Corporation
San Francisco
Kanetaka Yoshida
President and CEO
Union Bank
San Francisco
Alejandro Zaffaroni
Founder and Co-Chairman
ALZA Corporation
Palo Alto, California
Honorary Board Members
Mrs. Howard Ahmanson
Beverly Hills, California
J.H. Barnard
Orinda, California
Earle M. Chiles
President
Earle Chiles & Affiliated Companies
Portland, Oregon
Ann Z. Kerr
Coordinator, Los Angeles Area
Fulbright Visiting Scholar Enrichment
Program
Pacific Palisades, California
Mrs. Ben F. Feingold
San Francisco
David B. Kirby
Palo Alto, California
A. Lee Zeigler
San Francisco
Susan M. Kramer
Director, Cell Analysis
Genentech, Inc.
South San Francisco, California
Alexandre L. Lui
President
Anvil International Properties, Inc.
San Francisco
John D. Maguire
President
Claremont University Center
Claremont, California
Yoh Nakahara
General Manager
San Francisco Agency
Industrial Bank of Japan
San Francisco
Griffith Way
Attorney
Seattle
Giving to ME
CORPORATIONS and
CORPORATE FOUNDATIONS
Abbott Laboratories
Abbott Laboratories Fund
Gerald S. Adelman & Associates, Ltd.
American Bancorp of Oklahoma, Inc.
American Bank
American Bankers Association
American Express Philanthropic
Foundation
American Home Products Corporation
Ameritech Foundation
Ameritech International
Amoco Corporation
Amoco Foundation, Inc.
Amoco Production Company (USA)
Arab Banking Corporation
ARCO Coal Company
Ariel Capital Management Inc.
Arthur Andersen & Co.
Atwood Oceanics, Inc.
BankOne
Baker & McKenzie
Bank of America
Bank of California
Bank of the West
Bankers Trust Company
Banque Indosuez Houston Agency
BBDO Chicago, Inc.
Bechtel Group, Inc.
Biehl & Company
Bonner & Moore Associates, Inc.
Booker, Hancock and Associates
Booz Allen &n Hamilton, Inc.
British Gas Exploration and Production,
Inc.
CertainTeed Corporation
The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A.
Chevron Corporation
Chicago Federation of Labor
Chicago Mercantile Exchange
Citicorp
Claude Furniture Imports, Inc.
Coastal Equipment, Inc.
Coflexip & Services Inc.
CONCORD
Cooper Oil Tools Division
Cushman Realty Corporation
Cyprus Amax Minerals Company
Davis, Graham & Stubbs
DDB Needham Worldwide, Inc.
Deloitte & Touche
The Division Fund
Dixon & Dixon of Royal
Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc.
Ernst &c Company
Ernst & Young
Estee Lauder, Inc.
The EvansGroup
Executive Tower Inn
Femco, Inc.
Ford Motor Company
Freeport McMoRan, Inc.
Fulbright & Jaworski
The Gates Corporation
The General Electric Foundation
Goldenberg Hehmeyer & Co.
Gulf Forge Company
Gulf States Toyota, Inc.
Halliburton Energy Services
Hamilton Oil Corporation
Hanifen, Imhoff Inc.
Gerald D. Hines Interests
Household International
Houston Engineers, Inc.
Houston Lighting & Power Company
Industrial Bank of Japan, Ltd.
Industrial Metal Finishing Co.
Information Handling Services Inc.
IBM Corporation
Interiors Two by Barbara Fey
International Orientation Resources
InterPacific Group, Inc.
James Investment Company
Japan Productivity Center
Jeppersen Sanderson
Jones, Day, Reavis & Pogue
Kansai Productivity Center
Kerr-McGee Corporation
KHOU-TV, Inc.
Knight Piesold and Co.
KPMG Peat Marwick
Kraft General Foods, Inc.
KRON-TV
Kulkoni, Inc.
John Lampton Belt & Assoc.
LaSalle National Bank
Leasing Consultants
Lentrade, Inc.
The Leslie Analytical Organization, Inc.
Levi Strauss Foundation
Little Giant Pump Company
Losey & Smith
Lousiana Land and Exploration Company
Manville Corporation
Martin Gas Sales, Inc.
Material Service Foundation
Mayer, Brown & Piatt
McCann-Erickson, Inc.
McKinsey & Company, Inc.
Merck and Company, Inc.
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith
Mid America Committee
Mitchell Energy & Development Corp.
Mitsui & Co. (USA), Inc.
Molex, Inc.
Morris Export Crating Co.
Newmont Mining Corporation
Nippon Express (USA) Inc.
North Central Oil Corporation
Norwest Bank Denver
NW Transport Service, Inc.
OEA, Inc.
Omega World Travel
Pacific Gas & Electric
Pan-American Life Insurance Company
Parkway Investments/Texas, Inc.
Pennzoil Exploration and Production
Company
PEPE International
Percival Manufacturing Company
Philip Morris Companies, Inc.
Pillsbury, Madison & Sutro
Port of Houston Authority
Public Service Company of Colorado
Quaker Oats Company
Quaker Oats Foundation
RWS Architects Incorporated
Samsonite Corporation
Sara Lee Corporation
Savings Plans, Inc.
SC Johnson Wax
Schlumberger Foundation, Inc.
Seagull Energy Corporation
Sharp Electronics
Shell Oil Company Foundation
Sooner Pipe & Supply Corporation
The Starr Foundation
Stewart Enterprises Inc.
Suderman and Young Towing Company
Inc.
Tandem Computers
Telemedia, Inc.
Texaco Exploration and Production, Inc.
Texas Crude, Inc.
Thrall Enterprises, Inc.
Tideland Signal Corporation
T.L.I. International Corp.
Toshiba International
Transamerica Foundation
Triten Corporation
Union Bank
US West Foundation
Vallourec Inc.
Visa U.S.A. Inc.
Walgreen Co.
Waste Management, Inc,
WEHCO Media, Inc.
The Westin Hotel Tabor Center Denver
Westm St. Francis Hotel
Whirlpool Foundation
Xerox Corporation U.S.A.
The Xerox Foundation
FOUNDATIONS
M.D. Anderson Foundation
Edward F. Anixter Family Foundation
AWM Charitable Fund
Margaret & Philip D. Block Foundation
Blum-Kovler Foundation
Bonfils-Stanton Foundation
Burkenroad Foundation
Butler Family Foundation
Chiles Foundation
The Jacob & Rosaline Cohn Foundation
Compton Foundation
The Fred Darragh Foundation
Louise M. Davies Foundation
Collins C. Diboll Private Foundation
Gaylord & Dorothy Donnelley Foundation
James & Nina Donnelley Foundation
EJD Foundation
The Margaret & James A. Elkins, Jr.
Foundation
Harmes C. Fishback Foundation Trust
The Fleischmann Foundation
Fleishhacker Foundation
Gates Foundation
Giles Family Foundation
Herbst Foundation
Houston Endowment Inc.
Houston Jr. Chamber of Commerce
Foundation Inc.
JFM Foundation
George Frederick Jewett Foundation
Helen K. and Arthur E. Johnson
Foundation
The Fred Jones Foundation
Mayer & Morris Kaplan Foundation
The Keller Family Foundation
Harris and Eliza Kempner Fund
Kirkpatrick Foundation, Inc.
Samuel H. Kress Foundation
Albert Kunstadter Family Foundation
The Lake Family Foundation
Lenhardt Foundation
Raphael Levy Memorial Foundation
The Loving Foundation
Louis R. Lurie Foundation
McCasland Foundation
Morrow Charitable Trust
Mosbacher Foundation Inc.
