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September 11: The Philanthropic Response - Foundation Center

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SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong><strong>The</strong> <strong>Philanthropic</strong> <strong>Response</strong>


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong><strong>The</strong> <strong>Philanthropic</strong> <strong>Response</strong>


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong><strong>The</strong> <strong>Philanthropic</strong> <strong>Response</strong>ContributorsRICK SCHOFF,EDITORSARAH COLLINSELIZABETH CUCCAROMIREK DROZDZOWSKIKATHYE GIESLERCHRIS HURTCHRISTINE INNAMORATOCHERYL LOEREBECCA MACLEANLESLIE MARINOMITCH NAUFFTSLOREN RENZTHE FOUNDATION CENTER


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>Mission<strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>’s mission is to strengthen the nonprofit sector byadvancing knowledge about U.S. philanthropy.To achieve our mission, we:• Collect, organize, and communicate information on U.S. philanthropy;• Conduct and facilitate research on trends in the field;• Provide education and training on the grantseeking process;• Ensure public access to information and services through our Web site, printand electronic publications, five library/learning centers, and a nationalnetwork of Cooperating Collections.Founded in 1956, the <strong>Center</strong> is the nation’s leading authority on philanthropy and isdedicated to serving grantseekers, grantmakers, researchers, policymakers, the media,and the general public.<strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong> has documented private philanthropy’s response to the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks. Using our experience in collecting and analyzinggiving data, we constructed a comprehensive picture of giving by foundations andcorporations in the aftermath of 9/<strong>11</strong>, as well as tracked contributions by intermediariesand direct-service providers. We presented news and in-depth interviewsconcerning the philanthropic response to 9/<strong>11</strong> in the <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>’s onlinejournal, Philanthropy News Digest.All of these have been reproduced in <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>: Perspectives from the Field of Philanthropy, vols. I and II. To learn more, pleasevisit our Web site at www.fdncenter.org.We are grateful to the following for their support of our Philanthropy’s <strong>Response</strong> to9/<strong>11</strong> Project: the California Endowment, Carnegie Corporation of New York, AnnieE. Casey <strong>Foundation</strong>, ChevronTexaco, Citigroup <strong>Foundation</strong>, Ford <strong>Foundation</strong>, JohnS. and James L. Knight <strong>Foundation</strong>, Lumina <strong>Foundation</strong> for Education, MorganStanley, Charles Stewart Mott <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York Community Trust, andRockefeller Brothers Fund. <strong>The</strong> ideas expressed in <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> are those of theauthors alone and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the funding organizations.Design by Apicella Design.Copyright © 2004 by <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>. All rights reserved.Library of Congress Control Number: 2004<strong>11</strong>6950ISBN: 1-59542-045-2


ContentsPREFACE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .viiINTRODUCTION:THE REAL LESSONS OF SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>FOR AMERICAN CHARITIES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Lester SalamonTHE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE TO SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>:LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITY . . . . . . . . . . . . .<strong>11</strong>Tom SeesselPERSPECTIVES FROM THE FIELD OF PHILANTHROPY . . . . . . . . .69A list of the 33 interviews that were published in <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>:Perspectives from the Field of Philanthropy, vols. I and IISEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: A TIMELINE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .71GIVING IN THE AFTERMATH OF SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>:FINAL UPDATE ON THE FOUNDATION AND CORPORATE RESPONSE . . . . . . . .85PHILANTHROPY AND SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: A BIBLIOGRAPHY . . . . . . . . .105SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: GUIDE TO RELIEF AND RECOVERY GRANTSBY FOUNDATIONS AND CORPORATIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<strong>11</strong>9LIST OF FUNDERS BY TOTAL CONTRIBUTIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .121LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .135INDEX OF GRANT RECIPIENTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .231INDEX OF SUBJECTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .243


Preface<strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>’s multi-year project Philanthropy’s<strong>Response</strong> to 9/<strong>11</strong>: Creating the Record and Telling the Storybrings into focus the role private philanthropy played in relief,recovery, and rebuilding in the aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>,2001.While we as a people and as individuals continue to livewith the consequences of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, publication of thiscompendium volume brings the <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>’s specificeffort to a close.It has been a long, often painful passage from <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>, 2001, to this point more than three years later.<strong>The</strong>tragedies for many and the stresses on everyone have beendetailed elsewhere, but impressions created by mediaephemera cannot serve as a comprehensive record. For that,the facts about private philanthropy’s relief effort needed tobe compiled and recorded.It has been amply documented, by the <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>and others, that private philanthropy played a critical role infilling a variety of needs created by the events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>,2001. In the immediate aftermath of the attacks, private fundswere quickly made available by foundations, corporations, andvii


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEindividuals and distributed to a wide range of community organizations that understoodhow to best reach and serve various affected populations.This was accomplished even as itwas becoming clear that the experience and planning of the Federal EmergencyManagement Agency (FEMA) provided little direction for the near-term response to theunprecedented circumstances.In addition, private philanthropy’s ability to take a longer view of social problems helpedidentify the full range of needs to be met. In spite of this, and the effort made by manycharities to safeguard sufficient funds for ongoing needs, the pressure to distribute fundsrapidly, particularly to victims’ families, was intense. Having been stung by the criticismthat relief funds had not been distributed quickly enough, these same charities wouldregard the <strong>September</strong> 9, 2004, New York Times story entitled “With Funds Winding Down,Questions Remain About Longer-Term Needs” with considerable irony.<strong>The</strong> commentary by Lester Salamon that introduces this volume presents perhaps thelongest view. Salamon suggests that alleviating the social conditions that give rise tomurderous terrorism is one of the proper — and historical — roles of philanthropies suchas the Ford and Rockefeller foundations. He goes on to describe the growth of internationalcivil society that is being advanced by the development of non-governmentalorganizations (NGOs) around the world, and warns that post-9/<strong>11</strong> security concerns andpolicies may have a dampening effect on these activities.We also present in this volume an edited compilation of Tom Seessel’s reports prepared forthe Ford <strong>Foundation</strong>. Seessel presents a thorough account of 9/<strong>11</strong> relief and recoveryactivities — not only the important work of private philanthropy, but also the complexarray of government programs through which federal aid was and continues to bedistributed. A key point about FEMA’s difficulty with individual-assistance programs ismade as Seessel quotes one agency official: “FEMA’s big role is to help governments, notpeople, recover.”We have also included a timeline of the events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> and their aftermathoutlining the responses of philanthropy, government, and the media to the unfoldingdrama. This provides context for the other commentaries and reports in this volume andconveys the rush of events and the emotional environment within which 9/<strong>11</strong> recoverytook place, a major factor determining its course.To create the record of the 9/<strong>11</strong> philanthropic response from <strong>September</strong> 2001 onward, the<strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong> tracked the flow of contributions made by institutional funders and thedistribution of gifts from all private sources by relief funds. Through a series of researchreports we analyzed 9/<strong>11</strong> giving patterns and placed 9/<strong>11</strong> funding in the context of U.S.philanthropy. We issued a comprehensive report on the activities of the relief funds, 9/<strong>11</strong>Relief and Regranting Funds: A Summary on Funds Raised and Assistance Provided, in 2003.Giving in the Aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>: Final Update on the <strong>Foundation</strong> and Corporate<strong>Response</strong>, included here, is the final research report on 9/<strong>11</strong> giving by institutional donors,based on data compiled through <strong>September</strong> 2004.viii


PREFACE<strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong> told the story of 9/<strong>11</strong> by publishing interviews, articles, andcommentary by leaders in the field of philanthropy. <strong>The</strong>se originally appeared in ouronline journal, Philanthropy News Digest (PND). That work resulted in the publication oftwo volumes of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>: Perspectives from the Field of Philanthropy, one issued in<strong>September</strong> 2002 and the second in <strong>September</strong> 2003. We include here a complete list ofthese enlightening interviews with people involved in 9/<strong>11</strong> relief and recovery. Those twopublications were designed to accompany this volume.To assist those seeking additional resources about 9/<strong>11</strong> relief and recovery, we haveincluded a bibliography of 9/<strong>11</strong> resources available in <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong> librarycollections, as well as a comprehensive directory of relief and recovery grants made byfoundations and corporations through <strong>September</strong> 2004.We are grateful to the following foundations for making this project possible: CaliforniaEndowment, Carnegie Corporation of New York, Annie E. Casey <strong>Foundation</strong>,ChevronTexaco, Citigroup <strong>Foundation</strong>, Ford <strong>Foundation</strong>, John S. & James L. Knight<strong>Foundation</strong>, Lumina <strong>Foundation</strong> for Education, Morgan Stanley, Charles Stewart Mott<strong>Foundation</strong>, New York Community Trust, and Rockefeller Brothers Fund. <strong>The</strong> ideasexpressed in this work are the authors’ and do not necessarily reflect those of thefunding organizations.ix


Introduction<strong>The</strong> Real Lessons of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> forAmerican CharitiesMuch has been made of the response of American charity tothe events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, and for good reason.<strong>The</strong> misguidedterrorists who crashed civilian airliners into unarmed buildingson that fine <strong>September</strong> morning did not, it turns out, assault anation lacking the capacity to respond. But that capacityextended well beyond the conventional instrumentalities offederal, state, and local government that have attracted so muchattention in the press. In small towns and large cities, fromBangor to Burbank and Sarasota to Seattle, Americans rushedforward to help. In part, the responses were spontaneous andunstructured. But in even larger part, they were orchestrated andguided through the largely invisible social infrastructure thatcomprises the nation’s private, nonprofit sector.Like the arteries of a living organism, nonprofit organizationscarry a life-force that has long been a celebrated part of theAmerican character: a commitment to individual initiative in theLESTER M. SALAMONDIRECTORCENTER FOR CIVIL SOCIETY STUDIESJOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITYAUTHORGLOBAL CIVIL SOCIETY(KUMARIAN PRESS, 2004)THE RESILIENT SECTOR(BROOKINGS INSTITUTION PRESS, 2003)1


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE. ..it is time forAmerican charities toconsider the deeperimplications that<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> holds forAmerica’s nonprofitorganizations andthe philanthropicinstitutions that helpsupport them. . . .public good. What 9/<strong>11</strong> demonstrated convincingly, among other things, is that thiscommitment is still very much alive and well. With relatively little prompting, Americansresponded to the events of 9/<strong>11</strong> with an outpouring of charitable support. At last count,voluntary contributions to 9/<strong>11</strong> relief and recovery totaled a whopping $2.8 billion — $1.1billion of it from institutional donors like corporations and foundations and the balancefrom private individuals. 1In the early aftermath of 9/<strong>11</strong>, commentary within the nonprofit world understandablyalternated between celebrating this charitable response and worrying about its potentialnegative impact on the revenues of other charitable institutions. Now that some time haspassed, however, it is time for American charities to consider the deeper implications that<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> holds for America’s nonprofit organizations and the philanthropicinstitutions that help support them, for those implications are enormous. Three suchimplications in particular seem especially important to recognize, and act on.THE PERILS OF GO-IT-ALONE PHILANTHROPYIn the first place, the 9/<strong>11</strong> experience holds important lessons for the operation ofcharitable organizations. In particular, it points out the perils of “go-it-alone philanthropy,”the view that philanthropy and the state should operate independently of each other, thatphilanthropy is a substitute for state action, and that collaborations between charity andgovernment are fraught with peril for charitable institutions.This view gained considerable currency in the early celebrations of charity’s response to9/<strong>11</strong>. This response demonstrated the value that a robust charitable sector can add to asociety’s handling of social crises, even one as devastating as 9/<strong>11</strong>. Charitable resourcesbegan flowing quickly, in many cases more quickly than government’s. Charities were alsomore flexible, providing aid to far more than the direct victims of 9/<strong>11</strong> and dispensing withmany of the need-based restrictions that tied government support in knots for months.<strong>The</strong>charitable response also carried psychological advantages, signaling the nation’s collectivesense of grief and transmitting this to the direct victims of the disaster in a way that musthave brought emotional as well as financial comfort. No one can claim, therefore, that theresponse of American charity was in any sense superfluous to the 9/<strong>11</strong> recovery.Yet neither can we claim that it was adequate to the task. To the contrary, what began as aninspiring demonstration of the capacity of old-fashioned American voluntarism to cope witha major social cataclysm quickly became a demonstration of its inherent limitations as well.One of these limitations is essentially structural in character. <strong>The</strong> very pluralism anddiversity that gave the charitable response its flexibility and innovativeness also significantlylimited its coherence and coordination. Despite some notable collaborativeventures, such as the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund formed within hours of the tragedy by theNew York Community Trust and the United Way of New York City and the United1 Loren Renz and Leslie Marino, Giving in the Aftermath of 9/<strong>11</strong>: 2003 Update on the <strong>Foundation</strong> andCorporate <strong>Response</strong>. (New York:<strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, December 2003), p. 2.2


INTRODUCTIONServices Group formed some months later, the charitable response was splintered anddiffuse. At least 369 separate organizations entered the 9/<strong>11</strong> relief field. 2 While thepreponderance of these were new funds created by existing organizations as opposed towholly new organizations, the sheer number made the task of coordination difficult,especially given the long-standing nonprofit penchant for autonomy. Families in needtherefore had to navigate a maze of organizations, each with its own eligibility criteria andspecific forms of aid. Inevitably, delays and inequities occurred: many people fell throughthe slats, while others benefited from multiple sources of support. What is more, misunderstandingsarose between donors and nonprofit groups over how contributions were tobe used, and these misunderstandings tarnished the reputation of the philanthropic effortin ways that are still being felt.Beyond its structure, the charitable response to 9/<strong>11</strong> also suffered from limits of scale. Atthe end of the day, American charity, for all its effort, was able to supply only 10 percent ofthe resources ultimately made available to cope with the 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster. <strong>The</strong> remaining 90percent — approximately $27 billion out of the $29.8 billion total — came fromgovernment. 3 Charitable resources comprised a slightly larger share of the victimcompensation aid, but even here it constituted only $800 million out of the $5.8 billionultimately made available. 4 Philanthropy did carve out some unique niches not addressedby government support, such as ensuring the continued viability of New York’s importantnonprofit arts institutions as well as of hundreds of other nonprofit organizations in thedisaster area. Still, the scale of the response was dwarfed by the enormity of the need.In this, however, the response to 9/<strong>11</strong> is emblematic of a broader challenge to Americancharities, and to their governmental partners as well. Increasingly, the scale of our publicproblems calls out not for a government or a charitable response, but for a response thatmarries the advantages of both and engages the business sector as well. Regrettably,however, despite extensive interaction between government and nonprofit groups, oursystems for achieving such effective partnerships remain under-developed at best. Thiscertainly was the case in the 9/<strong>11</strong> response, which suffered from the start from inadequateIncreasingly, thescale of our publicproblems calls outnot for a governmentor a charitableresponse, but fora responsethat marries theadvantages of bothand engages thebusiness sectoras well.coordination between public and private authorities, and among private ones themselves. 5 32 Loren Renz, Elizabeth Cuccaro, and Leslie Marino, 9/<strong>11</strong> Relief and Regranting Funds: A SummaryReport on Funds Raised and Assistance Provided (New York:<strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, 2003), p. 7.3 Jeff Jacoby, “Why the 9/<strong>11</strong> Fund was a Mistake,” Boston Globe (<strong>September</strong> 26, 2004); U.S.General Accounting Office, <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>: Overview of Federal Disaster Assistance to the New YorkCity Area (Washington, DC: General Accounting Office, October 31, 2003); U.S. GeneralAccounting Office, <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>: Federal Assistance for New York Workers’ Compensation(Washington, DC: General Accounting Office, <strong>September</strong> 8, 2004).4 Tom Seessel, “<strong>The</strong> <strong>Philanthropic</strong> <strong>Response</strong> to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>: Lessons from Relief and Recoveryin New York City” in this volume.5 See, for example: C. Eugene Steuerle, “Preparing for the Next Emergency: Some Lessons forCharities from <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>,” Emerging Issues in Philanthropy (Washington, DC: <strong>The</strong> UrbanInstitute, n.d.).


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEIf one lesson of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> forAmerica’s charitiesis the limitation of“go-it-alonephilanthropy,” asecond is the needto re-energize thesocial-justicemission of thecharitable world.Revealingly, the charitable community’s own comprehensive assessment of private institutionalgiving in response to 9/<strong>11</strong> barely mentions this challenge of public-privatecollaboration in the 9/<strong>11</strong> relief effort. 6 Indeed, aside from a footnote reference to theVoluntary Organizations Active in Disaster (VOAD) network organized by the FederalEmergency Management Agency, this assessment barely acknowledges that the publicsector was involved in 9/<strong>11</strong> relief.Yet such coordination is imperative. While neither sectorcan afford to wait for the other to move on important issues, neither can they makeeffective headway operating in splendid isolation. Building effective collaborations, andperfecting the habit, and the skills, of partnering are the keys to gaining real traction on thekinds of problems that now confront us, and this is one of the central lessons we shouldtake away from 9/<strong>11</strong>.CHARITY’S SOCIAL JUSTICE MISSIONIf one lesson of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> for America’s charities is the limitation of “go-it-alonephilanthropy,” a second is the need to re-energize the social-justice mission of thecharitable world. “Terror,” Martin Luther King once reminded us, “is the last expressionof the voice unheard.”Terror is fueled, more than anything else, by humiliation, by a senseof powerlessness in the face of unacceptable conditions. 7 <strong>The</strong> best way to respond toterrorism is thus to relieve the humiliation that lies at its core and to project hope toterrorism’s would-be recruits. This suggests that the war on terror is not just a militaryconflict, but at least equally a battle of ideas and ideals.In this battle of ideas, however, the ideal of freedom, which has recently been advanced byour government as its justification for military action in Iraq, may ultimately not suffice.Given the gross disparities in resources and life-chances that exist in much of the world,freedom can have a hollow ring for those on the bottom, suggesting more a license toexploit on the part of the powerful than real opportunity for the millions without. <strong>The</strong>commitment to freedom must therefore be joined with an equal commitment to socialjustice, to helping those left behind. This was the message that President FranklinRoosevelt conveyed in his “Second Bill of Rights” towards the end of World War II, as legalscholar Cass Sunsteen has recently reminded us. 8 “Essential to peace,” Mr. Rooseveltobserved, is not just the cessation of hostilities, but “a decent standard of living for allindividual men and women and children in all nations.” A similar insight, it would seem,applies to our effort to secure the peace in a world threatened with terror.To date, however, the American response to terror has taken a different course. Instead ofpromoting social justice and responding to the voice unheard, our government hasemphasized the hard power of military action over the “soft power” of American ideals. In6 Renz, Cuccaro, and Marino (2003).This assessment does report that 56 percent of the charitablerelief funds claimed to coordinate their relief activities with those of “other agencies,” but theparticular challenges of coordinating with public authorities were not singled out.7 Jessica Stern, “Beneath Bombast and Bombs, a Caldron of Humiliation,” Los Angeles Times (June6, 2004), p. M1.8 Cass Sunsteen, <strong>The</strong> Second Bill of Rights (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004).4


INTRODUCTIONthe process, it has surrendered the moral high ground that may ultimately be the bestdefense against terror.I saw a powerful demonstration of this in March of 2003, when I found myself in Morocco asAmerican warplanes began their assault on Iraq.To my amazement, the hotel in which I wasstaying suddenly began to fill up with dozens of American young people on their way home.But these were not casual vacationers. Rather, they were America’s front-line soldiers in thebattle of ideals: our Peace Corps volunteers, who were being pulled out of the Arab world asour troops went in. We thus replaced the idealism of American youth with the might of theAmerican military as our face to the Arab world’s disadvantaged millions, reinforcing ratherthan relieving the sense of humiliation they must feel. And this was just one facet of a broaderretreat from the promotion of social justice that has recently characterized American policy,as the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> Commission and other critics have recently observed. 9What has all of this to do with American charities? I believe a great deal. <strong>The</strong> nonprofitsector and philanthropy are America’s institutional embodiment of the ideal of social justice.To be sure, the sector has not always lived up to this ideal, nor does it have a monopoly on it.Yet, uniquely among our social institutions it can lay claim to a historic commitment to thisideal both in its rhetoric and its action. This is, after all, the sector that has nurtured thesuccession of social movements that have extended human rights and broadened theAmerican commitment to social justice over two centuries, beginning with the anti-slaverymovement in the nineteenth century through the women’s suffrage movement in the earlytwentieth century to the succession of civil rights, women’s rights, gay rights, environmental,consumer, pro-life, pro-choice, and conservative movements of recent years.<strong>The</strong> nonprofit sectorand philanthropyare America’sinstitutionalembodiment ofthe ideal ofsocial justice.Regrettably, however, the social-justice voice of the charitable world has in some respectsgrown more faint in recent years.Thus, while charitable giving has grown substantially overthe past 30 years, the share of that giving flowing to human services has actually declined,from 12 or 13 percent in the early 1970s to less than 9 percent in the 1990s, and less than 8percent today. 10 Internationally, the record is even more bleak. Official U.S. internationalaid as a share of gross domestic product has long lagged far behind that of other advancedcountries while the share of private giving that goes for international relief and developmentas well as for all other international purposes, despite absolute growth, remains stubbornlybelow 2 percent of all giving. In fact, international aid organizations report a drying up ofdonations for overseas relief despite an escalation of international relief crises.In the wake of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> and in the face of a quite different governmental response, Ibelieve American charities should make a concerted effort to renew charity’s social justicemission, both at home and abroad. Such a recommitment does not in any sense condoneor justify the 9/<strong>11</strong> attack. But it does acknowledge the very real grievances and sense ofhopelessness that afflict millions in the Arab world today, and the special obligation of the9 Robin Wright, “U.S. Struggles to Win Hearts, Minds in the Arab World,” <strong>The</strong> Washington Post(August 20, 2004), p. Al.10 Giving USA (New York: AAFRC Trust for Philanthropy, 2003), p. 198.5


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEcharitable sector, given its background and traditions, to respond to these unheard voices,and to raise the banner of social justice at least as high as the banner of military might.This, it seems to me, is one of the unique contributions that American philanthropy canmake to the 9/<strong>11</strong> response and therefore part of the special message that 9/<strong>11</strong> holds for thecharitable sector.America’s success ineliminating Islamicterrorism mayultimately depend . . .on the persistence ofour efforts to fosteralternative vehiclesthrough whichwould-be extremistscan contribute totheir societies.Fortunately, some charitable institutions have moved in precisely this direction. One strikingexample is the Ford <strong>Foundation</strong>’s Social Justice Philanthropy Project, which is consciouslyseeking to promote charitable giving for social justice causes overseas. Another is the Gates<strong>Foundation</strong>’s commitment to assault the global AIDS crisis. But these examples need to bemultiplied many times and a major effort launched to re-position American charitableorganizations at the center of a global campaign to achieve the “decent standard of living forall individual men and women and children in all nations” that Franklin Roosevelt pledged60 years ago.This would be a lasting legacy of 9/<strong>11</strong> indeed.PROMOTING CIVIL SOCIETYA final long-term message American charities could usefully take out of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>tragedy is the special obligation they have to help promote the civil society sector in the Arabworld. America’s success in eliminating Islamic terrorism may ultimately depend, after all,less on the precision of our military strikes than on the persistence of our efforts to fosteralternative vehicles through which would-be Islamic extremists can contribute to theirsocieties. And civil society organizations are one of the most promising of these alternatives.This, at any rate, is one of the major lessons of the recent history of Latin America andCentral Europe, where such organizations have played vital roles in the battles fordemocracy and economic progress. While the social and cultural life of the Arab regionmay offer a less hospitable clime for the flowering of such organizations, the circumstancesmay not be all that different. After all, at the time of the last major cataclysm to strike theWest — the Castro Revolution of 1960 — much of Latin America, too, was ruled by anarrow oligarchy propped up by a conservative religious elite. Although the initial reactionto this cataclysm, too, was military (the Bay of Pigs invasion), ultimately the West pursueda quite different, and more successful, course: the promotion of local development and theactive encouragement of grass-roots nonprofit organizations.Thus, for example, the Latin American Catholic Church, freed by the Second VaticanCouncil from conservative control in the mid-1960s, began dispatching clerics into theLatin American hinterland to form Communidades Eclesasis de Base, or Church BaseCommunities, through which the rural poor could take some control of their lives. Over100,000 such organizations are said to have been created in Brazil alone. <strong>The</strong> U.S.government contributed to this effort as well through the Peace Corps and a little-knownagency called the Inter-American <strong>Foundation</strong>, which delivered critical capacity-buildingassistance to grass-roots non-governmental organizations and the networks that supportedthem. U.S. foundations like Ford, Rockefeller, and Kellogg also joined in this effort,providing additional critical support to the emerging Latin American civil society sector.6


INTRODUCTIONInterestingly, many of the activists in the resulting non-governmental organizations camefrom social strata quite similar to those of the 9/<strong>11</strong> terrorists. <strong>The</strong>y were doctors, lawyers,engineers, and other educated professionals frustrated by the grinding poverty andinequality of their region and determined to make a contribution to the life-chances oftheir peoples. Thanks in part to the support they received, however, they were able tochannel their passions not into building terrorist cells but into helping impoverishedpeasants and urban squatters create micro-enterprises and marketing cooperatives, buildvillage water systems, and establish health clinics. In the process, they fostered democraticnorms, trained a new generation of community leaders, created hope, and gave tangiblemeaning to abstract concepts like self-determination.NGOs played similar roles in the recent democratic breakthroughs in Central Europe andSouth Africa, channeling the energies of local activists into positive political and economicchange, and nurturing habits of reciprocity and trust. Charter 77 in Czechoslovakia, theHungarian social services cooperative LARAS, the Polish Environmental Circle, andSolidarnocz itself are just a few examples of this vibrant organizational scene. Indeed, thedramatic political events that led to the collapse of the Communist regimes in Central andEastern Europe in 1989 were preceded by two decades of change beneath the surface ofCentral European society, and voluntary organizations were very much at the center ofthem. Here, again, moreover, outside support was quite important, including support byphilanthropic institutions such as the Rockefeller Brothers Fund.Whether similar possibilities exist in the Arab world is open to reasonable doubt. Churchand state are far more fused in Islam than in the West, leaving far less space for organizedprivate action. Beyond this, radical Islam has already filled much of the space that existswith its own organizations that blend social aid with religious indoctrination. Some ofthese, we have now learned, may even have functioned as conduits for charitable supportof terrorism. Finally, the ethos of individual initiative so central to the NGO concept is farless prominent in Arab culture....the dramaticpolitical events that ledto the collapse of theCommunist regimes inCentral and EasternEurope in 1989 werepreceded by twodecades of changebeneath the surface ofCentral Europeansociety, and voluntaryorganizations werevery much at thecenter of them.But these are more excuses than explanations. In truth, a vibrant associational revolution isunder way throughout the Arab world today just as it was in Latin America and CentralEurope two decades ago. <strong>11</strong> Some 15,000 associations are operating in Egypt alone and thenumber recorded in Morocco is reportedly twice that. Pakistan now boasts a rich array ofsecular welfare organizations like the All Pakistan Women’s Association and the Hilal-e-Ahmer Society, religiously affiliated service agencies such as Al-Khidmat, and largeforeign-aid-financed organizations like the Orangi Pilot Project and the Aga Khan RuralSupport Corporation that offer important alternatives to radical religious movements andterror cells as routes to a better life for the rural poor.As in America, many of the Arab world’s nonprofit organizations have deep religious roots,but not all are controlled by fundamentalists. Islam has a potent tradition of charitable<strong>11</strong> See, for example, chapters on Egypt, Morocco, Lebanon, and Pakistan in Lester M. Salamon,Wojciech Sokolowski, and Associates. Global Civil Society: Dimensions of the Nonprofit Sector(Bloomfield, CT: Kumarian Press, 2004).7


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEendeavor embodied in its concept of zakat, which creates a religious obligation to devote aportion of one’s income to the community; and the religious principle of tsadakah, orgiving aid to those in need, which is mentioned no less than thirty times in the Quran.Thisprovides a powerful religious grounding for the region’s nonprofit organizations.As the carriers ofthe American civilsociety tradition,American charitiesshould react to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> insteadby redoubling theircommitment topromoting civilsociety in the Arabworld, and byencouraging thegovernment todo likewise.While U.S. charities and governmental authorities have hardly been blind to the emergenceof a vibrant civil society sector in the Arab World, 12 U.S. government support for the Arabregion’s non-governmental organizations has been uneven and narrow, and U.S.foundation support, so crucial in Latin America and Central Europe, has been far less inevidence. Worse yet, the PATRIOT Act and subsequent regulations promulgated in thewake of 9/<strong>11</strong>, far from encouraging support to the civil society sector in the Arab world,have put a serious chill on it. <strong>The</strong>se regulations authorize the government to freeze theassets of any U.S. charity that aids an organization found by the Executive Branch to beassociated with terrorism. But the definition of what constitutes association with terrorismis quite vague and the burden of ensuring that supported organizations are not soassociated is left to the charities. 13 Under the circumstances, it is no wonder that charitiesin the Arab world are finding their external support dwindling, thus weakening Arab civilsociety at precisely the time when its presence is most urgently needed.As the carriers of the American civil society tradition, American charities should react to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> instead by redoubling their commitment to promoting civil society in theArab world, and by encouraging the government to do likewise. This would apply to theArab region the lesson that Alexis de Tocqueville taught us 170 years ago, and that theInter-American <strong>Foundation</strong> and Vaclav Havel reiterated more recently: in the battleagainst terror and the despair that gives rise to it, it may be less in our command ofmilitary might than in our mastery of “the art of associating together” that our truecompetitive advantage may lie.CONCLUSION<strong>The</strong> time for celebrating charity’s response to 9/<strong>11</strong> or worrying about how this response isaffecting the flow of charitable resources to other nonprofit organizations is well past forAmerica’s charitable sector. <strong>Foundation</strong>s and nonprofit groups must now turn theirattention more fully to the deeper implications of 9/<strong>11</strong> for America’s charities. This willrequire committing, or recommitting, themselves to building cross-sectoral partnerships,promoting social justice, and encouraging the growth of global civil society, especially inthe Arab region.<strong>The</strong>se hold the real meaning of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> for the nonprofit world andthose it serves.12 <strong>The</strong> Ford <strong>Foundation</strong>, for example, has maintained an office in Egypt for years through which ithas channeled important support to Arab NGOs, and the U.S. Agency for InternationalDevelopment has also delivered important aid to Egyptian NGOs.13 Day, Berry, and Howard <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. Handbook on Counter-Terrorism Measures:What U.S.Nonprofits and Grantmakers Need to Know (June 30, 2004).8


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Philanthropic</strong> <strong>Response</strong>to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>Lessons from Relief and Recoveryin New York City<strong>The</strong> terrorist strikes of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001, were the worstattacks on U.S. soil by a foreign enemy since the War of 1812.At the World Trade <strong>Center</strong>, the toll was 2,823 dead or missing.<strong>The</strong> attack on the Pentagon resulted in 184 people dead ormissing, and 40 died in the airplane crash in Pennsylvania.Some 25 million square feet of downtown New York officespace (about two and a half times the total amount of officespace in Buffalo) was destroyed or severely damaged. About700 downtown New York small businesses were destroyed andover 7,000 residents were evacuated.<strong>The</strong> New York CityPartnership and Chamber of Commerce estimated that thecity lost 125,000 jobs in the last three months of 2001 asa direct result of the attack.<strong>The</strong> nation was tragicallyunprepared for the nature and scope of the attacks. As aresult, governmental, private, and philanthropic organizationswere forced to create, in the midst of turmoil and grief, newprocedures to respond to the disaster.TOM SEESSELTHOMAS EDISON STATECOLLEGE OF NEW JERSEY9


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE<strong>Philanthropic</strong>organizations . . .responded withunaccustomedspeed and agility.Americans and people throughout the world responded generously to the worst terroristattacks in U.S. history. Independent Sector, a nonprofit organization dedicated toadvancing the work of nonprofit and philanthropic groups, in a survey taken in mid-October 2001, found that 58 percent of Americans had given money to a 9/<strong>11</strong>-relatedcause, and the Internal Revenue Service reported that 262 new tax-exempt charitableorganizations had been created. <strong>The</strong>re was such an outpouring of donations that theAmerican Red Cross stopped soliciting for its 9/<strong>11</strong> Liberty Fund on October 31, 2001,having raised $543 million, by far the largest amount ever contributed in the aftermath ofone disaster. Despite cessation of fundraising, another approximately $424 million wascontributed by June 2002. To respond to the widening tangle of interrelated problems, onthe afternoon of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> two leading New York City philanthropic organizations, theNew York Community Trust and the United Way of New York City, announced formationof a new joint venture, the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, and within less than two weeks donationstotaling more than $<strong>11</strong>5 million had been received. Within four months, the <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th Fund received contributions totaling about $425 million from more than two milliondonors in all fifty states, three U.S. protectorates, and 150 countries. <strong>The</strong> response was solarge that the fund announced on January 16 that it no longer wished to receive contributions,but by July 2002 another approximately $76 million had been donated.This report, commissioned by the Ford <strong>Foundation</strong> and conducted under the auspices ofThomas Edison State College of New Jersey, examines the philanthropic response to 9/<strong>11</strong>and focuses on key aspects of the relief and recovery efforts in New York City. It draws oninterviews with more than one hundred individuals conducted in 2002 and 2003,including the chief executives of major independent and corporate foundations, the largestrelief charities and uniformed rescue workers’ funds, leading nonprofit service providersand intermediary organizations, government officials, and individuals and businessesaffected by the disaster. <strong>The</strong> report goes further by attempting to place philanthropicprograms in a larger context through a closer look at the scope, coverage, and difficulties ofgovernment programs in 9/<strong>11</strong> relief and recovery in New York City. It seeks to increasepublic understanding of lessons learned in the overall government-philanthropic reliefeffort, highlight unresolved public policy issues arising from the 9/<strong>11</strong> experience, andsuggest an approach to enhancing our preparedness for future similar events.<strong>The</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001, attack on the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> caused widespread sufferingand disrupted life throughout the city and tri-state region. It occurred at a time ofworsening economic conditions characterized by job cuts, city and state budget reductions,and decreases in philanthropic donations. Despite lack of a reliable roadmap, philanthropicorganizations, including donors and service providers, responded with unaccustomedspeed and agility to the urgent humanitarian needs in both the immediate vicinity of theattack and in the wider New York region. Providing for the short- and long-term financialneeds of families of people who died or were seriously injured was a major part of thephilanthropic response.This was facilitated by Congress’ extraordinary action opening theway for victim compensation payments by exempting charities from the long-standingrequirement that recipients of charitable funds be financially needy.10


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITYPrivate philanthropic responses were launched well before it was known what assistancewould be available from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), the leadfederal disaster organization. <strong>Foundation</strong> and corporate grants financed a diversity ofactivities addressing every known consequence of the calamity, ranging from providingimmediate cash assistance for families who lost their primary breadwinner or weredisplaced from their homes, to therapy for grief and post-traumatic stress; these activitiesalso maintained continuity of critical nonprofit service provision and public broadcasting,and helped very small businesses and their low wage workforces.<strong>The</strong>re was intense media scrutiny of philanthropic organizations, prompted by the recordamount of donations.<strong>The</strong> focus of attention became a comparison between how much hadbeen contributed and how much had been distributed, which depicted philanthropy as africtionless conveyer belt that speedily moves money from donors to recipients. <strong>The</strong>reputation of charitable organizations was not helped by the decision of the American RedCross to allocate a portion of the Liberty Fund for other than 9/<strong>11</strong> purposes after itsfundraising appeals had implied that all contributions would be used for 9/<strong>11</strong> relief.<strong>Foundation</strong> andcorporate grantsfinanced a diversity ofactivities addressingevery knownconsequence of thecalamity. . . .Charts showing a gap between receipts and expenditures frequently failed to point out thata part of the difference between the two figures represented items such as scholarshipfunds, which are paid out over a period of more than twenty years.<strong>The</strong> focus on spendingcompared with receipts, without digging deeper into the challenges of allocating philanthropicmoney wisely and effectively, was evident in every type of media.On the philanthropic side, some donors, including the Lilly Endowment, whichcontributed $30 million, did not issue press releases on its support for 9/<strong>11</strong> relief. Someagencies, such as the American Red Cross in the first few months, appeared to feel it wasnot necessary to answer questions about their work and antagonized reporters with whatmay have seemed to be evasiveness, flip-flops, or stonewalling. On the other hand, the lowkeySalvation Army got a break from the New York Times when a reporter learned that theArmy’s antiquated computer system could generate only a fraction of the enormousvolume of checks it was committed to issuing to cover basic needs such as food and rentand agreed to hold the story until the computers had been upgraded.Philanthropists are not accustomed to doing their work in the glare of the media spotlight,and many bristle at not being appreciated for their good works. <strong>The</strong> combination ofmedia over-simplification and philanthropic thin skins produced an unhappy interaction.Only a few organizations, most notably the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, invested significanttime and resources in trying to explain the dilemmas, excruciating choices, and nuancesof philanthropic decision-making to the media, and those that didn’t follow this leadsuffered for it. <strong>The</strong> story line implied that the philanthropic organizations were at bestinefficient and slow moving, at worst venal and self-serving. By neglecting the publicrelations aspects of its work, much of philanthropy did little to counteract this image.Research and interviews for this report suggest a different version of reality, one that thefollowing pages seek to convey.<strong>11</strong>


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE<strong>Philanthropic</strong>planning wascomplicated by theproliferation of newcharities created toaddress 9/<strong>11</strong> reliefand recovery. . . .Normally, foundations spend months studying problems before settling on a programstrategy. In the wake of 9/<strong>11</strong> they felt the need to respond quickly, so that victims and theirfamilies could know what help was available. Fundamental questions of philanthropicpurpose, efficacy, fairness, accountability to donors, and efficiency needed to beaddressed. Is the main purpose of philanthropy in the wake of such an unprecedenteddisaster to provide cash gifts in an effort to compensate people for the lost lives andincome-earning potential of loved ones? Is money the most effective form of assistance?What are the criteria for who gets how much? Should survivor families be supported intheir customary standard of living, or should all families receive equal amounts? Whatportion of donations should be earmarked to respond to problems that would only laterbecome apparent, such as financial need after expiration of health insurance andunemployment benefits and treatment for post traumatic stress syndrome? How couldcharities prevent fraud in the distribution of funds and services without creatingburdensome red tape and delays? Overlaying all these questions was uncertainty aboutwhat and how much would be provided by federal and state government, when, and forwhich groups of victims.<strong>Philanthropic</strong> planning was complicated by the proliferation of new charities created toaddress 9/<strong>11</strong> relief and recovery, many of which had inexperienced leadership and vaguelydefined plans. New victim relief funds, such as those established by firms that lost largenumbers of employees in the Twin Towers, faced the problem of how to make theirpayments in compliance with long-standing federal law governing tax-exempt entitiesrequiring that these payments be made to individuals only upon a determination offinancial need. Many 9/<strong>11</strong> victims did not qualify under this standard. To be able toaccomplish their purpose of providing financial help to the surviving families, organizersof victim relief funds, including fire and police unions, persuaded Congress to pass theVictims of Terrorism Tax Relief Act of 2001, which included a special one-time exemptionfrom this rule for payments to victims of terrorist and anthrax attacks occurring between<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> and December 31.Congress added a new pool of resources by enacting an open-ended program of financialbenefits, the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Victim Compensation Fund, which provided compensationto families of persons killed or physically injured as a result of the attacks and who agreedto waive their right to bring lawsuits against the airlines or any other public or privateentity. 1 Awards from the Fund would ultimately reach a total of about $5 billion, forapproximately 3,200 eligible claimants, including nationals of sixty-one different countries.<strong>The</strong> $5 billion sum is about twice as much as the total philanthropic amount donated forall 9/<strong>11</strong>-related purposes.1 <strong>The</strong> fund was established by Title IV of the Air Transportation Safety and System StabilizationAct of 2001, commonly referred to as the airlines bailout bill. In the view of some, creation of the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Victim Compensation Fund may have been motivated as much by a desire toprotect the carriers from potentially ruinous lawsuits as it was by humanitarian concerns.12


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITY<strong>Foundation</strong> information and networking organizations activated mechanisms throughwhich grantmakers could learn what was being done and planned by others. <strong>The</strong><strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, the nation’s leading source of information about foundations, begancollecting detailed information about the philanthropic response and posted the data on itsWeb site. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong> also maintained an updated online chronological log ofkey 9/<strong>11</strong>-related events and spotlighted the philanthropic response to 9/<strong>11</strong> at its 45thanniversary meeting on November 12.<strong>The</strong> Carnegie Corporation of New York convened a meeting <strong>September</strong> 28 that wasattended by leaders and other representatives of over fifty corporations, foundations, andgovernment agencies to encourage the sharing of information on the philanthropicresponse. <strong>The</strong> New York Regional Association of Grantmakers, a nonprofit membershiporganization, hosted a meeting October 5 at the Ford <strong>Foundation</strong> for the exchange ofinformation and published, in early 2002, the first comprehensive report on special relieffunds established to respond to 9/<strong>11</strong>. Ford <strong>Foundation</strong> president Susan V. Berresfordorganized an informal group of her counterparts in about fifteen large independentfoundations to keep each other informed of their plans and grant commitments. Thisprocess began with informal consultations and then an October 1 conference call, afterwhich the foundation executives updated each other through regular e-mails consolidatedand distributed through Thanksgiving by Berresford’s office.<strong>The</strong> improvisedresponses thathelped thousands ofpeople also exposedsignificant flaws inour public-privateapproach todisaster relief.Citigroup <strong>Foundation</strong> president Charles Raymond initiated a series of meetings with othergroups raising funds for scholarship programs that led to formation of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thScholarship Alliance, a consortium of philanthropies that created a $100 million fundadministered by the Citizens’ Scholarship <strong>Foundation</strong> of America. Informal affinitygroups, such as a group of funders for children’s causes that met at the Hasbro Children’s<strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>September</strong> 25, also began conferring. Corporate foundations set up an e-mailcommunication network through the Conference Board, a worldwide nonprofit businessorganization. <strong>The</strong> Better Business Bureau Serving Metropolitan New York posted on itsWeb site information on charities that were offering 9/<strong>11</strong> aid, and the New York StateAttorney General and the Nonprofit Coordinating Committee of New York did the same.<strong>The</strong> improvised responses that helped thousands of people also exposed significant flawsin our public-private approach to disaster relief. Public and voluntary agencies movedquickly to establish one-stop disaster assistance centers with personnel from key agencies.However, they were slow to develop common intake forms and procedures as well ascoordinated case management, which could have saved time and maximized assistance forgrief-stricken and traumatized individuals. <strong>The</strong> experience of the 9/<strong>11</strong> United ServicesGroup, described later in this report, offers useful lessons in coordinating the efforts ofdifferent agencies and developing a unified case management system for victims.13


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEPRECEDENTS AND THE ROLE OF FEMA...by narrowlyinterpreting the law,FEMA officials failed totake into account thewidespread economicimpacts . . .Not since the San Francisco earthquake of 1906 had a catastrophic event in this countryproduced such a widespread impact on the densely populated economic and social fabricof a city. <strong>The</strong>re were inevitable comparisons with the 1995 bombing of the Alfred P.Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, which claimed 168 victims. However, as aFEMA official put it, “That was child’s play compared to the World Trade <strong>Center</strong>.”<strong>The</strong>re was a difference not only in the death toll, but also the relative ease with whichOklahoma City victims could be confirmed dead. And there was almost no economicripple impact from the Murrah Building bombing.That building was in a low-density area,and the five nearby buildings that were destroyed all housed branch offices of large organizationsthat could readily find new locations for their employees. No uniformed officersdied trying to rescue people in Oklahoma City.In Oklahoma City, it was relatively simple to gather the approximately 25 to 30 importantpublic and private philanthropic agencies around one table for joint decision-making. InNew York City — whose foreign-born population alone exceeds Oklahoma City’s totalpopulation by a factor of 5.7 to 1 — there are an estimated 10,000 to 20,000 nonprofithuman service organizations that have carved out their own niches defined by servicesoffered, geographic area, and ethnic client base. Many of these agencies have substantialcontracts with city and state government to deliver a wide range of health and socialwelfare services to vulnerable groups and individuals.Nor was FEMA’s experience from other disasters very helpful. In numerous meetings andother communications with officials of philanthropic organizations in New York City,FEMA officials repeatedly said that the “historical role for private funds is in long-termrecovery, as responsibility for recovery moves from government to the community.” Butthis was an over-simplification and implied that FEMA, the major source of federalgovernment disaster aid, would provide immediate assistance to meet human needs.YetFEMA programs such as mortgage and rental assistance soon became bogged down inconfusion and delays. In addition, by narrowly interpreting the law, FEMA officials failedto take into account the widespread economic — as opposed to immediate physical —impacts of the attacks. Philanthropy was able to move quickly to meet the mounting needs.In the first six months after the attacks, FEMA distributed only about $81 million throughits entire individual and family assistance programs in New York City, and, with rareexceptions, undocumented workers were not eligible.2 Total FEMA financial aid covering all purposes for the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> disaster in this sixmonthperiod was $923 million, and all except the $81 million for individual and family assistancewas allocated for public infrastructure repairs, debris removal, and reimbursement of certain NewYork City and State expenses such as environmental remediation, overtime payments, liabilityinsurance for contractors working on the clean-up, and lump-sum payments made to beneficiariesof New York City firefighters who died in responding to the attack.14


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITYFEMA’s $81 million paid for temporary housing, mortgage and rental assistance,individual and family grants, disaster unemployment insurance, victim compensation,crisis counseling, and disaster food stamps. 2 In May, FEMA made a $132 million grant toNew York State’s Project Liberty for crisis counseling “to help people understand theircurrent situation ...[and] move forward with their lives.”Much greater amounts had been made available by FEMA for individual and familyassistance in the wake of other recent calamities: $1.4 billion for the Northridge,California, earthquakes in 1994 and $1 billion for Hurricane George in Puerto Rico in1998. Curtis Carleton, chief of FEMA’s community and family services branch, explainedthat the wide disparity was rooted in FEMA’s mission and capacities. “Most disasters,” hesaid in an interview, “are floods and don’t result in the loss of jobs. FEMA is geared toreimburse people for things like homes and automobiles that are swept away. <strong>The</strong>mortgage and rental assistance program is little used, because in a typical flood there areno businesses affected and therefore no income interruption.” In New York City, bycontrast, the impacts were much more widespread and diverse, and a philanthropicresponse was needed to help meet these challenges.“FEMA is geared toreimburse people forthings like homes andautomobiles that areswept away.”After months of criticism and Congressional pressure, during which FEMA justified itslow rate of expenditures in part by saying that private philanthropy had acted toogenerously and too quickly, on June 28, 2002, FEMA announced a liberalization of itsmortgage and rental assistance program guidelines, to help lawful U.S. residents whosuffered at least a 25 percent income loss as a result of the attack avoid eviction fromtheir dwellings. Residents who lived or worked anywhere in Manhattan and sufferedfinancially “may be eligible,” the carefully worded FEMA press release said. (UnderFEMA guidelines up to that point, applicants for mortgage and rental assistance neededto meet the more stringent test of demonstrating that their income loss was the “directresult” of the attack.)<strong>The</strong> June 28 announcement also said that people whose residence or place of business wasnot located in Manhattan, but who had “economically dependent relationships with firmsin Manhattan, and consequently suffered financially, may be eligible.” By July 17, FEMAreported that it had approved 5,147 applications out of <strong>11</strong>,202 that were submitted, for atotal of about $32 million in mortgage and rental assistance payments.In March, Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-NY) announced that the total FEMAcommitment for the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> disaster would ultimately reach nearly $10billion, most of which would be for similar purposes as the initial $923 million. <strong>The</strong> totalfederal commitment for New York City’s recovery is estimated ultimately to reach a totalof $25 billion, with the non-FEMA $15 billion allocated principally for various lowerManhattan business and residential incentives and rebuilding mass transit, roads, andtelecommunications and energy infrastructure. This sum dwarfs the estimated $2 billionto $2.5 billion total made available through all philanthropic resources for all locationsthat suffered 9/<strong>11</strong> losses.15


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEVICTIM COMPENSATION FUNDSDespite theirunmatched largesse,all of the victimcompensationfunds drew bittercriticism. . . .By far the largest category of both government and philanthropic aid for individuals andfamilies was the unprecedented programs for victim compensation. <strong>The</strong>se providedpayments, without regard to financial need, to the families of the approximately 3,200people who died or were severely injured. About $5 billion of a total $6.8 billion in federalhumanitarian aid was for this purpose, through the Victim Compensation Fund.Beneficiaries were required to waive their right to sue the airlines, the Port Authority ofNew York and New Jersey, the City of New York, or any other domestic entity.Charities gave upwards of $800 million to compensate many of the same 3,200 families,representing about 30 percent of all philanthropic distributions. To facilitate payment,Congress did away with the long-standing criterion of financial need for receipt ofcharitable donations. This created an impression that one of the purposes of philanthropyis to compensate for lost life, representing a departure from traditional expectations aboutthe role of the sector.Despite their unmatched largesse, all of the victim compensation funds drew bittercriticism and many were sued by beneficiaries, who complained that the formulas wereflawed in one respect or another, most often because of alleged under-payments. Althoughsome beneficiaries argued that the awards were too low, others — such as victims of otherterrorist attacks and low-wage workers — questioned why some payments were so high.PUBLIC AND PRIVATE FUNDING FOR OTHER NEEDSApart from the federal Victim Compensation Fund, government and philanthropyprovided roughly equal amounts — approximately $1.8 billion each — for individual,family, community, and economic needs. However, the allocations for program areasdiffered markedly. About 60 percent of the government’s $1.8 billion was in the form ofgrants and low-interest loans for small businesses in Lower Manhattan and Chinatown,many of which employed large numbers of low-wage workers. Outside of victimcompensation payments, the majority of philanthropy’s $1.8 billion went to humanservices programs and needs-based financial assistance.FEMA’s individual assistance programs have been criticized by the public, the media andCongressional representatives. FEMA’s eligibility requirements for its mortgage and rentalassistance program were so restrictive that Congress enacted special legislation liberalizingthe rules. Nevertheless, by extending the application deadlines several times, FEMAdistributed about $87.7 million by December 26, 2002, about a month before the deadline;this was more than four times the amount it awarded in all previous disasters combined.FEMA’s individual and family grants program, administered by the New York StateDepartment of Labor, became bogged down by its paper-based application process,prompting FEMA to dispatch a team of 150 employees to help unravel the problems.Moreover, a major segment of those in need, undocumented immigrants and most of thosewho arrived after August 1996, were not eligible for these and other government benefits,with the significant exception of the Victim Compensation Fund.16


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITYTo its credit, as of late December 2002, FEMA had awarded some $165 million to thestate for its Project Liberty, a short-term, outreach-based crisis counseling program thatoperates through some sixty-eight public and private agencies at over one hundredlocations.This grant amount is almost as large as the total awarded in all previous disasterscombined. However, only about $65 million of this had actually been obligated as of theend of 2002, and limitations on longer term therapy prompted philanthropic sources toprovide approximately $50 million to meet this need.<strong>The</strong> small business assistance programs funded with special Congressional appropriationsand administered by Empire State Development, a quasi-independent state agency, werecriticized for disbursing payments too slowly and for failing to cover losses adequately.Loans from another source, the U.S. Small Business Administration, require collateral,which presented difficulties for business owners who lost their business and had to securea business loan with their home. Some observers have questioned the use of federalcommunity development block grant funds, intended to aid low- to moderate-incomeneighborhoods and citizens, to induce large companies and affluent residential tenants toremain in or relocate to lower Manhattan.<strong>The</strong> small businessassistance programs...were criticized fordisbursing paymentstoo slowly and forfailing to cover lossesadequately.MEETING HEALTH NEEDSIn an example of unusual government flexibility to meet an emergency, New York City’sHuman Resources Administration implemented a four-month Disaster Relief MedicaidProgram with liberalized income limits, no asset test, and a greatly simplified application.This approach succeeded in enrolling about 350,000 people, about ten times as many asnormally enroll in a comparable time period. <strong>The</strong> program received significant philanthropicsupport, from the Robert Wood Johnson <strong>Foundation</strong>, the United Hospital Fund ofNew York, and the Kaiser Family <strong>Foundation</strong>.<strong>The</strong> Environmental Protection Agency released studies in late 2002 that were generallyreassuring about air quality. However, in a special federally funded program, communityand occupational clinicians screening on-site rescue workers found high incidences ofrespiratory problems and other lung-related complaints. In response to intense pressurefrom residents and elected officials, the EPA announced in May 2002 that it would, for thefirst time ever in a disaster, pay for indoor clean-up, testing, and environmentalremediation for any resident south of Canal Street who requested it. EPA estimated therewere 20,000 to 30,000 eligible residences.In another effort to respond to public concerns outside the boundaries of statutorydisaster relief programs, the New York City and federal government cooperated onestablishing a registry that will track the health status of some 100,000 to 200,000 peoplewho lived or worked near the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> site between <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001, andJune 30, 2002, in an attempt to measure short- and long-term health effects.17


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSELARGE INDEPENDENT FOUNDATIONS<strong>The</strong> first threeof Mellon’s grantsfrom its fund were tointermediary“re-granting”organizations thatin turn leveragedthe Mellon dollars. . . .<strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong> reported in February, 2002, that nineteen large independent(non-corporate related) foundations had each donated $1 million or more for 9/<strong>11</strong>purposes, amounting to a total of about $166 million. This represented 78 percent of atotal of about $212 million in donations by 215 independent foundations for whichinformation was available. <strong>The</strong> $166 million donated by the nineteen large foundationsamounted to about 3.7 percent of their aggregate annual giving in the most recent year.Two of the nineteen large foundation donors, the Andrew W. Mellon <strong>Foundation</strong> and theLilly Endowment, contributed just under half of the $166 million, with Mellon making thelargest pledge, $50 million, and Lilly giving $30 million. All of the ten large foundationsinterviewed for this report said that giving for 9/<strong>11</strong> did not cause any diminution in theirregular giving programs and commitments.<strong>The</strong> section below describes giving by the 13 private foundations that donated $3 millionor more.Andrew W. Mellon <strong>Foundation</strong>Headquartered in New York, Mellon, which has a long-standing record of support formuseums, research libraries, and the performing arts, established a $50 million fund toassist large and small New York City cultural and performing arts organizations that wereaffected in such ways as cancelled performances, reduced tourism, cancelled fundraisingevents, and, in some cases, physical damage. <strong>The</strong> Mellon <strong>Foundation</strong> also includedassistance for a new group of organizations — parks and branch libraries — because, as T.Dennis Sullivan, special advisor to Mellon president William G. Bowen, explained in aninterview, “<strong>The</strong>se were places where people went for solace or renewal in the aftermath ofthe attack.”In arriving at the $50 million figure, Mellon took into account foundations’ obligationsunder federal law to pay out an amount equal to at least five percent of their assetsannually. Mellon needed to increase its spending by approximately $18 million in 2001 tomeet this federal requirement, and the staff and trustees saw the 9/<strong>11</strong> response as anopportunity to fulfill this obligation; another $32 million was added to establish the fund.<strong>The</strong> $50 million expenditure represented about one quarter of Mellon’s usual annualgiving level of $175–$200 million.<strong>The</strong> first three of Mellon’s approximately <strong>11</strong>9 grants from its fund were to intermediary“re-granting” organizations that in turn leveraged the Mellon dollars with other grantsand, with the assistance of panels including outside reviewers, made awards to smallresident theatres, dance companies, individual artists, and music groups. Mellon’s directawards to larger institutions were announced in three groups: January 30, March 12, andMay 21, 2002. In a departure from traditional philanthropic and government grantmakingfor the Arts, Mellon-funded awards were based not on artistic merit, but rather on a dollars18


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITYand cents accounting of actual losses. <strong>The</strong> program officer overseeing the fund, CatherineWichterman, believes that the Mellon grants made up for about half of the documentedaggregate losses of the organizations that applied for assistance.Lilly EndowmentBased in Indianapolis, Lilly, the nation’s second largest philanthropy in terms of assets(after the Bill & Melinda Gates <strong>Foundation</strong>), and the second-largest donor for 9/<strong>11</strong>-relatedpurposes, has traditionally provided support for emergencies and had little difficulty indeciding on its grant strategy. On <strong>September</strong> 12 the Endowment allotted $10 million eachto three of its long-standing grantees: the American Red Cross, Salvation Army, and (forthe <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund) the United Way of America. Because the Endowment did not atthe time maintain a Web site or issue press releases on these grants, the <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>learned of the awards from the grantees. As Thomas Lofton, chairman of the Endowmentfor eleven years, explained in an interview, “We are more interested in doing our work thanin telling the world about it.” <strong>The</strong> Endowment made a $4.4 million grant to the SalvationArmy to support training of its staff and volunteers in responding more effectively tofuture disasters, both natural and terrorist.Ford, one of thenation’s largestprivate foundations inassets, also looked totrusted organizationsto become recipientsof its 9/<strong>11</strong> grants.Ford <strong>Foundation</strong>Ford, one of the nation’s largest private foundation in assets, also looked to trusted organizationsto become recipients of its 9/<strong>11</strong> grants. This not only increased Ford’s confidencethat its funds would be used well, but also shortened the “due diligence” process of understandingthe operations and capacities of a prospective grant recipient. Ford <strong>Foundation</strong>president Berresford took special care on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> and in the following weeks, asFord worked out its response, to involve her staff and give them the sense that they weremaking not only a professional but also a personal contribution to relief and recovery.Thus, when the grant award letters were sent out, they were accompanied by sheetscontaining the signatures of all the foundation’s staff members, who had assembled forsigning ceremonies at all of the foundation’s worldwide locations.<strong>The</strong> Fund for the City of New York, a nonprofit organization that had been establishedwith a grant from the Ford <strong>Foundation</strong> in 1968, received $1 million from Ford to augmentits fund for low-cost cash-flow loans to nonprofit organizations providing critical serviceswhose operations or finances were disrupted by the attack. FCNY leveraged Ford’s grantwith new grants and loans totaling $5.5 million from other donors, and by May had made64 loans totaling $4,670,500 to 9/<strong>11</strong>-affected nonprofits. One recipient, the Coalition forHispanic Family Services, administers a foster care program for over 200 children, undercontract with the city Administration for Children’s Services. <strong>The</strong> ACS offices, a fewblocks from ground zero, were closed for two weeks, slowing payments to the coalition andother nonprofit organizations. As a result, the coalition was at risk of not being able tomake its payments to foster families, thus jeopardizing the children’s basic needs. FCNYstepped in with a $120,000 cash-flow loan to avert this.19


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE<strong>The</strong> New York Postand Times reportedthat the anonymousdonor had beenmayor-elect MichaelBloomberg.<strong>The</strong> Nonprofit Finance Fund, a nonprofit community development financial institutionestablished in 1980, was given $1 million for financial and technical assistance to nonprofitorganizations that suffered financial and physical damage. NFF leveraged Ford’s grantwith another $6.4 million in grants from numerous groups and the resulting NonprofitRecovery Fund became a source of grants to nonprofit and public organizations thatexperienced a business loss due to physical damage, extraordinary expenses in recoveringfrom 9/<strong>11</strong>, and interruptions of earned and contributed income. By mid-June, 2002, NFFhad made 129 such grants totaling nearly $7.2 million. <strong>The</strong> largest grant, $509,000, wasawarded to the Borough of Manhattan Community College, which occupies severallocations between Chambers Street and North Moore Street, just to the north of groundzero, and suffered the loss of a building housing over forty classrooms.Other large Ford grants included $5 million for the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, to which thefoundation also loaned several of its grantmaking and administrative staff persons; $1.2million for the Washington Regional Association of Grantmakers to assist nonprofit organizationshandling an increased need for counseling and other support for persons affected bythe attack on the Pentagon; $1 million for WNYC-New York City public radio to helpreplace its destroyed FM transmitter; $1 million for the Legal Aid Society for services tolow-income people; $300,000 for a media-training program for Ford grantees in the humanrights and international cooperation field to help them articulate, on television and in otherforums, why respect for American constitutional protections, such as the right to a publictrial, are not inconsistent with national security; and $1 million to Seedco for a smallbusiness and workforce retention program downtown and in Chinatown.Carnegie Corporation of New YorkOn <strong>September</strong> 17, this Manhattan-based foundation announced a $10 million pledge for9/<strong>11</strong> relief efforts, saying it “expects to support institutions and organizations that offerassistance to or work in the area of educational and social needs.” In December, before ithad acted on this pledge, Carnegie received a $10 million anonymous gift for distributionto “small- and medium-sized arts and cultural organizations in New York City that arestruggling in the aftermath” of 9/<strong>11</strong>. (In April, 2002, the New York Post and Times reportedthat the anonymous donor had been mayor-elect Michael Bloomberg.) Carnegie’s awardsto 137 institutions from this gift were announced on February 13, 2002.On March 2, 2002, Carnegie announced the first grants under its original $10 millionpledge, by then termed a three-year commitment by Carnegie president VartanGregorian, for 9/<strong>11</strong> relief efforts: $1.85 million to assist public schools in lowerManhattan “in honor of the teachers who played such a critical role in the wake of theattack. ...”Of the $1.85 million, $800,000 was for model libraries in two elementaryschools, a use of funds evocative of the philanthropy of founder Andrew Carnegie acentury earlier. On March 4, Carnegie’s second installment of $1.6 million was awarded,to support public information on 9/<strong>11</strong>-related events, to WNYC-public radio and WNETpublictelevision in New York City, National Public Radio, Boston’s WBUR-public radio,and PBS’ NewsHour with Jim Lehrer.20


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITYJohn D. and Catherine T. MacArthur <strong>Foundation</strong><strong>The</strong> MacArthur <strong>Foundation</strong> stayed informed about the evolving philanthropic responsethrough the Ford <strong>Foundation</strong>-coordinated e-mail updates and concluded that there wassubstantial and “chaotic” funding for immediate relief and rehabilitation, and decided,according to president Jonathan Fanton, that its “efforts would have more impact ifdirected to other important issues” consistent with three of the foundation’s basic themes:providing analysis and information; strengthening the U.S. and the world’s response toterrorism and understanding its underlying causes; and protecting civil liberties andconstitutional guarantees and promoting adherence to international law. By the time ofMacArthur’s regularly scheduled board meeting two weeks after 9/<strong>11</strong>, many of thefoundation’s grantees working in these areas had inquired about fresh support to focusnew attention on 9/<strong>11</strong>-related concerns. <strong>The</strong> board approved a $5 million allocation, anddelegated authority to Fanton and the staff to make individual grant decisions asextensions of its existing work in the three fields.[Jonathan] Fantonstressed adhering “toyour core values andgrantees and programareas you know best.”<strong>The</strong> initial $3.2 million was awarded in fourteen grants by November 12, and the $1.8million balance in fifteen grants made by January.<strong>The</strong> largest grant, for $500,000, went tothe Public Broadcasting Service’s Frontline series of documentaries on the background of9/<strong>11</strong>. Other large awards included a $400,000 grant for National Public Radio to help withthe cost of correspondents sent to cover the war in Afghanistan, and $250,000 for HumanRights Watch “in support of efforts to monitor refugee flows and the effects of hostilitieson civilian populations in sensitive areas abroad.”In an interview, Fanton noted that the foundation took care to balance grants that couldresult in criticism of U.S. policy, such as Human Rights Watch or Physicians for HumanRights, with grants to organizations that “take terrorism seriously,” such as the MontereyInstitute, which received $100,000 to assess the risk that weapons of mass destructionmight move out of “weakened states and into the hands of terrorists.” Reflecting onMacArthur’s 9/<strong>11</strong> grant experience at a Council on <strong>Foundation</strong>s meeting April 30, 2002,Fanton said that his Chicago-based organization’s response would “no doubt” have beendifferent if that city’s Sears Tower had been attacked. He also stressed to his fellowfoundation executives the grantmaking principle of adhering “to your core values andgrantees and program areas you know best,” and challenged his audience by saying “donot be afraid to be countercyclical — even if it is unpopular — look for the unfilled niche.”Charles Stewart Mott <strong>Foundation</strong><strong>The</strong> regular fall board meeting of the Mott <strong>Foundation</strong> was conducted on <strong>September</strong> 12by conference call. Staff were invited to join the meeting, which opened with prayers andreadings from the Bible. <strong>The</strong> president of the foundation, William S. White, has theauthority to approve grants, and the board supported his intention to contribute to 9/<strong>11</strong>relief efforts. One of White’s first decisions was to allocate $1 million to the New York21


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSECommunity Trust for the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund. “We can’t figure out what New York Cityneeds from out here,” White said in an interview, “ so I just told Lorie [Slutsky] she coulduse our grant for whatever she felt was necessary.”[Steven] Schroederrecalled,“we saw thegreat outpouring offunds for thesepurposes . . . weweren’t as needed aswe thought.”<strong>The</strong>re are large concentrations of Arab-Americans in Michigan, and Mott made grants tothe American Arab Heritage Council in Flint, for programs “to promote better understandingand tolerance toward Flint area Arab Americans and Muslims,” and to the ArabCommunity <strong>Center</strong> for Economic and Social Services in Dearborn, “to help non-Arabsand non-Muslims better understand the Arab heritage, Middle Eastern culture and pointof view, and Islam.” Mott also made four grants totaling $900,000 to local charities, suchas the United Way and the Red Cross, to compensate them for donations they would havereceived but that were diverted to 9/<strong>11</strong> relief.White also registered his organization’s support for national economic recovery byinstructing the foundation’s fund managers to place only “buy” orders when the New YorkStock Exchange reopened <strong>September</strong> 17.Robert Wood Johnson <strong>Foundation</strong>Based in Princeton, New Jersey, about fifty miles south of ground zero, RWJF is thenation’s largest foundation devoted to health care. In its early senior managementdiscussions about a response to the attacks, according to the foundation’s president at thetime, Steven A. Schroeder, M.D., vice president Paul Jellinek urged a $100 millioncommitment as a “statement.” In a subsequent interview, Jellinek said that large portionsof such a pledge would have been spent on health insurance benefits and to shore up thefinancial position of nonprofit health care providers, but this did not materialize.RWJF’s initial announcement of its $5 million commitment, <strong>September</strong> 21, spoke ofmeeting the “immediate needs of the victims, their families, and the affected communities”in coordination with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund and other groups. Some months later,Schroeder recalled, “we saw the great outpouring of funds for these purposes and realizedwe weren’t as needed as we thought.”To address the needs of low-asset individuals without health insurance after the attacks, thefederal, state, and city governments created a temporary Disaster Relief Medicaid programthat provided four months of benefits. <strong>The</strong>re was a simplified application process with noquestions asked about assets or immigration status and no documentation requirements.However, the city’s Human Resources Administration (HRA) possessed only limitedcapacity to implement the program quickly, and speed was the point of this emergencyplan.To help move the effort forward, RWJF gave the United Hospital Fund of New York a$750,000 grant to augment HRA’s capacities for community education, outreach, andenrollment, an effort that succeeded in enrolling 70,000 new recipients. (This grant wasnot part of the foundation’s $5 million commitment because it was considered to be a partof RWJF’s existing program of enhancing access to the health care system for low-assetpeople.) <strong>The</strong> foundation also encouraged some of its existing grantees to direct attention to22


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITY9/<strong>11</strong>-related efforts, such as Finding Our Way, a program offering a “short course on deathand dying in America today,” and Faith in Action, a public education and communityaction program to stimulate interfaith volunteer coalitions.Rockefeller <strong>Foundation</strong><strong>The</strong> New York-based Rockefeller <strong>Foundation</strong>’s areas of 9/<strong>11</strong> assistance were extensions ofits pre-existing programs to assist low-wage workers, especially immigrants; to strengthenthe capacity of community-based organizations in immigrant communities to help familiesand individuals applying for benefits; and to protect civil liberties. Meetings at thefoundation with immigrant advocacy organizations, such as the New York ImmigrationCoalition, and labor unions, along with other funders, held in late <strong>September</strong>-earlyOctober, helped sharpen Rockefeller’s identification of needs.Two of the foundation’s largest grants under its $5 million 9/<strong>11</strong> commitment were$500,000 to the New York <strong>Foundation</strong>, to support its Immigrant Access Project in whichRockefeller funds were re-granted to more than twenty community-based ethnic organizations,and $500,000 to the Service Employees International Union to support a“multi-language outreach and information dissemination campaign” to help affected lowwageand immigrant workers to receive benefits.Assistance for theprotection of civilrights in Arab, SouthAsian, and Muslimcommunities wasprovided with the help ofRockefeller grants . . . .Assistance for the protection of civil rights in Arab, South Asian, and Muslim communitieswas provided with the help of such Rockefeller grants as those awarded to the IslamicCircle of North America, the Arab-American Family Support <strong>Center</strong>, and Asian AmericanLegal Defense and Education Fund. <strong>The</strong> Rockefeller <strong>Foundation</strong> also made a $350,000grant to the New York <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Arts to support its program of expertise andadvocacy for arts organizations and artists affected by 9/<strong>11</strong>, and a $60,000 grant to helpsupport the provision of equipment for rescue workers at the site.Atlantic PhilanthropiesThis foundation, with offices in several countries and in New York City, made a $10million grant to the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund on <strong>September</strong> 16. City Meals on Wheelsreceived $50,000 <strong>September</strong> 19, and another $100,000 on November 8.Starr <strong>Foundation</strong><strong>The</strong> Starr <strong>Foundation</strong> in lower Manhattan, one of the nation’s largest philanthropies, hadissued only one press release in its 47-year history prior to 9/<strong>11</strong>, announcing theappointment of its president, Florence A. Davis. <strong>The</strong> second release was on Starr’s initial$10 million commitment to 9/<strong>11</strong> relief. According to Ms. Davis in an interview, the 9/<strong>11</strong>release was “a way of showing that the city could come back and needed help.” Of the first$10 million pledge, $8 million was donated to the New York Police and Fire Widows’ andChildren’s Benefit Fund, and the Police <strong>Foundation</strong> received $2 million for its mentalhealth initiatives for police officers and their families. A gift of $250,000 was made to NYUDowntown Hospital “on the strength of an anguished phone call and no written proposal,23


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEbecause they had incurred significant unreimbursable expenses on and soon after 9/<strong>11</strong>,”Ms. Davis wrote in an e-mail. Near the end of 2001, the Starr <strong>Foundation</strong> gave“somewhere in the vicinity of $5 million” to emergency food providers and other humanneeds organizations whose services had been stretched beyond their resources inresponding to 9/<strong>11</strong>-related problems.In deciding on itsresponse to 9/<strong>11</strong> inNew York, the [Casey]<strong>Foundation</strong> looked to“people who had arelationship to us whowe knew could reachneedy families.”John S. and James L. Knight <strong>Foundation</strong>This Miami-based foundation initially committed $5 million over and above its expectedannual grant level, and in December increased the amount to $10 million, for “secondaryvictims” of the attacks in the twenty-six communities participating in the Knight<strong>Foundation</strong>’s ongoing Community Partners Program, most of which are served by aKnight-Ridder newspaper. <strong>The</strong>re were some 246 awards, ranging in size from $10,000 to$150,000, related to 9/<strong>11</strong>. One grant strengthened the ability of the Hunter Health Clinic,in Wichita, Kansas, to care for the increased number of patients without health insurancewho had been laid off in the aircraft industry because of reduced travel after 9/<strong>11</strong>. SecondHarvest in San Jose, California, received a grant to help meet the increased demand forfree food resulting from the downturn in the technology sector.Annie E. Casey <strong>Foundation</strong>Based in Baltimore and dedicated to helping disadvantaged children and families, theCasey <strong>Foundation</strong> has a New York City office that played a key advisory role in strengtheningthe city’s Administration for Children’s Services. In deciding on its response to 9/<strong>11</strong>in New York, the foundation looked to “people who had a relationship to us who we knewcould reach needy families,” Steve Cohen, senior associate in charge of the New York Cityoffice, said.<strong>The</strong> largest share of Casey’s $3 million commitment expended as of July, 2002,$1.18 million, was given to New Yorkers for Children (NYFC), a nonprofit organizationcreated to work closely with ACS.NYFC leveraged Casey’s grant with a $1 million grant from the Freddie Mac <strong>Foundation</strong>and a $250,000 donation from the With Arms Wide Open <strong>Foundation</strong>, created by the rockband Creed. With these funds, NYFC set up the New York City Family Fund to makecompetitive grants to assist community-based organizations (CBOs) provide support forchildren and families affected by the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> attack. In July, 2002, the fundmade its first grants, to twenty-one CBOs for services and advocacy for a broad group ofvictims throughout the city such as those who lost their jobs and for “community-wideconvening and healing” activities.24


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITYLumina <strong>Foundation</strong> for EducationHeadquartered in Indianapolis, Lumina <strong>Foundation</strong> for Education initiated the Families ofFreedom Scholarship Fund with a $3 million pledge to the Citizens’ Scholarship<strong>Foundation</strong> of America in St. Peter, Minnesota. As of July, 2002, the fund had nearlyreached its goal of $100 million to provide post-secondary scholarships for children of thepeople who were killed or seriously injured in New York, Pennsylvania, and at the Pentagon.CORPORATIONSAccording to the <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>’s February 2002 report, 555 corporations, corporatefoundations, and business associations pledged or donated $641.8 million, representingabout 43 percent of total giving; 47 corporations gave $5 million or more. Several firmsthat lost large numbers of employees in the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> attack established specialnew tax-exempt funds to provide for the needs of the survivors. Other corporations madedonations from their established foundations or corporate giving programs.Several firms thatlost large numbers ofemployees in the WorldTrade <strong>Center</strong> attackestablished special newtax-exempt funds. . . .Nineteen percent of the corporate and corporate foundation pledges went to theircorporate relief funds, and 43 percent was designated for large relief funds such as theAmerican Red Cross, <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, and the three major uniformed rescueworkers funds. Some examples of corporate giving follow.Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc.This large financial services firm created the tax-exempt MMC Victims Relief Fund, towhich it donated $20 million, and clients and friends contributed an additional $4 million.By June about $22 million of this had been distributed tax-free to the families of the 295deceased employees through a formula based on number of children, years of service inthe firm, and special needs, with a minimum payment of $25,000 per family. <strong>The</strong>remaining approximately $2 million was devoted to maintenance of health care coveragefor three years. Survivor families also received — in addition to regular company benefitssuch as life insurance and pension plan distributions — taxable salary continuationthrough December and a taxable supplemental death benefit equal to 75 percent of the2000 bonus.Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, Inc.Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, Inc. (KBW), an employee-owned securities broker/dealer andinvestment bank specializing in the financial services sector, occupied offices on the 88thand 89th floors of the South Tower. KBW’s co-chairman and co-CEO, John Duffy, wasdriving on the West Side Highway to his office the morning of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> when he sawthe attack, in which his son, his co-chairman/co-CEO, and 65 other fellow employees died.KBW established a tax-exempt charitable fund that raised about $<strong>11</strong> million, includingabout $5 million from donated trading commissions on October 29-30. At year-end, KBWmade initial payments from the fund of $5,000 for each decedent, plus $5,000 if they weremarried, and $5,000 for each child. Salary continuation through the end of 2001 and25


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEhealth insurance premiums, estimated at about $2 million over the next five years, are to bepaid out of company profits 3 , and the families received cash payments for the value of theirdeceased’s equity share of the firm.<strong>The</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>Scholarship Alliancedeveloped a centralregistry of eligiblechildren, a commonapplication form,and unifiedadministration.KBW decided that these payments, plus cash that was available through the Red Cross,Robin Hood Relief Fund, Safe Horizon, and other sources, were ample to meet immediateneeds and will devote the bulk of the fund to long-term assistance for KBW families: about$4.8 million was set aside to finance college scholarships for the victims’ children, and aconsulting firm, the Conservation Company (now called the TCC Group), was engaged tosurvey the families and make recommendations for how the fund can best meet their needsover time.Citigroup <strong>Foundation</strong><strong>The</strong> Citigroup <strong>Foundation</strong> announced on <strong>September</strong> 14 creation of the Citigroup ReliefFund to raise funds for post-secondary scholarships for the children of victims, andopened a Web site for donations on <strong>September</strong> 20. <strong>The</strong> fund was also advertised onCitigroup’s credit card statements.<strong>The</strong> Citigroup <strong>Foundation</strong> initiated the fund with a $15million pledge over and above its usual annual giving level of about $75 million, and in thefirst six months some 8,000 donors had contributed about $5.2 million, including $67,000from the citizens and volunteer fire department of Bozeman, Montana.Citigroup <strong>Foundation</strong> president Charles V. Raymond worked with other organizationsraising post-secondary scholarship funds to form the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> Scholarship Alliance,which developed a central registry of eligible children, a common application form, andunified administration through the forty-year old Citizens’ Scholarship <strong>Foundation</strong> ofAmerica (CSFA).<strong>The</strong> Scholarship Alliance named its campaign the Families for FreedomFund, and received the endorsement of former president Bill Clinton and his 1996opponent, Bob Dole. As of early July, 2002, the fund had neared its $100 million goal withcontributions from about twenty thousand people. William C. Nelsen, CSFA president,estimated that the $100 million would meet about seventy percent of the post-secondaryeducation financial need of all 4,500-4,700 children whose parents were killed orpermanently disabled in the attacks. (Some contributors to the fund also providedscholarships for spouses or domestic partners.)New York Times Company <strong>Foundation</strong><strong>The</strong> Times Company <strong>Foundation</strong>, which raises about $8 million during the Christmasseason for its Neediest Cases Fund, announced on <strong>September</strong> 12 the establishment of acompanion 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Cases Fund, expecting to raise about $4 million. In the end,3 Another example of a company assisting surviving families directly from its profits is CantorFitzgerald Securities. According to an article in the New York Times, Cantor Fitzgerald committedto paying out 25 percent of the firm’s profits over five years to the families of those who were lost.26


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITYabout $60 million was contributed, causing the Times Company <strong>Foundation</strong> to lookbeyond its seven traditional social welfare agency recipients and create new programs,partners, and processes.In 2000, the Times Company <strong>Foundation</strong> made 351 grants, mostly in the $5,000-$10,000range. With the unexpected resources in the 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, it made sixty grants, afourth of which were for $1 million or more. Of the $60 million raised, a little over halfwent to the seven large nonprofit organizations that provide direct services to individualsand families and are the traditional beneficiaries of the Times annual Neediest Casesappeals. Grants averaging $2.5 million each went to three foundations representing theuniformed services and law enforcement agencies; $5.7 million and $5.5 million,respectively, were donated to organizations offering school support services and traumatreatment; $3.1 million went for retention of low-wage jobs; and the balance was forvarious causes including Washington, DC relief activities. As is the practice with the annualNeediest Cases appeal, all administrative costs were paid by the New York Times Companyso that 100 percent of all donations were passed through to the beneficiaries.Goldman SachsAll administrativecosts were paid by theNew York TimesCompany so that100 percent of alldonations werepassed through tothe beneficiaries.This investment firm has several downtown locations, and the building it occupies at OneLiberty Plaza was slightly damaged in the attack and could not reopen until October 24.<strong>The</strong> firm lost no employees, but forty-two of them lost a family member. To respond tothis and other 9/<strong>11</strong> relief efforts, Goldman Sachs established a relief fund and within a fewweeks employees worldwide had donated about $6 million and the firm gave $5 million. Acommittee representing Goldman Sachs’ major divisions, including staff at all levels,solicited recommendations from employees for fund distributions and met frequently todetermine allocations, under instructions from the chairman, Henry M. Paulson, Jr., to“get the money in and get it out quickly”; the bulk was distributed by the end of 2001.<strong>The</strong> largest share, $2.25 million, went to various charities supporting rescue workers’funds such as the New York Police and Fire Widows’ and Children’s Benefit Fund.Taxablegifts of $50,000 each were given to the families of the deceased relatives of Goldman Sachsemployees, and just over $2 million went to two scholarship funds for victims’ children.<strong>The</strong> approximately $5 million remaining went to some 25 organizations, including SafeHorizon, Seedco, and the union representing restaurant workers from Windows on theWorld. <strong>The</strong> Goldman Sachs <strong>Foundation</strong>, a separately incorporated entity, allocated about$2 million of its annual grantmaking of $12 million for 9/<strong>11</strong>, through grants to two organizationsconducting programs to enhance mutual understanding among young people on aglobal level.27


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEREGRANTING ORGANIZATIONSAmerican Red Cross“<strong>The</strong> Red Cross wereheroes from Day 1 toDay 21.<strong>The</strong>y weredisaster relief at itsbest.<strong>The</strong> Red Crosshelped us makedecisions we couldn’thave made withoutthem.”Lorie Slutsky of the New York Community Trust echoes the sentiments of many peopleinterviewed in saying, “<strong>The</strong> Red Cross were heroes from Day 1 to Day 21. <strong>The</strong>y weredisaster relief at its best. <strong>The</strong> Red Cross helped us make decisions we couldn’t have madewithout them.”During this initial period, the Red Cross mobilized thousands of volunteers from the tristatearea and as far away as California, who helped open 12 shelters and provide food,clothing, emergency cash, and comfort to those who were physically injured, had a lovedone missing, had been displaced from their home, had lost their job, or were simplyoverwhelmed by the enormity of the event.<strong>The</strong> Red Cross was also on the front lines, withthe Salvation Army, in providing respite centers and care for the rescue workers.<strong>The</strong> Red Cross was by far the largest beneficiary of 9/<strong>11</strong>-related donations, receivingalmost $1 billion out of a total of about $2 billion–$2.5 billion. In the first five months after9/<strong>11</strong>, the Red Cross spent $80 million on relief services, including thirteen million mealsfor disaster workers and victims, mental health services for over 200,000, and healthservices for <strong>11</strong>8,000. And by January 31, 2002, the organization had given $390 million incash assistance to families of victims, injured persons, and to those who lost their homes orjobs. (Data are for all locations affected by the attacks.)<strong>The</strong> Red Cross made special efforts to help people who were not in the mainstream ofsociety. It opened a special tent across the street from the Pier 94 Family Assistance <strong>Center</strong>to accommodate undocumented immigrants or their families who were reluctant to enterthe official site for fear of being discovered, and worked with Asociacion Tepeyac, aHispanic immigrant advocacy and social services organization, to help undocumentedworkers produce necessary verifications of employment so that they could receive RedCross and other benefits. And the Red Cross became the first national relief organizationto include gay and lesbian families for survivor benefits. 4Problems for the American Red Cross began in the first week of November, when contributionsreached nearly $550 million. <strong>The</strong> agency decided at this point that not all of thesefunds were needed for 9/<strong>11</strong> purposes, and said that about half would be redirected intoother projects and for future terrorist attacks. <strong>The</strong>re were public outcries over this, becausethe Red Cross had been soliciting donations to the ostensibly stand-alone “Liberty Fund”for 9/<strong>11</strong>, even though the fine print said that, in keeping with customary policy, someportion of the funds might be set aside for future disasters. (This policy enabled the Red4 Although the Red Cross and other private relief agencies offered aid to undocumented workers, inorder to receive dislocated worker aid the workers had to show that they had in fact beenemployed. Some firms where they worked were totally destroyed. In other cases, employers werereluctant to verify their employment, for fear of being prosecuted for illegally employing personslacking the required papers.28


