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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - More than 30 presenters from around the nation
will discuss issues concerning race and ethnicity at the “Race
and Place in the Americas” conference on March 7-8 at The
University of Alabama.
The two-day conference focusing on racial issues in the United
States, Latin America, the Caribbean and elsewhere will begin at
1 p.m. on Friday, March 7, in UA’s Bidgood Hall. The conference
is open to the public, and more information is available at http://www.ua.edu/academic/colleges/raceandplace/.
UA’s history
department and the College
of Arts and Sciences are sponsoring the conference. Attending
all or portions of the two-day conference sessions is free, and
advanced registration is not required. Partaking in the two conference-sponsored
meals requires registration by March 1 and costs $15, with details
available at the above Web site.
Presenters are scheduled from Princeton, Tulane, the University
of Michigan, Vanderbilt, Northwestern University, Harvard, University
of Georgia, University of Southern California, University of Toronto
and elsewhere. The March 8 sessions are from 9 a.m.-3:15 p.m.
Dr. Lisa Dorr, UA assistant professor of history and chairperson
of the history department’s diversity committee, is the conference’s
primary organizer.
The College of Arts and Sciences is UA’s largest division
and the largest public liberal arts college in the state, with approximately
5,000 undergraduate and 1,000 graduate students. The College has
received national recognition for academic excellence, and A&S
students have been selected for many of the nation’s top academic
honors, including 15 Rhodes Scholarships, 13 Goldwater Scholarships,
seven Truman Scholarships and 15 memberships on USA Today’s
Academic All-American teams.
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