Fulbright Enrichment Program
IIE, Denver, Colorado
March, 1996



Joyful Memories in Colorado



This page is dedicated to the wonderful IIE-Denver staff, to our great host families, to our native American Indian friends who shared their culture with us and to all the fellow Fulbrighters I've met and remet during our brief but rewarding stay in Colorado.





With fellow Fulbrighters at Iowa State during our arrival at the
Denver International Airport. From L-R: Chris (Malawi), Ingitha
(Germany), Margarita (Albania),Milena (Bulgaria), Renan (Honduras),
Eckbert (Germany), myself, and Sovith (Cambodia).






Reunion of sorts! In this pic are the fellow Fullies who were
with me during the pre-academic orientation in Texas
back then. Standing from L-R: Hui(Cambodia), Mawuli (Togo),
Ghiorghis (Eretria), Rosa Maria (Colombia), Manuel (Peru),
and myself. In squatted position from L-R: Sybille (Germany),
Michela (Italy), Milena (Bulgaria), and Jeannine (Ecuador).
It could have been a grand reunion if all the Fullies I met in
Austin were under the jurisdiction of IIE-Denver






With Mrs. Phyllis Cotten, my Fulbright
student supervisor in IIE-Denver







The marathon seminar on Native American Indians.





With my fellow Fulbrighter hostbrother Edgar (Peru) and our
wonderful hostparents Russ and Ann, a one of a kind couple who
gave us a wonderful hospitality.





Our visit to the Denver Museum to view the American
Indian Art Exhibit





With my fellow Fulbrighters from the midwestern states who joined
the lift to the mountain top in Breckenridge, Colorado during the
penultimate day of our stay in Denver.(Also shown in this pic is
Mrs. Phyllis Cotten, our Fulbright student supervisor; not shown in
this pic are those who went on skiing.)






How about this refreshing sight during our lift to the mountain top
in Breckenridge!

EXCERPTS from one of the LECTURES

QUOTES from CHIEF JOSEPH :

"Treat all men alike, give them all the same law. Give them all an even chance to live and grow."

"I only ask of the government to be treated as all other men are treated. If I cannot go to my own home, let me have a home in a country where my people will not die so fast..."

"Let me be a free man...free to travel, free to stop, free to work, free to trade where I choose my own teachers, free to allow the religion of my fathers, free to think and talk and act for myself."

To Mrs. Phyllis Cotten, Darlene Evans, Polly and Kyle, thanks a lot for your wonderful job. To Ann and Russ and all the people in Denver, thanks a lot for your hospitality.