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITYCross to respond immediately to the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks and when, on November 12, anAmerican Airlines plane crashed in a Queens residential neighborhood shortly after takeoff,destroying homes and killing over 250 people.)In response to the ensuing firestorm of protest that donors had been misled, the AmericanRed Cross reversed itself, and on November 14 announced in a news conference carriedlive by CNN that the entire Liberty Fund would be spent to care for the victims of the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks, their families, and the rescue workers. <strong>The</strong> CEO, Bernadine Healy,was forced to resign and there were inquiries from key members of Congress about theagency’s fundraising and distribution policies. In December, former Senate MajorityLeader George Mitchell was appointed by the Red Cross as the Independent Overseer fordistribution of the $360 million then remaining in the Liberty Fund to benefit 9/<strong>11</strong> victimsand families. 5On January 31, 2002, the Red Cross announced its plans, developed under Mitchell’sdirection, to liberalize some of its programs and create new ones as vehicles forexpenditure of the remaining funds. <strong>The</strong> Family Gift Program, which provided livingexpenses for families of the deceased or missing and persons seriously injured, regardlessof financial need, was extended from three months to a full year. For the first time ever, theRed Cross made one-time outright gifts, without a showing of need, averaging about$45,000 per family, to the estates of the deceased and to the seriously injured. For the3,300 families who were also in the Family Gift Program, this brought the average totalRed Cross benefit to about $109,000. Further funds were allocated for needs-basedassistance for displaced residents, economically affected persons, and disaster workers.And $80 million (later increased to $<strong>11</strong>4 million as funds continued to be contributed)was set aside over a three- to five-year period for services such as health, mental health,and case management and service coordination.Similar outrageat what wascharacterized as“withholding funds”and “donor deception”have attended reliefefforts going backat least to the 1906San Franciscoearthquake. . . .Outcries about 9/<strong>11</strong> relief prompted some apparently long overdue American Red Crosspolicy changes. For example, the Red Cross began releasing and posting on its Web site thequarterly funding allocations for 9/<strong>11</strong> purposes, something it had never done. For thequarter that ended April 30, 2002, $398 million had been designated, on a non-needsbasis, for victims’ families and seriously injured persons; $310 million for needs-basedfinancial assistance for displaced residents and those who lost their jobs; and $<strong>11</strong>4 millionfor long-term services. Immediate relief had cost $105 million, and $40 million wasbudgeted for “Fund Stewardship.” On June 6, 2002, the Red Cross announced changes inthe language used in advertising, to clarify its practice of pooling donations for use in a5 This was not the first time the operations of the Red Cross were the subject of highly visible publiccontroversy. Similar outrage at what was characterized as “withholding funds” and “donordeception” have attended relief efforts going back at least to the 1906 San Francisco earthquake,when complaints came from as far away as Massachusetts that money raised for San Franciscowas not spent in that city. More recently, San Francisco Mayor Art Agnos accused the Red Crossof spending only about one quarter of the approximately $52 million raised after the 1989earthquake in his city. Similar charges were made after the Red River of the North floods inMinnesota in 1997 and San Diego fires earlier in 2001.29


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEwide range of emergencies, and stated it will ask donors to designate whether their gifts arefor a specific occurrence or more general relief. <strong>The</strong> agency will also now formally telldonors when it has raised enough money to address a particular event.<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th FundTrust and United Waystaff possessed anunmatched wealth ofknowledge of the city’ssocial service deliverystructure in both thepublic and privatesectors.<strong>The</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund utilized staff of its co-sponsoring organizations, the New YorkCommunity Trust and United Way of New York City, to develop distribution policies andguidelines. <strong>The</strong> Trust manages about 1,600 charitable funds and in 2001 made about15,000 grants totaling $128 million. <strong>The</strong> United Way had raised about $139 million in itsmost recent campaign among businesses and their employees, and distributed these fundsto some 400 member agencies working in areas such as youth development, job training,childcare, and health care. Drawing on this experience, Trust and United Way staffpossessed an unmatched wealth of knowledge of the city’s social service delivery structurein both the public and private sectors. Beginning in the week of the attack and continuingfor several weeks, staff met with some 350 nonprofit social services agencies to ascertainneeds as they became known, and to assess their capacities to take on additional work inthe relief and recovery effort.<strong>The</strong> resulting guidelines, manifesting a comprehensive approach to 9/<strong>11</strong> relief andaddressing the needs of a broad group of victims, were clearly stated:• Funding will be available for “both short-term emergency needs as well as long-termneeds.”• Support will be given for the “socio-economic recovery of individuals, families, andcommunities”; for “the economic rebuilding of lower Manhattan and New York City”;and for bolstering “the capacity of nonprofits to continue to provide services.”• Eligibility for assistance will include “ a) individuals and families victimized by the . . .disaster (loss of a family member or caregiver); and b) the larger community ofindividuals and families affected by the disaster.”• Funding will be “coordinated with public and other private funds and targeted to unmetneeds to avoid duplication of services.”• Nonprofit organizations will be utilized as primary vehicles for providing services andcash made available through <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund resources.<strong>The</strong> fund’s first grant was announced <strong>September</strong> 18, $1.2 million for Safe Horizon, anonprofit victim services and advocacy organization, to provide immediate financialassistance to meet housing, food, medical care, transportation, and burial expenses ofvictims and their families in New York City. Another early grant enabled Safe Horizon andSeedco to prepare and publish a resource guide of services and other assistance.In mid-October, the Trust and United Way announced formation of an independent boardto oversee the fund, chaired by Franklin Thomas, former president of the Ford<strong>Foundation</strong>. Joshua Gotbaum, who was named CEO, had held three high-level federal30


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITYagency positions in the Clinton administration and before that was a partner andmanaging director of the investment bank Lazard Freres & Co. (Gotbaum is the son oflong-time New York City labor leader Victor Gotbaum, who once ran the nation’s largestmunicipal employees union.)By June 30, 2002, the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund had received $501 million and distributed$301 million in 250 grants to nonprofit organizations that provided cash and services tovictims. More than 100,000 individuals received cash and services, including 3,800families and other financial dependents of those who were killed or were severely injured,35,000 people who lost their jobs, and 6,000 individuals and families who were displacedfrom their homes.<strong>The</strong> largest share of the $301 million distributed as of June 30, 2002 was $128 million, theproceeds from a United Way-sponsored national telethon, that was awarded in the form of$10,000 payments to each family of a direct victim of the attacks in New York andWashington and the crash in Pennsylvania, and $2,500 for each displaced worker orresident below Canal Street in New York City.<strong>The</strong> next largest share of funds given out bythe <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, $94.2 million, went to Safe Horizon (described below), mostlyfor emergency financial assistance....the OngoingRecovery Programincluded both new andexpanded initiatives toseek to fill gaps inexisting services. . . .Other recipients of $1 million or more included Seedco; Nonprofit Finance Fund; Fundfor the City of New York; NYU Downtown Hospital (for reimbursement for emergencycare immediately after the attack); the New York City Partnership (for downtown smalland medium-sized business retention); Consortium for Worker Education (foremployment services); Legal Aid Society (for emergency civil legal assistance for low-wageworkers in and near the World Trade <strong>Center</strong>); Renaissance Economic DevelopmentCorporation (for loans to Chinatown small businesses); and for the United Ways of Bergenand Monmouth counties in New Jersey,Westchester/Putnam County in New York, and theNational Capital Area/DC (all for cash assistance and services to victims and their families,for which the United Ways charged no administrative costs).Plans for the remaining $200 million of unallocated funds, announced July <strong>11</strong>, 2002, andknown as the Ongoing Recovery Program, included both new and expanded initiatives toseek to fill gaps in existing services available through government or other philanthropicsources. In the announcement, CEO Gotbaum said that the program “continues to helpthose who need it, but in a better way. In the emergency phase . . . the emphasis was ondelivering help quickly. Now we are funding a program that meets a wider range of needs,that gives people choices about where and how to get help, and makes it easier for them toget it.” New activities included:• up to $3,000 per person for mental health counseling for those who are not insured;• employment services, including financial assistance for people in training, for anestimated 12,000 people including dislocated workers, regardless of immigration status,and surviving family members of those who died;31


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE• health insurance for an estimated 14,000 victims, mostly dislocated workers, who cannotafford private health insurance and are not eligible for public programs such as Medicaidor FHP;• specialized assistance for an estimated 25,000 children in schools who were evacuated ordirectly witnessed the attack;Its founders correctlysensed that the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fundwould be operating ina fishbowl....This“was going to haveto be the mostaccountable charitableeffort in history.”• service coordinators to help more than 10,000 people get help more easily.In addition, it was stated that the fund would expand funding for previous services,including grants and loans for small businesses and nonprofit organizations in lowerManhattan; continued legal and financial advice on issues such as settling estates orapplying to the federal <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Victim Compensation Fund; and continued cashassistance for those who were eligible but had not yet come forward, including survivingfamilies, the injured, and displaced residents. A new component provided financing forsmall businesses at Reagan National Airport serving Washington, DC, which suffered lossesas a result of sharply reduced operations for several weeks following 9/<strong>11</strong>. Board ChairmanFranklin Thomas, in announcing the Ongoing Recovery Program, said, “<strong>The</strong> needs of thosedirectly affected . . . are so great that alone we could not cover them all” and emphasizedthat government and other philanthropic entities also needed to address ongoing problems. 6Accountability and Donor IntentIts founders correctly sensed that the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund would be operating in a fishbowlon worldwide public view, and that funding decisions would be the subject of scrutiny fromthe media, social services agencies competing for funds, and affected individuals andfamilies. Accordingly, as Gotbaum put it some months later, the fund determined that this“was going to have to be the most accountable charitable effort in history.” Gotbaum’ssecond hire was a communications officer, and he soon added two more.Among some members of the media, public officials, and the general public, there was anapparent assumption that donors to the fund intended that their contributions would bedistributed at once in the form of cash compensation and services to a narrow group ofimmediate victims and their families, to the exclusion of other affected groups such asdisplaced workers. 7 Gotbaum found himself on the defensive, answering accusatoryquestions about why the funds had not been paid out to the people who were thought bymany to have been the bona fide beneficiaries of the fund’s more than two million donors.6 A survey of 1,139 victims by McKinsey & Company for the 9/<strong>11</strong> United Services Group, releasedJuly 8, 2002, estimated that the total cost for the next year of meeting unmet needs for financialsupplements, employment services, mental health, and other services would be about $768million, the largest share of which, $700 million, was needed for workers whose livelihoods wereaffected by the attack. Of this $700 million, an estimated $562 million was needed to fill gaps inbasic household expenses.7 <strong>The</strong> <strong>September</strong> 21 national telethon sponsored by the United Way may have created someconfusion on this point, since the networks, led by ABC, insisted that the audience be told thatproceeds were earmarked for immediate victims and their families (even though there was no listof victims).32


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITYTo gain reassurance on the important issue of donor intent, and to help in programplanning, the fund conducted public opinion research through an online survey October 1and a telephone survey a month later, including respondents who did and did not give to a9/<strong>11</strong>-related cause, both in New York City and elsewhere. <strong>The</strong> results confirmed supportfor the fund’s strategy of taking a broad view of who should be helped and the need forboth cash assistance and services such as mental health counseling and job training. Forexample, in both surveys more than 80 percent of those polled agreed that the definition ofvictims should include people who were displaced from their homes or lost their jobs in theWorld Trade <strong>Center</strong> or Pentagon. (Both surveys were made possible by special in-kindcorporate contributions.)<strong>The</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund’s Web site provided comprehensive information on all facets ofthe operation. Grants were announced monthly, including recipients, amounts, andpurposes. Contributors were listed by the size category of their gifts. And there were ninepages of detailed answers to 41 FAQs on governance, how people could get help, whatcash and services were available, and how private philanthropy differed from governmentfunding. Perhaps inspired by this example, other philanthropies expanded their publicinformation activities. Prior to 9/<strong>11</strong>, the Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong> in New York City, forexample, posted only the names of its grantees, but information about its 9/<strong>11</strong> relief fundincluded amounts granted and purposes of the grants.More than 80 percentof those polled agreedthat the definition ofvictims shouldinclude people whowere displaced fromtheir homes or losttheir jobs. . . .UNIFORMED RESCUE WORKERS’ FUNDS<strong>The</strong> funds that solicited for the families of rescue officers, who gave their lives saving others,collectively received, next to the American Red Cross and the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, thethird largest share of donations. Brief descriptions of these three major funds follow.Twin Towers Fund<strong>The</strong> largest of the uniformed rescue workers’ funds, the Twin Towers Fund, wasannounced <strong>September</strong> 12 by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani. <strong>The</strong> first contributor was GeneralElectric Company, with a $10 million gift, and by November the total reached $80 million.Giuliani named his deputy counsel, Larry Levy, as the operating head with pro bonoassistance from Changing Our World, Inc., a New York-based philanthropic services firm.(Levy, who had previously served as special assistant corporation counsel to Mayors EdKoch and David Dinkins in his decades-long New York City government service, alsoplayed a key role in the city’s establishment of family assistance centers following theattack.) During the fall, Levy and his associates convened weekly meetings at City Hallwith other uniformed personnel funds, including those established by the unions, to shareinformation, address complex policy choices, and discuss plans for distributions.<strong>The</strong> Twin Towers Fund faced difficult decisions, some of which were shared by otheruniformed services funds, such as:• whether to include the court officers and non-uniformed rescue personnel, such asPort Authority staff, who died in rescue efforts (they were included on a case-by-casedetermination);33


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE• whether to give the same amount to every family or to factor in the number ofdependents, length of service, and the like (the formula took into account the number ofchildren, with a distinction between those under and over twenty-three);• whether to make payments to the families of single people (next of kin received aboutthree quarters as much as the families of married persons);<strong>The</strong>re also wereissues to be resolvedconcerning therightful recipient incomplicated familysituations such asdivorce and domesticpartners.• whether to observe the long-standing federal law limiting charitable payments only tothose for whom financial need could be shown (Mayor Giuliani initially had implied thathe would challenge the law if it was not changed);• whether to pay out all the money in one installment or to reserve a portion to meet futureneeds of the families;• whether to set aside funds to meet non-financial needs that would emerge later, such astrauma and grief counseling and family support services (provision was made for currentand future non-financial needs).<strong>The</strong>re also were issues to be resolved concerning the rightful recipient in complicatedfamily situations such as divorce and domestic partners. Generally the spouse was theTwin Towers Fund’s beneficiary, and “registered domestic partners” were also eligible;difficult cases were reviewed in consultation with the fund’s Family Advisory Board,consisting of members of the victims’ families.A final complication was that the Twin Towers Fund did not exist as a recognizedcharitable entity until its IRS tax exemption was received in December; the temporaryrepository of donations was Public-Private Initiatives, Inc. (PPI), a nonprofit established in1994 by Mayor Giuliani for the incubation of new programs. After his term ended inJanuary, 2002, Giuliani planned to carry on the work of the Twin Towers Fund as boardchairman of the newly incorporated private nonprofit organization of the same name.<strong>The</strong>fire union and a few police families criticized this plan, in part because some felt that distributionshad not been made rapidly enough and they did not want Giuliani to continue tocontrol the donations.In early 2002, the fund requested approval of the New York State Attorney General, whooversees tax-exempt charitable organizations, to transfer the fund’s assets from PPI to theTwin Towers Fund. Attorney General Eliot Spitzer, who had earlier clashed inconclusivelywith Giuliani over the question of which of the two officials was the appropriate person tocoordinate philanthropic relief efforts, granted approval for the asset transfer in April onthe condition that one-quarter of the Twin Towers Fund board members be appointees ofthe new mayor, Michael Bloomberg.<strong>The</strong> fund made its initial distributions, totaling about $49 million, in November andDecember, 2001, and a second distribution, $3.5 million for non-uniformed personnel, inJanuary. By June 6, 2002, the fund had made its third distribution, bringing the total to$155 million, with each surviving spouse having received $235,000 plus various amountsfor surviving children. Next of kin where there was no spouse received $150,000.34


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITY<strong>The</strong> fund planned to utilize the balance for such things as college scholarships through theCitizens’ Scholarship <strong>Foundation</strong> of America; summer camps with grief counselors;assistance for injured rescue workers; financial and emotional support counseling; andpossible assistance for cases that were still under review. <strong>The</strong> fund distributed all of itsresources and closed at the end of 2003.9/<strong>11</strong> Disaster Relief Fund of the InternationalAssociation of Fire FightersThis fund, the second largest among the rescue workers funds, was established by theAFL-CIO affiliated labor union representing more than 240,000 professional fire fightersand emergency medical personnel in the United States and Canada. According to GeorgeBurke of the union, 60-70 percent came from collections organized by local firehousesaround the country. As late as June, 2002, donations were continuing to arrive at the rate ofabout $750,000 per month, according to IAFF chief of staff Michael J. Crouse.<strong>The</strong> IAFF moved quickly to get an IRS Section 501(c)(3) tax exemption for the 9/<strong>11</strong>Disaster Relief Fund, which was approved in early October, near-record time, and it actedspeedily and decisively to make its distributions. Following the instructions of its generalpresident, Harold Schaitberger, to “do it right and do it quick,” the IAFF kept it simple:divide the total pool of dollars raised by the number of surviving families and give eachfamily, including the families of single fire fighters, an equal amount. Payments were madein increments as funds continued to come in. Fire Department of New York official recordswere relied upon to determine who was the legitimate beneficiary.This fundalso financedcounseling forfirefighters whosuffered from guiltbecause they didnot die.<strong>The</strong> IAFF set aside about $4 million from the fund to establish a new program, the 9/<strong>11</strong>Fire Fighters Counseling Fund, to provide grief and trauma counseling for families wholost a loved one.This fund also financed counseling for firefighters who suffered from guiltbecause they did not die. Crouse believed that it would be easier to attract firefighters andfamilies into such a counseling program if it was done under the aegis of the FDNY andunion than if it is offered through a regular employee assistance program, which carriedthe stigma of substance abuse counseling.<strong>The</strong> IAFF, asserting its lack of jurisdiction, managed to remain out of the bitter publiccontroversy over the distribution of funds to survivors by the Uniformed FirefightersAssociation of Greater New York (UFA), Local 94 of the IAFF, which raised about $70million through its Widows’ and Children’s Fund. (<strong>The</strong> UFA’s Widows’ and Children’sFund is distinct from the New York Police and Fire Widows’ and Children’s Benefit Fund,described below.) Families of the 97 unmarried firemen who died <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> said theywere as entitled to a payment as the widows were, because the union’s Web site advertisingthe fundraising appeal said that donations were for “the families of our fallen firefighters.”However, the union by-laws provided that the donations were to “relieve the need of thewidows, children and dependents. ...”One of the mothers of a dead single fireman,Domenica Ragusa, was quoted in the May 12, 2002 New York Times, saying “My son is just35


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEas dead as a married man who is dead.” A full-page ad sponsored by the UFA in the May19 Times defended the union’s position, and said that the dispute would be resolved “inconsultation with the Charities Bureau of the New York State Attorney General’s Office.”New York Police and Fire Widows’ and Children’s Benefit FundBefore 9/<strong>11</strong> the fundhad raised a total ofabout $52 million inits 16-year history,and since 9/<strong>11</strong> it hadraised more thantwice that much. . . .This fund was established in 1985 by Rusty Staub, the former New York Mets baseballstar, to help the families of police and fire officers who die in the line of duty. <strong>The</strong> fund’sannual appeals raised less than $1 million until 1996, and its typical distributions havebeen one-time death benefits of $10,000 plus annual payments based on fundraisingsuccess. Until 9/<strong>11</strong>, the largest annual gift had been about $2,200 per year, according toStephen J. Dannhauser, president of the fund and executive partner of the Manhattan lawfirm Weil, Gotshal and Manges.Before 9/<strong>11</strong> the fund had raised a total of about $52 million in its 16-year history, and since9/<strong>11</strong> it had raised more than twice that much, about $<strong>11</strong>5 million as of July 1, 2002. Majorcontributors included Deutsche Bank, with $9 million in foregone stock tradingcommissions, and $8 million from the Starr <strong>Foundation</strong>. In all, there were over 100,000gifts and Weil, Gotshal and Manges mobilized a group of volunteers that opened the mail,and acknowledged and booked the receipts.Even though it was an established organization with guidelines, the fund faced twodecisions about whom to help and how. One was whether to make payments to the familiesof Port Authority and EMS personnel; the fund decided to include them in its 9/<strong>11</strong> distributions.<strong>The</strong> other question was about the pre-9/<strong>11</strong> widows the fund had been assistingwith payments since its beginning. <strong>The</strong> fund’s board felt that provisions should be madefor these approximately 429 widows in the distribution of the new funds.To be certain thatthere would be no violation of donor intent for these steps broadening the beneficiarygroup, the fund wrote to each contributor of $5,000 or more and asked if they had aproblem with the fund’s intentions. Only a few objected, in which cases the fund returnedtheir gifts.<strong>The</strong> fund made $100,000 payments to each 9/<strong>11</strong> widow in two or three installments, and aspecial $30,000 gift for each pre-9/<strong>11</strong> widow. In keeping with the fund’s traditional policy,beneficiaries of single persons received a $10,000 death benefit. In the cases of disputedbeneficiaries, the fund relied on union records and union determinations of disputed cases.At the time, fund chief financial officer David Golush said that the fund expected to make afurther payment of $18,000 to each 9/<strong>11</strong> widow and $8,000 to each pre-9/<strong>11</strong> widow inOctober.<strong>The</strong> approximately $62 million balance remaining after these payments were madewould be escrowed for annual payments of $12,000 to approximately 729 widows (includingboth pre-9/<strong>11</strong> and 9/<strong>11</strong>-related) over a seven-year period beginning in October 2003.36


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITYSAFE HORIZONSafe Horizon is a nonprofit victim assistance, advocacy, and violence preventionorganization, the largest such agency in the country, and formerly known as VictimServices. For many years the agency has worked closely with the State of New York’sCrime Victims Board in processing crime victims’ compensation claims. By <strong>September</strong> 15,2001, in response to a request by Governor George Pataki, Safe Horizon began serving asthe Crime Victims Board’s agent for writing checks for financial assistance for survivingspouses who lost their primary wage earners in the attack.Because state guidelines limited this assistance to persons who were still married whentheir spouses died, Safe Horizon turned to the United Way of New York City to providecomparable funding for domestic partners, gay and lesbian couples, and others who didnot meet the state’s requirements. Lilliam Barrios-Paoli, then senior vice president andchief executive for agency services of the United Way of New York City, and one of thekey planners for the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th fund, readily agreed. By the week following 9/<strong>11</strong>,Safe Horizon was the only agency issuing on-the-spot checks, for up to $1,500, toreplace lost incomes.After the attack, Safe Horizon was forced to vacate its downtown headquarters, at 2Lafayette Street, and when staff returned ten days later, they were without phones, fax, orInternet until December. Despite these obstacles, and in the absence of formal agreementswith funding organizations or existing procedures for handing out money, Safe Horizonmoved quickly to provide cash and crisis counseling not only at the main Family Assistance<strong>Center</strong> but also at four other centers in the outer boroughs to facilitate access for peoplewho were reluctant to come to downtown Manhattan. Safe Horizon also opened a toll-freetwenty-four-hour hotline and, with Seedco and United Way, prepared and published inprint form and online a directory of resources for victims and their families.Safe Horizon wasable to adapt flexiblyto the extraordinarycircumstancesbecause it was anindependent localorganization, notbound by the rulesof a nationalorganization. . . .Safe Horizon CEO Gordon Campbell delegated to his frontline staff the authority to makedecisions and hand-write checks even as procedures and forms were being designed.Calling it “managing by groping,” Campbell credited his agency’s performance — widelyacknowledged as exemplary — to “knowing the victim business,” relationships with stateand city agencies, and the professionalism and dedication of the staff. Senior vice presidentElizabeth McCarthy said that Safe Horizon was able to adapt flexibly to the extraordinarycircumstances because it was an independent local organization, not bound by the rules ofa national organization, as was the case with the local branches of the American Red Crossand Salvation Army.As of March 31, 2002, Safe Horizon had received $90.3 million for 9/<strong>11</strong> services, all but $2million of which came from the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund. (By June 17, Safe Horizon hadreceived an additional $5.5 million from the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.) Of the $90.3 million,about 90 percent, or $80.8 million, was passed through in cash payments to 43,828surviving family members, injured persons, and displaced residents and workers. <strong>The</strong> $9.5million balance, about 10 percent of the total, was spent on operations costs such as staffingseven assistance centers, the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th hotline, and trauma education seminars.37


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE<strong>The</strong> $90.3 million total received for 9/<strong>11</strong> is almost three times as great as the agency’sannual budget of $34 million, but Safe Horizon managed to conduct 9/<strong>11</strong> relief while not“missing a beat” with its regular clients, according to Campbell, because many dedicatedstaff members worked 12–16 hours/day, and their number was augmented by new staffand over a thousand volunteers.Criticism by FoxNews’ Bill O’Reilly . . .though overstated andinflammatory ...hada basis in reality.Recognizing from experience that providing emergency cash to victims may succeed inrelieving the immediate anxiety, but only open the door for the beginning of the morechallenging long-term process of healing, recovery, and getting on with one’s life, SafeHorizon continued to follow up all of its approximately 47,000 9/<strong>11</strong> clients with phonecalls from a twenty-five-person phone bank to see how they were faring and what furtherassistance they needed.SERVICE COORDINATION<strong>The</strong> problem is that one charity doesn’t know what the other is doing. <strong>The</strong>re is nocentral controlling authority. ...Grieving people are forced to fill out dozens offorms and then left to fend for themselves....This is one big cruel mess.<strong>The</strong> UnitedStates government can move a huge military machine half way around the world intwo weeks — but can’t supervise charities and get financial help to a few thousanddevastated families in six weeks. Does this make sense to you?This criticism by Fox News’ Bill O’Reilly in his October 15, 2001, syndicated column,though overstated and inflammatory — and suggesting a new role for government tooversee philanthropic operations — had a basis in reality. Despite the fact that frontlinestaff at the Family Assistance <strong>Center</strong> on Pier 94 were, by most first-hand accounts,welcoming and eager to help, and the overall accommodations were a model for similarmulti-service locations, there were problems.People seeking aid had to fill out several different forms with mostly the same information.Some people were not well treated, and some did not get what they wanted. Some seekingaid had never asked for help from a government or nonprofit service organization, andwere not accustomed to standing in line or answering personal questions. It is not difficultto find angry, grief-stricken, confused, and terrified people in the aftermath of a calamitywho lash out at the closest target and tell their stories to a reporter, and New Yorkers arefamously impatient and demanding.<strong>The</strong>re were enough well-publicized negative experiences to prompt two Congressionalhearings in early November. 8 Arizona Republican Congressman J. D. Hayworth called onthe House Ways and Means Committee to assume an oversight role in the private philanthropicrelief effort. Senator Charles Grassley (R-IA), ranking member of the SenateFinance Committee, urged federal and state regulators “to work together to oversee the fairand expeditious distribution” of donations.New York State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer, who regulates tax-exempt charitableorganizations, called a <strong>September</strong> 26 meeting in his office with the large relief groups,including the Red Cross, Salvation Army, and others. Spitzer’s section chief of the38


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITYCharities Bureau, Marla Simpson, had been conferring extensively with key participantsin the Oklahoma City response to the 1995 bombing of the Murrah Building, andbelieved that the coordination of agencies that had occurred in that city could bereplicated among at least ten times that many, serving a much larger and more diversepopulation, in New York City.At the <strong>September</strong> 26 meeting, Spitzer proposed that his office establish a central database ofeveryone who sought assistance from the major service providers, as a means of ensuringfairness in the distribution of funds and services, and to prevent duplication and fraud.According to Spitzer during an interview in June, 2002, all of the participants agreed thiswas a sound idea, but the next day, apparently on orders from national headquarters, theAmerican Red Cross of Greater New York office said that confidentiality rules prevented itfrom disclosing information about its clients. <strong>The</strong> question of a central database wastherefore unresolved, but the Office of the Attorney General posted on its Web site a list oforganizations and services for people and organizations affected by the disaster.Leaders of charitable service organizations recognized the validity of appeals for greatercoordination, but felt that the Office of the Attorney General should not be the one to do it,because of a concern that information might be used in connection with the attorneygeneral’s oversight and regulatory responsibility. <strong>The</strong> two top officials of the <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th Fund, board chairman Franklin Thomas and CEO Joshua Gotbaum, met withSpitzer in mid-October, 2001, and told him this. Rather, they argued, the charities shouldbe responsible for their own coordination, and Spitzer agreed. Gotbaum said in a June2002 interview that, after this meeting, Spitzer urged the major charitable serviceproviders to organize themselves. Gotbaum then offered to fund the effort. This was theSpitzer urged themajor charitableservice providers toorganize themselves.Gotbaum then offeredto fund the effort.Thiswas the origin of the9/<strong>11</strong> United ServicesGroup....origin of the 9/<strong>11</strong> United Services Group, which is described later in this report. 9 398 Similar problems, though much less emotionally charged, occurred for businesses and nonprofitorganizations seeking aid to recover from the attacks’ impacts. Several different nonprofit financialinstitutions and government agencies offered aid to small businesses downtown and in Chinatown,often with different geographic and other eligibility requirements. Programs whose northernboundary was Canal Street excluded the approximately two-thirds of Chinatown’s small garmentmanufacturers with large numbers of low-wage workers. (This problem was addressed by the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.) Two nonprofit organizations, the Fund for the City of New York and theNonprofit Finance Fund, received separate grants from the Ford <strong>Foundation</strong> and the <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th Fund to provide similar assistance to nonprofit organizations that suffered similar impacts.9 Tragically, communications failures were not limited to the charitable sector. It has been widelyreported, for example, that better communication and coordination between the CIA and FBImight conceivably have averted the attacks. An in-depth investigation by the New York Times,published July 7, 2002, concluded that throughout the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> crisis “the two largestemergency departments, Police and Fire, barely spoke to coordinate strategy or to shareintelligence about building conditions,” and found that firefighters’ radio systems did not functionand were not linked to those of the Police Department. “<strong>The</strong> city’s Office of EmergencyManagement, which was created by Mayor Giuliani in 1996 and had spent nearly $25 million tocoordinate emergency responses,” according to the Times, “had not conducted an emergencyexercise [in the World Trade <strong>Center</strong>] that included the Fire Department, the police, and the PortAuthority emergency staff.”


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEA main stumblingblock to sharinginformation amongrelief organizations wastheir confidentialitypolicies.Although there was no central registry of applicants, the three major relief agencies at theFamily Assistance <strong>Center</strong> — the Red Cross, Salvation Army, and Safe Horizon — hadquickly developed ad hoc coordinating procedures that simplified life for persons seekingaid. Staff of Safe Horizon, the first stop for visitors to the center, offered to escort theirclients to the desks of the Red Cross and Salvation Army and provide some of thenecessary basic information required to initiate registration with those organizations. ByJanuary, 2002, the agencies had developed what amounted to a one-stop process: staffwere cross-trained so that a representative of one could take down the informationrequired for all three, and later do the work of filling out the separate forms.A main stumbling block to sharing information among relief organizations was their confidentialitypolicies. <strong>The</strong> Red Cross, for example, said that it had had some bad experiencesgiving out the names of fire victims forced from their homes, whose vulnerability thenbecame known to estranged, abusive spouses.<strong>The</strong> Salvation Army said that their confidentialitypolicies were designed to protect people who are concerned that the assistance theyreceive will be reported as taxable income, and to protect undocumented workers, whofear that government authorities might have access to the information and initiatedeportation proceedings.<strong>The</strong> Red Cross, Salvation Army, and Safe Horizon allowed their clients to waive theirconfidentiality, but Safe Horizon appears to have been more adroit than the others ininterpreting the waiver in the context of the situation, to the benefit of its clients. SafeHorizon explained the advantages of information sharing in terms of saving time andtrouble, and facilitating access to additional services. It also made clear that the informationwould be shared only with other service providers.9/<strong>11</strong> United Services Group<strong>The</strong> 9/<strong>11</strong> USG was launched December 14, 2001, with much fanfare. Its core financingcame from the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, in fulfillment of Gotbaum’s pledge to help theleading charities develop their own solutions to coordination of their work and thus avoidpossible intervention by Attorney General Spitzer. <strong>The</strong> 9/<strong>11</strong> USG was described as a“consortium of 13 New York City human services organizations . . . to coordinate the helpbeing provided to those affected by the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> terrorist attacks and ensurethat their needs are efficiently and compassionately met.” Member agencies were theAmerican Red Cross (which had changed its mind and agreed to cooperate, with confidentialityissues to be worked out later); Asian American Federation of New York; BlackAgency Executives, Inc.; Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of New York; CatholicCharities Diocese of Brooklyn; Federation of Protestant Welfare Agencies, Inc.; HispanicFederation; Human Services Council; Mental Health Association of New York City, Inc.;Safe Horizon; Salvation Army; UJA-Federation of New York; and United NeighborhoodHouses of New York. <strong>The</strong> 9/<strong>11</strong> USG’s budget was approximately $3 million, of whichmore than half was said by a 9/<strong>11</strong> USG official to be in the form of donated services fromIBM,Warburg Pincus, ADP, McKinsey & Company, and others.40


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITY<strong>The</strong> 9/<strong>11</strong> USG compiled a central database of individuals affected by the attacks who hadreceived services from one or more of the member organizations. One purpose of this wasto prevent duplication of services and “double dipping” on financial benefits. Anotherpurpose was to provide victims with periodic notification of new programs and services,such as the $200 million Ongoing Recovery Program that had been announced by the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.Another 9/<strong>11</strong> USG program was training for “service coordinators” in its approximately25 member and affiliated organizations to be able to direct clients to the full array of 9/<strong>11</strong>-related services. <strong>The</strong> 9/<strong>11</strong> USG also continued to operate the Safe Horizon <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th 24-hour hotline, and to maintain a database of resources built on the directorydeveloped soon after the attacks by Safe Horizon, United Way, and Seedco with fundingfrom the New York Community Trust and United Way of New York City through the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.Persons involved in New York’s social service community, who were close to the 9/<strong>11</strong> reliefeffort and were interviewed for this report, evince perfunctory support for the 9/<strong>11</strong> USG,and say that the effort may have been too little, too late. It failed to reach most of themedium- and smaller-sized community based organizations, although steps were beingtaken to remedy this shortcoming. As one 9/<strong>11</strong> USG Board member said in an interview,“A database is a good thing, but it doesn’t make coordination and collaboration happen.”However, the value of 9/<strong>11</strong> USG may become apparent in the future if the collaborationserves as a model for future catastrophes and develops a common intake process that canbe activated immediately.<strong>The</strong> value of 9/<strong>11</strong> USGmay become apparentin the future if thecollaboration servesas a model for futurecatastrophes. . . .In debriefings about the reports’ findings and implications for future disasters withphilanthropic groups and individuals in New York and other cities, it became clear thatattempts to improve planning for post-disaster responses needed to include attention notonly to philanthropy, but also government programs. Philanthropy does not operate in avacuum, but rather seeks to find niches that relieve the burdens of government, fill gaps,or test and evaluate new approaches to meeting human needs. <strong>The</strong> following sectionsattempt to place philanthropic programs in this larger context through a closer look atthe scope, coverage, and difficulties of government programs in 9/<strong>11</strong> relief and recoveryin New York City.SUMMARY OF FEDERAL AIDFederal aid for disasters is triggered by a presidential declaration, requested by thegovernor, of a disaster area. Federal funds are allocated by the Federal EmergencyManagement Agency, with the approval of the Office of Management and Budget, for awide variety of purposes pursuant to the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief andEmergency Assistance Act of 1974. Most of these funds flow through the state emergencymanagement agency to state and local public agencies. FEMA is the lead federal agencyfor the response, and is “authorized to enter into agreements with the American NationalRed Cross, the Salvation Army, the Mennonite Disaster Service, and other relief or disasterassistance organizations” for coordination of activities.41


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEFederal 9/<strong>11</strong>-relatedaid for New York Cityfrom all sourcestotaled about $25billion, ten times asgreat as the totalphilanthropic amountfor all locations andindividuals.In addition to FEMA’s statutory assistance programs, Congress frequently appropriatesadditional funds through other federal agencies to cover needs not met by FEMA’s authorizations.Examples in the 9/<strong>11</strong> response were the community development block grantprogram, for business recovery and other purposes, through the Department of Housingand Urban Development; funds for health screening and reimbursements for hospitalsthrough the Department of Health and Human Services; tax incentives for newinvestments in New York City’s downtown district through the Internal Revenue Service;and dislocated worker training through the Department of Labor.Federal 9/<strong>11</strong>-related aid for New York City from all sources totaled about $25 billion, tentimes as great as the total philanthropic amount for all locations and individuals. Initially,President Bush requested from Congress a special $20 billion appropriation to fight thewar on terrorism in Afghanistan and elsewhere. New York Senators Schumer and Clintondemanded that there also be an equal amount for relief, recovery, and rebuilding in NewYork City, and Bush committed to this amount in an Oval Office announcement attendedby the two senators on <strong>September</strong> 13.<strong>The</strong> $40 billion emergency supplemental appropriationsbill, introduced <strong>September</strong> 14, was enacted as Public Law 107-38 on <strong>September</strong> 18.<strong>The</strong>re was no delineation of uses of the funds except that one-half was for domestic reliefand recovery. Of the total $40 billion, the president was granted authority to expend thefirst $10 billion; the next $10 billion was to be available only after fifteen days’ advancenotice on proposed uses to the House and Senate Committees on Appropriations; and thefinal $20 billion could be obligated “only when enacted in a subsequent emergency appropriationsbill.” In subsequent negotiations about the uses of funds, Congressionalconservatives sought to undermine the commitment, and OMB director Mitchell Danielsmade negative comments about it, but the president stood by his pledge, and all of thefunds were appropriated with designated uses.<strong>The</strong> appropriations act watered down Bush’s commitment to New York by providing that“not less than one-half of the $40 billion shall be for disaster recovery activities and assistancerelated to the terrorist acts in New York, Virginia, and Pennsylvania. ...”Nevertheless,thepresident repeatedly referred to $20 billion for New York City, and the OMB, in internaldocuments, periodically updated the “Status of President’s $20 Billion Commitment to NewYork.” It was estimated that an additional $5 billion would be distributed by the federal<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Victim Compensation Fund, established in a later piece of legislation.In an early 2003 interview about the process by which Congress and the administrationdecided on specific programs to be funded with the $20 billion, a member of SenatorSchumer’s staff at the time recalled Otto von Bismarck’s quip, that the two things one doesnot want to see being made are laws and sausages. <strong>The</strong> process was greatly complicatedbecause the Hart Senate Office Building was closed for the three months following arrivalof a letter containing anthrax in Senator Daschle’s office October 15. New York’s senatorsand their staffs — as well as others normally housed there — worked out of temporaryoffices, often without computers, in other parts of Capitol Hill.42


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITYIn the then Democratic-controlled upper house, Senators Schumer and Clinton were theinitiators and arbiters of numerous funding requests urged by private firms, governmentagencies, and nonprofit organizations active in relief and recovery. Thus, like much of thephilanthropic response, large amounts of funds were made available before planning hadoccurred, and negotiations about specific uses of appropriated but unspent funds tookplace. For example, the New York Times reported on February 7, 2003, that the administrationhad agreed, following intense negotiations, to a precedent-breaking understandingthat would permit New York State and City to use about $980 million of the $20 billion inemergency relief funds to help close budget deficits.Of the $25 billion (including the estimated $5 billion for the Victim Compensation Fund),about $6.8 10 billion was directed at the broad categories of human, economic, and socialneeds that also received philanthropic contributions, and it is this portion that is the focusof this report.<strong>The</strong> balance, furnished mainly through FEMA, covered major expendituressuch as debris removal, emergency transportation, DNA testing, transportation and otherphysical infrastructure replacements, insurance for contractors working at ground zero,and reimbursements to New York City Fire and Police Departments for various costs suchas death benefits, overtime, and replacement of destroyed government facilities andequipment. As one FEMA official put it in commenting on the agency’s problems with itsindividual assistance programs, “FEMA’s big role is to help governments, not people,recover.” <strong>The</strong> $25 billion figure also included about $5 billion in tax incentives forcorporations to reinvest in lower Manhattan.Of the $25 billion . . .about $6.8 billion wasdirected at the broadcategories of human,economic, and socialneeds. . . .Excluding the estimated $5 billion in victim compensation, federal aid totaled about $1.8billion for human, social, and economic purposes. About 60 percent of this was for smallbusiness loans and loss compensation grants, and the balance went for all other programsincluding mortgage and rental assistance, home repairs, temporary lodgings, individualand family grants, disaster unemployment assistance, trauma counseling, employmentassistance, health screening and registry, and reimbursement of hospital expenses. <strong>The</strong>largest categories of non-business aid were health/mental health and needs-based financialassistance, each accounting for about 18 percent of the total.Private philanthropy provided roughly the same total amount. Exclusive of victimcompensation payments, $1.8 billion was spent for individual, family, and communityneeds by philanthropic organizations. <strong>11</strong> Human services programs and needs-basedfinancial assistance were the largest categories of the $1.8 billion, each accounting forroughly 30–35 percent.10 Sums cited in this report are approximate and are based on best estimates as of March 2003.Moreover, some extraordinary services provided by government discussed in this report, such asemergency Medicaid and HRA emergency checks, were funded out of normal appropriations andnot counted in total federal aid for the disaster.<strong>11</strong> <strong>The</strong> main sources for these estimates of philanthropic contributions and distributions were the<strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, Giving in the Aftermath of 9/<strong>11</strong>, November 2002; various issues of <strong>The</strong>Chronicle of Philanthropy; the AAFRC Trust for Philanthropy, Giving USA: 2002:<strong>The</strong> AnnualReport on Philanthropy for the Year 2001, <strong>Center</strong> on Philanthropy at Indiana University,Indianapolis, 2002; and Ford Fessenden, “After the World Gave: Where $2 Billion in KindnessEnded Up,” the New York Times, November 18, 2002.43


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEFamily Assistance <strong>Center</strong> (New York City). ..a FamilyAssistance <strong>Center</strong>[was] a one-stopfacility where familymembers . . . could filea missing personsreport . . . and receiveother help.<strong>The</strong> Mayor’s Community Assistance Unit, the City’s Office of Emergency Management,the City Human Resources Administration (HRA), with FEMA assistance, opened, on<strong>September</strong> 17, a Family Assistance <strong>Center</strong> as a one-stop facility where family memberswho had lost someone could file a missing persons report, begin the process of obtainingdeath certificates, and receive other help. Anne Grunewald, director of human services forthe City’s Office of Emergency Management, credited FEMA as having been“tremendous in supporting us quickly” in opening the Family Assistance <strong>Center</strong> (FAC).Human Resources Administration personnel installed phone lines and computers, anddeployed staff to process emergency food stamps, Medicaid, and up to $1,500 foremergency child care. HRA’s lead official, Jane Corbett, deputy commissioner fordomestic violence and emergency intervention services, had coordinated the City’sresponse to the 1993 World Trade <strong>Center</strong> bombing and the fatal 1981 fire that claimedeighty-seven lives at the Happyland Social Club in the Bronx. She persuaded top HRAmanagement to support the concept of a one-stop center and obtained the unusualauthority to issue checks in amounts of $200-$400, on the spot and with no documentation,to tide people over until other benefit streams could be activated. <strong>The</strong> SocialSecurity Administration,Veterans Administration, and State Workers Compensation Boardalso opened desks to serve their statutory beneficiaries.Major nonprofit organizations represented at FAC included the American Red Cross,Salvation Army, New York Cares, and Safe Horizon. Safe Horizon also opened offices forthis purpose in the outer boroughs, for the convenience of individuals who were unable orfrightened to travel into Manhattan. Representatives of the Crime Victims Board issuedchecks on the spot for up to $1,500 to cover loss of earnings of deceased family members(with a maximum payment of $30,000 per year), and in the other boroughs Safe Horizonissued checks in the expectation of subsequent reimbursement by the Crime VictimsBoard. Documentation of eligibility was expedited at the time of application andcompleted later. <strong>The</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund awarded Safe Horizon a grant to paycomparable death benefits for same-sex partners, and to families whose primary wageearner had not died but had lost his or her job.It gradually became clear that the disaster had wide impacts that extended well beyondthe deaths and injuries at ground zero. Most significantly, about 100,000 jobs had beenlost, devastating individuals and families who lived throughout the city and region.Others whose livelihoods depended on doing business with downtown companies, suchas car service drivers, also suffered economic losses. <strong>The</strong>se people began streaming intoFAC, which had been intended to help only those who were family members of animmediate victim.In response to this unexpected outpouring of people with diverse needs, HRA on<strong>September</strong> 19 opened a Disaster Assistance Service <strong>Center</strong> (DASC), initially to servedisplaced workers with the participation of the State Department of Labor, at 180 WaterStreet, but which soon became a much larger operation than the Family Assistance <strong>Center</strong>.44


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITY<strong>The</strong> DASC’s mission was expanded to include other services provided by agencies such asHUD and the Small Business Administration, and moved to 51 Chambers Street; theDASC relocated again to 141 Worth Street, in headquarters that were organized byFEMA. A portion of the FAC at Pier 94 was also converted to a DASC. Some thirty publicand private agencies ultimately were represented at these one-stop centers.<strong>The</strong>re were no protocols or precedents for such collaboration and the agencies needed toimprovise procedures to mesh their operations and facilitate the process for clients.Agencies were concerned that some people would try to take advantage of the crisis andget benefits they were not entitled to. Privacy rules prevented some organizations,especially public agencies but also the Red Cross, from sharing information about clients.As a result, DASC experienced well-publicized cases of frustrated and anguishedindividuals who had to provide the same information on different forms for severalagencies, of people who did not get straight answers to their questions, and cases of delaysor denials of benefits.An ad hoc system of coordination began to emerge from the work of an informal “servicescoordination group,” consisting of the top leadership of key organizations, chaired byFEMA, that could make decisions and empower DASC personnel to carry them out. <strong>The</strong>group sorted out which agencies were responsible for various services and configured aflow of clients through the different stops.<strong>The</strong> group developed a single information formto capture basic information needed by each agency for every client — such as family size,how they were impacted, and social security number — and this information was sharedamong the agencies, reducing the amount of time clients needed to spend on this task.IBM donated personnel to digitize the form, using techniques developed in earthquakedisasters in Turkey, India, and Peru. Some of the agencies, including HRA, beganrecording on the form the benefits they disbursed.<strong>The</strong>se arrangements were made too lateto save time or trouble for many of the first wave of clients, but they became thegroundwork for the 9/<strong>11</strong> United Services Group, described earlier, which by early 2002had developed an online unified case management system for the broadly defined group ofvictims and their families.<strong>The</strong>re were noprotocols orprecedents for suchcollaboration and theagencies needed toimprovise proceduresto mesh theiroperations. . . .Cash Benefits for Families of Immediate Victims<strong>The</strong> largest single federal assistance program for individuals and families was the unprecedented<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Victim Compensation Fund, providing tax-free cash awards forthe survivors of persons killed or seriously injured in the attacks who agreed to waive theirright to sue the airlines or any other public or private entity (except alleged foreignterrorists or their supporters). <strong>The</strong> fund was established by Title IV of the AirTransportation Safety and System Stabilization Act of 2001, commonly referred to as theairlines bailout bill, hastily enacted by Congress eleven days after 9/<strong>11</strong>.<strong>The</strong> payments wereintended to compensate surviving dependents for the expected future economic value ofthe victim’s life, based on their current earnings. This formula generated larger paymentsfor well-to-do victims than for those at the lower ends of the earnings scale, an imbalance45


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEnot corrected by charitable awards. Awards from the fund were expected ultimately toreach about $5 billion, for approximately 3,200 eligible claimants, including nationals of 61different countries.Victim compensationfor families of personswho died or wereseriously injured inone of the threedisaster sites . . .was by far thelargest category ofphilanthropic aid. . . .To prevent “double dipping,” the authorizing legislation specified that awards from thefund be reduced by “all collateral sources” of payments such as life insurance, pensionfunds, and payments by federal, state, and local governments (except the federal PublicSafety Officers Benefit). Fund Special Master Kenneth Feinberg initially interpreted thestatute to mean that charitable payments, such as those made by various benefit funds,were to be counted as collateral sources. In the November 2001 meeting with Feinberg,representatives of about fifty philanthropic organizations had threatened to withhold theirpayments until after the Victim Compensation Fund made its awards, so as to preventreductions in the federal amounts. Recognizing the potential for unacceptable delays,Feinberg decided to exempt charitable payments from the collateral sources calculation. Asa result of this decision, some families received cash awards from numerous sourcesincluding the Red Cross, uniformed officers benefit funds, and the federal fund.<strong>Philanthropic</strong> Victim CompensationVictim compensation for families of persons who died or were seriously injured at one ofthe three disaster sites, without regard to financial need, was by far the largest category ofphilanthropic aid, accounting for more than $800 million.<strong>The</strong> largest single source was theAmerican Red Cross, which reported disbursing $316 million for these purposes as ofJanuary 31, 2003. <strong>The</strong> Red Cross had never made such gifts, having previously confinedits financial assistance to temporary living expenses for needy victims. <strong>The</strong> new programwas created as part of the response to widespread public controversy over the Red Cross’announcement that it would not spend all of the 9/<strong>11</strong>-inspired Liberty Fund contributionson that disaster.When the Red Cross reversed this policy, it was forced to find new ways tospend the contributions, and the outright gift program was the largest of these inventions.<strong>The</strong> three major funds dedicated to the 436 families of deceased uniformed rescue workersraised about $455 million, mainly for payments to survivor families, by late 2002. Smalleramounts were distributed as outright gifts to families of immediate victims by othercharities, principally the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund and the Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>.Corporations that lost large numbers of employees in the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> alsoestablished their own charitable funds for cash payments to surviving family members.Three firms that suffered about one-third of the total deaths — Marsh & McClennan,Cantor Fitzgerald, and Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, Inc. — contributed and raised from theiremployees and others a total of about $30 million.Operations of these funds were marked by ad hoc decision-making, because most of thefunds were newly created and lacked policies, criteria, and procedures. <strong>The</strong>se had beenhastily created to enable expeditious action in the face of media stories highlighting the gapbetween total funds donated and totals paid out. Each fund used a different formula for its46


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITYdistributions. In some cases, there was a flat amount per family, while in others the numberof dependents, length of service, and other factors were taken into account. Most familiesreceived support from more than one fund, with no coordination of benefits paid.<strong>The</strong> various public and private cash compensation programs were extraordinary incomparison with those made following previous acts of terrorism, such as the bombings ofthe World Trade <strong>Center</strong> in 1993, the Oklahoma City Murrah Building in 1995, and theU.S. embassies in Africa in 1998. In none of these cases, nor in natural disasters, hasCongress or philanthropy made such generous provisions for survivors. In strikingcontrast, the Department of Veterans Affairs has a standard schedule of benefits forsurviving spouses and dependent children of active duty military personnel who die in theline of duty. This provides a spouse with two children under eighteen a life insurancebenefit of $250,000 plus $1,422 per month. Dependents of military personnel killed on9/<strong>11</strong> were eligible for the Victim Compensation Fund, but the awards were reduced by the“collateral” payments from the VA.Problems and Policy IssuesDespite their unmatched liberality, all of the funds encountered bitter criticism from thebeneficiaries who complained that the formulas were flawed in one respect or another.Some uniformed rescue workers’ families who received a flat amount protested that thosewith more dependents and length of service should receive higher awards. Families ofseven victims at Cantor Fitzgerald Securities filed a federal lawsuit against the SpecialMaster of the federal Victim Compensation Fund, alleging, among other things, that hiscalculations shortchanged higher income earners by offering them only about ten percentof what they believe their spouses would have earned over the rest of their lifetimes....policies, criteria,and procedures. . . .had been hastilycreated to enableexpeditious action inthe face of mediastories highlightingthe gap between totalfunds donated andtotals paid out.<strong>The</strong> March 15, 2003 New York Times reported that there had been some 1,700 disasterrelatedsuits against the City, including 1,000 firefighters seeking a total of at least $12billion. <strong>The</strong> City Law Department set up a special World Trade <strong>Center</strong> defense unitconsisting of twenty-one lawyers, operating on a $3 million budget, to fight these claims,which could take years to decide.Aid for Small Businesses<strong>The</strong> New York City Partnership and Chamber of Commerce reported that 707 smallbusinesses were destroyed at the World Trade <strong>Center</strong>, and that in the forty-five days after9/<strong>11</strong> the losses at 3,400 inaccessible small firms in the immediate vicinity of ground zeroamounted to $795 million. Small businesses as far as two miles from ground zero thatexperienced no physical damage nevertheless felt secondary impacts from disruptedsubway service, utility repairs, closed streets, and a drop in tourism. Retail and foodbusinesses, whose main market is foot traffic from office buildings, and small manufacturers,were especially hard-hit. By one estimate, there were about 14,000 small firms with47


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEfifty or fewer employees in Lower Manhattan and Chinatown south of Canal Street.<strong>The</strong>seemployed a total of about 370,000 people, including large numbers of low-wage andimmigrant workers.Small businessesas far as two milesfrom ground zero . . .felt secondaryimpacts fromdisrupted subwayservice, utilityrepairs, closedstreets, and a dropin tourism.<strong>The</strong> second largest category of federal aid, totaling an estimated allocation of about $1.1billion as of mid-2002, went for grants and low-interest loans for these enterprises.Federal and philanthropic funds were used to compensate for lost revenues, replace orrepair damaged facilities or equipment, bridge insurance payments, and provide cashflow for recovery. About $700 million of the $1.1 billion in federal aid, mostly for grantsfor business loss compensation, came from outside an established channel of authorizedfederal disaster relief, through the community development block grant (CDBG)program created in 1974 to revitalize low-income neighborhoods. About $400 millionwas for loans under the FEMA-Small Business Administration’s statutory disaster reliefauthorizations. <strong>Philanthropic</strong> organizations such as the Ford <strong>Foundation</strong>, the New YorkTimes Company <strong>Foundation</strong>, the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, and other foundations andcorporations made grants and low-interest loans to help support similar activitiesadministered by nonprofit organizations.Federal emergency supplemental CDBG appropriations for New York City economicrecovery went to two quasi-independent state agencies, Empire State Development andits subsidiary, the Lower Manhattan Development Corporation (LMDC). Specific plansfor expending the funds were subject to prior HUD approval. As in the case of naturaldisasters, the HUD Secretary waived many requirements of the CDBG program, suchas the one that at least 70 percent of the beneficiaries be low- or moderate-incomepersons. Of the $3.5 billion total CDBG funding for the City — more than the totalCDBG funds provided nationwide for all major disasters since 1991 — Congressrequired that at least $500 million be used to compensate small businesses and nonprofitorganizations located in lower Manhattan for their economic losses. LMDC indicatedthat it planned to provide an additional $200 million for these purposes. <strong>The</strong> approximately$2.8 billion balance was used for downtown relocation and retention incentivesfor large firms, downtown residential relocation incentives, rebuilding Con Ed andVerizon facilities, master planning of the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> site, and various cityexpenses related to the emergency.Business Recovery GrantsThis program, the largest one to be funded with CDBG allocations, was designed byLMDC and Empire State Development to provide businesses or nonprofit organizationswith fewer than 500 employees, located south of 14th Street, with cash grants for uncompensatedeconomic losses related to the attacks. <strong>The</strong> closer a business was to ground zero,the greater the amounts that were compensated. <strong>The</strong> maximum grant, for businessesclosest to the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> site, covered 25 days of lost revenue, up to $300,000. Asof March 18, 2003, a spokesman for Empire State Development said that the agency hadapproved 14,233 grants totaling $530 million in business recovery grants. In a November2002 study, the U.S. General Accounting Office (since renamed the Government48


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITYAccountability Office) reported that about three quarters of the recipients employed 10 orfewer people, making it likely that a majority of the recipients employed a predominantlylow-wage workforce.Small Firm Attraction and Retention GrantsThis LMDC/Empire State small business program was designed to provide cash grantincentives for small businesses that agreed to remain in or relocate to lower Manhattan.<strong>The</strong> program offers payments to businesses (but not nonprofits) with fewer than 200employees that were located or were planning to locate south of Canal Street, and signed anew lease or renewed an existing lease for at least five years. Total payments were $3,500per employee, except for those that were in the “Restricted Zone” close to ground zero,which could qualify for $5,000 per employee. As of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2002, $12 million hadbeen disbursed to 246 businesses. According to Empire State Development’s plan for itsCDBG funds, a total of $105 million was earmarked for the small firm attraction andretention program.Business Recovery Loan ProgramAnother initiative of Empire State Development, also undertaken with CDBG funds,provided low-interest recovery loans for small businesses and nonprofit organizations thatcould not qualify for a conventional or SBA loan. This activity was directed at businessrevitalization, not compensation for losses or incentives for relocation, and firms thatparticipated in one of the earlier programs were also eligible for this one. Businesses with500 or fewer employees, located anywhere in the city provided they were south of 14thStreet on 9/<strong>11</strong>, were eligible. Firms located beyond these boundaries on 9/<strong>11</strong> qualified ifthey derived at least ten percent of their revenues from business south of 14th Street.Empire State funded the program with $50 million in grants to nonprofit communitydevelopment financial institutions (CDFIs), which in turn awarded the funds as lowinterestloans. Empire State expected that the CDFIs would make a total of about 1,000loans averaging $50,000, with a cap of $250,000 per loan. Seedco, a CDFI which hadbeen operating a small business loan and grant program with funding from several publicand philanthropic donors, was the first recipient of Empire State funds under this newinitiative, and had closed about forty loans worth about $2 million as of January 2003.Another initiativeof Empire StateDevelopment . . .provided low-interestrecovery loans forsmall businessesand nonprofitorganizations thatcould not qualify fora conventional orSBA loan.Assistance by State and City before Approval of Federal CDBG FundsShortly after the attacks and before approval of the CDBG funds, Empire StateDevelopment and the City Economic Development Corporation began a program of cashgrants of up to $10,000 each to small businesses, and about $24 million was approved for4,322 firms.<strong>The</strong> state and city also operated a joint program in which they furnished loanloss reserves to banks and nongovernmental community development financial institutionsthat extended bridge loans to small businesses and nonprofit organizations. <strong>The</strong> estimated$24 million in cash grants was expected to be reimbursed from CDBG funds, and the loanloss reserve program was funded with $15 million in CDBG resources.49


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEProblems and Policy Issues<strong>The</strong> state and city . . .furnished loan lossreserves to banks andnongovernmentalcommunitydevelopment financialinstitutions thatextended bridge loansto small businessesand nonprofitorganizations.Empire State Development’s small business programs received a great deal of criticism,including concerns about reimbursement grants that fell substantially short of actuallosses, delays in approving and disbursing funds, confusion about boundaries demarcatingeligibility for different programs and differing grant sizes, and perceived inequities such asthe fact that businesses in the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> that were totally destroyed received thesame amount as other businesses in the same geographic zone.<strong>The</strong> November 2002 GAOreport found that the state had awarded only about one-half of the number of businessrecovery grants it originally estimated, but by March 2003 about three-quarters of theoriginal target of 19,600 small businesses had been helped. <strong>The</strong> median amount of losscoverage not otherwise reimbursed by insurance or other grants was only about 17percent. Because this was not an established disaster relief program, guidelines and criteriahad to be improvised hastily to meet the emergency. As a result, according to an April 10,2003 New York Times report, a HUD audit found that Empire State had “paid millions ofdollars to companies without getting details on how they had calculated their losses, a flawthat persisted despite a preliminary audit that flagged the problems.”Criticisms by business owners of the attraction and retention grant program focused onslow disbursements, ineligibility of firms with fewer than ten employees (a rule that waslater eliminated), and disputes about the significance of lease expiration dates forbusinesses that were located in the World Trade <strong>Center</strong>. Another concern was that businessgrants were subject to federal income taxes, even though this was self-defeating of thepurpose of the program’s assistance; grants to individuals for personal expenses likehousing were not taxable. Some business owners were pleased with the assistance theyreceived, and, according to officials of public and nonprofit organizations active indowntown economic assistance, some owners devoted a great deal of time and energy tomaking the rounds of various funding sources seeking to get the maximum possible aid.Questions also were raised about the overall allocation of the $3.5 billion in CDBG funds.Large companies that remained or relocated in downtown could receive up to $6,250 peremployee, compared to a maximum of $5,000 for small firms. A total of $170 million wasallocated for the large firm retention program, compared to $105 million for small firms.Two firms that had quickly expressed an intention to stay downtown, American Expressand the American Stock Exchange, were early recipients of these grants. <strong>The</strong> residentialrelocation incentive program, for which about $280 million in CDBG funds was allocated,provided residents of Battery Park City and parts of Tribeca, where the median householdincome was about $125,000, with grants of up to $14,500 if they signed new leases.Residents of Chinatown — where there was no direct damage but large economicdisruptions — qualified for residential incentive grants of up to only $7,750, even thoughthe Chinatown median household income was about a third of that in Battery Park Cityand Tribeca.50


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITYSmall Business Administration Loans<strong>The</strong> Small Business Administration (SBA) is equipped with statutory authority to makedisaster-related loans in three categories: business physical disaster loans for repair orreplacement of property; economic injury disaster loans for working capital to assist smallbusinesses and nonprofit organizations cover operating expenses; and disaster assistanceloans for repair or replacement of homeowners’ or renters’ real and personal property.Prospective borrowers from SBA were strongly encouraged first to register and establishtheir eligibility with FEMA, in a common intake procedure. Business owners who did notqualify for one of the SBA programs could be eligible for one of FEMA’s individualassistance programs. Congress appropriated $175 million to the Small BusinessAdministration as part of the $40 billion emergency supplemental bill, a figure that wascalculated to support about $651 million in loans through the agency’s three programs.SBA loan officers were out stationed in the Disaster Assistance Recovery <strong>Center</strong> (DASC)at 141 Worth Street, and at one time at nineteen other locations including one inChinatown. Eligibility was open to any small business that sustained physical or economicdamage in any borough of New York City, ten suburban New York counties, six upstateNew York Counties, six northern New Jersey counties, two counties each in Connecticutand Pennsylvania, and Berkshire County in Massachusetts. In addition, Congressauthorized $75 million to enable the SBA to guarantee $4.5 billion in non-disaster-related“7(A)” bank loans for small businesses located anywhere in the country that could show adirect or indirect adverse impact from 9/<strong>11</strong>.Prospectiveborrowers fromSBA were stronglyencouraged first toregister andestablish theireligibility withFEMA, in acommon intakeprocedure.<strong>The</strong> SBA disaster loan programs carried interest rates of 3.375 to 8 percent, and could befor a term as long as 30 years. SBA loans were relatively straightforward and free of mostof the intricate complexities of the Empire State grant programs, and could be for muchgreater amounts — up to $10 million, compared with $300,000 in Empire State’s businessrecovery grants and $250,000 in recovery loans. (<strong>The</strong> maximum SBA loan in otherdisasters has been $1.5 million.)All of SBA’s assistance is in the form of loans secured by collateral, a requirement thatcould be waived or negotiated flexibly in the Empire State and CDFI loan programsbecause the source of these funds was mainly grants. Downtown business real or personalproperty that was destroyed or severely damaged was obviously not available as collateral.Instead, these owners usually needed to offer their homes as collateral, a very risky movewhen facing great uncertainties about the economic future of the city and their businesses.Undocumented immigrants were not eligible for SBA loans, but some Empire State/CDFIprograms were less exacting than the SBA in their immigrant status documentationrequirements.51


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSESBA applicants could also qualify for all three of the Empire State programs and the CDFIprograms, and in practice receipt of a grant or wage subsidy strengthened the cash flowprojections analyzed in the loan underwriting process. Under program rules, owners werenot prevented from borrowing from more than one source, although the ability to servicetotal debt was a key underwriting factor.Criticisms of theSBA program focusedon the collateralrequirements andhigh denial rates.As of January 4, 2003, SBA had approved $4<strong>11</strong> million for <strong>11</strong>,165 disaster loans in NewYork City, about 85 percent of which were in Manhattan. Another $54 million had beenapproved for the suburban and upstate counties in the broader tri-state disaster area.<strong>The</strong>reare no figures available on utilization of the expanded 7(A) guarantee program anywherein the U.S., but SBA officials indicated that there had been very little interest. Of the $4<strong>11</strong>million in New York City, just over 90 percent was for economic injury loans for workingcapital and operating expenses in the disaster period. Eight percent was for repair orreplacement of real estate, machinery, equipment, inventory, and supplies. Only $5.9million had been approved for loans to homeowners or renters to repair or replace realestate or personal property. <strong>The</strong> $4<strong>11</strong> million represented about two-thirds of theauthorized $651 million. SBA closed its DASC office and stopped processing applicationsJanuary 31, 2003, upon expiration of the disaster period.Criticisms of the SBA program focused on the collateral requirements and high denial rates.A November 2002 GAO study found that denials and withdrawn applications accountedfor 54 percent of all business application dispositions, and the primary reasons for denialwere “no repayment ability” and “unsatisfactory credit.” <strong>The</strong> primary reasons forwithdrawals were “no IRS record found” and “failure to furnish additional information.”Non-governmental CDFI ProgramsSeveral nonprofit community development financial institutions began operating smallbusiness loan, grant, and wage subsidy programs soon after 9/<strong>11</strong>, initially with philanthropicsupport that reached a total of about $50 million. Seedco is the largest of these,having committed about $21 million as of January 31, 2003, mostly for retail andmanufacturing enterprises employing less than fifty people south of Canal Street includingChinatown. 12 Retail and manufacturing businesses with less than fifty employees weremore likely to employ predominantly low-wage and immigrant workforces than largerbusinesses and businesses engaged in professional services or other industries. Until itreceived Empire State Development grant, whose purpose is business recovery, Seedco’sprograms focused on stopgap bolstering of small businesses’ cash flows and stabilizingtheir low-wage workforces until larger, longer-range assistance could be identified.Other CDFIs and nonprofit organizations with similar programs for small businesses andnonprofit organizations in lower Manhattan included the Renaissance EconomicDevelopment Corporation, affiliated with Asian Americans for Equality; ACCION; theNew York City Partnership and Chamber of Commerce; the Nonprofit Finance Fund; and12 <strong>The</strong> Seedco program was chronicled by Tom Seessel, Back in Business:<strong>The</strong> Lower Manhattan SmallBusiness and Workforce Retention Program, Seedco, New York, April 2002.52


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITYthe Fund for the City of New York. Each of these carved out a mostly distinctive niche,although there was some overlap in terms of eligibility, purposes, and uses of funds amongCDFIs, Empire State, and SBA programs. CDFIs provided useful though smallsupplements to Empire State and SBA programs and were able to respond to very smallbusinesses that for one reason or another could not qualify for, or did not receive, as muchas they felt they needed from, a government program.FEMA Individual Assistance ProgramsAt the time of its response to 9/<strong>11</strong>, FEMA had statutory authorization for three principalprograms to assist individuals and families meet their economic needs following a disaster:Mortgage and Rental Assistance, Individual and Family Grants, and DisasterUnemployment Assistance. <strong>The</strong>se are discussed in the following sections. As is the casewith all other government programs — with the important exception of the <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th Victim Compensation Fund — undocumented immigrants and most of those whoarrived after August 1996 were not eligible.<strong>The</strong>se individuals became a special concern ofphilanthropic organizations.Mortgage and Rental Assistance...undocumentedimmigrants and mostof those who arrivedafter August 1996 werenot eligible.<strong>The</strong>seindividuals became aspecial concern ofphilanthropicorganizations.<strong>The</strong> Mortgage and Rental Assistance Program (MRA) authorizes FEMA to cover up toeighteen months of rent or mortgage payments for victims who suffer financial hardship asa result of a major disaster. FEMA’s initial policy in New York City was to restrict eligibilitynarrowly to persons who could demonstrate a “direct” link between physical damage totheir place of employment and the loss of at least 29 percent of their monthly grossincome. Applicants also needed to produce a written eviction, dispossession, or mortgageforeclosure document. FEMA application forms contained no guidance or criteria forinterpretation of “direct,” and 15,000 faulty applications were mailed out that increasedthe risk that eligible families would not receive help.<strong>The</strong>re were numerous cases of administrative ineptness, such as denial because FEMAstaff could not obtain employer verification of a job loss at a destroyed firm in the WorldTrade <strong>Center</strong>. Application evaluators — two-thirds of whom were temporary workers —were located in Texas, Virginia, and elsewhere, and many did not understand New York’sgeography. One employee, for example, did not know that 1 Liberty Plaza was located indowntown Manhattan, adjacent to the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> site. Another insisted thatgarment workers, many of whom had lost their Chinatown-based jobs because of transportationclosures, had been laid off because it is a seasonal occupation. <strong>The</strong>re werefrequent descriptions of evaluators as condescending or rude.FEMA made minor adjustments in its process and criteria at various times in late 2001through early 2002, but never clarified what it meant by “direct.” Among the changes wasthat a late notice would be acceptable documentation of intent to foreclose or evict. <strong>The</strong>adjustments did not improve the situation much, and the application denial rate six monthsafter 9/<strong>11</strong> was 70 percent. Only 2,854 applications were approved, for a total amount of53


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE$13 million. FEMA officials sought to deflect attention away from its shortcomings bymaking public statements, with some justification if not sensitivity, that the large charitableresponse helped New Yorkers stay current with their mortgage and rental obligations, thuspreventing issuance of foreclosure or eviction notices.FEMA officials soughtto deflect attentionaway from itsshortcomings bymaking publicstatements . . . that thelarge charitableresponse helped NewYorkers. . . .FEMA officials struggling with the “direct effect” issue were troubled by how wide theeligibility area might become, and how large the outlays would be, if the direct connectionto physical damage near the disaster site was no longer the criterion. Larry Zensinger,director of FEMA’s Recovery Division, continued to defend the initial eligibility criteria ina January 8, 2003 interview, noting “once you get away from a connection with directphysical impact, where do you draw the line? Airline employees living in Los Angeles alsosuffered economic hardship due to reduced flight schedules.”In April and May 2002, FEMA reviewed all 7,323 denied applications and found about 22percent to be eligible, and additional documentation was requested for a further 43percent. But the need to prove undefined “direct” impact continued to be the mainstumbling block. By June 2002, under the threat of pending Congressional legislationestablishing eligibility boundaries and discarding the “direct” language, FEMA issuedrevised guidelines expanding the geographic area to include the entire Borough ofManhattan. (Taking no chances, Congress subsequently enacted this into law on August2.) FEMA also discontinued requiring self-employed or business-owner applicants toapply for an SBA loan before seeking continued mortgage and rental assistance. Under thenew rules, applicants could demonstrate economic impact by showing that:• their employers were located in Manhattan and suffered financially because of the WorldTrade <strong>Center</strong> attack, or• they lost jobs or significant income because their non-Manhattan employers hadsignificant business relationships with firms in Manhattan, or• they lived in Manhattan but commuted to work outside the borough and sufferedfinancially because of travel restrictions after 9/<strong>11</strong>.<strong>The</strong> standard of financial hardship was also decreased from 29 to 25 percent of grossmonthly income. As a result of the new guidelines, and application deadlines that wereextended several times, ultimately to January 31, 2003, the rate of eligible applications andamounts awarded increased dramatically. <strong>The</strong> number of eligible applications increasedfrom 2,854 applications for a total amount of $13 million in April, to 10,429 and $87.7million by December 26, 2002, a month before the deadline. <strong>The</strong> overall approval rateincreased from 20 to 60 percent over this same period.For all of its troubles, the Mortgage and Rental Assistance program provided much morehelp to New York City than it had in all other disasters since its inception. <strong>The</strong> programwas little used before 9/<strong>11</strong> because, according to a FEMA Inspector General’s Report inDecember 2002, “previous disasters did not coincide with nor result in widespreadunemployment and national economic losses.” Before 9/<strong>11</strong>, a total of $18.1 million had54


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITYbeen awarded for sixty-eight declared disasters, compared with $87.7 million for NewYork, with further monthly amounts yet to be paid out to those who could demonstratecontinued economic need.<strong>The</strong> MRA program had operated at such a low level that, in 2000, Congress made itunavailable for disasters after May 1, 2002. <strong>The</strong> Individual and Family Grants programwas also repealed for disasters after May 1, 2002. For disasters occurring after that date,items previously covered by these two programs were combined in a new Individual andHouseholds Program. <strong>The</strong> FEMA Inspector General’s Report concludes its discussion ofthe MRA by saying that the program “if reinstated ...would still require legislativerevision to make it less complicated to administer. A broader, more flexible program . . .would more appropriately meet the range of economic losses experienced such as with the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks. FEMA should explore such a program with Congress.”Based on interviews with current and former high-ranking FEMA and other federalgovernment officials, there were no indications that such an exploration was a priority forFEMA, which has now been incorporated in the new Department of Homeland Security.Individual and Family GrantsThis program provides grants to states, subject to a 25 percent matching requirement, as asort of “ultimate safety net” to help meet disaster victims’ various needs that cannot beaddressed under other federal programs. Eligible expenses include compensation for suchlosses as vehicles and other personal property, moving and storage expenses, and medical,dental, and funeral costs.To qualify for the Individual and Family Grants (IFG) program,individuals must first have utilized insurance receipts and applied for and been denied anSBA disaster assistance loan for homes and personal property. In New York, the IFGprogram is administered by the State Department of Labor in accordance with a FEMAapprovedplan.For all of its troubles,the Mortgage andRental Assistanceprogram providedmuch more help toNew York City than ithad in all otherdisasters since itsinception.<strong>The</strong> IFG program was marked by widespread complaints about confusing rules, excessivedocumentation requirements, delays in processing applications, high rejection rates, smallawards, and poor public outreach and communications. About 300 people who mailed inapplications had their packets returned in November 2002 because FEMA’s Albany PostOffice Box was closed after the agency failed for three months to renew the $425 annualfee. In response to criticisms, FEMA and the state extended the IFG application deadlineon several occasions, finally to January 31, 2003. Items normally covered by IFG in otherdisasters, such as burial expenses and health care coverage, were not provided in New YorkCity because the disaster was caused by a crime, and consequently these expenses werereimbursable under the U.S. Department of Justice’s Office for Victims of Crimeprograms. FEMA officials also said that private charitable organizations were helping tomeet these expenses.<strong>The</strong> state Labor Department initially assigned ten permanent and 50 temporaryemployees to answer inquiries and process applications — utilizing a paper-basedinformation management and case-processing system — in the Disaster Assistance Service55


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE<strong>The</strong> Individual andFamily Grantsprogram (IFG) wasmarked bywidespreadcomplaints. . . .<strong>Center</strong> at 141 Worth Street in lower Manhattan.<strong>The</strong> antiquated paper-based methodologyled to an overwhelming backlog when, in May 2002, in response to heightened concernsabout environmental contamination, the state and FEMA announced that the Individualand Family Grants program could be used to reimburse up to $1,550 in outlays for indoorair conditioner units and other air quality equipment for residents anywhere in the fiveboroughs, regardless of income or proof of adverse environmental impact. This wasinstituted despite the fact that EPA had concluded the city’s outside air quality was back towhere it was pre-9/<strong>11</strong>, and made use of apartments above 78th Street as clean controlsamples when testing for downtown air quality.Indoor air quality equipment such as filters, air purifiers, and high-efficiency particulate airvacuum cleaners had been reimbursable since October 2001, but the May 2002announcement that air conditioners were included engendered an entrepreneurial responseby existing and start-up businesses that began promoting the program by encouragingindividuals to purchase the equipment and seek reimbursement. Consumer uptake causedIFG applications to quadruple from about 3,000 per month to an average of about 12,000in the unusually hot summer months of 2002. Not anticipating the upsurge, the state inMarch had reduced the number of staff assigned to IFG from sixty to thirty.FEMA assigned a team of 150 employees to help the state reduce the backlog byconverting data to an electronic database, referring new incoming calls to the FEMAnational processing center, making on-the-spot eligibility determinations where possible,providing online registration in the DASC, and streamlining redundant processingprocedures. FEMA and the state grossly overstated the consequent improvements, sayingin late October 2002 that the approval rate had jumped from 13 percent to 89 percent. Inresponding to Congressional questions about “Enron accounting,” a spokesman for thestate Labor Department conceded that the new calculations did not represent real awardsmade, but rather the possibility that awards would be forthcoming. “It’s more of a positiveway of looking at where those people stand,” the spokesman was quoted as saying in theNovember 1 New York Times.As of December 24, 2002, about a month before the IFG application deadline, there hadbeen 2<strong>11</strong>,305 applications, of which 46,610 were approved, with awards totaling $46.8million, or an average of just over $10,000 per grant.Disaster Unemployment Assistance<strong>The</strong> smallest of FEMA’s individual assistance programs is unemployment assistance,primarily for self-employed workers such as car service drivers and others not covered byregular unemployment insurance, who are unemployed as “a direct result” of a disaster. Asin the case of other public programs, undocumented immigrants, and most documentedimmigrants who arrived in this country after August 22, 1996, were not eligible. All of theDUA program costs were paid by FEMA, through a transfer to the U.S. Department ofLabor, which in turn makes the funds available to the state Department of Labor pursuantto an approved plan and guidelines. <strong>The</strong> state processed applications in the DisasterAssistance Service <strong>Center</strong>.56


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITY<strong>The</strong> state acted quickly to get clarification from the U.S. Department of Labor about theinterpretation of “direct,” which had never been defined in previous disasters. An October12, 2001 letter, subsequently confirmed in the November 14 Federal Register, went intogreat detail defining the term in restrictive language limiting eligibility to unemploymentresulting from “physical damage or destruction of the work site,” “the physical inaccessibilityof the work site,” and loss of work in a business that “previously received at least amajority of its revenue or income” from businesses that suffered the specified directimpacts. <strong>The</strong> regulation ruled out unemployment that was “the result of a longer chain ofevents precipitated or exacerbated by the major disaster.” Although FEMA didn’t usethese words, the same thoughts were in the minds of its officials who resisted expandingthe boundaries of the Mortgage and Rental Assistance Program.Minimum DUA benefits are one-half of the average regular unemployment weekly benefit,which in New York worked out to be $138 per week. <strong>The</strong> actual benefits paid were basedon earnings, and in New York the average was about $183/week. Awards are reduced byany Workmen’s Compensation or Social Security payments. DUA benefits are customarilypaid for up to 26 weeks of disaster-related unemployment, but in New York the period wasextended to thirty-nine weeks thanks to special legislation introduced by the New YorkState Congressional delegation. <strong>The</strong> deadline for applying for benefits was extendedseveral times, ultimately until June 2002. According to FEMA figures as of the weekending November 29, 2002, a total of 3,290 claims had been approved, a 49 percentapproval rate, and $13.2 million in benefits had been paid.FEMA’s unemploymentassistance program isprimarily for selfemployedworkers . . .not covered by regularunemploymentinsurance, who areunemployed as “a directresult” of a disaster.Crisis CounselingFEMA’s largest individual assistance program following the 9/<strong>11</strong> disasters was its onehundred percent funded grants to New York State for the Crisis Counseling Assistance andTraining Program (CCP), administered by the state’s Office of Mental Health withtechnical support from the federal <strong>Center</strong> for Mental Health Services. Known as ProjectLiberty, the program offered community outreach, education, group counseling, referralsand short-term interventions for disaster-related distress, including bereavementcounseling and cognitive-behavioral counseling such as teaching skills for managinganxiety and coping with stress. Project Liberty services were delivered by 68 public andprivate nonprofit agencies at over one hundred locations, with multicultural staffspossessing fluency in more than two dozen languages.<strong>The</strong> CCP is traditionally limited to the state where the disaster occurred, but in the case of9/<strong>11</strong> New York State requested, and FEMA agreed, that residents of New Jersey,Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Pennsylvania also be eligible. Project Liberty serviceswere available to any person who lived in or visited these areas during the disaster. <strong>The</strong>program was extensively promoted through publication of an 800 number, extensiveadvertising with the de-stigmatizing “Feel Free to Feel Better” slogan, and TV and radiopublic service announcements from celebrities such as Joe Torre and Susan Sarandon.57


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSELonger-term mentalhealth services, as wellas financial support,and related socialservices for crimevictims, are madepossible by fundingfrom the federalDepartment ofJustice’s Office forVictims of Crime. . . .In August 2002 the state received FEMA approval to expand the scope and range ofservices beyond short-term interventions, to assist individuals “who continue toexperience trauma symptoms at levels resulting in substantial function impairment.” Thispermitted the addition of treatment for post traumatic stress disorders, depression, andanxiety, but there were still restrictions on provision of medication, hospitalization, andlong-term therapy. <strong>The</strong> CCP program customarily operates for nine months following agrant award, which would have been the end of 2002, but in the New York area thedeadline was extended to December 31, 2003.Longer-term mental health services, as well as financial support, and related social servicesfor crime victims, are made possible by funding from the federal Department of Justice’sOffice for Victims of Crime (OVC) through one hundred percent grants to state agencies.In New York, these resources were provided to the State Crime Victims Board, whichcontracts with public and private nonprofit agencies to furnish the services to eligiblevictims. Many agencies, such as Safe Horizon, one of the largest nonprofit crime victims’organizations in the nation, received funding from both the CVB and Project Liberty todeliver services. FEMA’s Project Liberty grants could be used only for outreach-based,short-term counseling (with the recent liberalizations noted above), but CVB funds can beused for services for up to four years and can reimburse third-party providers.FEMA reported that, as of December 24, 2002, about $165 million had been approved forProject Liberty in New York and the four other states — by far the largest such grant in the27-year history of the program and almost as much as had been awarded in all previousdisasters combined. However, only about $65 million had actually been obligated, andfigures were not available on numbers of people served. <strong>Foundation</strong>s and other philanthropicorganizations also made major commitments to provide for longer term therapyand other needs not covered by FEMA. <strong>The</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund allocated some $45-$55 million for mental health benefits up to $3,000 for an estimated 15,000 people, as asupplement to existing health insurance or payment for treatment for those who do nothave coverage. <strong>The</strong> New York Times Company <strong>Foundation</strong>’s 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Cases Fundplayed a leadership role in elevating awareness of mental health impacts, especially amongchildren, and made grants of more than $5 million in this area, chiefly to help with trainingand capacity-building of providers.Recommendations for FEMA<strong>The</strong> FEMA Inspector General, in a December 2002 report, FEMA’s Delivery ofIndividual Assistance Programs: New York — <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001, concluded with issues“requiring FEMA’s attention.” <strong>The</strong> most significant of these, in relation to the subjectscovered in this report, were that FEMA:• examine how to address individual economic loss;• develop “fair and equitable eligibility criteria ...and ...not appear arbitrary”;• reach “diverse ethnic populations in dense urban areas”;58


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITY• recognize “the hardships of extremely low-income populations”;• broaden its outreach capability regarding non-English speaking victims;• pursue “legislative changes that would exempt FEMA’s [individual and householdassistance] programs from the Federal public benefit classification when victims . . . arelawfully present . . . but may not have the qualified alien status required by Title IV of the[welfare reform act] of 1996.”;• simplify documentation requirements;• be “flexible in defining the time period” for assistance;• work with states to “ensure that the State contingency staffing plans can adapt tofluctuations in applicant activity”;• be “better able to anticipate the proactive role non-governmental organizations willplay . . . and attempt to coordinate relationships with these organizations.”<strong>The</strong>se recommendations seem highly appealing, but some may conflict with others. Forexample, application of fair and equitable procedures in a transparent fashion may notalways be consistent with an attempt to be flexible.Disaster Relief Medicaid<strong>The</strong> City’s Medicaid agency could not follow the usual procedures for enrolling orrecertifying Medicaid recipients through the state’s Medicaid computer system because oftelecommunications failures following 9/<strong>11</strong>. To deal with this crisis, Governor Patakireceived a special waiver from the federal Medicaid agency that permitted a greatlystreamlined application process.<strong>The</strong> Disaster Relief Medicaid (DRM) program, providingemergency four-month coverage, also put into effect the new Family Health Plus plan, aMedicaid expansion that was scheduled to be implemented in the fall of 2001 but wasdelayed as a result of the disaster. This new program allowed for higher income eligibilitylimits than before (from 87 to 133 percent of the federal poverty level for families), anddispensed with asset tests.<strong>The</strong> FEMAInspector General[recommended] thatFEMA be “betterable to anticipatethe proactive rolenon-governmentalorganizations play...and attemptto coordinaterelationshipswith theseorganizations.”As reported in the November 14, 2002 Wall Street Journal, “fraud prevention took a backseat to getting help for needy people.” <strong>The</strong> application form was trimmed from eightpages to one; interviews took only about fifteen minutes rather than the traditional two orthree separate three-hour sessions; applicants could qualify by verifying only their identityrather than having to produce reams of material; Medicaid workers made decisions on thespot at one of twenty-two community-based centers and coverage began immediately; andeligibility was broadened to include legal immigrants regardless of their date of entry in theU.S., as contrasted with the previous rule, enacted in the 1996 welfare reform law, that theyhad to have been in this country before August 22, 1996. Aggressive community outreach,59