The Nelson Foundation
Neustadt Charitable Foundation
New Prospect Foundation
Perlmutter Charitable Foundation
Presbyterian Health Foundation
Richard and Edward Robinson Family
Foundation
The Sue Anschutz Rodgers Foundation
The RosaMary Foundation
The Saltzman Family Foundation
The Samuels Foundation
Charles & Lavinia Schwartz Foundation
Cleo & David B. Silberman Foundation
Jack D. & Fredda S. Sparks Foundation
Robert King Steel Family Foundation
Strake Foundation
Robert D. Stuart, Jr. Foundation
Taub Foundation
Taurus Foundation
Murray & Virginia Vale Foundation
Lawrence A. Wein Foundation
R. A. Young Foundation
OTHER
Academy for State and Local Government
City and County of Denver
Colorado Office of International Trade
The Consular Corps of Houston
Jewish Community Endowment Fund
National Council for International Visitors
(NCIV)
Rice University
Rocky Mountain District Export Council
San Francisco Conservatory of Music
Temple University
United Way of San Francisco
World Affairs Council of Philadelphia
INDIVIDUALS
BENEFACTORS ($10,000 & ABOVE ]
Robert Adell
Mrs. Hushang Ansary
Mr. and Mrs. John H. Barnard
Donald M. Blinken
Robert L. Dilenschneider
William H. Draper, III
James H. Evans
Mr. and Mrs. Victor J. Goldberg
Thomas S. Johnson
Henry Kaufman
Shigekuni Kawamura
Jean Bronson Mahoney
Dr. & Mrs. David Paton
PATRONS ($5,000 & ABOVE )
Anonymous Gift
Andres B. Bande
Mr. and Mrs. J.C. Burton
Gary Coughlan
Vartan Gregorian
Andrew Heiskell
Joan Kirkpatrick
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick A. Krehbiel
Alan J. Lacy
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Meier
John Rogers, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack D. Sparks
Mr. and Mrs. Robert King Steel
The Honorable and Mrs. Robert D.
Stuart, Jr.
Henrik N. Vanderlip
Dr. Alejandro Zaffaroni
SUSTAINING ASSOCIATES
($1,000-$4,999)
Anonymous Gift
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick G. Acker
Madelon Affeld
Mr. and Mrs. Victor K. Atkins
Letitia Baldrige
Richard I. Beattie
Mr. and Mrs. John F. Bookout
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Brodsky
Jean Brown
Rhett W. Butler
Mrs. Hugh Catherwood
Susan Crown
Dominique de Menil
Clyde Dickey
Mrs. Gay lord Donnelley
Stephen P. Duggan, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Philippe Dunoyer
Helene Feingold
Charles Fleischmann
Mr. and Mrs. Harold K. Forsen
The Honorable and Mrs. Henry H. Fowler
Kenneth Freinzheim, III
Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Galvin
Scott P. George
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Getty
Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Giesen
Mr. and Mrs. Richard N. Goldman
Rajat Gupta
Conrad K. Harper
Robert Healey
Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Hedlund
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Hehmeyer
Mr. and Mrs. E. Peter Honnen
James C. Hormel
Mr. and Mrs. E. Glenn Isaacson
Mr. and Mrs. Richard J.V. Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Morris Kaplan
Thomas M. Keesling
Jonathan Kovler
Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Kramer
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin F. Lenhardt, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Harris Masterson
Mr. and Mrs. John W. McCarter, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. G. E. McDavid
Roderick A. McManigal
Madeline H. McWhinney
Thomas M. Messer
Martin Meyerson
Z. Gary Miller
Mrs. Maurice T. Moore
Ewell E. Murphy, Jr.
Martha W. Murphy
Betty I. Naugle
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Norton
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Osher
David Packard
Mr. and Mrs. Francisco Pedraza
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Perlmutter
Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Petry
Annemarie H. Pope
Alice R. Pratt
Jack Ringer
Chancellor Daniel Ritchie
Mr. and Mrs. Rodman Rockefeller
Mr. and Mrs. David J. Rosso
Robert Rothermel
Mr. and Mrs. Norman J. Rubash
Walter W. Sapp
Mr. and Mrs. Barry R. Schuman
Mr. and Mrs. Paul S. Slawson
Carol Daube Sutton
Janet Wierman
Dr. and Mrs. George D. Wilbanks
Mr. and Mrs. John Woods
Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Wozencraft
Dr. and Mrs. Carl U. Zachrisson
Mr. and Mrs. A. Lee Zeigler
Mr. and Mrs. John Zenko
SUPPORTERS ( $ 1 0 0 - $ 9 9 9 )
Edmund B. Adamic
Jerome Adams
Gerald S. Adelman
Mrs. Hugh J. Ahem
Dr. Margaret Alafi
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Alexander
Fraser H. Allen
Ann Simmons Alspaugh
Mr. and Mrs. Ben M. Anderson
Mr. and Mrs. John Anderson
Mr. and Mrs. Paul F. Anderson
Mr. and Mrs. Peter N. Anderson
Mr. and Mrs. Edward F. Anixter
President George Ansell
Mr. and Mrs. William M. Arnold
Mr. and Mrs. Burke Baker, Jr.
Joan Baker
Elmer Balaban
Dr. and Mrs. David Baldwin
Norman Barker, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Barnard
Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Barnett
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Barrow
Hildegarde D. Becher
Alan Becker
Jack D. Beem
Helen R. Beiser, M.D.
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Benatar
Mr. and Mrs. Edward B. Benjamin, Jr.
Michael L. Bennet
Elizabeth M. Bennett
Dr. and Mrs. Philip S. Bentlif
Mr. and Mrs. A. Edgar Benton
Mr. and Mrs. Tobias J. Bermant
John R. Bermmgham
Mr. William L. Bernhard
Dr. Donald B. Bibeault
Dr. and Mrs. John E. Biddinger
Richard Billings
Dr. and Mrs. Amasa S. Bishop
Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Black
Harold R. Blankstein
Mr. and Mrs. Philip D. Block, Jr.
Elizabeth S. Bobrinskoy
Mrs. William W. Boddington
Mr. and Mrs. George T. Bogert
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon B. Bonfield
The Honorable Dudley B. Bonsai
Mr. and Mrs. Barry P. Boothe
Mrs. Dix Boring
Mrs. Armand O. Bosc
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Bossert
Mr. and Mrs. J.S. Bowman
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Boyer
Fentress Bracewell
Jack C. Bradley
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Brega
Dr. E. Howard Brooks
Melvin Brorby
Dr. and Mrs. Franz R. Brotzen
Ambassador and Mrs. Keith Brown
Mrs. Murray C. Brown
Ambassador and Mrs. Monroe Browne
Starr Bruce
Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. Brusati
Jean R. Buchert
Chancellor John C. Buechner
Dr. Barbara K. Bundy
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Buntrock
Mr. and Mrs. Kurt Burghardt
Mrs. Dewitt K. Burnham
James E. Bye
Mrs. Jerome Byrd
Mrs. Harold H. Cabe
Peter J. CabiH
Mrs. Lewis S. Callaghan
Harry D. Campbell
Heather P. Campbell
Joan Rule Campbell
Mrs. George Cannon
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph S. Carrigan
Winifred T. Carter
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Casey, Jr.
