Princeton's Third World Center has a new name: The Carl A. Fields
Center for Equality and Cultural Understanding.
For more than thirty years, the Third World Center played an invaluable
role in providing a social, cultural, and political environment that
is responsive to current issues of ethnic and racial diversity, that
addresses the needs and aspirations of students of color, and that
enriches the Princeton experience for all students.
However, since 1995, students have expressed growing concerns about
the ambiguous nature of the Center's name. For many, the name was
problematic - even divisive. The TWC Governance Board decided actively
to address these concerns in spring 2001. After discussions, surveys,
and meetings with students, alumni, and administrators, the Governance
Board recommended that the Center be renamed in honor of Dr. Carl
A. Fields. On April 13, 2002, the University Board of Trustees gave
its approval, and the Center became The Carl A. Fields Center for
Equality and Cultural Understanding, effective July 1, 2002.
Dr. Fields was the nation's first African-American administrator
at a predominantly white university. After joining the Princeton administration
in 1964, Dr. Fields served as an advocate for underrepresented students,
faculty, and staff. He provided the conceptual guidance that resulted
in the establishment of the Third World Center and other programs
to benefit students of color. Renaming the Center in his honor recognizes
his role in creating the Center and his extraordinary contributions
to the University as a whole and to people of color in particular.
It is with great pride and respect that we remember Dr. Fields as
a man of courage and principle and celebrate his achievements at Princeton,
as well as the alumni who gave unselfishly of themselves to ensure
a place and a space for us today.