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COLLEGE RALLIES TO AID VICTIMS OF TERRORIST ATTACK

By Lucas Bernays Held

When tragedy engulfed the tip of Manhattan on Sept. 11, Barnard students -- along with the rest of the community -- were quick to respond, raising thousands of dollars for the families of the victims.

Several fund-raising drives continue, and the College has announced that it will make a gift to two charitable funds, and has invited anyone wishing to join that effort to contribute at the Bursar's Office.

One of the groups that moved rapidly was the Student Government Association, selling hundreds of red, white and blue pins at $2 apiece and holding a massive bake sale on Friday, Sept. 14, in upper-level McIntosh Center.

"As SGA, we decided that we should take some sort of initiative to channel the energy of the students into something to help the World Trade Center victims," said Lara Goldberg '03, the SGA president.

More than 70 students spent 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. Thursday, Sept. 13 assembling the red, white and blue ribbons for sale the following day. At first, they were sold only on Barnard's campus, but then students moved to the steps of Low Memorial Library, selling hundreds more to Columbia students, graduate students and faculty from across the University.

SGA also decided to host a bake sale, Goldberg said, because leaders thought the act of making something would bring people together. Goods were sold Friday, and the remainder -- there were leftovers because of the huge quantity of goods contributed -- was given away to the City Harvest food cooperative.

The grand total: just over $5,000 for the Red Cross. Goldberg, who is no stranger to service, (she has spent the last several summers volunteering in Israel and Belarus), said she would like SGA to continue to find ways for students to make a contribution to the Barnard community and beyond.

Elsewhere on campus, the story was similar. On Tuesday, in the residence halls on 116th Street, Resident Assistant Katie Curran '03 felt the shock of helplessness after watching the World Trade Center towers burn and then fall.

"I felt as RAs we were in a position to mobilize other students on campus," she said. The next day, at 9 a.m., she and several others set up a table with a canister for donations.

"It was remarkable the response we received, not just from residents, but from people in the community - people saying 'can we do an hour shift, can we do an hour shift?' " said Curran. "We had students, citizens, and a professor at Columbia volunteer to sit at the table." Within five days, the volunteers had collected $2,000 - running shifts from the morning until 8 p.m.

Curran, who has longed planned on becoming a doctor, said of that goal: "this solidifies it if anything."

And on 110th Street, students, led by LaToya Ingram '04, 30 students undertook their own version of a bucket brigade - using a water jug. "We just asked people if they would empty out their pockets of their change," Ingram said. Within a day or two, they collected $512 for the Red Cross.

Cherie Sheridan, director of College Activities, remarked: "I think it was an incredible testament to our community how quickly students responded."

And the response was not confined to fund-raising. Led by Maliha Mustafa '04, 20 Barnard and Columbia students spent Friday, Sept. 21, from 11:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., at Rockefeller Center, leafletting for tolerance. At one point, former President Bill Clinton, who was at the site, shook all of their hands.

"It's a very emotional experience, and along with the process of helping others, you find a lot out about yourself," said Mustafa. "I think that leafletting and sending out a message helps create a dialogue."

The leaflet the students handed out read in part:

"After the crimes committed against humanity on Sept. 11, all Americans immediately united regardless of our race, religion, and political views to help those I need. Our unity however is now at risk. Hatred plays upon our fears. Terrorist behavior is not determined by religious, ethnic and racial background. Although we are justifiably outraged and wounded by the acts of terrorism, we cannot perpetuate the same hatred from which it stems. Many people of color have become the target of our anguish and frustrations. They too are experiencing the same grief, while also facing the additional of harassment, discrimination, and in some cases assault. ... "

We must show that our principles of equality and tolerance are applied to all. Defend your fellow Americans. We are all Americans regardless of our race, religion or ethnicity."

As much as any single statement, that last point seemed to sum up the mood on campus -- and the message that Barnard students, like others across America, were sending through their actions.

 

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