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Distinguished Alumni Academy
2003
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In 1999, the College began offering Distinguished
Alumni Awards, in recognition of the talents and accomplishments
of Fulbright College graduates.
These distinguished alumni were inducted into the
Fulbright College Alumni Academy for 2003. Congratulations to them
all.
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Biological Sciences: GRADY CORE
Grady Core is a pioneer in the field of endoscopic plastic
surgery. Since co-developing the technique in 1991, he has
developed additional applications for the face, breast, and
abdomen. Since 1992, he has taught his techniques to surgeons
throughout the world. He earned a bachelors degree in
zoology with honors from the U of A in 1977, and after earning
his medical degree from UAMS in 1981, he went on to train
in plastic surgery at the renowned Mayo Clinic. He then moved
to Birmingham, Alabama, where he was awarded a research fellowship
while also serving as a clinical instructor at the University
of Alabama. Today he is a practicing surgeon with Core and
Associates Plastic Surgery Clinic in Birmingham. During his
time at the U of A, he was a drum major for the Razorback
band. He is a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons and
a member of both the American Society of Aesthetic Surgery
and the American Society of Plastic Surgeons. The author of
numerous articles on plastic surgery, he has been a guest
lecturer and presenter at meetings around the world, from
the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital Medical Center in Australia
to the NYU Medical Center in New York and the New South Wales
Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. He has also
written several articles and book chapters on plastic surgery.
He has been included in numerous publications of Whos
Who in Medicine and Healthcare as well as Outstanding
Young Men of America.
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Biological Sciences: PAUL GAYLO
After earning his degree in microbiology from the U of A
in 1983, Paul Gaylo went on to earn a masters at Duke
and a law degree from Washington University. A member of Phi
Beta Kappa, he is licensed to practice law in Indiana as well
as for the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and the US Court
of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. Since 1991, Gaylo has
worked for the pharmaceutical company of Eli Lilly, currently
serving as its Associate General Patent Counsel and overseeing
the department that protects intellectual property for neuroscience
products. In addition, Gaylo has done patent work involving
biotechnological and organic chemicals, including procuring
intellectual properties, licensing, counseling, and litigation.
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Art: JIM JOHNSON
Jim Johnson found work as an artist with the Hockersmith
Advertising Agency in Little Rock after he earned his bachelor
of art degree in 1957. He served as Senior Vice President
of Creative Services for Cranford Johnson Robinson Woods,
an advertising agency in Little Rock he helped to establish
in 1961, until he retired in 2003. Elected to the Arkansas
Runners Hall of Fame in 1992, he has run 15 marathons, eight
triathlons, and climbed Orizaba, the third highest peak in
North America. He is a guitarist with The Rockets, a Little
Rock band named best band in Arkansas six years in a row.
Founder of the Marquis de Sade Running Club, Johnson is the
recipient of numerous awards, beginning with the Milton Bradley
National Crayon Art Award in fifth grade and extending to
the Silver Medal in 1994 from the Arkansas Advertising Federation
for career contributions. In addition to garnering creative
awards from the American Advertising Federation and the American
Institute of Outdoor Advertising, Johnson also designed the
Clinton Presidential Inaugural program, the state logo for
Arkansas, and the original logo for the Arkansas Arts Center.
Over the years, he has contributed his talents to many worthwhile
causes, such as the Arkansas Childrens Hospital, the
Arkansas Cancer Society, United Way, Arkansas Opera Theater,
The Razorback Club, and the Ouachita Girl Scouts Council.
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Drama: LAURENCE LUCKINBILL
Laurence Luckinbill currently tours in solo performances
portraying Lyndon Johnson, Clarence Darrow, and Theodore Roosevelt.
