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Sports Visitors: Mongolian Wrestlers
Partnering with USA Wrestling, the U.S. State Department brought members of the Mongolian men’s and women’s national freestyle wrestling teams and their coaches to New York.
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Young Basketball Players from the Democratic Republic of Congo Visit the U.S.
The U.S. State Department welcomed a group from the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) for the first Sports Visitor program of the new year.
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New ECA Websites
After years of extensive research and planning, the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs is pleased to announce the launch of our redesigned ECA Bureau and Exchanges websites.
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Benjamin Franklin Transatlantic Fellows Summer Institute Alumnus Reflects on His Fellowship
Daniel Voda, a 2010 BFTF Alumnus from Moldova, reflects on his experience at the Benjamin Franklin Transatlantic Fellows Summer Institute.
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Sports Visitors Program Hosts Futsal Athletes
Sports Visitors Program hosted 15 male athletes and coaches from Libya for a futsal Sports Visitors exchange program. Futsal is a modified version of outdoor soccer played on a hard surfaced basketball-sized indoor court, with a smaller and heavier ball.
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Fulbright on the Millennial Trains Project: Lala, South Africa
The Millennial Trains Project (MTP) leads crowd-funded transcontinental train journeys for diverse groups of young innovators to explore America's new frontiers.
Lala, a participant from South Africa details her experience on the train studying obesity.
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Take a look inside Madame Gadié's first grade French class. #IEW2017
Take a look inside Madame Gadié's first grade French class at Shepherd Elementary school in Washington, D.C., to see the benefits of learning a foreign language at a young age.
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The Fulbright Program: Creating Lasting Connections
Learn how the Fulbright Program brings people from all over the world together to increase mutual understanding and foster people-to-people diplomacy.
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“Museums in a Suitcase” Photo Gallery
Due to the ongoing conflict, museums across Libya remain closed to protect their collections from looting and other damage. As a result, many communities in Libya have lost a vital link to their country’s rich past that museums and public programming create.