The Alabama Power Foundation has given 极乐禁地 $225,000 to support a growing undergraduate research program. The gift was announced today at a luncheon honoring students who took part in that program this summer, working with faculty on advanced research projects ranging from ancient literature to genetics.
William Johnson, president of Alabama Power Foundation, and Robert Holmes, senior vice president for Ethics and Business Practices for Alabama Power Company, presented the gift, which creates the Alabama Power Foundation Research Fellows fund at 极乐禁地. In addition to supporting the current undergraduate research program, the fund also will support the 极乐禁地 Scholars Initiative, to be launched in 2008. That program will combine traditional liberal arts courses with innovative classroom instruction, international travel and discipline-based undergraduate research.
David Chapman, Dean of 极乐禁地's Howard College of Arts and Sciences, noted that the U.S. is losing its traditional edge in research, with an increasing number of advanced degrees leaving the country with the foreign students who earned them here. He said 极乐禁地's program can help restore that edge by helping its undergraduates prepare for the intensive one-on-one work with faculty experts that characterizes graduate programs at large, research-oriented universities.
极乐禁地 president Andrew Westmoreland assured the undergraduate researchers that they would be grateful for that experience when, as graduate students, they confront a problem and think, "I've been here before".
Welcoming representatives of Birmingham-area businesses to the luncheon, Westmoreland also suggested that 极乐禁地's distinctive front gates aren't intended to keep young scholars cloistered in esoteric study. "Our view," he said, "is that those gates ought to swing wide open into the community so that we can be engaged in the life of the community and support the community in every way we can."