Greetings!
Support the OSU Tulsa African American Student Association! ????
We are raising funds to empower students, celebrate culture, and create leadership opportunities for the future. Your donation can help make a difference in our community through trainings, conferences, seminars, scholarships, and more. Every contribution, big or small, helps us achieve our mission.
Donate today and share to spread the word! #SupportAASA #CommunityStrong
Thank You,
AASA Team
Greetings,
"Empowering the Leaders of Today" campaign is in need of your support. Your financial support means so much to our student members and any amount is greatly appreciated! We look forward to sharing our updates with you in the coming weeks.
Sincerely,
AASA Team
Greetings!
Thank you so much for your consideration and your support in our "Empowering the Leaders of Today" campaign. For the next five weeks, your donations will help students achieve their academic, professional and personal goals. No matter the size of your donation, we want you to know that your gift is greatly appreciated! We look forward to keeping you posted regarding the success of this campaign and how students will benefit from your gift.
Sincerely,
AASA Team
The campus was originally named University Center at Tulsa (UCAT), and then in 1999 it was renamed OSU Tulsa.
Students work hard to achieve their academic and personal goals. We want to develop their leadership skills as well as invest in their overall well-being by engaging in fun activities.
Successfully completing semester courses while participating in student leadership organizations is no easy task. We look forward to celebrating our member's accomplishments at the end of the semester to show how much they are appreciated.
Black History is not just celebrated during the month of February. Black history is American history. We celebrate our history 365 days a year.
The OSU Tulsa campus is located in the historic Greenwood business district. It is an honor to walk upon this sacred ground and to recognize the lives of those impacted by the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre.
Thriving black-owned businesses once existed on Archer Street during the early 1900s in the Greenwood Business District.
Greenwood, Archer, and Pine were the names of the streets that once had successful black-owned businesses and working families. These streets were also the inspiration behind the name of the R&B group, The GAP Band with lead singer, Charlie Wilson.
This was the name given to the affluent business district of Greenwood in North Tulsa. Thirty-five blocks of businesses, homes, schools, grocery stores, libraries, and churches that flourished until it was first destroyed in 1921 and later rebuilt by 1925.