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEmedia publicity, training Medicaid providers, and program assessment were made possiblethrough grants from the Robert Wood Johnson <strong>Foundation</strong>, the United Hospital Fund ofNew York, and the Kaiser Family <strong>Foundation</strong>.Results<strong>The</strong> Disaster ReliefMedicaid programsucceeded in enrollingnearly 350,000 peoplein four months, aboutten times the usualvolume for the sameamount of time.<strong>The</strong> DRM program succeeded in enrolling nearly 350,000 people in four months, aboutten times the usual volume for the same amount of time. Preliminary research by theKaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured, released in August 2002, found thatenrollees made “heavy use” of preventive services such as check-ups and mammograms,as well as surgery, dental visits, prescriptions, and eye examinations. When emergencycoverage began to expire, beginning January 31, 2002, DRM enrollees needed to completea full application, provide the usual documentation, and appear for a personal interview ata regular Medicaid office. In the early stages of the transition, only about half of the DRMenrollees appeared for the recertification interview, a finding whose significanceresearchers sought to understand. Possible explanations included mistaken beliefs that theemergency coverage was still in effect, inability to read the HRA letter calling them in foran interview, undeliverable letters, or that fraud was committed in the DRM applicationand the beneficiaries feared discovery.Protection of taxpayers and philanthropic donors from fraud was a dominant element ingovernment and philanthropic programs. <strong>The</strong> concluding sentence in an article about theDRM by Kathryn Haslanger of the United Hospital Fund of New York raises theimportant caution, not just for disaster relief but also more generally, that “fidelity toprogram integrity must do a better job so that procedures to screen out the ineligible donot exclude large numbers of eligibles.”Air PollutionDestruction of the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> and severe damage to surrounding buildingscaused release of such great quantities of debris, dust, and smoke that people in the area inthe immediate aftermath of the event spoke of it as having been like night. <strong>The</strong>re wasconcern about the extent to which exposure to these materials would cause health effects.EPA began air sampling in lower Manhattan and downwind locations, Brooklyn and JerseyCity, with funding supplied by FEMA. EPA also oversaw removal of hazardous materialsfrom the “Pile” at ground zero, cleaned up dust that had accumulated up to several inchesthick on downtown streets, and cleaned the exteriors of about 200 buildings. It alsoestablished a network of about 20 monitors downtown and in adjacent areas to measureairborne dust particles and other contaminants released as a result of the burning andcollapse of the World Trade <strong>Center</strong>.By late 2002, EPA issued a report finding that air contaminants in Lower Manhattan were“less likely to cause cancer and other long-term health problems than many had feared,” asreported in a December 24 article in the New York Times.<strong>The</strong> study found that most people60


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITYliving or working in the area around ground zero were “unlikely to suffer serious short- orlong-term health effects . . . [but] anyone exposed in the early hours was at risk of chronicsickness, as many firefighters have already reported.”Despite these generally sanguine findings, many were still concerned about potentialdangers. In response to intense pressure from residents and elected officials, EPAannounced in May 2002 that it would, for the first time ever, carry out indoor clean-up,testing, and environmental remediation for any resident south of Canal Street whorequested it.Through private contractors hired by the city’s Department of EnvironmentalProtection, the cleaning included all hard surfaces, rugs, carpets, curtains, drapes,upholstered furnishings, air conditioner units, exterior balconies and terraces, exteriorwindow ledges, and window guards. Contractors sought building owners’ permission toclean common areas, vacant apartments, and central HVAC systems. Following thecleaning, DEP/EPA contractors tested for asbestos in all residences, and for dioxins andtwenty-three elements in a sample of about 250 homes, and followed up whenunacceptable levels were found. Residents were promised that they would receive testresults within four to six weeks. Commercial properties were not included in the EPAprogram, which referred business owners to the SBA for loans for these purposes.Protection oftaxpayers andphilanthropic donorsfrom fraud was adominant element ingovernment andphilanthropicprograms.Using city-furnished census data, EPA estimated there were 20,000–30,000 eligibleresidences. As of January 21, 2003, Mary Mears of EPA estimated that about 6,700 unitshad been cleaned, but was unable to furnish any information about costs.Health Monitoring<strong>The</strong> Environmental Protection Agency may have felt that there was little remainingdanger, but community and occupational health professionals following rescue workersexposed to contamination after 9/<strong>11</strong> were not so sure. In late January 2003, Dr. StephenM. Levin of Mount Sinai Medical <strong>Center</strong> announced initial results from his team’s clinicalwork-ups of some 3,500 ground zero workers, made possible with $12 million in federalfunding through one of the emergency supplemental appropriations bills enacted in 2002to help fulfill President Bush’s $20 billion pledge. As reported in the January 31 New YorkTimes, Dr. Levin found that, of a sample of 250 examinations, three-fourths still hadrespiratory problems ten months after the attack, half had lung-related complaints, andhalf were experiencing psychological trauma warranting further review. It was estimatedthat as many as 35,000 workers and volunteers spent time at or adjacent to ground zero inthe days following <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>. Senator Clinton pushed strongly for additional federalappropriations, up to a total of $90 million, to support continuation of Dr. Levin’s work.<strong>Philanthropic</strong> contributions to health monitoring were made by the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.Other studies turned up similarly troubling findings. A <strong>Center</strong>s for Disease Controltelephone survey of a sample of Manhattan residents five to nine weeks following<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, found that among the 13 percent of adults with asthma, 27 percentreported more severe asthma symptoms after the attack. In an October 17, 2002 Forum onWorld Trade <strong>Center</strong> health effects, the director of the NYU-National Institute of61


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEEnvironmental Health Sciences <strong>Center</strong> reported that “premature declarations of ‘safety’were in contrast to the ‘World Trade <strong>Center</strong> Cough’ experience of many people in lowerManhattan,” and that “this increased both distrust of government and the public’sconcerns about health risks.”<strong>The</strong> New York CityDepartment of Healthand Mental Hygienecreated a registry forlong-term tracking . . .of the health status ofthe . . . people wholived or worked nearthe World Trade<strong>Center</strong> . . . .World Trade <strong>Center</strong> Registry<strong>The</strong> New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene created a registry for longtermtracking and monitoring of the health status of the estimated 100,000–200,000people who lived or worked near the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> site between <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001and June 30, 2002. <strong>The</strong> registry, similar to one that was compiled following the 1995Oklahoma City bombing, uses periodic surveys to measure short- and long-term healthand mental health effects of exposures to the attacks and ensuing smoke, dust, andairborne substances. <strong>The</strong> registry seeks to identify patterns of illness and pinpoint theirorigins, evaluate possible risks, and provide prevention and public health policyinformation to all New Yorkers and others who were affected. Dr. Pauline Thomas,assistant commissioner of the bureau of surveillance of the City Health Department,believes that the comprehensive registry is an essential means of establishing whetherclinical reports of high incidences of certain conditions among small samples werereflective of “background” health conditions of a large population. Dr. Thomas alsobelieves that such a study is necessary as a means of resolving “lingering anxiety” amongthe public.<strong>The</strong> registry was expected to begin in the spring of 2003, and ideally would continue until2021 if sufficient funding is made available.<strong>The</strong> initial $20 million was provided by FEMAto the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, whose Agency for ToxicSubstances and Disease Registry, an environmental public health group, was working withthe City Health Department on the registry. Officials emphasized that the registry will notinclude medical diagnoses or clinical examinations, but people who say in the interviewsthat they are still sick would be provided with referrals, including referrals to ProjectLiberty for respondents experiencing emotional or other mental health problems.Employment ServicesFederal aid to help individuals cope with disasters focuses on short-term relief. DisasterUnemployment Assistance is no exception, since it provides minimal benefits for a shortperiod of time until people can find new jobs. Adjustments to permanent changes in thelabor market are not addressed as part of disaster response. Accordingly, employmentservices to help people improve their skills or find new jobs is an overlooked subject in thestandard federal disaster response programs.<strong>The</strong> Consortium for Worker Education (CWE), a nonprofit organization sponsored by theNew York City Central Labor Council and its forty-six affiliated unions, gained a special$32.5 million appropriation in one of the emergency supplemental appropriations billsintroduced to fulfill the president’s $20 billion commitment.With this funding, CWE createdan Emergency Employment Clearinghouse to assist some of the “80,000 workers62


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITY...displaced by the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> attacks either directly or indirectly” through suchservices as job placement assistance, career advancement counseling and referrals, andeducation and training to teach new skills. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Center</strong> was also supported by philanthropicorganizations, including the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, the Rockefeller <strong>Foundation</strong>, and theMcCormick Tribune <strong>Foundation</strong>, whose grant was designated to help undocumentedworkers gain new or improved skills.<strong>The</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund also allocated more than $50million for other employment training programs, including payment of stipends for trainees.<strong>The</strong> Consortium for Worker Education entered into agreements with some 160 firms thatcommitted to a program of job retention, rehiring, and new hires. For some of these firms,CWE subsidized approximately one-half the wages, for periods up to ninety days, for jobsthat paid no more than $25/hour, with a maximum subsidy of $100,000 per company.WHAT HAS BEEN LEARNED<strong>The</strong> purpose of this study has been to increase public understanding of lessons learned inthe overall government-philanthropic relief effort, suggest a framework for preparation forfuture similar events, and highlight unresolved public policy issues arising from the 9/<strong>11</strong>experience. <strong>The</strong> nation was tragically unprepared for the worst attacks on U.S. soil by aforeign enemy since the War of 1812. As a result, governmental, private, and philanthropicorganizations were forced to create, in the midst of turmoil and grief, new procedures torespond to the disaster. Despite widespread public and media criticism pointing out oneshortcoming or another, this effort was in fact remarkably successful overall. Fundsprovided by both the federal government and philanthropic entities far surpassed theamounts in any previous disaster, and the allocations for some government aid programsexceeded the totals distributed for all previous disasters combined. Moreover, in numerousinstances government agencies and philanthropic organizations demonstratedunaccustomed flexibility, agility, and speed in assisting individuals, families, smallbusinesses, and nonprofit organizations.Human sufferingwas alleviated by therapid and creativephilanthropicresponses that inmany cases precededsignificant similaraid by the lead federaldisaster agency.Following is a brief summary of lessons learned in this experience.• Human suffering was alleviated by the rapid and creative philanthropic responses that inmany cases preceded significant similar aid by the lead federal disaster agency.• Conventional philanthropic planning and decision-making processes must be streamlinedand made very flexible in responding to fast-moving emergency circumstances.• <strong>Philanthropic</strong> speed and flexibility are not necessarily attended by widespread fraud.• Cash gifts can ease anxieties about financial needs, but no formula for distributing thisassistance will be greeted by universal acceptance or solve complex problems of loss,stress, or unemployment.• Because of the real possibility of future terrorist attacks on cities, FEMA should preparefor large-scale urban calamities by expanding its current capacity to deal with individualand family needs traditionally geared to natural disasters in sparsely populated areas.63


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE• Changes in federal law lifting the limitations on charitable payments to the financiallyneedy, and establishment of the federal <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Victim Compensation Fund, mayhave distorted the public perception of the role of philanthropy by creating anexpectation that its purpose is to provide financial compensation for lost life.<strong>The</strong> long-termrecovery processwas aided by thefact that somephilanthropicorganizationsreserved funds forlater use to meetindividual, family,and communityneeds. . . .• <strong>The</strong> long-term recovery process was aided by the fact that some philanthropic organizationsreserved funds for later use to meet individual, family, and community needs whoseexact dimensions were not immediately apparent in the chaotic weeks following 9/<strong>11</strong>.• New York City and the metropolitan area benefited from the controversial decisions ofsome foundations to direct 9/<strong>11</strong>-related resources to shoring up nonprofit organizationsincluding arts and culture groups.• Even with many agencies’ work over many months, there remain uncounted thousandswho did not receive adequate assistance.• <strong>The</strong> major relief agencies need to continue and make permanent their work in developinga simplified one-stop application process in preparation for use in another disaster.• Questions about donor intent in emergency fundraising can be avoided by unambiguousappeals and, if questions arise, can be addressed by polling donors and the general publicat various times after the emergency.• In a future event of this magnitude, the major philanthropies should expand their effortsto provide frequent in-depth media briefings on their activities.Public Policy<strong>The</strong> lead federal disaster agency, FEMA, is better equipped to deal with the aftermath ofnatural disasters, such as floods in rural areas, than it is to work in complex urban settings.It is more effective in providing aid to state and local government than to individuals andfamilies. FEMA’s individual and family assistance programs failed to help many peoplewho needed them, or provided help only after extensive delays and, finally, Congressionalaction. FEMA guidelines contemplate replacement of physical loss, not compensation foreconomic setbacks like those experienced by thousands of jobless New Yorkers. FEMA’srequirement that individuals demonstrate that their job was eliminated as a “direct” resultof the attacks failed to recognize widespread economic impacts throughout the region, andcaused thousands of needy people to go without financial assistance for their mortgageand rental payments. FEMA’s Inspector General’s report of December 2002 containsnumerous recommendations for remedying many of these shortcomings, including theneed to address economic losses, development of “fair and equitable eligibility criteria,”and the importance of reaching “diverse ethnic populations in dense urban areas.”Some recovery needs are not addressed in the authorizing statutes for federal disaster reliefprograms, and special Congressional action and philanthropic organizations filled thegaps. Chief among these were employment training and readjustment, financial assistancefor very small businesses with inadequate collateral for SBA loans, indoor cleaning andenvironmental remediation, and health monitoring and treatment. <strong>The</strong> ad hoc approach64


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITYhas provided needed relief to many people and businesses, but in the process engenderedconfusion about eligibility criteria and procedures and diminished the credibility ofgovernment. It was unclear in these and other areas where the responsibility of governmentended and that of philanthropy began, or where individuals and organizations or theirinsurance policies were responsible for their own recovery. <strong>The</strong> federal government needsto decide whether to create new programs with defined criteria to meet these needs infuture disasters.Perhaps the most important philosophical and public policy issue arising from theresponse to 9/<strong>11</strong> has to do with the concept of compensation of surviving families for thedeath of a loved one. By far the largest share of government and philanthropic aiddistributed for humanitarian purposes — about $5.8 billion of a total $8.6 billion — wasfor this use. An unprecedented federal <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Victim Compensation Fund wasestablished for 9/<strong>11</strong> survivors, but families of victims of other terrorist disasters, such asthe 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, were not included. <strong>Philanthropic</strong> organizationsdistributed an estimated $800 million to the approximately 3,200 families of people whodied or were seriously injured in the attacks in New York City, Washington, D.C., andShanksville, Pennsylvania. Much of this occurred because of intense media pressureinsisting that this was the intention of donors to various relief funds.To facilitate the distributions,Congress did away with the long-standing criterion of financial need for receipt ofcharitable donations. This has created an impression that one of the purposes ofphilanthropy is to compensate for lost life. Congress and the philanthropic sector need todecide if this concept will be a precedent for philanthropic responses to future disasters.Some recovery needsare not addressed inthe authorizingstatutes for federaldisaster reliefprograms, and specialCongressional actionand philanthropicorganizations filledthe gaps.To address these and related policy issues, Congress should consider creating and fundinga Disaster Relief and Recovery Commission with leadership representation fromphilanthropy, business, the media, and federal, state, and local government, to clarify thedisaster-related relief and recovery responsibilities of government, philanthropy, insurance,and individuals.<strong>The</strong> commission could draw upon the substantial body of relevant investigation andresearch done in the aftermath of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th emergency, examining problemsidentified, good practices described and recommendations made in the GAO reports oncharitable performance and small business assistance programs; the FEMA InspectorGeneral’s report; the two Ford <strong>Foundation</strong>/Thomas Edison State College reports;<strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong> reports; the Stanford Graduate School of Business case study of the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund; the United Way of New York City’s report on the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thFund; the LBG Associates report on corporate responses to disaster relief; and theCentury <strong>Foundation</strong> report on media coverage of the philanthropic response.Problems and policy issues discussed in this report have received scant systematicattention from policymakers. This is unfortunate, because they bear on our preparednessfor future similar events and affect public confidence in government and philanthropy.<strong>The</strong>y raise important questions about:65


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE• the extent of federal responsibility to restore communities, individuals, and families totheir pre-disaster state;• the role of philanthropy vis-à-vis government at all levels;• coordination of effort;Problems and policyissues discussed inthis report havereceived scantsystematic attentionfrom policymakers.• the purposes and criteria for financial aid for individuals and businesses; and• the operations of important government and charitable institutions.Recommendations<strong>The</strong> report’s four major recommendations are:1. Encourage major cities to draw up coordinated contingency plans.In anticipation of future similar attacks, major urban areas might do well to develop acontingency plan and locations for one-stop service centers, including a list of agenciesand services, a protocol for uniform intake, a system for digitizing and sharinginformation, and provisions for coordinated case management. Such measures would savetime and maximize assistance for grief-stricken and traumatized individuals.2. Establish a federal commission.<strong>The</strong> U.S. Congress should consider creating and funding a Disaster Relief and RecoveryCommission with leadership representation from philanthropy, business, the media, andfederal, state, and local government.<strong>The</strong> commission’s charge would be to:• clarify the disaster-related relief and recovery responsibilities of government,philanthropy, insurance, and individuals, with attention to filling key gaps;• review and refine the purposes and procedures of existing federal programs and suggestnew elements and changes in existing elements to improve efficiency and responsiveness;• establish principles about financial awards for individuals and businesses, includingtaxation of recovery grants to businesses, with special attention to eligibility ofimmigrants for government disaster relief assistance;• assume responsibility for implementing the GAO’s recommendation that FEMA convenea working group of government and philanthropic leaders to develop better means ofphilanthropic coordination.3. Encourage philanthropy to clarify charitable appeals.<strong>The</strong> philanthropic sector needs to consider questions that arose about the intentions ofdonors to 9/<strong>11</strong> relief funds. Charities soliciting from the general public need to meet twoconflicting challenges. <strong>The</strong>ir appeals should be specific enough to tell the potential donorhow the funds will be used, but broad enough to permit flexibility to respond to needs asthey become known. Charitable funds that plan to assist activities not contemplated in the66


LESSONS FROM RELIEF AND RECOVERY IN NEW YORK CITYsolicitation should review the experience of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, which conductedpublic opinion surveys, including respondents who did and did not give to a 9/<strong>11</strong>-relatedcause, both in New York City and elsewhere.4. Clarify victim compensation.By doing away with the long-standing criterion of financial need for receipt of charitabledonations, Congress made it possible for philanthropic organizations to compensate forlost life. Congress and the philanthropic sector need to decide if this will be a precedent forphilanthropic responses to future disasters.[Charitable] appealsshould be specificenough to tell thepotential donor howthe funds will be used,but broad enough topermit flexibility torespond to needs asthey become known.67


<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>Perspectives from the Field of PhilanthropyDuring 2002 and 2003, the staff of Philanthropy News Digest(PND) conducted interviews with leaders from the nonprofitsector on various aspects of the response to the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>attacks.<strong>The</strong>se interviews were later collected in <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>:Perspectives from the Field of Philanthropy, volumes one and two.<strong>The</strong> interviews, listed below, are available as part of PND’sNewsmakers series (www.fdncenter.org/pnd/ newsmakers/).In addition, each volume of collected interviews is availableas a downloadable PDF file at www.fdncenter.org/research/9<strong>11</strong>/book.html and www.fdncenter.org/research/9<strong>11</strong>/book2.html.VOLUME ONEDisaster Relief, Donor Intent, and Public AccountabilityMark Edelman, American Red CrossRegulating Charitable ReliefMarla Simpson and Karin Goldman, New York State Charities BureauSupporting the Recovery of Nonprofit OrganizationsClara Miller, Nonprofit Finance FundAssessing the Economic Impact on ChinatownChristopher Kui, Asian Americans for EqualityImpact on the ArtsVirginia Louloudes, Alliance of Resident <strong>The</strong>atres/New York<strong>The</strong> Challenges for Human ServicesRalph Dickerson and Larry Mandell, United Way of New York CityMaximizing America’s GenerosityLorie Slutsky, New York Community TrustAssessing Immediate and Longer-Term NeedsJoshua Gotbaum, <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund69


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSECash Assistance for Immediate NeedsGordon J. Campbell, Safe HorizonCoordinating Support for Long-Term Educational NeedsCharles “Chip” Raymond, Citigroup <strong>Foundation</strong>Civil Liberties and <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>Gara LaMarche, Open Society Institute<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> as SymptomRobert K. Ross, California EndowmentTerrorism, Civil Society, and International SecurityJonathan F. Fanton, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur <strong>Foundation</strong><strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> and BeyondSusan V. Berresford, Ford <strong>Foundation</strong>.VOLUME TWOPhilanthropy and Domestic TerrorismNancy Anthony, Oklahoma City Community <strong>Foundation</strong>Mobilizing Resources to Meet the Needs of Pentagon FamiliesTerri Lee Freeman, Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the National Capital RegionHelping Undocumented Immigrants in the Wake of 9/<strong>11</strong>Teresa Garcia, Asociación Tepeyac de New York<strong>The</strong> Impact of 9/<strong>11</strong> on Low-Income WorkersDavid R. Jones, Community Service Society of New YorkForging Connections in <strong>Response</strong> to DisasterJack Rosenthal, New York Times Company <strong>Foundation</strong>Helping the Arts and Artists Recover in the Wake of 9/<strong>11</strong><strong>The</strong>odore S. Berger, New York <strong>Foundation</strong> for the ArtsWorking to Expand Access to Higher Education for All AmericansMartha Lamkin, Lumina <strong>Foundation</strong> for EducationPhilanthropy in a Post-9/<strong>11</strong> WorldVartan Gregorian, Carnegie Corporation of New YorkDemocracy as an Antidote to TerrorismBenjamin R. Barber, authorDevelopment and Democracy in Post-9/<strong>11</strong> AsiaWilliam Fuller, Asia <strong>Foundation</strong>Human Rights in an Age of TerrorKen Roth, Human Rights Watch<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> and the Arab American CommunityJames Zogby, Arab American Institute<strong>The</strong> Media <strong>Response</strong> to 9/<strong>11</strong>Hodding Carter III, John S. and James L. Knight <strong>Foundation</strong>Media, Charity, and Philanthropy in the Aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>Paula DiPerna, authorCoordinating Service Delivery to Victims of the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> AttackStephen Solender, 9/<strong>11</strong> United Services GroupMeeting the Long-Term Needs of Individuals, Families, and CommunitiesCarol Kellerman, <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund<strong>The</strong> Oral History of 9/<strong>11</strong>Mary Marshall Clark, Oral History Research Office, Columbia University70


<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>A Timeline<strong>The</strong> following pages outline, in timeline form, the unfoldingof events on and after <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001, including theresponses of private philanthropy, government agencies, andthe media during the period covered.This is not meant to be a definitive record. Its purpose is todepict the various responses to the attacks and their aftermathand to provide context for the commentaries and reports in thiscompendium volume and elsewhere.Commentary, analysis, and distillation of lessons learned arecrucial for further developing policy and practice concerningdisaster response. Inevitably, however, any consideration of 9/<strong>11</strong>LEGENDEventsSignificant events related to the hijacking of four commercial airliners on the morning of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001, their use in strikes against targets in New York and Washington, DC, andsubsequent developments.Government responseSignificant events related to the federal, state, and municipal response to the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>attacks and their aftermath.<strong>Philanthropic</strong> responseSignificant events related to the institutional philanthropic response to the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacksand their aftermath.Media responseAn overview of the print and broadcast media coverage of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks and theiraftermath.71


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEmust take into account the unprecedented challenges presented by that awful day: thesuddenness and utter unexpectedness of the precipitating events, the time required toidentify the full array of needs, confusion about the role philanthropy should play withrespect to emergency relief and compensation, and the difficulties of coordinating thepublic/private response when existing programs and procedures were clearly inadequate.<strong>The</strong> timeline format can remind us of another important consideration: the powerfulemotional response of a horror- and grief-stricken nation.72


EventsGovernment <strong>Response</strong><strong>Philanthropic</strong> <strong>Response</strong>Media <strong>Response</strong>A TIMELINE<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 20017:59 a.m.American Airlines Flight <strong>11</strong>, bound for Los Angeles, departs Boston’sLogan International Airport8:14 a.m.United Airlines Flight 175, also bound for Los Angeles, departs LoganInternational Airport8:20 a.m.American Airlines Flight 77, bound for Los Angeles, departs DullesInternational Airport in Washington, DC8:40 a.m.Boston flight control notifies NORAD American Airlines Flight <strong>11</strong> hasbeen hijacked8:42 a.mUnited Airlines Flight 93, bound for San Francisco, departs NewarkInternational Airport8:43 a.m.FAA notifies NORAD that United Airlines Flight 175 has been hijacked8:45 a.m.American Airlines Flight <strong>11</strong>, with 81 passengers and <strong>11</strong> crew on board,slams into north tower of World Trade <strong>Center</strong>8:48 a.m.First TV and radio reports about events at World Trade <strong>Center</strong> broadcast9:03 a.m.United Flight 175, with 56 passengers and 9 crew members on board,crashes into south tower of World Trade <strong>Center</strong>9:17 a.m.FAA shuts down all New York City-area airports9:21 a.m.Port Authority of New York and New Jersey orders all bridges andtunnels into New York area closed9:30 a.m.President Bush, speaking in Florida, says the country has suffered an“apparent terrorist attack”9:38 a.m.American Airlines Flight 77, with 58 passengers and 6 crew memberson board, slams into west side of Pentagon9:40 a.m.FAA halts flight operations across the country9:45 a.m.White House is evacuated10:05 a.m.South Tower of the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> collapses, producing massivedebris cloud10:10 a.m.Portion of the Pentagon's west wall collapses10:10 a.m.United Flight 93, with 38 passengers and 7 crew members on board,crashes in a field near Shanksville, Pennsylvania, southeast of Pittsburgh10:13 a.m.United Nations building in New York City evacuated10:22 a.m.In Washington, State and Justice Departments evacuated10:28 a.m.North Tower of the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> collapses, producing secondmassive debris cloud10:45 a.m.All federal office buildings in Washington evacuated10:53 a.m.New York’s primary election, scheduled for the <strong>11</strong>th, is cancelled10:57 a.m.New York governor George Pataki orders all state offices closed<strong>11</strong>:02 a.m.New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani orders evacuation of Manhattansouth of Canal Street12:04 p.m.Los Angeles International Airport, destination of three of the fourhijacked planes, is evacuated12:15 p.m.San Francisco International Airport, the destination of Flight 93, isevacuated1:27 p.m.State of emergency declared by the city of Washington2:30FAA says commercial air traffic will not resume until noon, Wednesday,at the earliest2:49 p.m.Mayor Giuliani appears at a news conference and reports that subwayand bus service in Manhattan has been partially restored4:00 p.m.CNN reports there are “good indications” Osama bin Laden is involvedin the attacks5:20 p.m.Building 7, a 47-story structure at the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> complex,collapses7:02 p.m.CNN reports the Marriott Hotel near the WTC is on the verge of collapse7:45 p.m.New York Police Dept. reports 78 officers missing and says that as manyas half of the 400 firefighters on the scene were killed8:30 p.m.President Bush addresses the nation, saying U.S. will make nodistinction between the terrorists who committed the acts and thosewho harbor them<strong>September</strong> 12At 8:45 a.m., European stock markets cease trading to observe amoment of silenceNew York Community Trust and United Way of New York City issue jointpress release announcing creation of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th FundNew York Times Company <strong>Foundation</strong> creates New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong>Neediest Fund, the first-ever special campaign of New York TimesNeediest Cases FundAt West Side headquarters of New York City Chapter of the Red Cross,lines of blood donors, volunteers stretch around the block; Red CrossWeb site crashes from load placed on it by would-be donors andvolunteersTulsa-based Williams Energy Company announces $1 million pledge to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund73


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEEventsGovernment <strong>Response</strong><strong>Philanthropic</strong> <strong>Response</strong>Media <strong>Response</strong><strong>September</strong> 13, 2001Port of New York, which had closed after second tower was hit, reopensfor businessIndianapolis-based Lilly Endowment pledges $30 million to 9/<strong>11</strong> reliefand recovery effortsGeneral Electric Co. announces contribution of $10 million for familiesof New York firefighters, police officers, and rescue workers killed ormissing in attack; Cisco Systems, Inc. contributes $6 million to RedCross and other relief groups“For Arab Americans, A Familiar Backlash,” Hanna Rosin, WashingtonPost<strong>September</strong> 14President Bush, accompanied by Rudy Giuliani, George Pataki, and aNew York congressional delegation, visits ground zeroFBI announces identities of 19 alleged hijackers and launches biggestinvestigation in its history; Attorney General John Ashcroft says all roadslead to Osama bin LadenBond brokerage firm Cantor Fitzgerald, scrambling to account for morethan 700 missing employees, announces establishment of CantorFitzgerald Relief FundFord and Starr foundations, both New York City-based, pledge $10million each to relief and recovery effortsBaltimore-based Annie E. Casey <strong>Foundation</strong> pledges $3 million to reliefand recovery effortsHollywood executives begin to organize telethon for victims of theattacks; <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund designated to receive proceeds“Disaster May Tax Charities,” Aaron Donovan, New York Times<strong>September</strong> 15In New York, estimates of the dead and missing hover near 6,000; only150 bodies recoveredDaimlerChrysler AG pledges $10 million to relief and recovery efforts;German media giant Bertelsmann AG promises $2 million to survivingfamilies of New York firefighters and police officersRed Cross president Bernadine Healy circulates memo to Red Crosschapters alerting them to decision to segregate Sept. <strong>11</strong> donations in aseparate fundDonations to the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund reach $100 million“Companies Pledge $100 Million in Relief,” Tamar Lewin, New YorkTimes“’Charity’ Scams Starting to Appear: Red Cross Says Illicit Web SitesCollecting Funds in Its Name, Vows to Prosecute,” Christian Davenport,Washington Post“A Wide, Aggressive Probe Collides With Civil Rights: Innocent PeopleMay Face Questioning, Experts Say,” Serge F. Kovaleski, Washington Post<strong>September</strong> 17Stock exchanges reopen for business; record 2.3 billion shares trade bycloseU.S. airlines receive letters from insurers informing them that policies forterror-related crashes will be canceled as of following MondayCarnegie Corporation of New York pledges $10 million to relief andrecovery efforts<strong>September</strong> 18Governor George Pataki promises free college education to familymembers of 9/<strong>11</strong> victims who attend a New York State institution<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund okays first grant — $1.2 million, to Safe HorizonLeading high-tech firms, including AOL/Time Warner, Microsoft, Amazon,Ebay, Cisco Systems and Yahoo, form American Liberty Partnership toencourage online giving for 9/<strong>11</strong> victims via libertyunites.org<strong>September</strong> 19Governor Pataki signs Disaster Relief Medicaid program into law“People, Firms Are Giving Big to Relief Efforts,” Jacqueline Salmon,Washington Post<strong>September</strong> 20Appearing before a joint session of Congress, President Bush warns,“Every nation, in every region, now has a decision to make…either youare with us, or you are with the terrorists.”Cantor Fitzgerald CEO Howard Lutnick pledges 25 percent of the firm’sprofits to the relatives of the more than 700 employees missing since<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong><strong>September</strong> 21By vote of 356-54 in House and 96-1 in Senate, Congress passes $15billion Air Transportation Safety and System Stabilization Act, creatingSept. <strong>11</strong>th Victim Compensation Fund to protect industry from ruinouslaw suitsTribute to Heroes telethon benefiting <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund raises$128 million for victims of the attacksNew York City-based Rockefeller <strong>Foundation</strong> and New Jersey-basedRobert Wood Johnson <strong>Foundation</strong> commit $5 million each to supportindividuals and communities affected by the attacksCable news personality Bill O’Reilly devotes portion of <strong>The</strong> O’ReillyFactor to charitable response to 9/<strong>11</strong> and Tribute to Heroes telethon“As Relief Money Pours In, Charities Fear the Impact,” Nina Bernstein,New York Times<strong>September</strong> 22“Relief Funds Growing: Challenge Now Becomes Dispersing Aid Fairly,”Robert Polner, New York Newsday<strong>September</strong> 24U.S. authorities freeze the assets of 27 groups and individuals, many ofthem Islamic charities, alleged to be funding terrorist organizations“Other Causes Hurting,” Hannelle Rubin, New York Post<strong>September</strong> 25U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft appears before Senate JudiciaryCommittee to argue for new anti-terrorist legislationRed Cross president Bernadine Healy announces Family Grant Program,which will use money in Liberty Fund — more than $200 million — toprovide three months’ living expenses to victims’ families“Plan to List Who Receives Disaster Aid Stirs Concern,” David Barstowand Diana B. Henriques, New York Times74


A TIMELINE<strong>September</strong> 26New York State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer suggests that FEMA,private donor agencies create and share a common database thatincludes names of individuals each had assisted“On Pier 94, a Welfare State That Works, and a Possible Model for theFuture,” Nina Bernstein, New York Times“Volunteerism in U.S. Surges Following Terrorist Attacks,” Kelly Greene,Wall Street Journal“Red Cross Distributing $100 Million; Payments to Help the Families ofTerrorist Attack Victims,” Jacqueline Salmon, Washington Post<strong>September</strong> 27FBI releases photographs, names, and aliases of the 19 hijackers“Some Might Slip Between Cracks of Disaster Aid,” David Bank andAnne Marie Chaker, Wall Street Journal“Worries Over Record Relief Giving: Watchdogs Say Cash Coming TooFast to Monitor,” Todd Wallack, San Francisco Chronicle<strong>September</strong> 28Meeting of foundation, corporate, and local government leaders atCarnegie Corporation of New York to discuss information sharing inwake of attacksRed Cross president Bernadine Healy tells board she has “categoricallyrejected” Eliot Spitzer’s suggestion that Red Cross participate increation of common database“Destroyed Computer Links Leave Thousands of Poor People WithoutWelfare Benefits,” Nina Bernstein, New York Times“Welfare Applications Affected; WTC Attack Disrupts ComputerProcessing,” Lauren Terrazzano, New York Newsday<strong>September</strong> 29Former President Bill Clinton and former Senate Majority Leader BobDole named honorary co-chairs of Families of Freedom Scholarship Fund<strong>September</strong> 30“Aid Groups Face Unusual Quandries: Officials Scramble to Decide How,Whom to Help With Quickly Raised Millions,” Jacqueline Salmon,Washington PostOctober 1U.S. investigators report they have established financial links betweenal-Qaeda and the 19 hijackersJapanese Red Cross gives $7.2 million to Red Cross’ Liberty FundRed Cross president Bernadine Healy appears on CBS Morning Newsand defends the organization’s confidentiality policyOctober 3At executive committee meeting of Red Cross board, Bernadine Healyapologizes for having made decision to segregate 9/<strong>11</strong> funds withoutboard vote; board votes unanimous approval of specially designatedLiberty FundOctober 4Ford <strong>Foundation</strong> announces additional $1.2 million in grants forrecovery efforts in Washington, DCNew York Regional Association of Grantmakers hosts meeting at Ford<strong>Foundation</strong> to encourage exchange of information among regionalgrantmakersDonations to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund pass $200 million markBernadine Healy appears on <strong>The</strong> O’Reilly Factor“In the Face of Disaster Red Cross President Bernadine Healy ActivatedHer Troops — and Riled Her Critics,” Paul Farhi, Washington PostOctober 6“For Muslims, Benevolence Is Prevailing Over Backlash,” Caryle Murphy,Washington PostOctober 7U.S. launches air campaign against Taliban targets and al-Qaedatraining camps in AfghanistanBy executive order, President Bush establishes Office of HomelandSecurity; Pennsylvania governor Tom Ridge named director“Nearly $1 Billion Has Been Donated…Nonprofits Struggle With Howto Disperse It Fairly,” New York Newsday“Flow of Cash for the Victims Leaves Other Causes Bereft; Some Recast<strong>The</strong>ir Pitches,” David Bank and Ann Marie Chaker, Wall Street JournalOctober 9Stuyvesant High School, five blocks from ground zero, reopens after athorough cleanupOctober 10Bush administration releases list of the 22 “most wanted” terrorists; thelist is topped by Osama bin Laden and his deputy, Ayman al-ZawahriMiami-based John S. and James L. Knight <strong>Foundation</strong> pledges $5 millionfor post-terrorist activities and Flight 93 memorial effortsOctober <strong>11</strong>Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal offers $10 million donation to the TwinTowers Fund; Mayor Rudolph Giuliani refuses the donation later thatafternoonSenate, by vote of 100-0, passes Airline Security bill requiring federalizationof airport screening function “as soon as practicable”Senate, by vote of 99-1, passes USA PATRIOT ActU.S. adds names of 37 individuals and institutions to the list of entitieswhose assets it has frozenHouse, by vote of 337-79, passes version of PATRIOT Act virtuallyidentical to version passed by SenateRed Cross estimates it will spend more than $300 million over the nextseveral months to provide ongoing disaster relief services following the9/<strong>11</strong> attacks — the costliest and most extensive response to anydisaster in the organization’s 120-year historyFannie Mae Corporation makes $5 million donation to Community<strong>Foundation</strong> for the National Capital Region’s Survivors Fund to benefitthe long-term needs of DC-area victims75


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEEventsGovernment <strong>Response</strong><strong>Philanthropic</strong> <strong>Response</strong>Media <strong>Response</strong>October <strong>11</strong>, 2001, continued“$850 Million for Charity, Not Centrally Monitored,” David Barstow,New York TimesOctober 14“Outside New York, Charities Feel the Pinch,” Tamar Lewin, New YorkTimes“Partners of Gay Victims Find the Law Calls <strong>The</strong>m Strangers,” Denny Lee,New York Times“Victims’ Kin Still Wait for Charity Cash,” Susan Edelman, New York PostOctober 16<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund announces appointment of Franklin Thomas,former president of Ford <strong>Foundation</strong>, and Joshua Gotbaum, formercontroller of Office of Management and Budget, as chairman andpresident/CEO, respectivelyDonations to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> relief funds hit $1 billion; Red Crossannounces it may use a portion of the $450 million it has collected for9/<strong>11</strong> relief efforts for future disastersAt Madison Square Garden, the Concert for New York City featuringPaul McCartney, Bon Jovi, the Who, and others raises more than $30million for 9/<strong>11</strong> victims“Red Cross Donations Earmarked for Future; Agency May Have Enoughfor Terror Victims,” Todd Wallack, San Francisco Chronicle“Giving Too Big a Hand?” Nanette Byrnes and David Henry, BusinessWeekOctober 21United We Stand, an <strong>11</strong>-hour benefit concert for victims of the attack onthe Pentagon, raises $2 millionIn Nashville, top country music stars participate in the third concert ofthe weekend to benefit victims of the 9/<strong>11</strong> attacksOpen letter signed by Bernadine Healy runs in USA Today, New YorkTimes, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Boston Globe, BostonHerald, Chicago Tribune, and Los Angeles TimesBoard of Red Cross votes to ask for Bernadine Healy’s resignation;decides to name Harold Decker, organization’s general counsel, asinterim CEORed Cross president Bernadine Healy announces her resignation at whatshe later calls “the press conference from hell”President Bush signs USA PATRIOT Act into lawOn CNN’s Moneyline, anchor Lou Dobbs looks at the matter of benefitconcerts and concludes that none of the money raised had beendisbursed to date“Tax Issues Loom for Recipients of Sept. <strong>11</strong> Aid,” Ann Marie Chaker,Wall Street Journal“Red Cross Agrees to Database,” David Barstow, New York Times“Red Cross Faces Big Task; Also Confronted by Critics” Dave Saltonstall,New York Daily News“Red Cross Yielding on Victims Database,” Peggy McGlone, New JerseyStar-Ledger“Red Cross President Is Resigning,” Laura Meckler, Associated PressOctober 27“Disaster Fades Into the Past, But Generosity Does Not,” AaronDonovan, New York TimesOctober 28“Charity Abundant, But So Is Red Tape, After Terror Attack,” DavidBarstow and Diana B. Henriques, New York TimesOctober 29Federal government issues advisory to 18,000 state and local lawenforcement agencies warning of potential al-Qaeda strike in the UnitedStatesOctober 30House, by vote of 218-214, passes its version of the Airline Security billSen. Charles Grassley (R-IA), ranking Republican on the Senate FinanceCommittee, calls for greater federal oversight of disbursement of morethan $1 billion in donations to victims of 9/<strong>11</strong> attacksInterim CEO Howard Decker announces Red Cross will stop solicitingcontributions to Liberty Fund, which has received $547 million<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund announces 34 new grants to relief organizationsOn <strong>The</strong> O’Reilly Factor, O’Reilly focuses on the Tribute to Heroestelethon fund and the fact it has distributed $35 million of $230 millionraised to date“Aid to Terror Victims: Our View: New Beneficiaries May Be Deserving,But Donors Were Misled,” editorial, USA Today“Senator Wants Federal Oversight of Charitable Money,” Tanya Ballard,GovExec.com“Tax Report: Charities Cheer a Treasury Move Designed to BoostDonations,” Tom Herman, Wall Street Journal“New Yorkers Struggle Under a Double Blow,” Michael Powell,Washington PostNovember 1House Subcommittee on Oversight of the Committee on Ways andMeans announces it will hold a hearing on the response by charitableorganizations to 9/<strong>11</strong> attacksNPR’s Talk of the Nation invites calls from listeners “who were worriedthat the funds they had contributed might not be well spent”Chronicle of Philanthropy includes lengthy article about troubles at theRed CrossHundreds of New York City firemen show up at City Hall to protestdecision by Mayor Giuliani to cut back on number of firemen assignedto ground zero cleanupNovember 5“<strong>The</strong> Charity Olympics…Americans Want to Know Is That MoneyHelping?” Josh Tyrangiel, TimeNovember 6Billionaire media tycoon Michael Bloomberg narrowly defeats PublicAdvocate Mark Green in New York City mayoral election76


A TIMELINEAppearing before House Energy Committee’s Subcommittee onOversight and Investigations, Bernadine Healy defends herorganization’s decision to set aside aside $264 million of the$564 million it has raised since <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>“Debate Over Rules for Victims Fund,” David Barstow and Diana B.Henriques, New York Times“New York City Mayor’s Twin Towers Fund Raised $100 Million, ButHasn’t Paid a Cent,” David Bank, Wall Street Journal“Red Cross May Triple Aid to Victims,” Hayah El Nassar, USA TodayNovember 7<strong>The</strong> names of 62 groups and people are added to a list of suspectedsupporters of terrorismExecutive board of the Red Cross decides to distribute rest of money inLiberty Fund to victims and to extend Family Grant Program for up to ayearTwin Towers Fund, which has raised $85 million to date, announces firstround of awards to families of rescue workers who lost their lives in9/<strong>11</strong> attacksJosh Gotbaum, president and CEO of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, appears onHardball with Chris Matthews“In Congress, Harsh Words for Red Cross,” David Barstow, New YorkTimes“Red Cross Defends Use of Donations,” Mary Flaherty, Wall StreetJournalNovember 8Subcommittee on Oversight of the Committee on Ways and Meansholds hearing on the response by charitable organizations to the9/<strong>11</strong> attacksNovember 9Department of Justice releases order formalizing plan to interview menbetween ages of 18 and 33 who entered the country on visas fromcountries suspected of harboring terrorists<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund announces $14 million in new grants forindividuals and organizations affected by the 9/<strong>11</strong> attacksNovember 12American Airlines Flight 587, bound for the Dominican Republic, crashesminutes after takeoff from Kennedy International Airport in Rockaway, aQueens neighborhoodMcCormick Tribune Disaster Relief Fund announces it has raised morethan $20 million for 9/<strong>11</strong> recovery effortsMacArthur <strong>Foundation</strong> establishes $5 million fund to make grantsrelated to aftermath of 9/<strong>11</strong> attacks“Victims’ Funds May Violate U.S. Tax Law,” David Barstow and Diana B.Henriques, New York Times“Charities Get a Big Helping of Uncertainty,” John O’Neil, New YorkTimes“<strong>The</strong> I.R.S. Moves Rapidly to Process New Charities,” Jay Tokasz, NewYork TimesNovember 13Northern Alliance troops enter Kabul, capital of Afghanistan, as Talibanforces flee southward to KandaharNovember 14Red Cross announces that money remaining in Liberty Fund — $390million — will be used exclusively to meet the immediate and long-termneeds of direct and indirect victims of 9/<strong>11</strong>November 17Twin Towers Fund announces it has mailed checks averaging $124,000to the families of 197 rescue workers killed in 9/<strong>11</strong> attack“I.R.S. Makes an Exception on Terror Aid,” David Barstow and Diana B.Henriques, New York TimesNovember 18“Arts Groups Are Reeling in Wake of the Attacks,” Robin Pogrebin, NewYork TimesNovember 19President Bush signs Aviation and Transportation Act, creatingTransportation Security Administration within Dept. of TransportationNovember 20Andrew W. Mellon <strong>Foundation</strong> announces creation of $50 million fundto assist New York cultural and performing arts organizationsCalifornia Endowment announces grants of $3 million to help displacedhospitality/tourism workers in the state“<strong>Foundation</strong> Starts $50 Million Fund for Arts Groups Hurt By Terrorism,”Karen Arenson, New York TimesNovember 23“Disaster Gives the Uninsured Wider Access to Medicaid,” Kathryn E.Finkelstein, New York TimesNovember 26Attorney General Ashcroft names Kenneth Feinberg special master ofthe Sept. <strong>11</strong>th Victim Compensation FundJoshua Gotbaum makes a second appearance on <strong>The</strong> O’Reilly Factorand is questioned about the necessity of having two funds — the mainfund and the telethon fundNovember 27U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft says 600 people are in federalcustody in connection with investigations into the 9/<strong>11</strong> attacks; mostare held on immigration violationsSafe Horizon implements 24-hour Safe Horizon <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th SupportHotlineNovember 28“Small Arts Groups Feel the Pain: With Audiences and Money Dwindling,Some May Find It Hard to Survive,” Joe Garofoli, San Francisco Gate77


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEEventsGovernment <strong>Response</strong><strong>Philanthropic</strong> <strong>Response</strong>Media <strong>Response</strong>December 4, 2001U.S. government moves to block assets of three Muslim charities,including a group called the Holy Land <strong>Foundation</strong> for Relief andDevelopment, because of suspected links to terrorist groupsDecember 5United Nations brokers so-called Bonn Agreement, creating a plan for apower-sharing interim government in Afghanistan“Red Cross Details Gay-Inclusive Relief Plan,” Tom Musbach, Gay.comDecember 6Attorney General Ashcroft testifies before Senate Judiciary Committee“Giuliani Seeks to Lead Fund for Uniformed After Jan.1,” SarahKershaw, New York TimesDecember 7Taliban fighters abandon KandaharDecember 9Taliban surrenders province of Zabul, effectively ending Taliban rule inAfghanistanDecember 12Detained since August on immigration charges, Zacarias Moussaoui, thealleged “20th hijacker,” is charged with conspiracy to murder inconnection with the 9/<strong>11</strong> attacks<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund announces $75 million cash assistance programfor victims and families“Those Who Lost Homes or Jobs Are to Get $2,500 Grants,” DavidBarstow, New York TimesDecember 14Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control blocks assets oftwo Muslim charities, Benevolence International <strong>Foundation</strong> and GlobalRelief <strong>Foundation</strong>Thirteen New York City human services organizations join forces to form9/<strong>11</strong> United Services Group to coordinate services to direct and indirectvictims of 9/<strong>11</strong> attacks“Coalition of Charities Will Launch Group to Coordinate Aid Related toSept. <strong>11</strong>,” Anne Marie Chaker, Wall Street Journal“Victims’ Families Lack Voice in Effort to Coordinate Relief,” DavidBarstow, New York TimesDecember 17“<strong>The</strong> Heart Is Willing, But the Economy Isn’t,” Aline Sullivan, Barron’sDecember 18Congress agrees to package that provides $10.7 billion in aid to NewYork City and $425 million to Virginia and PennsylvaniaDecember 19Last fires at ground zero extinguishedDecember 20<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Victim Compensation Fund special master KennethFeinberg releases draft interim regulations for fund, initiating threemonthcomment periodInternational Association of Fire Fighters announces it is distributing$278,000 each to families of New York City firefighters killed in 9/<strong>11</strong>attackMellon <strong>Foundation</strong> announces first three grants, totaling $8 million,from $50 million fund to help New York arts and cultural organizationsDecember 21“Victims’ Fund Likely to Pay Average of $1.6 Million Each,” DavidBarstow and Diana B. Henriques, New York TimesDecember 22In Afghanistan, Hamid Karzai sworn in as head of 30-member interimgovernmentDecember 23Richard Reid, an English citizen of Jamaican descent, arrested in Bostonafter unsuccessfully trying to ignite explosives in his shoe on a Paris-Miami flight“Who Brought Bernadine Healy Down?” Deborah Sontag, New YorkTimes MagazineDecember 27Red Cross announces it will spend $317.5 million of the $667 million inLiberty Fund by end of year and also announces appointment of formerSenator George Mitchell as independent overseer of the fund“Pataki Says $700 Million in Aid Will Go to Downtown Businesses,”Charles Bagli, New York Times2002January 1Inauguration of Michael Bloomberg as mayor of New York CityJanuary 7“For Charities, 2001 ‘Not Terrible’,” Jon Yates, Chicago TribuneJanuary 8Five Sept. <strong>11</strong> widows spurn Sept. <strong>11</strong> Victim Compensation Fundand sue either American Airlines or United Airlines and the privatesecurity companies responsible for providing passenger screeningat airports in questionJanuary 9<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund announces 2001 total of $154.3 million to helpvictims, families and communities rebuild after the 9/<strong>11</strong> attacks78


A TIMELINEJanuary 14“Charities Reap Millions from Tie-Ins,” Jacqueline Salmon and Lena Sun,Washington PostJanuary 16<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, having received $425 million from two milliondonors, announces it is closed to further contributionsJanuary 22“Firefighter Families Quietly Get $100 Million,” William Murphy, NewYork Newsday“Families Find That Public Considers Demands to Change Terms of aVictims Fund ‘Greedy’,” Milo Geyelin, Wall Street JournalJanuary 29In his State of the Union address, President Bush brands Iraq, as well asIran and North Korea, as part of an “axis of evil”January 30American Red Cross and former Senate Majority Leader George Mitchellunveil plan providing $360 million in additional assistance to 9/<strong>11</strong>FamiliesJanuary 31Disaster Relief Medicaid program expiresFebruary 2“9/<strong>11</strong> Tie-Ins Blur Lines of Charity and Profit,” David Barstow, New YorkTimesFebruary 5Catholic Charities USA announces grants totaling more than $20 Millionto 16 local agencies for <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> recovery effortsFebruary 7“Red Cross Gives Disaster Relief to Tony Enclave,” Anne Marie Chaker,Wall Street JournalFebruary 89/<strong>11</strong> United Services Group announces coordinated plan by Red Cross,Salvation Army, and Safe Horizon to provide assistance to displacedworkersFebruary 12Twin Towers Fund announces 28 grants averaging $100,000 to familiesof rescue workersCarnegie Corporation of New York announces anonymous $10 milliongift to help arts and cultural organizations in New York CityFebruary 15“9/<strong>11</strong> Charities Set Cutoff Date for Applicants,” David W. Chen, NewYork TimesFebruary 17Supervision of all airport security screeners transferred to TransportationSecurity AdministrationFebruary 21Board of Red Cross formally votes to reaffirm policy of not soliciting orsegregating donations for specific disastersFebruary 25<strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong> releases report on 9/<strong>11</strong> philanthropic responseFebruary 27“In a Twin Towers Charity Shift, Giuliani to Give Money Quickly,” DavidBarstow and David Herszenhorn, New York Times“Many Charities Report ‘Encouraging’ Donations,” Associated PressFebruary 28Carnegie Corporation of New York announces $1.6 million grant insupport of WNYC, whose broadcast antenna was destroyed in thedestruction of twin towersMarch 5“U.S. May Approve More Aid for Kin of Sept. <strong>11</strong> Dead,” David Barstow,New York TimesMarch 6<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund reports six-month disbursement of $205 millionout of $465 million donatedMarch 7“Charity Shifting Emphasis Away from Cash Payments,” David Barstow,New York TimesMarch <strong>11</strong>Six-month anniversary of 9/<strong>11</strong> attacksSaudia Arabia moves to shut down al-Haramain Islamic <strong>Foundation</strong>'sbranches in Somalia and BosniaMarch 12Office of Homeland Security director Tom Ridge announces terror alertsystem; alert level is set at yellowMellon <strong>Foundation</strong> announces $28 million in grants to New York Cityarts organizationsMarch 19Department of Justice releases report on interviews of Muslimimmigrants: of 4,793 prospective interviewees, 1,700 could not belocated or had left U.S.; 2,261 agreed to be interviewed, generatingten leads79


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEEventsGovernment <strong>Response</strong><strong>Philanthropic</strong> <strong>Response</strong>Media <strong>Response</strong>March 21, 2002Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld announces rules for militarycommissions created to try certain terror suspectsMarch 27“Tax Report [IRS to Ease Rules for <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>-Related Donations],”Wall Street JournalMarch 28American forces capture Abu Zubaydah, a high-ranking al-Qaedaofficial, in a raid in PakistanMarch 29Brooklyn Battery Tunnel and West Street in Lower Manhattan arereopened to trafficApril 5California Endowment announces grants totaling $4.2 million toprograms promoting tolerance in California communitiesApril 15Open Society Institute announces grants in support of organizationsworking to preserve civil liberties and immigrant rightsApril 189/<strong>11</strong> United Services Group announces program to offer financialplanning to victims and familiesApril 23New York Regional Association of Grantmakers report finds that majorityof aid disbursed in wake of attacks took the form of direct cashpayments to victims and their families“Thousands of Displaced New York Workers Not Qualifying for Sept. <strong>11</strong>Charities,” Associated PressApril 24MacArthur <strong>Foundation</strong> announces grants totaling $1.8 million toadvance efforts in international peace and securityApril 26“Sorting Out Why U.S. Agency [FEMA] Spent So Little,” David Barstowand Diana B. Henriques, New York TimesMay 1FEMA announces it will reopen more than 7,000 applications forhousing assistance it had rejected in the months after 9/<strong>11</strong> attacksMay 2“U.S. [FEMA] to Reconsider Applicants Rejected for Aid After Attack,”Diana B. Henriques, New York TimesMay 4“Senate Seeks Inquiry into FEMA 9/<strong>11</strong> Role,” Diana B. Henriques, NewYork TimesMay 6“For Illegal Workers’ Kin, No Paper Trail and Less 9/<strong>11</strong> Aid,” AireyaNavarro, New York TimesMay 9Seedco announces extension of Lower Manhattan Small BusinessInitiativeMay 12Recovery workers find what will prove to be last human remainsrecovered at ground zeroMay 15“Downtown Families Eligible for More Housing Aid,” Edward Hyatt,New York TimesMay 17<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund provides additional $38 million to help affectedindividuals and families and to help revitalize lower ManhattanMay 19Vice President Dick Cheney says it's “almost certain” al-Qaeda will carryout another terror attack in the U.S.May 21Federal and local law enforcement officials warn of uncorroboratedthreats against Brooklyn Bridge and Statue of LibertyMellon <strong>Foundation</strong> announces nearly $6 million for New York City parksMay 23United Nations Security Council votes to extend mandate ofInternational Security Assistance Force in Kabul beyond June 20May 29Ceremony to mark end of cleanup at ground zero: in total, 200,000pounds of steel and 1.7 million tons of debris removed from site —three months ahead of schedule and $3 billion under budgetMay 30Watergate-era rules restricting FBI agents from canvassing public placesor Web sites lifted“U.S. Fund for Tower Victims Will Aid Some Gay Partners” Jane Gross,New York TimesMay 31Only 496 out of possible 3,000 people have filed claims with Sept. <strong>11</strong>Victim Compensation Fund80


A TIMELINEJune 5Congress begins closed hearings into possible intelligence failures in therun-up to 9/<strong>11</strong>Red Cross announces new Donor Direct policy, “an explicit response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> criticism …[intended] to minimize public misunderstandingabout where money is spent….”“Red Cross Is Pressed to Open Its Books,” New York Times“Red Cross Changes Donation Process,” Associated PressJune 6Twin Towers Fund announces third round of distributions, bringing totaldistributed to $155 millionJune <strong>11</strong>“Much of Sept.<strong>11</strong> Charity Remains to Be Disbursed,” Lena H. Sun, SarahCohen, and Jacqueline Salmon, Washington PostJune 13Specially convened loya jirga elects Hamid Karzai to head Afghanistan’stransitional governmentJune 23“Families Fret as Charities Hold a Billion Dollars in 9/<strong>11</strong> Aid,” StephanieStrom, New York TimesJune 26Bill passed in U.S. House of Representatives making it easier for federalagencies to share information with local and state authoritiesJune 28FEMA announces liberalization of its mortgage and rental assistanceprogram guidelines to help “lawful U.S. residents who suffered at leasta 25 percent income loss as a result of the attack avoid eviction fromtheir dwellings....”June 29“After Criticism, U.S. [FEMA] Broadens 9/<strong>11</strong> Aid Pool,” David W. Chen,New York TimesJuly 99/<strong>11</strong> United Services Group releases findings from “Ongoing NeedsStudy” of those affected by World Trade <strong>Center</strong> attacksJuly <strong>11</strong><strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund announces $200 million Ongoing RecoveryProgramJuly 13New York Times reports that of the 2,823 dead or missing, only 1,229people (44 percent) have been identifiedJuly 16Six proposals for rebuilding the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> unveiled at aceremony in Lower ManhattanJuly 17FEMA reports it has approved 5,147 out of <strong>11</strong>,202 applicationssubmitted to the mortgage and rental assistance program and hasdisbursed roughly $32 millionJuly 22“Finding Cure for Hearts Broken on Sept. <strong>11</strong> as Difficult as Explainingthe Cost,” Stephanie Strom, New York TimesJuly 26House of Representatives approves creation of Department of HomelandSecurityJuly 29“Saying No to Free Aid, Many Families Hire Lawyers,” David W. Chen,New York TimesAugust 8“Family of 9/<strong>11</strong> Victim Accepts $1.04 Million in U.S. Compensation,”David W. Chen, New York TimesAugust 12“352 Artists and 135 Arts Groups Sharing $4.6 Million from Sept. <strong>11</strong>Fund,” Robin Pogrebin, New York TimesAugust 19New York City medical examiner’s office releases first comprehensive listof those killed or missing in 9/<strong>11</strong> attacks“Big Gaps Found in 9/<strong>11</strong> Benefits,” Martin Kasindorf, USA TodayAugust 21“Program to Cover Psychiatric Help for 9/<strong>11</strong> Families,” Erica Goode,New York TimesAugust 23New York BBB announces survey results of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th charityactivity“Victims’ Fund Announces First Awards,” David W. Chen, New YorkTimesAugust 30<strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong> releases <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>: Perspectives From the Fieldof Philanthropy, vol. 1.<strong>September</strong> 4U.S. General Accounting Office releases Interim Report on the <strong>Response</strong>of Charities, says better coordination of charities needed in wake of9/<strong>11</strong>81


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEEventsGovernment <strong>Response</strong><strong>Philanthropic</strong> <strong>Response</strong>Media <strong>Response</strong><strong>September</strong> 4, 2002, continuedFamilies of Freedom Scholarship Fund announces it has reachedfundraising goal of $100 million<strong>September</strong> 5American Red Cross releases <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001: UnprecedentedEvents, Unprecedented <strong>Response</strong> — A Review of the American RedCross’ <strong>Response</strong> in the Past Year<strong>September</strong> 9<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund releases <strong>The</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund:One Year Later<strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong> releases report on post-9/<strong>11</strong> funding climateFord <strong>Foundation</strong> releases report on philanthropic response to 9/<strong>11</strong><strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>Second anniversary of the 9/<strong>11</strong> attacks; Ramzi Binalshibh, accused ofbeing a planner of the attacks, is arrested in Karachi, Pakistan“A Flood of Money, <strong>The</strong>n a Deluge of Scrutiny for Those Handing It Out,”Stephanie Strom, New York Times<strong>September</strong> 14“Suits by 950 Families Allege Safety Lapses at the Towers,” David W.Chen, New York Times<strong>September</strong> 17Bond brokerage firm Cantor Fitzgerald issues 80-page report criticizingaspects of Sept. <strong>11</strong>th Victim Compensation Fund“Worst-Hit Firm Faults Fairness of Sept. <strong>11</strong> Aid,” David W. Chen, NewYork Times“Survey Finds Artists Since 9/<strong>11</strong> Have Less Work and More Debt,” JesseMcKinley, New York Times<strong>September</strong> 26<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund announces appointment of Carol Kellerman toreplace Joshua Gotbaum as CEO<strong>September</strong> 28“Seen as Safety Net, 9/<strong>11</strong> Program Is Anything But,” David W. Chen,New York Times<strong>September</strong> 30“Fund for Terror Attack Victims Offers Awards in 14 Test Cases,” DavidChen, New York TimesOctober 12“Public Frustration Persists Over 9/<strong>11</strong> Relief Program,” David W. Chen,New York TimesNovember 1“Dispute Over Statistics Emerges in Sept. <strong>11</strong> Grants Program,” David W.Chen, New York TimesNovember 4Catholic Charities USA announces $30.5 million distributed to 25 localCatholic agencies for <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> recoveryNovember 5Major League Baseball and Major League Baseball Players Associationannounce donation of $2 Million to Families of Freedom 2November 8UN Security Council Resolution 1441 requires Iraq to declare allweapons of mass destruction (WMDs)November 13“Victims’ Kin Find Fault With Overseer of 9/<strong>11</strong> Fund,” David W. Chen,New York TimesNovember 19<strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong> releases follow-up report on philanthropy’s responseto 9/<strong>11</strong>November 20Developer Larry Silverstein, who controls lease on WTC site, releasesdesign for a new office tower to replace 7 World Trade <strong>Center</strong>November 27“9/<strong>11</strong> Aid Requests Returned: FEMA Didn’t Pay for P.O. Box,” David W.Chen, New York TimesNovember 28In Mombasa, Kenya, terrorists fire a shoulder-launched missile at anIsraeli passenger jet and three suicide bombers kill themselves andthirteen others at a resort hotelNovember 29Only 820 applications filed with Special Master Kenneth Feinberg’soffice, roughly a quarter of all those eligible to applyDecember 3“Saudis Detail Steps on Charities,” Karen DeYoung, Washington PostDecember 7Iraq submits documents required by UN Security Council Resolution1441; UN inspection teams begin inspecting suspected WMD sitesDecember 20Twin Towers Fund announces another round of distributions, bringingtotal amount it has distributed to $193 millionDecember 27New York City-based Human Rights Watch urges U.S. government toinvestigate allegations that al-Qaeda and Taliban detainees are beingtortured82


A TIMELINE2003January 8“FEMA Criticized for Its Handling of 9/<strong>11</strong> Claims,” David W. Chen, NewYork TimesJanuary 24Tom Ridge sworn in as first-ever Secretary of Homeland SecurityJanuary 27“7 Families Sue Administrator of 9/<strong>11</strong> Fund,” David W. Chen, New YorkTimesJanuary 29“Charities Face More Pressure to Be Accountable,” Mark O’Keefe, SanFrancisco ChronicleJanuary 31“Shoe-bomber” Richard Reid sentenced to life in prison for attemptingto blow up passenger jet en route to Miami in December 2001February 3Lower Manhattan Development Corp. announces finalists in designcompetition to select master plan for WTC siteFebruary 5Secretary of State Colin Powell appears before UN Security Council with“proof” of Iraq’s WMD programsFebruary 13Anti-aircraft missile batteries placed around Washington, DC, andLondon's Heathrow airport amid fears of an imminent al-Qaeda attackFebruary 18“A Slow, Deliberate Process of Judging 9/<strong>11</strong> Victim Awards,” David W.Chen, New York TimesMarch 1Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, alleged mastermind of the 9/<strong>11</strong> attacks, isarrested in joint Pakistani-CIA operation near Islamabad, PakistanMarch 7Chief Weapons Inspector Hans Blix tells UN Security Council that Iraqidisarmament will take months; U.S. and UK present draft resolution toSecurity Council giving Saddam Hussein until March 17 to disarmMarch 16President Bush and Prime Minister Blair meet in Azores with leaders ofSpain and Portugal in final attempt to solve Iraq crisis diplomaticallyMarch 17UK ambassador to United Nations declares diplomatic process on Iraq atan end; arms inspectors evacuate the country; President Bush givesSaddam Hussein and his sons 48 hours to leave the countryMarch 18Iraq rejects U.S. ultimatumMarch 19First U.S. missiles hit Baghdad in early morning, marking start ofcampaign to topple Saddam Hussein's regimeMarch 21“A Lessson Plan About Generosity,” Stephanie Strom, New York TimesApril 9U.S. forces advance into central Baghdad, breaking Saddam Hussein’scontrol of the cityApril 15“Relatives’ Lawyers Ask Court to Rule Sept. <strong>11</strong> Fund Unfair,” David W.Chen, New York TimesMay 1President Bush declares the “end to hostilities” in IraqMay 8Carnegie Corporation of New York announces $5.5 million in grants fora “living memorial” to those killed in 9/<strong>11</strong> attacks“Judge Rejects Challenges to Sept. <strong>11</strong> Compensation Fund,” AssociatedPressMay 9“Judge Dismisses 3 Cases Against 9/<strong>11</strong> Fund’s Special Master,” DavidW. Chen, New York TimesMay 27“9/<strong>11</strong> Fund Claims Remain Low,” Associated Press<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>Second anniversary of the attacksDecember 22Last day to file a claim with Sept. <strong>11</strong>th Victim Compensation Fund83


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEEventsGovernment <strong>Response</strong><strong>Philanthropic</strong> <strong>Response</strong>Media <strong>Response</strong>2004January 6Lower Manhattan Development Corp. selects a single design,“Reflecting Absence,” for memorial at World Trade <strong>Center</strong> siteJanuary 7<strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong> releases 9/<strong>11</strong> Relief and Regranting Funds:A Summary Report on Funds Raised and Assistance ProvidedJanuary 26Afghanistan’s loya jirga announces new constitution that grants thepresident sweeping powers and allows parliament to appoint ministersApril 5Day, Berry & Howard LLP, in partnership with Council on <strong>Foundation</strong>s,Independent Sector, and InterAction, a U.S.-based alliance of internationaldevelopment and humanitarian NGOs, issues Handbook onCounter-Terrorism Measures: What U.S. Nonprofits and GrantmakersNeed to KnowMay <strong>11</strong>Pittsburgh-based Heinz Endowments announce $500,000 grant to fundinternational design competition for a 9/<strong>11</strong> memorial in SomersetCounty, Pennsylvania, on the site where United Airlines Flight 93crashedMay 25Again working through the Carnegie Corporation of New York, MayorMichael Bloomberg donates $15 million to New York City nonprofitssuffering from post-9/<strong>11</strong> budget cutsJune 14Sept. <strong>11</strong> Victim Compensation Fund closes after paying more than$7 billion to 2,878 families, or roughly 97 percent of those eligibleJune 15“After Weighing Cost of Lives, 9/<strong>11</strong> Fund Completes Its Work,” David W.Chen, New York TimesJuly 4Ground-breaking ceremony for Freedom Tower, the 1,776-footcenterpiece of the redevelopment plan for World Trade <strong>Center</strong> siteJuly 7American Red Cross <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> Recovery Program announces twoyear,$50 million program to support longer-term recovery needs ofpeople directly affected by the events of 9/<strong>11</strong>July 22National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States, betterknown as the 9/<strong>11</strong> Commission, releases its final report to the publicJuly 28“Arrests Tie Charity Group to Palestinian Terrorists,” Eric Lichtblau,New York TimesAugust 3Statue of Liberty reopened to the publicAugust 22President Bush orders Treasury Dept. to freeze assets of five charitieswith links to Palestinian terrorist group HamasAugust 23“Bush Orders Move to Freeze Assets of Hamas Charities,” EdmundAndrews and Richard Stevenson, New York Times<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>Third anniversary of the attacksOctober 9Ten million Afghans go to the polls to elect a president in that country'sfirst-ever direct presidential electionOctober 21Topping-out ceremony for 7 World Trade <strong>Center</strong>; the 750-foot, 52-storystructure replaces previous building on site, which collapsed on theafternoon of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001November 2George W. Bush, 43rd president of the United States, elected tosecond termNovember 3With 55.4 percent of the vote, interim president Hamid Karzai isdeclared winner of Afghanistan's presidential electionNovember 8Rand Corporation releases study that shows that families of victims andbusinesses affected by the 9/<strong>11</strong> attacks received $38.1 billion inassistance, with insurance companies accounting for the greatest shareNovember 9“With Funds Winding Down, Questions Remain About Longer-TermNeeds,” Lydia Polgreen, New York TimesNovember 14“Groups, U.S. Battle Over 'Global Terrorist' Label,” David Ottaway,Washington PostNovember 17Sept. <strong>11</strong> Victim Compensation Fund issues final report84July 27Justice Dept. arrests five former officials of Holy Land <strong>Foundation</strong> forRelief and Development on charges they funneled millions of dollars toPalestinian terroristsNovember 18“$7 Billion for the Grief of Sept. <strong>11</strong>,” David W. Chen, New York Times


Giving in the Aftermath of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>Final Update on the <strong>Foundation</strong> andCorporate <strong>Response</strong><strong>The</strong> unprecedented outpouring of charitable supportthat followed the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001, terrorist attacksprompted the <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong> to launch a multi-yeareffort to track relief and recovery funding by foundations,corporations, and other institutional donors. Our goal earlyon was to document the philanthropic response as it washappening so that grantmakers and charities could betteridentify unmet needs and to help the field respond toquestions from the media, government officials, and thegeneral public. Over the longer term, our goal has been toprovide a definitive record of the response that will help thephilanthropic sector identify its successes and lessonslearned, so that it can prepare effectively to respond tofuture emergencies.In the first phase of the project — spanning the yearfollowing the attacks — we built a comprehensive database ofAUTHORSOREN ENZICE RESIDENT FOR ESEARCHESLIE ARINOESEARCH SSISTANTCONTRIBUTORSLIZABETH UCCAROEPTEMBER HILANTHROPICESPONSE ROJECT OORDINATORIREK ROZDZOWSKIPECIAL ROJECTS SSOCIATE85


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEFIGURE 1<strong>Foundation</strong> and Corporate 9/<strong>11</strong> <strong>Response</strong>Funding as a Share of All Private Givingcorporate and foundation contributions in response to 9/<strong>11</strong> and issued aseries of summary reports examining the role of these donors in financingrelief and recovery, mainly through support of 9/<strong>11</strong> relief and regrantingfunds. In the second phase, we focused on the ultimate uses and beneficiariesof the donations raised by the relief funds from all sources, and weissued a comprehensive report on their funding activities and practices. 1Source: <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, December 20041 <strong>The</strong> estimate of total private 9/<strong>11</strong> response funding includes an estimated $2.6 billion raised bymajor relief funds from all sources and $234 million in grants from foundations andcorporations to direct service providers.KEY FACTS AND FIGURES ON FOUNDATION ANDCORPORATE GIVING:*Donors:• <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong> has identified 1,339 foundations, corporations,and other institutional donors that made gifts in response to 9/<strong>11</strong>• <strong>The</strong>se donors gave over $1.1 billion in more than 4,500 gifts for reliefand recovery efforts and for issues related to the attacks, e.g.,bioterrorism and civil rights• Giving by institutional donors represented 39 percent of an estimated$2.8 billion in total private 9/<strong>11</strong>-related giving• 301 donors contributed in excess of $1 million each for relief andrecovery• <strong>The</strong> median amount of giving per donor was $100,000• <strong>Foundation</strong>s and corporations in the tri-state area (New York, NewJersey, and Connecticut) provided 52 percent of all givingRecipients and Beneficiaries:• 278 relief and regranting funds created to aid victims, their families, andcommunities affected by the disaster received support from institutionaldonors totaling $773 million• <strong>The</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund of the United Way of New York City/NewYork Community Trust received $163 million, surpassing all otherorganizations; the American Red Cross Liberty Disaster Relief Fundreceived $150 million• 1,538 direct-service providers, groups directly affected by the attacks,and organizations addressing 9/<strong>11</strong>-related issues received $235 million• Among direct-service organizations, arts and culture groups affected bythe attacks received $56 million; local human service agencies providingaid to affected persons and communities garnered nearly $55 million• Recipient organizations and funds were located in 44 states and12 countries*Based on data compiled by the <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong> through <strong>September</strong> 2004.86


GIVING IN THE AFTERMATH OF SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>While the scope of our 9/<strong>11</strong>-related efforts has expanded, we have continuedto track the foundation and corporate response. Specifically, in the latestyear we have added many new donors to our 9/<strong>11</strong> databaseand documented the purposes of many hundreds of gifts. This fourthand final version of Giving in the Aftermath of 9/<strong>11</strong> provides a definitiveand comprehensive overview of foundation and corporate donors andtheir beneficiaries. Based on data compiled through <strong>September</strong> 2004, thisstudy updates and expands on the findings presented in our December2003 report. 2 <strong>The</strong> latest information was drawn primarily from 2002 and2003 annual reports provided by foundation and corporate donors andfrom data reported by private foundations in their Form 990-PF taxreturns. Information also comes from grantmaker news releases and Websites and donor lists compiled by leading recipients, such as the AmericanRed Cross and the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund of the United Way of New YorkCity and the New York Community Trust.TABLE 1<strong>Foundation</strong> and Corporate 9/<strong>11</strong> <strong>Response</strong>Funding by Donor TypeDonor TypeCorporations/Corporate<strong>Foundation</strong>sIndependentand Family<strong>Foundation</strong>sNo. ofDonors % Amount 1 %No. ofGifts %632 46.5 $ 721,790,850 65.5 1,829 40.3535 40.0 315,544,283 28.6 2,180 48.0Community <strong>11</strong>2 8.4 23,078,420 2.1 357 7.9<strong>Foundation</strong>sOther Public 54 4.0 21,518,917 2.0 160 3.5<strong>Foundation</strong>sAssociations/ 15 1.1 19,835,700 1.8 16 0.4OtherTOTAL 1,339 100.0 $1,101,768,170 100.0 4,542 100.0Source: <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, December 2004.Due to rounding, percentages may not total 100.1 Includes cash donations and amounts pledged to match employee gifts; excludes in-kinddonations.DONORSInstitutional donors include corporations and corporate foundations; independentand family foundations; community foundations and other public foundations;and a variety of business and professional associations.• <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong> has identified 1,339 foundations,corporations, and other institutional donors that have togethercontributed more than $1.1 billion for relief and recovery efforts andfor purposes related to the 9/<strong>11</strong> attacks and their aftermath (Table 1). 3<strong>The</strong> sweeping breadth of the response has proven a milestonefor philanthropy. Prior to 9/<strong>11</strong>, the institutional philanthropicresponse to natural disasters and other regional or international criseshad been far narrower in scope.FIGURE 2<strong>Foundation</strong> and Corporate 9/<strong>11</strong> <strong>Response</strong>Funding by Donor Type• Giving by institutional donors represented 39 percent of an estimated$2.8 billion in total private giving in response to 9/<strong>11</strong> (Figure 1). 4 Toput this spending in perspective, this proportion is more than doublethe share of all U.S. private giving provided annually by foundationsand corporations in recent years. 5• <strong>Foundation</strong>s and corporations reported a total of 4,542 donations.<strong>The</strong> number of gifts has increased dramatically from prior editions ofthis report, as 9/<strong>11</strong> donors have fulfilled their undesignated pledgesand as more funders have provided complete reporting of the exactamounts given to named recipients. 6Source: <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, December 2004.Due to rounding, percentages may not total 100.87


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEFIGURE 3Corporate <strong>Foundation</strong> Giving as a Share ofAll Corporate 9/<strong>11</strong> GivingBy Funder Type• 632 corporations pledged $721.8 million, or 66 percent of allinstitutional giving made in response to the 9/<strong>11</strong> attacks (Figure 2). 7This figure includes cash donations and more than $126 millionpledged to match employee gifts. 8 (In-kind gifts were excluded fromthis analysis. 9 )• Corporate donors reported 1,829 donations to named recipientgroups, mainly 9/<strong>11</strong> relief funds. 10 <strong>The</strong>se donations representedtwo-fifths of all gifts designated for specific purposes. Another30 percent of the number of corporate donations went to directserviceorganizations providing a variety of services to those directlyand indirectly affected by the attacks.Source: <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, December 2004.Includes 276 corporate foundations.• Among various types of corporate donors were 276 corporatefoundations. <strong>The</strong>y contributed $360 million, or 50 percent of allcorporate 9/<strong>11</strong> giving (Figure 3). This is close to double theproportion of total annual corporate giving typically provided bycorporate foundations. Possible explanations for this higherproportion include corporations’ use of their foundations’endowments to help fund the unbudgeted 9/<strong>11</strong> donations, e.g.,for matching employee contributions and providing direct assistanceto victims or their families.• 701 independent and community or other public foundations pledged$360.1 million, or about 33 percent of institutional 9/<strong>11</strong> funding.Independent foundations alone provided $315.5 million, whilecommunity foundations contributed $23.1 million and other publicfoundations gave $21.5 million.• Independent and community and other public foundations reported2,697 gifts to specific recipient organizations, or 59 percent of allinstitutional gifts reported. Independent foundations alone made2,180 gifts, or 48 percent of all designated gifts. In addition tosupporting relief funds, larger independent foundations funded awide range of local and national direct-service providers, groupsdirectly affected by the 9/<strong>11</strong> attacks, and organizations addressingissues related to the attacks and their aftermath. (See “Recipientsand Beneficiaries” for an analysis of 9/<strong>11</strong> giving to recipientorganizations.)• Fifteen associations, including business groups, sports groups, andtrade unions pledged $19.8 million, or close to 2 percent of the total.<strong>The</strong>y reported 16 gifts, or less than 1 percent of designated gifts.88


GIVING IN THE AFTERMATH OF SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>Like corporations, they mainly channeled their support through9/<strong>11</strong> relief funds.By Range of Giving• Giving per funder ranged from less than $500 for a small communityfoundation in Michigan to the $50.5 million pledged by the NewYork-based Andrew W. Mellon <strong>Foundation</strong>, which ranked eighthamong U.S. independent foundations by giving in 2002. Amongcorporations, giving ranged from less than $5,000 to the $16.3 millionpledged by ExxonMobil through its foundation.• Seventy-one percent of all institutional donors gave less than$500,000 for 9/<strong>11</strong> relief and recovery (Table 2 and Figure 4). <strong>The</strong>median amount — the mid-point for all donors ranked by giving —was $100,000, but it varied widely by donor type. Among theprincipal donor types in the <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>’s 9/<strong>11</strong> database, themedian giving amount ranged from $25,000 for independentfoundations, including family foundations, to $295,000 forcorporations overall and $376,000 for corporate foundations.For community foundations it was $31,100; for other publicfoundations, $100,000; and for associations, $500,000.TABLE 2<strong>Foundation</strong> and Corporate 9/<strong>11</strong> <strong>Response</strong>Funding By Range of GivingRange of 9/<strong>11</strong> GivingNo. ofDonors % Amount 1 %$10 million and over 28 2.1 $403,230,694 36.6$5 million–$10 million 35 2.6 214,322,555 19.5$2 million–$5 million 58 4.3 160,279,452 14.5$1 million–$2 million 180 13.4 197,0<strong>11</strong>,180 17.9$500,000–$1 million 91 6.8 54,695,939 5.0$250,000–$500,000 93 6.9 29,635,184 2.7$100,000–$250,000 216 16.1 27,567,575 2.5$50,000–$100,000 126 9.4 7,538,934 0.7$25,000–$50,000 132 9.9 4,016,266 0.4Less than $25,000 380 28.4 3,470,391 0.3Source: <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, December 2004.Due to rounding, percentages may not total 100.1 Includes cash donations and amounts pledged to match employee gifts; excludes in-kinddonations.FIGURE 4<strong>Foundation</strong> vs. Corporate 9/<strong>11</strong> <strong>Response</strong>Funding by Range of Giving• 301 donors (22 percent) contributed $1 million or more for relief andrecovery efforts. Together they gave $974.8 million, or 88 percent oftotal funding.• $1 million+ contributors included 232 corporations, 49 independentfoundations, seven community foundations, seven public foundations,and six associations. Thirty-seven percent of the corporate donorsgave $1 million or more in 9/<strong>11</strong> response funding, compared to 9percent for independent and community foundations.• Sixty-three donors — fewer than 5 percent — pledged $5 million ormore. <strong>The</strong>ir contributions totaled $617.6 million, or 56 percent ofinstitutional 9/<strong>11</strong> giving. <strong>The</strong> proportion of funding providedby the largest contributors varied by donor type. For example, 46corporations — or roughly 7 percent of the corporate donors —reported giving $5 million or more, and they represented 53 percentof the corporate giving. In contrast, only 14 independentand community foundations — just 2 percent — gave $5 million ormore, yet they provided 64 percent of 9/<strong>11</strong> giving by thesefoundations.Source: <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, December 2004.Based on total giving figures for latest fiscal year reported (2003 for most foundations, 2002 forothers); due to rounding, percentages may not total 100.89


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEFIGURE 5<strong>Foundation</strong> and Corporate 9/<strong>11</strong> <strong>Response</strong>Funding by Donor State• Eleven corporate contributors gave in excess of $10 million:ExxonMobil (TX), Citigroup (NY), Deutsche Bank (NY), GeneralElectric (CT), J.P. Morgan Chase (NY), Verizon (NY), Coca-Cola(GA), ChevronTexaco (CA), Philip Morris (NY), Fannie Mae (DC),and Morgan Stanley (NY) (Table 3). Seven of the top corporatedonors made their 9/<strong>11</strong> gifts from their foundations.• <strong>Foundation</strong> donors that gave in excess of $10 million each includedthe Andrew W. Mellon <strong>Foundation</strong> (NY), Lilly Endowment (IN),Starr <strong>Foundation</strong> (NY), Ford <strong>Foundation</strong> (NY), CarnegieCorporation (NY), Atlantic Philanthropies (NY), <strong>11</strong> and CaliforniaEndowment (CA) (Table 4).By Funder LocationSource: <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, December 2004.Due to rounding, percentages may not total 100.• While corporations, foundations, and other institutional donorsacross the United States and abroad responded generously to the9/<strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks, New York State-based corporations andTABLE 3Top 25 Corporate Donors Ranked by Total 9/<strong>11</strong> <strong>Response</strong> FundingCorporation/Corporate <strong>Foundation</strong> State Amount 1 No. of Gifts Purpose of Funding1. ExxonMobil <strong>Foundation</strong> TX $ 16,251,000 10 To support the ExxonMobil <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Disaster Relief Campaign; support also for various relief and recoveryorganizations through employee, retiree, dealer, and distributor matching gift programs.2. Citigroup <strong>Foundation</strong> NY 15,2<strong>11</strong>,000 20 To establish the Citigroup Relief Fund for scholarships for the children of victims and to provide disaster assistance tovarious NYC nonprofits.3. Deutsche Bank Americas <strong>Foundation</strong> NY 13,597,823 26 To support the 9/<strong>11</strong> Widows’ and Children’s Benefit Fund and various organizations helping with relief and recovery.4. GE <strong>Foundation</strong> CT 13,260,000 5 To support the Twin Towers Fund and the American Red Cross Liberty Disaster Relief Fund.5. J. P. Morgan Chase/J. P. Morgan Chase NY 13,045,278 7 To establish the J. P. Morgan Chase WTC Disaster Relief Fund to aid victims and families.<strong>Foundation</strong>6. Verizon <strong>Foundation</strong> NY 12,625,000 5 To support the 9/<strong>11</strong> Widows’ and Children’s Benefit Fund, the American Red Cross Liberty Disaster Relief Fund (andlocal chapters), and the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.7. Coca-Cola Company GA 12,194,150 7 To support the American Red Cross Liberty Disaster Relief Fund and various relief and recovery organizations.8. ChevronTexaco Corporation CA 10,560,000 57 To support various relief and recovery organizations providing for the short- and long-term needs of affectedindividuals and communities; support also for various organizations promoting tolerance, inclusiveness, and anti-biaseducational programs.9. Philip Morris USA NY 10,431,666 72 To support the American Red Cross Liberty Disaster Relief Fund, <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, Safe Horizon WTC Fund,Scholarship America, and various community-based service organizations.10. Fannie Mae/Fannie Mae <strong>Foundation</strong> DC 10,156,770 8 To support various organizations including the Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the National Capital Region Survivors’ Fund,REALTORS Housing Relief Fund, <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, and the DC Disaster Relief Fund.<strong>11</strong>. Morgan Stanley NY 10,010,000 2 To establish the Morgan Stanley Victims Relief Fund to aid victims and families.12. AXA <strong>Foundation</strong> NY 10,000,000 1 To establish the AXA 9/<strong>11</strong> Relief Fund aiding those affected by 9/<strong>11</strong>.13. Bear, Stearns & Co. NY 10,000,000 1 To establish the Bear Stearns Relief Fund to benefit victims and families.14. DaimlerChrysler Corporation MI 10,000,000 1 To establish the DaimlerChrysler Help the Children Fund to benefit the children of those killed or injured in the attacks.15. Freddie Mac VA 10,000,000 2 To support various relief organizations providing for the short-term needs of survivors and families of victims and longtermrelief for victims’ families; support also for MBS Mega Scholarship Fund.16. Goldman, Sachs <strong>Foundation</strong> NY 10,000,000 1 To establish the Goldman Sachs Relief Fund to aid victims and families.17. Johnson & Johnson Family of Companies NJ 10,000,000 3 To support the American Red Cross Liberty Disaster Relief Fund, <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, and various organizations tohelp speed relief and recovery.18. Lehman Brothers Holdings NY 10,000,000 8 To support the NYU Downtown Hospital and various relief and recovery organizations.19. Marsh & McLennan Companies NY 10,000,000 1 To establish the Marsh & McLennan Victims’ Relief Fund to aid victims and families.20. Merrill Lynch & Co. NY 10,000,000 6 To establish the Merrill Lynch 9/<strong>11</strong> Scholarship Fund and to support various relief and recovery organizations.21. Vivendi Universal <strong>Foundation</strong> NY 9,500,000 4 To support the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, Robin Hood Relief Fund (to underwrite the Concert for NYC), and variousorganizations through employee matching gift programs.22. Pfizer/Pfizer <strong>Foundation</strong> NY 9,263,500 22 To support the Twin Towers Fund, <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, American Red Cross Liberty Disaster Relief Fund, and variousrelief organizations.23. Anheuser-Busch Family of Wholesalers/Anheuser-Busch <strong>Foundation</strong>MO 8,400,000 6 To support the NYS World Trade <strong>Center</strong> Relief Fund, <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region Survivors’ Fund, the American Red Cross (for long-term personal needs of victims and families), and theSalvation Army (to provide meals for emergency workers in NY and DC).24. SoundView Technology Group CT 7,067,850 28 To support the Robin Hood Relief Fund and various relief and recovery organizations.25. Credit Suisse First Boston NY 6,648,345 17 To support various relief and recovery organizations including the 9/<strong>11</strong> Widows’ and Children’s Benefit Fund and theChildren’s Aid Society WTC Relief Fund; support also for community-based service organizations.Top 25 Subtotal $268,222,382 320All Other Corporate Donors $453,568,468 1,509Source: <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, December 2004.1 Includes cash donations and amounts pledged to match employee gifts; excludes in-kind donations.90