Eleanor Caulkins
Mr. and Mrs. William Cayce
Mr. and Mrs. Yanek S.Y. Chiu
Stanley Christianson
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Cleworth
William K. Coblentz
Marcia S. Cohn
Sharon P. Cole
Norman Coliver
Mr. and Mrs. William B. Collister
Betty C. Connors
Mr. and Mrs. Philip G. Cox
Weyman W. Crawford
Mr. and Mrs. William Crouch
Mr. and Mrs. J. William Cuncannan
Mr. and Mrs. Louis B. Cushman
Dr. Howard A. Cutler
Dick Dace
Mrs. Ted A. Dale
John D'Arcy, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph P. Davidson
Eliza T. Davies
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Davis
Mr. and Mrs. Tom M. Davis
Debora de Hoyos
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Decker
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Deering
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Delaney
Mr. and Mrs. John B. Dempsey
Mr. and Mrs. Reid W. Dennis
Mrs. Charles P. Dennison
Mr. and Mrs. James H. DeVnes
Dr. and Mrs. James S. Diamonon
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Dick
William Dickinson
Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Dinner
Bruce B. Donnell
Mr. and Mrs. Edward S. Donnell
Mr. and Mrs. James R. Donnelley
Mr. and Mrs. Richard R. Donnelley
Helen Dowdeswell
Benjamin Duke
Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Dupre, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Reed H. Eberly
Mr. and Mrs. John F. Ehy
Stefan T. Edlis
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Ehrlich
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Elbers
Mr. and Mrs. John W, Elder
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Eley
Ann W. Eliaser
Carolyn J. Engel
Mr. and Mrs. E.S. Enlund
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Erzmger
Dr. Mark Allen Everett
Karen K. Fain
Mr. and Mrs. James N. Falk
Leo J. Falk,M.D.
Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey M. Farb
Mr. and Mrs. Hubert A. Farbes
Beatrice Field
Ruth Fiesel
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry E. Finger
Mr. and Mrs. Mortimer Fleishhacker
R.G. Follis
Charles C. Foster
Donald Fowler
Sandra Foxley
Gerald B. Frank
Mr. and Mrs. J. Wayne Fredericks
Hal French
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Fromm
The Honorable Robert Fullerton
Mr. and Mrs. Anson Gamsey
Cyril P. Geary, Jr.
Raymond I. Geraldson, Sr.
Dr. Donald R. Gerth
Arlene M. Getz
Georgie Anne Geyer
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Gibbons
Elizabeth Gibson
Joseph L. Gidwitz
Mr. and Mrs. William E. Gipson
Dr. and Mrs. Louis J. Girard
Mr. and Mrs. Jean-Paul Giraudet
Thomas A. Glass, M.D.
Ralph I. Goldenberg
Marianne Goldman
Mr. and Mrs. Norman M. Goldring
Ronald Gonzalez
Allison P. Goodheart
Mrs. John D. Gordan
Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. Gossard
Melanie Grant
Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Grant III
Mrs. Robert M. Gray
Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Green
Mr. and Mrs. William Green
Mr. and Mrs. James Gregory
Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Groh
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Groppe
Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Grossman
Mr. and Mrs. Paul W. Guenzel
Cecile Guthman
Mr. and Mrs. Carlisle Guy
Carlyn Halde
Mr. and Mrs. George W. Haldeman
Mr. and Mrs. George N. Hale, Jr.
David W. Hall
Mr. and Mrs. David Hamilton
Jane Hamilton
Mr. and Mrs. William Hammerman
Edith L. Hammerslough
The Honorable and Mrs. James W.
Hargrove
Joseph L. Hargrove
Eric Harkna
Robert M. Hart
Mr. and Mrs. David Hartley
Mr. and Mrs. James Hartley
Elizabeth B. Hartong
Mr. and Mrs. John F. Hartray
Mr. and Mrs. Bennet B. Harvey, Jr.
Mr. Albert M. Hayes
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Hayward
Mr. and Mrs. Launn H. Healy
Mr and Mrs. Alexander M. Hehmeyer
Mr. and Mrs. James Heim
Robert Heller
Mrs. Charles D. Hemphill
Mr. and Mrs. William E. Henley
Reverend Theodore Hesburgh
Ragnhild T. Hickey
Dr. and Mrs. Richard M. Hirshberg
Mr. and Mrs. A. Barry Hirschfeld
Byron Hirst
Mr. and Mrs. James Ho
Mr. and Mrs. Del Hock
Mrs. Peter H. Holme, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald D. Hornbeck
Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Houston
Mrs. James Patrick Houstoun, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Howard
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Howell
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Howey
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer R. Hubacher
David S. Hugle
Jacquelin Hume
Mr. and Mrs. Philip W. Hummer
Mr. and Mrs. William B. Hummer
Patricia J. Hunt
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Hyman
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew W. Imbrie
Mr. and Mrs. G. Tucker Ingham
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Isenhart, Jr.
Mrs. Charles Jackson, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. George B. Javaras
Mr. and Mrs. Harold S. Jessen
Hannah Jisa
Mr. and Mrs. William Jobe
H. Blume Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. John T. Jones, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne V. Jones
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Judd
M.T. Judd
Patrick Kan
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Kaplan
Golda Kaufman
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kaufman
Dennis Keller
Dr. and Mrs. Wilfried J. Keller
Mr. and Mrs. John Kennedy
William Kent, III
Diane G. Kepner
ffi
Mr. and Mrs. George Stark
Rabah A. Khatib
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin R. Mason
Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Preble, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Eugene S. Kilgore
Mr. and Mrs. Frank D. Mayer, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Pundsack
E. BlytheStason, Jr.
Mrs. Harold Taft King
Mr. and Mrs. James F. McAllister
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice H. Purcell
Mr. and Mrs. Harrison I. Steans
Mr. and Mrs. Jerrold L. Kingsley
Jean McClatchy
Ruth H. Purkaple
Francis Lilienthal Stein
Kenneth P. Kinney
Mrs. L. F. McCollum
Mrs. Cassandra A. Pyle
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Stein
Mrs. Earl Kipp
Sanford E. McCormick
Harriet Meyer Quarre
Russell T. Stern, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Kirkpatrick
Mr. and Mrs. James R. McCotter
Mr. George A. Ranney
Mr. and Mrs. J. Alexander Stevens
Mary Anne Kirschlager
Robert B. McDermott
Karen Reder
Mr. and Mrs. Adlai E. Stevenson
Tish Kllanxhja
Mr. and Mrs. John C. McGuire
Lucinda Reinold
Dr. and Mrs. Donald M. Stewart
Christopher Knapp
Mr. and Mrs. Donald McKinlay
Genelle Relfe
Mrs. John K. Stewart
Mrs. Bernard Koehman
Mr. and Mrs. James K. McWilliams
Mrs. Robert C Reneker
Mr. and Mrs. Jules N. Stiffel
Mrs. Erich Kohlberg
Quentm R. Mease
Kyle H. Reno
Frances M. Stolar
Laurence E. Korwin
Mr. Henry W. Meers
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rich
Arthur G. Strauss
Mr. and Mrs. Graham Kreicker
Masud R. Mehran
C. G. Rives, III
Fran A. Streets
Mr. James B. Kurtz
Edward J. Meier
Dr. and Mrs. Scott C. Roberts
Allen P. Stults
Mr. and Mrs. William C. Kurtz, Jr.
Mr. J.H. Meier
Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Robinson
Mr. and Mrs. John B. Stuppin
Alden J. Laborde
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth K. Mercer
Mr. and Mrs. Tom K. Rodgers
Mr. and Mrs. Louis C. Sudler, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Lake
Charles A. Meyer
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald G. Rohde
Mr. and Mrs. Axel Suray
Ruth C. Lakeway
Mr. and Mrs. Otto F. Meyer
Mr. and Mrs. John N. Rosekrans, Jr.
The Honorable Leonard v.B. Sutton
Jacqueline A. Lamb
Pamela Meyers
Dr. and Mrs. Alan J. Rosenberg
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Sweeney, III
Mr. and Mrs. Kent Landmark
Mr. Bernard J. Miller, Jr.
