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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – The University of Alabama will open the
Crossroads Community Center this fall to assist student organizations
with multicultural issues and facilitate coordination of multicultural
issues on campus.
The center is part of a collaborative effort of the UA divisions
of student affairs, community affairs and academic affairs to meet
needs identified last year by the University’s Multicultural
Center Task Force. It is expected to open in Ferguson Center in
September.
“We’re proud of our success in recruiting students
from a wide variety of ethnicities and backgrounds to The University
of Alabama. Crossroads Community Center will provide the support
systems we need to assure that our students are fully integrated
into all aspects of life at the Capstone,” said Dr. Samory
Pruitt, vice president for community affairs.
Dr. Margaret King, vice president for student affairs, chaired
the Multicultural Center Task Force. “Crossroads will give
students and student organizations a place to address a wide variety
of questions and issues. Its central location and valuable programs
will make it a key part of our students’ experience at UA,” she
said.
The center will advise student organizations and provide advice
and counseling to individual students on multicultural issues.
In addition, it will assist student organizations with recruiting
members; serve as a ticket clearinghouse for cultural events and
activities on campus and around Tuscaloosa; provide training on
multicultural issues to student organizations, Student
Affairs staff and the UA community, as requested; assist the Career
Center in fostering multicultural skills important to employment;
facilitate coordination of multicultural activities on campus;
and generate grants and gifts for campus programs with a global
and multicultural focus.
A national search for a director of the center is currently under
way.
Crossroads Community Center is one of several initiatives implemented
as a result of the Multicultural Center Task Force’s report.
In one example, two televisions with international programming
have been installed in a study area on the second floor of the
Gorgas Library. This new service was established as a way to help
international students feel at home while on campus, and it has
been endorsed by the UA Office of Community Affairs and Capstone
International.
The offices of community affairs and academic affairs are also
providing funding to renovate space in Gorgas Library for book
signings, lectures and campus forums. Dr. Louis Pitschmann, dean
of libraries, will oversee the renovation.
“We are excited about the efforts on our campus that seek
to facilitate more campus dialogue around a range of domestic and
international issues. We believe that the design and aesthetics
of this space in the Gorgas Library will provide an outstanding
venue for this type of campus dialogue,” Pitschmann said.
The Multicultural Center Task Force was created in 2004 by UA
President Robert E. Witt to review the support needs of minority
and international students and the University’s overall efforts
to promote diversity as well as awareness and appreciation of cultural
differences.
UA is a leader in the enrollment of African-American students
among southern flagship institutions with 12 percent African American
enrollment. UA enrolls more than 850 international students each
year from more than 75 different countries. More than 600 Hispanic
American, Asian American and American Indian students also study
at the Capstone.
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