GIVING IN THE AFTERMATH OF SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>foundations provided more than two-fifths of all 9/<strong>11</strong> response funding($467 million) (Figure 5 and Table 6). Tri-state (NY, NJ, CT)grantmakers together contributed over half of all support($572.2 million). Seven of the top ten independent foundations, four ofthe top ten public foundations, and six of the top ten corporate donorswere located or headquartered in New York State or the tri-state area.• California ranked second after New York among states providinginstitutional philanthropic support, with close to 9 percent offunding ($93.9 million). <strong>The</strong> California Endowment, the largestCalifornia-based 9/<strong>11</strong> donor, ranked seventh among independentTABLE 4Top 25 Independent and Operating <strong>Foundation</strong>s Ranked by Total 9/<strong>11</strong> <strong>Response</strong> Funding<strong>Foundation</strong>State<strong>Foundation</strong>Type 1AmountNo. ofGiftsPurpose of Funding1. Andrew W. Mellon <strong>Foundation</strong> NY IN $ 50,501,500 135 To assist NYC cultural and performing arts organizations directly affected by <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th; support alsofor various organizations’ New York disaster response.2. Lilly Endowment IN IN 34,660,100 4 To support the American Red Cross Liberty Disaster Relief Fund, the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, and theSalvation Army’s national disaster training project for faith-based disaster relief organizations.3. Starr <strong>Foundation</strong> NY IN 20,071,446 164 To support various NYC nonprofit organizations affected by <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th; support also for AIG DisasterRelief Fund through a matching gift program for AIG employees.4. Ford <strong>Foundation</strong> NY IN 18,923,850 67 To support the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, nonprofits directly affected by the WTC disaster, and those workingto promote public discourse on issues related to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.5. Carnegie Corporation of New York NY IN 14,592,400 155 To support various educational and media-related organizations dealing with public awareness andresponse to the aftermath of the attacks; support also for NYC cultural organizations through ananonymous $10 million gift.6. Atlantic Philanthropies 2 NY IN 13,770,670 30 To support the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, nonprofits affected by the attacks, and various organizationsinvolved in tolerance and anti-bias educational programs.7. California Endowment CA IN 13,368,041 76 To support workers and nonprofit organizations in California affected by <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th; support also forCA-based nonprofits working to promote intercultural communication, religious tolerance, conflictresolution, and violence prevention.8. Alfred P. Sloan <strong>Foundation</strong> NY IN 9,923,919 37 To support the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund and various educational institutions responding to the needs of thoseaffected in NYC and Washington, DC, and seeking to prevent the threat of bioterrorism through researchand program development.9. John S. and James L. Knight <strong>Foundation</strong> FL IN 9,351,000 252 To support various relief-related activities for the secondary economic victims of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th in the 26communities served by the foundation and for memorial efforts honoring hijacking victims of Flight 93.10. Robert Wood Johnson <strong>Foundation</strong> NJ IN 8,616,520 31 To support the Task Force for Child Survival and Development and various organizations focusing on publichealth preparedness and disaster response, mental health, and direct aid to recovery workers.<strong>11</strong>. W. K. Kellogg <strong>Foundation</strong> MI IN 6,316,492 18 To support various educational and community outreach organizations that provided support tocommunities and population groups affected by the attacks.12. Rockefeller <strong>Foundation</strong> NY IN 5,715,596 43 To support various relief organizations, particularly those involved with minority communities in NYC;support also for those working to promote community awareness and involvement in the rebuilding ofLower Manhattan.13. John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur<strong>Foundation</strong>IL IN 5,170,000 30 To support organizations addressing issues arising from <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th related to strengthening thequality of public information and analysis, understanding the underlying causes of terrorism, anddetermining the implications for civil liberties.14. Andor Capital Management <strong>Foundation</strong> CT IN 5,000,000 1 To support the Robin Hood Relief Fund.15. Charles Stewart Mott <strong>Foundation</strong> MI IN 3,803,737 21 To support the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund and various organizations dealing with the aftermath of the attacks.16. Kresge <strong>Foundation</strong> MI IN 3,250,000 3 To support the Nonprofit Recovery Fund, <strong>The</strong> Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the National Capital RegionSurvivors’ Fund, and the New York <strong>Foundation</strong>.17. Thomas and Stacey Siebel <strong>Foundation</strong> CA IN 3,069,391 1 To establish the Siebel America Fund to support the relief work of the American Red Cross and SalvationArmy.18. Lumina <strong>Foundation</strong> for Education IN IN 3,025,000 3 To support the Families of Freedom Scholarship Fund.19. Bill & Melinda Gates <strong>Foundation</strong> WA IN 3,020,000 4 To support the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, the New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, and the American RedCross Liberty Disaster Relief Fund.20. Samuel I. Newhouse <strong>Foundation</strong> NY IN 3,015,000 4 To support the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, the Twin Towers Fund, and the Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of NewJersey Star Ledger Disaster Relief Fund.21. Annie E. Casey <strong>Foundation</strong> MD IN 3,000,000 15 To support New Yorkers for Children and other organizations providing assistance to children and familiesaffected by the attacks.22. Open Society Institute NY OP 2,732,994 33 To support various organizations that promote policy development, advocacy, and monitoring pertaining tocivil liberties of immigrant and minority groups affected by 9/<strong>11</strong>.23. William Randolph Hearst <strong>Foundation</strong> NY IN 2,630,000 27 To support the American Red Cross Liberty Disaster Relief Fund, Twin Towers Fund, Salvation Army ofGreater New York, and various NYC arts and culture organizations affected by <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.24. William R. Kenan, Jr. Charitable Trust NC IN 2,500,000 1 For fellowship program at CUNY Honors College.25. Robert R. McCormick Tribune <strong>Foundation</strong> IL IN 2,500,000 1 To establish the McCormick Tribune Disaster Relief Fund to aid organizations providing services to thevictims of the attacks, their families, and those in the impacted communities.Top 25 Subtotal $248,527,656 1,156All Other Independent <strong>Foundation</strong>s $ 67,016,627 1,024Source: <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, December 2004.1 Includes independent and family (IN) and operating (OP) foundations; excludes company-sponsored foundations.2 An international endowed philanthropy with a principal domicile outside the U.S., it operates like an independent foundation and maintains a grant selection and administration office in New York.91


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEfoundation donors, while ChevronTexaco Corporation, the secondlargest California donor, placed eighth among corporate 9/<strong>11</strong>contributors.• Twenty-four donors — mainly corporations — based outside ofthe United States provided roughly 1 percent of 9/<strong>11</strong> responsefunding ($12.1 million). Canada represented the largest number ofdonors (9), and Japan accounted for the largest giving amount($3.6 million), followed by Canada and the Netherlands. It should benoted that many foreign and multinational companies donated 9/<strong>11</strong>funds through their U.S.-based affiliates. <strong>The</strong>refore, the total amountreported does not represent all funding from overseas corporationsand foundations.By Funder Size<strong>The</strong> following analysis of 9/<strong>11</strong> giving by funder size is limited to independent,community, and corporate foundations for which asset information is available inthe <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>’s foundation database. 12 While not all foundations maintainlarge endowments relative to their giving, asset size nevertheless provides onecriterion for assessing giving capacity.• Larger foundations represented the majority of the 9/<strong>11</strong> foundationdonors identified by the <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>. Nearly two-thirds(64 percent) of the 647 independent and community foundation9/<strong>11</strong> donors held at least $10 million in assets in their latest fiscalyear, while 43 percent held at least $50 million in assets (Table 7and Figure 6). 13TABLE 5Top 10 Community and Other Public <strong>Foundation</strong>s and Associations Ranked by Total 9/<strong>11</strong> <strong>Response</strong> FundingDonor Name State Donor Type 1 AmountNo. ofGifts Purpose of Funding1. Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong> NY PC $ 7,000,000 1 To establish the Robin Hood Relief Fund for organizations helping victims and families, uniformedservice workers, and low-income victims impacted by the resulting economic downturn.2. Major League Baseball Players Association NY AS 5,000,000 1 To establish the MLB-MLBPA Disaster Relief Fund to aid victims and families.3. National Association of <strong>The</strong>atre Owners CA AS 5,000,000 1 To support various relief and recovery organizations.4. National Collegiate Athletic Association(NCAA)IN AS 5,000,000 1 To support the Families of Freedom Scholarship Fund to benefit former or current NCAA studentathletes,firefighters, police officers, and emergency medical technicians who were permanentlydisabled as a result of the WTC tragedy.5. New York Community Trust NY CM 4,677,895 46 To support the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund and various organizations directly involved in short- andlong-term relief and recovery efforts, anti-bias and tolerance activities, and emergencypreparedness planning.6. PGA Tour Charities FL PC 2,518,204 7 To support various relief and recovery organizations.7. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of New Jersey NJ CM 2,098,303 10 To provide scholarships for individuals.8. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> Silicon Valley CA CM 1,950,000 1 To support the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.9. Columbus <strong>Foundation</strong> and AffiliatedOrganizationsOH CM 1,389,992 39 To support the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund and various relief organizations providing aid to victims andfamilies.10. Pittsburgh <strong>Foundation</strong> PA CM 1,310,700 4 To support the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.Top 10 Subtotal $35,945,094 <strong>11</strong>1All Others $28,487,943 422Source: <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, December 2004.1 AS = Association; CM = Community <strong>Foundation</strong>; PC = Public Charity/Other.92


GIVING IN THE AFTERMATH OF SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>• Large foundations provided the vast majority of 9/<strong>11</strong> support.<strong>The</strong> 281 foundation donors holding at least $50 million in assetsaccounted for almost 86 percent of all 9/<strong>11</strong> giving by independentand community foundations. <strong>The</strong> 30 foundation 9/<strong>11</strong> donors withassets of $1 billion or more provided 66 percent of all foundation9/<strong>11</strong> giving ($224 million).• Compared with independent and community foundations, the276 corporate foundations that made 9/<strong>11</strong> gifts were more equallydistributed by asset size. Just over two-fifths (43 percent) held assetsof $10 million or more, while just 15 percent held at least $50 millionin assets. One-fourth of corporate foundation donors held less than$1 million in assets (Table 8 and Figure 7). 14• Despite the more even distribution of corporate foundation 9/<strong>11</strong>donors by asset size, larger corporate foundations also provided amajority of corporate foundation 9/<strong>11</strong> funding. In the top asset ranges,those reporting assets of $10 million or more accounted for 61 percentof all corporate foundation 9/<strong>11</strong> giving. Those holding assets of$50 million or more contributed 34 percent of all corporatefoundation 9/<strong>11</strong> support.RECIPIENTS AND BENEFICIARIES<strong>The</strong> following is an analysis of contributions from institutional donors to morethan 1,800 recipient groups, including relief funds created by relief agencies, governmentagencies, corporations, and foundations to aid 9/<strong>11</strong> victims and affectedcommunities; emergency relief and other direct-service providers; local nonprofitsdirectly affected by the disaster and its aftermath; and organizations working onissues related to the attacks. As part of our tracking effort, the <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>created a recipient database and classified recipients of gifts from institutionaldonors by geographic location, organization type, and field of activity.TABLE 6Top 15 States by Total <strong>Foundation</strong> andCorporate 9/<strong>11</strong> <strong>Response</strong> FundingStateNo. ofDonors 1 % Amount %1. New York 303 22.4 $ 467,008,556 42.42. California 147 10.9 93,902,132 8.53. New Jersey 73 5.4 59,675,525 5.44. Indiana 23 1.7 47,175,605 4.35. Connecticut 45 3.3 45,476,825 4.16. Illinois 67 5.0 44,214,698 4.07. Texas 56 4.1 41,012,174 3.78. Michigan 52 3.8 37,097,872 3.49. Florida 38 2.8 24,106,139 2.210. Georgia 29 2.1 23,381,010 2.<strong>11</strong>1. Pennsylvania 54 4.0 20,520,387 1.912. Washington 21 1.6 19,630,617 1.813. Ohio 55 4.1 17,998,476 1.614. Virginia 23 1.7 17,635,017 1.615. District of Columbia 16 1.2 16,210,768 1.5Subtotal 1,002 74.2 $ 975,045,801 88.5All Other States 325 24.1 <strong>11</strong>4,598,635 10.4Non-U.S. 2 24 1.8 12,123,734 1.1TOTAL 1,351 100.0 $1,101,768,170 100.0Source: <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, December 2004.1 Includes six corporate donors with funding sources in more than one location.2 Principal countries by amount of giving include Japan, Canada, Netherlands, Germany,England, France, and Kuwait.FIGURE 6Distribution of Independent and Community<strong>Foundation</strong> 9/<strong>11</strong> <strong>Response</strong> Funding by<strong>Foundation</strong> Asset SizeRelief Funds• Seven-tenths ($773 million) of the $1.1 billion pledged byfoundations, corporations, and other institutional donors supported278 relief funds created after 9/<strong>11</strong> to aid victims, their families, andother persons and communities affected by the disaster, mainlythrough regranting (Figure 8). <strong>The</strong>se intermediaries included generalandspecial-purpose funds created by relief agencies and othernonprofits and also funds created by institutional donors, especiallycorporations, community and other public foundations, federatedfunds, and associations. 15Source: <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, December 2004.Based on assets for latest fiscal year reported (2003 for most foundations, 2002 for others); dueto rounding, percentages may not total 100.93


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSETABLE 7Breakdown of Independent and Community<strong>Foundation</strong> 9/<strong>11</strong> <strong>Response</strong> Fundingby <strong>Foundation</strong> Asset SizeAsset RangeNo. of<strong>Foundation</strong>s %9/<strong>11</strong> GivingAmount %$1 billion and over 30 4.6 $223,879,622 66.1$250 million–$1 billion 73 <strong>11</strong>.2 36,699,162 10.8$50 million–$250 million 178 27.4 29,605,826 8.7$10 million–$50 million 135 20.8 16,670,082 4.9$1 million–$10 million 143 22.5 7,533,120 2.2Under $1 million 61 9.4 3,340,607 1.0Not available 27 4.2 20,894,284 6.2TOTAL 647 100.0 $338,622,703 100.0Source: <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, December 2004.Based on assets for latest fiscal year reported (2003 for most foundations, 2002 for others); dueto rounding, percentages may not total 100.FIGURE 7Distribution of Corporate <strong>Foundation</strong> 9/<strong>11</strong><strong>Response</strong> Funding by <strong>Foundation</strong> Asset Size• <strong>The</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund was the largest 9/<strong>11</strong> relief fund rankedby amount received from institutional donors ($162.5 million, or15 percent) and number of gifts (589). It also ranked as the toprecipient in the <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>’s database overall (Table 9).<strong>The</strong> Fund’s broad purposes include providing direct assistance tovictims and their families and services to affected communities.Excluding donations raised for the Fund in a national telethon,foundations and corporations provided 41 percent of theFund’s reported $410 million in private support. (Including thetelethon pledges, the Fund received $540 million. 16 )• <strong>The</strong> American Red Cross Liberty Disaster Relief Fund, which raisedfunds for victims and their families and also provided direct services,ranked second in institutional donor contributions ($150.2 million,or 14 percent) and in number of gifts (393). Yet, compared with the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, foundations and corporations provided a muchsmaller, 15 percent share of the Liberty Fund’s $1 billion in overallsupport. 17 (Most of the fund’s support came from individuals.)<strong>The</strong> Liberty Fund captured roughly 36 percent of the estimated$2.8 billion in private 9/<strong>11</strong> response funding.• Other top 9/<strong>11</strong> relief fund recipients of institutional donors’ gifts includedthe Twin Towers Fund ($51 million) and the New York Police and Fire9/<strong>11</strong> Widows’ and Children’s Benefit Fund ($28.9 million), bothestablished to aid the families of New York City police, firefighters, andrescue workers who were victims of the attacks; and the Families ofFreedom Scholarship Fund ($24.3 million), a national-level fund thatprovides post-secondary educational assistance to dependents of thosekilled or injured in the attacks.• Relief funds created by more than 60 corporations to aid victims(especially employees) and their families and to support relief andrecovery efforts together received $173.2 million, or 16 percent ofall institutional funding. Eight corporate funds received at least$10 million in support (Table 10). <strong>The</strong> largest relief fund recipientby far was the Citigroup Relief Fund, which received $15.1 millionfrom the Citigroup <strong>Foundation</strong> to provide post-secondaryscholarships to the children of victims.Source: <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, December 2004.Due to rounding, percentages may not total 100.• <strong>The</strong> vast majority, or roughly nine-tenths, of the $773 million receivedby relief funds from foundations and corporations providedemergency relief and disaster assistance. Still, some of the largest 9/<strong>11</strong>charities focused their giving for specific fields or funding priorities:$76 million supported educational purposes, mainly through grants to94


GIVING IN THE AFTERMATH OF SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>various scholarship funds and a school relief fund; roughly $31 milliontargeted community development and economic recovery, especiallythrough funds aiding affected businesses and nonprofits; and morethan $6 million supported general and public health issues. Otherfields that raised more than $1 million each from institutional donorsthrough special-purpose funds included arts and culture, mentalhealth, civil rights, and international affairs.Direct-Service Providers• 1,538 direct-service providers, groups directly affected by the 9/<strong>11</strong>attacks, and organizations addressing issues related to the attacks andtheir aftermath received $234.5 million, or roughly 21 percentof funding. <strong>The</strong>se organizations took in 2,318 donations frominstitutional funders, or 51 percent of their gifts.• <strong>The</strong> NYU Downtown Hospital, a medical facility located just threeblocks from ground zero, was the top direct-service recipient. Itreceived contributions totaling $5.9 million, including $5 million fromthe Lehman Brothers <strong>Foundation</strong> (NY) for renovation and expansionof its emergency center. <strong>The</strong> center’s services were heavily utilizedfollowing the attacks. In all, 45 organizations and institutions received$1 million or more from donors — mainly foundations — foroutreach services, emergency needs, special programming, advocacy,repairs and renovation, and operating support. More than 478 groupsreceived $100,000 or more. A large majority of organizations receivedless than $50,000.TABLE 8Breakdown of Corporate <strong>Foundation</strong> 9/<strong>11</strong><strong>Response</strong> Funding by <strong>Foundation</strong> Asset SizeAsset RangeNo. of<strong>Foundation</strong>s %9/<strong>11</strong> GivingAmount %$250 million and over 5 1.8 $ 9,697,366 2.7$50 million–$250 million 37 13.4 <strong>11</strong>3,097,519 31.5$10 million–$50 million 77 27.9 96,314,497 26.8$1 million–$10 million 78 28.3 77,960,933 21.7Under $1 million 55 19.9 42,994,422 12.0Not available 24 8.7 19,492,625 5.4TOTAL 276 100.0 $359,557,362 100.0Source: <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, December 2004.Based on assets for latest fiscal year reported (2003 for most foundations, 2002 for others); dueto rounding, percentages may not total 100.FIGURE 8<strong>Foundation</strong> and Corporate 9/<strong>11</strong> <strong>Response</strong>Funding by Type of Recipient• About 9 percent of institutional giving ($94.4 million) could not beassigned to a recipient because donors either did not break downamounts pledged to named recipients ($62 million, or 6 percent) ordid not designate a recipient ($32.4 million, or 3 percent). 18By Donor Type• Corporate donors pledged 22 percent of their 9/<strong>11</strong> funding($157.6 million) to corporate relief funds, 18 percent to the AmericanRed Cross Liberty Disaster Relief Fund, 15 percent to the <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th Fund, and 20 percent to other relief funds, especially the TwinTowers Fund and the New York Police and Fire 9/<strong>11</strong> Widows’ andChildren’s Benefit Fund (Figure 9). Just under 9 percent of corporategiving ($62 million) supported direct-service agencies. Seven percentof corporate pledges ($50 million) could not be allocated byrecipient, while roughly 4 percent ($27.7 million) was undesignated.(A substantial portion of corporate donors’ undesignated givingrepresents funds pledged to match employee gifts.)Source: <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, December 2004.Due to rounding, percentages may not total 100. Shows individual organizations that received atleast 5 percent of funding.1 Regranting funds established by individual companies after 9/<strong>11</strong>.2 Various recipients named but amount not reported by recipient; includes grants to unspecifiedindividuals totaling $3,425,185.3 No recipient named at time of pledge.95


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEFIGURE 9Corporate 9/<strong>11</strong> <strong>Response</strong> Funding by Type ofRecipient• Independent and community or other public foundations gave16 percent of their 9/<strong>11</strong> funding ($55.9 million) to the <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th Fund and 5 percent to the American Red Cross Liberty DisasterRelief Fund; another 33 percent of donations went to various otherrelief funds (Figure 10). In contrast with corporate donors, the singlelargest share of foundation funding — $158.1 million, or 44 percent— supported direct-service organizations active in relief and recoveryefforts or addressing issues related to the attacks. Only 2 percent offunds ($7 million) could not be broken down by recipient, and just1 percent ($4.2 million) of pledges was undesignated.• Corporations and foundations differed strikingly in the degree towhich they supported relief funds. Corporations gave 64 percent oftheir 1,829 gifts to corporate and other relief funds and 30 percent todirect-service organizations. Another 6 percent of gifts remainsundesignated or unspecified. In contrast, 65 percent of foundations’2,697 gifts went to direct-service organizations, including nonprofitsaffected by 9/<strong>11</strong> and those addressing related issues, while 33 percentwent to relief funds. A modest 2 percent of foundation gifts wasundesignated or could not be allocated by recipient.By Recipient LocationSource: <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, December 2004.Donors include 623 corporations and corporate foundations; due to rounding, percentages maynot total 100. Shows individual organizations that received at least 5 percent of funding.1 Regranting funds established by individual companies.2 Various recipients named but amount not reported by recipient; includes grants to unspecifiedindividuals totaling $581,785.3 No recipient named at time of pledge.• <strong>Foundation</strong>s and corporations supported 9/<strong>11</strong> relief funds and serviceorganizations located in 44 states and twelve countries, includingAfghanistan and Pakistan. New York-based funds and recipientsgarnered $609 million, or 55 percent of all 9/<strong>11</strong> response funding(Figure <strong>11</strong>). <strong>The</strong>y received 2,466 gifts, or 54 percent of the total,including many of those to direct-service providers and groupsaffected by the attacks.• Including gifts to the American Red Cross Liberty Disaster ReliefFund, recipients in the District of Columbia ranked second by dollarsreceived ($198.1 million), followed by California ($35.6 million) andMinnesota ($27.5 million). <strong>The</strong> DisneyHAND: Survivor Relief Fund,a regranting fund, was the top California recipient, with $6.9 millionin gifts from the Walt Disney Company’s foundation andcontributions program. In Minnesota, Scholarship America garnered$24.3 million from foundations and corporations across the country tosupport various long-term scholarship funds benefiting thedependents of victims. Organizations in eight states received acombined total of at least $10 million each from institutional donorsfor 9/<strong>11</strong>-related causes. Recipients included local 9/<strong>11</strong> relief funds,local chapters of the American Red Cross and Salvation Army, fire96


GIVING IN THE AFTERMATH OF SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>departments and emergency services, and nonprofits working locally,nationally, and internationally on issues related to the attacks.By Recipient Field of ActivityAs noted above, recipients fell into two broad categories: relief funds and direct-serviceagencies. <strong>The</strong> following is an analysis of funding for direct-service organization recipientsby principal field of activity. Recipients were coded using the National Taxonomyof Exempt Entities. Direct-service organizations received more than 2,318 giftstotaling nearly $234 million, mainly from foundations. Of that total, roughly $223million could be identified by recipient field.• Arts and culture groups ranked first by share of funding for directserviceorganizations ($55.7 million, or 25 percent) and second bynumber of gifts (480, or nearly 22 percent) (Figure 12 and Table <strong>11</strong>).<strong>The</strong> vast majority of gifts supported performing and visual arts groupsand museums in the New York metropolitan area that suffereddisplacement or substantial loss of income following the attacks.Cultural recipients also included public broadcasting and other mediaorganizations. By far the largest provider of emergency support foraffected arts groups was the Andrew W. Mellon <strong>Foundation</strong>, whichdistributed nearly $38 million in direct grants and an additional$8 million through support for intermediaries, such as the New YorkTABLE 9Top 20 Designated Recipients of <strong>Foundation</strong> and Corporate 9/<strong>11</strong> <strong>Response</strong> FundingSources of InstitutionalFunding 2% ofTotalFundingNo. ofGiftsCorporations/Corporate<strong>Foundation</strong>sIndependent,Communityand Public<strong>Foundation</strong>s 3<strong>11</strong>. <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund of the United Way of NYC and New York Community Trust NY $162,531,187 14.8 589 65.6 34.42. American Red Cross Liberty Disaster Relief Fund 4 DC 150,247,237 13.6 393 87.3 <strong>11</strong>.83. Twin Towers Fund NY 51,165,986 4.6 99 89.3 9.74. NY Police & Fire Widows’ and Children’s Benefit Fund NY 28,923,274 2.6 37 68.4 31.65. Scholarship America—Families of Freedom Scholarship Fund MN 24,302,008 2.2 32 51.9 23.56. Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>—Robin Hood Relief Fund NY 19,448,800 1.8 23 27.3 72.77. Salvation Army—9/<strong>11</strong> Disaster <strong>Response</strong> VA 17,642,676 1.6 29 <strong>11</strong>.1 88.98. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the National Capital Region—Survivor’s Fund and other programs DC 13,791,448 1.3 32 80.9 19.19. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund NY 12,274,144 1.1 64 70.3 29.710. American Red Cross in Greater New York NY <strong>11</strong>,968,614 1.1 22 90.3 9.7<strong>11</strong>. MLB-MLBPA Disaster Relief Fund NY 10,250,000 0.9 3 51.2 0.012. New York State World Trade <strong>Center</strong> Relief Fund NY 9,584,265 0.9 24 97.0 3.013. National Housing Endowment—Homebuilders Care Victims Relief Fund DC 7,000,000 0.6 7 100.0 0.014. New York University—NYU WLRK Scholarship Fund and other purposes NY 6,780,000 0.6 <strong>11</strong> 87.8 12.215. Greater Kansas City Community <strong>Foundation</strong>—<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund and other purposes MO 6,093,887 0.6 5 99.8 0.216. NYU Downtown Hospital NY 5,925,000 0.5 6 89.9 10.<strong>11</strong>7. Structured Employment Economic Development Corporation NY 5,157,777 0.5 16 72.9 27.<strong>11</strong>8. Siebel America Fund CA 4,869,391 0.4 2 37.0 63.019. New York <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Arts—New York Arts Recovery Fund NY 4,746,876 0.4 20 5.5 94.520. New York City Police <strong>Foundation</strong> NY 4,532,525 0.4 12 30.6 69.4Source: <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, December 2004.Excludes relief funds established by individual corporate donors.1 Excludes undesignated pledges and unspecified amounts donated to named recipients.2 Does not include associations, so figures may not total 100 percent.3 Includes independent, community, and public foundations; excludes associations.4 Includes all contributions to headquarters for 9/<strong>11</strong>-related efforts.97


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSETABLE 10Top 15 Corporate Relief Fund Recipients ofCorporate 9/<strong>11</strong> <strong>Response</strong> FundingFund State Amount Funding Gifts% ofTotalCorporate Relief1 Corporate No. of1. Citigroup Relief Fund NY $15,100,000 2.1 22. J.P. Morgan Chase NY 12,765,278 1.8 3WTC Disaster ReliefFund3. Marsh & McLennan NY 10,519,875 1.5 13Victims Relief Fund4. AXA 9/<strong>11</strong> Relief Fund NY 10,000,000 1.4 15. Bear Stearns Relief NY 10,000,000 1.4 1Fund6. Daimler Chrysler 9/<strong>11</strong> MI 10,000,000 1.4 1Relief Fund7. Goldman Sachs Relief NY 10,000,000 1.4 1Fund8. Morgan Stanley NY 10,000,000 1.4 1Victims’ Relief Fund9. Cantor Fitzgerald Relief NY 7,<strong>11</strong>5,980 1.0 <strong>11</strong>Fund10. DisneyHAND: Survivor CA 6,876,284 1.0 2Relief Fund<strong>11</strong>. BP Employee Disaster IL 5,933,333 0.8 2Relief Fund12. American Express NY 4,100,000 0.6 1World Trade <strong>Center</strong>Disaster Relief Fund13. Alcoa Relief Fund PA 3,000,000 0.4 214. Phillips Petroleum OK 3,000,000 0.4 1<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund15. Unilever <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th Children’s FundNJ 2,546,000 0.4 2Source: <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, December 2004.Regranting funds established by individual companies after 9/<strong>11</strong> to assist victims and theirfamilies.1 Amount includes pledges and matching gifts from the institutional donors in the 9/<strong>11</strong> responsedatabase only; excludes funds contributed by employees.Arts Recovery Fund. <strong>The</strong> top New York-based cultural recipientsincluded the Museum of Modern Art, Metropolitan Museum of Art,American Museum of Natural History, WNYC <strong>Foundation</strong>, WhitneyMuseum of Modern Art, Brooklyn Institute for Arts and Science, andLower Manhattan Cultural Council. Other leading recipients were theSmithsonian Institution and National Public Radio, both located inthe District of Columbia, and Facing History and Ourselves National<strong>Foundation</strong> in Massachusetts.• Human service providers accounted for the second largest share offunding to direct-service organizations ($54.6 million, or 25 percent)and the largest share of gifts (831, or 37 percent). Funding supportedmultipurpose human service agencies, including 82 chapters of theAmerican Red Cross, but also agencies working in such areas as fooddistribution (e.g., City Harvest, NY); legal services (e.g., Legal AidSociety, NY); employment (e.g., Los Angeles Alliance for a NewEconomy); and youth development (e.g., Big Brothers/Big Sisters ofNYC). Included among the largest multipurpose recipients were localcommunity organizations serving Arab and other ethnic communities,such as the Michigan-based Arab Community <strong>Center</strong> for Economicand Social Services.• Public affairs/society benefit organizations ranked third by share of9/<strong>11</strong> funding for service organizations ($43.6 million, or 20 percent)and share of gifts (386, or 17 percent). Roughly one-third of fundingsupported philanthropy organizations, such as communityfoundations, United Ways, and other federated funds. <strong>The</strong> nextlargest share of funds went to public affairs groups and governmentagencies, including a $2.5 million grant from the California-basedCisco Systems <strong>Foundation</strong> to the City of New York Office ofEmergency Management to provide infrastructure support for therelief effort and support for children and families of victims. <strong>The</strong>remaining funds were divided between community improvementorganizations active in recovery and rebuilding efforts and civil rightsand advocacy groups. In the former category, top recipients includedthe Regional Plan Association of New York, which convened theCivic Alliance to Rebuild Downtown New York to develop strategiesfor redeveloping Lower Manhattan; and Working Partnerships USA(CA) for the Bay Area Worker Relief Project, which supportedworkers in the tourist industry who experienced economicdistress due to the effects of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks. Civilrights groups included local and national organizations, such asthe American Civil Liberties Union <strong>Foundation</strong> (NY), New YorkImmigration Coalition, Asian American Legal Defense and98


GIVING IN THE AFTERMATH OF SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>Education Fund (NY), and American-Arab Anti-DiscriminationCommittee (DC).FIGURE 10<strong>Foundation</strong> 9/<strong>11</strong> <strong>Response</strong> Funding by Typeof Recipient• Educational organizations and institutions received 13 percent of9/<strong>11</strong> funding ($28.9 million) and 9 percent of gifts (198) for serviceorganizations. While a small portion of funds targeted LowerManhattan schools and institutions directly affected by the attacks,by far the largest share supported higher and graduate educationalinstitutions across the country for activities addressing issues relatedto the attacks. For example, Columbia University (NY) received$2.8 million to research and develop public education programs on9/<strong>11</strong>-related topics ranging from anti-discrimination to public healthand bio-terrorism. Libraries, especially the New York Public Library($3.1 million) and branch libraries in Brooklyn and Queens, receivedthe second largest share of education funding. Support came mainlyin the form of grants from the Andrew W. Mellon and Starr<strong>Foundation</strong>s to replace income lost due to the economic effects of theattacks. Grants also funded educational support organizations, such asthe New York-based After-School Corporation and Sponsors forEducational Opportunity, and the DC-based WAVE, Inc., aschool dropout prevention program.• Health care organizations and institutions, including hospitals,blood banks, and emergency medical services providing foraffected communities, as well as counseling and mental healthgroups around the country, garnered 10 percent of 9/<strong>11</strong> funding($23.2 million) and 6.7 percent of gifts (150). In addition to theNYU Downtown Hospital (mentioned earlier), top health recipientsincluded the Task Force for Child Survival and Development,which received a $2.9 million grant from the Robert Wood Johnson<strong>Foundation</strong> for a public health information system project to improvebio-terrorism readiness; Saint Vincent’s Hospital and Medical <strong>Center</strong>(NY), which provided emergency services to victims and workers atground zero; the Children’s Health Fund (NY); and America’sHealth Together (DC).Source: <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, December 2004.Donors include 538 independent and family foundations, <strong>11</strong>2 community foundations, and 55other public foundations; due to rounding, percentages may not total 100.1 Various recipients named but amount not reported by recipient; includes grants to unspecifiedindividuals totaling $2,843,400.2 No recipient named at time of pledge.• <strong>The</strong> majority of the remaining 9/<strong>11</strong> funds for service organizationssupported international affairs, relief, and human rights groups in theUnited States and overseas. Small amounts of funding also went toenvironmental and animal welfare organizations, social scienceresearch groups, and churches and interfaith councils.99


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEFIGURE <strong>11</strong><strong>Foundation</strong> and Corporate 9/<strong>11</strong> <strong>Response</strong>Funding by Recipient Location9/<strong>11</strong>-RELATED FOUNDATION GRANTSAWARDED IN 2003<strong>Foundation</strong>s continued to report new grants for 9/<strong>11</strong>-related purposes throughyear-end 2003. In all, the <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong> identified 68 grants awarded in2003 1 totaling $7,547,336. <strong>The</strong>se grants were reported by 19 donors, of whichthe vast majority were large New York-based independent foundations.Source: <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, December 2004.Due to rounding, percentages may not total 100.1 In the 9/<strong>11</strong> response database, all gifts to the American Red Cross (ARC) Liberty DisasterRelief Fund are accounted for in the District of Columbia, which houses ARC headquarters.2 Includes grants to various organizations for unspecified amounts and undesignated pledges.While some of the newer grants provided ongoing support for 9/<strong>11</strong>-relatedfunds or outreach programs initiated in the aftermath of the attacks, themajority of them funded either new long-term service initiatives — suchas mental health and general health care coverage for those affected bythe attacks — or emerging social issues in the post-9/<strong>11</strong> world, with anemphasis on preserving civil liberties and human rights and fostering religiousand racial tolerance, especially in areas with Arab and other immigrantcommunities across the country. New grants also focused on homelandsecurity and local disaster preparedness; business recovery and nonprofitorganization assistance; rebuilding efforts; the creation of memorials; andforeign policy.Community leaders with experience in earlier disaster recovery efforts, especiallythose from Oklahoma City, 2 had warned 9/<strong>11</strong> donors about the critical need forlong-term philanthropic resources. <strong>The</strong>se 2003 grants suggest that somefoundations did heed this advice and are taking a long-term approach.Examples of 2003 Donors and Beneficiaries:FIGURE 12<strong>Foundation</strong> and Corporate 9/<strong>11</strong> DirectGiving to Service Organizations by MajorRecipient Field• By far the largest new grant was the Starr <strong>Foundation</strong>’s $1 millionaward to the New York City Police <strong>Foundation</strong> for technological andcommunications equipment to support counter-terrorism and crimeprevention programs.• <strong>The</strong> Ford <strong>Foundation</strong> awarded the year’s second largest grant of$700,000 to Public Interest Projects (NY) for start-up support for theFreedom Fund, a national fundraising and grantmaking collaborative toadvance immigrants’ and human rights in the post-9/<strong>11</strong> context. Amongits other grants, Ford gave $100,000 to the Circle <strong>Foundation</strong>’s <strong>Center</strong>for the Study of Policy Attitudes (MD) to conduct public opinionresearch to help U.S. policymakers understand post-9/<strong>11</strong> publicattitudes on the nation’s role in the world.• <strong>The</strong> Alfred P. Sloan <strong>Foundation</strong> (NY) gave $294,000 to Project Rebirth(NY) to develop and launch a state-of-the art Web site centered aroundthe rebuilding of Ground Zero; and $45,000 to New York Universityto evaluate post-9/<strong>11</strong> economic assistance for small businesses andnonprofits in lower Manhattan.• <strong>The</strong> Richard and Rhoda Goldman Fund (CA) gave $200,000 toAmerica’s Health Together (DC) to expand its “Facing Fear Together”program, which is a national initiative addressing mental health issuesrelated to exposure to homeland terrorism in the United States.Source: <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, December 2004.Includes recipient type fields representing at least 4 percent of the dollars donated directly toservice organizations; excludes gifts to relief funds and other funding intermediaries.1 Includes civil rights and social action, community improvement, philanthropy and voluntarism,and public affairs.100


GIVING IN THE AFTERMATH OF SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>• In a related grant, the Robert Wood Johnson <strong>Foundation</strong> (NJ)awarded $103,000 to America’s Health Together to improve mentalhealth services and primary care in a time of terrorism.• <strong>The</strong> Commonwealth Fund (NY) made a grant of just over$100,000 to Lake, Snell, Perry and Associates (DC) for a projectto assist New Yorkers with the transition from disaster reliefMedicaid to permanent health coverage, and nearly $100,000 tothe Asian American Federation of New York for its “InformingInitiative” to expand health coverage after <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> in NewYork City’s Chinatown.• <strong>The</strong> MetLife <strong>Foundation</strong>, a New York-based corporate donor, madeseveral grants in 2003 to local area organizations for ongoing disasterrelief and recovery efforts, including $150,000 to the Children’sHealth Fund, $135,000 to the Floating Hospital, and $100,000 tothe Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island <strong>Foundation</strong>.• <strong>The</strong> Andy Warhol <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Visual Arts (NY) providedcontinuing support for local affected arts groups, including a$50,000 grant to the Alliance for the Arts for “<strong>The</strong> Arts RebuildNew York” campaign.• <strong>The</strong> New York Community Trust and the California Endowmentreported the largest number of 2003 grants related to 9/<strong>11</strong> (12 each).Among the Trust’s grants, four provided about $50,000 each to localgroups such as the Nonprofit Coordinating Committee of New Yorkand New York Cares, to use lessons learned from the 9/<strong>11</strong> attacks tohelp nonprofits develop disaster response and business continuityplans, and a $40,000 grant to the DC-based ADC Research Institute,an arm of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, tocombat post-9/<strong>11</strong> discrimination against Arab-American NewYorkers.• <strong>The</strong> California Endowment’s 12 grants to organizations in its homestate for various 9/<strong>11</strong>-related projects included a $200,000 grant toChinese for Affirmative Action for “United <strong>Response</strong> to BacklashHate, Violence, and Discrimination,” a five-agency collaborative tocreate a coordinated response to post-9/<strong>11</strong>-related acts of violenceagainst immigrants in the Bay Area, and almost $189,000 to theOrange County Human Relations Council for “Living RoomDialogues,” a program to increase racial and religious tolerance byengaging in community-building activities that bring together diversepeople, including Muslims and Arabs throughout Orange County.TABLE <strong>11</strong><strong>Foundation</strong> and Corporate 9/<strong>11</strong> DirectGiving to Service Organizations byRecipient Field and Sub-FieldRecipient Field Amount %No. ofGifts %Arts and Culture $ 55,694,408 25.0 480 21.5Museums 20,619,044 9.3 86 3.8Performing Arts 16,469,000 7.4 189 8.5Media/Communications 8,447,092 3.8 66 3.0Arts—Multidisciplinary 4,392,637 2.0 58 2.6Visual Arts 2,613,635 1.2 44 2.0Historic Preservation 2,616,000 1.2 24 1.1Other Arts and Culture 537,000 0.2 13 0.6Human Services 54,612,432 24.5 831 37.2Human Services—32,133,524 14.4 517 23.1MultipurposeFood Distribution 7,264,500 3.3 93 4.2Crime, Justice, Legal4,175,000 1.9 49 2.2servicesRecreation 3,474,140 1.6 19 0.9Youth Development 2,549,062 1.1 42 1.9Employment 2,351,956 1.1 35 1.6Other Human Services 2,664,250 1.2 76 3.4Public/Society Benefit 43,610,340 19.6 386 17.3Philanthropy/Voluntarism1 14,737,749 6.6 144 6.4Public Affairs 10,414,788 4.7 59 2.6Community Improvement 9,720,425 4.4 97 4.3Civil Rights 8,736,878 3.9 85 3.8Education 28,909,475 13.0 198 8.9Higher Education 16,172,898 7.3 87 3.9Libraries/Library Sciences 8,277,500 3.7 31 1.4Elementary/Secondary 1,468,177 0.7 27 1.2EducationOther Education 2,990,900 1.3 53 2.4Health 23,248,699 10.4 150 6.7General Health Care 18,842,699 8.5 95 4.3Mental Health 2,945,500 1.3 38 1.7Other Health 1,460,500 0.7 17 0.8International Affairs 9,130,513 4.1 96 4.3Environment and Animals 3,036,705 1.4 37 1.7Science and Social Science 2,667,603 1.2 16 0.7Religion 1,679,371 0.8 41 1.8TOTAL $222,589,546 100.0 2,235 100.0Source: <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, December 2004.Includes giving to agencies and organizations that provide services or conduct programs;excludes gifts to 9/<strong>11</strong> relief funds, scholarship funds, and other funding intermediaries.1 Includes gifts to local federated funds.1. <strong>The</strong>se grants included one 2004 grant from the Starr <strong>Foundation</strong> for $100,000.2. At an event marking the release of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund’s six-month report, Nancy Anthony,executive director of the Oklahoma City Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, told nonprofit leaders that 30 percentof the funds collected in response to the Oklahoma City bombing were used in years four to six after thedisaster; that most requests for counseling came only after the first year, with counseling becoming thesingle largest ongoing expense; and that seven years after the disaster 10 percent of their cases were stillactive. See press release, “<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund Reports Six-Month Disbursements of $205 Millionfrom $456 Million Donated; Plans $250 Million for Future Use,” available fromhttp://national.unitedway.org/news/sept<strong>11</strong>_sixmonths.cfm; Internet; accessed on 10/15/04.101


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEIMPACT OF 9/<strong>11</strong> RESPONSE FUNDING ONPROSPECTS FOR GIVING<strong>The</strong> $1.1 billion in 9/<strong>11</strong> response funding provided by foundations, corporations,and other institutional donors in such a short time frame wasunprecedented. Still, the scale of this funding should be kept in perspective.<strong>The</strong> $339 million donated by independent and community foundationsrepresented just 1 percent of the $27.2 billion they gave to all causes in2001, while the $722 million pledged by corporations accounted for lessthan 6 percent of the estimated $12.9 billion they contributed in the sameyear. 19 <strong>The</strong>se findings suggest that the impact of the philanthropic responseon future giving levels was relatively modest.Of far greater consequence in terms of its impact on funding capacity, especiallyof endowed foundations, was the precarious state of the economy atthe time of the attacks. In a survey of 9/<strong>11</strong> donors conducted in early 2002,grantmakers emphasized that it was the continuing stock market slide —starting well in advance of <strong>September</strong> 2001 — and not their 9/<strong>11</strong> donationsthat was threatening their future giving prospects and driving changes ingrantmaking practice. 20Yet, despite substantial market losses, institutional giving remained remarkablysteady in 2002 and declined only modestly in 2003. Independent andcommunity foundation giving slipped by less than 1 percent in 2002, followedby a 3 percent drop in 2003. Over the same period, corporate foundationgiving increased 5 percent in 2002, and then decreased by a modest 2percent in 2003. 21While these aggregate findings may not reflect the experience of individualinstitutional donors, they nevertheless suggest that 9/<strong>11</strong> donations helped tobolster overall giving in 2001 and again in 2002, as donors continuedto make good on their substantial pledges. In addition, the positive feedbackreceived by foundations and corporations for their unprecedented generosityin the aftermath of the 9/<strong>11</strong> attacks may have encouraged some fundersto maintain relatively high levels of giving despite three years of asset losses— or even to increase their giving. Although many factors need to be takeninto account, such as an increased demand for private funding in the wakeof draconian cuts in government support triggered by a recession,these results suggest that the immediate foundation and corporate responseto America’s greatest national tragedy since Pearl Harbor set a historic milestonefor the field and stimulated donors to be more philanthropic goingforward.102


GIVING IN THE AFTERMATH OF SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>Endnotes1 See Renz, L., 9/<strong>11</strong> Relief and Regranting Funds: A Summary Report on Funds Raised andAssistance Provided, New York, NY: <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, November 2003.2 See Renz, L., Giving in the Aftermath of 9/<strong>11</strong>: 2003 Update on the <strong>Foundation</strong> andCorporate <strong>Response</strong>, New York, NY: <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, December 2003. Findingswere based on data compiled through <strong>September</strong> 2003.3 Since publication of the December 2003 edition of Giving in the Aftermath of 9/<strong>11</strong>, thenumber of 9/<strong>11</strong> donors identified by the <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong> has increased by just over5 percent, while the total for 9/<strong>11</strong> giving has risen by close to 3 percent. <strong>The</strong>seincreases reflect more complete reporting by donors of their 9/<strong>11</strong> giving as well asdonations announced after the latest edition was compiled.4 <strong>The</strong> estimate of total private 9/<strong>11</strong> response funding includes an estimated $2.6 billionraised by major relief funds from all sources and roughly $234 million in gifts andgrants from foundations and corporations to direct-service providers. <strong>The</strong> relief fundtotal derives from a 2003 survey conducted by the <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>. <strong>The</strong> total hasbeen adjusted to account for estimated regranting and transfers between funds in thesample that did not provide a detailed breakdown of their gifts. Because of incompleteinformation and inter-fund regranting, the figure for all 9/<strong>11</strong> giving is subject tochange.5 See Brown, M., Giving USA 2004: <strong>The</strong> Annual Report on Philanthropy for the Year2003, Indianapolis, IN: AAFRC Trust for Philanthropy, 2004. <strong>The</strong> report providesrevised 2002 overall private giving figures.6 Since publication of the December 2003 edition of Giving in the Aftermath of 9/<strong>11</strong>, thenumber of gifts has increased by almost 18 percent (from 4,031). This increase mainlyreflects more detailed and complete reporting of recipient names and gift amounts bydonors. Many foundations that announced large pledges immediately following theattacks waited to assess needs before earmarking the funds for specific recipients. To alesser extent, the increase reflects gifts reported by the 68 donors that are new to the9/<strong>11</strong> funding database.7 For the purpose of this analysis, giving by separate corporate-directed entities —including corporate foundations, corporate direct-giving programs, and corporateaffiliates and subsidiaries — has been collapsed into a single 9/<strong>11</strong> giving figure tied tothe corporate parent.8 Some companies reporting matching gifts did not provide an exact dollar figure. As aresult, the actual figure for 9/<strong>11</strong>-related employee matching gifts is likely higher. Also,to avoid double counting of 9/<strong>11</strong>-related gifts, the matching gift amount includes giftsfrom the company only; it excludes roughly $80 million donated by individualemployees.9 Corporate donors in the 9/<strong>11</strong> funding database reported in-kind gift pledges totaling$73 million. Because many donors did not affix monetary values to in-kind gifts, andthe relative value of in-kind gifts reported is difficult to measure, these pledges havebeen excluded from the analysis.10 Since publication of the December 2003 edition of Giving in the Aftermath of 9/<strong>11</strong>, thenumber of company-sponsored gifts identified by the <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>’s 9/<strong>11</strong>database has increased by more than 12 percent (up from 1,627).<strong>11</strong> An international endowed philanthropy with a principal domicile outside the UnitedStates, the Atlantic Philanthropies operates like an independent foundation andmaintains a grant selection and administration office in New York.12 Since corporate direct giving programs do not maintain assets, comparisons can onlybe made with corporate foundations.13 By comparison, only about 7 percent of U.S. foundations overall held assets of $10million or more, while less than 2 percent held assets of $50 million or more. Fiscalyear reported was 2002 for most foundations, 2001 for others.103


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE14 By comparison, roughly 12 percent of the nation’s 2,362 corporate foundations heldassets of $10 million or more, while almost 3 percent held assets of $50 million ormore. More than half held less than $1 million in assets.15 Since publication of the December 2003 edition of Giving in the Aftermath of 9/<strong>11</strong> thetotal number of relief funds tracked in the <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>’s 9/<strong>11</strong> database has hada net decrease due to reclassification of some of funds. For more detailed informationabout relief funds and their giving patterns, see the <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>’s 9/<strong>11</strong> Reliefand Regranting Funds, December 2003.16 See <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund of the United Way of New York and the New YorkCommunity Trust, “<strong>The</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund: Year Three,” available fromwww.september<strong>11</strong>fund.org; Internet; accessed 9/23/04. <strong>The</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fundannounced on <strong>September</strong> 7, 2004, that its final grantmaking and administrativeactivities will cease in December 2004. Services being provided to those alreadyenrolled will continue to be delivered through January 2005, and no enrollment orservice deadline has been set for the 9/<strong>11</strong> Mental Health and Substance Abuseprogram created in cooperation with the American Red Cross.17 See American Red Cross, “2002 Corporate Annual Report,” available fromwww.redcross.org; Internet; accessed on 9/23/04.18 Since publication of the December 2003 edition of Giving in the Aftermath of 9/<strong>11</strong>, theproportion of undesignated pledges and giving that is not broken down by recipientfell from <strong>11</strong> percent to 9 percent.19 Since some 9/<strong>11</strong> pledges were paid in 2002, this comparison overestimates the share ofoverall 2001 foundation and corporate giving directed to the 9/<strong>11</strong> response.Nonetheless, these comparisons provide a useful yardstick for the scale of privateinstitutional support. For more information on overall annual corporate giving, seerevised 2001 figures in Giving USA 2002 (2003).20 See Renz, L., Assessing the Post-9/<strong>11</strong> Funding Environment: Grantmakers’ Perspectives,New York, NY: <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, 2002.21 Based on estimates from Giving USA, overall corporate giving increased 10.3 percentin 2002 and rose another 4.2 percent in 2003.104


Philanthropy and <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>A BibliographyThis bibliography of books, pamphlets, and articles related to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> is selected from the Literature of the NonprofitSector Online (LNPS), the <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>’s free,searchable catalog of the published material aboutphilanthropy. LNPS represents the literature acquired for the<strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>’s five libraries due to its relevance to:visitors to our libraries, trustees and staff of foundations andnonprofit organizations, fundraisers, representatives ofgovernment agencies, the media, librarians, and the burgeoningnumbers of scholars and students interested in reading andwriting about the philanthropic sector of American society.<strong>The</strong> listing is organized in alphabetical order by author ormain entry, and contains descriptive abstracts for mostentries. Each of the items in this bibliography is available in atleast one of the <strong>Center</strong>’s five libraries. Several of the itemscontain URLs, indicating where entire reports can be locatedon the Internet.<strong>The</strong> citations range from late 2001 through mid-2004.Much of the literature during that period related to theestablishment of charities to aid victims, data on the moniescontributed, controversies that arose over disbursement of105


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEfunds, and the impact on fundraising throughout the nonprofit sector. More general worksprovide essays by various specialists on the nature of philanthropy and generosity.To keepup with new materials being published on this topic, refer to the Literature of theNonprofit Sector Online (http://lnps.fdncenter.org) using the subject heading “<strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks.”Abshire, Michael. “E-Philanthropy Continues to Grow.” Corporate Philanthropy Report,vol. 17 (April 2002): p. 1, <strong>11</strong>.Reports on the Third Annual E-Philanthropy Conference that took place in March 2002 inMcLean,VA.<strong>The</strong> role of Internet fundraising after the attacks of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> took center stage,and several statistics about the amounts raised are provided. Other speakers focused on the role ofthe Internet in soliciting volunteers and in sharing information about corporate donations.Abshire, Michael. “<strong>The</strong> Funding in the (Auto) ‘Parts’.” Corporate Philanthropy Report, vol.17 (February 2002): p. 1, <strong>11</strong>.Describes giving trends within the automotive component sector in the wake of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>attacks and the recession.Anft, Michael. “Assisting Terrorism’s Other Victims.” Chronicle of Philanthropy, vol. 15(<strong>September</strong> 4, 2003): p. 7–8, 10.Explains that more foundations have begun to support charities that serve immigrants from Araband predominantly Muslim countries facing post-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> backlash in the United States.Smaller organizations, however, have found fundraising difficult under the increased scrutiny offederal investigators looking for ties to terrorist groups.Anft, Michael. “Immigrant-Rights Organizations Face Fallout from <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.”Chronicle of Philanthropy, vol. 14 (January 10, 2002): p. 18–9.In the aftermath of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks, nonprofit immigration groups have found it moredifficult to fundraise and draw support for immigrants’ rights.Association of Fundraising Professionals. Study of the Impact of the Events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>on Charities. Alexandria,VA: Association of Fundraising Professionals, 2002. 49 p.Reports findings from an Association of Fundraising Professionals survey studying the effects ofthe <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks on fundraising.<strong>The</strong> survey was conducted from November 2001 to earlyJanuary 2002, with 248 members responding.<strong>The</strong> report covers the effect of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> onspecific fundraising campaigns, including direct mail, planned giving, major gifts, onlinesolicitation, and annual campaigns. Also describes the impact of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> on fundraisingstrategies, donor attitudes, and business operations.Baron, Barnett F. “Philanthropy and Homeland Security.” <strong>Foundation</strong> News &Commentary, vol. 45 (May–June 2004): p. 30–3.Baron analyzes the USA PATRIOT Act and its impact on international grantmaking.<strong>The</strong> U.S.Treasury Department has indicated its concern that philanthropy may be a major source of supportfor terrorist activity, but a recent report by the General Accounting Office has called thatsupposition into question.Bernacchi, Gina. “Corporate Giving Picks Up Despite Weak Economy, Attacks.”NonProfit Times, vol. 15 (November 1, 2001): p. 1, 10, 12.At this time it appears that corporate giving will increase substantially in 2001 over 2000, perhapslargely due to the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks.Bernacchi, Gina. “Giving Grew after <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> Terror Attacks.” NonProfit Times, vol.16 (June 1, 2002): p. 1, 6.Discusses the impact of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks on fundraising, analyzing results fromreports published by the Association of Fundraising Professionals.While arts, cultural, andhumanities organizations witnessed a decline in donations in October 2001, year-end fundraisingtotals of nearly all nonprofits were higher than in 2000.106


BIBLIOGRAPHY“Beyond <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>:Where Do We Go from Here?” Carnegie Reporter, vol. 1 (Summer2002): 45 p.Blum, Debra E. “Hundreds of Displaced N.Y. Charities Face Financial, Other Losses inAttack.” Chronicle of Philanthropy, vol. 13 (October 4, 2001): p. 12.Describes how nonprofits in lower Manhattan are coping with the damage caused by the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks. Explains that many organizations not directly affected by thedisaster will witness a growing demand in social services. Provides a list of grantmakers and othernonprofits that are offering financial and technical support.Blum, Debra E. “New Telemarketing Law Called Too Restrictive by Some Fund Raisers.”Chronicle of Philanthropy, vol. 14 (November 15, 2001): p. 21.<strong>The</strong> Federal Trade Commission has new authority to regulate appeals by telemarketers; those in theindustry claim the rules are burdensome. HR 3162 is a broad anti-terrorism bill that included thesenew regulations in the anticipation of fraudulent fundraising schemes after the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>attacks.Borochoff, Daniel. Congressional Testimony on the Charities <strong>Response</strong> to the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>Terrorist Attack for Subcommittee on Oversight of the Committee on Ways and Means,November 8, 2001. American Institute of Philanthropy, 4 p.Borochoff, president of the American Institute of Philanthropy, gave testimony to the U.S.Congress, and this is a reprint of his text.Brody, Deborah A. “In for the Long Haul in the Capital City.” <strong>Foundation</strong> News &Commentary, vol. 42 (November–December 2001): p. 32–4.Describes how foundations in Washington DC have been working more closely together after the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks. Grantmakers and nonprofits have learned the importance of long-termplanning from the Oklahoma bombing six years earlier.Carpenter, Clint. “Cancelled Revenues: Attacks Hurt Annual Events, Cash Flow.”NonProfit Times, vol. 16 (February 1, 2002): p. 27–9.Discusses the impact of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks on several annual conferences. Organizationscovered include the Association for Healthcare Philanthropy, the Council for the Advancement andSupport of Education, the American Society of Association Executives, and the National CatholicDevelopment Conference.Carpenter, Clint. “<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> Impact on Overall Giving Sparks Diverse Opinions.”NonProfit Times, vol. 16 (July 1, 2002): p. 1, 5–6.Carpenter, Clint; Causer, Craig; Clolery, Paul;Williamson, Richard. “We Shall Overcome:Charities Rally Nation, Lend Aid after Attacks.” NonProfit Times, vol. 15 (October 1,2001): p. 1, 4–5.Reports on the emergency relief efforts of various nonprofits in response to the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>terrorist attacks. Organizations described include the American Red Cross and the Salvation Army.Causer, Craig; Clolery, Paul; Sinclair, Matthew;Williamson, Richard. “Money Pouring In,Yet Fundraising on Hold.” NonProfit Times, vol. 15 (October 1, 2001): p. 6.Describes the effect of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attack on fundraising efforts.Charitable Contributions for <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>: Protecting Against Fraud,Waste, and Abuse.Hearing before the Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations of the Committee onEnergy and Commerce, House of Representatives, 107th Congress, 1st session. Washington,DC: Government Printing Office, 2001. 102 p.Includes the testimony of leaders of the following entities: United Way of America, Federal TradeCommission, American Red Cross in Greater New York, International Association of Fire Fighters,<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund of the New York Community Trust, American Red Cross, New York StateAttorney General, Marsh, Inc., and Better Business Bureau Wise Giving Alliance.107


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSECho, Eunice. “Building Communities, Defeating Fear: Organizing for Immigrant Rightsafter <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.” Nonprofit Quarterly, vol. 9 (Spring 2002): p. 32–5.<strong>The</strong> author, from the National Network for Immigrant and Refugee Rights, gives a status report.Cohen, Rick. “Reflecting upon the Charitable <strong>Response</strong> of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>:We’ve JustBegun.” Nonprofit Quarterly, vol. 9 (Spring 2002): p. 16–20.Numerous unique issues were raised by the donations that poured in after <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, such ashow to define a victim, what is excessive charity, use of donations for administrative expenses, andmany more.This article outlines some of the major concerns, and argues for the sector to learnfrom mistakes that were made, and also the unprecedented accomplishments that were achieved.“Congressional Hearings on 9-<strong>11</strong> Relief Organizations: BBB Wise Giving Alliance SpeaksOut for Donors.” Better Business Bureau Wise Giving Guide, (Winter 2001): p. 4–10.Reprints excerpts of Congressional testimony by executives of the American Red Cross, SalvationArmy, <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, and others regarding their organizations’ response to donors’expectations and victims’ needs.Corporate Contributions in 2001: Executive Summary. New York, NY: Conference Board,2003. 10 p.This is the executive summary of the annual statistical analysis delving into the contributions of 187companies in 2001. Data indicates a total of $4.52 billion in giving, of which $648 million wasearmarked for disaster and relief related to the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks.Cox, Linda R. <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Relief Funds:A Report at Six Months. New York, NY: NewYork Regional Association of Grantmakers, 2002. 12 p.Lists 37 relief funds that responded to the needs of victims and families in the wake of <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>, and provides some statistics about the amounts raised and distributed, as well as the charities’approach to the task at hand.Cross, Devon Gaffney. “Arms and the <strong>Foundation</strong>.” Philanthropy, vol. 16(January–February 2002): p. 22–5.Author asserts that foundations should play a greater role in supporting national security in thewake of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks.Curtis, Jody. “Set Up before the Sun Set.” <strong>Foundation</strong> News & Commentary,vol.42(November–December 2001): p. 28–31.Explains how the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund came about, and its progress to date in supporting thefamilies of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> victims.Derryck, Dennis; Abzug, Rikki. “Lessons from Crisis: New York City Nonprofits Post-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.” Nonprofit Quarterly, vol. 9 (Spring 2002): p. 6–<strong>11</strong>.<strong>The</strong> authors provide a look at how neighborhood nonprofits in New York City have fared in the twomonths after the destruction of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks, based on their survey of more than onehundred that replied to their questionnaire.Derryck, Dennis; Abzug, Rikki. <strong>The</strong> WTC Tragedy Ripple Effect Devastates NeighborhoodNonprofits. New York, NY: New School University. Milano Graduate School ofManagement and Urban Policy, 2001. 12 p.URL: http://www.newschool.edu/milano/rebuild_nyc/nonprofits9<strong>11</strong>.pdfReports the results of a survey of 125 neighborhood organizations taken in the first two monthsafter the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks in New York City. Eighty percent of the nonprofits indicated thatthey had been adversely impacted, but many had recovered by the time of the survey.“Donors Respond to Terror: A Symposium.” Philanthropy, vol. 15 (November–December2001): p. <strong>11</strong>–3.Representatives from various foundations explain how the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks and the currentrecession will impact their giving patterns.108


BIBLIOGRAPHYFeller, Michael. “Minding the Gaps.” <strong>Foundation</strong> News & Commentary, vol. 43(<strong>September</strong>–October 2002): p. 24–7.<strong>The</strong> employees of the J. P. Morgan Chase <strong>Foundation</strong> experienced the events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> atclose range, and committed substantial funds for the relief effort immediately after the disaster.<strong>The</strong>president of the foundation explains their grantmaking strategy, and the lessons they learned.Fickenscher, Lisa. “Charities, Feds Leave Small Firms Out in the Cold.” Crain’s New YorkBusiness, vol. 18 (March 4, 2002): p. 1, 41.Little money is finding its way to aid the small businesses in New York that were most affected bythe attacks on the World Trade <strong>Center</strong>. Most of the charities that are involved are directing theirsupport to the families of the victims.“<strong>Foundation</strong> and Corporate Grants to Relief Funds: A Sampling.” Chronicle ofPhilanthropy, vol. 13 (October 4, 2001): p. 18, 20.A listing of foundations and companies that have donated to the American Red Cross, <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th Fund, and other beneficiaries for disaster relief efforts.“<strong>The</strong> Giving Climate: New Normalcy, New Vigilance.” Advancing Philanthropy, vol. 9(January–February 2002): p. 21–4, 46.Advice about approaching donors in the wake of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.“Giving for <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>:<strong>The</strong> View from Ground Zero.” Better Business Bureau WiseGiving Guide, (Fall 2002): p. 2–5.Brief interviews with representatives of City Harvest, the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, andSafe Horizon, all of whom were affected by the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> attacks, and the <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th Fund, which was created to assist the victims and their families.Global <strong>Philanthropic</strong> Strategies for a Post-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th World:A Working Paper forIndividual and Institutional Donors. New York, NY: Rockefeller PhilanthropyOffice/<strong>The</strong> <strong>Philanthropic</strong> Collaborative, Inc., 2001. 19 p.A working paper on grantmaking strategies.Gose, Ben. “42% of Americans Say Relief Effort Damaged Faith in Nonprofit Groups.”Chronicle of Philanthropy, vol. 14 (<strong>September</strong> 5, 2002): p. 12.Reports results from a Chronicle survey of 1,000 Americans on public confidence in nonprofitsafter <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.Gose, Ben. “Terrorist Attacks Did Not Cause Major Shift in Focus of Most GrantMakers.” Chronicle of Philanthropy, vol. 14 (<strong>September</strong> 5, 2002): p. 15–6, 18.Explains that few foundations have changed their funding priorities for areas such as homelandsecurity and international peace efforts since the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks. Provides severalexamples of grantmakers that are responding to the terrorist threat.Greene, Elizabeth. “Disaster-Relief Funds Face Tough Decisions on How To Put GoodWill to Good Use.” Chronicle of Philanthropy, vol. 13 (October 4, 2001): p. 14–7.<strong>Foundation</strong>s and grantmaking public charities are determining how to spend the funds that havebeen raised for the victims of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attack. Several nonprofits including theBlack United Fund of New York are concerned that prejudices may hinder funding to minoritygroups. Contains a listing of organizations that are collecting contributions for relief efforts.Greene, Elizabeth;Wolverton, Brad. “Learning the Lessons of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>: CharitiesReassess How <strong>The</strong>y Handled Aid.” Chronicle of Philanthropy, vol. 14 (<strong>September</strong> 5,2002): p. 5, 9, <strong>11</strong>.Explains how charities are learning from their experience with <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> donations, focusingon the Salvation Army and the American Red Cross.109


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEGreene, Stephen G. “Borderless Giving Crucial to Solving Global Strife, Experts Say.”Chronicle of Philanthropy, vol. 14 (March 21, 2002): p. 10–1.Discusses remarks from a conference organized by the Global Philanthropy Forum. Some speakerstouched on promoting an international philanthropic vision in the aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.Nonprofit leaders also addressed the AIDS epidemic and spoke on the needs of Central Asia.Greene, Stephen G. “In Disaster’s Wake.” Chronicle of Philanthropy, vol. 14 (<strong>September</strong> 5,2002): p. 4–6, 8.Explains that the public may have lost confidence in charities after <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, as critics questionthe nonprofit sector’s ability to handle similar disasters. Observers suggest charities missed opportunitiesto effectively harness the good will of volunteers and to clearly communicate the value ofthe nonprofit sector to the public.Higgins, Heather R. “Fighting Back: How to Avert a Charitable Calamity.” Philanthropy,vol. 15 (November–December 2001): p. 9–10.Suggests changes in federal tax policy that could encourage philanthropy in the wake of the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks.Hinds, Michael deCourcy. “Nonprofits at Ground Zero: Struggling to Survive,<strong>The</strong>irMissions Point the Way.” Carnegie Reporter, vol. 1 (Spring 2002): p. 22–32.Profiles of four nonprofits whose offices were in the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> neighborhood: Four WayBooks, Safe Horizon, Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>, and Futures and Options.<strong>The</strong>ir stories sketch outhow they experienced the events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> and the months after, as each worked to resumeservices.Hoyt, David. “Under Pressure:Where the Charitable <strong>Response</strong> to 9/<strong>11</strong> Went Wrong.”Stanford Social Innovation Review, vol. 2 (Summer 2004): p. 66–73.A case study of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, which was created on the day of the terrorist attacks inNew York City by a collaboration between the New York Community <strong>Foundation</strong> and the UnitedWay of New York City.While the outpouring of donations to the Fund was unprecedented, andthousands of people were helped, the lack of coordinated and effective communication to the publicresulted in several negative stories in the media. Strains developed between the two agencies assome critics questioned the role of the Fund.Indiana University <strong>Center</strong> on Philanthropy. America Gives: Survey of Americans’ Generosityafter <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>. Indianapolis, IN: Indiana University <strong>Center</strong> on Philanthropy, 2002. 7 p.Co-published with the Association of Fundraising Professionals, this presents the results of a surveyof more than 1,300 households about their giving or volunteering in the wake of the terrorist attackson <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.Indiana University <strong>Center</strong> on Philanthropy; Brown, Melissa S. (ed.) Giving USA 2004:<strong>The</strong>Annual Report on Philanthropy for the Year 2003. 49th ed. Indianapolis, IN: AmericanAssociation of Fund Raising Counsel Trust for Philanthropy, 2004. v, 260 p.An annual statistical analysis of charitable contributions, distribution, donors, recipients, sources ofphilanthropy, and areas of philanthropic opportunity; this edition covers 2003. Sources analyzedinclude individuals, bequests, foundations, and corporations. Areas of philanthropic opportunitythat are compared for various periods up to 2003 are religion; education; health; human services;arts, culture, and humanities; public/society benefit; environment/wildlife; and international affairs.A separate section lists studies of giving in specific states. Contains numerous charts, lists, andstatistical tables. Of particular note are the listings of gifts of five million dollars or more byindividuals. Includes a table of the National Taxonomy of Exempt Entities.This edition contains aspecial section on the subject of philanthropy related to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.Jones, David R.; Campbell, David. “Philanthropy and 9/<strong>11</strong>: How Did We Do?” ResponsivePhilanthropy, (Fall 2002): p. 1, 12–5.A report card on the results of charitable giving and disbursement after <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.<strong>11</strong>0


BIBLIOGRAPHYJones, Jeff; Sinclair, Matthew. “Grantmakers’ Changes Rooted in Economy, Not TerrorismFears.” NonProfit Times, vol. 16 (November 1, 2002): p. 28, 36.Summarizes findings from the <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong> report, Assessing the Post-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>Funding Environment: Grantmakers’ Perspective. Over 330 grantmakers responded to the surveythat was conducted in Spring 2002.<strong>The</strong> results indicate that approximately 95 percent ofrespondents did not change their funding focus after <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.Jones, Jeff. “Most Donors Believe Money Was Used Wisely.” NonProfit Times, vol. 16(<strong>September</strong> 1, 2002): p. 1, 12.Provides results from a NonProfit Times/Ruotolo Associates national survey on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>donations that was taken in late June. Half of the people polled indicated that they gave to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> causes, and two-thirds of people who made donations felt that nonprofits used thefunds properly.Jones, Jeff. “Nonprofits Fear False Accusations of Terror Grants.” NonProfit Times, vol. 17(May 1, 2003): p. 1, 4, 6.Describes laws and voluntary guidelines issued by the federal government to prevent charitabledonations from funding terrorism. Discusses how these measures are affecting internationalgrantmaking. Sidebar lists additional resources to help nonprofits comply with guidelines.Jones, Jeff. “Questions Raised about How IRS OK’d Status.” NonProfit Times, vol. 16(<strong>September</strong> 1, 2002): p. 1, 4–5.Describes research performed by NonProfit Times reporters in an effort to contact nonprofits thatreceived expedited tax-exempt status for <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>-related causes.While the reporters haddifficulty obtaining information from the organizations, there have been relatively few cases of fraudreported in New York. Changes to the federal tax code have been proposed so that federal officialscan disseminate information to state regulators.Lake, Eli. “Leading the Charge:Top Donors and Grantees on the Private Sector’s Role inDefending America.” Philanthropy, vol. 17 (November–December 2003): p. 17–21.A status report on some of the anti-terrorism initiatives by the following donors: German MarshallFund, JM <strong>Foundation</strong>, John M. Olin <strong>Foundation</strong>, Lauder <strong>Foundation</strong>, Merrill Family <strong>Foundation</strong>,Rosenkranz <strong>Foundation</strong>, Shelby Cullom Davis <strong>Foundation</strong>, David Steinmann, Stuart Family<strong>Foundation</strong>, and the W. H. Donner <strong>Foundation</strong>. Programs by the following grantees are alsodescribed briefly: American Enterprise Institute, Asia Pacific Initiative, Aspen Institute Berlin,Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America, Foreign Policy Research Institute,<strong>Foundation</strong> for the Defense of Democracies, Freedom House, Imagine New York, Institute of WorldPolitics, International <strong>Center</strong> for Nonviolent Conflict, Investigative Project, Islam and AmericanDemocracy Project, Middle East Forum, Middle East Media Research Institute, National Interest,Philip Merrill <strong>Center</strong> for Strategic Studies, Project for a New American Century, and Shalem<strong>Center</strong>.Lipman, Harvy. “IRS Handling of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> Charities Shows Weakness of ApprovalSystem, Critics Say.” Chronicle of Philanthropy, vol. 14 (March 7, 2002): p. 8, 10.Nonprofit organizations responding to the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks were granted tax-exemptstatus under an expedited approval process. Critics of the Internal Revenue Service’s review systeminsist that several of the approved nonprofits had nothing to do with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> disaster.Lipman, Harvy. “Majority of Funds Raised after <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> Have Been Distributed.”Chronicle of Philanthropy, vol. 15 (<strong>September</strong> 4, 2003): p. 16–7.Provides results from the Chronicle’s survey of 28 charities. Indicates 80 percent of the $2.4 billionraised has been allocated.Lyman,Timothy R.; Considine, Michael G.; Sachs, Jennifer L. “InternationalGrantmaking after <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>: Dealing with Executive Order 13224 and the USAPATRIOT Act.” International Dateline, vol. 64 (Fall 2002): p. 1–4.Explains the provisions of laws passed after <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> that impact funders, and outlines howgrantmakers can best comply with the new regulations.<strong>11</strong>1


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEMaehara, Paulette V. “Let Ethics Be Your Fundraising Guide.” Association Management,vol. 54 (July 2002): p. 30–4, 36–7.Discusses fundraising ethics in the wake of the controversies surrounding the use of the <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th Fund and the Red Cross Liberty Fund. Explains how fundraisers should develop trust,educate donors, demonstrate accountability, minimize risk, and protect donor privacy.McKivergan, Daniel. “Bankrolling Terror.” Philanthropy, vol. 12 (November–December1998): p. 38–41.Discusses the prevalence of U.S.-based organizations that fundraise for terrorist activities aroundthe world.Melcher, Michael F.; Mandl, Alex. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Philanthropic</strong> <strong>Response</strong> to 9/<strong>11</strong>:A Practical Analysisand Recommendations. New York, NY: Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP, 2003. 42 p.<strong>The</strong> report is based on interviews with service providers, foundations, government agencies, andothers, and also includes several recommendations for disaster planning.Morrison & Foerster LLP. Helping Handbook for Small Business Affected by the World Trade<strong>Center</strong> Disaster. New York, NY: Association of the Bar of the City of New York, 2001. 50 p.Meyerson, Adam. “Pitching in: Philanthropy’s Role in the War on Terror.” Philanthropy,vol. 15 (November/December 2001): p. 7–8.Discusses the importance of philanthropy in the wake of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks. Suggests thatprivate funding can foster new ideas on foreign policy, encourage research on emergencypreparedness, and support organizations that promote tolerance in the Islamic world.Pulley, John L. “Fund-Raising Efforts Proliferate for Families of Terrorists’Victims.”Chronicle of Higher Education, vol. 48 (November 2, 2001): p. A35–6.Describes the scholarship funds that colleges and grantmakers are establishing for family membersof victims of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attack.Putnam, Robert D. “Bowling Together.” American Prospect, vol. 13 (<strong>11</strong> February 2002): 5 p.Putnam, author of Bowling Alone, claims that the events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> radically changed howAmericans experience their sense of community. He presents here the results of surveys heconducted in 2000 and again in the fall of 2001, measuring levels of trust in the government, civicinvolvement and other issues.Ramos, Edgardo; Lyman,Timothy R.; Canavan, Patricia; Nichols, Clifford, III. Handbookon Counter-Terrorism Measures: What U. S. Nonprofits and Grantmakers Need to Know.Hartford, CT: Day, Berry & Howard <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., 2004. vii, 25 p.Provides an overview of Executive Order 13224, the USA PATRIOT Act, and other regulationsthat may affect international grantmaking.“Recovering from a National Tragedy:Women’s Special Role.” Women’s PhilanthropyInstitute News, (December 2001): p. 1, 3.Discusses women’s philanthropic role in the wake of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks.Reiss, Alvin H. “Arts Respond in Time of Crisis.” Fund Raising Management, vol. 32(November 2001): p. 26, 35.Describes how arts organizations have helped with relief efforts in the aftermath of the <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks. Some arts groups have donated proceeds from performances, while otherorganizations have provided free programs.Renz, Loren; Cuccaro, Elizabeth; Marino, Leslie. 9/<strong>11</strong> Relief and Regranting Funds:ASummary Report on Funds Raised and Assistance Provided. New York, NY: <strong>Foundation</strong><strong>Center</strong>, 2003. 27 p.URL: http://fdncenter.org/research/trends_analysis/pdf/9_<strong>11</strong>relief_funds.pdfThis survey of <strong>11</strong>1 9/<strong>11</strong>-related relief funds revealed that 64.2 percent of these organizations hadplanned to distribute 100 percent of the funds they raised by year-end 2003. Further, nearly all<strong>11</strong>2


BIBLIOGRAPHYrelief funds with unspent contributions have specific plans for distributing their remaining funds,such as providing long-term assistance and scholarships for children of victims. In addition to thesurvey findings that are presented in part one, the second part of the report analyzes the actualdonations received by 40 of the largest funds, as well as how these funds have distributed thissupport. Overall, excluding donations from one fund to another, these funds have raised almost$2.9 billion for relief and recovery and contributed $2.2 billion, accounting for the vast majority ofdollars raised and disbursed by the more than 350 relief funds created after 9/<strong>11</strong>.<strong>The</strong> analysisprovides precise breakdowns of funds distributed and estimates of unspent funds by beneficiarygroup and type of assistance.Renz, Loren. Assessing the Post-9/<strong>11</strong> Funding Environment: Grantmakers’ Perspectives. NewYork, NY: <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, 2002. 8 p.URL: http://www.fdncenter.org/research/trends_analysis/pdf/post9<strong>11</strong>.pdfBased on a nationwide survey of 333 grantmakers, this report examines the impact of foundations’and corporations’ response to the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> tragedy on their overall giving, and assesses therelative impact of the 9/<strong>11</strong> response vs. the economic downturn on giving patterns and practices.Renz, Loren; Marino, Leslie. Giving in the Aftermath of 9/<strong>11</strong>: 2003 Update on the <strong>Foundation</strong>and Corporate <strong>Response</strong>. New York, NY: <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, 2003. 16 p.URL: http://fdncenter.org/research/trends_analysis/pdf/9_<strong>11</strong>update03.pdfBased on data collected through <strong>September</strong> 2003, this report provides statistics on institutionaldonors (independent and family foundations, corporate foundations and direct giving programs,community and other public foundations, as well as trade and business associations) in response tothe <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks. Analyses are provided based on funder type, range of giving,funder location, and recipients.Rhule, Patty. “After the Attacks: Nonprofits and Volunteers Rush to Aid Victims.” VolunteerLeadership, (Fall 2001): p. 20–1.A sampling of efforts around the country.Rhule, Patty. “Disaster Relief:Volunteers Sign on for the Long Haul.” Volunteer Leadership,(Winter 2002): p. 4–8.Some examples of the outpouring of volunteer aid after the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks, and advice onpreparation for disasters.Salamon, Lester M. “What Really Matters about <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.” Chronicle ofPhilanthropy, vol. 14 (<strong>September</strong> 5, 2002): p. 47–8.Salamon opines on the response of nonprofits to the cataclysmic events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.Though the philanthropic response was unprecedented and remarkably generous, thecoordination of organizations left something to be desired, and that fact will have implications forthe future. He warns against “go-it-alone“ philanthropy. He suggests that Americans pay greaterattention to social justice concerns, noting the relationship of terrorism to the underlying despairthat may spawn it, and citing statistics that indicate that the percentage of charitable moniesfunneled to human services has declined in recent decades. Finally, Salamon encouragesAmericans to look more closely at efforts to support emerging movements for civil society in theinternational Islamic community.Schram, Sanford F. “Social Welfare after <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.” Nonprofit Quarterly, vol. 9(Spring 2002): p. 21–4.State budgets are adversely impacted by the loss of the federal budget surplus, and the effect onsocial welfare programs could be dire, according to this analysis. Other forces are also eating awayat the social safety net, and the author decries the erosion of government support for basic needs.Schwinn, Elizabeth. “Easing of IRS Policy Lets Relief Groups Disburse Funds Regardlessof Need.” Chronicle of Philanthropy, vol. 14 (November 29, 2001): p. 30.In an exception to IRS regulations, funds raised for the victims and families of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>attacks in New York and Washington can be distributed by charities to individuals regardless ofneed.<strong>The</strong> new ruling is not without its critics, however.<strong>The</strong> policy is Notice 2001–78.<strong>11</strong>3


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSESchwinn, Elizabeth. “Guarding against Future Threats.” Chronicle of Philanthropy, vol. 14(November 15, 2001): p. 19–20.Outlines some recent efforts to work against terrorism.<strong>The</strong> Global Terrorism Project has receivedfunding from several foundations; the MacArthur <strong>Foundation</strong> has earmarked $5 million; and theNathan Cummings <strong>Foundation</strong> has pledged $500,000 to protect the civil liberties of ArabAmericans.Seessel,Tom. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Philanthropic</strong> <strong>Response</strong> to 9/<strong>11</strong>:A Report Prepared for the Ford <strong>Foundation</strong>.Trenton, NJ:Thomas Edison State College, 2002. viii, 63 p.URL:http://www.fordfound.org/publications/recent_articles/philanthropic_response.cfmProvides short descriptions of the response of foundations, corporations, and relief organizationsto the needs created by the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks.<strong>The</strong> foundations are: Andrew W. Mellon, LillyEndowment, Ford, Carnegie Corporation of New York, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur,Charles Stewart Mott, Robert Wood Johnson, Rockefeller, Atlantic Philanthropies, Starr, John S.and James L. Knight, Annie E. Casey, and the Lumina <strong>Foundation</strong> for Education.<strong>The</strong>corporations are: Marsh & McLennan, Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, Citigroup <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewYork Times Company <strong>Foundation</strong>, and Goldman Sachs. Also included are the American RedCross, the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, the Twin Towers Fund, the 9/<strong>11</strong> Disaster Relief Fund of theInternational Association of Fire Fighters, the New York Police and Fire Widows’ and Children’sBenefit Fund, and Safe Horizon.Seessel,Tom. Responding to the 9/<strong>11</strong> Terrorist Attacks: Lessons from Relief and Recovery inNew York City. Trenton, NJ:Thomas Edison State College, 2003. 43 p.URL:http://www.fordfound.org/publications/recent_articles/philanthropic_response_ii.cfmThis report supplements a Ford <strong>Foundation</strong> report, “<strong>The</strong> <strong>Philanthropic</strong> <strong>Response</strong> to 9/<strong>11</strong>,“released in August 2002 on the philanthropic response in relief and recovery for New York Cityfollowing the terrorist attacks of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.“<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> Donations: How Much Charities Have Raised and Distributed.” Chronicleof Philanthropy, vol. 14 (November 15, 2001): p. 16–7.A chart showing the activities of 29 organizations that have raised money related to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>,and how the funds are being disbursed.<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>: Interim Report on the <strong>Response</strong> of Charities. Washington, DC: U. S. GeneralAccounting Office, [2002]. ii, 37 p.This is the presentation made on August 21, 2002 by the General Accounting Office to theCommittee on Finance of the U. S. Senate.<strong>The</strong> report covered data about monies raised anddisbursed by charities that were aiding victims of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks.<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>: Perspectives from the Field of Philanthropy. New York, NY: <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>,2002. viii, 182 p.URL: http://www.fdncenter.org/research/9<strong>11</strong>/book.htmlEssays by or interviews of leaders from the nonprofit sector, reflecting on various aspects of theresponse to the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks. Essays include: “Managing Charitable Giving in the Wake ofDisaster“ by C. Eugene Steuerle; and “Reflections on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> Legal Developments“ byVictoria B. Bjorklund (Simpson Thacher & Bartlett). Fourteen interviews are listed in “<strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>: Perspectives from the Field of Philanthropy” on pp. 69–70.<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>: Perspectives from the Field of Philanthropy, Volume Two. New York, NY:<strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, 2003. viii, 208 p.URL: http://fdncenter.org/research/9<strong>11</strong>/book_2.htmlEssays by or interviews of leaders from the nonprofit sector, reflecting further on various aspects ofthe response to the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks. Essays include: “Compassion & Competence: A Non-Philanthropist Reflects on the Contributions of Philanthropy” by Joshua Gotbaum (<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thFund); and “Nonprofits and 9/<strong>11</strong>: Now the Good News“ by Susan V. Berresford (Ford<strong>Foundation</strong>). Seventeen interviews are listed on p. 70.<strong>11</strong>4


