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PROJECTS:
Finding
Freedom Summer Newsletter
US IN THE
NEWS:
Beyond Our
Borders
Compass Magazine, College of
Arts and Science
http://www.cas.muohio.edu/compass/
By: Jackie Irmen
With its sleek lines
and circular designs, the Center
for American and World Cultures
will elicit a sense of modern, global
awareness when it reopens in a renovated
MacMillan Hall this August.
A $5 million renovation
transformed the old campus infirmary
into a haven for international and
minority studies and student activities.
The building will provide space
for the International Studies, Black
World Studies, Latin American Studies,
Women’s Studies, American
Studies and Jewish Studies programs.
Mary Jane Berman,
the center’s director, said
the project was designed with the
dual purpose of creating both an
intellectual and a physical site
for discussion and debate. The new
center will be a “clearinghouse”
of research, education and programming
for both faculty and students, Berman
said.
“MacMillan will
be a place where race, class, gender,
nationality, ethnicity, religious
variability, ableness, sexuality
and language will be confronted,”
she said.
MacMillan will welcome
visitors into a global community
in grandiose style. Mosaic floors,
a circular staircase and a large
skylight highlight the building’s
front entrance. The first level
is dedicated to the Women’s
Center, assorted academic offices,
a reception area, and an office
for Berman.
A multi-media auditorium
is on the second floor along with
the study abroad offices. While
the first and second floors are
academic, the lower level is devoted
to student activity.
The student activity
offices will include traditional
organizations as well as those that
are newer to the campus, said Steve
Ransom, director of Student Activities.
Among them will be the Miami University
Student Foundation, Recensio yearbook,
The Miami Student, the Black Student
Action Society, Spectrum, the Association
for Latin American Students, the
Indian Student Association, the
Association for Women Students and
the Asian American Association.
According to its Web
site, “the mission of the
Center for American and World Cultures
is to promote positive intergroup
relations among students, faculty,
and staff on campus and ultimately
to improve the climate for diversity
on campus.”
Berman hopes to achieve
this purpose through her programming.
Since she was hired in July 2002,
Berman has tallied a great number
of successes, including bringing
in a distinguished set of lecturers
and updating the center’s
Web presence. Currently, she is
working to solidify the center’s
curriculum for the upcoming school
year.
“All programming
will be addressed through an interdisciplinary
lens,” Berman said.
In addition to another
lecture series, next year the center
will host monthly brown bag seminars,
exhibits, an East Asia Conference
and an American Studies Conference.
It will also organize and coordinate
a Hispanic Heritage Month, a new
initiative.
The call for a multicultural
center on campus grew from both
student concerns and the university’s
desire to provide its students with
a place that would prepare them
for the globalization of the world
at large. Plans for the center began
before incidents of hate crime on
campus in March 1997, when two hate
calls were left on the voice mail
of a first-year African American
student. But that incident hastened
the project’s progress, Ransom
said.
Associate Provost
Joe Cox said the Center for American
and World Cultures will “advance
the stated mission of the university
by affording increased educational
opportunity for all Miami students
in the area of non-dominant cultures.”
MacMillan, which had
been used as a temporary location
for departments whose facilities
were under rehabilitation, was chosen
as the new site for the center because
of its central location. Historically,
Miami was divided by discipline,
with Shriver Center, the Bonham
House and the Joyner House of Continuing
Education comprising the “student
services sector” of campus.
Cox said it made sense
to place the Center for American
and World Cultures amidst other
buildings with similar purposes.
Cox has been with
the project from its inception.
He was responsible for commissioning
funds for the new project and heads
the ad-hoc committee that has been
monitoring its progress.
Drew Eastmead, editor
of The Miami Student, is excited
to return the paper’s office
to MacMillan.
“The location
will mean a lot more interaction
with the writers and staff and faster
Internet technology for the paper,”
he said.
Jeanne Hey, director
of Miami’s International Studies
program, said she also felt that
her program’s move to MacMillan
will be beneficial.
The move will give
all disciplines a chance to “coordinate
our programs more closely and benefit
from each others’ expertise,”
she said.
The center will
open this fall with a grand opening
event in the spring of 2004.
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