Gerald B. Rosenstein
Mrs. Howard R. Swig
Robert Lansdon
Philip L. Miller
Norman A. Ross
Dr. Conrad Taeuber
Mrs. Niles Larsen
William D. Miller
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Rosston
Tsuneo Tanase
Tom Lasater
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Miner
James Roth
Mrs. Thomas Taplin
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Lawton
Mr. John C.Mitchell
The Honorable and Mrs. Luis D. Rovira
O.J. Tauber, Jr.
Dr. Richard E. LeBIond, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. William H. Mobley
R.E. Runice
Mr. Dirk P. Ten Brinke
Brownie Ledbetter
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace W. Mojden
Clive Runnells
Frances J. Tenison
Mr. Richard A. Lester
J. Clifford Moos
Madeleine Haas Russell
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Louis Terrasson
Mr. Humboldt W. Leverenz
Susan M. Morrice
Mr. and Mrs. John Sabel
Rosemary Thakar
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Levin
Mr. and Mrs. Walter K. Morris
Mary Sagan
Miss Margaret G. Thatcher
Edward Levy
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Morrow
Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Sander
Mr. and Mrs. Max Thelen, Jr.
Leonard J. Levy
Dr. and Mrs. Norman L. Morse
Frieda Sanidas
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Thomas
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Lehman
Dr. and Mrs. Michael Muftic
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Savage
Dr. and Mrs. Peter K. Thompson
Mr. and Mrs. Elliot Lehman
William D. Mulliken
Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Sawyier
Mrs. Mary C. Tiedemann
James Leibling
Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Mullineaux
Alexander F. Schilt
The Honorable Eleanor Tinsley
Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Lenon
Mr. and Mrs. Manly W. Mumford
George T. Schneider, M.D.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Trigg
Sara Jane Leonard
Mr. and Mrs. Colin Murdoch
Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Schuessler
Dr. Gene L. Usdin
Conrad Leslie
Mrs. John R. Murphy
Ann Schultz
Frayn G. Utley
The Honorable and Mrs. Edward H. Levi
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick C. Murphy
Dr. and Mrs. Richard C. Schultz
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Van Cleave
Astri L. Lindberg
Judith B. Nadai
James Schwabacher
Edna V. Vanek
Mr. and Mrs. Kai Lindholst
Marlen E. Neumann
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin B. Schwinger
J. E. Wagner
John H. Lindsey
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Newcombe
Mr. and Mrs. Wesley A. Segelke
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph C. Wagner
Mr. and Mrs. Elbert W. Link
Judy Nichols
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Seipp
Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Walker
Selma M. Lipman
Mr. and Mrs. John Nicolai
Paul Seydel
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Wallach
Mr. and Mrs. David Little
James E. Nielson
Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Sharp
Mrs. Paul L. Wattis
George S. Livermore
Mrs. P. Roussell Norman
Drs. Ben and A. Jess Shenson
Griffith Way
Mr. and Mrs. Johnston R. Livingston
Mr. and Mrs. John C. North III
Mrs. James L. Shepherd, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl M. Weaver
Mrs. Glen A. Lloyd
Mr. and Mrs. John K. Notz, Jr
Mrs. Albert W. Sherer
Dr. and Mrs. Marlin Weaver
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Logan
Madeline O'Brien
Mr. and Mrs. James Shore
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold R. Weber
Mr. and Mrs. John D. Lohre
Nobuo Ohashi
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Sias
Mr. and Mrs. William Weil
JohnH. Lollar, [II
Kent O. Olin
Elizabeth Siebert
Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Welbon
E.W.Long, Jr.
Joan E. O'Malley, M.D.
Mr. and Mrs. David B. Silberman
Mr. and Mrs. John Welles
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence A. Long
Clifford Orrent
Mr. Charles F. Sills
Mr. and Mrs. Ben White
Mr. and Mrs. Morris A. Long
Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Owen
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Silverman
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Whiting
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Loo
Dr. and Mrs. Frank T. Padberg
Mr. and Mrs. Paul G. Sittenfeld
Mrs. John Hay Whitney
Ron Loser
Gordon R. Parker
Mr. and Mrs. Louis S. Sklar
Mrs. Margaret S. Wilber
The Honorable and Mrs. John Love
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Parks
Margaret Sloss
Mrs. Brayton Wilbur
Mr. and Mrs. Norris W. Love
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Parsons
C. Cabanne Smith
Christopher Wilhelm
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Low
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wavne Payne
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon H. Smith
Mr. and Mrs. John Wilkenson
President Herman Lujan
Shirley Peletz
K. Hart Smith
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Williams
Mr. and Mrs. John R. Lyman
Jordan Perlmutter
Dr. and Mrs. K. Wayne Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Williamson
Timothy Lynch
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Peropoulos
Mr. and Mrs. Marlis Smith
Mr. and Mrs. George V. Willoughby
Mr. and Mrs. B. Frank Mackey, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. James S. Peters
Mr. and Mrs. Morgan Smith
James E. Wilson
Mrs. William B. Macomber
Marianne H. Peterson
Mr. and Mrs. William R. Smith
Winton A.Winter
John W. Madden
Elizabeth Spencer Pfau
Mr. and Mrs. Shinsaku Sogo
Ann Witter-Gillette
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Magne
Mr. Leland R.Phelps
Maurice Sokolow
Arthur M. Wood
Mrs. Laura R. Malkin
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Philipp
Mr. and Mrs. John Sommer
George F. Wood
Dr. and Mrs. Clayton K. Mammel
Mr. and Mrs. Allan Phipps
Douglas S. Spencer
Diane Writer
Jerry Manne
Drs. John and Carolyn Piel
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Sperry
Katherine Zartman
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Mar
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Pierson
Robert L. Spiegel
Kenna Zierer
Mr. and Mrs. Victor L. Marcus
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Pilkington
Mr. and Mrs. Lee A. Stahl, III
Hans K. Zschiegner
Eloise W. Martin
Mrs. Fletcher S. Pratt
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin F. Stapleton
Mr. and Mrs. Peter M. Zuber
HE wishes to thank all those listed above, in addition to those who have made donations of less than
$100 or have volunteered their time, for their generous support of our work.
/-
Special Events
NEW YORK
1993 Benefit Dinner to Honor
Thomas G. Labrecque
HE presented Thomas G. Labrecque,
Chairman and CEO of The Chase Manhattan Corporation, with the Stephen P.
Duggan, Sr., Award for outstanding contributions to international cooperation and
understanding, in recognition of Mr.
Labrecque's leadership in education and
philanthropy and IIE's longstanding partnership with The Chase Manhattan Bank. The
award is named for IIE's first president,
who served from the Institute's founding in
1919 until 1946. David Rockefeller delivered
a tribute to Mr. Labrecque at the dinner.
Honorary Chairmen
Henry Kaufman
David Rockefeller
Co-Chairmen
Robert L. Dilenschneider
Henrik N. Vanderlip
Sponsors
Chase Manhattan Corporation
D1C Trading (USA), Inc.
IBM Corporation
Pfizer, Inc.
Price Waterhouse
Mr. and Mrs. Henrik N. Vanderlip
Patrons
The Amelior Foundation
Amb. and Mrs. Hushang Ansary
Archer-Daniels-Midland Company
Chemical Bank
CODA Incorporated
Digital Equipment Corporation
F. Hoffmann-La Roche AG
The General Electric Foundation, Inc.
The Industrial Bank of Japan, Ltd.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kaufman
Henry A. Kissinger
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Loeb
Mitsui and Co. (USA), Inc.
Mobil Corporation
Morgan Guaranty Trust Company
RJR Nabisco
David Rockefeller
Wells Rich Greene BDDP
James D. Wolfensohn Inc.