BIBLIOGRAPHY<strong>The</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund: One Year Later. [New York]: <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, [2002]. 46 p.A progress report on the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund that describes accomplishments and ongoingactivities. Includes several first-person accounts.<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th: Lessons Learned. Washington, DC:Washington Regional Association ofGrantmakers, 2002. 30 p.Short essays by the heads of many of the organizations involved in the aftermath of the <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong> attacks at the Pentagon: Federal Emergency Management Agency, American Red Cross, ArmyEmergency Relief, Navy-Marine Corps Relief Society, Greater DC Cares, Community ServicesAgency of the Metropolitan Washington Council, AFL-CIO, United Way of the National CapitalArea, Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of the National Capital Region, Metropolitan Washington Council ofGovernments, and Washington Grantmakers.“Shaken <strong>Foundation</strong>s.” Trust & <strong>Foundation</strong> News, vol. 58 (<strong>September</strong>–November 2001):p. 1, 24.Describes how foundations located near the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> have been impacted by the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks.Sinclair, Matthew. “Community Service Projects to Remember Victims of 9-<strong>11</strong>.”NonProfit Times, vol. 16 (May 1, 2002): p. 1, 10, 25.Describes the recently passed Unity in the Spirit of America Act that will sponsor communityservice programs in the name of the victims of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks.<strong>The</strong> Points of Light<strong>Foundation</strong> and Volunteer <strong>Center</strong> National Network will be overseeing the projects around thenation.Sinclair, Matthew; Jones, Jeff. “Following the Money: Meeting the Need.” NonProfit Times,vol. 16 (<strong>September</strong> 1, 2002): p. 14, 39.Provides results from a NonProfit Times survey of nearly 300 new charities and funds withinexisting organizations that were established as a result of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks. Indicates thatapproximately $2.2 billion was raised and $1.4 billion was disbursed. Also provides specificdisbursement figures for several funds.Sinclair, Matthew. “Mission Served.” NonProfit Times, vol. 18 (April 1, 2004): p. 1, 5–6.URL: http://www.nptimes.com/Apr04/npt2.htmlOrganizations that had been created in response to the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks have begunpreparations for closing, or have already closed.<strong>The</strong> 9/<strong>11</strong> United Services Group that wasestablished to coordinate relief efforts will cease operations by the end of 2004.<strong>The</strong> number ofpeople seeking assistance from traditional programs is likely to increase during the transitionperiod.Sinclair, Matthew. “Quick Action, Long Reflection Mark Tragic Year.” NonProfit Times,vol. 16 (<strong>September</strong> 1, 2002): p. 1, 6, 8.Discusses lessons that nonprofit leaders have learned about fundraising and disaster relief since the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks. Sidebar includes a chart listing the top six relief funds along withdisbursement figures.Sinclair, Matthew. “United Ways Mobilize National Support System: Funneling MoneyWhere It’s Needed.” NonProfit Times, vol. 15 (October 1, 2001): p. 6–7.Describes how United Ways across the nation have responded to the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attack.<strong>The</strong> United Way of New York City and the New York Community Trust established the <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th Fund.Souccar, Miriam Kreinin. “Bleak Months in Offing for Arts Groups.” Crain’s New YorkBusiness, vol. 17 (November 26, 2001): p. 3, 47.Most arts groups in New York City foresee a decline in attendance, sales, and fundraising in thenext six months, largely due to the effects of the attack on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.<strong>11</strong>5


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSESouccar, Miriam Kreinin. “United Way Slashes Funds for Agencies.” Crain’s New YorkBusiness, vol. 18 (July 15, 2002): p. 1, 44.Many New York City nonprofits will find their United Way grants much smaller this year, due to thefact that about half of the agency’s receipts were earmarked for victim relief related to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.Suhrke, Henry C. “A Wannabe Federal Charity Regulator Tries Again.” PhilanthropyMonthly, vol. 34 (#7–8 2002): p. 5–12.<strong>The</strong> Federal Trade Commission has been charged with overseeing charitable solicitation by forprofits,in the wake of several fraudulent schemes after <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.This is not the first time theFTC has attempted this regulatory role, as this history indicates.<strong>The</strong> most recent effort is part ofthe USA PATRIOT Act, legislation passed in the autumn of 2001.Summary of Findings: Survey of <strong>Foundation</strong> Communications Issues Post-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.Communications Network, [2002]. 3 p.Presents the results of a survey of 32 communications directors of foundations regarding how theirpriorities changed (or did not) after <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, and how the communications function andbudget was impacted.“Under Pressure.” Chronicle of Philanthropy, vol. 14 (November 15, 2001): p. 9.Now, two months after an unprecedented outpouring of monetary support for victims of the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attack on the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> and the Pentagon, tough questions are arising.Congress, the press, and the public are looking closely at how funds are disbursed, and somecharities are having trouble giving a complete picture.<strong>The</strong> American Red Cross, and theLiberty Fund that it created, have been a special focus of attention; leaders there are criticizedfor their plans to earmark a substantial part of the funds in reserve for other needs. In light ofthe controversy, the organization’s chief executive Bernadine Healy has resigned. Other charitieshave yet to distribute any funds. Some critics are calling for government oversight of the entirerelief effort.Wallace, Nicole. “Online Giving Soars as Donors Turn to the Internet Following Attacks.”Chronicle of Philanthropy, vol. 13 (October 4, 2001): p. 22.Describes the rise in online giving after the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attack.<strong>The</strong> American Red Crossreported it has raised $60 million over the Internet thus far.Wallace, Nicole. “Technology Plays Many Roles in Aftermath of Disaster.” Chronicle ofPhilanthropy, vol. 13 (October 4, 2001): p. 22.Companies donated hardware and developed Web sites to help with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> relief efforts.Whelan, David. “<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> Fund Discourages New Gifts: Studies Show Tragedy’sEffect on Charities.” Chronicle of Philanthropy, vol. 14 (January 24, 2002): p. 18, 20.Provides highlights from several studies that analyze the impact of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks onnonprofits.White, Doug. “How Can Donors Know When a Charity Is ‘Terrorist’?” Trusts & Estates,vol. 142 (May 2003): p. 66–7.Safeguards that donors can take to reduce the possibility that charitable monies will be utilized tosupport terrorist activities.Wilhelm, Ian;Williams, Grant. “American Red Cross Names Interim Chief and VowsAdditional Changes.” Chronicle of Philanthropy, vol. 14 (November 15, 2001): p. 10.In the wake of the controversy over the disbursement of funds collected for the victims of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, Harold Decker has been appointed interim chief executive, replacing BernadineHealy. Healy was criticized for decisions made involving the Liberty Fund, which has collected$564 million to date in gifts and pledges. Decker comes from a background in the pharmaceuticalindustry.<strong>11</strong>6


BIBLIOGRAPHYWilhelm, Ian. “Former OMB Executive Steps in to Run <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.” Chronicleof Philanthropy, vol. 14 (November 15, 2001): p. 18.An interview with Joshua Gotbaum, who has been appointed chief executive of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thFund, created by the New York Community Trust and the United Way of New York City.Wilhelm, Ian. “Half of $2-Billion Raised for <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> Given Away; Other RecoveryUpdates.” Chronicle of Philanthropy, vol. 14 (March 7, 2002): p. 14–5.Provides results from a Chronicle survey of organizations that were raising funds for <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>relief efforts. Sidebar includes a listing of the charities and how much each has distributed thus far.Wilhelm, Ian. “Nonprofit Groups Search for Better Ways to Manage Disaster Volunteers.”Chronicle of Philanthropy, vol. 14 (<strong>September</strong> 5, 2002): p. 13–4.Explains that the poor coordination by charities and emergency personnel in managing volunteersafter <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> has prompted nonprofit and government leaders to examine better proceduresfor handling large numbers of emergency workers. Discusses the challenges and risks involvedwhen working with so-called spontaneous volunteers.Wilhelm, Ian. “Red Cross Fund Raiser Takes on Unforeseen Challenges.” Chronicle ofPhilanthropy, vol. 13 (October 4, 2001): p. 28.Profiles Michael D. Farley, a senior fundraiser at the American Red Cross. Provides excerpts froman interview conducted after the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attack.Wilhelm, Ian. “Red Cross Plans to Spend All Donations to Help <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> AttackVictims.” Chronicle of Philanthropy, vol. 14 (November 29, 2001): p. 30.In a turnaround, the American Red Cross has decided to allocate all funds raised for the reliefefforts to the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> families of victims. Earlier, the organization had planned to earmarksome of the donations for future disasters, a plan that was widely criticized.Williams, Grant. “Turmoil at the Red Cross: Critics Blame Charity’s Leader for Problemsin Wake of Attacks.” Chronicle of Philanthropy, vol. 14 (November 1, 2001): 2001.Reports that the American Red Cross, along with its president Bernadine P. Healy, has been facingcriticism for the way fundraising efforts have been managed after the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attack.<strong>The</strong>re isconfusion over the amount that victims, families, and rescue workers will receive from the charity’sLiberty Fund.Williams, Roger M. “In Solomon’s Footsteps: Conversation with Kenneth Feinberg.”<strong>Foundation</strong> News & Commentary, vol. 43 (<strong>September</strong>–October 2002): p. 20–3.Kenneth Feinberg heads up the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> Victim Compensation Fund of 2001, which wasestablished by the U.S. Congress. In this interview he explains his work and the role of the charity.Williams, Roger M.; Siska, Darlene. “New York Philanthropy after the Attacks.”<strong>Foundation</strong> News & Commentary, vol. 42 (November–December 2001): p. 22–6.A roundup about the response of foundations and nonprofits to the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks in NewYork City. Some of the featured programs are Futures & Options for Kids, American Express<strong>Foundation</strong>, Deutsche Bank Americas <strong>Foundation</strong>, and Trinity Church. A sidebar presents aninterview with Barbara Bryan, head of the New York Regional Association of Grantmakers.Williamson, Richard; Sinclair, Matthew. “Islamic Charities under Spotlight’s Red Glare.”NonProfit Times, vol. 16 (January 1, 2002): p. 1, 6, <strong>11</strong>.In the aftermath of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks, the federal government is working to seize the assetsof several Islamic nonprofits with alleged ties to terrorist groups. Charities such as the Holy Land<strong>Foundation</strong> for Relief and Development in Texas have denied involvement in any terrorist activity.<strong>11</strong>7


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEWilliamson, Richard. “Money Comes between Charities,Terror Victims.” NonProfit Times,vol. 15 (December 1, 2001): p. 1, 6, 8.Facing controversy over the management of the Liberty Fund, the American Red Cross hasannounced that all of the $543 million raised will go toward helping <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> victims and theirfamilies. Discusses the organizational restructuring after the departure of Dr. Bernadine Healy.Wirthlin Worldwide. A Survey of Charitable Giving after <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, 2001. Washington,DC: Independent Sector, 2001. 10 p.Presents the results of a national telephone survey of more than one thousand Americans in October2001. Among the major findings, it shows that one in seven Americans donated money, blood, ortime in the weeks after the attack.<strong>11</strong>8


<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>Guide to Relief and Recovery Grants by<strong>Foundation</strong>s and CorporationsLIST OF FUNDERS BY TOTAL CONTRIBUTIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDER. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135INDEX OF GRANT RECIPIENTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 231INDEX OF SUBJECTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 243


List of Funders by Total ContributionsTotal number of grants: 4,542Total dollar value of grants: $1,101,786,170FUNDERDOLLARAMOUNTNUMBEROF GRANTSMellon <strong>Foundation</strong>, Andrew W., <strong>The</strong> $50,501,500 135Lilly Endowment Inc. 34,660,100 4Starr <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 20,071,446 164Ford <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 18,923,850 67Exxon Mobil Corporation Contributions Program 16,251,000 10Citigroup <strong>Foundation</strong> 15,2<strong>11</strong>,000 20Carnegie Corporation of New York 14,592,400 155Atlantic Philanthropies 13,770,670 30Deutsche Bank Americas <strong>Foundation</strong> 13,597,823 26California Endowment, <strong>The</strong> 13,368,041 76GE <strong>Foundation</strong> 13,260,000 5Morgan Chase <strong>Foundation</strong>, J. P., <strong>The</strong> 12,765,278 3Verizon <strong>Foundation</strong> 12,625,000 5ChevronTexaco Corporation ContributionsProgram 10,560,000 57Altria Group, Inc. 10,431,666 72Morgan Stanley Corporate Giving Program 10,010,000 2AXA <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 10,000,000 1Bear, Stearns & Co. Inc. 10,000,000 1DaimlerChrysler Corporation ContributionsProgram 10,000,000 1Fannie Mae 10,000,000 4Freddie Mac Corporate Giving Program 10,000,000 2Goldman Sachs <strong>Foundation</strong> 10,000,000 1Johnson & Johnson Family of CompaniesContribution Fund 10,000,000 3Lehman Brothers <strong>Foundation</strong> 10,000,000 8Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. CorporateGiving Program 10,000,000 1Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc. Corporate GivingProgram 10,000,000 6Sloan <strong>Foundation</strong>, Alfred P. 9,923,919 37Coca-Cola Company Contributions Program, <strong>The</strong> 9,750,000 2Vivendi Universal <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 9,500,000 4Knight <strong>Foundation</strong>, John S. and James L. 9,351,000 252Johnson <strong>Foundation</strong>, Robert Wood, <strong>The</strong> 8,616,520 31SoundView Technology Group, Inc. 7,067,850 28Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 7,000,000 1Credit Suisse First Boston LLC Corporate GivingProgram 6,648,345 17Kellogg <strong>Foundation</strong>, W. K. 6,316,492 18Microsoft Corporation Community Affairs 6,300,000 2Cisco Systems <strong>Foundation</strong> 6,000,000 5BP <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 5,933,333 2Rockefeller <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 5,715,596 43MetLife <strong>Foundation</strong> 5,526,000 31Bristol-Myers Squibb <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 5,510,000 12Wal-Mart <strong>Foundation</strong> 5,300,000 5FUNDERDOLLARAMOUNTNUMBEROF GRANTSMacArthur <strong>Foundation</strong>, John D. andCatherine T. 5,170,000 30Boeing Company Charitable Trust, <strong>The</strong> 5,100,000 3PepsiCo <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 5,100,000 4Amerada Hess Corporation ContributionsProgram 5,000,000 1Andor Capital Management <strong>Foundation</strong> 5,000,000 1Cantor, Fitzgerald <strong>Foundation</strong> 5,000,000 1Disney World Co. Contributions Program,Walt 5,000,000 1DuPont Corporate Giving Program 5,000,000 1Major League Baseball 5,000,000 1Major League Baseball Players Association 5,000,000 1National Association of <strong>The</strong>atre Owners 5,000,000 1National Collegiate Athletic Association(NCAA) 5,000,000 1Pfizer <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 5,000,000 1Shell Oil Company <strong>Foundation</strong> 5,000,000 3Siebel Systems, Inc. 5,000,000 2Thomson Corporation, <strong>The</strong> 5,000,000 4UBS Securities LLC Corporate GivingProgram 5,000,000 1Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz<strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 5,000,000 1Wyeth Corporate Giving Program 5,000,000 37Merck Company <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 4,913,151 24New York Community Trust, <strong>The</strong> 4,677,895 46Prudential <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 4,264,726 2Pfizer Inc. Corporate Giving Program 4,263,500 21Anheuser-Busch Family of Wholesalers 4,200,000 1Anheuser-Busch <strong>Foundation</strong> 4,200,000 5American Express <strong>Foundation</strong> 4,100,000 1Sony USA <strong>Foundation</strong> Inc. 4,080,000 4New York Life <strong>Foundation</strong> 4,000,000 2Time Warner <strong>Foundation</strong> 4,000,000 1Hewlett-Packard Company <strong>Foundation</strong> 3,953,948 3Mott <strong>Foundation</strong>, Charles Stewart 3,803,737 21Ford Motor Company Fund 3,512,612 6Intel <strong>Foundation</strong> 3,508,200 4Kresge <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 3,250,000 3Siebel <strong>Foundation</strong>, Thomas and Stacey, <strong>The</strong> 3,069,391 1Lumina <strong>Foundation</strong> for Education, Inc. 3,025,000 3Gates <strong>Foundation</strong>, Bill & Melinda 3,020,000 4Newhouse <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Samuel I. 3,015,000 4Casey <strong>Foundation</strong>, Annie E., <strong>The</strong> 3,000,000 15Michelin North America, Inc. CorporateGiving Program 3,000,000 2Novartis U.S. <strong>Foundation</strong> 3,000,000 <strong>11</strong>21


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEFUNDERDOLLARAMOUNTNUMBEROF GRANTSPhillips Petroleum <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 3,000,000 1SAP America, Inc. Corporate Giving Program 3,000,000 1State Farm Companies 2,782,459 5Open Society Institute 2,732,994 33Hearst <strong>Foundation</strong>, William Randolph 2,630,000 27Unilever United States <strong>Foundation</strong> 2,546,000 2PGA Tour Charities, Inc. 2,518,204 7Andersen LLP Corporate Giving Program,Arthur 2,500,000 1Kenan, Jr. Charitable Trust, William R. 2,500,000 1Kohlberg Kravis Roberts <strong>Foundation</strong> 2,500,000 1McCormick Tribune <strong>Foundation</strong>, Robert R. 2,500,000 1Lucent Technologies <strong>Foundation</strong> 2,476,000 4Coca-Cola <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 2,444,150 5AT&T <strong>Foundation</strong> 2,431,405 12Procter & Gamble Fund, <strong>The</strong> 2,367,000 9FleetBoston Financial <strong>Foundation</strong> 2,290,000 19Best Buy Company, Inc. 2,200,000 2Panasonic Corporate Giving Program 2,200,000 2EDS <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 2,150,000 2SBC <strong>Foundation</strong> 2,130,596 12Abbott Laboratories Fund 2,<strong>11</strong>0,000 4Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of New Jersey 2,098,303 10Key <strong>Foundation</strong> 2,073,626 68HSBC Bank USA Corporate Giving Program 2,040,000 5Amgen <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 2,038,898 10Gannett <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 2,030,000 2Principal Financial Group <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 2,000,003 12Alcoa Inc. 2,000,000 1Bertelsmann <strong>Foundation</strong> U.S., Inc. 2,000,000 1Computer Associates International, Inc.Corporate Giving Program 2,000,000 1Discover Card Financial Services 2,000,000 2Eastman Kodak Company ContributionsProgram 2,000,000 1Ernst & Young <strong>Foundation</strong> 2,000,000 1European Aeronautic Defense and SpaceCompany (EADS) 2,000,000 1Giant Food <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 2,000,000 2HCA <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 2,000,000 1NRG Energy, Inc. 2,000,000 2Rolex Watch U.S.A. 2,000,000 1Siemens <strong>Foundation</strong> 2,000,000 1Time Warner Inc. Corporate Giving Program 2,000,000 2UPS <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 2,000,000 2MBIA, Inc. 1,998,600 3Community <strong>Foundation</strong> Silicon Valley 1,950,000 1Disney Company <strong>Foundation</strong>, Walt, <strong>The</strong> 1,876,284 1Nordstrom, Inc. Corporate Giving Program 1,868,000 1Motorola <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,856,059 7Rockefeller Brothers Fund, Inc. 1,775,000 25Toys “R” Us Children’s Fund, Inc. 1,703,270 1Lilly and Company <strong>Foundation</strong>, Eli 1,560,000 5Avaya 1,500,000 1Carnival Cruise Lines 1,500,000 1Investment Technology Group, Inc. 1,500,000 2Mitsubishi International CorporationContributions Program 1,500,000 2Siemens Corporation Contributions Program 1,500,000 1Tricon Global Restaurants, Inc. 1,500,000 1Bank of America <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 1,450,000 2Aetna <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 1,439,263 33Household International, Inc. Corporate GivingProgram 1,400,000 4Columbus <strong>Foundation</strong> and AffiliatedOrganizations, <strong>The</strong> 1,389,992 39FUNDERDOLLARAMOUNTNUMBEROF GRANTSGlaxoSmithKline Holdings (Americas) Inc.Corporate Giving Program 1,348,456 4General Motors <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 1,325,000 3Pittsburgh <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 1,310,700 4Neuberger Berman <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 1,298,252 7Cardinal Health <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,241,958 9Tenet Healthcare <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,217,013 25Comcast <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 1,200,000 9International Paper Company <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,200,000 1National Hockey League <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,200,000 1Pharmacia <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 1,200,000 3Starbucks <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 1,200,000 1Phoenix <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 1,175,000 15BANK ONE <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,170,000 <strong>11</strong>Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the CentralSavannah River Area 1,137,4<strong>11</strong> 2El Paso Corporate <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,136,657 13Atlantic <strong>Foundation</strong> of New York, <strong>The</strong> 1,120,670 15Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield 1,102,500 2Surdna <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 1,100,000 15Schwab Corporation <strong>Foundation</strong>, Charles,<strong>The</strong> 1,090,702 4Nationwide <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,090,000 2Alcoa <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,085,000 4Mattel, Inc. Corporate Giving Program 1,085,000 2Philadelphia <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 1,074,263 12Wells Fargo <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 1,065,500 4Marriott <strong>Foundation</strong>, J. Willard and Alice S.,<strong>The</strong> 1,060,000 3Xerox <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 1,050,000 2Toshiba America Inc. Corporate GivingProgram 1,045,000 4CIGNA <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,040,645 5Packard <strong>Foundation</strong>, David and Lucile, <strong>The</strong> 1,034,750 3Sempra Energy Corporate Giving Program 1,033,994 <strong>11</strong>Dodge <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Geraldine R. 1,030,600 47GreenPoint <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 1,025,000 3ING DIRECT Kids <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,025,000 2Dow Chemical Company <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,020,000 4Janus <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 1,019,861 7Emerson <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Fred L. 1,010,000 2Gap <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 1,010,000 3H&R Block <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 1,005,000 2MBNA America Bank, N.A. CorporateGiving Program 1,003,000 2HRH Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,001,000 18Overbrook <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 1,001,000 2Academy <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,000,000 1Accenture 1,000,000 1ACE INA <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 1,000,000 1Alcatel USA, Inc. Corporate Giving Program 1,000,000 1Allen Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>, Paul G., <strong>The</strong> 1,000,000 1Allianz Life Insurance Company of NorthAmerica Corporate Giving Program 1,000,000 1AMVESCAP 1,000,000 1Apollo Group 1,000,000 1Applied Materials <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 1,000,000 2Asea Brown Boveri Inc. Corporate GivingProgram 1,000,000 1Aventis Pharmaceuticals <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,000,000 1Avon Products, Inc. Corporate GivingProgram 1,000,000 1BD Corporate Giving Program 1,000,000 1Beazer Homes 1,000,000 1BellSouth Corporation ContributionsProgram 1,000,000 1BI-LO Inc. Corporate Giving Program 1,000,000 <strong>11</strong>22


LIST OF FUNDERS BY TOTAL CONTRIBUTIONSFUNDERDOLLARAMOUNTNUMBEROF GRANTSBlackstone Group, <strong>The</strong> 1,000,000 1Blockbuster Inc. Corporate Giving Program 1,000,000 1Blue Cross/Blue Shield Association 1,000,000 1Blum-Kovler <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,000,000 1BMW Group 1,000,000 1Bridgestone Corporation 1,000,000 1Brown <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., James Graham 1,000,000 2Campbell <strong>Foundation</strong>, J. Bulow 1,000,000 2Carey Family Trust 1,000,000 1Centex Corporation Contributions Program 1,000,000 1Claiborne <strong>Foundation</strong>, Liz 1,000,000 1Colgate-Palmolive Company ContributionsProgram 1,000,000 1Concord Camera Corp. 1,000,000 1ConocoPhillips Corporate Giving Program 1,000,000 6Cooke <strong>Foundation</strong>, Jack Kent 1,000,000 1Cross Country Bank 1,000,000 1Dell <strong>Foundation</strong>, Michael and Susan, <strong>The</strong> 1,000,000 1Duke Energy <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,000,000 3Enron Corp. Contributions Program 1,000,000 2FederalExpress 1,000,000 1First Union <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 1,000,000 2FleetBoston Financial Corporation 1,000,000 1Freeman <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 1,000,000 3Fuji Photo Film U.S.A., Inc. Corporate GivingProgram 1,000,000 1Fujitsu America Inc. Corporate Giving Program 1,000,000 1GAMA <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 1,000,000 1Genentech, Inc. Corporate Giving Program 1,000,000 1General Growth Properties 1,000,000 1Good Guys’ 1,000,000 1Harley-Davidson <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 1,000,000 1Haworth Inc. Corporate Giving Program 1,000,000 2Hilton Hotels Corporation Contributions Program 1,000,000 1Hitachi America, Ltd. Corporate Giving Program 1,000,000 1Home Depot, Inc. Corporate Giving Program,<strong>The</strong> 1,000,000 1Honeywell International Inc. Corporate GivingProgram 1,000,000 1Hovnanian Enterprises 1,000,000 1Interactive Brokers Group 1,000,000 1International Council of Shopping <strong>Center</strong>sEducational <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 1,000,000 1Johnson Controls <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,000,000 1Kaiser Permanente 1,000,000 2Kansas City Chiefs 1,000,000 1Kimberly-Clark <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 1,000,000 1Koch Industries, Inc. Corporate Giving Program 1,000,000 1KPMG <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 1,000,000 1Lazard Freres 1,000,000 1Lennar <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 1,000,000 1Limited Brands <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,000,000 1Lindenwood University 1,000,000 1Lockheed Martin Corporation <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,000,000 1Lortel <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Lucille, <strong>The</strong> 1,000,000 49Luitpold Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 1,000,000 1Mandalay Resort Group 1,000,000 1McDonald’s Corporation Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,000,000 1MDC Holdings, Inc./Richmond America 1,000,000 1MGM Mirage, Inc,, 1,000,000 1Mitsubishi Electric America <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,000,000 3Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Japan 1,000,000 1Mitsui U.S.A. <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 1,000,000 1Mizuho Financial Group 1,000,000 1Mohegan Tribe/Mohegan Sun 1,000,000 1National Association of Realtors 1,000,000 1FUNDERDOLLARAMOUNTNUMBEROF GRANTSNational Association of Security Dealers(NASD), Inc. 1,000,000 1New York Yankees 1,000,000 1Nissan <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 1,000,000 1North Jersey Media Group Inc. CorporateGiving Program 1,000,000 1NVIDIA 1,000,000 1OfficeMax Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,000,000 1PG&E Corporation <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 1,000,000 1Pulte Homes, Inc. Corporate GivingProgram 1,000,000 1Reynolds Tobacco Company <strong>Foundation</strong>, R.J. 1,000,000 2Riggio <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 1,000,000 1Robertson <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,000,000 1Robertson Stephens 1,000,000 1Ronald McDonald House Charities 1,000,000 1Royal Bank of Canada (RBC) FinancialGroup 1,000,000 1Safeway Inc. Corporate Giving Program 1,000,000 1Safra <strong>Foundation</strong>, Edmond J. 1,000,000 1Saks Incorporated <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,000,000 1SANYO Manufacturing CorporationContributions Program 1,000,000 1Sears, Roebuck and Co. ContributionsProgram 1,000,000 2Simon Property Group 1,000,000 4SL Green Realty Corporation 1,000,000 1Sony USA Corporate Giving Program 1,000,000 1Southeastern Conference 1,000,000 1Sovereign Bank <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,000,000 2Spears <strong>Foundation</strong>, Britney 1,000,000 1Starwood <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 1,000,000 1Susquehanna International Group 1,000,000 1Swiss ReInsurance 1,000,000 1ThyssenKrupp 1,000,000 1TIAA-CREF 1,000,000 1Tim Hortons/<strong>The</strong> TDL Group Ltd. 1,000,000 1Toll Brothers 1,000,000 1Tops Markets LLC Corporate GivingProgram 1,000,000 1Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc. CorporateGiving Program 1,000,000 1TXU Corp. Contributions Program 1,000,000 2Ty, Inc. 1,000,000 1UAW-GM Human Resource <strong>Center</strong> 1,000,000 1Unisys Corporation Contributions Program 1,000,000 1Verity, Inc. 1,000,000 1Vodafone-US <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,000,000 1Weinberg <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Harry andJeanette, <strong>The</strong> 1,000,000 1Wendy’s International, Inc. CorporateGiving Program 1,000,000 1Williams Companies <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 1,000,000 1Xilinx 1,000,000 1Geffen <strong>Foundation</strong>, David, <strong>The</strong> 999,999 3NIKE <strong>Foundation</strong> 994,000 12Sunoco, Inc. Corporate Giving Program 975,000 9Enterprise Rent-A-Car <strong>Foundation</strong> 955,000 7Six Continents Hotels 923,923 2Cadence Design Systems, Inc. CorporateGiving Program 850,000 3Cleveland <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 837,751 18Revson <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Charles H. 825,000 3Bank of Montreal 815,000 2Medtronic <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 800,000 3123


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEFUNDERDOLLARAMOUNTNUMBEROF GRANTSPenney Corporation, Inc. Corporate GivingProgram, J. C. 800,000 2Stryker Short <strong>Foundation</strong> 797,065 3Compaq Computer Corporation ContributionsProgram 777,000 3ADP Corporate Giving Program 750,000 1Granite Broadcasting Corporation 750,000 1Baxter International <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 748,250 2Cingular Wireless LLC Corporate GivingProgram 732,457 2Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for SoutheasternMichigan 730,000 4PETCO <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 723,000 2Hapag-Lloyd AG 720,000 1Goldman Fund, Richard & Rhoda 700,000 2Goldsmith <strong>Foundation</strong>, Horace W. 700,000 3NEC USA, Inc. Corporate Giving Program 700,000 1United Way of Palm Beach 700,000 1Warhol <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Visual Arts, Andy,<strong>The</strong> 700,000 33Bechtel <strong>Foundation</strong> 698,913 1PSEG <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 672,000 1Baxter International Inc. Corporate GivingProgram 659,791 1Federation of Korean Industries 650,000 2CBS <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 642,248 2McInerny <strong>Foundation</strong> 640,000 16Hosiosky <strong>Foundation</strong>, Issai & Ellen 622,500 1Reader’s Digest <strong>Foundation</strong> 610,000 2Target Stores, Inc. Corporate Giving Program 608,607 3Capital Group Companies Charitable<strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 601,495 20American Electric Power System EducationalTrust Fund, <strong>The</strong> 600,000 1Annenberg <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 600,000 3Pew Charitable Trusts, <strong>The</strong> 600,000 2Strauss <strong>Foundation</strong>, Levi 600,000 5Mellon Financial Corporation Fund 599,837 55Hewlett <strong>Foundation</strong>, William and Flora, <strong>The</strong> 594,000 5Cargill, Incorporated Corporate Giving Program 593,857 10Illinois Tool Works <strong>Foundation</strong> 583,333 2California Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 580,000 8Corning Incorporated <strong>Foundation</strong> 576,633 2Baltimore Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 576,000 2Cummings <strong>Foundation</strong>, Nathan, <strong>The</strong> 535,000 12Commonwealth Fund, <strong>The</strong> 530,763 9Humana <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 526,133 2Lee Corporation Contributions Program, Sara 525,000 2Tides <strong>Foundation</strong> 523,280 51Northern Trust Company Charitable Trust, <strong>The</strong> 518,956 5Clark <strong>Foundation</strong>, Edna McConnell, <strong>The</strong> 515,000 2Minneapolis <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 506,<strong>11</strong>0 1Dominion Resources, Inc. Corporate GivingProgram 505,000 3Anchor Gaming 500,000 1Danforth <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 500,000 1Daniels Charitable Fund 500,000 1Dell <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 500,000 1Dillon Fund, <strong>The</strong> 500,000 1Dodge <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Cleveland H. 500,000 2Dominion <strong>Foundation</strong> 500,000 2Duke Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>, Doris 500,000 2Dunwalke Trust, Clarence and Anne Dillon 500,000 1El Pomar <strong>Foundation</strong> 500,000 2Entergy Corporation Contributions Program 500,000 1Equilon Enterprises, LLC 500,000 1Exelon Corporation 500,000 1FUNDERDOLLARAMOUNTNUMBEROF GRANTSFinancial Security Assurance 500,000 1Fortune Brands, Inc. Corporate GivingProgram 500,000 1Goodyear Tire & Rubber CompanyContributions Program, <strong>The</strong> 500,000 1Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company Fund 500,000 1Harriman <strong>Foundation</strong>, Gladys and Roland 500,000 2Heineken 500,000 4ITT Industries, Inc. Corporate GivingProgram 500,000 2K-B Toys 500,000 1Keck <strong>Foundation</strong>, W. M. 500,000 1Kuwait Red Crescent 500,000 1Lucent Technologies, Inc. 500,000 1Manulife Financial Corporation 500,000 1Marathon Oil Company ContributionsProgram 500,000 4Marathon Oil <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 500,000 4Mast-Jagermeister AG 500,000 1Mitsubishi Corporation - Tokyo 500,000 1Monsanto Fund 500,000 2NHL Players Association 500,000 1Northrop Grumman CorporationContributions Program 500,000 4Northrop Grumman <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 500,000 4Oak <strong>Foundation</strong> U.S.A., <strong>The</strong> 500,000 1Parsons <strong>Foundation</strong>, Ralph M., <strong>The</strong> 500,000 1Prebon Group 500,000 2Progress Energy <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 500,000 2Progress Energy Service Company 500,000 1Sprint <strong>Foundation</strong> 500,000 1Straus <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Philip A. and Lynn,<strong>The</strong> 500,000 1Summit Partners 500,000 1SunLife Financial 500,000 1Suntory International 500,000 1SunTrust Bank Corporate Giving Program 500,000 1SunTrust Bank, Atlanta <strong>Foundation</strong> 500,000 1TD Bank Financial Group 500,000 1Thomson Financial Inc. Corporate GivingProgram 500,000 13M <strong>Foundation</strong> 500,000 3TotalFinaElf 500,000 1Tri State Ford Dealers 500,000 1UDS <strong>Foundation</strong> 500,000 1USA Funds 500,000 1USFreightways Corporation 500,000 2Wachovia <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 500,000 1Warburg Pincus Partners LLC CorporateGiving Program 500,000 1Weingart <strong>Foundation</strong> 500,000 1American Jewish World Service, Inc. 472,768 1New York Women’s <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 464,000 30May Department Stores Company<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 463,441 3National City Corporation ContributionsProgram 455,000 1Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Louisville, Inc.,<strong>The</strong> 454,619 6Allstate <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 450,000 2Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc.Corporate Giving Program, <strong>The</strong> 450,000 3New York Mets 450,000 1Rippel <strong>Foundation</strong>, Fannie E. 450,000 2Talbots Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 450,000 2American Kennel Club Canine Health<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 408,360 2124


LIST OF FUNDERS BY TOTAL CONTRIBUTIONSFUNDERDOLLARAMOUNTNUMBEROF GRANTSPollock-Krasner <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 402,700 1Asbury Auto Group 400,000 7Community <strong>Response</strong> Fund 400,000 1Langeloth <strong>Foundation</strong>, Jacob and Valeria, <strong>The</strong> 400,000 4Luce <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Henry, <strong>The</strong> 400,000 1Oldcastle, Inc. 400,000 1Teagle <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 397,500 1Meadows <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 377,000 3Central New York Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 376,181 2Northwestern Mutual <strong>Foundation</strong> 376,000 1American Standard <strong>Foundation</strong> 374,107 8Hawaii Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 370,000 1duPont Fund, Jessie Ball 365,000 6New York <strong>Foundation</strong> 362,585 18Astoria Federal Savings 361,734 2New Hampshire Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 360,100 3Lincoln Financial Group <strong>Foundation</strong> 355,000 2Hundred Club of Colorado Springs 351,303 1Booth Ferris <strong>Foundation</strong> 350,000 2Caterpillar Inc. Corporate Giving Program 350,000 3Chartwell Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong> 350,000 2GAR <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 350,000 1Park <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 350,000 10Harris Bank 340,551 2PNC <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 340,362 1Altman <strong>Foundation</strong> 340,000 5Hewitt Associates LLC Corporate Giving Program 327,809 3Pitney Bowes Inc. Corporate Giving Program 322,302 3Clorox Company <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 314,500 4St. Paul Travelers <strong>Foundation</strong> 310,000 3Mead Corporation <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 309,570 1Boston <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 306,137 10Rhode Island <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 304,136 5Convergys <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 303,640 2Agilent Technologies <strong>Foundation</strong> 300,417 2Anadarko Petroleum Corporation 300,000 1Deere <strong>Foundation</strong>, John 300,000 1Freed <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 300,000 6NEC <strong>Foundation</strong> of America 300,000 1Trendwest Resorts 300,000 1Price Associates <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., T. Rowe 295,145 8Community <strong>Foundation</strong> Serving Richmond &Central Virginia, <strong>The</strong> 286,700 4Lowe’s Corporate Giving Program 285,000 1Morgan Chase & Co. Contributions Program, J.P. 280,000 4M & D Relief Fund 275,700 1Comerica <strong>Foundation</strong> 272,800 5Seattle <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 257,068 10Celanese Americas <strong>Foundation</strong> 255,000 3Superior Energy Services 255,000 3Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians 250,000 1American RuYi Machinery Corporation 250,000 1BB&T Corporation Contributions Program 250,000 1Belo 250,000 1Bertelsmann, Inc. Corporate Giving Program 250,000 1Canadian National Railway Company 250,000 1Cathay Bancorp, Inc. 250,000 1Chubb Corporation Contributions Program, <strong>The</strong> 250,000 1Citizens Communications CompanyContributions Program 250,000 2Clark <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Robert Sterling 250,000 1Doornink <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 250,000 1Galvin Charitable Trust, Helen M. 250,000 1GM Corporate Giving Program 250,000 1FUNDERDOLLARAMOUNTNUMBEROF GRANTSGreater New York Automobile Association 250,000 1Hasbro Children’s <strong>Foundation</strong> 250,000 1Inter-Tel, Incorporated 250,000 1Kennedy Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Ethel &W. George, <strong>The</strong> 250,000 2Kennedy <strong>Foundation</strong>, Karen A. & Kevin W. 250,000 1Lear Corporation Contributions Program 250,000 1Liquidnet 250,000 1MCI <strong>Foundation</strong> 250,000 1McNair <strong>Foundation</strong>, Robert and Janice, <strong>The</strong> 250,000 1Moody’s Investors Services 250,000 1New Era Cap Company 250,000 1NiSource Inc. Corporate Giving Program 250,000 1Office Depot, Inc. Corporate GivingProgram 250,000 1Penn <strong>Foundation</strong>, William, <strong>The</strong> 250,000 1Rohm and Haas Company ContributionsProgram 250,000 3San Angelo Health <strong>Foundation</strong> 250,000 1Sidney Frank Importing Co. 250,000 1Sigma-Aldrich Corporation ContributionsProgram 250,000 2Solectron Corporation ContributionsProgram 250,000 1State Street Corporation ContributionsProgram 250,000 2Tokyo Electron limited 250,000 1Transocean Sedco Forex, Inc. 250,000 1UAW 250,000 1Valeo 250,000 1Washington Mutual <strong>Foundation</strong> 250,000 1Saks Incorporated Corporate GivingProgram 245,000 1Monterey Fund, Inc. 240,000 14Norris <strong>Foundation</strong>, Kenneth T. and EileenL., <strong>The</strong> 230,000 2Rochester Area Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 226,591 1Barker Welfare <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 225,270 13Cincinnati <strong>Foundation</strong>, Greater, <strong>The</strong> 215,864 2America’s Collectible Network 215,024 1Bodman <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 215,000 4Joukowsky Family <strong>Foundation</strong> 206,927 2Applied Micro Circuits CorporationContributions Program 205,154 1KPMG Consulting Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong> 205,000 1Sirus Fund, <strong>The</strong> 205,000 1Stanley Works <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 205,000 2With Arms Wide Open <strong>Foundation</strong> 202,8<strong>11</strong> 1CIGNA Corporation Contributions Program 202,788 1Berlitz International, Inc. 200,000 1Bremer <strong>Foundation</strong>, Otto 200,000 1Crane Fund for Widows and Children 200,000 1First Tennessee <strong>Foundation</strong> 200,000 1Hilton <strong>Foundation</strong>, Conrad N. 200,000 1Kansas Health <strong>Foundation</strong> 200,000 2Lafarge North America Inc. CorporateGiving Program 200,000 1Lam Research Corporation <strong>Foundation</strong> 200,000 2Mitsubishi Motors USA <strong>Foundation</strong> 200,000 1Ohrstrom <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 200,000 4Pinnacle Entertainment 200,000 1Princess Grace <strong>Foundation</strong> - U.S.A. 200,000 1Standard Register Company ContributionsProgram, <strong>The</strong> 200,000 2Syngenta Corporation ContributionsProgram 200,000 1WTEN-TV 200,000 <strong>11</strong>25


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEFUNDERDOLLARAMOUNTNUMBEROF GRANTSAdvanced Micro Devices Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong> 196,891 24Graham Fund, Philip L. 195,000 3Fluor <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 194,214 3Wilcox, G.N. 194,000 9Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for Greater Atlanta,Inc. 187,650 4OppenheimerFunds, Inc. Corporate GivingProgram 187,188 2Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi Trust CompanyContributions Program 186,304 4Kohlberg <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 185,900 4Jewish Community Federation of Cleveland 181,000 1Women’s <strong>Foundation</strong> of California, <strong>The</strong> 180,000 10Alabama Power <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 175,000 2Peninsula Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 174,317 8Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Greater Birmingham,<strong>The</strong> 167,731 2Heinz Company <strong>Foundation</strong>, H. J. 167,000 2Denso Corporation 166,000 1Tobias <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Randall L. 165,000 1BTM <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 163,000 3Amerisure Corporate Giving Program 162,151 3Avnet, Inc. Corporate Giving Program 162,000 1Fannie Mae <strong>Foundation</strong> 156,770 4Hartford <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., John A., <strong>The</strong> 153,000 1Whirlpool <strong>Foundation</strong> 151,356 2Con-Way Transportation Services, Inc. 150,000 1Goodrich <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 150,000 2Huntington <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 150,000 1Jostens, Inc. Corporate Giving Program 150,000 1Reiman <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 150,000 1U.S. Trust Corporation <strong>Foundation</strong> 150,000 3UTC Corporate Giving Program 150,000 1Scripps Howard <strong>Foundation</strong> 146,924 3APS Corporate Giving Program 146,000 2Atlanta Falcons Youth <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 140,419 5<strong>Foundation</strong> for the Carolinas 139,641 2Meyer <strong>Foundation</strong>, Eugene and Agnes E. 138,998 5Avery Dennison <strong>Foundation</strong> 136,776 1Achelis <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 135,000 3Independence Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 134,000 2Johnson Endeavor <strong>Foundation</strong>, Christian A. 134,000 5Random House, Inc. Corporate Giving Program 134,000 1Hallmark Corporate <strong>Foundation</strong> 131,285 7DTE Energy <strong>Foundation</strong> 130,000 1PNM <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 129,908 2Simon Youth <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 129,400 1Palmer <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 128,000 2Raskob <strong>Foundation</strong> for Catholic Activities, Inc. 127,800 6Autodesk <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 125,000 2Carson Family Charitable Trust, <strong>The</strong> 125,000 2Delany Charitable Trust, Beatrice P. 125,000 3IFF <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 125,000 1itelligence, Inc. 125,000 1PPL Corporation Contributions Program 125,000 2Pulliam Charitable Trust, Nina Mason 125,000 4Sinatra <strong>Foundation</strong>, Frank, <strong>The</strong> 125,000 2MassMutual Financial Group Corporate GivingProgram 121,397 1Adventist Community Services 120,001 1Bard <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., C. R. 120,000 4Dayton <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 120,000 1Kaplan Fund, Inc., J. M., <strong>The</strong> 120,000 3Providian Financial Corporation ContributionsProgram 120,000 2Frueauff <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Charles A. <strong>11</strong>8,000 2FUNDERDOLLARAMOUNTNUMBEROF GRANTSGPU, Inc. Corporate Giving Program <strong>11</strong>8,000 2Guidant <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>11</strong>7,930 1QUALCOMM Incorporated CorporateGiving Program <strong>11</strong>7,000 2Dreyfus <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Jean and Louis <strong>11</strong>5,000 6Edison International <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>11</strong>5,000 1Land O’Lakes <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>11</strong>5,000 3Richardson <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Smith <strong>11</strong>5,000 4Wolfensohn Family <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>11</strong>0,400 4Atrix Laboratories <strong>11</strong>0,000 1Grant <strong>Foundation</strong>, William T. <strong>11</strong>0,000 6Trellis Fund <strong>11</strong>0,000 2Burlington Northern Santa Fe <strong>Foundation</strong> 109,707 2Alavi <strong>Foundation</strong> 106,000 3Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of GreaterMemphis 105,150 9Barra <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 102,500 3JCCC <strong>Foundation</strong> 100,700 1A.C. Moore Arts & Crafts 100,000 1Air Products and Chemicals, Inc. CorporateGiving Program 100,000 1Alden Trust, George I., <strong>The</strong> 100,000 1Ambac Financial Group, Inc. CorporateGiving Program 100,000 1APB Energy 100,000 1Apex Fund/Apex Venture Partners 100,000 1Aspect Community Commitment Fund, <strong>The</strong> 100,000 1Audi of America 100,000 1Basic American Foods 100,000 1Bedminster Fund, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 100,000 1Berkshire Life Insurance Company ofAmerica Corporate Giving Program 100,000 1Best Western International, Inc. CorporateGiving Program 100,000 1Black & Decker Employees CombinedCharities Trust Towson, <strong>The</strong> 100,000 1Blank Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Arthur M., <strong>The</strong> 100,000 1Bremer Financial Corporation 100,000 1Bridgestone/Firestone Trust Fund 100,000 1Brookdale <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 100,000 1Brother International CorporationContributions Program 100,000 1Brown & Sons Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.,Alex 100,000 1Buca Di Beppo 100,000 1Buhl <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 100,000 2Butler <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., J. E. & Z. B. 100,000 1Butt <strong>Foundation</strong>, H. E. 100,000 1California Federal Bank “CommunityPower” Program 100,000 1Callaway Golf Company <strong>Foundation</strong> 100,000 3Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce 100,000 1Carnegie Hero Fund Commission 100,000 2Carolina First Bank 100,000 1Casey <strong>Foundation</strong>, Eugene B. 100,000 1Champlin <strong>Foundation</strong>s, <strong>The</strong> 100,000 1Charles River Laboratories 100,000 1Cheney <strong>Foundation</strong>, Ben B. 100,000 1Colorado Trust, <strong>The</strong> 100,000 1Compaq Canada 100,000 1Compass Bank <strong>Foundation</strong> 100,000 1Constellation Energy Group 100,000 1Corn Products International 100,000 2Crossmark 100,000 1CSG <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 100,000 1Dade Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 100,000 1Dayton Superior 100,000 <strong>11</strong>26


LIST OF FUNDERS BY TOTAL CONTRIBUTIONSFUNDERDOLLARAMOUNTNUMBEROF GRANTSDean Foods Company Contributions Program 100,000 1Deluxe Corporation <strong>Foundation</strong> 100,000 2Dibner Fund, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 100,000 1Donnelly, R.H. 100,000 1Downey Savings 100,000 1Driehaus <strong>Foundation</strong>, Richard H., <strong>The</strong> 100,000 1Drown <strong>Foundation</strong>, Joseph 100,000 1Electricite de France 100,000 1Fairbanks <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Richard M. 100,000 1Farish Fund, William Stamps, <strong>The</strong> 100,000 1Federated Department Stores <strong>Foundation</strong> 100,000 1Fetzer Institute, Inc., John E. 100,000 1Fleishman-Hillard Charitable Trust 100,000 1FMC <strong>Foundation</strong> 100,000 1Foot Locker, Inc. Corporate Giving Program 100,000 1Frankel <strong>Foundation</strong>, Evan 100,000 1Gateway <strong>Foundation</strong> 100,000 1General Mills <strong>Foundation</strong> 100,000 1Georgia-Pacific <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 100,000 1Gordon <strong>Foundation</strong>, Jeff, <strong>The</strong> 100,000 1Guffey Family <strong>Foundation</strong> 100,000 1Gund <strong>Foundation</strong>, George, <strong>The</strong> 100,000 2H.O. Penn, NYC Caterpillar Dealer 100,000 1Harris <strong>Foundation</strong>, Irving, <strong>The</strong> 100,000 1Heinz Endowment, Howard 100,000 1Heinz Endowment, Vira I. 100,000 1Help America <strong>Foundation</strong>, Ltd. 100,000 1Herbst <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 100,000 1HIFN 100,000 1Hispanic Broadcasting Corporation 100,000 1Hitachi <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 100,000 2Hughes Medical Institute, Howard 100,000 2Hy-Vee <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 100,000 1Inco Alloys International, Inc. Corporate GivingProgram 100,000 1Internet Security Systems 100,000 1Jewett <strong>Foundation</strong>, George Frederick 100,000 1Johnson <strong>Foundation</strong>, Helen K. and Arthur E. 100,000 9Juniper Networks 100,000 1KeySpan Energy Delivery New EnglandCorporate Giving Program 100,000 1Lenfest <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 100,000 1Lenfest <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 100,000 1Lincy <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 100,000 1Lithia Motors 100,000 1LSG Skychefs 100,000 1M&T Bank 100,000 1MassMutual <strong>Foundation</strong> for Hartford, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 100,000 1McBean Charitable Trust, Alletta Morris 100,000 1McCaw <strong>Foundation</strong>, Craig and Susan, <strong>The</strong> 100,000 1McEnroe <strong>Foundation</strong>, John 100,000 4McGregor Fund 100,000 1MIM Corporation 100,000 1National Association of Chain Drug StoresEducation <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 100,000 1National <strong>Center</strong> for Outreach 100,000 1National Distributing Company 100,000 1New York Rotary <strong>Foundation</strong> 100,000 1Nextgen <strong>Foundation</strong> Charitable Trust 100,000 1Payne <strong>Foundation</strong>, Frank E. Payne and Seba B. 100,000 1PerkinElmer <strong>Foundation</strong> 100,000 1Piper Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>, Marion D. and JaneE., <strong>The</strong> 100,000 1Radio One, Inc. 100,000 1Retirement Research <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 100,000 2Rockwell Automation Trust Fund 100,000 1FUNDERDOLLARAMOUNTNUMBEROF GRANTSRockwell Collins 100,000 1Roth Staffing Companies, Inc. 100,000 1Scaife Family <strong>Foundation</strong> 100,000 1Serano Inc. 100,000 1Shizouka Bank 100,000 1Sonoco <strong>Foundation</strong> 100,000 1South Financial Group <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 100,000 1Steelcase <strong>Foundation</strong> 100,000 2SunTrust MidAtlantic Charitable Trust 100,000 1TCF <strong>Foundation</strong> 100,000 1TFC/Jewel Osco 100,000 1“<strong>The</strong> Producers” 100,000 1Trident Capital 100,000 2United Way of Central Maryland 100,000 1Unocal Corporation Contributions Program 100,000 2Vinik Family <strong>Foundation</strong> 100,000 1Waitt Family <strong>Foundation</strong> 100,000 1Weil, Gotshal & Manges <strong>Foundation</strong> 100,000 1Weill Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 100,000 1Yellow Corporate <strong>Foundation</strong> 100,000 1BMG Music 95,000 1Flint Ink <strong>Foundation</strong> 95,000 1St. Paul Companies, Inc. Corporate GivingProgram, <strong>The</strong> 91,500 1HON INDUSTRIES Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong> 91,150 1Maytag Corporation <strong>Foundation</strong> 87,681 3Amica Companies <strong>Foundation</strong> 85,250 1Denver <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 85,000 2Triangle Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 84,836 <strong>11</strong>Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of SarasotaCounty, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 84,214 2Read-Rite 84,077 1Stamps Family Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 83,154 1California Dental Association <strong>Foundation</strong> 81,290 3Safeco Corporation Contributions Program 80,500 1Electric Boat Employees CommunityService Association 80,000 4van Ameringen <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 80,000 4Waddell & Reed 80,000 1VNU, Inc. 79,777 1Dallas <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 78,300 4Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of GreaterChattanooga, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 77,642 1Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Western NorthCarolina, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 77,190 2Grainger, Inc. Corporate Giving Program,W. W. 76,500 3Dircks <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Robert and Joan 76,000 3CIT Group <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 75,000 2Clark Retail Enterprises 75,000 2Crossroads Fund 75,000 1Hotchkiss <strong>Foundation</strong>, W. R. 75,000 1Kornfeld <strong>Foundation</strong>, Emily Davie andJoseph S. 75,000 5Paley <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., William S. 75,000 3Schwab Fund for Charitable Giving 75,000 1State Street <strong>Foundation</strong> 75,000 1Summit <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 75,000 1Whole Foods Market, Inc. CorporateGiving Program 75,000 1ADC <strong>Foundation</strong> 74,500 2Northeast Utilities <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 74,400 3RBC Dain Rauscher <strong>Foundation</strong> 72,000 2Lubrizol <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 71,335 2Rudin Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., May andSamuel 71,044 3MONY <strong>Foundation</strong> 70,519 3127


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEFUNDERDOLLARAMOUNTNUMBEROF GRANTSBauer, Inc. Corporate Giving Program, Eddie 70,000 1Kauffman <strong>Foundation</strong>, Ewing Marion 70,000 2Third Wave <strong>Foundation</strong> 69,500 2Gruner & Jahr 67,000 1Bemis Company <strong>Foundation</strong> 65,000 1Prospect Hill <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 64,980 3Phelps Dodge <strong>Foundation</strong> 64,784 1Lee Enterprises, Incorporated Corporate GivingProgram 64,500 6Albany Molecular Research, Inc. 60,000 1Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for Southern Arizona 60,000 1Flora Family <strong>Foundation</strong> 60,000 3Lyndhurst <strong>Foundation</strong> 60,000 1Rohatyn <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Felix and Elizabeth,<strong>The</strong> 60,000 2Rosenberg <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Sunny and Abe 60,000 1Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Lowcountry, Inc. 58,130 1Union Planters Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 57,999 7Auchincloss <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Lily 55,000 3drugstore.com <strong>Foundation</strong> 55,000 1Fairfield County Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 55,000 1Mercantile Bankshares Corp. 55,000 1Ronald McDonald House Charities ofNortheastern Ohio, Inc. 55,000 1Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Greater Greensboro,Inc. 54,182 1Polk Bros. <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 52,500 2Austin Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the CapitalArea, Inc. 52,000 1Hartford <strong>Foundation</strong> for Public Giving 51,000 1Healthcare <strong>Foundation</strong> of New Jersey, <strong>The</strong> 51,000 2Metal Industries <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 51,000 3Weyerhaeuser Company <strong>Foundation</strong> 51,000 1Agere Systems 50,000 1Airgas, Inc. 50,000 1AK Steel <strong>Foundation</strong> 50,000 1American Trading and Production CorporationContributions Program 50,000 2Arison Family <strong>Foundation</strong> USA, Inc., Ted 50,000 1Burlington Resources <strong>Foundation</strong> 50,000 1Campbell Soup Company ContributionsProgram 50,000 1Cantwell Private <strong>Foundation</strong>, Louis Yager 50,000 3CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield 50,000 1Cassava Enterprises 50,000 1Cemala <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 50,000 1Charter Municipal Mortgage AcceptanceCompany 50,000 1Chef America, Inc. 50,000 1City National Corporation ContributionsProgram 50,000 1Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for Greater New Haven,<strong>The</strong> 50,000 1Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Ottawa 50,000 1Consumers Energy Company ContributionsProgram 50,000 1Credence 50,000 1CVS Corporation Contributions Program 50,000 1Dana <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 50,000 1Donnelley & Sons Company ContributionsProgram, R. R. 50,000 1Excel Communications 50,000 1Federal Home Loan Bank of Atlanta 50,000 1First Kentucky National Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>,Inc. 50,000 1Foster Wheeler Inc. Corporate Giving Program 50,000 1Giant Eagle <strong>Foundation</strong> 50,000 1FUNDERDOLLARAMOUNTNUMBEROF GRANTSGoldman <strong>Foundation</strong>, Herman 50,000 1IonIdea 50,000 2JM <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 50,000 2Joyce <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 50,000 1Kaufman <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Henry & Elaine 50,000 1Kikkoman Foods <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 50,000 1Koch <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 50,000 1Krahm Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., DorothyH. 50,000 3Lozier <strong>Foundation</strong> 50,000 1LTV <strong>Foundation</strong> Charitable and EducationalTrust, <strong>The</strong> 50,000 1Macy, Jr. <strong>Foundation</strong>, Josiah 50,000 2Mercer <strong>Foundation</strong>, Johnny, <strong>The</strong> 50,000 1Merck Fund, John, <strong>The</strong> 50,000 1Meyer Family <strong>Foundation</strong> 50,000 2Nash Finch <strong>Foundation</strong> 50,000 1Noyes, Jr. Memorial <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.,Nicholas H. 50,000 1Party City Corporation 50,000 2Pearle Vision <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 50,000 1Piedmont Natural Gas Company, Inc.Corporate Giving Program 50,000 1Piper Charitable Trust, Virginia G. 50,000 1Plum Creek <strong>Foundation</strong> 50,000 1Rich Products Corporation ContributionsProgram 50,000 1Rose Community <strong>Foundation</strong> and Affiliates 50,000 1Rosemore 50,000 1Schumann Fund for New Jersey, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 50,000 1Sedgwick Publishing 50,000 1Sharp <strong>Foundation</strong>, Peter Jay, <strong>The</strong> 50,000 1ShopKo Stores, Inc. Corporate GivingProgram 50,000 1Sports Offshore 50,000 1Steele <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 50,000 1Straus <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Aaron Straus &Lillie, <strong>The</strong> 50,000 1Stuart <strong>Foundation</strong> 50,000 1Sylvan Learning <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 50,000 1Tull Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 50,000 1Union Bank of California <strong>Foundation</strong> 50,000 1United States-Japan <strong>Foundation</strong> 50,000 1van Beuren Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 50,000 2Webster Bank Corporate Giving Program 50,000 1Zarrow Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Maxine andJack, <strong>The</strong> 50,000 2Metris Companies <strong>Foundation</strong> 46,807 2Haas Fund, Walter and Elise 46,000 1Tulsa Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 45,805 1Bosch <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 45,000 1Calder <strong>Foundation</strong>, Louis, <strong>The</strong> 45,000 2Massachusetts Intitute of Technology Officeof the Arts 45,000 1O’Neill <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., William J. andDorothy K., <strong>The</strong> 45,000 2Elk County Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 43,435 1Kress <strong>Foundation</strong>, Samuel H. 42,500 6Welch Foods Inc. Corporate Giving Program 41,000 2Hibernia Corporation ContributionsProgram 40,777 1Benwood <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 40,000 4Blaustein <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Morton K. andJane, <strong>The</strong> 40,000 2Butler Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Patrick and Aimee 40,000 2CNT 40,000 1Eaton Charitable Fund, <strong>The</strong> 40,000 <strong>11</strong>28


LIST OF FUNDERS BY TOTAL CONTRIBUTIONSFUNDERDOLLARAMOUNTNUMBEROF GRANTSOndeo Nalco Company Contributions Program 40,000 1Scherman <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 40,000 4United Chinese Association of Greater New York 40,000 1Tauck <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 39,999 3Arvato & Bertelmann, Inc. 38,000 1RGK <strong>Foundation</strong> 38,000 1Zale <strong>Foundation</strong>, M. B. and Edna 37,500 1People’s Bank Corporate Giving Program 37,266 1Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Monroe County 36,379 1Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Broward 36,000 1Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Santa Cruz County,<strong>The</strong> 36,000 1Orange County Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 36,000 2McCune Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong> 35,500 2Allfirst <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 35,000 2BB&T Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong> 35,000 2Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Central Illinois 35,000 2Eckerd Corporation <strong>Foundation</strong> 35,000 1Finish Line Youth <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 35,000 1Hoblitzelle <strong>Foundation</strong> 35,000 2Jerome <strong>Foundation</strong> 35,000 2Lowenstein <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Leon 35,000 1Norton Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Peter 35,000 2Stratford <strong>Foundation</strong> 35,000 2United Way of Greater New Haven 35,000 2Wiegand <strong>Foundation</strong>, E. L. 35,000 2Pasadena Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 34,515 4Axe-Houghton <strong>Foundation</strong> 34,000 1DENSO International America, Inc. CorporateGiving Program 34,000 2Oregon Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 33,751 1Suncor Energy <strong>Foundation</strong> 33,734 2Lutheran Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 33,501 1Resnick Family <strong>Foundation</strong> 33,058 2Gartner, Inc. 32,500 2Harrisburg <strong>Foundation</strong>, Greater, <strong>The</strong> 32,000 1Latham & Watkins 32,000 1Lincoln Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 31,700 2Aladdin Systems, Inc. 31,335 1Vermont Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 31,200 1Bechtel, Jr. <strong>Foundation</strong>, S. D. 31,000 3Central Alabama Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 31,000 1Arizona Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 30,000 1BMW Manufacturing Corporation 30,000 1Gerber <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 30,000 1Greenwall <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 30,000 6Nordson Corporation <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 30,000 1Pryne <strong>Foundation</strong> 30,000 3Roby <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 30,000 1Allyn <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 29,000 1Dermalogica <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 28,357 1Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for Palm Beach andMartin Counties, Inc. 28,127 2Noyes <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Jessie Smith 27,500 2Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of South Alabama 27,028 1Fry <strong>Foundation</strong>, Lloyd A. 26,500 3Subaru of America <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 26,085 1Target Stores 26,079 3Reed <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 26,000 1Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Westmoreland 25,907 13Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of the Eastern Shore,Inc. 25,750 1Lane Family <strong>Foundation</strong> 25,750 1Chicago Community Trust and Affiliates, <strong>The</strong> 25,625 1Saint Paul <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 25,375 2Abbott Family <strong>Foundation</strong> 25,000 1FUNDERDOLLARAMOUNTNUMBEROF GRANTSAirborne Express Corporate GivingProgram 25,000 1Amerivest Partners 25,000 1BEA <strong>Foundation</strong> 25,000 1Benedum <strong>Foundation</strong>, ClaudeWorthington 25,000 1Bovaird <strong>Foundation</strong>, Mervin, <strong>The</strong> 25,000 1Branan <strong>Foundation</strong>, Mary Allen Lindsey 25,000 1Bush <strong>Foundation</strong> 25,000 1California Association of Realtors 25,000 1Callaway <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 25,000 1CHS <strong>Foundation</strong> 25,000 1Eastman Kodak Charitable Trust 25,000 1Ebix.com 25,000 1Edison International Corporate GivingProgram 25,000 1Educational Testing Services 25,000 1English-Bonter-Mitchell <strong>Foundation</strong> 25,000 1Fieldstone <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 25,000 1First Southwest Company 25,000 1France-Merrick <strong>Foundation</strong> 25,000 1Fremont Area Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 25,000 1Georgia Power <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 25,000 1Grand Marnier <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 25,000 1Green Mountain Power Corporation 25,000 1Gregory <strong>Foundation</strong>, Alexis 25,000 1Guttman <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Stella andCharles 25,000 1Hill/Hill and Knowlton <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.,John W., <strong>The</strong> 25,000 1Indianapolis <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 25,000 1Jennings <strong>Foundation</strong>, Mary Hillman, <strong>The</strong> 25,000 1Kirby <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., F. M. 25,000 1Kirsch <strong>Foundation</strong>, Irving and Elaine, <strong>The</strong> 25,000 1Kobo Products 25,000 1Lord Baltimore Capital Corporation 25,000 1Mason Fund, Carlos and Marguerite, <strong>The</strong> 25,000 1Mitsubishi Chemical America, Inc.Corporate Giving Program 25,000 1Mosaic Fund, <strong>The</strong> 25,000 1Mulford <strong>Foundation</strong>, Vincent 25,000 1National Penn Bank 25,000 1NCC Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong> 25,000 1New York Times Company <strong>Foundation</strong>,Inc., <strong>The</strong> 25,000 1Norfolk <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 25,000 2NYSEG <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 25,000 1Ohio Casualty <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 25,000 1OPNET Technologies, Inc. 25,000 1Oxford <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 25,000 1Plum <strong>Foundation</strong> 25,000 1Price <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Louis and Harold,<strong>The</strong> 25,000 1Prince Charitable Trusts 25,000 2Public Strategies, Inc. 25,000 1Rite Aid Corporation ContributionsProgram 25,000 1Rite Aid, New York City 25,000 1S & G <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 25,000 1Society of the Friendly Sons of Saint Patrickin the City of New York, <strong>The</strong> 25,000 1Sports Authority 25,000 1Summit Fund of Washington, <strong>The</strong> 25,000 1SUPERVALU <strong>Foundation</strong> 25,000 1Tinker <strong>Foundation</strong> Inc., <strong>The</strong> 25,000 1Tully Family <strong>Foundation</strong> 25,000 1Walgreen Co. Contributions Program 25,000 <strong>11</strong>29


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEFUNDERDOLLARAMOUNTNUMBEROF GRANTSWeinberg Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, William and Irene 25,000 1Westlake <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 25,000 1Wolverine <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 25,000 1Young <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., George & Fay 25,000 1PEMCO <strong>Foundation</strong> 24,880 1Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Gaston County, Inc. 23,699 1Grand Rapids Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 22,485 1Advanced Energy Industries 22,000 1D-B Trust, <strong>The</strong> 22,000 1Houston Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Greater 22,000 1Friends of Barnabas <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 21,077 2Comey-Fitzgerald Family <strong>Foundation</strong> 21,000 1Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for Monterey County 20,100 3AEGON Transamerica <strong>Foundation</strong> 20,000 1American Savings Bank 20,000 2Anderson <strong>Foundation</strong>, John W. 20,000 1Baker Street <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 20,000 2Baker Trust, Clayton 20,000 1C.E. and S. <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 20,000 1Clark Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 20,000 1Cypress <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 20,000 1Dedalus <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 20,000 1Deitchman Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, John V., <strong>The</strong> 20,000 1Emerson Charitable Trust 20,000 1Gillmore Fund, Frederick H., <strong>The</strong> 20,000 1Goldhammer Family <strong>Foundation</strong> 20,000 1Gould <strong>Foundation</strong> for Children, Edwin 20,000 2Hess <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 20,000 1Home Shopping Network 20,000 1IPSCO 20,000 1JL <strong>Foundation</strong> 20,000 2Lakeside <strong>Foundation</strong> 20,000 2LEF <strong>Foundation</strong> 20,000 2Mazda <strong>Foundation</strong> (USA), Inc., <strong>The</strong> 20,000 1Minnesota Mutual <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 20,000 1Mnuchin <strong>Foundation</strong>, Steven T., <strong>The</strong> 20,000 1Nymox Pharmaceutical Corporation 20,000 1Olson Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Delmar and AudriaM., <strong>The</strong> 20,000 1Olympic Optical 20,000 1Ryan <strong>Foundation</strong>, Richard Nelson 20,000 1Seay Memorial Trust, George and Effie 20,000 1Severns Family <strong>Foundation</strong> 20,000 2Spectrian 20,000 2Stanton Irrevocable Charitable Trust, Joan 20,000 1Sternberg Charitable Trust 20,000 1Tapper Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong> 20,000 2Tucker <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Marcia Brady 20,000 1Uni-Marts, Inc. 20,000 1Unitarian Universalist Service Committee 20,000 1Zisman Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>, Simon & Sylvia,<strong>The</strong> 20,000 1Berrien Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 19,680 <strong>11</strong>Great Lakes Technologies Group 19,040 3Communities <strong>Foundation</strong> of Texas, Inc. 19,000 1Quaker Oats <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 19,000 1Guggenheim <strong>Foundation</strong>, Harry Frank, <strong>The</strong> 18,004 1Bider Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Lynn and Les 18,000 1Zalaznick <strong>Foundation</strong>, Barbara M. 18,000 1Toro <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 17,920 1Mitchell, Silberberg & Knupp <strong>Foundation</strong> 17,630 1Kalamazoo Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 17,500 1Day <strong>Foundation</strong>, Willametta K. 17,340 4Fredericks Family <strong>Foundation</strong> 17,300 1Leeway <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 17,250 1FUNDERDOLLARAMOUNTNUMBEROF GRANTSBookspan 17,000 1Yamaha Corporation of America CorporateGiving Program 16,800 1Applebaum Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Eugene, <strong>The</strong> 16,000 3American Savings <strong>Foundation</strong> 15,000 2Carey <strong>Foundation</strong>, W. P. 15,000 1Central Maine Power CompanyContributions Program 15,000 1Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of theElmira-Corning Area, <strong>The</strong> 15,000 1Corwin Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>, Jack B., <strong>The</strong> 15,000 2Dinnerstein <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Elliot 15,000 2Fels Fund, Samuel S. 15,000 1Hansen Family <strong>Foundation</strong> 15,000 1Maddox <strong>Foundation</strong>, J. F 15,000 2Massachusetts Association of RealtorsCharitable and Educational <strong>Foundation</strong> 15,000 1Muller <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Robert & Elizabeth,<strong>The</strong> 15,000 2Roche <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 15,000 1Samuels <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Fan Fox andLeslie R., <strong>The</strong> 15,000 1Sasco <strong>Foundation</strong> 15,000 1Toronto Blue Jays Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong> 15,000 1Winfield <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 15,000 2McNeely <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 14,583 8CH <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 14,406 1East Tennessee <strong>Foundation</strong> 14,150 2JM Family Enterprises, Inc. Corporate GivingProgram 14,000 1Spencer <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 13,500 1Oneida Limited 13,257 1Church in Radburn <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 13,250 1Alfa <strong>Foundation</strong> 13,000 1Compton <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 13,000 1Peoples Energy Corporation ContributionsProgram 13,000 1PLACE Fund 12,500 1Wolfe Associates, Inc. 12,096 1Hatfield Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 12,076 1Capital Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 12,000 1Stark <strong>Foundation</strong>, Nelda C. and H. J.Lutcher 12,000 1Kauffman <strong>Foundation</strong>, Muriel McBrien <strong>11</strong>,000 2Krumholz <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Elroy and Terry <strong>11</strong>,000 2Serimus <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>11</strong>,000 1Wallerstein Institute, Johanette <strong>11</strong>,000 2Wichita Falls Area Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 10,715 1Susman and Asher <strong>Foundation</strong> 10,500 1Williamsport-Lycoming <strong>Foundation</strong> 10,500 1Abeles <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Joseph & Sophia 10,000 2Abell-Hanger <strong>Foundation</strong> 10,000 1American Fiber Systems 10,000 1American <strong>Foundation</strong> Corporation, <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Aron Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., J. 10,000 1Bank Rhode Island 10,000 1Barclay Investments 10,000 1Baroco <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., J. H. 10,000 1Belfer <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Arthur andRochelle, <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Bell Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Stuart L. & Susan S. 10,000 1Bennett <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Alan R., <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Berman <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Bennett M. &Gertrude 10,000 1Bernstein Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 10,000 1Bigelow <strong>Foundation</strong>, F. R. 10,000 1Blowitz-Ridgeway <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 10,000 <strong>11</strong>30


LIST OF FUNDERS BY TOTAL CONTRIBUTIONSFUNDERDOLLARAMOUNTNUMBEROF GRANTSBuilder’s General Supply Company 10,000 1Cafritz <strong>Foundation</strong>, Morris and Gwendolyn, <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1California Exotic Novelties 10,000 1Castle <strong>Foundation</strong>, Samuel N. and Mary 10,000 1Chapman Family Fund 10,000 1ChoiceOne 10,000 1Clowes Fund, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Cohen Opportunity Fund 10,000 1Component Assembly Systems 10,000 1Constantin <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Dharma-Grace <strong>Foundation</strong> 10,000 1Diamond Fund, Irene 10,000 2Dodge Jones <strong>Foundation</strong> 10,000 2Dragicevich Charitable Remainder Trust,Matthew 10,000 2Duncan Oil Company 10,000 1DuPage Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Eades <strong>Foundation</strong> 10,000 1Endowment Fund of the Jewish Federation ofGreater New Haven 10,000 1Fios 10,000 2Fort Wayne Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 10,000 1<strong>Foundation</strong> for Appalachian Ohio, <strong>The</strong> 10,000 3Frist <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Gale <strong>Foundation</strong>, Bulova, <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Ginsberg <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Albert and Pearl 10,000 2Global Resource 10,000 1Golding <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Faith, <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Graustein Memorial Fund, William Caspar 10,000 1Gray <strong>Foundation</strong>, Garland 10,000 1Gund <strong>Foundation</strong>, Agnes, <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Hall <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Andrew J. and ChristineC., <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Hamilton <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Thomas H. 10,000 1Handspring <strong>Foundation</strong> 10,000 1Harrah’s Ak-Chin Casino Resort 10,000 1Hassanein <strong>Foundation</strong>, Salah M., <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Hazen <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Edward W., <strong>The</strong> 10,000 2Health <strong>Foundation</strong> of South Florida 10,000 1Healthcare <strong>Foundation</strong> for Orange County, <strong>The</strong> 10,000 2Hennessy <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 10,000 1Herbalife Family <strong>Foundation</strong> 10,000 1Huffy <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Ikonix Group 10,000 1InfoSpace <strong>Foundation</strong> 10,000 1Jewish Federation of Hartford 10,000 1Jordan <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Kanawha Valley <strong>Foundation</strong>, Greater, <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Kellogg <strong>Foundation</strong>, Peter & Cynthia K. 10,000 1Keren Keshet - <strong>The</strong> Rainbow <strong>Foundation</strong> 10,000 1Kimco Realty Company 10,000 1Kindred Healthcare 10,000 1Knight <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Faith & James 10,000 1Kravis <strong>Foundation</strong>, Robert Kravis and Kimberly,<strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Laurie <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Blanche & Irving 10,000 1Lifebridge <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 10,000 2Loews <strong>Foundation</strong> 10,000 1Lost Tree Village Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Marx <strong>Foundation</strong>, William, <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Maslin <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Lucille and Paul, <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1McConnell <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Merck Family Fund 10,000 1Milano <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 10,000 1Mitsubishi Heavy Industries America, Inc. 10,000 1Mutual Benefit Credit Union 10,000 1FUNDERDOLLARAMOUNTNUMBEROF GRANTSNagase America Corporation 10,000 1Nokomis <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Oakleaf <strong>Foundation</strong> 10,000 1Oberkotter <strong>Foundation</strong> 10,000 1Phoenixville Community Health <strong>Foundation</strong> 10,000 1Provident Bank 10,000 1Rich <strong>Foundation</strong>, Shelly and Donald 10,000 1Robins <strong>Foundation</strong> 10,000 1Robinson <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Jim and Linda,<strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Russell Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Savings Bank of Manchester <strong>Foundation</strong>,Inc. 10,000 1Schiff <strong>Foundation</strong>, Robert C. & Adele R. 10,000 1Schmidt Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong>odore &Elizabeth 10,000 1Seabury <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Shulevitz <strong>Foundation</strong>, Norman 10,000 1Siragusa <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Snow Memorial Trust, John Ben 10,000 1Spahr <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Speckhard-Knight Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong> 10,000 1Spewack Article 5 Trust, Bella 10,000 1Sporran, Inc. 10,000 1Sterling <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Thompson Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Lucille S. 10,000 1Tisch <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 10,000 1TJX <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Turbo Sportswear 10,000 1UniHealth <strong>Foundation</strong> 10,000 1Vance <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., H. A. 10,000 1Wachovia Corporation ContributionsProgram 10,000 1WD-40 Company 10,000 1West Central Initiative 10,000 1Whitford Company, Jaques 10,000 1Wilson Fund, Matilda R. 10,000 1Winston <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Norman andRosita, <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Winston-Salem <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Woodward Fund-Atlanta, David, Helen,and Marian, <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Worcester Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.,Greater 10,000 1Yeonas <strong>Foundation</strong>, Stephen G. and<strong>The</strong>lma S., <strong>The</strong> 10,000 2Yum! Brands <strong>Foundation</strong> 10,000 1Zellerbach Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 10,000 1Zimmerman <strong>Foundation</strong>, Mary and GeorgeHerbert 10,000 1Liberty Bank <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 8,945 1Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Greater LorainCounty, <strong>The</strong> 8,220 1Gaiser Unitrust, Mary Jewett 8,169 1Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Grand Forks,East Grand Forks and Region 8,000 1Marvin <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 8,000 1U.S. Bancorp <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 7,740 3Community <strong>Foundation</strong> Serving Riversideand San Bernardino Counties, <strong>The</strong> 7,677 1Bohemian <strong>Foundation</strong> 7,5<strong>11</strong> 1Bank of the Northwest 7,500 1Maine Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 7,000 1Richland County <strong>Foundation</strong> 6,500 2Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Collier County 6,333 2Galway Bay <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 6,000 2Gimprich Family <strong>Foundation</strong> 6,000 <strong>11</strong>31


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEFUNDERDOLLARAMOUNTNUMBEROF GRANTSKennecott Utah Copper Visitors <strong>Center</strong>Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong> 5,686 1Andres Charitable Trust, Frank G. 5,584 1KT Family <strong>Foundation</strong> 5,500 1Fein <strong>Foundation</strong> 5,400 1Oshkosh Area Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 5,320 1Budco 5,250 1Berks County Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 5,100 1Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Northern Illinois 5,075 2AKC Fund, Inc. 5,000 1Allegheny <strong>Foundation</strong> 5,000 1Allyn <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 5,000 1American Arab Chamber of Commerce 5,000 1Appel Family <strong>Foundation</strong> 5,000 1Archbold Charitable Trust, Adrian & Jessie 5,000 1Association of Specialists in Cleaning andRestoration <strong>Foundation</strong> 5,000 1Barbash Family Fund, Inc. 5,000 1Barrios Trust, <strong>The</strong> 5,000 1Bitensky <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Samson & Halina 5,000 1Blum <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Edith C. 5,000 1Bradley <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Lynde and Harry, <strong>The</strong> 5,000 1Cammarata Family <strong>Foundation</strong> 5,000 1Central Carolina Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 5,000 1Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of WesternMassachusetts 5,000 1Cowles Charitable Trust, <strong>The</strong> 5,000 1Deaconess Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 5,000 1Degenstein <strong>Foundation</strong>, 1994 Charles B., <strong>The</strong> 5,000 1DPC Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 5,000 1Dreyfus <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Camille and Henry,<strong>The</strong> 5,000 2East Stroudsburg Savings Association<strong>Foundation</strong> 5,000 1Elmwood <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 5,000 1Engineering Information <strong>Foundation</strong> 5,000 1Feil Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 5,000 1Fifth Third <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 5,000 1FISA <strong>Foundation</strong> 5,000 1Fisher Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>, Jerome & AnneC. 5,000 1Frank <strong>Foundation</strong>, Lawrence L. 5,000 1Gamble <strong>Foundation</strong>, Anna C. 5,000 1Goldseker <strong>Foundation</strong> of Maryland, Inc., Morris 5,000 1Golkin Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Perry & Donna 5,000 1Grotto <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 5,000 1Hanlon <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 5,000 1Henry <strong>Foundation</strong>, Paul B. 5,000 1Heritage Fund of Bartholomew County, Inc. 5,000 1Herrick <strong>Foundation</strong> 5,000 1Isermann Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 5,000 1Jacobus Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Richard G. 5,000 1Jamieson <strong>Foundation</strong> 5,000 1Jergens <strong>Foundation</strong>, Andrew, <strong>The</strong> 5,000 1Jones <strong>Foundation</strong>, Daisy Marquis 5,000 1Kandell Fund, <strong>The</strong> 5,000 1Kempner Fund, Inc., Harris and Eliza 5,000 1Krol Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Jan M. andEugenia, <strong>The</strong> 5,000 1Liberty Bank 5,000 1Lynch Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Gerard P., <strong>The</strong> 5,000 1Marcus <strong>Foundation</strong>, Grace R. and Allan D. 5,000 1Merrill <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Jane and Randy, <strong>The</strong> 5,000 1Mississippi Power <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 5,000 1MWVE Fund 5,000 1Newland Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 5,000 1FUNDERDOLLARAMOUNTNUMBEROF GRANTSNorthwest Minnesota <strong>Foundation</strong> (NWMF) 5,000 1Pantirer Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Larry andNancy, <strong>The</strong> 5,000 1Pharmacia Corporation ContributionsProgram 5,000 1Portland <strong>Foundation</strong> 5,000 1Reynolds <strong>Foundation</strong>, Donald W. 5,000 1Ritchie Memorial <strong>Foundation</strong>, Charles E.and Mabel M., <strong>The</strong> 5,000 1River Rock <strong>Foundation</strong> 5,000 1Robison <strong>Foundation</strong>, James E. 5,000 1Rural Development <strong>Foundation</strong> 5,000 1Schlanger Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 5,000 1Seaver Institute, <strong>The</strong> 5,000 1Stratfield Fund 5,000 1Tocker <strong>Foundation</strong> 5,000 1Van Leer U.S. <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 5,000 1Wanek-Vogel <strong>Foundation</strong>, Ltd., <strong>The</strong> 5,000 1Werblin <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., David A. & LeahRay 5,000 1Wouk <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Abe 5,000 1Wurzburg <strong>Foundation</strong>, Warren S.Wurzburg, Sr. and Marjorie O., <strong>The</strong> 5,000 1Yen Chuang <strong>Foundation</strong> 5,000 1New Yorker/Advance Magazines, <strong>The</strong> 4,876 1Pollak Fund, Lucile and Maurice 4,450 1Bansal <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 4,240 1Rawlings <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 4,200 1Sancoa <strong>Foundation</strong> 3,763 1Red Wing Shoe Company, Inc. 3,547 1Wyoming Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 3,500 1Greater Jackson <strong>Foundation</strong> 3,400 1Ann Arbor Area Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 3,000 1Anschutz <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 3,000 1Deakins Family Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong> 3,000 1Golden Artists Colors 3,000 1Kirkeby <strong>Foundation</strong> 3,000 1Management Consultants for the Arts 3,000 1McFeely-Rogers <strong>Foundation</strong> 3,000 2Pohanka Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, John J., <strong>The</strong> 3,000 1Tipton County <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 2,575 1Buuck Family <strong>Foundation</strong> 2,500 1Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for MuskegonCounty 2,500 2Gramercy Park <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., <strong>The</strong> 2,500 1Littauer <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Lucius N., <strong>The</strong> 2,500 1Southwest Minnesota <strong>Foundation</strong> 2,500 1Stranahan <strong>Foundation</strong> 2,500 1Brown and Charles Seelig Family<strong>Foundation</strong>, Robin, <strong>The</strong> 2,000 1Butler <strong>Foundation</strong>, Marilyn and Marshall 2,000 1Cavaliere <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 2,000 1FishAmerica <strong>Foundation</strong> 2,000 1Handtmann Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 2,000 1Lieb <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., David L. 2,000 1Loewenberg <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 2,000 1Lowenstein Family <strong>Foundation</strong> 2,000 1Wood Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 2,000 1Woodstock <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 2,000 1Schrager <strong>Foundation</strong>, Phillip and Terri 1,622 1Gordon Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 1,500 1Knott <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Marion I. and HenryJ., <strong>The</strong> 1,500 1Linehan Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 1,500 1Bunbury Company, <strong>The</strong> 1,300 2Arkansas Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 1,000 <strong>11</strong>32


