Carroll Elected SGA President at UA
Mary Margaret Carroll of Ozark was elected president of the Student Government Association at The University of Alabama for the 2005-2006 term.
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Mary Margaret Carroll of Ozark was elected president of the Student Government Association at The University of Alabama for the 2005-2006 term.
The University of Alabama Coalition for Diversity and Inclusiveness is sponsoring a lecture by Tim Wise on Wednesday, March 16, at 7:30 p.m. in the Ferguson Forum.
The University of Alabama will be hosting a number of events to recognize February as African-American Heritage Month.
The University Women’s Club recently awarded Isabella Hummel Graham Scholarships to five University of Alabama students.
The University of Alabama Graduate School has named 12 graduate students as new fellowship recipients in programs designed to increase and retain the number of minorities in college or university faculty positions, with a special emphasis on graduate students who plan to become faculty members at colleges and universities in Alabama.
Enrollment at The University of Alabama is at an all-time high of 20,969 students this fall, with both the entering freshman class and new graduate students representing some of the largest and best qualified classes in UA history.
Lawn decorations, a parade and a pep rally are all a part of The University of Alabama tradition of celebrating Homecoming Week, scheduled this year for Oct. 10-16 with the theme All Tide Together.
A ceremony to dedicate new markers for the graves of two slaves buried on The University of Alabama campus is planned for Wednesday, Sept. 29 from 6-7 p.m. The program, sponsored by the Coalition for Change, the Coalition for Diversity and Inclusiveness, and the Office of the Vice President for Community Affairs at UA, will be at the gravesite next to the Biology Building on Hackberry Lane.
The University of Alabama Graduate School recently announced the recipients of the 2004-2005 Graduate Council Fellowships.
Parents are always saying they would move heaven and earth to help their children. Well, in the case of Carolyn Prunkl, her parents literally moved their whole lives from Decatur, Ill. to Tuscaloosa so she could attend The University of Alabama’s RISE Program, the nationally renowned early intervention program for preschoolers with disabilities.