Friends
Donald and Vera Blinken
John D. and Madeline McWhinney Dale
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Dilenschneider
William H. Draper III
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen P. Duggan
Mr. and Mrs. James H. Evans
Andrew and Marian Heiskell
John D. Howard
Thomas S. and Margaret Ann Johnson
Dr. Henry A. Kissinger
Jean Bronson Mahoney
Mrs. Maurice T. Moore
Morgan Stanley
David G. and Janet M. Offensend
Dr. and Mrs. David Paton
A. Alfred Taubman
Contributors
Letitia Baldrige
The Depository Trust Company
J. Wayne Fredericks
Conrad K. Harper
Mrs. Charles Jackson, Jr.
Thomas M. Messer
Henry S. Miller
Frank E. Richardson
Conrad Taeuber
Elin Vanderlip
Amoco Production Company
Ariel Capital Management
Andres B. Bande
Booz Allen & Hamilton, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. William Brodsky
Mr. and Mrs. J.C. Burton
Chicago Mercantile Exchange
Deloitte & Touche
Encyclopaedia Britannica
Goldenberg, Hehmeyer & Co.
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Hehmeyer
Jones, Day, Reavis & Pogue
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Krehbiel
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin F. Lenhardt, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John McCarter, Jr.
Dr. John McLaughlin
Donald L. Meier
Molex, Inc.
Peter Norton
Mrs. Francisco Pedraza
John Rogers, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. David Rosso
Robert Rothermel
Sara Lee Corporation
Mr. and Mrs. Jack D. Sparks
Robert D.Stuart, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. George D. Wilbanks
ROCKY MOUNTAIN
"1993 Celebration of
International Understanding:
April in Paris"
The IIE/Rocky Mountain Region saluted
France, honoring Regional Advisory Board
Chairman Philippe Dunoyer with its 1993
World Citizen Award for his outstanding contributions to international understanding
and philanthropy, recognizing him as a distinguished leader in community affairs.
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick G. Acker
Ameritech International
3D /Environmental Services, Inc.
Charter Bank Houston
FINA, Inc.
Houston National Bank
Mr. and Mrs. Richard J.V. Johnson
Johnson Carlier Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh G. McDowell
Panhandle Eastern Corporation
Alice R. Pratt
Prescott Legal Search
Riviana Foods Inc.
Walter W. Sapp
Texas Guaranty National Bank
Gala Reception underwritten by The
American University in Cairo
Dance Music underwritten by Mrs. James
L. Shepherd, Jr.
Invitation and Program printing courtesy
of Conoco Inc.
WEST COAST
1993 Annual Benefit Dinner
Amoco Production Company
Argonaut Wine and Liquor Store
Bruce Benson
Colorado National Bankshares
CONCORD
Coors Brewing Company
Mr. and Mrs. Cortland t Dietler
The Gates Corporation
Gatherings, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gooding
Dr. and Mrs. Lowell Hansen
Holme Roberts & Owen
Mr. and Mrs. E. Peter Honnen
Martin Marietta
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Mayer
Newmont Mining Corporation
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Perlmutter
Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Petry
Price Waterhouse
Dr. and Mrs. John Roberts
Robinson Dairy, Inc.
Ruth and Vernon Taylor Foundation
Travel Associates, Inc.
University of Denver
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Vickers
James B. Wallace
James E. Wmdlinger
U S West Foundation
SOUTHERN
1993 "Festival of Nations"
Celebration
The Festival of Nations honored the Arab
Republic of Egypt, with a theme of "Gift of
the Nile." His Excellency Ahmed Maher El
Sayed, Ambassador of the Arab Republic of
Egypt, was IIE's honored guest at the gala.
Honorary Chairwoman
Mrs. Suzanne Mubarak
1993 Annual Benefit Dinner
Sponsors
Friends
Sponsors
Co-Chairwomen
John W. McCarter, Jr.
American General Corporation
Arthur Andersen & Co.
Baker & Botts, L.L.P.
Dr. and Mrs. Sam Barrada
British Gas Exploration & Production, Inc.
elf exploration, inc.
EXXON
Katy Instruments Inc.
Shell Oil Company
Tenneco Inc.
Texas Commerce Bank, N.A.
Vinson & Elkins L.L.P.
Mrs. John Roberts
Atiya Abouleish
Jerianne Kolber
Chair
Donors
Chair
MIDWEST
Featuring John McLaughlin, Host,
The McLaughlin Group
Houston Chronicle
Lufthansa German Airlines
Port of Houston Authority
Fayez Sarofim & Co.
The American University in Cairo
The Egyptian Heritage Society
University of Houston System
Grand Patrons
Amoco Egypt Oil Company
Amoco Production Company
Sponsors
AGIP Petroleum Co. Inc.
American Airlines
EgyptAir
Egyptian American Society
IIE/West Coast Region honored Mr. James
H. Schwabacher, Jr.. a nationally recognized
figure for over forty years in America's musical life, by presenting him with the 1993
Community Leadership Award. The annual
dinner event, held on March 24, at the St.
Francis Hotel, set a fundraising record for
the West Coast Region.
Chairs
Ann Eliaser
Roderick McManigal
Co-Chairs
Nancy M. Adler
Jola and John Anderson
Nancy H. Bechtle
Gordon P. Getty
Frances Green
Grant N. Home
Robert C. Leefeldt
Lotfi Mansouri
Barbro and Bernard Osher
Harriet Mever Quarre
Jane Schaefer Roos
Milton Salkind
Drs. Ben and A. Jess Shenson
Taisuke Shimizu
P a t r o n s ($5,000 a n d o v e r )
Mr. and Mrs. Alejandro Zaffaroni
S p o n s o r s ($1,000 to $5,000)
Bank of America
Bechtel Corporation
Mr. and Mrs. John H. Barnard
Chevron Corporation
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon P. Getty
Mr. and Mrs. Richard N. Goldman
James C Hormel
Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Kramer
Roderick A. McManigal
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Osher
Pacific Gas & Electric
David Packard
Mr. and Mrs. Paul S. Slawson
Tandem Computers
Mr. and Mrs. Haskell TitcheU
Union Bank
Friends ($100 to $999)
Mr. and Mrs. John Anderson
Joan Baker
Norman Barker, Jr.
Alan Becker
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Benatar
Dr. Donald B. Bibeault
Mr. and Mrs. Barry P. Boothe
Mrs. Dix Boring
Hon. and Mrs. Monroe Browne
Mr. and Mrs. Starr Bruce
Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. Brusati
Dr. Barbara K. Bundy
Mrs. Dewitt K. Burnham
PeterJ.Cahill
Mrs. Lewis S. Callaghan
Mr. and Mrs. Yanek S.Y. Chiu
William K. Coblentz
Norman Coliver
Betty C. Connors
Mr. and Mrs. Reid W. Dennis
Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Dinner
Bruce B. Donnell
Ann W. Eliaser
Helene Feingold
Mr. and Mrs. Mortimer Fleishhacker
R.G. Follis
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Fromm
Arlene M. Gctz
Ann Witter Gillette
Marianne Goldman
Mr. and Mrs. William Green
Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Groh
Mr. and Mrs. George W. Haldeman
Mr. and Mrs. George N. Hale, Jr.
David B. Hall
Edith L. Hammerslough
Mr. and Mrs. David Hartley
Mr. and Mrs. Alexander M. Hehmeyer
Mrs. Charles D. Hemphill
Mr. and Mrs. William E. Henley
Mr. and Mrs. James Ho
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer R. Hubaeher
David Hugle
Jacquelin Hume
Stewart O. Hume
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Hyman
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew W. Imbrie
Mr. and Mrs. G. Tucker Ingham
Mr. and Mrs. E. Glenn Issacson
Golda Kaufman
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kaufman
William Kent, III
Dr. and Mrs. Eugene S. Kilgore
Mr. and Mrs. Jerrold L. Kingsley
Robert Lansdon
Mrs. Niles Larsen
Dr. Richard E. LeBlond, Jr.