LIST OF FUNDERS BY TOTAL CONTRIBUTIONSFUNDERDOLLARAMOUNTNUMBEROF GRANTSBarr <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,000 1Brown <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 1,000 1Colt <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., James J. 1,000 1Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Jackson Hole 1,000 1Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of the Ozarks 1,000 1Dachs <strong>Foundation</strong>, A. M. 1,000 1Findlay-Hancock County Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,000 1Frey <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,000 1Golden <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Arts, Sam and Adele 1,000 1Green River <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 1,000 1Hartmarx Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong> 1,000 1Hermes <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 1,000 1Junior League of Hartford 1,000 1Kayden <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 1,000 1Logan <strong>Foundation</strong>, E. J. 1,000 1Lubbock Area <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc. 1,000 1Moffitt <strong>Foundation</strong>, L. R. Moffitt & L. Q. 1,000 1Remala <strong>Foundation</strong>, Satya and Rao 1,000 1Riklis <strong>Foundation</strong>, Judith, <strong>The</strong> 1,000 1Robbins <strong>Foundation</strong>, J. H. 1,000 1Shaw Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Jerome & JoyceCutler, <strong>The</strong> 1,000 1FUNDERDOLLARAMOUNTNUMBEROF GRANTSSheffler <strong>Foundation</strong>, Dudley P. and BarbaraK., <strong>The</strong> 1,000 1Slifka <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Alan B. 1,000 1Spencer Charitable Fund 1,000 1Stephens Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>, D. R. andC. B. 1,000 1Stern <strong>Foundation</strong>, William A. 1,000 1Women’s <strong>Foundation</strong> of Colorado, <strong>The</strong> 1,000 1Aon <strong>Foundation</strong> 750 3Madison County Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 600 1Greenblatt <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Burton G. andAnne C. 500 1Molton Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong> 500 1Upton <strong>Foundation</strong>, Frederick S. 500 1Wolk Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., Elliot K. 500 1Tilley Family <strong>Foundation</strong> 400 1Bay Area Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 300 1von Liebig <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., William J., <strong>The</strong> 250 1Star Tribune <strong>Foundation</strong> 180 4Samek <strong>Foundation</strong>, Edward & Marthann,<strong>The</strong> 100 1Midland Area Community <strong>Foundation</strong> 90 <strong>11</strong>33


List of Grants by FunderA. C. Moore Arts & Craftsc/o Corp. Communications Dept.500 University CourtBlackwood, NJ 080121. Undesignated. $100,000.Abbott Family <strong>Foundation</strong>330 South Ocean Blvd., Ste. 5FPalm Beach, FL 334802. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY. $25,000.For general support.A.C.AbbottAbbottAbbott Laboratories FundDept. 379, Bldg. Apt. 6D100 Abbott Park Rd.Abbott Park, IL 60064-3500(847) 937-7075URL: http://abbott.com/citizenship/fund/fund.shtml3. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000, 2001.4. American Veterinary Medical <strong>Foundation</strong>,Schaumburg, IL. $10,000. To equip and financeemergency veterinarians caring for animalsaffected by the recent terrorist attacks, specificallythe training and equipping of veterinariansstationed at the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> treatingsearch and rescue dogs.5. AmeriCares <strong>Foundation</strong>, New Canaan, CT.$100,000, 2001.6. New York Community Trust & United Way ofNew York, New York, NY. $1,000,000.AbelesJoseph & Sophia Abeles <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.1055 Bedford Rd.Pleasantville, NY 10570-39077. New York Community Trust & United Way ofNew York, New York, NY. $5,000.8. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $5,000.Abell-Hanger <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 430Midland, TX 79702(432) 684-6655FAX: (432) 684-4474; E-mail:AHF@abell-hanger.org; URL: http://www.abell-hanger.org9. New York Community Trust & United Way ofNew York, New York, NY. $10,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.Academy <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Communications Dept.8949 Wilshire BoulevardBeverly Hills, CA 902<strong>11</strong>10. Various organizations. $1,000,000.AbellAcademyAccenturec/o Corp. Communications Dept.<strong>11</strong>951 Freedom DriveReston, VA 20190<strong>11</strong>. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.<strong>The</strong> ACE INA <strong>Foundation</strong>2 Liberty Pl.1601 Chestnut St., Ste. TL31Philadelphia, PA 19101(215) 640-100012. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.AccentureACEAchelis<strong>The</strong> Achelis <strong>Foundation</strong>767 3rd Ave., 4th Fl.New York, NY 10017(212) 644-0322FAX: (212) 759-6510; E-mail:main@achelis-bodman-fnds.org; URL: http://fdncenter.org/grantmaker/achelis-bodman/13. Bill of Rights Institute, DC. $15,000, 2001.For development and marketing of Citizenshipand Character instructional material tosupplement American government and historyclasses in U.S. high schools.14. Columbia University, New York, NY.$100,000, 2001. To the <strong>Center</strong> for Public HealthPreparedness for public health activities that willimprove the ability of medical institutions in NewYork City to respond to public health emergencies,especially bio-terrorist attacks.15. Save the Children Federation, New York, NY.$20,000, 2001. To support relief efforts forrefugees and other victims of the fighting inAfghanistan.ADCADC <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box <strong>11</strong>01Minneapolis, MN 55440-<strong>11</strong>01(952) 917-0<strong>11</strong>8FAX: (952) 917-0965; E-mail:veronica_theobald@adc.com; URL: http://www.adc.com/aboutadc/adcfoundation/16. New York Community Trust & United Way ofNew York, New York, NY. $50,000, 2001.17. Undesignated. $24,500.ADPADP Corporate Giving Program1 ADP Blvd.Roseland, NJ 0706818. New York Community Trust & United Way ofNew York, New York, NY. $750,000.AdvancedAdvanced Energy Industriesc/o Corp. Communications Dept.1625 Sharp Point DriveFort Collins, CO 80525-442319. American Red Cross, National, DC. $22,000.AdvancedAdvanced Micro Devices Charitable<strong>Foundation</strong>901 Thompson PlaceP.O. Box 3453, MS68Sunnyvale, CA 94086(408) 749-206320. American Red Cross, Central Chapter, Austin,TX. $850.21. American Red Cross, National, DC.$147,846.22. American Red Cross, National, DC. $12,442.23. American Red Cross, Palo Alto Chapter, PaloAlto, CA. $100.24. American Red Cross, San Francisco Chapter,San Francisco, CA. $25.25. American Red Cross, San Jose Chapter, SanJose, CA. $500.26. American Society for the Prevention ofCruelty to Animals, New York, NY. $325.27. Catholic Relief Services, Baltimore, MD.$1,100.28. Garden Pathways, Bakersfield, CA. $250.29. International Association of Fire Fighters, DC.$1,300.30. New York Community Trust & United Way ofNew York, New York, NY. $2,390.31. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $200.32. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $100.33. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $18,540.34. Salvation Army of Austin, Austin, TX. $200.35. Salvation Army of San Francisco, SanFrancisco, CA. $385.36. Salvation Army of San Francisco, SanFrancisco, CA. $385.37. Salvation Army of Santa Clara County, SanJose, CA. $100.38. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY. $250.39. United Way of Capital Area, Austin, TX.$6,000.40. United Way of Greater Rochester, Rochester,NY. $100.41. United Way, Silicon Valley, San Jose, CA.$725.42. Windows of Hope Family Relief Fund, NewYork, NY. $1,000.135


AdvancedSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE43. World Vision International, Federal Way, WA.$1,778.AdventistAdventist Community Services12501 Old Columbia PikeSilver Spring, MD 2090444. General Conference of Seventh-DayAdventists, Silver Spring, MD. $120,001. For 9/<strong>11</strong>disaster relief.AEGONAEGON Transamerica <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Tax Dept.4333 Edgewood Rd., N.E.Cedar Rapids, IA 52499(319) 398-885245. New York City Public Safety Memorial Fund,DC. $20,000.AetnaAetna <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.151 Farmington Ave., REIBHartford, CT 06156-3180(860) 273-6382FAX: (860) 273-4764; E-mail:aetnafoundation@aetna.com; URL: http://www.aetna.com/foundation46. America’s Second Harvest, Chicago, IL.$1,500.47. American Red Cross, Bethlehem Chapter,Bethlehem, PA. $28,232.48. American Red Cross, Dallas Area Chapter,Dallas, TX. $250.49. American Red Cross, Denver, Denver, CO.$500.50. American Red Cross, Farmington,Farmington, CT. $5,800.51. American Red Cross, Greater Los AngelesChapter, Los Angeles, CA. $650.52. American Red Cross, Harrisburg, Harrisburg,PA. $250.53. American Red Cross, Jacksonville,Jacksonville, FL. $250.54. American Red Cross, Middletown,Middletown, CT. $3,200.55. American Red Cross, Morristown,Morristown, NJ. $3,438.56. American Red Cross, Nassau CountyChapter, Mineola, NY. $500.57. American Red Cross, National, DC. $64,883.58. American Red Cross, New Canaan, NewCanaan, CT. $500.59. American Red Cross, Portland, ME, Portland,ME. $1,750.60. American Red Cross, Southeast PA Chapter,Philadelphia, PA. $1,125.61. American Red Cross, St. Paul Chapter, SaintPaul, MN. $1,750.62. American Red Cross, White Plains, WhitePlains, NY. $225.63. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $32,600.64. Greater New York Hospital <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewYork, NY. $5,350.65. International Association of Fire Fighters, DC.$250.66. Main Street Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Bristol,CT. $20,000.67. Mercy Corps International, Portland, OR.$250.68. New York City Police <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York,NY. $12,500.69. New York Community Trust & United Way ofNew York, New York, NY. $754,<strong>11</strong>5, 2001.70. New York Community Trust & United Way ofNew York, New York, NY. $250,000, 2002.71. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $1,250.72. New York Womens <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York,NY. $12,500.73. Salvation Army of Greater New York, NewYork, NY. $4,750.74. Salvation Army of Hartford, Hartford, CT.$1,750.75. Salvation Army of Houston, Houston, TX.$500.76. Salvation Army of Los Angeles, Los Angeles,CA. $250.77. Salvation Army, U.S.A. Eastern Territory,West Nyack, NY. $250.78. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY. $228,145.AgereAgere Systemsc/o Corp. Communications Dept.555 Union Blvd.Allentown, PA 1810979. New York Community Trust & United Way ofNew York, New York, NY. $50,000.AgilentAgilent Technologies <strong>Foundation</strong>5301 Stevens Creek Blvd.P.O. Box 58059, M.S. 54L-AWSanta Clara, CA 95052-8059(408) 553-7181E-mail: contributions@agilent.com; URL: http://www.agilent.com/philanthropy/foundation.html80. American Red Cross, National, DC.$210,568.81. New York Community Trust & United Way ofNew York, New York, NY. $89,849.AguaAgua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indiansc/o Communications Dept.600 E. Tahquitz Canyon WayPalm Springs, CA 9226282. Various organizations. $250,000. Fordonations to help families of firefighters, policeofficers and emergency response personnel whoperished in the Pentagon and WTC disasters.Air Products and Chemicals, Inc.Corporate Giving Programc/o Corp. Philanthropy7201 Hamilton Blvd.Allentown, PA 18195-1501(610) 481-8527FAX: (610) 481-6642; E-mail:gabrielmb@apci.com; URL: http://www.airproducts.com/social_responsibilities83. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.AirAirborneAirborne Express Corporate GivingProgramc/o Corp. Giving Comm. and Treas.P.O. Box 662Seattle, WA 98<strong>11</strong>1-0662(206) 285-460084. American Red Cross, National, DC. $25,000.AirgasAirgas, Inc.c/o Corp. Communications Dept.259 North Radnor - Chester RoadRadnor, PA 1908785. American Red Cross, National, DC. $50,000.AK Steel <strong>Foundation</strong>703 Curtis St.Middletown, OH 4504386. American Red Cross, National, DC. $50,000.AKAKCAKC Fund, Inc.67A E. 77th St.New York, NY 1002187. New York Community Trust & United Way ofNew York, New York, NY. $5,000. For <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th Fund to provide direct relief to victims andtheir families.AlabamaAlabama Power <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.600 N. 18th St.Birmingham, AL 35291-00<strong>11</strong>(205) 257-2508FAX: (205) 257-186088. New York Community Trust & United Way ofNew York, New York, NY. $25,000.89. Undesignated. $150,000.AladdinAladdin Systems, Inc.c/o Corp. Communications Dept.245 Westridge DriveWatsonville, CA 9507690. American Red Cross, National, DC. $31,335.To help aid victims of the attack on <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th.AlaviAlavi <strong>Foundation</strong>500 5th Ave., 39th Fl.New York, NY 10<strong>11</strong>0-0397(212) 944-8333FAX: (212) 921-0325; URL: http://www.alavifoundation.org91. American Red Cross, National, DC. $3,000.92. New York Community Trust & United Way ofNew York, New York, NY. $3,000.93. New York State World Trade <strong>Center</strong> ReliefFund, Albany, NY. $100,000.Albany Molecular Research, Inc.c/o Corp. Communications Dept.21 Corporate Circle, PO Box 15098Albany, NY 1220494. Various organizations. $60,000.Alcatel USA, Inc. Corporate GivingProgramc/o Corp. Contribs.1000 Coit Rd.Plano, TX 75075(972) 519-300095. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.AlbanyAlcatelAlcoaAlcoa <strong>Foundation</strong>Alcoa Corporate Ctr.201 Isabella St.Pittsburgh, PA 15212-5858(412) 553-2348E-mail: alcoa.foundation@alcoa.com; URL: http://www.alcoa.com/global/en/community/foundation.asp96. Alcoa <strong>Foundation</strong>, Pittsburgh, PA.$1,000,000. To match employee and retireecontributions to assist in relief and recoveryefforts in affected communities.97. American Red Cross, National, DC. $50,000,2001. For NYC disaster relief at the World Trade<strong>Center</strong>.98. American Red Cross, National, DC. $25,000,2001. For DC disaster relief at Pentagon.99. American Red Cross, National, DC. $10,000,2001.Alcoa Inc.201 Isabella StreetPittsburgh, PA 15212100. Alcoa <strong>Foundation</strong>, Pittsburgh, PA.$2,000,000.Alcoa136


Alden<strong>The</strong> George I. Alden Trust370 Main St.Worcester, MA 01608-1779(508) 798-8621FAX: (508) 791-6454; E-mail:trustees@aldentrust.org; Additional tel.: (508)798-8621, ext. 3303; URL: http://www.aldentrust.org101. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund post-attack relief efforts.Alfa <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box <strong>11</strong>189Montgomery, AL 36<strong>11</strong>1-0189(334) 613-4498102. American Red Cross, National, DC.$13,000. To assist victims of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thattacks.Allegheny <strong>Foundation</strong>301 Grant St., Ste. 3900Pittsburgh, PA 15219-6401(412) 392-2900URL: http://www.scaife.com/alleghen.html103. Undesignated. $5,000, 2002. For 9/<strong>11</strong>education project.AlfaAlleghenyAllen<strong>The</strong> Paul G. Allen Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>505 5th Ave., S., Ste. 900Seattle, WA 98104(206) 342-2030E-mail: info@pgafoundations.com; URL: http://www.pgafoundations.com104. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> Fund.Allfirst <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.<strong>11</strong>0 S. Paca St., M.C. 109-620Baltimore, MD 21201(410) 244-3949105. Baltimore Cares, Baltimore, MD. $10,000.106. Undesignated. $25,000.AllfirstAllianzAllianz Life Insurance Company of NorthAmerica Corporate Giving Programc/o Corp. Contribs.1750 Hennepin Ave.Minneapolis, MN 55403-2195107. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000, 2001.Allstate<strong>The</strong> Allstate <strong>Foundation</strong>2775 Sanders Rd., Ste. F3Northbrook, IL 60062-6127(847) 402-2794FAX: (847) 326-7517; URL: http://www.allstate.com/foundation108. National Fallen Firefighters <strong>Foundation</strong>,Emmitsburg, MD. $400,000, 2001.109. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY. $50,000,2001.Allyn <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 22Skaneateles, NY 13152<strong>11</strong>0. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $29,000,2001.<strong>The</strong> Allyn <strong>Foundation</strong>22<strong>11</strong> S. Dixie Ave., Ste. 302Dayton, OH 45409(937) 299-2295E-mail: csafdn@ix.netcom.com<strong>11</strong>1. American Red Cross, Dayton, OH. $5,000.For operating support.AllynAllynLIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERAltmanAltman <strong>Foundation</strong>521 5th Ave., 35th Fl.New York, NY 10175(212) 682-0970FAX: (212) 682-1648; URL: http://www.altmanfoundation.org<strong>11</strong>2. Big Brothers/Big Sisters of New York City,New York, NY. $50,000, 2001. To respond to theemotional needs of children and families affectedby <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.<strong>11</strong>3. Catholic Big Brothers of New York, NewYork, NY. $10,000. To help support Dwight’sLights, effort to enroll new volunteer mentors andreach out to children who lost parents on<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.<strong>11</strong>4. City Harvest, New York, NY. $25,000, 2001.For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th relief services support.<strong>11</strong>5. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $250,000, 2001.<strong>11</strong>6. New York Regional Association ofGrantmakers, New York, NY. $5,000. To supportwebsite upgrade and general mission of facilitatingcommunication within the New Yorkphilanthropic community, and help defray thecosts of an initial report on the philanthropicfunds developed following <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.AltriaAltria Group Inc.c/o Corporate Communications120 Park AveNew York, NY 10017<strong>11</strong>7. AIDS <strong>Foundation</strong> of Chicago, Chicago, IL.$25,000. To support HIV nutrition services.<strong>11</strong>8. Alliance of Resident <strong>The</strong>aters/New York(ART/NY), New York, NY. $100,000. To supporttheaters and art programs impacted by WTCdisaster.<strong>11</strong>9. America’s Second Harvest, Chicago, IL.$1,000,000. To secure the national network offood banks.120. American Red Cross in Greater New York,New York, NY. $100,000. To support generalemergency relief efforts.121. American Red Cross, Cabarrus CountyChapter, Concord, NC. $50,000.122. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000. To support general emergency reliefefforts.123. AmeriCares <strong>Foundation</strong>, New Canaan, CT.$30,000. To contribute to the Twin Towers Fund.124. Aon Memorial Education Fund, Chicago, IL.$75,000. To assist Aon employee victims of 9/<strong>11</strong>.125. Art in General, New York, NY. $25,000. Tooffset diminished revenues.126. Asian American Federation of New York,New York, NY. $150,000. To support recoveryefforts in Chinatown.127. Atlantic <strong>The</strong>ater Company, New York, NY.$30,000. To offset losses in revenue to secure2002 season and the academic year for theAtlantic <strong>The</strong>ater School.128. Bar of City of New York, City Bar Fund,New York, NY. $200,000. To provide legalservices and advocacy to victims.129. Bereavement <strong>Center</strong> of Westchester, <strong>The</strong>,Tuckahoe, NY. $25,000. To provide supportgroups and outreach.130. Big Brothers/Big Sisters of New York City,New York, NY. $50,000. For placement training ofmentors.131. Borough of Manhattan Community Collegeof the City University of New York, New York,NY. $195,000. To provide scholarships to studentswho lost their work-study employment and cannotcontinue to attend school without assistance.132. Brooklyn Academy of Music, Brooklyn, NY.$40,000. To offset diminished revenues.Altria133. Brooklyn Legal Services Corporation,Brooklyn, NY. $100,000. For legal assistance andoutreach.134. Children’s Aid Society, New York, NY.$100,000. For grief counseling.135. City Harvest, New York, NY. $250,000. Toprovide meals for rescue workers at Ground Zero.136. Community Works, New York, NY. $50,000.To support relief activities including staff training,and expanded after-school programming.137. Creative Time, New York, NY. $25,000. Tosupport public art initiatives.138. Food and Friends, DC. $75,000. To continuefood service to homebound ill.139. Food for Survival, Bronx, NY. $200,000. Forfood for victims and rescue workers.140. Foodcare, Brooklyn, NY. $5,000. To servenew clients accessing food pantry.141. Fords <strong>The</strong>ater, DC. $10,000. To offset lossesin revenues due to cancellation of tour groups.142. Gateway Community Services, Lansing, MI.$100,000, 2001. To help continue services tohomeless adolescents.143. Gay Mens Health Crisis (GMHC), NewYork, NY. $120,000. To support a congregatemeal program for people with AIDS.144. Gift of New York, New York, NY. $25,000.To provide tickets to entertainment venues tofamilies of victims.145. Gods Love We Deliver, New York, NY.$100,000. To cover additional expenses incurredas a direct result of 9/<strong>11</strong>.146. Greater Richmond Chapter of the AmericanRed Cross, Richmond, VA. $70,000.147. HealthCare Chaplaincy, New York, NY.$150,000. For researching the efficacy oflong-term psychological, emotional and spiritualcounseling for the victims of grief and trauma.148. Hispanic Committee of Virginia, FallsChurch, VA. $50,000. To provide employmentservices to workers displaced in the aftermath of9/<strong>11</strong>.149. Hispanic Federation of New York City, NewYork, NY. $100,000.150. Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen, New York, NY.$40,000. To assist meeting increased demand foremergency food, post 9/<strong>11</strong>.151. Inspiration Cafe, Chicago, IL. $20,000. Tooffset losses of revenues redirected to 9/<strong>11</strong>charities.152. International <strong>Center</strong> of Photography, NewYork, NY. $50,000. To support the Meyerwitzexhibit at the Venice Bienale.153. Legal Aid Society, New York, NY. $100,000.To hire a legal emergency relief team to assistvictims of the disaster with legal issues.154. Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, NewYork, NY. $120,000. Grant to support staffsalaries for two months as LMCC stabilizes isorganization’s infrastructure, searches for newoffice space (originally located in 5 World Trade<strong>Center</strong>) and rebuilds its existing programs.155. Mabou Mines Development <strong>Foundation</strong>,New York, NY. $25,000. To re-hire a touringmanager.156. MMC Victims Relief Fund, New York, NY.$125,000. To provide assistance to employees ofMarsh and McLennan.157. Momentum AIDS Project, New York, NY.$30,000. To support congregate meal programsfor people with AIDS.158. Mount Sinai Hospital and Medical <strong>Center</strong>,New York, NY. $17,000. To assist with costs ofservice of trauma experts working with victimsand rescue workers.137


AltriaSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE159. Museum of the City of New York, New York,NY. $50,000, 2001. To exhibit photographs of thedisaster by Joel Meyerowitz.160. National <strong>Center</strong> for Disability Services,Albertson, NY. $100,000. To provide jobplacement services for displaced disabled workers.161. National <strong>Center</strong> for Victims of Crime,Arlington, VA. $50,000. To grant support to theVictims House which has experienced asignificant increase in caller volume since theWTC attacks.162. National Domestic Violence Hotline, Austin,TX. $200,000. To support the national domesticviolence hotline.163. New Direction Services, Staten Island, NY.$6,000, 2001. To host community activities aimedat relieving racial and ethnic tensions after theattacks of 9/<strong>11</strong>.164. New Museum of Contemporary Art, NewYork, NY. $20,000. To reimburse for additionalsecurity costs and membership fees.165. New School University, New York, NY.$25,000. For benefit dinner to establish ascholarship fund and provide communityoutreach.166. New York Blood <strong>Center</strong>, New York, NY.$25,000. To assist with the additional costs ofincreased blood collection and processing.167. New York City Coalition Against Hunger,New York, NY. $75,000. To establish EmergencyFood Action <strong>Center</strong>s.168. New York City Gay and LesbianAnti-Violence Project, New York, NY. $35,000. Tohire an additional victim advocate/counselor toprovide assistance to primary and secondaryvictims of the attacks.169. New York University, New York, NY.$100,000. To provide long-term trauma andbereavement counseling and the creation anddistribution of educational materials for use byparents and teachers.170. North Shore Child and Family Guidance<strong>Center</strong>, Roslyn Heights, NY. $50,000. To supportgroups and community forums.171. Northern Westchester Shelter, Pleasantville,NY. $5,000. To offset loss of donations andvolunteers services to DV shelter.172. P.S. 122, New York, NY. $35,000. To assistin offsetting diminished revenues and supporttickets for relief workers.173. Project Angel Food, Los Angeles, CA.$100,000. To offset losses in revenue to enablecontinued provision of home delivered meals forpersons with HIV/AIDS.174. Project Open Hand, San Francisco, CA.$50,000, 2001. To help avoid reductions in foodand nutrition for people living with HIV/AIDSafter the increased need of 9/<strong>11</strong>.175. Safe Horizon, New York, NY. $1,500,000. Toopen a transitional shelter for victims of domesticviolence.176. Safe Horizon, New York, NY. $250,000. Tohire victims advocates.177. Saint Johns Bread and Life Program,Brooklyn, NY. $10,000, 2001. To help purchaseadditional food.178. Sanctuary for Families, New York, NY.$100,000. For financial assistance and outreach.179. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$1,000,000. For scholarships for children andspouses of 9/<strong>11</strong> victims.180. Services Now for Adult Persons (SNAP),New York, NY. $50,000. For transportation ofseniors to medical and social serviceappointments.181. Shelter House, Falls Church, VA. $30,000.To provide domestic violence services.182. Sidran Traumatic Stress <strong>Foundation</strong>,Baltimore, MD. $50,000. To provide education ongrief issues to school personnel.183. Silver Shield <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$100,000. To provide scholarships to children ofuniformed officers killed in the line of duty.184. Soho Repertory <strong>The</strong>ater, New York, NY.$20,000. To offset diminished revenues fromrentals during closure.185. Various organizations. $1,178,666, 2001. Tosupport various organizations.186. West Hawaii AIDS <strong>Foundation</strong>, KailuaKona, HI. $15,000. To assist in meeting increaseddemand for emergency food, post 9/<strong>11</strong>.187. Yorkville Common Pantry, New York, NY.$20,000. To assist in meeting increased demandfor emergency food, post 9/<strong>11</strong>.188. 651 Kings Majestic Corporation, Brooklyn,NY. $30,000. To offset diminished revenues andavoid indefinite postponement 2002 season.AmbacAmbac Financial Group, Inc. CorporateGiving Programc/o Corp. Contribs.1 State Street Plz.New York, NY 10004189. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.AmeradaAmerada Hess Corporation ContributionsProgram<strong>11</strong>85 Ave. of the AmericasNew York, NY 10036(212) 997-8500FAX: (212) 536-8318190. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$5,000,000, 2001. To benefit the families of NewYork firefighters, police officers, and other rescueworkers who died or were injured as a result of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks.America’sAmerica’s Collectible Networkc/o Corp. Communications Dept.10001 Kingston PikeKnoxville, TN 37922191. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $215,024.AmericanArab American Chamber of Commercec/o Communications Dept.4917 Schaefer, Suite 215Dearborn, MI 48126192. Arab American Chamber of Commerce,Dearborn, MI. $5,000. To support victims of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th in Washington and New York.American<strong>The</strong> American Electric Power SystemEducational Trust Fundc/o American Electric Power Co., Inc., Tax Dept.P.O. Box 16428Columbus, OH 43216-0428193. American Red Cross, National, DC.$600,000.AmericanAmerican Express <strong>Foundation</strong>World Financial Ctr.200 Vesey St., 48th Fl.New York, NY 10285-4804(212) 640-5661Contact for organizations located outside the U.S.:Cornelia W. Higginson, V.P.; URL: http://www.americanexpress.com/corp/philanthropy/194. American Express <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York,NY. $4,100,000.American Fiber Systemsc/o Corp. Communications Dept.Meridian Centre, Suite 250Rochester, NY 14618195. American Red Cross, National, DC.$10,000.AmericanAmerican<strong>The</strong> American <strong>Foundation</strong> Corporation720 National City Bank Bldg.Cleveland, OH 44<strong>11</strong>4(216) 241-6664196. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $10,000.American Jewish World Service, Inc.45 W. 36th St., 10th Fl.New York, NY 10138-0932(212) 736-2597197. Various organizations. $472,768. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th relief and recovery efforts andcommunity development organizations.AmericanAmericanAmerican Kennel Club Canine Health<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 37941Raleigh, NC 27627-7941(919) 334-4010198. Animal Medical <strong>Center</strong>, New York, NY.$83,360. For assessment of injuries,environmental toxins and anthrax exposure inNYPD Search & Rescue & Bomb DetectionCanine units during WTC-site relief and recoveryefforts.199. University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.$325,000. For medical surveillance of dogsdeployed to the WTC & the Pentagon.AmericanAmerican RuYi Machinery Corporationc/o Corp. Communications Dept.5105 Tollview DriveRolling Meadows, IL 60008200. Various organizations. $250,000.American Savings BankP.O. Box 10New Britain, CT201. Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Family Fund(KBW Family Fund), Melville, NY. $10,000.202. Sandler O’Neill Assistance <strong>Foundation</strong>,Chatham, NJ. $10,000.AmericanAmericanAmerican Savings <strong>Foundation</strong>185 Main St.New Britain, CT 06051(860) 827-2556E-mail: info@asfdn.org; URL: http://www.asfdn.org/203. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.204. Various organizations. $5,000.AmericanAmerican Standard <strong>Foundation</strong>1 Centennial Ave.P.O. Box 6820Piscataway, NJ 08855-6820(732) 980-6000205. American Red Cross, National, DC.$83,333, 2001.206. American Red Cross, National, DC.$71,486, 2001.207. Aon Memorial Education Fund, Chicago, IL.$2,500, 2001.208. MMC Victims Relief Fund, New York, NY.$2,500, 2001.209. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $83,333, 2001.138


210. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $18,649, 2001.2<strong>11</strong>. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $83,333, 2001.212. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $28,973, 2001.AmericanAmerican Trading and ProductionCorporation Contributions Program10 E. Baltimore St., Ste. <strong>11</strong><strong>11</strong>Baltimore, MD 21202-1630FAX: (410) 347-7210213. American Red Cross, Central MarylandChapter, Baltimore, MD. $25,000.214. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.AmerisureAmerisure Corporate Giving Programc/o Corp. Contribs.26777 Halsted Rd.Farmington Hills, MI 48331-3586(248) 615-9000URL: http://www.amerisure.com/au_1d_community.cfm215. American Red Cross, National, DC.$75,000.216. American Red Cross, National, DC.$25,000.217. Undesignated. $62,151.AmerivestAmerivest Partnersc/o Corp. Communications Dept.50 Broad StreetNew York, NY 10004218. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.AmgenAmgen <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.1 Amgen <strong>Center</strong> Dr., M.S. 38-3-BThousand Oaks, CA 91320(805) 447-4056Additional application addresses: CO: AC-27B, 4000Nelson Rd., Longmont, CO 80503, RI: M.S.TS-A, 40 Technology Way, West Greenwich, RI02817, WA: AW1/J-4144, 1201 Amgen Ct. W.,Seattle, WA 98<strong>11</strong>9-3105; FAX: (805) 499-6751;URL: http://wwwext.amgen.com/community/foundation_community.html219. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000.220. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $100,000.221. Greater New York Hospital <strong>Foundation</strong>,New York, NY. $300,000.222. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $700.223. New York City Police <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York,NY. $150,000.224. New York Fire Safety <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York,NY. $150,000.225. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $1,900.226. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $800,000.227. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $35,948.228. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $350.Amica Companies <strong>Foundation</strong>100 Amica WayLincoln, RI 02865229. American Red Cross, National, DC.$85,250.AmicaLIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERAMVESCAPAMVESCAP<strong>11</strong> Devonshire SquareLondon,230. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000.Anadarko Petroleum Corporationc/o Corp. Communications Dept.1201 Lake Robbins Drive<strong>The</strong> Woodlands, TX 77380231. American Red Cross, National, DC.$300,000.Anchor Gamingc/o Corp. Communications Dept.815 Pilot Road, suite GLas Vegas, NV 89<strong>11</strong>9232. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000.AnadarkoAnchorAndersenArthur Andersen LLP Corporate GivingProgram225 N. Michigan Ave.Chicago, IL 60601(312) 580-0069233. Anderson <strong>Foundation</strong>, IL. $2,500,000.John W. Anderson <strong>Foundation</strong>402 Wall St.Valparaiso, IN 46383(219) 462-46<strong>11</strong>234. Washington Family Relief Fund, DC.$20,000, 2001.AndersonAndorAndor Capital Management <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Andor Capital Management, LLC107 Elm St., 7th Fl.Stamford, CT 06902235. Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$5,000,000. For Robin Hood Relief Fund.AndresFrank G. Andres Charitable Trustc/o First Bank of TomahP.O. Box 753, 1001 Superior Ave.Tomah, WI 54660-0753236. Tomah, City of, Tomah, WI. $5,584. For skidunit for brush truck.Anheuser-BuschAnheuser-Busch Family of WholesalersSt. Louis, MO237. New York State World Trade <strong>Center</strong> ReliefFund, Albany, NY. $4,200,000. To aid the familiesof firefighters, police officers and emergencyrescue workers who perished in the attacks withhealth care, income maintenance and otherlong-term personal needs.AnheuserAnheuser-Busch <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Anheuser-Busch Cos., Inc.1 Busch Pl.St. Louis, MO 63<strong>11</strong>8(314) 577-7368238. American Red Cross in Greater New York,New York, NY. $1,000,000, 2001. To support<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th relief and recovery activities andto help the victims and families.239. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $1,000,000, 2001.240. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000, 2001.241. New York State World Trade <strong>Center</strong> ReliefFund, Albany, NY. $1,000,000, 2001. To aid thefamilies of firefighters, police officers andemergency rescue workers who perished in the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks with health care, incomemaintenance, and other long-term personal needs.242. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $200,000, 2001. To help supplydaily meals for emergency workers at the WorldTrade <strong>Center</strong> and Pentagon.Ann ArborAnn Arbor Area Community <strong>Foundation</strong>201 South Main Street, Suite 501Ann Arbor, MI 48104243. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $3,000.Annenberg<strong>The</strong> Annenberg <strong>Foundation</strong>Rodnor Financial Ctr., Ste. A-200150 N. Radnor-Chester Rd.Radnor, PA 19087(610) 341-9066FAX: (610) 964-8688; E-mail:info@annenbergfoundation.org; URL: http://www.annenbergfoundation.org244. American Red Cross, National, DC.$250,000, 2002. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th relief effortin NYC.245. New York Academy of Medicine, New York,NY. $100,000. For counseling and education forstudents, teachers and parents in the aftermath of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.246. United Way of Southeastern Pennsylvania,Philadelphia, PA. $250,000, 2002. For <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th relief effort in NYC.<strong>The</strong> Anschutz <strong>Foundation</strong>1727 Tremont Pl.Denver, CO 80202(303) 308-8220247. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $3,000.AnschutzAon <strong>Foundation</strong>200 E. Randolph St.Chicago, IL 60601(312) 381-3549248. Saint Gregory Episcopal Church, Hamilton,NJ. $250.249. Saint Sebastian Parish Association,Woodside, NY. $250, 2002.250. Union <strong>The</strong>ological Seminary, New York, NY.$250.APB Energyc/o Corp. Communications Dept.9931 Corporate Campus Dr. suite 1000Louisville, KY 40223251. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.Apex Fund/Apex Venture Partnersc/o Corp. Communications Dept.225 West Washington Street, Suite 1450Chicago, IL 60606252. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.Apollo Groupc/o Corp. Communications Dept.4615 E. Elwood StreetPhoenix, AZ 85040253. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$1,000,000.AppelAppel Family <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Robert J. Appel700 Park Ave.New York, NY 10021254. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $5,000. For general support.AonAPBApexApolloAppel139


ApplebaumSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEApplebaum<strong>The</strong> Eugene Applebaum Family<strong>Foundation</strong>39400 Woodward Ave., Ste. 100Bloomfield Hills, MI 48304255. Garden Pathways, Bakersfield, CA. $7,500.256. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $1,000, 2001.257. New York State Fraternal Order of PoliceFund, Hicksville, NY. $7,500.Applied<strong>The</strong> Applied Materials <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Mike O’Farrell3050 Bowers Ave., M.S. 2033Santa Clara, CA 95054258. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $750,000.259. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $250,000. Tosupport ongoing <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th relief efforts.Applied Micro Circuits CorporationContributions Programc/o Community Rels.6290 Sequence Dr.San Diego, CA 92121(858) 535-6554260. Various organizations. $205,154.AppliedAPS Corporate Giving ProgramP.O. Box 53999, M.S. 8510Phoenix, AZ 85072-3999(602) 250-2257261. United Way, Valley of the Sun, Phoenix, AZ.$96,000, 2002. Company Match.262. United Way, Valley of the Sun, Phoenix, AZ.$50,000, 2002. Pinnacle West CorporateContribution.ArchboldAdrian & Jessie Archbold Charitable Trustc/o Arthur J. Mahon401 E. 60th St., Ste. 36BNew York, NY 10022(212) 371-<strong>11</strong>52263. Silver Shield <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$5,000. Toward educational support for childrenwho have lost a parent in the line of duty in NewYork City.ArisonTed Arison Family <strong>Foundation</strong> USA, Inc.3655 N.W. 87th Ave.Miami, FL 33178-2428(305) 599-2600264. Trust for Jewish Philanthropy, New York,NY. $50,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Relief Fund.APSArizonaArizona Community <strong>Foundation</strong>2122 E. Highland Ave., Ste. 400Phoenix, AZ 85016(602) 381-1400265. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $30,000.ArkansasArkansas Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.700 S. Rock St.Little Rock, AR 72202(501) 372-<strong>11</strong>16FAX: (501) 372-<strong>11</strong>66; E-mail: arcf@arcf.org;URL: http://www.arcf.org266. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.J. Aron Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.126 E. 56th St., Ste. 2300New York, NY 10022(212) 832-3405267. FT Fiduciary Trust Memorial Fund, SanMateo, CA. $10,000. For general support.Arvato & Bertelmann Inc.New York, NY268. Bertelsmann Relief Fund, New York, NY.$38,000, 2002.AronArvatoAsburyAsbury Auto Group3 Landmark SquareStamford, CT 06901269. American Red Cross in Greater New York,New York, NY. $150,000.270. HOPE Worldwide, Wayne, PA. $25,000.271. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $50,000.272. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$50,000.273. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY. $50,000.274. United Way of National Capital Area, DC.$50,000.275. Youth Empowerment America, Atlanta, GA.$25,000.AseaAsea Brown Boveri Inc. Corporate GivingProgram501 Merritt 7Norwalk, CT 06851-7000FAX: (203) 750-7788276. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.<strong>The</strong> Aspect Community CommitmentFund1310 Ridder Park Dr.San Jose, CA 95131-2312(408) 325-2850FAX: (408) 325-4232; URL: http://www.aspect.com/company/community.cfm277. Various organizations. $100,000.AspectAssociationAssociation of Specialists in Cleaning andRestoration <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Corp. Communications Dept.8229 Cloverleaf Drive, Suite 460Millersville, MD 2<strong>11</strong>08278. Various organizations. $5,000.Astoria Federal Savingsc/o Corp. Communications Dept.One Astoria Federal PlazaLake Success, NY <strong>11</strong>042279. American Red Cross, National, DC.$250,000.280. American Red Cross, National, DC.$<strong>11</strong>1,734.AstoriaAT&TAT&T <strong>Foundation</strong>32 Ave. of the Americas, 6th Fl.New York, NY 10013(212) 387-6555FAX: (212) 387-4882; E-mail: reznick@att.com;URL: http://www.att.com/foundation281. Alliance for Downtown New York, NewYork, NY. $75,000. For River to River Festival2002 to help restore confidence in downtown NewYork.282. American Red Cross, National, DC.$970,000, 2001.283. American Red Cross, National, DC.$250,000, 2001.284. American Red Cross, National, DC.$230,000, 2001.285. American Red Cross, National, DC.$200,000, 2001.286. American Red Cross, National, DC.$150,000, 2001.287. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000, 2001.288. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000, 2001.289. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000, 2001.290. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000, 2001.291. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000, 2001.292. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $56,405, 2001.AtlantaAtlanta Falcons Youth <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.4400 Falcon Pkwy.Flowery Branch, GA 30542(770) 965-3<strong>11</strong>5FAX: (770) 965-3185; E-mail:afyf@falcons.nfl.com293. American Red Cross, National, DC. $515,2001.294. Chris Faughman Memorial Fund, GA.$3,010, 2001.295. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $84,828, 2001.296. New York City Public/Private Initiatives,New York, NY. $50,266, 2001.297. Various organizations. $1,800. For donationsgenerated through fan donations, corporate giftsand employee donations.Atlantic<strong>The</strong> Atlantic <strong>Foundation</strong> of New York125 Park Ave., 21st Fl.New York, NY 10017-5581FAX: (212) 922-0360; E-mail:USA@atlanticphilanthropies.org; URL: http://www.atlanticphilanthropies.org298. Asian Americans for Equality, New York,NY. $76,000. For emergency aid, counseling, andassistance to Chinatown and Lower East Sidecommunities in wake of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.299. City Meals on Wheels, New York, NY.$100,000. To implement Emergency Food PantryProgram in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th disaster.300. City Meals on Wheels, New York, NY.$50,000. To replenish food warehouse, anddevelop reserves for emergency meal and fooddeliveries to homebound elderly in wake of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.301. Common Cents New York, New York, NY.$50,000. For Twin Towers Penny Harvest,expansion of annual Penny Harvest campaign.302. Community Resource Exchange, New York,NY. $75,000. For general operating support whichwill allow uninterrupted continuation ofregranting and technical assistance programs inwake of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.303. Council on Senior <strong>Center</strong>s and Services ofNew York City, New York, NY. $100,000. Towardeducation, training, and support to aging servicesnetwork in wake of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.304. Council on Senior <strong>Center</strong>s and Services ofNew York City, New York, NY. $50,000. Forimmediate needs of service program that wereclosest to World Trade <strong>Center</strong> and were mostaffected by <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.305. Helen Keller International, New York, NY.$350,000. For ChildSight program to replaceinventory and rebuild databases lost in <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th disaster.140


LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERAustin306. Human Rights Watch, New York, NY.$45,000. For U.S. domestic policy work protectingcivil liberties of Arab-Americans, Muslims, andSouth Asian minorities in the U.S. who mayexperience hate crimes or bias against them asresult of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks.307. National Council on the Aging, Washington,DC. $12,000. For nonrecoverable costs incurredas result of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.308. New York Cares, New York, NY. $50,000.For general operating support to replace fundingand resources used for relief efforts in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.309. New York Legal Assistance Group, NewYork, NY. $50,000. To provide support to victimsfor legal assistance in aftermath of attacks of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.310. NPower NY, New York, NY. $50,000. Forimmediate technology assistance to nonprofitslocated at or near Ground Zero of <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th tragedy, and for coordination efforts amongother nonprofit technology-assistance providers.3<strong>11</strong>. United Neighborhood Houses of New York,New York, NY. $57,670. For staff overtime costsfollowing <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, and for emergencyhome-delivered meals to elderly from UnitedNeighborhood senior centers.312. United Seamens Service, New York, NY.$5,000. To replace inventory lost in the aftermathof <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.AtlanticAtlantic Philanthropiesc/o Communications Dept.125 Park Avenue, 21st Floor, DO NOTMAIL/E-MAIL CONFIRMNew York, NY 10017313. American Civil Liberties Union <strong>Foundation</strong>,New York, NY. $500,000, 2002. To support theAmerican Civil Liberties Union’s Security andCivil Liberties Task Force.314. Arab American Institute <strong>Foundation</strong>, DC.$200,000, 2002. To support the <strong>Foundation</strong> in itswork to strengthen and better articulate the needsand nature of the Arab American community inthe wake of the terrorist attacks of <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th.315. Asian Americans for Equality, New York,NY. $76,000, 2001. To provide emergency aid,counseling, and assistance to the Chinatown andLower East Side communities in the wake of the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th tragedy.316. Aviation Volunteer Fire Department EngineCompany 3, Bronx, NY. $7,500, 2002. To providethe balance of funding for the repair of the fireengine that was damaged in the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>threcovery efforts.317. Big Brothers/Big Sisters of New York City,New York, NY. $332,500, 2002. To providefunding for three mentoring programs specificallytargeting youth affected by the events of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.318. <strong>Center</strong> for National Security Studies, DC.$100,000, 2002. To support the <strong>Center</strong> forNational Security Studies’ Emergency Project toDefend Civil Liberties and Protect Security and tosupport any past, present or future <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>iniatives.319. Chhaya Community DevelopmentCorporation, Flushing, NY. $100,000, 2002. Tosupport Chhaya’s advocacy, educational andoutreach work in the South Asian community ofNew York City in the wake of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thattacks.320. City Meals on Wheels, New York, NY.$100,000, 2001. To implement an EmergencyFood Pantry Program in response to the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th disaster.321. City Meals on Wheels, New York, NY.$50,000, 2001. To replenishCitymeals-on-Wheels’ food warehouse, anddevelop reserves for emergency meal and fooddeliveries to homebound elderly.322. Common Cents New York, New York, NY.$50,000, 2001. To support the Twin TowersPenny Harvest, an expansion of the annual PennyHarvest campaign.323. Community Resource Exchange, New York,NY. $75,000, 2001. To provide general operatingsupport which will allow the uninterruptedcontinuation of re-granting and technicalassistance programs in the wake of the <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th tragedy.324. Council on Senior <strong>Center</strong>s and Services ofNew York City, New York, NY. $100,000, 2001.To provide partial support for education, training,and support to the aging services network in thewake of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th tragedy.325. Council on Senior <strong>Center</strong>s and Services ofNew York City, New York, NY. $50,000, 2001. Toprovide support for the immediate needs of sevenservice programs that were closest to the WorldTrade <strong>Center</strong> and were most affected by the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th disaster.326. Helen Keller International, New York, NY.$350,000, 2001. To provide support to theChildSight program to replace inventory andrebuild databases lost in the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thdisaster.327. Human Rights Watch, New York, NY.$45,000, 2001. To support the U.S. domesticpolicy work of Human Rights Watch—protectingthe civil liberties of Arab-Americans, Muslims,and South Asian minorities in the U.S. who mayexperience hate crimes or bias against them as aresult of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks.328. Lawyers Committee for Human Rights, NewYork, NY. $100,000, 2002. To support theCommittee’s work in monitoring theimplementation of the laws and presidential ordersenvoked in response to the terrorist attacks of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, and its advocacy withWashington, D.C.329. Legal Aid Society, New York, NY. $75,000,2002. To provide general operating support fordisaster relief efforts in providing legal services tolow income individuals who were adverselyeffected by the events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.330. National Council on the Aging, Washington,DC. $12,000, 2001. To provide support fornonrecoverable costs incurred as a result of the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th disaster.331. New York Cares, New York, NY. $50,000,2001. To provide general operating support toreplace the funding and resources used for reliefefforts in response to the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th disaster.332. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000,000, 2001.To contribute to the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> Fund,established by the New York Community Trustand the United Way to provide relief for thevictims and families of those who have sufferedduring the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> tragedy.333. New York Legal Assistance Group, NewYork, NY. $100,000, 2002. To support theongoing legal services to victims of the <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th tragedy through NYLAG’s VolunteerOutreach, Education, and Training program.334. New York Legal Assistance Group, NewYork, NY. $50,000, 2001. To provide support tovictims for legal assistance in the aftermath of theattacks of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.335. NPower NY, New York, NY. $50,000, 2001.To provide support for immediate technologyassistance to nonprofits located at or near GroundZero of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th tragedy, and forcoordination efforts among other nonprofittechnology-assistance providers.336. P.S. 234 Parents and Teachers Association,Inc.. $100,000, 2002. To continue in the 2002-3school year a therapeutic program to amelioratethe psychological effect of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, 2001and its aftermath on the students, teachers andtheir families.337. Regional Plan Association, New York, NY.$500,000, 2002. To support ‘Listening to the CityII’, the second in a series of town hall meetingscovened by the Civic Alliance to RebuildDowntown New York.338. Research <strong>Foundation</strong> for Mental Hygiene,New York, NY. $500,000, 2002. To providesupport to the New York City Consortium forEffective Trauma Treatment for mental healthtraining and evaluation of services as a result ofthe <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th tragedy.339. Union Settlement Association, New York,NY. $20,000, 2002. To provide support for aseries of tolerance and sensitivity seminars andworkshops for Union Settlement staff andcommunity residents (children, teens, andparents) in the wake of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thattacks.340. United Neighborhood Houses of New York,New York, NY. $57,670, 2001. To providesupport for staff overtime costs following the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th tragedy, and for emergencyhome-delivered meals to the elderly from theUnited Neighborhood senior centers.341. United Seamens Service, New York, NY.$5,000, 2001. To provide funding to replaceinventory lost in the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th disaster.342. Young Citizens, Inc., New York, NY.$15,000, 2001. To provide general support in theaftermath of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th tragedy.Atrix Laboratoriesc/o Corp. Communications Dept.2579 Midpoint DrFort Collins, CO 80525343. American Red Cross, National, DC.$<strong>11</strong>0,000.AtrixAuchinclossLily Auchincloss <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.16 E. 79th St., Ste. 31New York, NY 10021(212) 737-9533FAX: (212) 737-9578; E-mail: info@lilyauch.org;URL: http://www.lilyauch.org344. Humane Society of New York, New York,NY. $10,000. For World Trade <strong>Center</strong> emergencyservices.345. New York Historical Society, New York, NY.$20,000. For History Responds project, responseto events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.346. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $25,000.Audi of Americac/o Corporate Communications1440 Gratiot AvenueDetroit, MI 48207347. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $100,000.AudiAustinAustin Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for theCapital Area, Inc.P.O. Box 5159Austin, TX 78763(512) 472-4483FAX: (512) 472-4486; E-mail:info@austincommunityfoundation.org; URL: http://www.austincommunityfoundation.org348. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $52,000.141


AutodeskSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE<strong>The</strong> Autodesk <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.<strong>11</strong>1 McInnis Pkwy.San Rafael, CA 94903(415) 507-6336FAX: (415) 507-6339; URL: http://www.autodesk.com/foundation/349. American Red Cross, National, DC.$25,000. To support families and victims,<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th relief and recovery work, andsafety/disaster preparedness initiatives.350. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$100,000.AutodeskAvayac/o Corporate Communications2<strong>11</strong>Mt. Airy RoadBasking Ridge, NJ 07920351. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,500,000.Aventis Pharmaceuticals <strong>Foundation</strong>400 Somerset Corp. Blvd.Bridgewater, NJ 08807(908) 243-6777352. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.AvayaAventisAvery Dennison <strong>Foundation</strong>150 N. Orange Grove Blvd.Pasadena, CA 9<strong>11</strong>03353. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $136,776, 2001.Avnet, Inc. Corporate Giving Program22<strong>11</strong> S. 47th St.Phoenix, AZ 85034(480) 643-2000354. American Red Cross, National, DC.$162,000.Avon Products, Inc. Corporate GivingProgram9 W. 57th St.New York, NY 10019(212) 282-5000355. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.AveryAvnetAvonAXAAXA <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.1290 Ave. of the Americas, 7th Fl.New York, NY 10104(212) 314-2566FAX: (212) 314-4480; URL: http://www.axaonline.com/axafoundation356. AXA <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., New York, NY.$10,000,000. To establish fund to support reliefefforts and related programs aiding those affectedby 9/<strong>11</strong>.Axe-Houghton <strong>Foundation</strong>919 3rd Ave., 2nd Fl.New York, NY 10022(212) 909-8304357. Various organizations. $34,000. For specialone-time increases in grants for nonprofit granteesdisrupted or suffering losses after <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thattacks.<strong>The</strong> Baker Street <strong>Foundation</strong>135 Main St., Ste. <strong>11</strong>40San Francisco, CA 94105358. American Red Cross, San FranciscoChapter, San Francisco, CA. $10,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong>rescue efforts.359. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $10,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> rescue efforts.AxeBakerClayton Baker Trust2 E. Read St., Ste. 100Baltimore, MD 21202(410) 837-3555FAX: (410) 837-77<strong>11</strong>360. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $20,000.BakerBaltimore<strong>The</strong> Baltimore Community <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Anne Ross Knoeller2 E. Read St., 9th Fl.Baltimore, MD 21202(410) 332-4171FAX: (410) 837-4701; E-mail: knoeller@bcf.org;URL: http://www.bcf.org361. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $226,000.362. Undesignated. $350,000.Bank of America <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.100 N. Tryon St., NC1-007-18-01Charlotte, NC 28255-0001URL: http://www.bankofamerica.com/foundation/363. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000.364. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $450,000.Bank of Montrealc/o Corporate Communications<strong>11</strong>5 S La Salle St No. 1200Chicago, IL 60603365. Red Cross of Canada, Ottawa, Canada.$500,000.366. Red Cross of Canada, Ottawa, Canada.$315,000.Bank of the Northwestc/o Corporate Communications4794 SW 76th AvePortland, OR 97225367. American Red Cross, National, DC. $7,500.BankBankBankBankBank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi Trust CompanyContributions Programc/o Legal and Public Affairs Office1251 Sixth Ave., 15th Fl.New York, NY 10020-<strong>11</strong>04(212) 782-4627368. American Red Cross, National, DC.$13,000.369. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.370. Various organizations. $48,183. Fordonations to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, AmericanRed Cross, Employee Scholarship Fund, NYTimes 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Cases Fund, Twin TowersFund, Salvation Army, WTC Relief Fund, NYPolice & Fire Widows’ Fund.371. Various organizations. $25,121. Fordonations to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, AmericanRed Cross, Employee Scholarship Fund, NYTimes 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Cases Fund, Twin TowersFund, Salvation Army, WTC Relief Fund, NYPolice & Fire Widows’ Fund.BANKBANK ONE <strong>Foundation</strong>1 BANK ONE Plz., Ste. 0308Chicago, IL 60670(312) 407-8052372. Aon Memorial Education Fund, Chicago, IL.$100,000.373. Army Emergency Relief, Alexandria, VA.$50,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.374. Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund, New York,NY. $200,000.375. Children’s Aid Society, New York, NY.$50,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.376. Fire Rescue Development Program, Chicago,IL. $50,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.377. FT Fiduciary Trust Memorial Fund, SanMateo, CA. $10,000.378. MMC Victims Relief Fund, New York, NY.$10,000.379. Navy Marine Corps Relief Society,Arlington, VA. $50,000. For Pentagon AssistanceFund.380. New York, State of, Albany, NY. $300,000.381. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$150,000. For Families of Freedom 2, providingscholarships for postsecondary education forfamilies in Lower Manhattan who suffered loss ofincome as result of attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>,2001.382. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$200,000.Bank Rhode Islandc/o Corporate CommunicationsOne Turks Head PlaceProvidence, RI 02903383. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.BankBansal<strong>The</strong> Bansal <strong>Foundation</strong>1861 International Dr.McLean, VA 22102384. American India <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$4,240. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Relief Fund.Barbash Family Fund, Inc.265 W. Main St.Babylon, NY <strong>11</strong>702-3419385. Newsday Community Service Fund,Melville, NY. $5,000. For general support.BarbashBarclayBarclay Investmentsc/o Corporate Communications693 Fifth Avenue 18th FlNew York, NY 10023386. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.BardC. R. Bard <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.730 Central Ave.New Providence, NJ 07974(908) 277-8182FAX: (908) 277-8098; URL: http://www.crbard.com/about/community/foundation.cfm387. Engine 8 Ladder Association, New York, NY.$5,000. To support families of firefighter victimsof <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.388. New Jersey Network (NJN) <strong>Foundation</strong>,Trenton, NJ. $5,000. For Remembrance andReflection event held at Liberty State Park.389. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000, 2002.390. Summit Area Public <strong>Foundation</strong>, Summit,NJ. $10,000, 2002. To provide aid to families ofthe victims within local community.Barker<strong>The</strong> Barker Welfare <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 2Glen Head, NY <strong>11</strong>545(516) 759-5592FAX: (516) 759-5497; E-mail:BarkerSMD@aol.com; URL: http://www.barkerwelfare.org391. Ackerman Institute for the Family, NewYork, NY. $5,000. For counseling for survivors,victims, family members and rescue workers in thewake of the 9/<strong>11</strong> attacks.142


392. American Red Cross, Nassau CountyChapter, Mineola, NY. $25,000, 2002. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th disaster relief effort efforts inNew York.393. American Red Cross, National, DC.$25,000.394. Big Brothers/Big Sisters of New York City,New York, NY. $<strong>11</strong>,000. Toward programsassociated with the events of 9/<strong>11</strong>/01.395. Big Brothers/Big Sisters of New York City,New York, NY. $8,000.396. Children’s Museum of the Arts, New York,NY. $3,000.397. Fund for the City of New York, New York,NY. $3,000. For costs associated with 9/<strong>11</strong>.398. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000, 2002. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th disaster relief effort efforts inNew York.399. Partnership for After School Education, NewYork, NY. $5,000.400. Project Renewal, New York, NY. $<strong>11</strong>,770.Toward programs associated with the events of9/<strong>11</strong>/01.401. Project Renewal, New York, NY. $3,500.402. Saint Vincents Hospital and Medical <strong>Center</strong>of New York, New York, NY. $25,000, 2002. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th disaster relief efforts inManhattan.403. Various organizations. $50,000.BarocoJ. H. Baroco <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 10729Pensacola, FL 32524-0729(850) 479-2491Application address: 6706 N. 9th Ave., Pensacola,FL 32504404. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.Barr <strong>Foundation</strong><strong>The</strong> Pilot HouseLewis WharfBoston, MA 02<strong>11</strong>0(617) 854-3500FAX: (617) 854-3501; E-mail:info@barrfoundation.org, khurley@pilothouse.com;URL: http://www.barrfoundation.org405. Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund, New York,NY. $1,000.BarrBarraBarra <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.8200 Flourtown Ave., Ste. 12Wyndmoor, PA 19038-7976(215) 233-5<strong>11</strong>5FAX: (215) 836-1033; E-mail:william.harral@verizon.net406. American Red Cross, Southeast PA Chapter,Philadelphia, PA. $50,000, 2001.407. Undesignated. $2,500. To off-set feescharged for credit card payments to the 9/<strong>11</strong> Fundvia the GivingCapital.com website.408. United Way of Southeastern Pennsylvania,Philadelphia, PA. $50,000, 2001.<strong>The</strong> Barrios Trust653 <strong>11</strong>th St.Oakland, CA 94607409. Children’s Aid Society, New York, NY.$5,000. For children whose parents were victimsof <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks.BarriosLIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERBasicBasic American Foodsc/o Corporate Communications415 W. Collins RoadBlackfoot, ID 83221410. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $100,000.Eddie Bauer, Inc. Corporate GivingProgram15010 N.E. 36th St.Redmond, WA 98052-9700FAX: (425) 882-6127; URL: http://www.eddiebauer.com/about/eb_philanthropy.asp4<strong>11</strong>. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $70,000.<strong>The</strong> Baxter International <strong>Foundation</strong>1 Baxter Pkwy.Deerfield, IL 60015FAX: (847) 948-4559; E-mail:celene_peurye@baxter.com; URL: http://www.baxter.com/about_baxter/sustainability/our_communities/foundation/index.html412. Baxter International <strong>Foundation</strong>, Deerfield,IL. $500,000.413. Baxter International <strong>Foundation</strong>, Deerfield,IL. $248,250.Baxter International Inc. CorporateGiving Programc/o Community Rels. Dept.1 Baxter Pkwy.Deerfield, IL 60015-4633(847) 948-2000FAX: (847) 948-2887; URL: http://www.baxter.com/about_baxter/sustainability/our_communities/index.html414. Baxter International <strong>Foundation</strong>, Deerfield,IL. $659,791.BauerBaxterBaxterBay Area Community <strong>Foundation</strong>703 Washington Ave.Bay City, MI 48708-5732(989) 893-4438FAX: (989) 893-4448; E-mail:bacfnd@bayfoundation.org; Additional tel.: (800)926-3217; URL: http://www.bayfoundation.org415. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $300.BayBB&TBB&T Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o BB&T Corp., Trust Dept.P.O. Box 2907Wilson, NC 27894-2907416. Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Family Fund(KBW Family Fund), Melville, NY. $10,000.417. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.BB&TBB&T Corporation Contributions Program200 W. 2nd St.Winston-Salem, NC 27101418. American Red Cross, National, DC.$250,000.BD Corporate Giving Program1 Becton Dr.Franklin Lakes, NJ 07417FAX: (201) 847-7065; URL: http://www.bd.com/responsibility419. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000.BEA <strong>Foundation</strong>2315 North First StreetSan Jose, CA 95131420. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.BDBEABear, Stearns & Co. Inc.New York, NY421. Bear Stearns Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewYork, NY. $10,000,000. To establish charitablefund to benefit 9/<strong>11</strong> victims and families.Beazer Homes5775 Peachtree Dunwoody Rd.Suite B-200Atlanta, GA 30342422. National Housing Endowment, DC.$1,000,000.BearBeazerBechtelBechtel <strong>Foundation</strong>50 Beale St.San Francisco, CA 94105(415) 768-5444Application address: P.O. Box 193965, SanFrancisco, CA 94<strong>11</strong>9-3965; Additional tel.: (415)768-7158; E-mail: foundtn@bechtel.com; URL:http://www.bechtel.com/foundation.htm423. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$698,913.BechtelS. D. Bechtel, Jr. <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 193809San Francisco, CA 94<strong>11</strong>9-3809(415) 284-8572FAX: (415) 284-8571; E-mail:esb@fremontgroup.com424. American Red Cross, National, DC. $5,000.425. National Disaster Search Dog <strong>Foundation</strong>,Ojai, CA. $1,000.426. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY. $25,000.For World Trade <strong>Center</strong> Disaster Relief Fund.Bedminster<strong>The</strong> Bedminster Fund, Inc.1330 Ave. of the Americas, 27th Fl.New York, NY 10019-5490427. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.Belfer<strong>The</strong> Arthur and Rochelle Belfer<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o Belfer Mgmt., LLC767 5th Ave., 46th Fl.New York, NY 10153-0002428. American Jewish Committee, New York, NY.$10,000. For 9<strong>11</strong> Fund.Stuart L. & Susan S. Bell Family<strong>Foundation</strong>688 N. Wilton Rd.New Canaan, CT 06840(203) 845-8717429. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000. ForTelethon Fund.BellSouthBellSouth Corporation ContributionsProgram<strong>11</strong>55 Peachtree St., N.E., Rm. 7H08Atlanta, GA 30309URL: http://www.bellsouth.com/community/index.html430. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.Beloc/o Corporate Communications400 South Record StreetDallas, TX 75265431. American Red Cross, National, DC.$250,000.BeloBellBelo143


BemisSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEBemisBemis Company <strong>Foundation</strong>222 S. 9th St., No. 2300Minneapolis, MN 55402-4099(612) 376-3093E-mail: bemisfoundation@bemis.com; Additionaltel.: (612) 376-3007; URL: http://www.bemis.com/corp_citizenship/community_relations.html432. American Red Cross, National, DC.$65,000.BenedumClaude Worthington Benedum<strong>Foundation</strong>1400 Benedum-Trees Bldg.223 4th Ave.Pittsburgh, PA 15222(412) 288-0360FAX: (412) 288-0366; E-mail: info@benedum.org;URL: http://www.fdncenter.org/grantmaker/benedum/433. Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$25,000. To aid poorest victims of World Trade<strong>Center</strong> attack on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.Bennett<strong>The</strong> Alan R. Bennett <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.4847 Foxhall Crescent N.W.Washington, DC 20007434. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000. For generalsupport.BenwoodBenwood <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.SunTrust Bank Bldg.736 Market St., Ste. 1600Chattanooga, TN 37402(423) 267-43<strong>11</strong>FAX: (423) 267-9049; E-mail:Benwood@Benwood.org435. American Red Cross, National, DC.$10,000.436. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.437. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $10,000.438. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $10,000.Berks County Community <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 212Reading, PA 19603-0212(610) 685-2223FAX: (610) 685-2240; E-mail: info@bccf.org;URL: http://www.bccf.org439. Salvation Army of Reading, Reading, PA.$5,100. For storage of supplies and materials forNYC disaster relief efforts.BerksBerkshireBerkshire Life Insurance Company ofAmerica Corporate Giving Program700 South St.Pittsfield, MA 01201(413) 499-4321440. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.BerlitzBerlitz International, Inc.c/o Corporate Communications400 Alexander ParkPrinceton, NJ 08540441. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $200,000.BermanBennett M. & Gertrude Berman<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.1700 Broadway, 23rd Fl.New York, NY 10019442. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY. $10,000.For general support.BernsteinBernstein Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 343Brooklandville, MD 21022-0343443. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.BerrienBerrien Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.2900 S. State St., Ste. 2E.St. Joseph, MI 49085(269) 983-3304FAX: (269) 983-4939; E-mail: nkeiser@qtm.net;URL: http://www.berriencommunity.org444. American Red Cross, Berrien CountyChapter, Benton Harbor, MI. $4,270. For localRed Cross efforts in the aftermath of <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th.445. American Red Cross, National, DC. $750.For needs of local military families in theaftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.446. Beacon Police Department, Beacon, NY.$2,500. For puppy purchase for <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thdisaster relief efforts.447. Childrens Hope <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$500. For support for children of 9/<strong>11</strong> tragedy.448. Federal Employee Education & AssistanceFund, Littleton, CO. $500. For Pentagon’s civilianvictims’ families.449. Gods Love We Deliver, New York, NY. $500.For assistance to senior citizens in the aftermath of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.450. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $1,000. For Firefighters Family Relief Fund.451. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $7,410. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.452. Partnership for After School Education, NewYork, NY. $1,000. For support for children of theWorld Trade <strong>Center</strong> attack.453. Safe Horizon, New York, NY. $750. Forgeneral relief in New York in the aftermath of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.454. United Way of Passaic Valley, Paterson, NJ.$500. For displaced workers fund.BertelsmannBertelsmann <strong>Foundation</strong> U.S., Inc.1540 BroadwayNew York, NY 10036-4094455. Bertelsmann Relief Fund, New York, NY.$2,000,000.Bertelsmann, Inc. Corporate GivingProgram1540 BroadwayNew York, NY 10036(212) 782-7676456. BMG, New York, NY. $250,000.Best Buy Company, Inc.7075 Flying Cloud DriveMinneapolis, MN 55440457. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,200,000.458. Best Buy Children’s <strong>Foundation</strong>, EdenPrairie, MN. $1,000,000.Best Western International, Inc.Corporate Giving Program6201 N. 24th Pkwy.Phoenix, AZ 85016(602) 957-4200FAX: (602) 957-5740; E-mail:nancy.kennedy@bestwestern.com; URL: http://www.bestwestern.com/about/donation.html459. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.BertelsmannBestBestBI-LO Inc. Corporate Giving Programc/o Corp. Contribs.208 Industrial Blvd.Greenville, SC 29607Application address: P.O. Box 99, Mauldin, SC29662; URL: http://www.bi-lo.com/learn/community.htm460. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.Lynn and Les Bider Family <strong>Foundation</strong>16830 Ventura Blvd., Ste. 300Encino, CA 91436461. Jewish Federation Council of Greater LosAngeles, Los Angeles, CA. $18,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Victims Fund.F. R. Bigelow <strong>Foundation</strong>600 5th St. Ctr.55 E. 5th St.St. Paul, MN 55101-1797(651) 224-5463FAX: (651) 224-8123; E-mail:inbox@frbigelow.org; URL: http://www.frbigelow.org462. Saint Paul <strong>Foundation</strong>, Saint Paul, MN.$10,000, 2001.BIBiderBigelowBitenskySamson & Halina Bitensky <strong>Foundation</strong>,Inc.200 Madison Ave.New York, NY 10016463. United Jewish Communities, New York, NY.$5,000, 2001.Black<strong>The</strong> Black & Decker Employees CombinedCharities Trust Towson701 E. Joppa Rd.Towson, MD 21286-5502464. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.Blackstone Groupc/o Corporate Communications345 Park AvenueNew York, NY 10154465. Various organizations. $1,000,000.BlackstoneBlank<strong>The</strong> Arthur M. Blank Family <strong>Foundation</strong>3223 Howell Mill Rd, N.W.Atlanta, GA 30327(404) 367-2100FAX: (404) 367-2058; URL: http://www.blankfoundation.org466. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000, 2001.Blaustein<strong>The</strong> Morton K. and Jane Blaustein<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.10 E. Baltimore St., Ste. <strong>11</strong><strong>11</strong>Baltimore, MD 21202(410) 347-7206FAX: (410) 347-7210; E-mail: Tanya Herbick:therbick@blaufund.org; URL: http://www.blaufund.org/foundations/mortonandjane_f.html467. City Harvest, New York, NY. $15,000.468. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.144


LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERBremerBlockbusterBlockbuster Inc. Corporate GivingProgramRenaissance Tower1201 Elm St.Dallas, TX 75270-2187(214) 854-3077FAX: (214) 854-3822; URL: http://www.blockbuster.com/bb/about/community469. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000.Blowitz<strong>The</strong> Blowitz-Ridgeway <strong>Foundation</strong>1701 E. Woodfield Rd., Ste. 201Schaumburg, IL 60173(847) 330-1020FAX: (847) 446-6318; E-mail:laura@blowitzridgeway.org; URL: http://www.blowitzridgeway.org/470. Robert R. McCormick Tribune <strong>Foundation</strong>,Chicago, IL. $10,000. For disaster relief efforts inNew York and Washington following <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th, 2001.Blue Cross/Blue Shield Associationc/o Corporate Communications225 N. Michigan AvenueChicago, IL 60601471. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.Edith C. Blum <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o KPMG, LLP345 Park Ave.New York, NY 10154472. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.Blum-Kovler <strong>Foundation</strong>875 N. Michigan Ave., Ste. 3400Chicago, IL 606<strong>11</strong>-1958(312) 664-5050473. Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD.$1,000,000. For <strong>Center</strong> for Civilian BiodefenseStrategies.BMG MusicNew York, NY474. Bertelsmann Relief Fund, New York, NY.$95,000, 2002.BMW Group2621 Palisades Ave.Riverdale, NJ475. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000. To support 9/<strong>11</strong> relief and recoveryefforts.BlueBlumBlumBMGBMWBMWBMW Manufacturing CorporationP.O. Box <strong>11</strong>1000Spartanburg, SC 29304476. American Red Cross, Spartenburg Chapter,Spartanburg, SC. $30,000. To match employeecontributions in the wake of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.<strong>The</strong> Bodman <strong>Foundation</strong>767 3rd Ave., 4th Fl.New York, NY 10017-2023(212) 644-0322FAX: (212) 759-6510; E-mail:main@achelis-bodman-fnds.org.; URL: http://www.fdncenter.org/grantmaker/achelis-bodman/477. Catholic Relief Services, New York, NY.$20,000, 2001. To support relief efforts forrefugees and other victims of the fighting inAfghanistan.478. East Harlem Employment Services, NewYork, NY. $75,000, 2001. For STRIVEBodmanCommunity Partnership, citywide job training andplacement effort by nonprofits, includingsettlement houses, to assist those who have lostjobs due to recession and World Trade <strong>Center</strong>attacks.479. Manhattan Institute for Policy Research,New York, NY. $100,000, 2001. For research,articles, panels and other events on RebuildingNew York in the wake of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.480. New York Historical Society, New York, NY.$20,000, 2001. For Monument: <strong>The</strong> World Trade<strong>Center</strong>, an exhibition and public program series,in collaboration with the Skyscraper Museum, onthe conception, design, engineering, building, anddestruction of the World Trade <strong>Center</strong>.Boeing<strong>The</strong> Boeing Company Charitable Trustc/o <strong>The</strong> Boeing Co.P.O. Box 34345Seattle, WA 98124-1345Application address: c/o <strong>The</strong> Boeing Co., EducationRels., P.O. Box 3707, M.S. 17-MP, Seattle, WA98124-2207; FAX: (206) 655-2133; URL: http://www.boeing.com/companyoffices/aboutus/community/guidelines.htm481. American Red Cross, National, DC.$2,500,000.482. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $2,500,000.483. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.Bohemian <strong>Foundation</strong>103 W. Mountain Ave.Fort Collins, CO 80524(970) 482-4642FAX: (970) 482-6139; E-mail:beth@bohemianfoundation.org orinfo@bohemianfoundation.org; URL: http://www.bohemianfoundation.org484. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of NorthernColorado, Fort Collins, CO. $7,5<strong>11</strong>, 2002. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund brochure.BookspanNew York, NY485. Bertelsmann Relief Fund, New York, NY.$17,000, 2002.BohemianBookspanBooth Ferris <strong>Foundation</strong>345 Park Ave., 4th Fl.New York, NY 10154(212) 464-2487FAX: (212) 4642305; E-mail:maurer_barbara@jpmorgan.com; URL: http://fdncenter.org/grantmaker/boothferris/486. American Red Cross in Greater New York,New York, NY. $250,000, 2001.487. American Red Cross in Greater New York,New York, NY. $100,000, 2001.<strong>The</strong> Bosch <strong>Foundation</strong>8<strong>11</strong> Dallas Ave.Houston, TX 77002Application address: 3760 Olympia Dr., Houston,TX 77019, tel: (713) 466-4018488. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $45,000.BoothBoschBostonBoston <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.75 Arlington St.,10th Fl.Boston, MA 02<strong>11</strong>6(617) 338-1700FAX: (617) 838-1604; E-mail: alk@tbf.org; URL:http://www.tbf.org489. American Red Cross, MassBay Chapter,Boston, MA. $25,000. To assist locally-basedfamilies and individuals affected by <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th tragedy.490. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $93,137.491. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.492. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $48,000.493. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.494. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.495. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $10,000.496. Trinity Church, New York, NY. $10,000. ForDay of Remembrance activities on <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th.497. United Way of Massachusetts Bay, Boston,MA. $25,000. Toward fundraising goal of UnityFund.498. United Way of Massachusetts Bay, Boston,MA. $25,000. For development and operatingsupport of Unity Fund.<strong>The</strong> Mervin Bovaird <strong>Foundation</strong>401 S. Boston Ave., Ste. 3300Tulsa, OK 74103-4070(918) 592-3300499. American Red Cross, Tulsa Area Chapter,Tulsa, OK. $25,000.BovairdBP <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.4101 Winfield Rd., M.C. 4EWarrenville, IL 60555-3521(630) 821-3174FAX: (312) 616-0826; E-mail:foundation@bpamoco.com500. BP <strong>Foundation</strong>, Chicago, IL. $5,000,000.Initial commitment of BP to relief and otherorganizations through the BP Employee DisasterRelief Fund.501. BP <strong>Foundation</strong>, Chicago, IL. $933,333.<strong>The</strong> Lynde and Harry Bradley<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 510860Milwaukee, WI 53203-0153(414) 291-9915FAX: (414) 291-9991; URL: http://www.bradleyfdn.org502. Yeshiva University, New York, NY. $5,000.For Barbara Olson Memorial Scholarship Fund.BPBradleyBrananMary Allen Lindsey Branan <strong>Foundation</strong>Wachovia Bank, N.A. 191 Peachtree St. NEMC:GA <strong>11</strong>02Atlanta, GA 30303503. USO Council of Georgia, Atlanta, GA.$25,000. For capital and operating support forUSO <strong>Center</strong> at Hartsfield International Airport,Atlanta, in the aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.BremerBremer Financial Corporationc/o Corporate Communications260 Wentworth Avenue E.West St. Paul, MN 55<strong>11</strong>8504. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.Otto Bremer <strong>Foundation</strong>445 Minnesota St., Ste. 2000St. Paul, MN 55101-2107(651) 227-8036505. Saint Paul <strong>Foundation</strong>, Saint Paul, MN.$200,000, 2001.Bremer145


BridgestoneSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEBridgestone CorporationTokyo, Japan506. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.Bridgestone/Firestone Trust Fund535 Marriott Dr.Nashville, TN 37214(615) 937-1415FAX: (615) 937-1414; E-mail:bfstrustfund@bfusa.com507. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000, 2001.BridgestoneBridgestoneBristol<strong>The</strong> Bristol-Myers Squibb <strong>Foundation</strong>,Inc.c/o Fdn. Coord.345 Park Ave., 43rd Fl.New York, NY 10154URL: http://www.bms.com/aboutbms/founda/data508. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.509. HealthCare Chaplaincy, New York, NY.$50,000, 2001.510. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $750,000, 2001.5<strong>11</strong>. John Jay College of Criminal Justice<strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY. $500,000, 2001.512. National Crime Prevention Council, NewYork, NY. $50,000, 2001.513. New York Academy of Medicine, New York,NY. $100,000, 2001.514. New York City Police <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York,NY. $1,000,000, 2001.515. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000, 2001.516. Saint Vincents Hospital and Medical <strong>Center</strong>of New York, New York, NY. $150,000, 2001.517. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $150,000, 2001.518. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $750,000, 2001.519. United Service Organization of MetropolitanNew York, New York, NY. $10,000. For WorldTrade <strong>Center</strong> relief.Brookdale<strong>The</strong> Brookdale <strong>Foundation</strong>126 E. 56th St., 10th Fl.New York, NY 10022(212) 308-7355E-mail: BkdlFdn@aol.com; URL: http://www.ewol.com/brookdale/520. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.BrotherBrother International CorporationContributions Programc/o Corp. Public Rels.100 Somerset Corporate Blvd.Bridgewater, NJ 08807Tel.: (908) 704-1700, ext. 3047; FAX: (732)375-3721; E-mail: dfischer@brother.com521. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.<strong>The</strong> Robin Brown and Charles SeeligFamily <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o BCRS Assocs., LLC100 Wall St., <strong>11</strong>th Fl.New York, NY 10005522. Ground Hero Kids, New York, NY. $2,000.For general support.BrownBrownAlex Brown & Sons Charitable<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 2257Baltimore, MD 21203523. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.<strong>The</strong> Brown <strong>Foundation</strong>71 W. Park Ave.Vineland, NJ 08360524. Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund, New York,NY. $1,000. For general support.BrownBrownJames Graham Brown <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.4350 Brownsboro Rd., Ste. 200Louisville, KY 40207(502) 896-2440FAX: (502) 896-1774; E-mail: mason@jgbf.org;URL: http://www.jgbf.org525. National <strong>Philanthropic</strong> Trust, Jenkintown,PA. $250,000, 2001.526. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $750,000, 2001.<strong>The</strong> BTM <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi, Ltd.1251 Ave. of the AmericasNew York, NY 10020-<strong>11</strong>04(212) 782-4627E-mail: bgilroy@btmna.com527. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.528. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000.529. Undesignated. $13,000.Buca Di Beppo1300 Nicollet Mall, Suite 5003Minneapolis, MN 55403530. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$100,000. To assist families of members of theuniformed servicemen who lost their lives in theattacks of the <strong>11</strong>th of <strong>September</strong>.BTMBucaBudcoBudcoc/o Corporate Communications13700 Oakland AvenueHighland Park, MI 48203531. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,250. To meetimmediate and long-term needs of victims,families, and communities impacted by the eventsof <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.Buhl<strong>The</strong> Buhl <strong>Foundation</strong>650 Smithfield St., Ste. 2300Pittsburgh, PA 15222(412) 566-27<strong>11</strong>532. American Red Cross, Pittsburgh, PA.$50,000. For Disaster Relief Fund designated forSomerset area hijacked airplane disaster.533. Salvation Army of Western Pennsylvania,Pittsburgh, PA. $50,000. For Disaster Relief Fundfollowing attacks of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, 2001,designated for relief efforts in Somerset areawhere hijacked plane was forced down.Builder’sBuilder’s General Supply Companyc/o Corporate Communications222 Throckmorton StreetFreehold, NJ 07728534. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.Bunbury<strong>The</strong> Bunbury Company2 Railroad Pl.Hopewell, NJ 08525Tel./FAX: (609) 333-8900; E-mail:bunburyco@aol.com; URL: http://www.bunburycompany.org535. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $800.536. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500.BurlingtonBurlington Northern Santa Fe<strong>Foundation</strong>5601 W. 26th St.Cicero, IL 60804(708) 924-5615FAX: (708) 924-5657537. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.538. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $9,707.Burlington Resources <strong>Foundation</strong>5051 Westheimer St., Ste. 1400Houston, TX 77056(713) 624-9898Additional contact: Dee McBride, Admin., tel.:(713) 624-9366; FAX: (713) 624-9955; E-mail:gsmith@br-inc.com or dmcbride@br-inc.com;Additional address: 717 Texas Ave., Ste. 2100,Houston, Texas 77002; URL: http://www.br-inc.com/community/community_brFound.asp539. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000.Bush <strong>Foundation</strong>E-900 First National Bank Bldg.332 Minnesota St.St. Paul, MN 55101(651) 227-0891FAX: (651) 297-6485; E-mail:info@bushfoundation.org; URL: http://www.bushfoundation.org540. American Red Cross, National, DC.$25,000, 2001.Patrick and Aimee Butler Family<strong>Foundation</strong>332 Minnesota St., E-1420St. Paul, MN 55101-1369(651) 222-2565E-mail: info@butlerfamilyfoundation.org; URL:http://www.butlerfamilyfoundation.org541. American Red Cross, National, DC.$20,000, 2001.542. Saint Paul <strong>Foundation</strong>, Saint Paul, MN.$20,000.BurlingtonBushButlerButlerJ. E. & Z. B. Butler <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.825 3rd Ave., 40th Fl.New York, NY 10022543. Gift of New York, New York, NY. $100,000.ButlerMarilyn and Marshall Butler <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o AVX Corp.750 Lexington Ave., 27th Fl.New York, NY 10022-1282544. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $2,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.H. E. Butt <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 290670Kerrville, TX 78029-0670(830) 896-2505545. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.Butt146


LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERCaliforniaBuuckBuuck Family <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Lowry Hill90 S. 7th St., Ste. 5300Minneapolis, MN 55402Application address: 8800 Deer Ridge Ln.,Bloomington, MN 55438; FAX: (612) 667-7839546. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $2,500.<strong>The</strong> C.E. and S. <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.1650 National City TowerLouisville, KY 40202(502) 583-0546FAX: (502) 583-7648; URL: http://www.cesfoundation.com547. American Red Cross, Louisville, KY.$20,000. For relief efforts following terroristattacks in New York, Washington andPennsylvania.CadenceCadence Design Systems, Inc. CorporateGiving Programc/o Community Affairs Dept.2655 Seely Ave., M.S. 5A1San Jose, CA 95134(408) 428-5993Tel. for University Relations and Recruiting: (408)428-5368; URL: http://www.cadence.com/company/com_svc_l2_index.html548. American Red Cross, National, DC.$400,000.549. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $400,000.550. Various organizations. $50,000.C.E.Cafritz<strong>The</strong> Morris and Gwendolyn Cafritz<strong>Foundation</strong>1825 K St., N.W., 14th Fl.Washington, DC 20006(202) 223-3100FAX: (202) 296-7567; E-mail:info@cafritzfoundation.org; URL: http://www.cafritzfoundation.org551. Echo Hill Outdoor School, Worton, MD.$10,000. To provide DC Public School childrenwith residential outdoor experiences; grant madein memory of Hilda Taylor, teacher who perishedin plane that crashed into Pentagon on <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>.Calder<strong>The</strong> Louis Calder <strong>Foundation</strong>175 Elm St.New Canaan, CT 06840(203) 966-8925E-mail: admin@calderfdn.org; URL: http://www.louiscalderfdn.org552. Big Brothers/Big Sisters of New York City,New York, NY. $25,000. For Disaster ReliefServices response to children and families affectedby <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.553. City Harvest, New York, NY. $20,000, 2001.CaliforniaCalifornia Association of Realtorsc/o Corporate Communications525 South Virgil AvenueLos Angeles, CA 90028554. National Association of Realtors, Chicago,IL. $25,000.CaliforniaCalifornia Community <strong>Foundation</strong>445 S. Figueroa St., Ste. 3400Los Angeles, CA 90071(213) 413-4130FAX: (213) 383-2046; E-mail: info@ccf-la.org;URL: http://www.calfund.org555. Asian Pacific American Legal <strong>Center</strong> ofSouthern California, Los Angeles, CA. $25,000.For public education program addressing hatecrimes in wake of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.556. Beyond Shelter, Los Angeles, CA. $50,000.For efforts to provide rental assistance to localsecondary victims of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, such asworkers with little or no savings who lost jobs intourism industry.557. Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy,Los Angeles, CA. $120,000. For serving workerswho have lost their jobs as result of <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th.558. Los Angeles Coalition to End Hunger andHomelessness, Los Angeles, CA. $30,000. Forproduction of copies of informational brochuredistributed to agencies serving families who lostjobs in wake of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.559. Los Angeles Commission on AssaultsAgainst Women, Los Angeles, CA. $30,000. Forassistance to battered women and rape victimsPost-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.560. Los Angeles Regional Foodbank, LosAngeles, CA. $100,000. For people affected byevents of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.561. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $200,000.562. Shelter Partnership, Los Angeles, CA.$25,000. For distribution of donated goodsthrough churches, family centers, and AFL/CIOto those facing unexpected difficulties after eventsof <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.CaliforniaCalifornia Dental Association <strong>Foundation</strong>1201 K Street Mall, 8th FloorSacramento, CA 95814563. American Dental Association, Chicago, IL.$5,000.564. New York Dental Society, New York, NY.$66,290.565. New York Forensic Dental Society, NewYork, NY. $10,000.California<strong>The</strong> California Endowment21650 Oxnard St., Ste. 1200Woodland Hills, CA 91367(800) 449-4149566. Anti-Defamation League of B’nai B’rith, SanDiego, CA. $377,595, 2002. For Pathways toTolerance program to promote tolerance andelimination of racial, religious, and other biasamong San Diego County high school-age youthby offering anti-bias and violence-preventionworkshops in high schools, and providingintensive counseling to juvenile perpetrators andyouth at risk of committing bias-related violence.567. Asian Pacific Fund, San Francisco, CA.$50,000, 2002. For regranting efforts that willsupport health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).568. Black United Fund Bay Area, Oakland, CA.$50,000, 2002. For regranting efforts that willsupport health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).569. California Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, LosAngeles, CA. $400,000, 2002. For regrantingefforts that will support health and health-relatedsafety net providers affected by California’seconomic downturn (connected with the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, 2001 terrorist attacks).570. California Council of Churches, Sacramento,CA. $300,000, 2002. For Building Bridges ofUnderstanding: An Interfaith <strong>Response</strong> to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> to produce and distribute materialsand provide training to congregations of alltraditions designed to deepen knowledge andunderstanding of diverse faith traditions.571. Capital Unity Council, Sacramento, CA.$219,962, 2002. For Unity Teams Program toincrease capacity of diverse community leaders inSacramento Valley region to promotecross-cultural understanding among theirrespective communities.572. <strong>Center</strong> for the Advancement of Nonviolence,Los Angeles, CA. $25,000, 2002. For A Season ofNonviolence, nonviolence education andcommunity healing campaign in Los Angeles.573. <strong>Center</strong> on Policy Initiatives, San Diego, CA.$568,830, 2002. For Tourism Industry DisplacedWorker Relief Program to assist workers in SanDiego County who have been affected by the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks and relatedeconomic downturn, and who are in need ofemergency financial assistance, public benefitsadvocacy, and related support.574. Chinese For Affirmative Action, SanFrancisco, CA. $200,000, 2003. For A United<strong>Response</strong> to Backlash Hate, Violence, andDiscrimination, five-agency collaborative to createcoordinated response to recent acts of violenceagainst immigrants in the Bay Area as a result of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.575. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for MontereyCounty, Monterey, CA. $100,000, 2002. Forregranting efforts that will support health andhealth-related safety net providers affected byCalifornia’s economic downturn (connected withthe <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, 2001 terrorist attacks).576. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Santa Cruz,Soquel, CA. $50,000, 2002. For regranting effortsthat will support health and health-related safetynet providers affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).577. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of the Napa Valley,Napa, CA. $50,000, 2002. For regranting effortsthat will support health and health-related safetynet providers affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).578. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> Serving Riversideand San Bernardino Counties, Riverside, CA.$200,000, 2002. For regranting efforts that willsupport health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).579. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> Silicon Valley, SanJose, CA. $150,000, 2002. For regranting effortsthat will support health and health-related safetynet providers affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).580. Community Partners, Los Angeles, CA.$50,000, 2002. For Coming Together In Crisis -Hate Crime Prevention Dialogues, program topromote understanding of Arab-Americans andpeople of Islamic faith by conducting communityforums and dialogues between various religiousand ethnic groups in selected Southern Californiaareas.581. East Bay Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Oakland,CA. $150,000, 2002. For regranting efforts thatwill support health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).582. El Dorado Community <strong>Foundation</strong> forYouth and Family Services, Placerville, CA.$50,000, 2002. For regranting efforts that willsupport health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).583. Facing History and Ourselves National<strong>Foundation</strong>, Brookline, MA. $200,000, 2003. For<strong>The</strong> California Project to provide training,support and resources to teachers in California sothey can help students responsibly frame diversity147


CaliforniaSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEand tolerance issues in the aftermath of the eventsof <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.584. <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, New York, New York,NY. $50,000, 2003. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th<strong>Philanthropic</strong> <strong>Response</strong> Project.585. Fresno Regional <strong>Foundation</strong>, Fresno, CA.$150,000, 2002. For regranting efforts that willsupport health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).586. Glendale Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Glendale,CA. $50,000, 2002. For regranting efforts that willsupport health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).587. Glide Memorial <strong>Foundation</strong>, San Francisco,CA. $70,000, 2003. For Peacemakers, program forcultural and religious tolerance education andoutreach in Bay Area communities.588. Hebrew Union College, Jewish Institute ofReligion, Los Angeles, CA. $84,250, 2002. ForMy America — Beyond Multiculturalism,week-long series of seminars and performing artsevents in Los Angeles that emphasize distinctiveand integral contributions of immigrants inAmerica.589. Horizons <strong>Foundation</strong>, San Francisco, CA.$50,000, 2002. For regranting efforts that willsupport health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).590. Humboldt Area <strong>Foundation</strong>, Bayside, CA.$50,000, 2002. For regranting efforts that willsupport health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).591. Kern County Community <strong>Foundation</strong>,Bakersfield, CA. $50,000. For regranting effortsthat will support health and health-related safetynet providers affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).592. Liberty Hill <strong>Foundation</strong>, Santa Monica, CA.$100,000. For regranting efforts that will supporthealth and health-related safety net providersaffected by California’s economic downturn(connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, 2001terrorist attacks).593. Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy,Los Angeles, CA. $900,000, 2002. For DisplacedWorker Relief Program to provide emergencyassistance and support services to tourism workerswho have been unemployed or had their schedulesreduced as a result of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terroristattacks.594. Los Angeles Brotherhood Crusade, LosAngeles, CA. $50,000, 2002. For regrantingefforts that will support health and health-relatedsafety net providers affected by California’seconomic downturn (connected with the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, 2001 terrorist attacks).595. Los Angeles County Commission on HumanRelations, Los Angeles, CA. $180,000, 2003. ForHate Crime Media Campaign and CapacityBuilding Project to implement comprehensiveplan in Los Angeles County to respond toincrease in hate crimes in the aftermath of the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> tragedy.596. Marin Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Larkspur,CA. $50,000, 2002. For regranting efforts that willsupport health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).597. Mazon-A Jewish <strong>Response</strong> to Hunger, LosAngeles, CA. $1,400,000, 2002. For CaliforniaEmergency Food Assistance and AdvocacyProgram to provide statewide emergency foodassistance, outreach on eligibility for income andfood assistance programs, and advocacy supportto low-wage and immigrant workers recentlylaid-off as a result of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th tragedyand California’s economic downturn.598. Mendocino County Community <strong>Foundation</strong>,Ukiah, CA. $50,000, 2002. For regranting effortsthat will support health and health-related safetynet providers affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).599. Multicultural Collaborative, Los Angeles,CA. $150,000, 2003. To expand MulticulturalCollaborative Town Halls, programs in LosAngeles that address issues of power, inequity, andpoverty that often underlie the intolerance, fear,and competition that breeds inter-ethnic conflict.600. National Conference for Community andJustice, Los Angeles, CA. $205,850, 2002. ForCommunity/Interfaith 9<strong>11</strong> Dialogue Initiative, tosupport interfaith and intercultural dialogue inSouthern California to reduce anti-Arab Americanand Muslim emotions and hate-motivatedbehaviors that have increased in the wake ofrecent terrorism.601. National Conference for Community andJustice - Orange County Region, Newport Beach,CA. $100,000, 2002. For Community CousinsProgram to promote tolerance and elimination ofracial and religious bias by facilitating friendshipsand promoting mutual understanding amongpeople of all ethnicities and religions in OrangeCounty.602. North Valley Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Chico,CA. $50,000, 2002. For regranting efforts that willsupport health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).603. Operation HOPE, Los Angeles, CA.$100,000, 2003. For Project Islamic Hope toenhance and expand youth violence preventionprogram and development of youth leaderstrained in multi-ethnic, religious tolerance, andconflict resolution at South Los Angeles highschools.604. Orange County Community <strong>Foundation</strong>,Irvine, CA. $200,000, 2002. For regranting effortsthat will support health and health-related safetynet providers affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).605. Orange County Human Relations Council,Santa Ana, CA. $188,991, 2003. For Living RoomDialogues, program to increase racial andreligious tolerance by engaging in communitybuilding activities, which bring together diversepeople, including Muslims and Arabs throughoutOrange County.606. Partners for Democratic Change, SanFrancisco, CA. $125,000, 2003. For East BayAfghan Community Project to improve mentaland physical health of East Bay Afghancommunity in the aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> byincreasing organizational and leadership capacityof Afghan Coalition.607. Pasadena <strong>Foundation</strong>, Pasadena, CA.$50,000, 2002. For regranting efforts that willsupport health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).608. Peninsula Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, SanMateo, CA. $100,000, 2002. For regrantingefforts that will support health and health-relatedsafety net providers affected by California’seconomic downturn (connected with the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, 2001 terrorist attacks).609. Sacramento Regional <strong>Foundation</strong>,Sacramento, CA. $100,000, 2002. For regrantingefforts that will support health and health-relatedsafety net providers affected by California’seconomic downturn (connected with the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, 2001 terrorist attacks).610. San Diego <strong>Foundation</strong>, San Diego, CA.$200,000. For regranting efforts that will supporthealth and health-related safety net providersaffected by California’s economic downturn(connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, 2001terrorist attacks).6<strong>11</strong>. San Francisco <strong>Foundation</strong>, San Francisco,CA. $100,000, 2002. For regranting efforts thatwill support health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).612. San Luis Obispo County Community<strong>Foundation</strong>, San Luis Obispo, CA. $50,000, 2002.For regranting efforts that will support health andhealth-related safety net providers affected byCalifornia’s economic downturn (connected withthe <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, 2001 terrorist attacks).613. Santa Barbara <strong>Foundation</strong>, Santa Barbara,CA. $100,000, 2002. For regranting efforts thatwill support health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).614. Seventh Generation Fund for IndianDevelopment, Forestville, CA. $50,000, 2002. Forregranting efforts that will support health andhealth-related safety net providers affected byCalifornia’s economic downturn (connected withthe <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, 2001 terrorist attacks).615. Shasta Regional Community <strong>Foundation</strong>,Redding, CA. $50,000, 2002. For regrantingefforts that will support health and health-relatedsafety net providers affected by California’seconomic downturn (connected with the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, 2001 terrorist attacks).616. Simon Wiesenthal <strong>Center</strong>, Los Angeles, CA.$350,000, 2002. For Tolerance EducationProgram for Youth, to expand number of youth inLos Angeles who participate in tolerance and hatecrime reduction programs and to supportinclusion of specific <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001 museumprogram components, teaching materials, andseminars.617. Solano Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Fairfield,CA. $100,000, 2002. For regranting efforts thatwill support health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).618. Sonoma County Community <strong>Foundation</strong>,Santa Rosa, CA. $100,000, 2002. For regrantingefforts that will support health and health-relatedsafety net providers affected by California’seconomic downturn (connected with the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, 2001 terrorist attacks).619. Sonora Area <strong>Foundation</strong>, Sonora, CA.$50,000, 2002. For regranting efforts that willsupport health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).620. Truckee Tahoe Community <strong>Foundation</strong>,Truckee, CA. $50,000, 2002. For regrantingefforts that will support health and health-relatedsafety net providers affected by California’seconomic downturn (connected with the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, 2001 terrorist attacks).621. United Way California Capital Region,Sacramento, CA. $250,000, 2002. For regrantingefforts that will support health and health-relatedsafety net providers affected by California’seconomic downturn (connected with the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, 2001 terrorist attacks).148


622. United Way of Fresno County, Fresno, CA.$150,000, 2002. For regranting efforts that willsupport health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).623. United Way of Kern County, Bakersfield,CA. $50,000, 2002. For regranting efforts that willsupport health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).624. United Way of Monterey County, Monterey,CA. $50,000, 2002. For regranting efforts that willsupport health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).625. United Way of Mount Baldy, RanchoCucamonga, CA. $150,000, 2002. For regrantingefforts that will support health and health-relatedsafety net providers affected by California’seconomic downturn (connected with the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, 2001 terrorist attacks).626. United Way of Orange County Chapter,Irvine, CA. $250,000. For regranting efforts thatwill support health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>,2001 terrorist attacks).627. United Way of San Diego County, SanDiego, CA. $250,000, 2002. For regranting effortsthat will support health and health-related safetynet providers affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).628. United Way of San Joaquin County,Stockton, CA. $50,000, 2002. For regrantingefforts that will support health and health-relatedsafety net providers affected by California’seconomic downturn (connected with the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, 2001 terrorist attacks).629. United Way of Sonoma-Mendocino-Lake,Santa Rosa, CA. $50,000, 2002. For regrantingefforts that will support health and health-relatedsafety net providers affected by California’seconomic downturn (connected with the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, 2001 terrorist attacks).630. United Way of Stanislaus County, Modesto,CA. $50,000, 2002. For regranting efforts that willsupport health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).631. United Way of the Bay Area, San Francisco,CA. $500,000, 2002. For regranting efforts thatwill support health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).632. United Way of the Inland Valleys, Riverside,CA. $150,000, 2002. For regranting efforts thatwill support health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).633. United Way of Ventura County, Camarillo,CA. $150,000, 2002. For regranting efforts thatwill support health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).634. United Way, Inc., Los Angeles, CA.$600,000, 2002. For regranting efforts that willsupport health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).635. United Way, Silicon Valley, San Jose, CA.$150,000, 2002. For regranting efforts that willLIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERsupport health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).636. University Muslim Medical Association, LosAngeles, CA. $150,000, 2003. For <strong>The</strong> IslamicMedia Roundtable — Building a Healthy Voice forthe Community, media and opinion makersconvening in Los Angeles to increase publicawareness about Islamic cultures and to formMuslim coalition to foster positive portrayal oftheir community as one promoting violenceprevention.637. Vanguard Public <strong>Foundation</strong>, San Francisco,CA. $100,000, 2002. For regranting efforts thatwill support health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).638. Ventura County Community <strong>Foundation</strong>,Camarillo, CA. $100,000, 2002. For regrantingefforts that will support health and health-relatedsafety net providers affected by California’seconomic downturn (connected with the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, 2001 terrorist attacks).639. Walnut Avenue Womens <strong>Center</strong>, Santa Cruz,CA. $100,000, 2003. For Contra Costa LabyrinthProject, supporting development of educationaland outreach programs that foster religioustolerance in Contra Costa County communities.640. Womens <strong>Foundation</strong>, San Francisco, CA.$50,000, 2002. For regranting efforts that willsupport health and health-related safety netproviders affected by California’s economicdownturn (connected with the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,2001 terrorist attacks).641. Working Partnerships USA, San Jose, CA.$972,563, 2002. For Bay Area Worker ReliefProject to support workers in tourist industry inAlameda, San Francisco, San Mateo, and SantaClara Counties who are experiencing economicdistress due to the effects of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thattacks and the current recession.CaliforniaCalifornia Exotic Noveltiesc/o Corporate Communications14235 Ramona AveChino, CA 91710642. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.CaliforniaCalifornia Federal Bank “CommunityPower” Program3900 Lennane Dr., Ste. 102Sacramento, CA 95834(916) 614-2335E-mail: mhogarty@calfed.com643. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.CallawayCallaway <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 790LaGrange, GA 30241(706) 884-7348FAX: (706) 884-0201; E-mail:hsburdette@callaway-foundation.org644. American Red Cross, La Grange, LaGrange, GA. $25,000, 2001. For New York andWashington DC disaster relief.Callaway Golf Company <strong>Foundation</strong>2180 Rutherford Rd.Carlsbad, CA 92008-7328(760) 930-8686FAX: (760) 930-5021; E-mail:cgcfoundation@callawaygolf.com; URL: http://www.callawaygolf.org645. American Red Cross, National, DC.$60,000.Callaway646. Undesignated. $20,000.647. Undesignated. $20,000.CapitalCammarataCammarata Family <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 248Concord, MA 01742648. Leary Firefighters <strong>Foundation</strong> Fund for NewYorks Bravest, Boston, MA. $5,000. For generalsupport.CampbellJ. Bulow Campbell <strong>Foundation</strong><strong>The</strong> Hurt Building, Ste. 85050 Hurt Plz.Atlanta, GA 30303(404) 658-9066649. American Red Cross, Metropolitan AtlantaChapter, Atlanta, GA. $500,000, 2001. Tosupport victims and families affected by terroristattacks in New York, Washington, DC andPennsylvania.650. Salvation Army of Atlanta, Atlanta, GA.$500,000, 2001. To support victims and familiesaffected by terrorist attacks in New York,Washington, DC and Pennsylvania.CampbellCampbell Soup Company ContributionsProgramc/o Public Affairs Dept.Campbell Pl., Box 60BCamden, NJ 08103-1799(856) 342-4800651. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000.CanadianCanadian Imperial Bank of Commercec/o Corporate CommunicationsCommerce CourtToronto, Ontario M5L 1A2652. Undesignated. $100,000.CanadianCanadian National Railway Companyc/o Corporate Communications935 de la Gauchetiere Street WestMontreal, Quebec H3B 2M9653. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $250,000.Cantor, Fitzgerald <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o J. Ficarro101 Park Ave., 34th Fl.New York, NY 10172654. Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund, New York,NY. $5,000,000.CantorCantwellLouis Yager Cantwell Private <strong>Foundation</strong><strong>11</strong> Cape WoodburyNewport Beach, CA 92660655. American Red Cross, National, DC.$10,000.656. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $20,000.657. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY. $20,000.CapitalCapital Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 18902Raleigh, NC 27619-8902Tel./FAX: (919) 782-0602; E-mail:info@capitalcf.org; URL: http://www.capitalcf.org658. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $12,000.Capital<strong>The</strong> Capital Group Companies Charitable<strong>Foundation</strong><strong>11</strong>100 Santa Monica Blvd., Fl. 9Los Angeles, CA 90025-3384659. Catholic Charities USA, Alexandria, VA.$200.149


CapitalSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE660. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $50,000.661. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $4,570.662. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $690.663. Engine No. 22/Ladder No. 13 Family Fund,New York, NY. $10,000.664. Engine No. 22/Ladder No. 13 Family Fund,New York, NY. $600.665. Farmington Hills Police BenevolentAssociation, Farmington Hills, MI. $5,000.666. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $200.667. Los Angeles Firemen’s Relief Association,Los Angeles, CA. $1,400.668. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $8,830.669. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $162,272.670. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $100,000.671. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $81,063.672. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $28,740.673. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $16,400.674. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $2,340.675. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $1,000.676. United Way of New York City, New York,NY. $100,000.677. United Way of New York City, New York,NY. $27,240.678. Windows of Hope Family Relief Fund, NewYork, NY. $950.CardinalCardinal Health <strong>Foundation</strong>7000 Cardinal Pl.Dublin, OH 43017(614) 757-7450E-mail: cardinalfoundation@cardinal.com; URL:http://www.cardinal.com/content/about/cardfoundation.asp679. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $150,000, 2001. 9/<strong>11</strong>disaster relief for the capital region.680. Greater New York Hospital <strong>Foundation</strong>,New York, NY. $450,000, 2001.681. Greater New York Hospital <strong>Foundation</strong>,New York, NY. $100,000, 2001.682. Greater New York Hospital <strong>Foundation</strong>,New York, NY. $100,000, 2001.683. Greater New York Hospital <strong>Foundation</strong>,New York, NY. $50,000, 2001.684. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $100, 2001.685. Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$175,000, 2001. 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief focused onchildren and low income victims of attacks.686. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $1,150, 2001. matching gift for9/<strong>11</strong> employee contributions.687. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$215,708, 2001. Scholarship fund to support 9/<strong>11</strong>victims and their families.CareFirst BlueCross BlueShieldc/o Corporate Communications301 Bay Street, Suite No. 401Easton, MD 21601688. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000.CareFirstCarey Family Trust<strong>11</strong>75 Hilltop DriveRedding, CA 96002689. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000.W. P. Carey <strong>Foundation</strong>50 Rockefeller Plz., 2nd Fl.New York, NY 10020690. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $15,000.CareyCareyCargillCargill, Incorporated Corporate GivingProgramc/o Citizenship Comm.P.O. Box 5650Minneapolis, MN 55440-5650(952) 742-43<strong>11</strong>Additional contact: Michelle Grogg, Sr. Prog. Off.,tel.: (952) 742-2931, E-mail:michelle_grogg@cargill.com; Additional address:Cargill Office Ctr., 15407 McGinty Rd. W.,Wayzata, MN 55391-2399 (express mail ormessenger); FAX: (952) 742-7224; E-mail:stacey_smida@cargill.com; URL: http://www.cargill.com/commun/index.htm691. American Red Cross, National, DC.$208,136, 2001.692. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.693. Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund, New York,NY. $90,000, 2001.694. Credit Suisse/First Boston CorporateContributions Program, NY. $20,000, 2001.695. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $108,000, 2001.696. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $10,000, 2001.697. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $9,000, 2001.698. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$47,000, 2001.699. Undesignated. $1,181, 2001. Un-namedrecipient.700. World Trade <strong>Center</strong> Disaster Fund, London,England. $540, 2001.CarnegieCarnegie Corporation of New York437 Madison Ave.New York, NY 10022(212) 371-3200FAX: (212) 754-4073; URL: http://www.carnegie.org701. Aaron Davis Hall, New York, NY. $100,000,2002. Toward support in wake of terrorist attackson <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.702. Alliance for the Arts, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.703. Alliance of Resident <strong>The</strong>aters/New York(ART/NY), New York, NY. $100,000, 2002.Toward support in wake of terrorist attacks on<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.704. American Museum of the Moving Image,Astoria, NY. $100,000, 2002. Toward support inwake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.705. American Music <strong>Center</strong>, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.706. American Place <strong>The</strong>ater, New York, NY.$75,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.707. Amigos del Museo del Barrio, New York,NY. $100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.708. Anthology Film Archives, New York, NY.$25,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.709. Art in General, New York, NY. $50,000,2002. Toward support in wake of terrorist attackson <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.710. Artists Space, New York, NY. $25,000, 2002.Toward support in wake of terrorist attacks on<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.7<strong>11</strong>. ArtsConnection, New York, NY. $100,000,2002. Toward support in wake of terrorist attackson <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.712. Asian American Arts Alliance, New York,NY. $25,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.713. Atlantic <strong>The</strong>ater Company, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.714. Ballet Hispanico of New York, New York,NY. $100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.715. Ballet Tech <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.716. Bargemusic, Brooklyn, NY. $75,000, 2002.Toward support in wake of terrorist attacks on<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.717. Borough of Manhattan Community CollegePerforming Arts <strong>Center</strong>, New York, NY. $50,000,2002. Toward support in wake of terrorist attackson <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.718. Boston University, Boston, MA. $100,000,2002. For WBUR Group radio stations to supportprogramming on Islam and foreign policy.719. Boys Choir of Harlem, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.720. Bronx Council on the Arts, Bronx, NY.$75,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.721. Bronx County Historical Society, Bronx, NY.$50,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.722. Bronx Museum of the Arts, Bronx, NY.$75,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.723. Brooklyn Academy of Music, Brooklyn, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.724. Brooklyn Arts Council, Brooklyn, NY.$75,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.725. Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Brooklyn, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.726. Brooklyn Childrens Museum, Brooklyn, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.727. Brooklyn Conservatory of Music, Brooklyn,NY. $75,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.728. Brooklyn Historical Society, Brooklyn, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.729. Brooklyn Philharmonic SymphonyOrchestra, Brooklyn, NY. $75,000, 2002. Towardsupport in wake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>, 2001.730. Brooklyn Youth Chorus, Brooklyn, NY.$50,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.731. Brown University, Providence, RI. $48,800.Toward development and distribution ofcurriculum resources about issues surrounding<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks for high school students andteachers.150


LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERCarnegie732. Castillo Cultural <strong>Center</strong>, New York, NY.$50,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.733. <strong>Center</strong> for Arts Education, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.734. <strong>Center</strong> for Investigative Reporting, SanFrancisco, CA. $50,000. Toward investigation ofsurveillance technologies, new governmentintelligence-gathering policies, and impact on U.S.democracy, including civil liberties.735. <strong>Center</strong> for Traditional Music and Dance,New York, NY. $50,000, 2002. Toward support inwake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.736. Chamber Music America, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.737. Children’s Museum of Manhattan, NewYork, NY. $100,000, 2002. Toward support inwake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.738. Circle in the Square <strong>The</strong>ater School, NewYork, NY. $75,000, 2002. Toward support in wakeof terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.739. City <strong>Center</strong> Fifty-Fifth Street <strong>The</strong>ater<strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY. $100,000, 2002.740. City Lore, New York, NY. $75,000, 2002.Toward support in wake of terrorist attacks on<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.741. Columbia University, New York, NY.$49,300. Toward study of role of United Nationsin counterterrorism.742. Concert Artists Guild, New York, NY.$75,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.743. Council on Arts & Humanities for StatenIsland Film Video Arts, Inc., Staten Island, NY.$75,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.744. Creative Time, New York, NY. $50,000,2002. Toward support in wake of terrorist attackson <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.745. Dance <strong>The</strong>ater of Harlem, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.746. Dance <strong>The</strong>ater Workshop (DTW), NewYork, NY. $100,000, 2002. Toward support inwake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.747. Dancing in the Streets, New York, NY.$50,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.748. Dia <strong>Center</strong> for the Arts, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.749. Duke University, Durham, NC. $499,300.For project on managing external interventionsafter <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.750. Educational Broadcasting Corporation, NewYork, NY. $500,000, 2002. For Channel Thirteen /WNET New York’s expenses related torestoration of transmission and broadcastcapabilities, website enhancement andprogramming.751. Ensemble Studio <strong>The</strong>ater (EST), New York,NY. $50,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.752. Fifty-Second Street Project, New York, NY.$50,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.753. Film/Video Arts, New York, NY. $75,000,2002. Toward support in wake of terrorist attackson <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.754. Flushing Council on Culture and the Arts,Flushing, NY. $75,000, 2002. Toward support inwake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.755. <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, New York, New York,NY. $35,000, 2002. To support the <strong>Center</strong>’s 9/<strong>11</strong><strong>Philanthropic</strong> <strong>Response</strong> Project.756. Four Way Books, New York, NY. $25,000,2002. Toward support in wake of terrorist attackson <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.757. Fund for Public Schools, Brooklyn, NY.$1,850,000, 2002. For projects to honor NewYork City public school teachers in the wake ofthe terrorist attack on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.758. Greater Washington EducationalTelecommunications Association, Arlington, VA.$250,000, 2002. For reporting by <strong>The</strong> NewsHourfrom countries involved in different aspects of thewar on terrorism.759. H. T. Dance Company, New York, NY.$25,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.760. Harlem School of the Arts, New York, NY.$75,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.761. Harlem Textile Works, New York, NY.$25,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.762. HERE/Home for Contemporary <strong>The</strong>ater andArt, New York, NY. $50,000, 2002. Towardsupport in wake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>, 2001.763. High Five Tickets to the Arts, New York,NY. $50,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.764. Historic House Trust of New York City, NewYork, NY. $25,000, 2002. Toward support in wakeof terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.765. Hospital Audiences, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.766. Human Rights Watch, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward project to monitorhuman rights issues related to post-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>antiterrorism campaigns and war in Afghanistan.767. International Print <strong>Center</strong> New York, NewYork, NY. $25,000, 2002. Toward support in wakeof terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.768. Internews Network, Arcata, CA. $10,000.Toward Open Media Fund for Afghanistan.769. Irish Repertory <strong>The</strong>ater Company, NewYork, NY. $75,000, 2002. Toward support in wakeof terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.770. Isamu Noguchi <strong>Foundation</strong>, Long IslandCity, NY. $50,000, 2002. Toward support in wakeof terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.771. Jamaica <strong>Center</strong> for Arts and Learning,Jamaica, NY. $75,000, 2002. Toward support inwake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.772. John A. Noble Collection, Staten Island, NY.$25,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.773. John F. Kennedy Library <strong>Foundation</strong>,Boston, MA. $50,000. Toward series of educationforums called Responding to Terrorism.774. Jose Limon Dance <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York,NY. $75,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.775. King Manor Association of Long Island,Jamaica, NY. $25,000, 2002. Toward support inwake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.776. La Mama Experimental <strong>The</strong>ater Club, NewYork, NY. $75,000, 2002. Toward support in wakeof terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.777. Lower East Side Printshop, New York, NY.$25,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.778. Lower East Side Tenement Museum, NewYork, NY. $75,000, 2002. Toward support in wakeof terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.779. Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, NewYork, NY. $100,000, 2002. Toward support inwake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.780. Mabou Mines Development <strong>Foundation</strong>,New York, NY. $50,000, 2002. Toward support inwake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.781. Martha Graham <strong>Center</strong> of ContemporaryDance, New York, NY. $100,000, 2002. Towardsupport in wake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>, 2001.782. Mindbuilders Creative Arts Company,Bronx, NY. $25,000, 2002. Toward support inwake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.783. Museum for African Art, Long Island City,NY. $100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.784. Museum of American Folk Art, New York,NY. $100,000, 2002.785. Museum of Jewish Heritage, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.786. Museum of the City of New York, New York,NY. $100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.787. National Academy of Sciences, DC.$200,000. For project on Russian-Americancooperation in countering terrorism.788. National Choral Council, New York, NY.$50,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.789. National Dance Institute, New York, NY.$75,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.790. National Public Radio, DC. $250,000, 2002.Toward programming on the aftermath of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> and the war on terrorism.791. New Museum of Contemporary Art, NewYork, NY. $100,000, 2002. Toward support inwake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.792. New School University, New York, NY.$50,000. Toward research project on domesticarms lobby and intersection of campaignfinancing in shaping size and content ofpost-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> military build-up.793. New Victory <strong>The</strong>ater, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.794. New York <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Arts, NewYork, NY. $100,000, 2002. Toward support inwake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.795. New York Hall of Science, Corona, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.796. New York Historical Society, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.797. New York Shakespeare Festival, New York,NY. $100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.798. New York Studio School of Drawing,Painting and Sculpture, New York, NY. $50,000,2002. Toward support in wake of terrorist attackson <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.799. Nuyorican Poets Cafe, New York, NY.$25,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.800. Ontological-Hysteric <strong>The</strong>ater, New York,NY. $25,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.801. Open Channels New York, New York, NY.$25,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.802. Orpheon Little Orchestra Society, <strong>The</strong>, NewYork, NY. $100,000, 2002. Toward support inwake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.803. Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, New York,NY. $100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.804. P. S. 1 Contemporary Art <strong>Center</strong>, LongIsland City, NY. $100,000, 2002. Toward support151


CarnegieSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEin wake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>,2001.805. Pan Asian Repertory <strong>The</strong>ater, New York,NY. $50,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.806. Paper Bag Players, New York, NY. $50,000,2002. Toward support in wake of terrorist attackson <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.807. Paul Taylor Dance <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York,NY. $100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.808. Performance Space 122, New York, NY.$75,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.809. Playwrights Horizons, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.810. Poets and Writers, New York, NY. $100,000,2002. Toward support in wake of terrorist attackson <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.8<strong>11</strong>. Poets House, New York, NY. $50,000, 2002.Toward support in wake of terrorist attacks on<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.812. Pregones Touring Puerto Rican <strong>The</strong>aterCollection, Bronx, NY. $25,000, 2002. Towardsupport in wake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>, 2001.813. Public Art Fund, New York, NY. $100,000,2002. Toward support in wake of terrorist attackson <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.814. Publicolor, New York, NY. $25,000, 2002.Toward support in wake of terrorist attacks on<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.815. Queens Botanical Garden Society, Flushing,NY. $100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.816. Queens College of the City University ofNew York <strong>Foundation</strong>, Flushing, NY. $75,000,2002. Toward support in wake of terrorist attackson <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.817. Queens Council on the Arts, Woodhaven,NY. $75,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.818. Queens Museum of Art, Flushing, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.819. Queens Symphony Orchestra, Rego Park,NY. $75,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.820. Queens <strong>The</strong>ater in the Park, Flushing, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.821. Repertorio Espanol, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.822. Saratoga International <strong>The</strong>ater Institute(SITI), New York, NY. $25,000, 2002. Towardsupport in wake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>, 2001.823. Signature <strong>The</strong>ater Company, New York, NY.$75,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.824. Snug Harbor Cultural <strong>Center</strong>, Staten Island,NY. $100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.825. Society for the Preservation of Weeksvilleand Bedford-Stuyvesant History, Brooklyn, NY.$25,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.826. Socrates Sculpture Park, Long Island City,NY. $25,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.827. Soho Repertory <strong>The</strong>ater, New York, NY.$50,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.828. Staten Island Botanical Garden, StatenIsland, NY. $100,000, 2002. Toward support inwake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.829. Staten Island Childrens Museum, StatenIsland, NY. $75,000, 2002. Toward support inwake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.830. Staten Island Historical Society, StatenIsland, NY. $75,000, 2002. Toward support inwake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.831. Staten Island Institute of Arts and Sciences,Staten Island, NY. $75,000, 2002. Toward supportin wake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>,2001.832. Staten Island Zoological Society, StatenIsland, NY. $100,000, 2002. Toward support inwake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.833. Studio in a School Association, New York,NY. $100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.834. Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.835. Symphony Space, New York, NY. $100,000,2002. Toward support in wake of terrorist attackson <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.836. TADA <strong>The</strong>ater and Dance Alliance, NewYork, NY. $75,000, 2002. Toward support in wakeof terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.837. Target Margin <strong>The</strong>ater, Brooklyn, NY.$25,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.838. Teachers and Writers Collaborative, NewYork, NY. $75,000, 2002. Toward support in wakeof terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.839. Thalia Spanish <strong>The</strong>ater, Sunnyside, NY.$25,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.840. <strong>The</strong>ater for a New Audience, New York, NY.$75,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.841. <strong>The</strong>atre for A New City <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.,New York, NY. $50,000, 2002. Toward support inwake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.842. Third Street Music School Settlement, NewYork, NY. $100,000, 2002. Toward support inwake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.843. Town Hall <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$75,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.844. Trisha Brown Dance Company, New York,NY. $100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.845. University of Maryland <strong>Foundation</strong>, CollegePark, MD. $25,000. Toward internationalroundtable on impact of terrorism on global civilsociety and democracy.846. UrbanGlass/New York Contemporary Glass<strong>Center</strong>, Brooklyn, NY. $75,000, 2002. Towardsupport in wake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>, 2001.847. Vineyard <strong>The</strong>ater and Workshop <strong>Center</strong>,New York, NY. $75,000, 2002. Toward support inwake of terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.848. Wave Hill, Bronx, NY. $100,000, 2002.Toward support in wake of terrorist attacks on<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.849. WNYC <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$500,000, 2002. Toward rebuilding organizationalcapacity and strengthening programming in theaftermath of the terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>,2001.850. Womens Project and Productions, New York,NY. $75,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.851. Wooster Group, New York, NY. $75,000,2002. Toward support in wake of terrorist attackson <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.852. Working Group, Oakland, CA. $25,000. Forreactivating national Not In Our Town network,national community campaign against hate crimesin aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.853. World Music Institute, New York, NY.$75,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.854. Young Audiences-New York, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward support in wake ofterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.855. Young Playwrights, New York, NY. $25,000,2002. Toward support in wake of terrorist attackson <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.CarnegieCarnegie Hero Fund Commission425 6th Ave., Ste. 1640Pittsburgh, PA 15219-1823(412) 281-1302FAX: (412) 281-5751; E-mail:carnegiehero@carnegiehero.org; Additional tel.:(800) 447-8900; URL: http://www.carnegiehero.org/856. National <strong>Philanthropic</strong> Trust, Jenkintown,PA. $50,000, 2002.857. Todd M. Beamer <strong>Foundation</strong>, Cranbury, NJ.$50,000, 2002.Carnival Cruise Linesc/o Corporate Communications3655 NW 87th AvenueMiami, FL 33178858. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,500,000.Carolina First Bankc/o Corporate Communications<strong>The</strong> South Financial Group, PO Box 1029Greenville, SC 29602859. South Carolina Cares Relief Fund,Greenville, SC. $100,000.CarnivalCarolina<strong>The</strong> Carson Family Charitable Trustc/o U.S. Trust Co. of New York<strong>11</strong>4 W. 47th St.New York, NY 10036860. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$100,000. For Families of Freedom ScholarshipFund.861. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$25,000. For Families of Freedom Fund.CarsonCasey<strong>The</strong> Annie E. Casey <strong>Foundation</strong>701 St. Paul St.Baltimore, MD 21202(410) 547-6600FAX: (410) 547-6624; E-mail: webmail@aecf.org;URL: http://www.aecf.org862. Alianza Dominicana, New York, NY.$150,000, 2001. For emergency relief efforts afterthe crash of Flight 587.863. Asian American Coalition for Children andFamilies, New York, NY. $50,000, 2002. To assesspost-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> mental health needs ofChinatown residents and provide outreach toparents and children to ensure they receive neededmental health services and support.864. Baltimore Community <strong>Foundation</strong>,Baltimore, MD. $5,000. To support the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund to help victims of theterrorist attacks and those affected by the tragedy.865. Citizens Committee for Children of NewYork, New York, NY. $75,000, 2002. To supportthe development of a trauma-related trainingprogram for child-welfare clients and staff,impacted by the WTC attacks.866. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $300,000, 2001. To addressthe emotional needs of children and familiesaffected by the tragic events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> andto address the backlash against Muslims andArab-Americans in our region.152


867. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $10,000. For <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th Fund to help victims of terrorist attacks andthose affected by tragedy.868. Community YMCA, Red Bank, NJ. $30,000,2001. Support for the YMCA’s Family Services<strong>Center</strong> WTC9<strong>11</strong> relief effort and YCARESFinancial assistance program.869. <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, New York, New York,NY. $90,000, 2001. For compilation and trackingof philanthropy’s response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>terrorist attacks.870. <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, New York, New York,NY. $90,000, 2002. For continued support of the<strong>Center</strong>’s 9/<strong>11</strong> <strong>Philanthropic</strong> <strong>Response</strong> Project.871. New Yorkers for Children, New York, NY.$1,000,000, 2001. To provide longer-term grantsto community non-profits already engaged andworking with vulnerable children and families,now further destabilized as a result of the WorldTrade <strong>Center</strong> attacks.872. New Yorkers for Children, New York, NY.$75,000, 2002. To prepare child welfarecaseworkers and other frontline staff to moreeffectively address the trauma families areexperiencing since the World Trade <strong>Center</strong>attacks.873. Points of Light <strong>Foundation</strong>, DC. $49,875,2001. To support a re-granting process tot heVolunteer <strong>Center</strong> National Network and othernon-profit organizations administeringcommunity service projects honoring the victimsof the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001 World Trade <strong>Center</strong>attacks.874. Undesignated. $951,237, 2001. Balance oforiginal commitment.875. United Neighborhood Houses of New York,New York, NY. $98,888, 2002. For efforts ofneighborhood based settlement houses to addresslonger-term needs of children and familieseconomically and emotionally harmed by theattacks on the World Trade <strong>Center</strong>, and tosupport community outreach to promotetolerance.876. United Way of Massachusetts Bay, Boston,MA. $25,000, 2001. Support the USA MemorialFund and provide direct services to families andcommunity organizations immediately affected bythe occurrences of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.CaseyEugene B. Casey <strong>Foundation</strong>800 S. Frederick Ave., Ste. 100Gaithersburg, MD 20877-4102877. Salvation Army of Washington, DC, DC.$100,000. For Pentagon victims of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>,2001.CassavaCassava Enterprisesc/o Corporate CommunicationsOld Parham RoadSt. John’s, Gibraltar878. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000.CastleSamuel N. and Mary Castle <strong>Foundation</strong>Pacific Guardian Ctr., Makai Tower733 Bishop St., Ste. 1275Honolulu, HI 96813(808) 522-<strong>11</strong>01FAX: (808) 522-<strong>11</strong>03; E-mail: acastle@aloha.net;URL: http://fdncenter.org/grantmaker/castle/879. American Red Cross, National, DC.$10,000, 2001.LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERCaterpillarCaterpillar Inc. Corporate Giving Program100 N.E. Adams St.Peoria, IL 61629-1480(309) 675-1000880. American Red Cross, National, DC.$300,000.881. American Red Cross, National, DC.$25,000.882. American Red Cross, National, DC.$25,000.Cathay Bancorp, Inc.c/o Corporate Communications777 N. BroadwayLos Angeles, CA 90012883. 9<strong>11</strong> Healing Hands, Los Angeles, CA.$250,000.CathayCavaliereCavaliere <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.1716 Jefferson St.Madison, WI 537<strong>11</strong>Application address: 2<strong>11</strong> S. Patterson St., Madison,WI 53703, tel.: (608) 260-9500884. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $2,000. For unrestricted support.CBS <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.1515 Broadway, 50th Fl.New York, NY 10036(212) 258-6000885. American Red Cross, National, DC.$370,248, 2002.886. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $272,000, 2002.CBSCelaneseCelanese Americas <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Celanese Americas Corp.86 Morris Ave.Summit, NJ 07901887. American Red Cross, National, DC.$17,000.888. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $200,000.889. Undesignated. $38,000. To donate $100 tofamilies of each firefighter and police officerreported missing in World Trade <strong>Center</strong> collapse.Cemala<strong>The</strong> Cemala <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.330 S. Greene St., Ste. 101Greensboro, NC 27401(336) 274-3541FAX: (336) 272-8153; E-mail: cemala@cemala.org;URL: http://www.cemala.org890. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000, 2001.Centex Corporation ContributionsProgramc/o Corp. Contribs.2728 N. HarwoodDallas, TX 75201891. National Housing Endowment, DC.$1,000,000.CentexCentralCentral Alabama Community<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box <strong>11</strong>587Montgomery, AL 36<strong>11</strong>1(334) 264-6223FAX: (334) 263-6225; E-mail: cacf@bellsouth.net892. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $31,000.CentralCentral Carolina Community <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box <strong>11</strong>222Columbia, SC 292<strong>11</strong>-1222(803) 254-5601FAX: (803) 799-6663; E-mail:info@yourfoundation.org; URL: http://www.yourfoundation.org893. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th recovery efforts.Central Maine Power CompanyContributions Program83 Edison Dr.Augusta, ME 04336894. American Red Cross, National, DC.$15,000.CentralCentralCentral New York Community<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.500 S. Salina St., Ste. 428Syracuse, NY 13202(315) 422-9538FAX: (315) 471-6031; URL: http://www.cnycf.org895. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $14,715.896. Various organizations. $361,466. Fordonations to support local not-for-profitorganizations that received less funding thannormally expected because of local diversion offunds to various 9/<strong>11</strong>-related fundingopportunities.<strong>The</strong> CH <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 94038Lubbock, TX 79493-4038(806) 792-0448FAX: (806) 792-7824897. American Red Cross, National, DC.$14,406.CharterCHChamplin<strong>The</strong> Champlin <strong>Foundation</strong>s300 <strong>Center</strong>ville Rd, Ste. 300SWarwick, RI 02886-0226(401) 736-0370FAX: (401) 736-7248; E-mail:champlinfdns@worldnet.att.net; URL: http://www.fdncenter.org/grantmaker/champlin898. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$100,000, 2001. For post-secondary educationscholarships in the aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.Chapman Family FundP.O. Box 194Scarborough, NY 10510899. Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund, New York,NY. $10,000, 2002.ChapmanCharlesCharles River Laboratoriesc/o Corporate Communications251 Ballardvale StWilmington, MA 01887900. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.CharterCharter Municipal Mortgage AcceptanceCompanyc/o Corporate Communications625 Madison AveNew York, NY 10022901. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000.153


ChartwellSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEChartwell Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>1999 Ave. of the Stars, Ste. 3050Los Angeles, CA 90067(310) 556-7600902. Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$100,000, 2001.903. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$250,000.Chef America, Inc.c/o Corporate Communications20 Inverness Pl. E.Engelwood, CO 80<strong>11</strong>2904. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000.ChartwellChefCheneyBen B. Cheney <strong>Foundation</strong>3<strong>11</strong>0 Ruston Way, Ste. ATacoma, WA 98402-5307(253) 572-2442E-mail: info@benbcheneyfoundation.org; URL:http://www.benbcheneyfoundation.org905. American Red Cross, Tacoma Chapter,Tacoma, WA. $100,000, 2001. To support disasterrelief in the aftermath of the terrorist strikesagainst NYC and Washington, DC.ChevronTexacoChevronTexaco CorporationContributions Program6001 Bollinger Canyon Rd., Rm. A2332San Ramon, CA 94583-0778URL: http://www.chevrontexaco.com/social_responsibility906. Active Voice, San Francisco, CA. $100,000.To extend the Islam Project, a community andmedia-based effort geared toward helping buildbridges between Muslim and Non-Muslimorganizations, to Houston, TX and New Orleans,LA.907. Afghan Coalition, Fremont, CA. $100,000.To support the creation of cross-cultural alliances,stimulate meaningful dialogue, and promoteincreased understanding and respect for localcommunities that have been victims of theheightened discrimination after the 9/<strong>11</strong> attacks.908. American Group Psychotherapy Association,New York, NY. $465,000, 2001. To focus onproviding services to the large cadre of mentalhealth professionals (both clinicals andparaprofessionals) who work with those affectedby <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.909. American Immigration Law <strong>Foundation</strong>,DC. $50,000. To support the development of anew policy paper and a related series of regionalbriefings that will bring together legal experts,community representatives, and the public toreview how the newly enacted government policiesand federal agency restructuring will impactSouth Asian, Muslim, and Arab immigrants.910. American Red Cross, Kern County,Bakersfield, CA. $5,000, 2001.9<strong>11</strong>. American Red Cross, Kern County,Bakersfield, CA. $5,000, 2001.912. American Red Cross, San FranciscoChapter, San Francisco, CA. $800,000. Tosupport NY-based relief and recovery efforts.913. American Red Cross, San FranciscoChapter, San Francisco, CA. $200,000. Tosupport DC-based relief and recovery efforts.914. American Red Cross, Southeastern FairfieldCounty, Fairfield, NJ. $5,000, 2001. To supportWTC Disaster Relief Fund.915. Arab American Institute <strong>Foundation</strong>, DC.$100,000. To support 1) the education ofteachers, students and civic groups on the cultureheritage and contributions of Americans of Arabdescent; 2) conduct and disseminate accurate anduseful research on Arab American communitiesand current challenges to their civil liberties andcivic integration to media outlets, governmentagencies, social service agencies and academicinstitutions; 3) provide resources, training andcontacts to Arab American leaders in major U.S.communities to expand local level outreach onArab American needs to public and private sectoragencies.916. Asian American Legal Defense andEducation Fund, New York, NY. $240,000. Forlong-term counseling needs.917. Bereavement <strong>Center</strong> of Westchester, <strong>The</strong>,Tuckahoe, NY. $25,000. For long-term counselingneeds.918. California State University, Long Beach, CA.$52,000. To support the Social Work Anti-BiasCurriculum Project, to provide an educationalexperience for social workers across the state ofCalifornia to examine their conscious andunconscious attitudes regarding South Asian,Muslim, and Arab communities in order to betterserve the needs of these vulnerable communities.919. Chhaya Community DevelopmentCorporation, Flushing, NY. $35,000. To supportthe Housing Discrimination Outreach, EducationInitiative, a project assisting the South East Asiancommunity by providing workshops, focus groupsand community events to inform them of theirrights, and assist them in advocating forthemselves.920. Childrens National Medical <strong>Center</strong>, DC.$125,000, 2001. To provide financial support tothe International <strong>Center</strong> to Heal our ChildrenProgram to help children cope with tramaticevents such as the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks.921. Childrens National Medical <strong>Center</strong>, DC.$125,000, 2001. To work with childrenkindergarten-sixth grade to express their emotionsthrough a series of arts activities including Wall ofHeARTS.922. Chinese-American Planning Council, NewYork, NY. $1,000,000, 2001. To providepost-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th workforce development.923. Church Avenue Merchants BlockAssociation (CAMBA), Brooklyn, NY. $100,000.To support the Mosaic Youth Project, whichprovides 200 junior high and high school age NewYork City youth by providing them the skills andtools needed to avoid negative behaviors, valuediversity and successfully negotiate situations ofconflict through peaceful means.924. Columbia University, New York, NY.$684,000, 2001. To support collaborative andpre-project organization of <strong>The</strong> Oral HistoryTelling Lives Project: <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> Stories.925. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $750,000, 2001. To supportthe Partnership’s work as it continues to invest inthe assets contained within our immigrantcommunities. To support “Moving Forward:Employment and Educational opportunities forImmigrant Families” Project.926. Council of Religious Leaders ofMetropolitan Chicago, Chicago, IL. $100,000. Tosupport the ally relationships with youth andadults among Chicago’s Muslim, Sikh, GreekOrthodox and Jewish communities.927. Educators for Social Responsibility, NewYork, NY. $100,000. To support theimplementation of Teaching for Understanding inSecondary Classrooms Post-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>; to (1)develop greater understanding among adults andstudents about Muslims, Arabs, and South Asians,and raise awareness about increaseddiscrimination they face in the aftermath of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>; and (2) equip secondary educatorswith tools and strategies for interrupting bias anddiscrimination in their schools and communities.928. <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, New York, New York,NY. $25,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th <strong>Philanthropic</strong><strong>Response</strong> Project.929. Fund for the City of New York, New York,NY. $250,000, 2001. To support the YouthDevelopment Institute to engage 10 organizationsin a New York City-wide effort to improveemployment and other opportunities for displacedyouth aged 16-24, a group disproportionatelyaffected by the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks.930. Graduate School of Islamic and SocialStudies, DC. $100,000. To support theempowerment of ordinary members of theMuslim community through education byU.S.-based Islamic social scientists and scholarson Islam’s fundamental messages of tolerance,inclusiveness, and peaceful coexistence for allpeople, and on personal skills to identify andaddress bigotry and discrimination.931. Hate Free Zone Campaign of Washington,Seattle, WA. $100,000. To support ProjectReflect, geared toward the development ofdevelop a comprehensive and innovativeeducational curriculum that focuses on immigrantcommunities affected by the post 9/<strong>11</strong> backlash.932. Hispanic Federation of New York City, NewYork, NY. $250,000. For long-term counselingneeds.933. Houchin Blood Services, Bakersfield, CA.$5,000, 2001.934. Houchin Blood Services, Bakersfield, CA.$5,000, 2001.935. Interfaith Ministries Wichita, Wichita, KS.$91,000. To support “More Alike ThanDifferent” a project that aims to dismantle biasand bigotry against Muslims, Arabs, and SouthAsian groups through a social marketingcampaign to help increase respect andunderstanding regarding the faith, history andcultures of the groups.936. Islamic Social Services Association, Mesa,AZ. $41,000. To support the education ofmainstream professionals and students in thefields of social service, health, law enforcement,education and the media about Muslims inAmerica to raise awareness and knowledge, anddevelop cultural competencies to increase theeffectiveness of the services professionals provideto Muslim clients, patients, students and thegeneral public.937. Islamic Society of San Francisco, SanFrancisco, CA. $100,000, 2001. To providesupport for the United <strong>Response</strong> to Backlash HateViolence and Discrimination in the San FranciscoBay Area Project. Includes preparing anddistributing materials to increase public awarenessand dispel myths and damaging sterotypes aboutArab, Muslim, Asian, and North Africancommunities.938. Japanese American Citizens League, SanFrancisco, CA. $74,000. To support What ItMeans To Be an American, a project to promotetolerance of Arab, South Asian, and Muslimpopulations and dialogue through trainingworkshops for teachers and school administrators.939. Lohgarh Sikh Education <strong>Foundation</strong>, PaloAlto, CA. $95,000. To support <strong>The</strong> Sikh NextDoor: Introducing Sikhs to America’s Classroomsa project geared toward developing a set ofprofessional, interactive, educational materialsabout Sikh-Americans that are specificallydesigned for classroom instruction.940. Masjidul Waritheen, Oakland, CA. $92,000.To support the United Youth Leadership Council,a project designed to work with youth to decreasebias, bigotry and racism among youth in the BayArea.941. Metropolitan Opera, New York, NY.$500,000.942. MMC Victims Relief Fund, New York, NY.$100,000.943. Museum of Chinese in the Americas, NewYork, NY. $65,000, 2001. To provide support for154


the Mapping Our Herritage Project. <strong>The</strong> museumwill help implement the final phase of the OralHistory Telling Lives Project by preserving andexhibiting the various interviews, artifacts, andother materials collected by the Project’s activities.944. Muslim Student Association of United Statesand Canada, Washington, DC. $37,000. Tosupport Building Muslim Friendly Campuses, aproject seeking to research and document the levelin which University and Colleges are Muslimfriendly and discover best practices that lead tothe creation of Muslim friendly programs.945. National Asian Pacific American LegalConsortium, DC. $85,000, 2001. To support atwo-day leadership-training workshop for the Post9/<strong>11</strong> Leadership Training Project focused oninstitutional development, fundrasing,communication strategies, and advocacy skills.946. National Asian Pacific American LegalConsortium, DC. $20,000. For long-termcounseling needs.947. National Conference for Community andJustice, New York, NY. $250,000.948. National Conference for Community andJustice, New York, NY. $165,000, 2001. Toenhance the work of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thAnti-Bias Project by engaging 10 of NCCJ’sregional offices in locales where winning RFPprojects are underway to monitor and evaluateactivities.949. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $250,000.950. New York Stock Exchange Fallen HeroesFund, New York, NY. $100,000.951. New York University, New York, NY.$750,000. For long-term counseling needs.952. Puerto Rican Legal Defense and EducationFund, New York, NY. $350,000, 2001. ProjectAyuda. To continue to provide case managementand legal serives to existing and new PRLDEFclients who suffer from the post-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thimpact on individuals and families.953. Salvation Army New Jersey DivisonalHeadquarters, Union, NJ. $5,000.954. Salvation Army New Jersey DivisonalHeadquarters, Union, NJ. $5,000, 2001. Tosupport NY Trade <strong>Center</strong> Disaster Relief Fund.955. United Neighborhood Houses of New York,New York, NY. $371,000. For fourcommunity-based settlement houses in New YorkCity.956. United Neighborhood Houses of New York,New York, NY. $279,000. To four settlementhouses in New York City.957. United Neighborhood Houses of New York,New York, NY. $100,000. For long-termcounseling needs.958. University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley,CA. $77,000, 2001. To support an essaycompetition open to UC Berkeley students andInternational House residents. <strong>The</strong> topic of theessay would be heightened bigotry andstereotyping that has surfaced in the aftermath of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th and how to combat thisdiscrimination.959. University of Richmond Chaplaincy,Richmond, VA. $100,000. To supportMetropolitan Richmond <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thAnti-Bias Project, a project designed to engageleadership outreach and establish a collaborativemodel to increase regional leaders’ awareness andunderstanding of the South Asian, Muslim, andArab populations; create settings which encourageregional religious, business, and civic leaders toexamine their conscious and unconscious attitudesregarding these communities; and provideopportunities to affect systemic change withregard to regional bias against the South Asian,Muslim, and Arab communities.LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDER960. Vital Voices Global Partnership, DC.$75,000, 2001. To provide cross-culturalunderstanding through women’s leadershipprograms in the Muslim/Arab world and Pakistanthat will include opportunities for interculturaldialogue and exchange among Americans andparticipants from the Arab/Muslim world andPakistan.961. WAVE (Work, Achievement, Values andEducation), DC. $340,000, 2001. To provide 9/<strong>11</strong>grant for the District of Columbia HomelandSecurity Academy to assist displaced youth in DCget homeland security jobs.962. WAVE (Work, Achievement, Values andEducation), DC. $142,000. For long-termcounseling needs.Chicago<strong>The</strong> Chicago Community Trust andAffiliates<strong>11</strong>1 E. Wacker Dr., Ste. 1400Chicago, IL 60601(312) 616-8000FAX: (312) 616-7955; E-mail: sandy@cct.org;TDD: (312) 856-1703; URL: http://www.cct.org963. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,625. For CriticalNeeds Fund.ChoiceOneChoiceOnec/o Corporate Communications56 Grandville Ave. SWGrand Rapids, MI 49503964. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.CHS <strong>Foundation</strong>5500 CENEX Dr., M.S. 470Inver Grove Heights, MN 55077(651) 451-5481E-mail: mkast@chsco-ops.com; URL: http://www.chsfoundation.org965. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.CHSChubb<strong>The</strong> Chubb Corporation ContributionsProgram15 Mountain View Rd.Plainfield, NJ 07061-1615(908) 580-2000966. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $250,000.Church<strong>The</strong> Church in Radburn <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 598Fair Lawn, NJ 07410-0598967. American Red Cross, Bergen CountyChapter, Ridgewood, NJ. $13,250. To help victimsof 9/<strong>11</strong> residing in Bergen County, NJ.CIGNACIGNA Corporation ContributionsProgram1650 Market St., OL54CPhiladelphia, PA 19192-1540Application address in CT: James N. Mason, Jr.,Dir., Contribs. and Civic Affairs, W-A/900 CottageGrove Ave., Bloomfield, CT 06002; FAX: (215)761-5515; URL: http://www.cigna.com/general/about/community/index.html968. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $202,788.CIGNACIGNA <strong>Foundation</strong>2 Liberty Pl.1601 Chestnut St., TL06BPhiladelphia, PA 19192-1540URL: http://www.cigna.com/general/about/community969. ACCION New York, Brooklyn, NY. $1,000.Citigroup970. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500,000, 2001.971. Staten Island Victims Relief Fund, StatenIsland, NY. $1,000.972. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$500,000, 2001.973. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $38,645, 2001.Cincinnati<strong>The</strong> Greater Cincinnati <strong>Foundation</strong>200 W. 4th St.Cincinnati, OH 45202-2602(513) 241-2880FAX: (513) 852-6888; E-mail:info@greatercincinnatifdn.org; URL: http://www.greatercincinnatifdn.org974. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $205,864.975. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000. Foremergency grant from the <strong>Foundation</strong>.CingularCingular Wireless LLC Corporate GivingProgramc/o Charitable Contribs. and Sponsorships5565 Glenridge Connector, Ste. 2070-BAtlanta, GA 30342E-mail: charitable.contributions@cingular.com;URL: http://www.cingular.com/cingular/about_us/community_involvement976. American Red Cross, National, DC.$232,457.977. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500,000.CiscoCisco Systems <strong>Foundation</strong>170 W. Tasman Dr.San Jose, CA 95134-1706E-mail: ciscofoundation@cisco.com; E-mail forproduct donations:dicountech_cisco@techsoup.org; URL: http://www.cisco.com/go/foundation978. American Red Cross in Greater New York,New York, NY. $2,000,000.979. American Red Cross, DC Chapter, DC.$500,000.980. City of New York, New York, NY.$2,500,000.981. YMCA of Greater New York, New York, NY.$500,000.982. YMCA of the USA, Armed Services -Washington Office, Springfield, VA. $500,000.<strong>The</strong> CIT Group <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o <strong>The</strong> CIT Group, Inc.12<strong>11</strong> Ave. of the AmericasNew York, NY 10036NJ tel.: (973) 740-5638; FAX: (973) 740-5424983. American Red Cross, National, DC.$25,000.984. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000.CITCitigroupCitigroup <strong>Foundation</strong>850 3rd Ave., 13th Fl.New York, NY 10043(212) 559-9163E-mail: citigroupfoundation@citigroup.com; URL:http://www.citigroup.com/citigroup/corporate/foundation/index.htm985. ACCION New York, Brooklyn, NY. $25,000,2001. For American Dream Disaster Relief Fund.986. ACCION New York, Brooklyn, NY. $10,000,2001. For disaster assistance.987. American Tribute <strong>Center</strong>, Sands Point, NY.$10,000. For publication of Tribute book.155


CitigroupSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE988. American Woman’s Economic Development(AWED), New York, NY. $10,000, 2001. Fordisaster assistance.989. Asian American Federation of New York,New York, NY. $10,000, 2001. For <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th relief support.990. Asian Americans for Equality, New York,NY. $10,000, 2001. For disaster assistance.991. Brooklyn Alliance, Brooklyn, NY. $10,000,2001. For disaster assistance.992. Brooklyn Economic DevelopmentCorporation, Brooklyn, NY. $10,000, 2001. Fordisaster assistance.993. Chinatown Manpower Project, New York,NY. $10,000, 2001. For disaster assistance.994. Citigroup Relief Fund, New York, NY.$15,000,000. To provide scholarships to thechildren of victims of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks.995. East Harlem Business Capital Corporation,New York, NY. $10,000, 2001. For disasterassistance.996. <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, New York, New York,NY. $10,000. For project on <strong>Philanthropic</strong><strong>Response</strong> to 9/<strong>11</strong>.997. Hunts Point Local DevelopmentCorporation, Bronx, NY. $10,000, 2001. Fordisaster assistance.998. Jamaica Business Resource <strong>Center</strong>, Jamaica,NY. $10,000, 2001. For disaster assistance.999. Lehman College of the City University ofNew York, Bronx, NY. $10,000, 2001. For disasterassistance.1000. Nonprofit Coordinating Committee of NewYork, New York, NY. $10,000, 2001. For disasterassistance.1001. Nonprofit Finance Fund, New York, NY.$10,000, 2001. For disaster assistance.1002. Saint Vincents Hospital and Medical<strong>Center</strong> of New York, New York, NY. $25,000,2001. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th initiatives.1003. Wall Street Rising Corporation, New York,NY. $10,000, 2002.1004. Windows of Hope Family Relief Fund, NewYork, NY. $1,000.CitizensCitizens Communications CompanyContributions Programc/o Corp. Contribs.High Ridge Park, P.O. Box 3801Stamford, CT 06905(203) 329-88001005. American Red Cross, National, DC.$125,000.1006. Windows of Hope Family Relief Fund, NewYork, NY. $125,000.CityCity National Corporation ContributionsProgram400 N. Roxbury Dr.Beverly Hills, CA 90210(310) 888-60001007. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000.Liz Claiborne <strong>Foundation</strong>1440 BroadwayNew York, NY 10018(212) 626-5704FAX: (212) 626-53041008. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$1,000,000.Clark Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.1633 Broadway, 30th Fl.New York, NY 100191009. Sandler O’Neill Assistance <strong>Foundation</strong>,Chatham, NJ. $20,000. For general support.ClaiborneClarkClark<strong>The</strong> Edna McConnell Clark <strong>Foundation</strong>250 Park Ave., Ste. 900New York, NY 10177-0026(212) 551-9100FAX: (212) 986-4558; E-mail: info@emcf.org;URL: http://www.emcf.org1010. Community Funds, Inc, New York, NY.$500,000, 2001. For fund to aid victims, families,and not-for-profit organizations affected byterrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.10<strong>11</strong>. New York University, New York, NY.$15,000. For Civic Alliance to Rebuild DowntownNew York, coalition of business, community, andcivic groups that is exploring how best to rebuildNew York City’s downtown area in the wake of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001 terrorist attacks.ClarkRobert Sterling Clark <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.135 E. 64th St.New York, NY 10021(212) 288-8900FAX: (212) 288-1033; URL: http://www.rsclark.org1012. New York <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Arts, NewYork, NY. $250,000. For New York Arts RecoveryFund.Clark Retail Enterprisesc/o Corporate Communications3003 Butterfield Road, Suite 300Oak Brook, IL 605231013. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000.1014. American Red Cross, National, DC.$25,000. To support the families of firefighters inthe aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.ClarkCleveland<strong>The</strong> Cleveland <strong>Foundation</strong>1422 Euclid Ave., Ste. 1300Cleveland, OH 44<strong>11</strong>5-2001(216) 861-3810FAX: (216) 589-9039; TTY: (216) 861-3806;URL: http://www.clevelandfoundation.org1015. American Red Cross, Greater ClevelandChapter, Cleveland, OH. $397,500. To supportthe ARC 9-<strong>11</strong> Disaster Relief Fund.1016. American Red Cross, Greater ClevelandChapter, Cleveland, OH. $10,000, 2001. ForDisaster Relief Fund.1017. American Red Cross, Greater ClevelandChapter, Cleveland, OH. $1,000, 2001. ForDisaster Relief Fund - <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.1018. American Red Cross, Greater ClevelandChapter, Cleveland, OH. $1,000, 2001. ForDisaster Relief Fund - <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.1019. American Red Cross, Greater ClevelandChapter, Cleveland, OH. $300, 2001. For DisasterRelief Fund - <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.1020. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $200,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1021. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $68,951, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th terrorist attacks.1022. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000, 2001. Forrelief to victims of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th terroristattacks.1023. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000, 2001. Forrelief for <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th disaster.1024. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $15,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1025. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1026. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1027. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1028. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000, 2001. ForRelief to terrorist attack victims.1029. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1030. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1031. United Way of Lake County, Mentor, OH.$5,000, 2001.1032. Windows of Hope Family Relief Fund, NewYork, NY. $7,500, 2001. For relief aid.Clorox<strong>The</strong> Clorox Company <strong>Foundation</strong>East Bay Community Fdn., DeDomenico Bldg.200 Frank Ogawa Plz.Oakland, CA 94612(510) 836-3223E-mail: cloroxfndt@eastbaycf.org; URL: http://www.clorox.com/company/foundation1033. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000, 2001.1034. American Red Cross, San FranciscoChapter, San Francisco, CA. $107,000. Forcontribution from Stars and Stripes campaign for9/<strong>11</strong>/01 disaster.1035. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000, 2001.1036. United Way of the Bay Area, San Francisco,CA. $107,500. For Stars and Stripes campaigncontribution to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.Clowes<strong>The</strong> Clowes Fund, Inc.320 N. Meridan St., Ste. 316Indianapolis, IN 46204-1722(317) 833-01441037. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $10,000.CNTc/o Corporate Communications6000 Nathan Lane NorthMinneapolis, MN 554421038. Various organizations. $40,000.<strong>The</strong> Coca-Cola Company ContributionsProgram1 Coca-Cola Plz.Atlanta, GA 30313(404) 676-2121URL: http://www2.coca-cola.com/citizenship/index.html1039. American Red Cross, National, DC.$6,000,000, 2001. To support relief and recoveryefforts.1040. Various organizations. $3,750,000. Tosupport a variety of local relief organizations.CNTCocaCoca-Cola<strong>The</strong> Coca-Cola <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.1 Coca-Cola Plz., N.W.Atlanta, GA 30301(404) 676-2568Application address: P.O. Drawer 1734, Atlanta, GA30301; FAX: (404) 676-8804; URL: http://www2.coca-cola.com/citizenship/foundation_coke.html1041. American Red Cross, National, DC.$2,000,000, 2001. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> disasterrelief.1042. American Red Cross, National, DC.$84,150, 2001.156


1043. New York City Public/Private Initiatives,New York, NY. $250,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>Anniversary Fund.1044. Tavis Smiley <strong>Foundation</strong>, Los Angeles, CA.$100,000, 2001.1045. United Way of Metropolitan Atlanta,Atlanta, GA. $10,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> events.CohenCohen Opportunity FundWashington, DC1046. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.Colgate-Palmolive CompanyContributions Program300 Park Ave.New York, NY 10022(212) 310-34281047. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.ColgateColorado<strong>The</strong> Colorado Trust<strong>The</strong> Colorado Trust Bldg.1600 Sherman St.Denver, CO 80203-1604(303) 837-12001048. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000, 2001.James J. Colt <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 9130Lyndhurst, NJ 07071(201) 804-83221049. American Red Cross in Greater New York,New York, NY. $1,000.Columbus<strong>The</strong> Columbus <strong>Foundation</strong> and AffiliatedOrganizations1234 E. Broad St.Columbus, OH 43205-1453(614) 251-4000FAX: (614) 251 4009; E-mail:info@columbusfoundation.org,rbiddisc@columbusfoundation.org; URL: http://www.columbusfoundation.org1050. American Red Cross, Columbus Chapter,Columbus, OH. $4,300.1051. American Red Cross, National, DC.$10,000, 2001.1052. Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund, New York,NY. $23,300, 2001.1053. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $23,300, 2001. For grant from principals andemployees of Stonehenge Financial Holdings.1054. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000, 2001.For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1055. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1056. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $15,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund to mobilize financialresources to respond to needs of victims and theirfamilies.1057. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $12,389, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1058. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1059. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000, 2001.1060. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.ColtLIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDER1061. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $8,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1062. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1063. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1064. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, to benefit families offirefighters and police officers who died in attacks.1065. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $3,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1066. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $2,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1067. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $2,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund to support Greater NewYork families.1068. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $2,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1069. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,500, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1070. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1071. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000, 2001. Toassist families of firemen, policemen and otherrescue workers who have perished in rescuemission.1072. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund and is for victim’s families.1073. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1074. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1075. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1076. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1077. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1078. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1079. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, to benefit families offirefighters and police officers who perished inattacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.1080. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1081. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $400, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1082. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $200, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1083. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $200, 2001. ForAmerica, Tribute to Heroes <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thTelethon Fund.Comerica1084. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1085. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$10,000, 2002. For Families of FreedomScholarship Fund, benefitting financially needychildren and spouses of victims of <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th attacks.1086. Squad 41 Associations Heroes Fund,Bronx, NY. $50,000.1087. Squad 41 Associations Heroes Fund,Bronx, NY. $15,000.1088. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$53,303.Comcast<strong>The</strong> Comcast <strong>Foundation</strong>1201 Market St., Ste. 1405Wilmington, DE 19801-<strong>11</strong>65Application address: 1500 Market St., E. Tower,35th Fl., Philadelphia, PA 19102, tel.: (215)665-17001089. Alliance of Neighbors of MonmouthCounty, Red Bank, NJ. $25,000, 2001. Grant tosupport their relief effort to aid families of victimsof the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks who reside inMonmouth County, NJ.1090. American Red Cross, National, DC.$75,000, 2001. To support the Liberty DisasterRelief Fund aiding the immediate and emergingefforts of the Red Cross in response to the tragicevents of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.1091. Army Emergency Relief, Alexandria, VA.$50,000, 2001. Grant to provide financialassistance to the families of Army personnel lostduring the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attack on the Pentagon.1092. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $100,000, 2001. To supportthe long-term educational health incomemaintenance and other needs of the individualvictims and their families in the DC region.1093. District of Columbia Public Schools, DC.$50,000, 2001. Grant to create a memorial to theDCPS teachers and students lost in the attack.1094. Navy Marine Corps Relief Society,Arlington, VA. $50,000, 2001. Grant to providefinancial assistance to the families of Navypersonnel lost during the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attack onthe Pentagon.1095. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000, 2001.Grant to support the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund whichwill make grants to establish non-profit agencies.1096. Various organizations. $600,000.1097. Various organizations. $225,000.ComericaComerica <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Comerica Inc.P.O. Box 75000, M.C. 3390Detroit, MI 48275-3390(313) 222-7356Application address: 500 Woodward Ave., Detroit,MI 48226-3390; FAX: (313) 222-55551098. American Red Cross, National, DC.$250,000, 2001.1099. Childrens Home of Detroit, Grosse PointeWoods, MI. $2,500.<strong>11</strong>00. <strong>Foundation</strong> for Alger Families, Jersey City,NJ. $300.<strong>11</strong>01. Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Family Fund(KBW Family Fund), Melville, NY. $10,000,2001.<strong>11</strong>02. Sandler O’Neill Assistance <strong>Foundation</strong>,Chatham, NJ. $10,000, 2001.157


ComeySEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEComey-Fitzgerald Family <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 65Glen Ridge, NJ 07028<strong>11</strong>03. Undesignated. $21,000. To support directrelief for victims and their families.ComeyCommonwealth<strong>The</strong> Commonwealth Fund1 E. 75th St.New York, NY 10021-2692(212) 606-3844FAX: (212) 606-3500; E-mail: cmwf@cmwf.org;URL: http://www.cmwf.org<strong>11</strong>04. Asian American Federation of New York,New York, NY. $99,963. For Informing Initiativeto Expand Health Coverage After <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>in New York City’s Chinatown.<strong>11</strong>05. Betances Health Unit, New York, NY.$50,000, 2002. For Lower East Side post-disasteroutreach effort.<strong>11</strong>06. Columbia University, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002. For Focus on WorkforceComponent of Hospital Emergency <strong>Response</strong>.<strong>11</strong>07. Columbia University, New York, NY.$25,000, 2002. For Bioterrorism DiseasePreparedness: Training for Emergency ServiceWorkers.<strong>11</strong>08. Greater New York Hospital Association,New York, NY. $20,000, 2002. For Bioterrorismand Emergency Preparedness Education Project:Training for Emergency Services Workers.<strong>11</strong>09. Lake, Snell, Perry and Associates, DC.$100,800. For Making Transition from DisasterRelief Medicaid to Permanent Health Coverage:Focus Groups with New Yorkers.<strong>11</strong>10. New York Academy of Medicine, NewYork, NY. $100,000, 2002. For post-disastermental health needs assessment among NewYorkers.<strong>11</strong><strong>11</strong>. New York University, New York, NY.$10,000, 2002. For Conversations with the Cityon Rebuilding Lower Manhattan.<strong>11</strong>12. Regional Plan Association, New York, NY.$25,000, 2002. For ensuring civic involvement inmaster planning for Lower Manhattan.CommunitiesCommunities <strong>Foundation</strong> of Texas, Inc.5500 Caruth Haven Ln.Dallas, TX 75225-8146(214) 750-4222FAX: (214) 750-4210; URL: http://www.cftexas.org<strong>11</strong>13. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $19,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.CommunityCommunity <strong>Foundation</strong> for GreaterAtlanta, Inc.<strong>The</strong> Hurt Bldg., Ste. 449Atlanta, GA 30303(404) 688-5525FAX: (404) 688-3060; URL: http://www.atlcf.org<strong>11</strong>14. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $21,800, 2002.<strong>11</strong>15. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $89,150, 2002.<strong>11</strong>16. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $26,700, 2002. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.<strong>11</strong>17. Sandler O’Neill Assistance <strong>Foundation</strong>,Chatham, NJ. $50,000, 2002.Community<strong>The</strong> Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for GreaterNew Haven70 Audubon St.New Haven, CT 06510(203) 777-2386FAX: (203) 787-6584; E-mail:contactus@cfgnh.org; URL: http://www.cfgnh.org<strong>11</strong>18. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for Greater NewHaven, New Haven, CT. $50,000.CommunityCommunity <strong>Foundation</strong> for MontereyCounty99 Pacific St., No. 155AMonterey, CA 93940(831) 375-9712FAX: (831) 375-4731; E-mail: info@cfmco.org;URL: http://www.cfmco.org<strong>11</strong>19. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.<strong>11</strong>20. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.<strong>11</strong>21. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100.CommunityCommunity <strong>Foundation</strong> for MuskegonCounty425 W. Western Ave., Ste. 200Muskegon, MI 49440(231) 722-4538FAX: (231) 722-4616; E-mail: info@cffmc.org;URL: http://www.cffmc.org<strong>11</strong>22. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000. For New York relief efforts related to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks.<strong>11</strong>23. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,500.CommunityCommunity <strong>Foundation</strong> for Palm Beachand Martin Counties, Inc.700 S. Dixie Hwy., Ste. 200West Palm Beach, FL 33401(561) 659-6800FAX: (561) 832-6542; E-mail: info@cfpbmc.org;Martin County Office: P.O. Box 2441, Stuart, FL34995-2441, tel.: (888) 853-4438; URL: http://www.yourcommunityfoundation.org<strong>11</strong>24. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $15,100.<strong>11</strong>25. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $13,027. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.CommunityCommunity <strong>Foundation</strong> for SoutheasternMichigan333 W. Fort St., Ste. 2010Detroit, MI 48226(313) 961-6675FAX: (313) 961-2886; E-mail: cfsem@cfsem.org;URL: http://www.cfsem.org<strong>11</strong>26. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $206,670, 2001.<strong>11</strong>27. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $30,625. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.<strong>11</strong>28. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,947.<strong>11</strong>29. Various organizations. $466,758.CommunityCommunity <strong>Foundation</strong> for SouthernArizona2250 E. Broadway Blvd.Tucson, AZ 85719-6014(520) 770-0800FAX: (520) 770-1500; E-mail:philanthropy@cfsoaz.org, salley@cfsoaz.org; URL:http://www.cfsoaz.org<strong>11</strong>30. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $60,000.CommunityCommunity <strong>Foundation</strong> for the CentralSavannah River Area1450 Greene St., Ste. 228Augusta, GA 30901(706) 724-1314FAX: (706) 724-1315; E-mail: info@cfcsra.org;Mailing address: P.O. Box 31358, Augusta, GA30903; URL: http://www.cfcsra.org<strong>11</strong>31. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $885,449.<strong>11</strong>32. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$251,962.CommunityCommunity <strong>Foundation</strong> of Broward1401 E. Broward Blvd., Ste. 100Fort Lauderdale, FL 33301(954) 761-9503FAX: (954) 761-7102; E-mail:lcarter@cfbroward.org; URL: http://www.cfbroward.org<strong>11</strong>33. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $36,000. To supportparamedics and their families in the aftermath of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.CommunityCommunity <strong>Foundation</strong> of Central Illinois331 Fulton St., Ste. 310Peoria, IL 61602(309) 674-8730FAX: (309) 674-8754; E-mail:jim@communityfoundationci.org; URL: http://www.communityfoundationci.org<strong>11</strong>34. American Red Cross, National, DC.$25,000.<strong>11</strong>35. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.CommunityCommunity <strong>Foundation</strong> of Collier Countyc/o Mary George2400 Tamiami Trail, N., Ste. 300Naples, FL 34103(239) 649-5000<strong>11</strong>36. American Red Cross, National, DC.$3,<strong>11</strong>7.<strong>11</strong>37. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $3,216.CommunityCommunity <strong>Foundation</strong> of GastonCounty, Inc.P.O. Box 123Gastonia, NC 28053FAX: (704) 869-0222; E-mail:jedgerton@cfgaston.org; URL: http://www.cfgaston.org<strong>11</strong>38. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $23,699.CommunityCommunity <strong>Foundation</strong> of Grand Forks,East Grand Forks and Region412 DeMers Ave.Grand Forks, ND 58203(701) 746-0668<strong>11</strong>39. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $8,000. For directrelief for victims of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th and theirfamilies.158


Community<strong>The</strong> Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of GreaterBirmingham2100 First Ave. N., Ste. 700Birmingham, AL 35203(205) 328-8641FAX: (205) 328-6576; E-mail:info@foundationbirmingham.org; URL: http://www.foundationbirmingham.org<strong>11</strong>40. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $102,000, 2001.<strong>11</strong>41. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $65,731.Community<strong>The</strong> Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of GreaterChattanooga, Inc.1270 Market St.Chattanooga, TN 37402(423) 265-0586FAX: (423) 265-0587; E-mail: pcooper@cfgc.org;URL: http://www.cfgc.org<strong>11</strong>42. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $77,642.CommunityCommunity <strong>Foundation</strong> of GreaterGreensboro, Inc.<strong>Foundation</strong> Place330 S. Greene St., Ste. 100Greensboro, NC 27420(336) 379-9100FAX: (336) 378-0725; E-mail: info@cfgg.org;Application address: P.O. Box 20444, Greensboro,NC 27420; URL: http://www.cfgg.org<strong>11</strong>43. Undesignated. $54,182.Community<strong>The</strong> Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of GreaterLorain County1865 N. Ridge Rd. E., Ste. ALorain, OH 44055(440) 277-0142FAX: (440) 277-6955; E-mail:foundation@cfglc.org; Additional tel.: (440)323-4445; URL: http://www.cfglc.org<strong>11</strong>44. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $8,220.CommunityCommunity <strong>Foundation</strong> of GreaterMemphis1900 Union Ave.Memphis, TN 38104(901) 728-4600FAX: (901) 722-0010; URL: http://www.cfgm.org<strong>11</strong>45. American Red Cross, DC Chapter, DC.$1,650.<strong>11</strong>46. American Red Cross, Memphis/JacksonChapter, Memphis, TN. $6,600.<strong>11</strong>47. Catholic Charities USA, Alexandria, VA.$500.<strong>11</strong>48. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $1,550.<strong>11</strong>49. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $22,850, 2002.<strong>11</strong>50. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $50,000, 2002.<strong>11</strong>51. Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$10,000, 2002.<strong>11</strong>52. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $10,500, 2002.<strong>11</strong>53. Union of American Hebrew Congregations,New York, NY. $1,500.LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERCommunityCommunity <strong>Foundation</strong> of Jackson Hole255 E. Simpson St.P.O. Box 574Jackson, WY 83001(307) 739-1026FAX: (307) 734-2841; E-mail:info@cfjacksonhole.org; URL: http://www.cfjacksonhole.org<strong>11</strong>54. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000.Community<strong>The</strong> Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Louisville,Inc.Waterfront Plz. Bldg.325 W. Main St., Ste. <strong>11</strong>10Louisville, KY 40202(502) 585-4649FAX: (502) 587-7484; E-mail:info@cflouisville.org; URL: http://www.cflouisville.org<strong>11</strong>55. American Red Cross in Greater New York,New York, NY. $31,950.<strong>11</strong>56. American Red Cross, National, DC.$12,955.<strong>11</strong>57. New York City Fire Department, NewYork, NY. $125,000.<strong>11</strong>58. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $170,000.<strong>11</strong>59. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $94,714. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.<strong>11</strong>60. Salvation Army of Greater New York, NewYork, NY. $20,000.CommunityCommunity <strong>Foundation</strong> of Lowcountry,Inc.4 Northridge Drive Suite APost Office Box 23019Hilton Head Island, SC 29925<strong>11</strong>61. Undesignated. $58,130.CommunityCommunity <strong>Foundation</strong> of MonroeCounty<strong>11</strong>1 E. 1st St.P.O. Box 627Monroe, MI 48161(734) 242-1976FAX: (734) 242-1234; E-mail: info@cfmonroe.org;URL: http://www.cfmonroe.org<strong>11</strong>62. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $36,379. To supportrelief and recovery efforts.CommunityCommunity <strong>Foundation</strong> of New Jersey35 Knox Hill Rd.P.O. Box 338Morristown, NJ 07963-0338(973) 267-5533FAX: (973) 267-2905; E-mail: info@cfnj.org;URL: http://www.cfnj.org<strong>11</strong>63. Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund, New York,NY. $250, 2001.<strong>11</strong>64. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of New Jersey,Morristown, NJ. $48,600, 2001.<strong>11</strong>65. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of New Jersey,Morristown, NJ. $15,250, 2001.<strong>11</strong>66. Individual beneficiaries. $1,000,000. Forscholarships.<strong>11</strong>67. Individual beneficiaries. $1,000,000. Forscholarships.<strong>11</strong>68. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $750, 2001.<strong>11</strong>69. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $500, 2001.<strong>11</strong>70. New York State Fraternal Order of PoliceFund, Hicksville, NY. $203, 2001.<strong>11</strong>71. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY. $750,2001.<strong>11</strong>72. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $32,000, 2001.CommunityCommunity <strong>Foundation</strong> of NorthernIllinois946 N. 2nd St.Rockford, IL 6<strong>11</strong>07(815) 962-2<strong>11</strong>0FAX: (815) 962-2<strong>11</strong>6; E-mail: info@cfnil.org;URL: http://www.cfnil.org<strong>11</strong>73. American Red Cross, National, DC.$3,700.<strong>11</strong>74. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,375.Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Ottawa75 Albert StreetSuite 301Ottawa, Ontario K1P 5E7<strong>11</strong>75. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000.CommunityCommunityCommunity<strong>The</strong> Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of SantaCruz County2425 Porter St., Ste. 17Soquel, CA 95073-2453(831) 477-0800FAX: (831) 477-0991; E-mail: info@cfscc.org, orlance@cfscc.org; URL: http://www.cfscc.org<strong>11</strong>76. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $36,000.Community<strong>The</strong> Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of SarasotaCounty, Inc.P.O. Box 49587Sarasota, FL 34230-6587(941) 955-3000Office address: 1800 2nd St., Ste. 103, Sarasota, FL34236; FAX: (941) 952-1951; E-mail:sstearns@sarasota-foundation.org; URL: http://www.sarasota-foundation.org<strong>11</strong>77. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $57,000.<strong>11</strong>78. Various organizations. $27,214. Fordonations to support nonprofit organizationsworking directly with victims of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thand their families.CommunityCommunity <strong>Foundation</strong> of SouthAlabamaP.O.Box 91007Mobile, AL 3660<strong>11</strong>179. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $27,028.CommunityCommunity <strong>Foundation</strong> of the EasternShore, Inc.200 W. Main St.Salisbury, MD 21803-0152(410) 742-99<strong>11</strong>Additional address: P.O. Box 152, Salisbury, MD21803; FAX: (410) 742-6638; E-mail:cfes@cfes.org; URL: http://www.cfes.org/<strong>11</strong>80. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,750.159


