Editor for this issue: Anthony M. Aristar <aristar
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Please make this notice available to interested students, both in U.S. and abroad. DOCTORAL FELLOWSHIPS IN LINGUISTICS AT RICE UNIVERSITY The Department of Linguistics at Rice University announces the opening of competition for its doctoral fellowships for 1996-97. The Ph.D. program at Rice emphasizes the study of language use, the relation of language and mind, and functional approaches to linguistic theory and description. A strong component of the program is field studies in particular language areas, as indicated by its year-long field methods requirement. Areas of intensive research activity in the department include cognitive/functional linguistics, in-depth study of the languages of North and South America and of the Pacific, language universals and typology, language change and grammaticalization studies, lexical semantics, corpus linguistics, computational modelling, neurolinguistics, discourse studies, and second language acquisition. Interdisciplinary opportunities are available with the Ph.D. programs in Cognitive Psychology, Philosophy, Anthropology, the interdisciplinary group in Cognitive Sciences, and the Center for Cultural Studies. The department hosts a distinguished speakers series, whose recent speakers have included Scott De Lancey, Jeffrey Elman, Paul Hopper, John Haiman, Frantisek Lichtenberk, and Marianne Mithun. The department also sponsors a biennial Symposium on Language. The topic in March 1995 was Usage-Based Models of Language; participants included Ronald Langacker, Joan Bybee, Brian MacWhinney, Janet Pierrehumbert, Douglas Biber, Tom Givon, and John Du Bois. The 1997 Symposium will be on Amazonian linguistics. FACULTY AND RESEARCH INTERESTS Michael Barlow, Ph.D. Linguistics, Stanford University. Grammatical theory, corpus linguistics, second language acquisition, discourse. Lilly Chen, Ph.D. Linguistics, University of Illinois. Chinese linguistics, grammaticalization, metaphor, Chinese classic novel. James Copeland, Chair, Ph.D. Linguistics, Cornell University. Functional linguistics, phonology, Germanic linguistics, grammaticalization, American Indian linguistics (Tarahumara). Philip W. Davis, Ph.D. Linguistics, Cornell University. Semantics and syntax, language and intelligence, Amerindian (Bella Coola; Alabama), Austronesian (Atayal, Ilokano, Yogad). Spike Gildea, Ph.D. Linguistics, University of Oregon. Diachronic syntax, field methods and ethics, phonology, typological/functional linguistics, Amazonian languages. Roy G. Jones, Ph.D. Slavic Linguistics, University of Texas at Austin. Amerindian (Koasati/Coushatta), Russian folk epic and Slavic linguistics. Suzanne Kemmer, Ph.D. Linguistics, Stanford University. Typology and universals, lexical semantics, semantics of grammar, syntactic and semantic change, cognitive linguistics, Germanic, Austronesian. Sydney Lamb, Ph.D. Linguistics, University of California, Berkeley. Cognitive linguistics, neurolinguistics, neural network modelling, Amerindian (Monachi). E. Douglas Mitchell, Ph.D. Linguistics, University of Texas at Austin. Comparative Indo-European linguistics, historical linguistics, history of linguistics, early Germanic dialects, Sanskrit. Livia Polanyi, Ph.D. English, University of Michigan. Discourse analysis, language and society, text linguistics, language and gender. Stephen A. Tyler, Ph.D. Anthropology, Stanford University. Cognitive studies, philosophy of language, anthropological linguistics, languages of India. FINANCIAL AID Graduate fellowships include tuition, and for especially well-qualified students, a cash stipend. Graduate stipends are normally renewable for four years upon satisfactory performance, and candidates can apply for a fifth year of support. (The department is fortunate to have been able so far to support all students it has admitted.) RICE UNIVERSITY Rice University, founded in 1912, is a private university dedicated to the promotion of arts and letters, science, and engineering. The university is highly selective, and departments tend to be small and focused. The campus is spacious, tree-lined, and has lovely architecture (a blend of Mediterranean and Renaissance). Rice is a close-knit academic community and the Department of Linguistics in particular offers opportunities for personalized interaction and collaboration with faculty. Current enrollment is ca. 2700 under- graduates and 1,200 graduate students; faculty:student ratio is 1:9. Houston is the America's fourth largest city and offers the full array of urban amenities (fine arts, large city parks etc.). It is ethnically extremely diverse (affording not only excellent opportunities for working with linguistic consultants, but also a huge number of restaurants representing a wide spectrum of cuisines at all levels of affordability.) The university is 45 minutes from the Gulf Coast (Galveston Island). Rents in Houston are easily affordable on a graduate stipend; inexpensive graduate housing at the edge of campus, run by the university, is also available. The university and department offer a full range of computing facilities available to students. The library has an outstanding linguistics collection, including a vast array of reference grammars. The department supports photocopying accounts for its doctoral students. Both U.S. and international applicants are admitted on the same basis, and financial aid is not restricted to U.S. citizens. Current graduate students include not only Americans but students from Australia, Brazil, China, Israel, and Korea. Prospective students of diverse linguistic backgrounds are encouraged to apply. APPLICATION DEADLINE: February 1, 1996. Prospective applicants must take the Graduate Record Examination as soon as possible, and have the results sent to the university in time for consideration in February. The selection process is competitive. For more information about the program, please contact: Department of Linguistics Rice University 6100 Main St. Houston TX 77005-1892 (713) 527-6010 Coordinator: Ursula Keierleber email: ukeieMail to author|Respond to list|Read more issues|LINGUIST home page|Top of issueruf.rice.edu