Leonard J. Levy
George S. Livermore
F. Richard Losey
Timothy Lynch
Mr. and Mrs. Victor L. Marcus
Hannah Jisa McCormick
Mr. and Mrs. John C. McGuire
Mr. and Mrs. James K. McWilliams
Mr. and Mrs. Otto F. Meyer
Mr. and Mrs. Walter K. Morris
Mr. and Mrs. Colin Murdoch
Judith B. Nadai
Mr. and Mrs. John Nicolai
Clifford Orent
Shirley Peletz
Marianne H. Peterson
Elizabeth Spencer Pfau
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Philipp
Drs. John and Carolyn Piel
Harriet Meyer Quarre
Lucinda Remold
Genelle Relfe
Mr. and Mrs. John N. Rosekrans, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Alan J. Rosenberg
Gerald B. Rosenstein
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Rosston
Mr. James Roth
William Roth
Madeleine Haas Russell
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Savage
Mr. James Schwabacher
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin B. Schwinger
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Seipp
Drs. Ben and A. Jess Shenson
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Silverman
Margaret Sloss
K. Hart Smith
Maurice Sokolow
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Sperry
Robert L. Spiegel
Francis Lilienthal Stein
Mrs. John K. Stewart
Fran A. Streets
Mr. and Mrs. John B. Stuppin
Mrs. Howard Swig
Rosemary Evans Thakar
Mr. and Mrs. Max Thelen, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Page van Loben Sels
Alice B. Vincilione
Ann Wagner
Mrs. Paul L. Wattis
Mrs. Brayton Wilbur
Christopher Wilhelm
Mr. and Mrs. George V. Willoughby
Dr. and Mrs. Carl U. Zachrisson
Mr. and Mrs. Peter M. Zuber
Special Initiatives
For 75 years, HE has taken special initiatives t o meet changing needs, from helping r e b u i l d E u r o p e a n u n i v e r s i t i e s
after
World War I to helping people of the former Communist bloc build free and democratic societies. The continuing support of
foundations, corporations, governments,
and i n d i v i d u a l s m a k e s t h e s e
initiatives
possible. ME warmly t h a n k s the following
for their support of 1 9 9 3 initiatives:
Arts International
Bristol-Myers Squibb Company
E.I. duPont de Nemours & Company
Johnson & Johnson
Eli Lilly Company
Merck, Sharp & Dohme International
The Pfizer Foundation
Joseph E. Seagram & Sons, Inc.
Sponsors
Beverage Control, Inc.
Charmer Industries, Inc.
Exhibit Management Corp.
Louisville Crown
Magnolia Marketing Company
Price Waterhouse
Saratoga Liquor Co., Inc.
Southern Wine & Spirits of America, Inc.
U.S. Government
$50,000 and over
$ 2 0 , 0 0 0 to $ 4 9 , 9 9 9
American Hungarian Friendship Forum
The Trust for Mutual Understanding
The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts
$ 5 , 0 0 0 to $ 1 9 , 9 9 9
AT&T Foundation
The Cintas Foundation
The Robert Sterling Clark Foundation, Inc.
The Joyce Mertz-Gilmore Foundation
Under $5,000
©
United States Information Agency
Philip Morris Companies, Inc.
The Soros Foundations
C o u n s e l o r in R e s i d e n c e for Africa
The Ford Foundation
Carnegie Corporation of New York
Church Leaders Development Project
The Global Ministries of the United Methodist Church
U.S. Agency for International Development
The Ford Foundation
Fundacio la Caixa
Annette Kade Endowment in Memory of Max Kade
The National Endowment for the Arts
The Pew Charitable Trusts
The Rockefeller Foundation
Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest Fund
Career Development Fellowship Program (CDFP)
U.S. Agency for International Development (A.I.D.)
The Charles Stewart Mott Foundation
Carnegie Corporation of New York
The Ford Foundation
Namibian Program
The Ford Foundation
David Rockefeller
The South African Information Exchange
An Anonymous Donor
The Patrick and Anna Cudahy Fund
The Ford Foundation
The Genesis Foundation
W.K. Kellogg Foundation
The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
The Charles Stewart Mott Foundation
Yankee Eastern Europe Entrepreneural Students
(YE3S) Sponsors
U.S.-Japan W o m e n L e a d e r s ' D i a l o g u e
Arthur Andersen & Co.
Atlantic Fastener Co.
B&W Manufacturing
Bobrow & Bobrow
Business Planning Associates
Canberra Industries, Inc.
Chessco Industries
Curtis Packaging
Gerald Geise
The Hartford Courant
Highway Safety Corp.
Lerman Container Corporation
Lindberg and Ripple
Otis Elevator
Paul H. Gesswein & Co.
Pryor and Clark
Reid & Reige, P.C.
Retrieval Masters Credit Bureau
Robert E. Morris Co.
Rudder Building Services
Stanley Tool
The Taylor & Fenn Co.
TRC Companies, Inc.
United Aluminum Corp.
Welling International
Windsor Marketing Group
Anonymous
The Japan Foundation Center for Global Partnership
H o w you c a n s u p p o r t
international
educational exchange
C o n t r i b u t i o n s t o HE n o t o n l y
help to s u s t a i n t h e
Institute's
e d u c a t i o n a l services, but also
enable HE to create exchange
and a s s i s t a n c e
programs
to
meet the new needs and opportunities
created
by
rapidly
changing world events.
Your tax-deductible contribution
P e a c e k e e p i n g and P e a c e m a k i n g in
c a n be s e n t t o t h e O f f i c e
of
E a s t C e n t r a l Europe I n f o r m a t i o n
S o u t h e r n Africa
Development and Public Affairs
Exchange
The Ford Foundation
Carnegie Corporation of New York
Friedrich Ebert Stiftung
Government of Denmark
International Republican Institute
Government of Nigeria
Government of Norway
United Nations Centre Against Apartheid
at IIE's New York headquarters,
The Ford Foundation
The Pew Charitable Trusts
The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
I n t e r n a t i o n a l H e a l t h Policy P r o g r a m
Carnegie Corporation of New York
The Pew Charitable Trusts
International Human Rights
addresses).
We will be happy to assist you
provide for IIE's work t h r o u g h
your will or a charitable remain-
South African Education Program (SAEP)
Major funding for the South African Education Program
comes from the U.S. Agency for International
Development, whose support is roughly matched by
scholarships from colleges and universities and contributions from these corporate and foundation donors.
d e r t r u s t , or in
whether
your
will
match your contribution to HE.
For m o r e i n f o r m a t i o n on t h e
above, or on how you can j o i n
The Ford Foundation
with HE t o s u p p o r t or develop
international programs or t o inti-
$ 1 0 , 0 0 0 to $ 1 9 , 9 9 9
Pfizer, Inc.
The Starr Foundation
tiate
a scholarship
assist international
please contact
N o r t h A m e r i c a n C o n s o r t i u m for Free
Under $10,000
M a r k e t Study
Abbott Laboratories Fund
Butterick Company, Inc.
E.l. DuPont de Nemours & Co.
Merrill Lynch & Co. Foundation, Inc.
The Pfizer Foundahon, Inc.
Members
AT&T Foundahon
American International Group
determining
company
$ 2 5 , 0 0 0 and Over
M e x i c o - U . S . Journalist E x c h a n g e
American Express de Mexico
Tire Ford Foundation
H-E-B Foundation
nearest
in planning, should you wish to
South African Programs
Internship Program
The Edna McConnell Clark Foundation
The Ford Foundation
General Service Foundation
The John Merck Fund
The Joyce Mertz-Gilmore Foundation
The Royal Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs
The Swedish NGO Foundation for Human Rights
or t h e regional o f f i c e
you (see inside back cover for
to
Development
and Public Affairs
5380).
fund
students,
(212-984-
About the HE Financial Statements . . .
