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NEWS SERVICES |
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News Release
| For immediate use |
April 21, 2006 -- No. 221 |
Local angles: Cary, Hillsborough; Boulder, Colo.;
Wayne, Pa.; Hertfordshire, England
Climbing Mt. Kilimanjaro among projects
Carolina's Burch Fellows plan this summer
CHAPEL HILL - Five students at the University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill have an opportunity to do exciting things this summer - from woodworking
in Canada to teaching theater in Malawi - through the 2006 Burch Fellowships.
Each summer, the fellowships provide up to $6,000 each for up to six students
for self-designed, off-campus study experiences to pursue passionate interests.
The Burch Fellows Program in UNC's College of Arts and Sciences was established
in 1993 by a gift from alumnus Lucius E. Burch III of Nashville, Tenn., to recognize
undergraduate students who possess extraordinary ability, promise and imagination.
This year's fellows are Vera Fabian of Cary; Paul North of Hertfordshire, England;
Sarah Plastino of Wayne, Pa.; Laura Williamson of Hillsborough; and Habib Yazdi
of Boulder, Colo.
Fabian, a junior international studies and anthropology major, will lead the
UNC student organization SWEAT (Students Working in the Environment for Active
Transformation) in climbing Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania - a project to raise
funds for the Green Belt Movement.
The movement works to address underlying social, political and economic causes
of poverty and environmental degradation. Fabian also will work directly with
Green Belt and its partners in Kenya and Tanzania, following women's grassroots
organizations and micro-credit cooperatives to study alternative paths to food
security and economic empowerment.
Green Belt's founder, Wangari Maathai, won the 2004 Nobel Peace Prize for addressing
East Africa's most critical problems of environmental destruction and hunger.
North, a junior dramatic art major, will conduct theater-for-development workshops
in two rural villages outside Lilongwe, the capital city of Malawi, with the
goal of empowering residents.
North will intern with the Story Workshop, a popular entertainment and education
agency based in Blantyre, Malawi. Under the auspices of World Camp for Kids,
a North Carolina-based nonprofit specializing in HIV/AIDS education, North will
guide residents toward self expression and problem-solving skills. He also will
conduct a seminar with members of Malawi's Writers Union.
Plastino, a junior public policy and international studies major, will study
Latino immigration and global maternal health. Her fellowship will take her
to three states in Mexico from which many North Carolina immigrants come: Guanajuato,
Oaxaca and Veracruz.
Plastino will travel by bus to gain insight into the migrant journey and volunteer
at a maternal health clinic and a mobile medical unit. She also will record
women's narratives through photography, film and interviews. She plans to make
a documentary film when she returns to Chapel Hill.
Williamson, a sophomore English and psychology major, will study woodworking
in Toronto under one of the most respected masters in the trade.
She will work with Michael Fortune on his current project, an office suite for
the Governor General of Canada.
Williamson also will travel to France and Spain to explore the countries' rich
woodworking traditions. Returning to Toronto, Williamson will condense her ideas
into a comprehensive design plan, a prototype of which will be constructed when
she is back in North Carolina.
Yazdi, a sophomore communication studies major, will use his fellowship to study
drumming in Ghana. His passion for traditional African drumming made Ghana an
obvious choice for his fellowship experience. Yazdi hopes to incorporate the
techniques of Ghanaian drumming into his own style of playing.
In Ghana, Yazdi will take lessons with a local drumming instructor, a native
of the Cape Coast who has studied drumming his entire life. Yazdi will live
with a host family and participate in local traditions. He plans to start an
African drum circle at UNC when he returns.
Previous Burch Fellows have apprenticed under a master door carver in Tanzania,
studied traditional Chinese medicine in Beijing, retraced the steps of a Medieval
pilgrimage in France and Spain and biked 2,700 miles through Western China to
study and film ethnic minority groups.
Burch, a 1963 Carolina graduate, heads the Burch Investment Group in Nashville,
Tenn. Burch's gift also supports the Burch Field Research Seminars, which showcase
the relationship between faculty research and undergraduate education by combining
traditional coursework with active, experiential learning.
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Burch Programs contact: Friederike Muehls, (919) 962-9680, fsmuehls@email.unc.edu
News Services contact: L.J. Toler, (919) 962-8589