After graduating from the drama department in 1955, he earned
his MFA in playwriting from Catholic University in Washington,
D.C. A versatile actor, Luckinbill has won praise for his
work on television, stage, and screen. He won the New York
Critics Circle Award for his performance in The Memory
Bank and was nominated for a Tony for his work in The
Shadow Box. His films include starring roles in Such
Good Friends, Cocktail, and Star Trek V: The
Final Frontier. On television, he starred in his own ABC
series, The Delphi Bureau. As a writer, Luckinbill
has contributed to The New York Times, Cosmopolitan,
Esquire, and American Theatre Magazine. In 1993,
he wrote and co-produced with his wife, Lucy Arnaz, Lucy
& Desi: A Home Movie, a two-hour television special
that won an Emmy Award. During the Kennedy administration,
he served in the US Foreign Service for two years, in Africa
and Italy, as director, actor, and lecturer on American Theatre
and Culture.
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Journalism: ROBERT McCORD
While at the U of A, Robert McCord began his career in journalism
by working on the Arkansas Traveler for four years, becoming
its editor in 1950-51. While many men were away fighting during
World War II, McCord was able at age 15 to get a job as a
photographer at the Arkansas Democrat. After receiving
a masters in journalism from Columbia in 1954, he rejoined
the paper as a reporter and later as editor of its Sunday
Magazine. As a Southern correspondent for Business Week, he
covered the desegregation crisis in Little Rock for the Christian
Science Monitor. In 1958, he bought the North Little Rock
Times, a weekly newspaper, which he operated until 1968, when
he became editor of the editorial page of the Democrat and
a member of the papers board of directors. After leaving
the Democrat in 1978, he produced and narrated McCords
Arkansas for three years on AETN as well as produced
five programs for the MacNeil/Lehrer Newshour. In 1981,
he was hired by the Arkansas Gazette to develop the
newspapers first opinion page. He is the recipient of
the Presidents Award and Distinguished Service Award
from the Arkansas Press Association and has served as president
of the national Society of Journalists. He also served on
the board of the First Commercial Bank of Little Rock for
23 years.
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English: JANE SAUNDERS
Jane Saunders, who graduated cum laude with a bachelors
degree in English in 1959, is a certified investment management
analyst with Stephens, Inc. in Little Rock. She manages a $150 million
portfolio and specializes in financial, retirement, and estate planning,
asset allocation, and professional investment management services.
In 1998, she continued her studies at the Wharton School of Business,
completing the Morgan Stanley Advanced Financial Advisors Program.
From 1979 to 2002, she worked for Dean Witter, which became Morgan
Stanley, as senior vice president and a member of the Chairmans
Club. She worked three years convincing the legislature, the Governor,
and the public of the need to fund higher education in Arkansas.
The result was the College Savings Bond Program, a $100,000,000
bond issue allowing colleges to build needed academic buildings
and encouraging parents to buy bonds for their childrens college
education. In 1998 and 1999, she was named one of the Top 100 Women
in Arkansas by Arkansas Business. She is chair of the Board of Trustees
of Trinity Episcopal Cathedral and a member of the St. Vincent Hospital
Association, the Arkansas Arts Center, and the Arkansas Womens
Leadership Forum.
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Natural Sciences: ARCHIE SCHAFFER
Archie Schaffer became Senior Vice President for External Relations
for Tyson Foods, Inc., in 1999, after serving the company since
1991 as Director of Media, Public and Governmental Affairs. He served
under Governor Dale Bumpers as an administrative assistant from
1971 to 1975, continuing to work with the newly elected Senator
Bumpers until 1977. He then switched from politics to healthcare,
becoming the administrator of the family-owned Greenhurst Nursing
Home in Charleston, Arkansas. Eight years later he opened his own
firm, Schaffer & Associates, in Little Rock. For two years,
he focused on public relations and government consulting. He took
on a new challenge in 1987 as Executive Director of the Arkansas
Business Council, a position he held until joining Tyson Foods in
1991. Schaffer earned a bachelors degree in natural sciences
from the University of Arkansas in 1970. A native of Fort Smith
and a graduate of Charleston High School, he is a longtime supporter
of the Arkansas Nature Conservancy, which he serves as a member
of the board. In addition, he is a member of the Arkansas Leadership
Academy, the University of Arkansas Agricultural Development
Council, and the Arkansas League of Women Voters Advisory Board.
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