The following describes the work of HE in each functional area appearing in the audited financial statement.
Program Services: Sponsored Programs
International Exchange of Persons
For sponsored programs, HE brings foreign nationals to the United States for academic study a n d / o r practical training and arranges for
U.S. nationals to study, conduct research, and serve as teaching assistants and business advisers abroad.
For foreign participants, HE services include assisting sponsors in determining training needs and selecting participants; identifying or
developing appropriate training programs; and arranging for the participants' admission. Training sources include academic degree programs, specialized short courses, internships, study tours, and professional affiliations. HE disburses sponsor funds; acts as participants' visa
sponsor; monitors their progress; arranges professional and social enrichment activities; and maintains liaison with the training providers.
For U.S. students, HE administers international study and teaching-assistant programs for a variety of public and private sponsors,
including USIA, A.I.D., the U.S. Department of State, and foreign governments and educational and cultural institutions. HE conducts the
nationwide competition for the USIA Fulbright grants for graduate study, conducts auditions for grants in the performing arts, and administers grants to students going to countries without Fulbright Commissions.
Scientific Cooperation Activities
For more than 20 years HE provided purchasing and personnel-support services for developing-country agricultural and other research
institutions. IIE's role concluded at the end of the first quarter of fiscal 1993, as the institutions' success diminished their need for external services. HE continues to provide international purchasing services to developing-country institutions and nongovernmental organizations.
Short-Term International Visitors
HE arranges U.S. visits for foreign leaders and specialists, singly and in groups. Most are sponsored by the U.S. Information Agency Office
of International Visitors. Visits focus on a specific theme, e.g., environmental protection or U.S. higher education. HE arranges meetings
with U.S. leaders and professionals, visits to cultural institutions, and home hospitality to provide a broad view of American life.
Assistance t o Colleges and Universities
HE offices in Bangkok, Budapest, Mexico City, and Jakarta's International Education Foundation administer a n d / o r provide support services for the administration of standardized U.S. university admissions tests and tests of English-language competence. The Educational
Testing Service (ETS) is the sponsor.
Institute Educational and Arts Services
Publications, Census, Counseling, Library, and Reference Services
HE conducts research and publishes findings relevant to all aspects of international education. IIE's annual census of foreign nationals
studying in the United States is the basis of an annual publication, Open Doors. A biennial analysis of the data is published as Profiles. HE
researches and publishes comprehensive directories of study-abroad programs and provides information and advice on international
study in its New York, U. S. regional, and overseas offices. HE also maintains a specialized international education library in New York.
Overseas and regional office activities
HE offices in Bangkok, Budapest, Hong Kong, and Mexico City provide information and educational services to students, universities, the
business community, and government officials in the regions they serve. IIE/Hong Kong-China, IIE/Mexico, and IIE/Bangkok maintain
information centers on U.S. higher education, advising thousands annually, and conduct outreach programs for schools in their regions.
Regional offices supervise IIE-related students in their regions, monitor their progress, and arrange professional enrichment programs
and home hospitality with the aid of more than 1,600 volunteers. They also stimulate international awareness through discussion groups,
seminars, and school outreach programs.
Arts Services, Student Activities, Conferences, and Projects
This category includes administrative costs of IIE's Arts International program as well as administrative costs of conferences and seminars
on key international-education issues. HE maintains an emergency loan fund for foreign students.
Supporting Services
Management and General
This function includes expenses of running HE as a whole, from human-resources management to equipment maintenance. A major 1993
undertaking was systems modernization, an IIE-wide investment in state-of-the art computer technology and staff training.
Fundraising
This function is devoted to raising unrestricted funds to support HE educational services and to provide start-up funds for programs HE
initiates to meet emerging needs. Funds come from from individuals, corporations, and foundations and from fundraising benefits in New
York, Chicago, Denver, Houston, and San Francisco honoring corporate and civic leaders.
flfc
Program Development
This function includes developing special HE initiatives and finding support for them, as well as coordinating development of HE proposals to obtain grants and contracts for specific projects. In 1993 HE was awarded major new U.S. Government contracts to expand international-study opportunities for U.S. undergraduates; to build energy efficiency in Russia, Ukraine, and Kazakhstan; and to strengthen the
economies of Cambodia, Mongolia, and Thailand. In 1993, HE proposals earned foundation grants to publish an analysis of Western
European and North American support for East Central Europe's academic development, to support a trilateral Canada-Mexico-U.S.journalist exchange, and to launch an international dialogue of U.S. and Japanese women leaders.
IIE's finances are audited on an annual basis by
Arthur Anderson & Co, The following Balance Sheet,
September 30, 1993 and Statement of Support,
Revenues and Expenses and Changes in Fund
Balance for the Year Ended September 30, 1993
are part of IIE's financial statements. The complete
0
audited financial statements are available upon
request. Please contact the Controller, Institute of
International Education, 809 United Nations Plaza,
New York, NY 10017, (212) 984-5475.
Institute of International Education, Inc.
Balance Sheet as of September 30, 1993,
with Summarized Totals for 1992
Current Fund
Land, Building
and Equipment
Fund
Endowment
Fund
Total All
Funds
1992 Totals
ASSETS
Cash
Investments, at cost,
which approximates market
Reimbursable expenditures
under contracts in progress
Prepaid expenses and other
current assets
LAND, BUILDING AND
EQUIPMENT, at cost:
LandBuilding
Furniture and equipment
Less- Accumulated depreciation
Total assets
$ 2,156,717
$
12,385,504
90,000
$ 2,246,717
$ 2,111,672
4,489,223
16,874,727
15,042,682
3,101,980
—
3,101,980
4,789,785
995,483
—
995,483
847,345
—
987,491
4,177,789
7,255,324
987,491
4,177,789
5,979,657
12,420,604
7,263,860
5,156,744
11,144,937
6,176,729
4,968,208
$28,375,651
$27,759,692
$ 4,857,666
8,778,085
2,439,134
$ 4,857,666
8,778,085
2,439,134
$ 5,218,272
8,591,534
2,417,790
16,074,885
16,074,885
16,227,596
1,793,690
400,000
1,793,690
400,000
2,174,035
400,000
4,579,223
371,109
5,156,744
4,579,223
356,760
4,968,208
3,633,093
—
987,491
4,177,789
7,255,324
z
12,420,604
7,263,860
5,156,744
$18,639,684
$5,156,744
—
$4,579,223
LIABILITIES AND FUND BALANCE
LIABILITIES:
Accounts payable and accrued expenses
Sponsor funds received in advance
Deferred income
Total liabilities
FUND BALANCE:
Unrestricted, designated by the Board of Trustees forMajor building and equipment repairs
and replacement
Program initiatives and special projects
Contract compliance and
program adjustment
Land, building and equipment
Endowment
Total fund balance
Total liabilities and fund balance
371,109
5,156,744
2,564,799
5,156,744
4,579,223
12,300,766
11,532,096
$18,639,684
$5,156,744
$4,579,223
$28,375,651
$27,759,692
Institute of International Educatiion, Inc.
Statement of Support, Revenue and Expenses
and Changes in Fund Balances
For the year ended September 30, 1993,
with summarized totals for 1992
Land, Building
Current Fund
and Equipment
Fund
Endowment
Fund
Total All
Funds
1992 Totals
$133,805,659
445,558
368,316
229,590
REVENUE AND PUBLIC OPERATING SUPPORT:
RevenueSponsored programs
Investment income
Sales of publications
Miscellaneous income, net
Rental income (net of related expenses of $865,360
and $810,366 in 1993 and 1992, respectively)
Total revenue
Public operating supportContributions
Special events (net of direct expenses of $102,520
and $82,323 in 1993 and 1992, respectively)
Membership fees
Total public operating support
Total revenue and public operating support
—
—
—
—
—
—
$90,714,117
524,020
444,023
107,128
919,847
—
—
919,847
869,800
92,709,185
—
—
92,709,185
135,718,923
2,565,312
2,853,470
—
473,094
349,645
359,077
271,810
$90,714,117
524,020
444,073
107,128
$
-
$
-
2,565,312
473,094
349,645
—
3,388,051
—
—
3,388,051
3,484,357
96,097,236
—
—
96,097,236
139,203,280
63,033,963
19,552,525
5,055,750
1,224,318
652,164
32,111
78,892
16,849
—
63,686,127
19,584,636
5,134,642
1,241,167
57,300,649
68,519,343
5,805,533
881,925
88,866,556
780,016
—
89,646,572
132,507,450
1,321,509
664,626
55,767
15,946
—
1,377,276
680,572
1,377,960
688,515
390,276
11,459
401,735
538,888
2,376,411
83,172
—
2,459,583
2,605,363
91,242,967
863,188
—
92,106,155
135,112,813
$ 2,928,473
372,966
867,103
$ 2,901,166
290,644
895,611
PROGRAM SERVICE EXPENSES
Sponsored programsInternational exchange of persons
Scientific cooperation activities
Short-term international visitors
Assistance to colleges and universities
©
Total sponsored programs
Institute, educational and arts servicesPublications, census, counseling, library
and reference services
Overseas and regional office activities
Art services, student activities, conferences
and projects
Total Institute educational and arts services
Total program services
SUPPORTING SERVICES EXPENSES
Management and general
Fund raising
Program development
Total supporting services
Total expenses
EXCESS (DEFICIENCY) OF REVENUE AND
PUBLIC OPERATING SUPPORT OVER
EXPENSESBEFORE CAPITAL ADDITIONS
$ 2,779,830
361,156
832,421
$
148,643
11,810
34,682
$
3,973,407
195,135
—
4,168,542
4,087,421
95,216,374
1,058,323
—
96,274,697
139,200,234
880,862
(1,058,323)
—
(177,461)
3,046
CAPITAL ADDITIONS:
Contributions to endowment fund
Reinvestment income to endowment fund
Total capital additions
—
—
365,000
581,131
365,000
581,131
365,000
54,546
—
—
946,131
946,131
419,546
3,633,092
11,532,096
11,109,504
$4,579,223
$12,300,766
$11,532,096
FUND BALANCE, beginning of year
Transfers between funds—
Land, building and equipment additions
2,930,795
4,968,209
(1,246,858)
1,246,858
FUND BALANCE, end of year
$2,564,799
$5,156,744
Institute of International Education
Institute of International Education
809 United Nations Plaza
New York NY 10017-3580
Telephone: (212) 883-8200
Fax: (212) 984-5452
IIE/Washington DC
HOOK Street NW
Washington DC 20005-2403
Telephone: (202) 898-0600
Department of Development Assistance, 12th floor
Telephone: (202) 962-8822
Fax: (202) 962-8833
Department of Exchange Programs
and Regional Services, 6th floor
Telephone: (202) 962-8829
Fax: (202) 898-1396
Department of Science and Technology
and Energy Training Program, 11th floor
Telephone: (202) 682-6560
Fax: (202) 682-6576
Telex: TRT 1561408 CETP UT
African Human Resources Development
Projects, Suite 1212
Telephone: (202) 962-8800
Fax: (202) 962-8827
Hubert H. Humphrey Fellowship
Program, 6th floor
Telephone: (202) 682-6550
Fax: (202) 842-1219
International Human Rights Internship
Program, 12th floor
Telephone: (202) 682-6540
Fax: (202) 962-8827
National Security Education Program, 6th floor
Telephone: 1-800-618-NSEP, (202) 962-8835
Fax: (202) 962-8834
Professional Exchange Programs, 6th floor
Telephone: (202) 898-0600
Fax:(202)842-1219
International Health Policy Program
1818 H Street NW
S6133
Washington DC 20433
Telephone: (202) 473-3223
Fax: (202) 477-0643
Writer: Mary Louise Taylor
Graphic Design: Rebecca Lown Design
Production Editor: Anna Clune
US Regional Offices
IIE/Midwest Regional Office
401 North Wabash Avenue
Suite 722
Chicago IL 60611-3580
Telephone: (312) 644-1400
Fax:(312)644-3759
Robert S. Houston, Director
IIE/Rocky Mountain Regional Office
700 Broadway
Suite 112
Denver CO 80203
Telephone: (303) 837-0788
Fax:(303)837-1409
Kyle Reno, Director
IIE/Russia and Eurasia
Grokholsky Pereulok, 13
4th floor
Moscow, Russia
Mary E. Kirk, Director
IIE/Latin America
Educational Counseling Center
Londres 16
Col. Juarez
Mexico DF
06600 Mexico
Telephone: 525/703-0617
Fax: 525/535-5597
Cable: IIEMEX
Electronic mail: TCN 1508
Mailing address:
IIE/Southern Regional Office
515 Post Oak Boulevard
Suite 150
Houston TX 77027-9407
Telephone: (713) 621-6300
Fax: (713) 621-7958
James Falk, Director
IIE/West Coast Regional Office
41 Sutter Street
Suite 510
San Francisco CA 94104
Telephone: (415) 362-6520
Fax: (415) 392-4667
Carl Zachrisson Jr., Director
IIE/Northeast Student Services
809 United Nations Plaza
New York NY 10017-3580
Telephone: (212) 984-5308
Fax: (212) 984-5394
Linda Laskos, Director
Overseas Offices
IIE/China and Hong Kong
c/o Hong Kong-America Center
G/F, University Library, South Entrance
Chinese University of Hong Kong
Shatin, New Territories
Hong Kong
Telephone: 852/603-5771
Fax: 852/603-5765
Electronic mail: LEEMARSHA@CUHK.HK
Mailing address:
Shatin Central PO Box 1298
Shatin, New Territories
Hong Kong
Marsha Lee, Director
IIE/East Central Europe
VigyazoF.u. 4. II/2
1051 Budapest
Hungary
Telephone: 36/1/132-9093
Fax: 36/1/269-5436
Electronic mail: H267KIR@ELLA2.SZTAKI.HU
Mary E. Kirk, Director
Educational Counseling Center
American Embassy
PO Box 3087
Laredo TX 78044-3087
Alan Adelman, Director
IIE/Southeast Asia
Maneeya Center, 8th floor
518/5 Ploenchit Road
Pathumwan, Bangkok
10330 Thailand
Telephone: 66/2/652-0726, 0727
Fax: 66/2/652-0729
Electronic mail: TCN 1518
Mailing address:
GPO Box 2050
Bangkok
10501 Thailand
Norman Goodman, Director
In Indonesia, HE is represented by the
International Education Foundation
Lippocentre Building
7th floor, Room 708
Jl Gatot Subroto 35/36
Jakarta, Selatan
12950 Indonesia
Telephone: 62/21/520-0364
Fax: 62/21/520-0365
Electronic mail: TCN 1504
Mailing address:
PO Box 8518 JKSCO
Jakarta, Selatan
12085 Indonesia
Kay Ikranagara, Director
Project Management Offices
in Egypt, the Philippines, Sri Lanka
-; - W ,
-V,-:
A W
Institute
of
International
809
United
New
York,
Nations
NY
Education
Plaza
10017-3580