ConstellationConstellation Energy Groupc/o Corporate Communications250 West Pratt StreetBaltimore, MD 2120<strong>11</strong>223. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.Consumers Energy CompanyContributions Program212 W. Michigan Ave.Jackson, MI 49201(517) 788-04321224. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000.<strong>The</strong> Convergys <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.201 E. 4th St., Ste. 102-1900Cincinnati, OH 45202(513) 784-59371225. American Red Cross, National, DC.$203,640.1226. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.ConsumersConvergysJack Kent Cooke <strong>Foundation</strong>44<strong>11</strong>5 Woodridge ParkwaySuite 200Landsdowne, VA 201761227. Kent <strong>Foundation</strong>, Altavista, VA.$1,000,000. For college education fund forfamilies affected by the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks.Corn Products Internationalc/o Corporate Communications6500 South Archer AvenueBedford Park, IL 6050<strong>11</strong>228. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000.1229. New York Firemen’s Association, NewYork, NY. $50,000.CookeCornCorningCorning Incorporated <strong>Foundation</strong>MP-LB-02Corning, NY 14831(607) 974-8722URL: http://www.corning.com/inside_corning/foundation.asp1230. American Red Cross, National, DC.$470,883, 2001.1231. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $105,750, 2001.Corwin<strong>The</strong> Jack B. Corwin Charitable<strong>Foundation</strong>633 W. 5th St., Ste. 6780Los Angeles, CA 90071-20991232. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000. Forprogram support.1233. Union of American Hebrew Congregations,New York, NY. $5,000. For program support.<strong>The</strong> Cowles Charitable TrustP.O. Box 219Rumson, NJ 07760(732) 936-98261234. Structured Employment EconomicDevelopment Corporation, New York, NY.$5,000, 2002.Crane Fund for Widows and Children140 Sylvan Ave.Englewood Cliffs, NJ 07632-25091235. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$200,000.CowlesCraneLIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERCredenceCredencec/o Corporate Communications215 Fourier AvenueFremont, CA 945391236. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000.CreditCredit Suisse First Boston LLC CorporateGiving Programc/o Corp. Contribs.<strong>11</strong> Madison Ave., 7th Fl.New York, NY 100101237. A Little Hope, New York, NY. $10,000.1238. Boy Scouts of America, New York, NY.$100,000.1239. Boys & Girls Club of America, Atlanta, GA.$100,000.1240. Bronx Community Services, Bronx, NY.$30,000.1241. Children’s Aid Society, New York, NY.$250,000.1242. Christopher Robert Clarke <strong>Foundation</strong>,Princeton, NJ. $5,000.1243. City Harvest, New York, NY. $100,000.1244. CityKids <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$100,000. For the Bridge Builder Initiative.1245. Face to Face International, New York, NY.$100,000.1246. Good Shepherd Services, New York, NY.$50,000.1247. National Outdoor Leadership School,Lander, WY. $3,345.1248. New York Academy of Medicine, NewYork, NY. $250,000. To support Moving fromCrisis to Hope and Well Being.1249. New York Lawyers for the Public Interest,New York, NY. $125,000.1250. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY.$5,250,000.1251. New York University, New York, NY.$100,000.1252. Nonprofit Finance Fund, New York, NY.$50,000.1253. Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, NewYork, NY. $25,000.CrossCross Country Bankc/o Corporate CommunicationsP.O. Box 3107<strong>11</strong>Boca Raton, FL 3343<strong>11</strong>254. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000.Crossmarkc/o Corporate Communications6400 InternationalParkway, Suite 1000Plano, TX 750931255. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.Crossroads Fund34<strong>11</strong> W. Diversey Ave., Ste. 20Chicago, IL 60647-1245(773) 227-7676FAX: (773) 227-7790; E-mail:info@crossroads.org; URL: http://www.crossroadsfund.org1256. Crossroads Fund, Chicago, IL. $75,000.For safety and civil rights and advocacy inimmigrant communities.CrossmarkCrossroadsCSG <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.8401 Connecticut Ave., Ste. <strong>11</strong><strong>11</strong>Chevy Chase, MD 20815(301) 652-68801257. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.CummingsCSGCummings<strong>The</strong> Nathan Cummings <strong>Foundation</strong>475 10th Ave., 14th Fl.New York, NY 10018(212) 787-7300FAX: (212) 787-7377; E-mail:info@nattancummings.org; URL: http://www.nathancummings.org1258. American Civil Liberties Union<strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY. $75,000, 2001. ForSecurities and Civil Liberties Task Force toaddress new civil liberties issues in the wake of9/<strong>11</strong>.1259. Arab American Family Support <strong>Center</strong>,Brooklyn, NY. $10,000, 2001. To meet increasedneeds from families within the Arab-speakingcommunity for information and counselingservices for adults and children who have beendevastated by the tragedy and who are fearful toappear in public including distributing flyers inthe community with a hot line number to call forassistance in obtaining referrals for assistance,information, reporting harassment and biasincidents and obtaining escort services anddeveloping more proactive youth and communityeducation programs to diminish the isolation ofthe Arab-American community and to buildbridges to the larger community.1260. Citizens Budget Commission, New York,NY. $10,000. For conference with supportingbackground materials that will provideopportunity for newly elected City officials(including Mayor, Comptroller, and the CityCouncil Speaker candidates, with their staffs) toreflect on challenges they will face in assess.1261. Education Development <strong>Center</strong>, Newton,MA. $15,000, 2001. For Beyond Blame: Reactingto the Terrorist Attack, which seeks to support thebroad dissemination and use of new curriculumthat helps youth workers and teachers to addressthe possible negative consequences for AmericanMuslims, Arab-Americans and others as a resultof the terrorist attack.1262. Facing History and Ourselves National<strong>Foundation</strong>, Brookline, MA. $35,000, 2001. Forplanning grant to push curriculum deeper, inorder to prepare teachers and students for globalcitizenship and for initial development anddissemination of resources on themes related tothe events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.1263. Financial Markets <strong>Center</strong>, Philomont, VA.$25,000. For start-up support for series of newinitiatives that respond to current domestic andinternational economic developments in order toaddress worsening global economic situation andgeopolitical turmoil created by events of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.1264. Georgetown University, DC. $50,000,2001. For <strong>The</strong> Constitution Project’s (initiative ofPublic Policy Institute) Initiative on Liberty andSecurity, which will form bipartisan, blue-ribboncommittee to lend voices of moderation, cautionand judgment to the current debate on civilliberties. Committee will focus on creating generalprinciples for liberty, engaging in outreach andcoalition building, educating policy makers, andaggressively seeking media attention.1265. National Security Archive Fund, DC.$100,000, 2001. For emergency effort beingundertaken by project, <strong>Center</strong> for NationalSecurity Studies which has begun an emergencypublic education campaign on current dangers tocivil liberties and the false notion of a necessarytrade-off between security and liberty. Project willincrease public and policy makers understanding161


CummingsSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEof how to achieve security while respectingliberties and constitutional processes.1266. New York <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$65,000, 2001. For program support fororganizations affected by events of 9/<strong>11</strong>.1267. New York <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Arts, NewYork, NY. $60,000, 2001. For New York ArtsRecovery Fund which combines strength of keyNew York service organizations by creatingcollaborative, comprehensive effort to addresschallenges specifically facing New York’s artistsand art organizations affected by the 9/<strong>11</strong> tragedy.1268. New York Immigration Coalition, NewYork, NY. $15,000, 2001. For hate crimes datacollection, assisting national and local mediaoutlets with story ideas, and providing training toimmigrants and to the staff ofimmigrant-servicing organizations about variousdisaster relief programs and other resources andfor Economic Impact Research initiative.1269. Union Community Fund, DC. $75,000,2001. For HERE Education and Support Fund.HERE is project of Union Community Fund.Purpose of HERE Fund is to meet emergencyneeds of both union and non-union families offood service workers who were killed and foodservice workers who were displaced as a result ofthe 9/<strong>11</strong> attack on the World Trade <strong>Center</strong>.CVSCVS Corporation Contributions Program1 CVS Dr.Woonsocket, RI 02895Tel.: (401) 765-1500, ext. 4517; FAX: (401)769-44881270. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000.Cypress <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o Sandler O’Neill & Partners, LP919 3rd Ave., 6th Fl.New York, NY 100221271. Sandler O’Neill Assistance <strong>Foundation</strong>,Chatham, NJ. $20,000.<strong>The</strong> D-B Trust1 M&T Plz., Ste. 2000Buffalo, NY 14203-239<strong>11</strong>272. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for GreaterBuffalo, Buffalo, NY. $22,000. For <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th Fund.A. M. Dachs <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 193809San Francisco, CA 94<strong>11</strong>9-38091273. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000, 2001.CypressD-BDachsDade Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.200 S. Biscayne Blvd., Ste. 505Miami, FL 33131-2343(305) 371-27<strong>11</strong>FAX: (305) 371-5342; E-mail:ruth.shack@dadecommunityfoundation.org; URL:http://www.dadecommunityfoundation.org1274. American Red Cross in Greater New York,New York, NY. $100,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thEmergency Relief Fund.DaimlerChrysler CorporationContributions ProgramCIMS: 485-02-461000 Chrysler Dr.Auburn Hills, MI 48326-2766(248) 512-25021275. DaimlerChrysler Corporation Fund,Auburn Hills, MI. $10,000,000.DadeDaimlerChryslerDallas<strong>The</strong> Dallas <strong>Foundation</strong>900 Jackson St., Ste. 150Dallas, TX 75202(214) 741-9898FAX: (214) 741-9848; E-mail:info@dallasfoundation.org,mjalonick@dallasfoundation.org; URL: http://www.dallasfoundation.org1276. American Red Cross, Dallas Area Chapter,Dallas, TX. $41,300, 2001.1277. American Red Cross, Dallas Area Chapter,Dallas, TX. $25,000, 2001. For Family Well-BeingInquiry <strong>Center</strong>, a call-in center.1278. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $2,000.1279. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.Dana<strong>The</strong> Dana <strong>Foundation</strong>745 5th Ave., Ste. 900New York, NY 10151-0799(212) 223-4040FAX: (212) 317-8721; E-mail: danainfo@dana.org;URL: http://www.dana.org1280. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $50,000. For victims of the attack onthe World Trade <strong>Center</strong>.<strong>The</strong> Danforth <strong>Foundation</strong>2<strong>11</strong> N. Broadway, Ste. 2390St. Louis, MO 63102(314) 588-1900FAX: (314) 588-00351281. Policemen and Firemen Fund of SaintLouis, Chesterfield, MO. $500,000, 2002. Fordirect relief for victims and their families.DanforthDanielsDaniels Charitable Fund55 Madison St., Ste. 255Denver, CO 802061282. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500,000.Willametta K. Day <strong>Foundation</strong>865 S. Figueroa St., Ste. 700Los Angeles, CA 90017(213) 891-6300Mailing address: P.O. Box 71289, Los Angeles, CA9007<strong>11</strong>283. Direct Relief International, Santa Barbara,CA. $7,500, 2001.1284. MMC Victims Relief Fund, New York, NY.$3,750, 2001.1285. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $3,750,2001.1286. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $2,340,2001.DayDayton<strong>The</strong> Dayton <strong>Foundation</strong>2300 Kettering Twr.Dayton, OH 45423-1395(937) 222-0410Toll-free tel.: (877) 222-0410; FAX: (937)222-0636; E-mail: info@daytonfoundation.org;URL: http://www.daytonfoundation.org1287. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $120,000.DaytonDayton Superiorc/o Corporate Communications7777 Washington Village Drive, Suite 130Dayton, OH 454591288. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.DeaconessDeaconess Community <strong>Foundation</strong>4269 Pearl Rd., Ste. 108Cleveland, OH 44109-4227(216) 741-4077FAX: (216) 741-6042; E-mail:info@deacomfdn.org; URL: http://www.fdncenter.org/grantmaker/deaconess/1289. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000.DeakinsDeakins Family Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>3 Woodpath Dr.Northport, NY <strong>11</strong>768-3519Application address: P.O. Box 1034, West Diver,VT 05356, tel.: (212) 422-16261290. New York State World Trade <strong>Center</strong> ReliefFund, Albany, NY. $3,000.DeanDean Foods Company ContributionsProgramc/o Corp. Contribs.2515 McKinney Ave., Ste. 1200Dallas, TX 7520<strong>11</strong>291. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.DedalusDedalus <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o Hecht & Co., PC<strong>11</strong>1 W. 40th St.New York, NY 100181292. New York <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Arts, NewYork, NY. $20,000. For New York Arts RecoveryFund.John Deere <strong>Foundation</strong>1515 River Dr.Moline, IL 61265(309) 748-7955FAX: (309) 748-7953; E-mail:christisonjudya@johndeere.com1293. John Deere <strong>Foundation</strong>, Moline, IL.$300,000.DeereDegenstein<strong>The</strong> 1994 Charles B. Degenstein<strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Mellon Financial Corp.P.O. Box 7236, AIM 193-0224Philadelphia, PA 19101-7236Application address: 43 S. 5th St., Sunbury, PA17801-28961294. Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Family Fund(KBW Family Fund), Melville, NY. $5,000, 2002.For 9/<strong>11</strong>/01 Disaster Relief.Deitchman<strong>The</strong> John V. Deitchman Family<strong>Foundation</strong>c/o U.S. Trust<strong>11</strong>4 W. 47th St., TAXRGRNew York, NY 100361295. MMC Victims Relief Fund, New York, NY.$20,000. For operating support.Beatrice P. Delany Charitable Trustc/o JPMorgan Chase Bank12<strong>11</strong> Avenue of the Americas, 34th FL.New York, NY 100361296. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$50,000. For general support.1297. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$25,000. For general support.1298. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $50,000. For general support.Delany162


<strong>The</strong> Dell <strong>Foundation</strong>Round Rock 1, Box 80451 Dell WayRound Rock, TX 78682-9426E-mail: the_dell_foundation@dell.com; URL: http://www.dell.com/dellfoundation1299. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000.Dell<strong>The</strong> Michael and Susan Dell <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 163867Austin, TX 78716-3867URL: http://www.msdf.org/1300. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.DellDeluxeDeluxe Corporation <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 64235St. Paul, MN 55164-0235(651) 483-7<strong>11</strong>1URL: http://www.deluxe.com/dlxab/deluxe-foundation.jsp1301. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000, 2001.1302. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000.Denso CorporationBattle Creek, MI1303. American Red Cross, National, DC.$166,000. For contribution in the wake of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th on behalf of Denso Corporationand Denso World headquarters in Japan.DensoDENSODENSO International America, Inc.Corporate Giving Program24777 DENSO Dr.P.O. Box 5047, M.C. 4600Southfield, MI 48086-5047(248) 372-8232FAX: (248) 213-2550; E-mail:john_voorhorst@denso-diam.com; URL: http://www.densocorp-na.com/corporate/community.html1304. American Red Cross, National, DC.$19,000.1305. American Red Cross, National, DC.$15,000.Denver<strong>The</strong> Denver <strong>Foundation</strong>950 S. Cherry St., Ste. 200Denver, CO 80246(303) 300-1790FAX: (303) 300-6547; E-mail:info@denverfoundation.org; URL: http://www.denverfoundation.org1306. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000. Towardadministrative costs.1307. Various organizations. $60,000.Dermalogica<strong>The</strong> Dermalogica <strong>Foundation</strong>1001 Knox St.Torrance, CA 905021308. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $28,357. For 9/<strong>11</strong>Fund.DeutscheDeutsche Bank Americas <strong>Foundation</strong>60 Wall St., NYC60-2<strong>11</strong>0New York, NY 10005-2858(212) 250-0539URL: http://www.cib.db.com/community/htm/db_americas_foundation.html1309. American Society for the Prevention ofCruelty to Animals, New York, NY. $10,000,2001.1310. Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund, New York,NY. $50,000, 2001.LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDER13<strong>11</strong>. Civic Capital Corporation, New York, NY.$250,000, 2001.1312. Euro Brokers Relief Fund, New York, NY.$25,000, 2001.1313. Individual beneficiaries. $50,000.1314. Joint Industry Board of the ElectricalIndustry, Flushing, NY. $10,000.1315. Metropolitan Opera, New York, NY.$1,000,000, 2001.1316. MicroFinance Network, DC. $650,000.1317. MMC Victims Relief Fund, New York, NY.$50,000, 2002.1318. Municipal Art Society of New York, NewYork, NY. $200,000, 2002.1319. National <strong>Philanthropic</strong> Trust, Jenkintown,PA. $100,000, 2002.1320. Neighborhood Housing Services of NewYork City, New York, NY. $150,000, 2002.1321. New York <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Arts, NewYork, NY. $150,000, 2002. For New York ArtsRecovery Fund.1322. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY.$9,000,000, 2002.1323. New York State World Trade <strong>Center</strong> ReliefFund, Albany, NY. $5,000.1324. New York Stock Exchange Fallen HeroesFund, New York, NY. $100,000, 2001.1325. Nonprofit Finance Fund, New York, NY.$150,000, 2002.1326. NYU Downtown Hospital, New York, NY.$200,000, 2002.1327. Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, NY. $150,000,2002.1328. Safe Horizon, New York, NY. $150,000,2002.1329. Saint Francis Xavier Welcome Table, NewYork, NY. $50,000, 2002.1330. Sandler O’Neill Assistance <strong>Foundation</strong>,Chatham, NJ. $50,000, 2001.1331. State University of New York at Albany,Albany, NY. $250,000, 2002.1332. Various organizations. $497,823. Fordonations to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th disaster relieforganizations identified by DB employees throughGlobal Matching Gifts program.1333. Wall Street Rising Corporation, New York,NY. $200,000, 2002.1334. Working in Support of Education, NewYork, NY. $100,000, 2002.DharmaDharma-Grace <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Mann, Celon & Glodney Inc.1880 Century Park E., Ste. 700Los Angeles, CA 900671335. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Telethon Fund.DiamondIrene Diamond Fund375 Park Ave., Ste. 3303New York, NY 10152-3399(212) 838-95251336. Daedalus Productions, New York, NY.$5,000. For supplementary support towards theproduction of a documentary on emergencyefforts in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.1337. Daedalus Productions, New York, NY.$5,000. For additional support for the productionof a documentary on relief efforts in response tothe attack at the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> on<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.Dibner<strong>The</strong> Dibner Fund, Inc.P.O. Box 7575Wilton, CT 06897(203) 761-9904FAX: (203) 761-9989; E-mail:info@dibnerfund.org; URL: http://www.dibnerfund.org1338. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.Dillon<strong>The</strong> Dillon Fund1330 Ave. of the Americas, 27th Fl.New York, NY 100191339. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500,000.DinnersteinElliot Dinnerstein <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.36 Indian Creek IslandIndian Creek, FL 33154-290<strong>11</strong>340. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $10,000.1341. New York State Fraternal Order of PoliceFund, Hicksville, NY. $5,000.DircksRobert and Joan Dircks <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 6Mountain Lakes, NJ 07046E-mail: grants@dircksfoundation.org; PA tel.: (610)925-3713; MA tel.: (978) 449-0072; URL: http://www.dircksfoundation.org1342. New York City Police <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewYork, NY. $25,000. To provide assistance towidows and children.1343. RENEW International, Plainfield, NJ.$26,000. To provide funding to print grievingbook for victims and their families.1344. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $25,000. To provide assistance towidows and children.DiscoverDiscover Card Financial Servicesc/o Corporate Communications2500 Lake Cook RoadDeerfield, IL 600151345. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000.1346. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$1,000,000.Disney<strong>The</strong> Walt Disney Company <strong>Foundation</strong>500 S. Buena Vista St.Burbank, CA 91521-0987(818) 560-10061347. Walt Disney Company <strong>Foundation</strong>,Burbank, CA. $1,876,284.Walt Disney World Co. ContributionsProgramc/o Corp. Contribs.Lake Buena Vista, FL 328301348. Walt Disney Company <strong>Foundation</strong>,Burbank, CA. $5,000,000.DodgeDisneyDodgeCleveland H. Dodge <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.670 W. 247th St.Bronx, NY 10471(718) 543-1221FAX: (718) 543-07371349. American Red Cross in Greater New York,New York, NY. $250,000. For disaster reliefservices due to World Trade <strong>Center</strong> catastropheon 9/<strong>11</strong>/01.1350. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $250,000. Forvictims of World Trade <strong>Center</strong> disaster.163


DodgeSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEDodgeGeraldine R. Dodge <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.163 Madison Ave., 6th Fl.P.O. Box 1239Morristown, NJ 07962-1239(973) 540-8442FAX: (973) 540-12<strong>11</strong>; E-mail: info@grdodge.org;For Cynthia Evans, Compt., tel.: (973) 540-8443,ext. 107; URL: http://www.grdodge.org1351. African Globe <strong>The</strong>aterWorks, Newark, NJ.$25,000, 2001. For project that will celebratepower of human spirit by using arts to conquerfear and pain and aid marching forward throughhistory and showing road to personal redemptionand collective healing.1352. AKC Canine Health <strong>Foundation</strong>, Aurora,OH. $10,000, 2001. For researchers who willcollect/analyze health data from Search & Rescuedogs to develop training and equipment to helpdogs cope with stress with their work.1353. ArtPride New Jersey <strong>Foundation</strong>, Trenton,NJ. $15,000, 2001. To develop online resourceroom to include Connections, online gallery toshowcase creative expressions in response to 9/<strong>11</strong>tragedy.1354. Arts Council of the Morris Area, Madison,NJ. $25,000, 2001. For believing arts provideopportunities for personal expression and avenuefor healing in times of crisis, ACMA invitesgreater community to come together duringcoming year to create Unity Quilt ofremembrance, reflection and renewal.1355. Arts Horizons, Englewood, NJ. $10,000,2001. To mobilize Arts Horizons arts therapistsand teaching artists to provide classroomresidencies and professional development,providing students with arts-based activities todeal with fear, grief, anger and prejudice causedby 9/<strong>11</strong> events.1356. Boston University, Boston, MA. $15,000.To develop web-site featuring multi-mediaresources to support efforts of teachers andstudents to understand and deal constructivelywith the events of 9/<strong>11</strong>.1357. <strong>Center</strong> for Nonprofit Corporations, NorthBrunswick, NJ. $5,000. To underwrite a surveyassessing the impact and implications of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th on New Jersey’s non-profitsector.1358. Child and Family Resources, Randolph, NJ.$12,000, 2001. To build capacity to supportchildren and families living with war andterrorism. Also to collect and share resources,strategies and curriculum from experts. Toexpand ACT coalition todevelop/implement/access support roadmap forMorris County.1359. Children’s Music Network, Evanston, IL.$10,000, 2001. To expand online Peace ResourcesPage, compilation of songs, articles, etc. to helpchildren cope with their changing world, bypartnership with NJ schools.1360. County College of Morris, Randolph, NJ.$14,000, 2001. For two interactive workshops onTeaching in Suddenly Changing World that wouldbe cablecast and videotaped.1361. Environmental Defense, New York, NY.$15,000, 2001. To secure adoption ofcost-effective steps to reduce emissions fromconstruction vehicles and trucks at NYC site.1362. George Street Playhouse, New Brunswick,NJ. $15,000, 2001. To provide forum for youngaudiences to discuss 9-<strong>11</strong> crisis through theireducational and Main Stage programming.1363. Geraldine R. Dodge Poetry Program,Morristown, NJ. $38,000. For Dodge Poetryprogram, which proposes to more than triplenumber of school visits and to introduce 30 newteacher sessions in response to events of 9/<strong>11</strong>.1364. Institute for Arts and HumanitiesEducation, New Brunswick, NJ. $15,000, 2001.For Time to Heal, program to provide students,teachers, families and communities withopportunity to share thoughts and feelings aboutevents on 9/<strong>11</strong> - incorporating music, visual artsand writing.1365. International Institute of New Jersey, JerseyCity, NJ. $50,000, 2001. For meeting multipleneeds of New Jersey’s immigrant population after9/<strong>11</strong> through assessment, clinical interventions,and public education, including establishment ofNew American Ensemble, theater of witnessfeaturing immigrant high school students’ work.1366. International Institute of New Jersey, JerseyCity, NJ. $12,500. For additional funding toexpand impact of New Americans <strong>The</strong>atreEnsemble Program.1367. ISLES, Trenton, NJ. $20,000, 2001. Tocoordinate community education and trainingcampaign to address ability of families do dealwith trauma, fear and racist challenges in Trentonregion in aftermath of 9/<strong>11</strong>.1368. Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum, NewBrunswick, NJ. $10,000, 2001. For exhibition ofphotographs entitles, Victor Weeps, by FazalSheikh, depicting lives of Afghani refugees livingalong border between Afghanistan and Pakistan.1369. Luna Stage Company, Montclair, NJ.$20,000, 2001. For American Experience, tocreate theatre piece on what it means to beAmerican. Creative process can give voice tofears, express who and what we are and allowhealing through community.1370. McCarter <strong>The</strong>ater Company, Princeton,NJ. $30,000, 2001. To commission Marc Wolf tocreate documentary play about events of 9/<strong>11</strong>.1371. Montessori Childrens House ofMorristown, Morristown, NJ. $6,150. TowardHearts, Hands and Voices: A Children’s Festivalfor Tolerance and Diversity, to bring children andfamilies in Morris County together to explore therichness of our diversity through dialogue and thearts.1372. Morris Museum, Morristown, NJ. $10,000,2001. For warm, friendly, unstructured avenue forself-expression through drop-in workshops forchildren to respond to 9/<strong>11</strong> through creativity.1373. Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company, Fort Lee,NJ. $5,000. For American Rising—Asian MoonFestival, performance to benefit <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>threlief funds. Traditionally a time for family unity,this year’s festival convened Asian-Americanartists and audiences for community healing andcivic participation.1374. National Public Radio, DC. $50,000, 2001.For expanded and special programming to helpinform and connect listeners to events relating to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.1375. New Jersey Historical Society, Newark, NJ.$50,000, 2001. For oral history component ofmultifaceted, long-term historical project todocument and interpret impact of 9/<strong>11</strong> on lives ofNew Jersey residents and the state.1376. New Jersey Network (NJN) <strong>Foundation</strong>,Trenton, NJ. $75,000, 2001. For unexpectedemergency programming that was done inresponse to 9/<strong>11</strong> and for new special projects todocument New Jersey’s heroism, courage andsacrifice.1377. New Jersey Repertory Company, LongBranch, NJ. $25,000, 2001. For playwritingproject for high-school students relating to eventsof 9/<strong>11</strong>. Plays will deal with grief, loss, fear, anger,diversity, tolerance, affirmation and hope and willserve to bring community together for discussionand healing.1378. New Jersey <strong>The</strong>ater Alliance, Madison, NJ.$40,000, 2001. For symposium entitled <strong>The</strong>atre:Catalyst for Transformation featuring panel ofnoted theatre arts professionals; symposium willbe followed by three roundtables for furtherdiscussion among arts groups & other communitygroups.1379. New Jersey Work Environmental Council,Trenton, NJ. $15,000, 2001. To examine, incollaboration with community organizations, waysto prevent adverse public health andenvironmental consequences from potentialthreats to security or safety of New Jerseyschemical manufacturing facilities.1380. New York/New Jersey Baykeeper,Highlands, NJ. $15,000, 2001. To collaborate withLiberty State Park Conservancy to design andplant memorial trees and gardens.1381. Newark Museum, Newark, NJ. $75,000,2001. For creation of Garden of Paradise, place ofhealing and contemplation based on medievalSpain when Muslims, Christians & Jews livedtogether.1382. Orion Society, Great Barrington, MA.$10,000, 2001. For Winter issue of Orion, bookletof essays by Wendell Berry, second booklet ofOrion writers and weekend conference of Orionwriters.1383. Perkins <strong>Center</strong> for the Arts, Moorestown,NJ. $15,000, 2001. For exhibition that honorsindomitable spirit of city featuring work madefrom 1976 to present including children’sactivities, slide presentation, lecture series andcatalog.1384. Principals <strong>Center</strong> for the Garden State,Princeton, NJ. $31,200, 2001. To develop andpublish booklet entitled Leadership in Crisis,which will present leadership responses of NewJersey school principals to the events of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.1385. Printmaking Council of New Jersey,Somerville, NJ. $12,750, 2001. To facilitatecreation of memorial collaborative print piece inorder to help capture community’s shared griefand support for events of 9/<strong>11</strong>.1386. Randy James Dance Works, Highland Park,NJ. $20,000, 2001. For collaborating artists whowill create multi-media performance developedfrom artists personal experiences of 9/<strong>11</strong> andcommunity emotions.1387. Regional Plan Association, New York, NY.$10,000. To convene Civic Alliance to RebuildDowntown New York and support series ofConversations With the City.1388. Rutgers, <strong>The</strong> State University of NewJersey, Newark, NJ. $45,000, 2001. For televisedtown hall meeting inspired by recent events, whichchallenge our notions of American innocence andexceptionalism. Program will explore cultural andideological context of 9/<strong>11</strong> and subsequent globalanxieties.1389. Rutgers, <strong>The</strong> State University of NewJersey, New Brunswick, NJ. $30,000, 2001. ForCitizens Across Borders, education/action projectfor high school students that will generateunderstanding and change out of 9/<strong>11</strong> tragedy.1390. Saint Huberts Animal Welfare <strong>Center</strong>,Madison, NJ. $5,000. To cover costs oftransporting and storing large quantities of excessdog food donated to the search and rescue dogsand for a special newsletter.1391. South Brunswick Board of Education,Monmouth Junction, NJ. $15,000, 2001. ForVoices of Children: A Community Confronts theUnexplainable. Project will involve partnershipwhich include clergy, police and municipal andschool personnel to help children express theirresponses to events of 9/<strong>11</strong>.1392. Sundance School, Gateway, CO. $10,000,2001. Toward printing and distributing of MyFathers Love written by Kathleen Maleski.1393. Vermont Studio <strong>Center</strong>, Johnson, VT.$9,000. To make four-week retreats in anatmosphere conducive to healing, contemplation164


and available to three artists and/or writers directlyimpacted by <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.1394. WGBH Educational <strong>Foundation</strong>, Boston,MA. $15,000, 2001. To develop a website forteachers, students and parents featuringmulti-media learning resources prepared in directresponse to the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks.1395. WNYC <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$15,000, 2001. For emergency grant to helpWNYC restore transmission to theirlistener-audience in New Jersey.1396. Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship<strong>Foundation</strong>, Princeton, NJ. $35,000, 2001. Forsummer commuter institute entitled AmericanCivil Liberties at Times of Crisis. Goal is toreview and analyze for NJ high school teachersmany historical circumstances that created threatsto civil liberties that prevailed in crisis-free times.1397. World Affairs Council of Philadelphia,Philadelphia, PA. $20,000, 2001. For Terrorism:Challenge and <strong>Response</strong>, program for middle andhigh school teachers in southern New Jersey,including curriculum materials and assistance ofChoices Teaching Fellows.DodgeDodge Jones <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 176Abilene, TX 79604(325) 673-64291398. American Red Cross, Abilene, Abilene, TX.$5,000.1399. Salvation Army of Dallas, Dallas, TX.$5,000.DominionDominion <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Dominion Tower625 Liberty Ave., 21st Fl.Pittsburgh, PA 15222-3199(412) 690-1430FAX: (412) 690-7608; URL: http://www.dom.com/about/community/foundation/index.jsp1400. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $250,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund disaster relief.1401. Virginia Department of EmergencyManagement, Richmond, VA. $250,000. ForPentagon Disaster Fund.DominionDominion Resources, Inc. CorporateGiving ProgramP.O. Box 26532Richmond, VA 23261-6532FAX: (804) 775-5822; URL: http://www.dom.com/about/community1402. American Red Cross, Johnstown Chapter,Johnstown, PA. $5,000.1403. Commonwealth of Virginia, Richmond, VA.$250,000.1404. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $250,000.DonnelleyR. R. Donnelley & Sons CompanyContributions Program77 W. Wacker Dr.Chicago, IL 60601-1696(312) 326-8102FAX: (312) 326-8262; E-mail:susan.levy@rrd.com; URL: http://www.rrdonnelley.com/cportal/public/home/publicaffairs/index.jsp1405. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000.LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERDonnellyR. H. Donnellyc/o Corporate CommunicationsOne Mahhattanville RoadPurchase, NY 105771406. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.Doornink<strong>The</strong> Doornink <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Jeffrey B. Power<strong>11</strong>1 Lyon St. N.W., Ste. 900Grand Rapids, MI 49503-24871407. United Way of New York City, New York,NY. $250,000.DowDow Chemical Company <strong>Foundation</strong>2030 Dow Ctr.Midland, MI 48674(989) 636-6891URL: http://www.dow.com/about/corp/social/social.htm1408. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000, 2001.1409. Garden Pathways, Bakersfield, CA.$10,000. For Twin Towers Orphan Relief Fund.1410. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500,000, 2001.14<strong>11</strong>. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $10,000.DowneyDowney Savings3501 Jamboree Rd.Newport Beach, CA 926601412. American Red Cross, National, DC. $100,000.DPCDPC Community <strong>Foundation</strong>530 Main St., Ste. 302P.O. Box 1039Danville, VA 24543(434) 793-0884FAX: (434) 793-6489; E-mail:dpccf@gamewood.net; URL: http://www.dpccf.org1413. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000.DragicevichMatthew Dragicevich CharitableRemainder TrustP.O. Box 606Palm Springs, CA 92263(760) 320-66421414. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $5,000.1415. New York State World Trade <strong>Center</strong> ReliefFund, Albany, NY. $5,000.Dreyfus<strong>The</strong> Camille and Henry Dreyfus<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.555 Madison Ave., Ste. 1305New York, NY 10022-3301(212) 753-1760FAX: (212) 593-2256; E-mail: admin@dreyfus.org;URL: http://www.dreyfus.org1416. Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association of theCity of New York, New York, NY. $2,500.1417. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $2,500.DreyfusJean and Louis Dreyfus <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.420 Lexington Ave., Ste. 626New York, NY 10170(212) 599-1931FAX: (212) 599-2956; E-mail:jldreyfusfdtn@hotmail.com; URL: http://fdncenter.org/grantmaker/dreyfus/1418. Alliance for the Arts, New York, NY.$15,000. Toward Arts Rebuild New York Project.1419. Bridge Fund of New York, New York, NY.$15,000. For Project Recovery.1420. Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen, New York,NY. $30,000. For emergency relief.1421. New York City Opera, New York, NY.$25,000, 2002.1422. New York <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Arts, NewYork, NY. $15,000.1423. Saint Vincents Hospital and Medical<strong>Center</strong> of New York, New York, NY. $15,000,2002.Driehaus<strong>The</strong> Richard H. Driehaus <strong>Foundation</strong>203 N. Wabash, 1800Chicago, IL 60601(312) 641-5772FAX: (312) 641-5736; E-mail:driehausfoundation@ameritech.net1424. Firemens Fund, New Paltz, NY. $100,000.DrownJoseph Drown <strong>Foundation</strong>1999 Ave. of the Stars, Ste. 1930Los Angeles, CA 90067(310) 277-4488FAX: (310) 277-4573; E-mail: staff@jdrown.org;URL: http://www.jdrown.org1425. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund relief efforts.drugstoredrugstore.com <strong>Foundation</strong>13920 S.E. Eastgate Way, Ste. 300Bellevue, WA 98005E-mail: foundation@drugstore.com; URL: http://www.shareholder.com/drugstore/guidelines.cfm1426. American Red Cross, National, DC.$55,000.DTE Energy <strong>Foundation</strong>2000 2nd Ave., Rm. 1046 WCBDetroit, MI 48226-1279(313) 235-9271URL: http://www.dteenergy.com/community/foundation/index.html1427. American Red Cross, National, DC.$130,000.DukeDTEDukeDoris Duke Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>650 5th Ave., 19th Fl.New York, NY 10019(212) 974-7000FAX: (212) 974-7590; Additional tel.: (212)974-7100; URL: http://www.ddcf.org1428. New York <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Arts, NewYork, NY. $250,000. For New York Arts RecoveryFund.1429. New York <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Arts, NewYork, NY. $250,000, 2001. For New York ArtsRecovery Fund’s emergency re-granting programfor artists and arts organizations adverselyaffected by events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, and toencourage community interaction and audienceparticipation in the arts.Duke Energy <strong>Foundation</strong>526 S. Church St., M.C. ECO6G-FCP.O. Box 1009Charlotte, NC 28201-1009(704) 382-7200FAX: (704) 382-7600; URL: http://www.duke-energy.com1430. American Red Cross, Charlotte, Charlotte,NC. $10,000, 2001. For operating support toadminister and complete blood drive in theaftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.1431. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000, 2001.1432. Undesignated. $490,000, 2001. Part oforiginal $1.0 million committment.Duke165


DuncanSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEDuncanDuncan Oil Companyc/o Corporate Communications849 Factory RoadBeaver Creek, OH 454341433. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.East StroudsburgEast Stroudsburg Savings Association<strong>Foundation</strong>744 Main St.Stroudsburg, PA 18360-20291444. American Red Cross of Monroe County.$5,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> Fund.Edison International <strong>Foundation</strong>2244 Walnut Grove Ave.Rosemead, CA 91770(626) 302-8<strong>11</strong>41453. American Red Cross, National, DC.$<strong>11</strong>5,000.EdisonDunwalkeClarence and Anne Dillon DunwalkeTrust1330 Ave. of the Americas, 27th Fl.New York, NY 100191434. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500,000.DuPage<strong>The</strong> DuPage Community <strong>Foundation</strong><strong>11</strong>0 N. Cross St.Wheaton, IL 60187-5318(630) 665-5556FAX: (630) 665-9571; E-mail:bheydorn@dcfdn.org, nchibucos@dcfdn.org, ordmm@dcfdn.org; URL: http://www.dcfdn.org1435. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.DuPontDuPont Corporate Giving Programc/o Corp. Contribs. Office, Public Affairs1007 Market St.Wilmington, DE 19898(302) 774-2036Application address for education: c/o DuPont <strong>Center</strong>for Collaborative Research and Education, P.O.Box 80030-1370, Wilmington, DE 19880-00301436. Various organizations. $5,000,000.duPontJessie Ball duPont Fund1 Independent Dr., Ste. 1400Jacksonville, FL 32202-50<strong>11</strong>(904) 353-0890FAX: (904) 353-3870; Additional tel.: (800)252-3452; E-mail: smagill@dupontfund.org (forSherry P. Magill), jbennett@dupontfund.org (for JoAnn P. Bennett), sdouglass@dupontfund.org (forSally Douglass), ekingjr.@dupontfund.org (forEdward King), and sgreene@dupontfund.org (forSharon Greene); URL: http://www.dupontfund.org/1437. American Red Cross, Delaware,Wilmington, DE. $130,000. For Phase II ofpost-9/<strong>11</strong> Business Recovery, Stabilization, andGrowth Plan.1438. American Red Cross, Delaware,Wilmington, DE. $25,000, 2001. Toward nationalrelief efforts.1439. Christian Herald Association, New York,NY. $10,000, 2001. To defray expenses related tothe attack on the World Trade <strong>Center</strong>.1440. Osborne Association, Long Island City, NY.$25,000, 2001. For internal grief counseling, staffsupport and unexpected organizational expensesresulting from the attacks on the World Trade<strong>Center</strong>.1441. Salvation Army of Jacksonville, Jacksonville,FL. $25,000, 2001. For disaster relief grant toalleviate suffering and distress caused by<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001 attacks on the World Trade<strong>Center</strong> and Pentagon.1442. United Way of Northeast Florida,Jacksonville, FL. $150,000, 2001. For support ofvictims in New York City through the <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th Fund managed by the New York CommunityTrust.EadesEades <strong>Foundation</strong>1701 Broadmoor Dr., Ste. 200Champaign, IL 61821-59331443. Salvation Army of Greater New York, NewYork, NY. $10,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> recovery.East Tennessee <strong>Foundation</strong>550 W. Main St., Ste. 550Knoxville, TN 37902(865) 524-1223FAX: (865) 637-6039; E-mail: etf@etf.org; URL:http://www.easttennesseefoundation.org1445. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000.1446. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $13,150.Eastman Kodak Charitable Trustc/o JPMorgan Chase BankP.O. Box 31412Rochester, NY 14603(585) 724-2434Application address: 343 State St., Rochester, NY146501447. George Eastman House/InternationalMuseum of Photography and Film, Rochester,NY. $25,000. For Picturing What Matters: AnOffering of Photographs, pictorial memorialexhibit of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.EastEastmanEastmanEastman Kodak Company ContributionsProgram343 State St.Rochester, NY 14650-0517(716) 724-1980URL: http://www.kodak.com/US/en/corp/community.shtml1448. American Red Cross, National, DC.$2,000,000.Eaton<strong>The</strong> Eaton Charitable Fundc/o Eaton Corp.<strong>11</strong><strong>11</strong> Superior Ave.Cleveland, OH 44<strong>11</strong>4-2584(216) 523-4944FAX: (216) 479-7013; E-mail:barrydoggett@eaton.com; URL: http://www.eaton.com1449. American Red Cross, National, DC.$40,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th disaster relief fund.Ebix.comc/o Corporate Communications5 Concourse Parkway NE No. 3200Atlanta, GA 303281450. NASDAQ Issuers Disaster Relief Fund,New York, NY. $25,000.Ebix.comEckerd Corporation <strong>Foundation</strong>6501 Legacy Dr., M.S. 1205Plano, TX 75024-3698(972) 431-2159Additional address: 8333 Bryan Dairy Rd., Largo,FL 33777-1230, tel.: (727) 395-697<strong>11</strong>451. American Red Cross, National, DC.$35,000. To aid 9/<strong>11</strong> efforts.EckerdEdisonEdison International Corporate GivingProgramP.O. Box 800, G.O. 1 Rm. 399Rosemead, CA 91770(626) 302-98531452. American Red Cross, Greater Los AngelesChapter, Los Angeles, CA. $25,000.EDS<strong>The</strong> EDS <strong>Foundation</strong>5400 Legacy Dr., H3-6F-47Plano, TX 75024E-mail: info@eds.com; URL: http://www.eds.com/foundation1454. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,150,000.1455. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000.Educational Testing Servicesc/o Corporate CommunicationsRosedale RoadPrinceton, NJ 0854<strong>11</strong>456. American Red Cross, Mercer CountyChapter, Princeton, NJ. $25,000.EducationalEl PasoEl Paso Corporate <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 25<strong>11</strong>Houston, TX 77252-25<strong>11</strong>(713) 420-2878Application address: 1001 Louisiana St., Houston,TX 770021457. MMC Victims Relief Fund, New York, NY.$50,000.1458. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $<strong>11</strong>,685. For<strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th Fund.1459. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $2,490, 2001.1460. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $15,822,2001.1461. New York State Fraternal Order of PoliceFund, Hicksville, NY. $6,050, 2001.1462. New York State World Trade <strong>Center</strong> ReliefFund, Albany, NY. $1,850, 2001.1463. Port Authority Police BenevolentAssociation, Englewood Cliffs, NJ. $<strong>11</strong>,605, 2001.1464. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY. $1,200,2001.1465. United Jewish Communities, New York,NY. $10,000.1466. United Jewish Communities, New York,NY. $2,380, 2001.1467. World Trade <strong>Center</strong> Port AuthorityMemorial Fund, New York, NY. $1,000,000.1468. World Trade <strong>Center</strong> Port AuthorityMemorial Fund, New York, NY. $13,230.1469. World Trade <strong>Center</strong> Port AuthorityMemorial Fund, New York, NY. $10,345.El PomarEl Pomar <strong>Foundation</strong>10 Lake Cir.Colorado Springs, CO 80906(719) 633-77331470. Bonfils Blood <strong>Center</strong>, Denver, CO.$250,000. For relief for New York City disastervictims.1471. Hundred Club of Colorado Springs,Colorado Springs, CO. $250,000, 2001. Towardcollecting blood and delivering it to the New YorkCity area.Electric Boat Employees CommunityService AssociationP.O. Box 1291Groton, CT 06340-129<strong>11</strong>472. American Red Cross, New LondonChapter, New London, CT. $13,500.Electric166


1473. Central Labor Rehabilitation Council ofNew York, New York, NY. $40,000.1474. Community Services Agency, DC. $15,500.1475. Various organizations. $<strong>11</strong>,000.ElectriciteElectricite de Francec/o Corporate Communications22 av Wagram 75008Paris, France1476. Greater New Orleans <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewOrleans, LA. $100,000. For educational assistanceto surviving children of victims of the <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th terrorist attacks.Elk County Community <strong>Foundation</strong><strong>11</strong>1 Erie Ave.St. Marys, PA 15857(814) 834-2125FAX: (814) 834-2126; E-mail: eccf@penn.com;URL: http://www.elkcountyfoundation.com1477. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $43,435.<strong>The</strong> Elmwood <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 2287La Crosse, WI 54602-2287(608) 781-08501478. American Red Cross, La Crosse, WI.$5,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Relief Fund.Emerson Charitable Trust8000 W. Florissant Ave.P.O. Box 4100St. Louis, MO 63136(314) 553-2000FAX: (314) 553-16051479. American Red Cross, National, DC.$20,000.Fred L. Emerson <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 276Auburn, NY 13021(315) 253-962<strong>11</strong>480. United Way of Cayuga County, Auburn,NY. $1,000,000, 2001.1481. WNYC <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$10,000, 2001.Endowment Fund of the JewishFederation of Greater New Haven360 Amity RoadWoodbridge, CT 065251482. United Jewish Community Relief Fund,New York, NY. $10,000.ElkElmwoodEmersonEmersonEndowmentEngineeringEngineering Information <strong>Foundation</strong>180 W. 80th St., Ste. 207New York, NY 10024-6301FAX: (212) 579-7517; E-mail: info@eifgrants.org;URL: http://www.eifgrants.org1483. Goodwill Industries of Greater New Yorkand Northern New Jersey, Astoria, NY. $5,000.English-Bonter-Mitchell <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o National City Bank<strong>11</strong>0 W. Berry St.Fort Wayne, IN 46802-23161484. Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Family Fund(KBW Family Fund), Melville, NY. $25,000,2001.Enron Corp. Contributions Program1400 Smith St.Houston, TX 77002(713) 853-616<strong>11</strong>485. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000.EnglishEnronLIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDER1486. Various organizations. $500,000. Fordonations to organizations in NYC that areassisting families in the wake of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.EntergyEntergy Corporation ContributionsProgramc/o Corp. Contribs.P.O. Box 61000, L-ENT-8ANew Orleans, LA 70161(504) 576-69901487. Greater New Orleans <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewOrleans, LA. $500,000. For educational assistanceto surviving children of victims of the <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th terrorist attacks.EnterpriseEnterprise Rent-A-Car <strong>Foundation</strong>600 Corporate Park Dr.Clayton, MO 63105-42<strong>11</strong>(314) 512-2754FAX: (314) 512-47541488. American Red Cross in Greater New York,New York, NY. $50,000, 2002.1489. Firefighters Fund of Fairfax County,Fairfax, VA. $125,000. For support in theaftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.1490. MMC Victims Relief Fund, New York, NY.$5,000, 2002.1491. Montgomery County Fire and RescueService, Rockville, MD. $125,000. For support inthe aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.1492. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500,000, 2003.1493. Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association of theCity of New York, New York, NY. $50,000, 2002.1494. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $100,000, 2002.EquilonEquilon Enterprises, LLCc/o Corporate Communications<strong>11</strong>00 Louisiana StreetHouston, TX 770021495. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500,000.ErnstErnst & Young <strong>Foundation</strong>5 Times Sq.New York, NY 10036(212) 773-31031496. Ernst & Young <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$2,000,000, 2001. To match funds collected fromemployees, alumni and retirees for the purpose ofproviding financial support to those affected bythe terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.EuropeanEuropean Aeronautic Defense and SpaceCompany (EADS)c/o Corporate CommunicationsLe Carre - Beechavenue 130-132Schiphol Rijk, Netherlands <strong>11</strong>19PR1497. Undesignated. $2,000,000. For donations tosupport victims of the terrorist attacks and theirfamilies.ExcelExcel Communicationsc/o Corporate Communications8750 N. Central Expy No. 2000Dallas, TX 7523<strong>11</strong>498. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000.ExelonExelon Corporationc/o Corporate Communications10 South Dearborn St. - Fl.37Chicago, IL 606031499. Greater New Orleans <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewOrleans, LA. $500,000. For educational assistanceto surviving children of victims of the <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th terrorist attacks.FannieExxonExxon Mobil Corporation ContributionsProgram5959 Las Colinas Blvd.Irving, TX 75039-2298(972) 444-<strong>11</strong>06FAX: (972) 444-1405; URL: http://www.exxonmobil.com/community1500. American Red Cross in Greater New York,New York, NY. $5,105,348, 2001.1501. American Red Cross in Greater New York,New York, NY. $667,000, 2001.1502. Children’s Aid Society, New York, NY.$2,059,383, 2001.1503. Children’s Aid Society, New York, NY.$667,000, 2001.1504. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $1,000,000, 2001.1505. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $774,738, 2001.1506. New York State World Trade <strong>Center</strong> ReliefFund, Albany, NY. $1,344,507, 2001.1507. New York State World Trade <strong>Center</strong> ReliefFund, Albany, NY. $667,000, 2001.1508. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$2,000,000, 2001.1509. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$1,966,024, 2001.FairbanksRichard M. Fairbanks <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.9292 N. Meridan St., Ste. 304Indianapolis, IN 46260(317) 846-7<strong>11</strong>1FAX: (317) 844-0167; E-mail:Bikoff@rmfairbanksfoundation.org; URL: http://www.rmfairbanksfoundation.org1510. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000. Forgeneral support for <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.FairfieldFairfield County Community <strong>Foundation</strong>,Inc.523 Danbury Rd.Wilton, CT 06897(203) 834-9393FAX: (203) 834-9996; E-mail:info@fccfoundation.org; URL: http://www.fccfoundation.org15<strong>11</strong>. Fairfield County Community <strong>Foundation</strong>,Wilton, CT. $55,000.FannieFannie MaeWashington, DC1512. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $5,000,000.1513. District of Columbia, Government of, DC.$1,000,000. For financial support of DC residentsdirectly and adversely affected by the attacks of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.1514. National Association of Realtors, Chicago,IL. $1,000,000.1515. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $3,000,000. Forfinancial support of DC residents directly andadversely affected by the attacks of <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th.Fannie Mae <strong>Foundation</strong>4000 Wisconsin Ave. N.W.N. Tower, Ste. 1Washington, DC 20016-2804(202) 274-80571516. Arlington, County of, Arlington, VA.$25,000, 2001.1517. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $50,000, 2001.Fannie167


FannieSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE1518. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $54,566. For NYCrelief efforts.1519. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $27,204. For DCrelief efforts.<strong>The</strong> William Stamps Farish Fund10000 Memorial Dr., Ste. 920Houston, TX 77024(713) 686-73731520. American Red Cross, Lexington, KY.$100,000. For disaster relief fund for New YorkCity <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attack.Federal Home Loan Bank of Atlantac/o Corporate CommunicationsP.O. Box105565Atlanta, GA 303481521. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $50,000.FarishFederalFederalExpressFederalExpressc/o Corporate Communications942 South Shady GroveMemphis, TN 381201522. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000.Federated Department Stores<strong>Foundation</strong>7 W. 7th St.Cincinnati, OH 45202(513) 579-7000FAX: (513) 579-7185; URL: http://www.federated-fds.com/community/report/chapter2/index_1_4.asp1523. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.FederatedFederationFederation of Korean Industriesc/o Communications Dept.460 Park AvenueNew York, NY 100221524. Army Emergency Relief, Alexandria, VA.$150,000.1525. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$500,000.<strong>The</strong> Feil Family <strong>Foundation</strong>370 7th Ave., Ste. 618New York, NY 10001(212) 563-65571526. Special Operations Warrior <strong>Foundation</strong>,Tampa, FL. $5,000, 2003. For the children of9/<strong>11</strong>.Fein <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 99Scarsdale, NY 105831527. New York, State of, Albany, NY. $5,400.Samuel S. Fels Fund1616 Walnut St., Ste. 800Philadelphia, PA 19103-5313(215) 731-9455FAX: (215) 731-9457; URL: http://www.samfels.org1528. Arab-American Development Corporation,Philadelphia, PA. $15,000. For start-up support toeducate community about Muslims and Islam.FeilFeinFelsJohn E. Fetzer Institute, Inc.9292 West KL Ave.Kalamazoo, MI 49009-9398FAX: (269) 372-2163; E-mail: info@fetzer.org;URL: http://www.fetzer.org1529. Undesignated. $100,000.FetzerFieldstone<strong>The</strong> Fieldstone <strong>Foundation</strong>14 Corporate Plz.Newport Beach, CA 92660(949) 640-9090ext.: 5869; Alternate address: 5465 Morehouse Dr.,Ste. 250, San Diego, CA 92121; E-mail:foundation@fieldstone-homes.com; URL: http://www.fieldstone-homes.com/foundation1530. Undesignated. $25,000.Fifth<strong>The</strong> Fifth Third <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Fifth Third Bank38 Fountain Sq. Plz., M.D. 1090CACincinnati, OH 45263(513) 534-7001URL: http://www.53.com/about53/foundation.asp1531. Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Family Fund(KBW Family Fund), Melville, NY. $5,000, 2002.Financial Security Assurancec/o Corporate Communications350 Park Avenue - Fl. 12New York, NY 100221532. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$500,000.FinancialFindlay-HancockFindlay-Hancock County Community<strong>Foundation</strong>101 W. Sandusky St.Suite 207Findlay, OH 458401533. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000.Finish Line Youth <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.3308 N. Mitthoeffer Rd.Indianapolis, IN 46235(317) 899-1022URL: http://www.finishline.com/store/corporate_info/youthfoundation.jsp1534. Undesignated. $35,000.FinishFiosc/o Corporate Communications921 SW Washington St. No. 850Portland, OR 972051535. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $5,000.1536. New York State World Trade <strong>Center</strong> ReliefFund, Albany, NY. $5,000.First Kentucky National Charitable<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 3600Louisville, KY 40233(502) 581-52581537. Fire Rescue Development Program,Chicago, IL. $50,000. To pay the travel expensesof firefighters helping in <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th reliefefforts.First Southwest Companyc/o Corporate Communications1700 Pacific Avenue, Suite 500Dallas, TX 7520<strong>11</strong>538. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.FiosFirstFirstFirst Tennessee <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o First Tennessee National Corp.165 Madison Ave., 8th Fl.Memphis, TN 38103(901) 532-43801539. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $200,000.<strong>The</strong> First Union <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Wachovia Corp.301 S. Tryon St., TW-<strong>11</strong>Charlotte, NC 28288-0143(704) 374-6649Local bank addresses: CT, NJ, NY: YvonneCalcagno, 370 Scotch Rd., Trenton, NJ 08628, tel.:(609) 530-7357, FL: Connie Smith, 225 Water St.,7th Fl., FL0670, Jacksonville, FL 32202, tel.: (904)489-3268, DC, GA, MD, NC, SC, VA: RobbyRussell, 310 S. Tryon St., Charlotte, NC28288-0143, tel.: (704) 374-4912, DE, PA: KevinDow, 1339 Chestnut St., 13th Fl., Philadelphia, PA19107, tel.: (267) 321-7664, First Union Securities,Inc.: Tim Holtz, 10700 Wheat 1st Dr., Glen Allen,VA 23060, tel.: (804) 965-2415; FAX: (704)374-24841540. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000.1541. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000.FISA <strong>Foundation</strong>1001 Liberty Ave., Ste. 650Pittsburgh, PA 15222(412) 456-5550FAX: (412) 456-5551; E-mail:dee@fisafoundation.org, orsue@fisafoundation.org; URL: http://www.fisafoundation.org/1542. National Council on Independent Living,Chicago, IL. $5,000. For urgent needs of peoplewith disabilities affected by the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>,2001 attacks on the United States.FirstFirstFISAFishAmericaFishAmerica <strong>Foundation</strong>225 Reinekers Ln., Ste.420Alexandria, VA 22315(703) 519-9691FAX: (703) 519-1872; E-mail:fishamerica@asafishing.org; URL: http://www.fishamerica.org/1543. Central Park Conservancy, New York, NY.$2,000. For re-stocking of Harlem Meer pond inCentral Park, so children and families may fishand enjoy a respite from the pace of city life asway to improve the lives of New Yorkers in viewof the tragedies of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.FisherJerome & Anne C. Fisher Charitable<strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Caler, Donten & Levine, et al.505 S. Flagler Dr., Ste. 900West Palm Beach, FL 33401-59231544. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY. $5,000.FleetBostonFleetBoston Financial Corporationc/o Corporate Communications100 Federal Street, 10034FBoston, MA 02<strong>11</strong>01545. Various organizations. $1,000,000. Fordonations related to the events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thfrom Fleet Bank and subsidiaries throughFleetBoston Financial <strong>Foundation</strong>.168


FleetBostonFleetBoston Financial <strong>Foundation</strong>100 Federal St., MA DE 10018ABoston, MA 02<strong>11</strong>0(617) 434-2804FAX: (617) 434-6072; URL: http://www.fleet.com/foundation1546. ACCION New York, Brooklyn, NY.$200,000, 2002.1547. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000, 2002.1548. Bridge Fund of New York, New York, NY.$50,000, 2002.1549. Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund, New York,NY. $10,000. For general support.1550. Harvey Young Yurman Relief Fund.$150,000, 2002.1551. Individual beneficiaries. $200,000, 2002. Toprovide individual support to directly impactedemployees.1552. James E. Hayden Memorial Fund, MA.$25,000, 2002.1553. Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Family Fund(KBW Family Fund), Melville, NY. $100,000,2001.1554. Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Family Fund(KBW Family Fund), Melville, NY. $5,000, 2002.1555. Massachusetts 9/<strong>11</strong> Fund, Boston, MA.$25,000, 2002.1556. Neighborhood Housing Services of NewYork City, New York, NY. $50,000, 2002.1557. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000, 2002.1558. New York State World Trade <strong>Center</strong> ReliefFund, Albany, NY. $25,000, 2002.1559. New York Stock Exchange Fallen HeroesFund, New York, NY. $1,000,000, 2002.1560. Renaissance Economic DevelopmentCorporation, New York, NY. $50,000, 2002.1561. Sandler O’Neill Assistance <strong>Foundation</strong>,Chatham, NJ. $25,000, 2001.1562. Sandler O’Neill Assistance <strong>Foundation</strong>,Chatham, NJ. $5,000, 2002.1563. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$25,000, 2002.1564. Various organizations. $145,000.FleishmanFleishman-Hillard Charitable Trust200 N. Broadway, Ste. 1800St. Louis, MO 63102-1706(314) 982-17001565. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.FlintFlint Ink <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Flint Ink Corp.4600 Arrowhead Dr.Ann Arbor, MI 48105-27731566. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $95,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.FloraFlora Family <strong>Foundation</strong>2121 Sand Hill Rd., Ste. 123Menlo Park, CA 94025(650) 233-1335FAX: (650) 233-1340; E-mail:info@florafamily.org; URL: http://www.florafamily.org1567. American Red Cross, National, DC.$25,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> relief efforts in New York City.1568. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1569. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$10,000. For fund for families of victims following<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDER<strong>The</strong> Fluor <strong>Foundation</strong>1 Enterprise Dr.Aliso Viejo, CA 92656-2606(949) 349-6797FAX: (949) 349-7175; E-mail:community.relations@fluor.com; URL: http://www.fluor.com/community/involvement.asp1570. American Red Cross, National, DC.$104,207. To match gifts made by FluorCorporation employees.1571. American Red Cross, National, DC.$68,762. To match gifts made by Fluoremployees.1572. American Red Cross, National, DC.$21,245. To match gifts made by Fluor Fernaldemployees.FluorFMCFMC <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o FMC Corp.1735 Market St., 23rd Fl.Philadelphia, PA 19103(215) 299-60001573. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.Foot Locker, Inc. Corporate GivingProgramc/o Corp. Contribs.233 BroadwayNew York, NY 10279(212) 553-20001574. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$100,000.FootFord<strong>The</strong> Ford <strong>Foundation</strong>320 E. 43rd St.New York, NY 10017(212) 573-5000FAX: (212) 351-3677; URL: http://www.fordfound.org1575. Action Alliance for Virginias Children andYouth, Richmond, VA. $14,200, 2002. To informpublic discourse about the impact and burden ofincreased costs and constrained budget resourcesresulting from the events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.1576. Alzheimers Disease and Related DisordersAssociation, Chicago, IL. $20,000, 2002. For NewYork City chapter to conduct special outreach toassist those in Alzheimer’s community affected bythe terrorist attacks.1577. American Association of UniversityProfessors, DC. $50,000. For activities of SpecialCommittee on Academic Freedom and NationalSecurity in a Time of Crisis.1578. American Friends Service Committee,Philadelphia, PA. $100,000. To ensure that humanrights of non-citizens detained in New Jersey inaftermath of attacks of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001 arerespected.1579. American Immigration Law <strong>Foundation</strong>,DC. $50,000. To address curtailment of dueprocess protections for non-citizens duringimmigration proceedings in post-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>period.1580. Arab American Family Support <strong>Center</strong>,Brooklyn, NY. $50,000. For crisis intervention,legal aid, community education and outreach andcoalition building for Arab-American detaineesand victims of bias crimes and discrimination inaftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.1581. Arkansas Advocates for Children andFamilies, Little Rock, AR. $14,200, 2002. Toinform public discourse about the impact andburden of increased costs and constrained budgetresources resulting from the events of <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>.1582. Asian American Legal Defense andEducation Fund, New York, NY. $100,000. Forcore support for 9/<strong>11</strong> Immigrant Access to JusticeFordProject to ensure that human rights ofnon-citizens detained in the U.S. in aftermath of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001 are respected.1583. Aspen Institute, DC. $25,000. Forconference on how forces of homeland securityand commercialism are shaping future ofjournalism.1584. Bank Information <strong>Center</strong>, DC. $200,000,2002. To monitor the response of internationalfinancial institutions to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.1585. Brecht Forum, New York, NY. $50,000. Toorganize and provide assistance to Arab, Muslimand South Asian communities in New York andNew Jersey experiencing discrimination as resultof events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.1586. <strong>Center</strong> for Constitutional Rights, New York,NY. $150,000. For racial justice litigation,advocacy, and educational outreach activitiesrelated to detention and racial profiling of ArabAmericans and Muslims following World Trade<strong>Center</strong> attack.1587. <strong>Center</strong> on Budget and Policy Priorities,DC. $150,000, 2002. For state-level dialogues onpolicy implications of post-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> budgetcuts.1588. Centre for Development and ConflictManagement Studies, Ile-Ife, Nigeria. $200,000.For research and public education on <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>, anti-Americanism and conflict in Nigeria.1589. Childrens Action Alliance, Phoenix, AZ.$14,200, 2002. To inform public discourse inArizona about the impact and burden of increasedcosts and constrained budget resources resultingfrom the attacks of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.1590. Childrens Defense Fund, DC. $14,200,2002. To inform public discourse in Minnesotaabout the impact and burden of increased costsand constrained budget resources resulting fromthe attacks of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.1591. Chinese Academy of Social Sciences,Beijing. $<strong>11</strong>8,200. To conduct research onchanges in social stratification, occupationalstructure and income distribution in China since1980.1592. Circle <strong>Foundation</strong>, Bethesda, MD.$100,000. For Program on International PolicyAttitudes to conduct public opinion research tohelp U.S. policy makers better understandpost-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> public attitudes on nation’srole in world.1593. City Limits Community InformationService, New York, NY. $125,000, 2002. For the<strong>Center</strong> for an Urban Future to undertake aninitiative to help NYC leaders address criticalworkforce development issues in the aftermath of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.1594. City Limits Community InformationService, New York, NY. $100,000. For continuingefforts of <strong>Center</strong> for Urban Future to help NewYork City business and political leaders addresscritical workforce development issues in aftermathof <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.1595. Common Cents New York, New York, NY.$100,000. For report on Twin Towers PennyHarvest, New York City school-based fundraisingand grantmaking program that enabled studentsto carry out service projects in aftermath of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.1596. Communications Network, DC. $250,000.For core support for South Asian StrategicCommunications Project to strengthen ability ofSouth Asian and Muslim communityorganizations to protect civil liberties in wake of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.1597. Council on Foreign Relations, New York,NY. $100,000, 2002. For development of CouncilTask Force on Terrorism and roundtables todiscuss challenges facing international affairscommunity in the wake of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.169


FordSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE1598. Deep Dish T.V. Network, New York, NY.$75,000, 2002. For television news seriesDemocracy Now to continue incorporatingaftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks into futurebroadcasts.1599. Economic Policy Institute, DC. $66,000.For research and analysis on effects of stateunemployment insurance laws on contingentworkforce in post-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th economy.1600. Educational Broadcasting Corporation,New York, NY. $300,000, 2002. For already-airedand future programming which directly related tothe 9/<strong>11</strong> crisis and its repercussions.1601. Fenton Communications, DC. $300,000,2002. For strategic communications activities topromote informed voices in response to the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks, with an emphasis on theprotection of civil liberties and prevention ofdiscrimination.1602. Ford <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY. $175,000.For administration of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1603. <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, New York, New York,NY. $150,000, 2002. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th<strong>Philanthropic</strong> <strong>Response</strong> Project.1604. Fund for the City of New York, New York,NY. $1,000,000, 2002. To provide loans fornonprofit organizations whose revenue streamswere disrupted by World Trade <strong>Center</strong> disaster.1605. Graduate School and University <strong>Center</strong> ofthe City University of New York, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002. For series of public forums toconsider history and future of New York City inlight of World Trade <strong>Center</strong> attacks.1606. Human Rights Education and Law Project(HELP), Montclair, NJ. $50,000. To insureadequate legal representation of post-<strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong> detainees and for activities that address civilrights issues arising from selected governmentalresponses to attack.1607. Human Rights Watch, New York, NY.$375,000, 2002. Core support for the AcademicFreedom Program to foster tolerance for seculareducation and critical thought worldwide,particularly, post <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, in Southwest andCentral Asia and in the Middle East.1608. Human Rights Watch, New York, NY.$75,000. To document and advocate against,human rights violations in Afghanistan related toaftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks.1609. Independent Sector, DC. $13,000, 2002.For public education in the aftermath of the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th terrorist attacks about theimportant role of the nonprofit sector.1610. Interfaith Alliance <strong>Foundation</strong>, DC.$330,000, 2002. For an innovative effort in theaftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> to create Jewish,Muslim and Christian congregational partnershipsfor local action in US communities.16<strong>11</strong>. International Rescue Committee, NewYork, NY. $150,000, 2002. For the Women’sCommission for Refugee Women and Children toprotect Afghan refugee and internally displacedwomen and girls.1612. International Rescue Committee, NewYork, NY. $50,000, 2002. To expand human rightsprotections for displaced Afghans.1613. Kentucky Youth Advocates, Louisville, KY.$14,200, 2002. To inform public discourse aboutthe impact and burden of increased costs andconstrained budget resources resulting from theevents of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.1614. Kitchen Sisters Productions, San Francisco,CA. $35,000. For Sonic Memorial Project,post-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> nationwide public radiocollaboration commemorating people, places andendeavors involved in World Trade <strong>Center</strong> and itssurrounding neighborhoods.1615. Legal Aid Society, New York, NY.$1,000,000, 2002. For legal services and otheractivities to help low-income people and theworking poor affected by the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> WorldTrade <strong>Center</strong> disaster.1616. Legal Defense Institute, Lima, Peru.$500,000, 2002. For legal defense and promotionof international human rights in Andean Region,and program of action to respond to regionalconsequences of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.1617. Link Media, San Rafael, CA. $585,000,2002. For the digital distribution of WorldLinkTV’s international programming to the nationalnetwork of public television stations, including aseries of post-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> global town meetings.1618. Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy,Los Angeles, CA. $75,000. To expand study onimpact of Los Angeles Living Wage Ordinance onworkers and employers in post-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>theconomy.1619. Middle East Institute, DC. $250,000. Toestablish U.S.-Arab Working Group for ongoingdialogue in aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> onpolitical, social and economic issues and for policyreport on common agenda.1620. National <strong>Center</strong> on Education and theEconomy, DC. $195,000, 2002. To educate localworkforce board members about responsibilities &opportunities under the federal workforce system& share effective strategies of post-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>global town meetings.1621. National Immigration Project of theNational Lawyers Guild, Boston, MA. $100,000,2002. For core support for activities to ensure thatthe human rights of noncitizens detained in theUnited States in the aftermath of the attacks of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001 are respected.1622. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $3,000,000, 2002.For the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund’s grantmaking insupport of relief and restoration activities.1623. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $2,000,000, 2002.For the operating committee and staffing expensesof the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1624. Nonprofit Finance Fund, New York, NY.$1,000,000, 2002. To help nonprofit organizationsthat have suffered physical damage or loss ofbusiness as result of World Trade <strong>Center</strong> tragedy.1625. Physicians for Human Rights, Boston, MA.$25,000. To complete survey of maternalmortality in Afghanistan in context of U.S.response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks.1626. Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, NY. $150,000,2002. To develop a plan to address communityneeds in the aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.1627. Public Interest Projects, New York, NY.$700,000. For start-up support for FreedomFund, national fundraising and grant makingcollaborative to advance immigrants’ and humanrights in post-9/<strong>11</strong> context.1628. Regional Plan Association, New York, NY.$350,000, 2002. For the Civil Alliance Project todevelop strategies for the rebuilding of LowerManhattan in the wake of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attackon the World Trade <strong>Center</strong>.1629. Rethinking Schools, Milwaukee, WI.$40,000, 2002. To publish and disseminatematerials to help K-12 educators discuss theevents of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th with students.1630. Rock the Vote Education Fund, LosAngeles, CA. $100,000, 2002. For Aftermath,documentary exploring post-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>experiences of young people with issues withdiscrimination.1631. Rutgers, <strong>The</strong> State University of NewJersey, New Brunswick, NJ. $30,000. For videoproject exploring South Asian communityorganizing around issues of gender, sexuality andnationalism, with events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> as pointof departure.1632. Structured Employment EconomicDevelopment Corporation, New York, NY.$1,000,000, 2002. To provide small grants,short-term loans and technical assistance to microenterprises and other small firms affected byWorld Trade <strong>Center</strong> disaster.1633. Thomas A. Edison <strong>Foundation</strong> forNon-Traditional Education, Trenton, NJ. $57,400,2002. For report on the philanthropic andoperational lessons learned in responding to theconsequences of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attack.1634. Thomas A. Edison State College<strong>Foundation</strong>, Trenton, NJ. $29,850. To createsupplement and executive summary to report onphilanthropic and operational lessons learnedreport in responding to consequences of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attack.1635. Tides <strong>Center</strong>, San Francisco, CA. $50,000.For <strong>September</strong> Eleventh Families for PeacefulTomorrows, project to intensify outreach andmembership building efforts and expandfundraising and development activities.1636. Tides <strong>Center</strong>, San Francisco, CA. $50,000,2002. For start-up support for <strong>September</strong>Eleventh Families for Peaceful Tomorrows, anorganization to create opportunities for publicdiscussion of governmental responses to the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks.1637. University of California, Los Angeles, CA.$55,000. For research and analysis on impact ofLos Angeles living wage ordinance on workersand on employers in post-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>theconomy.1638. Voices for Alabamas Children,Montgomery, AL. $14,200, 2002. To informpublic discourse about the impact and burden ofincreased costs and constrained budget resourcesresulting from the events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.1639. Washington Regional Association ofGrantmakers, DC. $1,200,000, 2002. To assistnonprofit organizations and enhance coordinationamong donors and service providers working oncommunity recovery issues.1640. Wisconsin Council on Children andFamilies, Madison, WI. $14,200, 2002. To informpublic discourse about the impact and burden ofincreased costs and constrained budget resourcesresulting from the events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.1641. WNYC <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$1,000,000, 2002. To purchase new transmitter torestore FM public radio station to full service inaftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th World Trade <strong>Center</strong>disaster.FordFord Motor Company Fund1 American Rd.P.O. Box 1899Dearborn, MI 48126-2798(313) 248-47451642. American Red Cross, Southeast Michigan,Detroit, MI. $1,000,000, 2001.1643. American Red Cross, Southeast Michigan,Detroit, MI. $1,000,000, 2001. To match Fordindividual contributions for <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thdisaster relief.1644. American Red Cross, Southeast Michigan,Detroit, MI. $7,612. Funds transferred throughFund from Ford Japan.1645. Farmington Hills Police BenevolentAssociation, Farmington Hills, MI. $5,000, 2001.To support a Disaster Relief walk from Detroit toNew York by firefighters.1646. Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$1,000,000, 2001. To sponsor the Concert for NYfundraiser for Robin Hood Relief Fund.1647. Undesignated. $500,000.170


Fort WayneFort Wayne Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.701 S. Clinton St., Ste. 210Fort Wayne, IN 46802(260) 426-4083FAX: (260) 424-0<strong>11</strong>4; E-mail: info@fwcf.org;URL: http://www.fwcf.org1648. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th fund.FortuneFortune Brands, Inc. Corporate GivingProgram300 Tower Pkwy.Lincolnshire, IL 60069-3640(847) 484-44001649. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500,000.FosterFoster Wheeler Inc. Corporate GivingProgramPerryville Corporate ParkClinton, NJ 08809-4000(908) 730-4050FAX: (908) 730-53001650. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000.<strong>Foundation</strong><strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> for Appalachian Ohio36 Public Sq.P.O. Box 456Nelsonville, OH 45764(740) 753-<strong>11</strong><strong>11</strong>FAX: (740) 753-3333; E-mail:info@appalachianohio.org; URL: http://www.appalachianohio.org1651. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $2,500. For Survivor’s Fund.1652. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $2,500.1653. Various organizations. $5,000. To supportAppalachian Ohio victims and families of victimsfrom Appalachian Ohio and to promote andencourage strong community relationships withinand across Appalachian Ohio’s racial and ethnicdiversities.<strong>Foundation</strong><strong>Foundation</strong> for the Carolinas217 South Tryon St.Charlotte, NC 28202(704) 973-45001654. American Red Cross, National, DC.$26,000.1655. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $<strong>11</strong>3,641. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.FranceFrance-Merrick <strong>Foundation</strong><strong>The</strong> Exchange<strong>11</strong>22 Kenilworth Dr., Ste. <strong>11</strong>8Baltimore, MD 21204(410) 832-5700FAX: (410) 832-57041656. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.FrankLawrence L. Frank <strong>Foundation</strong>234 E. Colorado Blvd., Ste. 500Pasadena, CA 9<strong>11</strong>01-2206(626) 440-52341657. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERFrankelEvan Frankel <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 5072East Hampton, NY <strong>11</strong>937(631) 329-2833FAX: (631) 329-7102; E-mail:frankelfound@hamptons.com1658. New York Presbyterian Hospital, New York,NY. $100,000.FreddieFreddie Mac Corporate Giving Program8200 Jones Branch Dr.McLean, VA 22102-3<strong>11</strong>0(703) 903-20001659. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$2,000,000.1660. Various organizations. $8,000,000. To coverday-to-day expenses of survivors and families ofvictims, long-term relief for families of victims.FredericksFredericks Family <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Vincent Andrews Mgmt.16 West Ave.Darien, CT 068201661. Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Family Fund(KBW Family Fund), Melville, NY. $17,300. Forgeneral support.Freed<strong>The</strong> Freed <strong>Foundation</strong>1025 Thomas Jefferson St., Ste. 308 E.Washington, DC 20007(202) 337-54871662. AmeriCares <strong>Foundation</strong>, New Canaan, CT.$50,000.1663. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $50,000.1664. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $50,000.1665. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000.1666. New York State Fraternal Order of PoliceFund, Hicksville, NY. $50,000.1667. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$50,000.Freeman<strong>The</strong> Freeman <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o JPMorgan Private Bank345 Park Ave., 4th Fl.New York, NY 10154(212) 464-2487FAX: (212) 464-2305; E-mail:wong_elizabeth@jpmorgan.com1668. City Harvest, New York, NY. $300,000. Forrelief efforts associated with events of <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>.1669. Community Service Society of New York,New York, NY. $400,000. For relief effortsassociated with events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.1670. Food for Survival, Bronx, NY. $300,000.For relief efforts associated with events of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.FremontFremont Area Community <strong>Foundation</strong>4424 W. 48th St.P.O. Box BFremont, MI 49412(231) 924-5350FAX: (231) 924-5391; E-mail: gzerlaut@tfacf.org;URL: http://www.tfacf.org1671. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000, 2001.Frey <strong>Foundation</strong>40 Pearl St., N.W., Ste. <strong>11</strong>00Grand Rapids, MI 49503-3028(616) 451-0303FAX: (616) 451-8481; E-mail:freyfdn@freyfdn.org; URL: http://www.freyfdn.org1672. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000.FreyFriends<strong>The</strong> Friends of Barnabas <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 2100Danville, VA 24541Application address: P.O. Box 34531, Richmond,VA 232341673. American Red Cross, National, DC.$12,077. For disaster relief fund.1674. United Methodist Church, Richmond, VA.$9,000. For disaster relief fund.<strong>The</strong> Frist <strong>Foundation</strong>3319 West End Ave., Ste. 900Nashville, TN 37203-1076(615) 292-3868FAX: (615) 292-5843; E-mail:askfrist@fristfoundation.org; URL: http://www.fristfoundation.org1675. United Way of Metropolitan Nashville,Nashville, TN. $10,000, 2001.Charles A. Frueauff <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.3 Financial Ctr.900 S. Shakleford, Ste. 300Little Rock, AR 722<strong>11</strong>(501) 219-1410FAX: (501) 219-1416; URL: http://www.frueaufffoundation.com1676. Various organizations. $108,000. To aidNew York nonprofits that were disrupted orsuffered loss of income after 9/<strong>11</strong>.1677. WNYC <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$10,000, 2001. To restore FM transmissionantenna after 9/<strong>11</strong>.FristFrueauffLloyd A. Fry <strong>Foundation</strong>120 S. LaSalle St., Ste. 1950Chicago, IL 60603(312) 580-0310FAX: (312) 580-0980; E-mail:usong@fryfoundation.org; URL: http://www.fryfoundation.org1678. American Red Cross, National, DC. $500,2002.1679. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $1,000, 2002.1680. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.Fuji Photo Film U.S.A., Inc. CorporateGiving Programc/o Corp. Contribs. Dept.200 Summit Lake Dr.Valhalla, NY 10595-1356(800) 755-38541681. Various organizations. $1,000,000.Fujitsu America Inc. Corporate GivingProgram3055 Orchard Dr.San Jose, CA 95134(408) 432-13001682. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.GaiserMary Jewett Gaiser UnitrustSeattle, WA1683. American Red Cross, Spokane Chapter,Spokane, WA. $8,169.FryFujiFujitsuGaiser171


GaleSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEGale<strong>The</strong> Bulova Gale <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Maurice Silberman403 Blanketflower Ln.Princeton Junction, NJ 08550-24371684. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000. For generalsupport.Helen M. Galvin Charitable Trustc/o Christopher B. Galvin1303 E. Algonquin Rd.Schaumburg, IL 601961685. Live Brave Coalition, Schaumburg, IL.$250,000.<strong>The</strong> Galway Bay <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.5 Burning Hollow Rd.Saddle River, NJ 07458-29261686. Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Family Fund(KBW Family Fund), Melville, NY. $1,000. Forgeneral support.1687. Sandler O’Neill Assistance <strong>Foundation</strong>,Chatham, NJ. $5,000. For general support.GAMA <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.1302 Pleasant Ridge RdGreensboro, NC 274091688. Undesignated. $1,000,000. For grants toindividuals adversely affected by the events of9/<strong>11</strong> and to enable them to pursue MarketAmerican’s Unfranchis opportunity.Anna C. Gamble <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Bank One Trust Co., N.A.P.O. Box 1308Milwaukee, WI 5320<strong>11</strong>689. American Red Cross, National, DC.$5,000, 2002.Gannett <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.7950 Jones Branch Dr.McLean, VA 22107FAX: (703) 854-2167; E-mail:isimpson@gannett.com; URL: http://www.gannettfoundation.org1690. American Red Cross, National, DC.$2,000,000.1691. Arlington, County of, Arlington, VA.$30,000, 2001.GalvinGalwayGAMAGambleGannett<strong>The</strong> Gap <strong>Foundation</strong>2 Folsom St., 14th Fl.San Francisco, CA 94105(415) 427-6473E-mail: dotti_hatcher@gap.com1692. America Reads, DC. $10,000. To honor thedeath of a Gap employee who perished in one ofthe hijacked planes on 9/<strong>11</strong>.1693. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500,000.1694. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500,000, 2002.<strong>The</strong> GAR <strong>Foundation</strong>50 S. Main St.P.O. Box 1500Akron, OH 44309-1500(330) 643-0201FAX: (330) 252-5584; E-mail:RBriggs@BDBlaw.com; URL: http://www.garfdn.org1695. American Red Cross, Akron, OH.$350,000. For construction, maintenance, andendowment; and for Disaster Relief Fund to helpvictims of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, 2001.GapGARGartnerGartner, Inc.c/o Corporate Communications56 Top Gallant Rd.Stamford, CT 069021696. AmeriCares <strong>Foundation</strong>, New Canaan, CT.$6,000.1697. Undesignated. $26,500.GatesBill & Melinda Gates <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 23350Seattle, WA 98102(206) 709-3100FAX: (206) 709-3180; E-mail:info@gatesfoundation.org; URL: http://www.gatesfoundation.org1698. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000, 2001.1699. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000, 2001.For the victims of the terrorist attacks in NewYork and Washington, D.C.1700. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $1,000,000, 2001.1701. Town Hall <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$20,000, 2001.Gateway <strong>Foundation</strong>14303 Gateway Pl.Poway, CA 92064-71401702. Undesignated. $100,000.GatewayGE <strong>Foundation</strong>3135 Easton Tpke.Fairfield, CT 06431(203) 373-3216FAX: (203) 373-3029; E-mail:gefoundation@ge.com; URL: http://www.ge.com/foundation/1703. American Red Cross, National, DC.$2,500,000.1704. Municipal Art Society of New York, NewYork, NY. $250,000.1705. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$10,000,000, 2001.1706. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$500,000.1707. Wall Street Rising Corporation, New York,NY. $10,000.GEGeffen<strong>The</strong> David Geffen <strong>Foundation</strong>331 N. Maple Dr., Ste. 200Beverly Hills, CA 90210(310) 288-7333FAX: (310) 288-73291708. American Red Cross in Greater New York,New York, NY. $333,333. For grant made in theaftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.1709. Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association of theCity of New York, New York, NY. $333,333. ForPBA Widows’ and Children’s Fund in theaftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.1710. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $333,333. For grant made in theaftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.GenentechGenentech, Inc. Corporate GivingProgramc/o Mgr., Contribs.460 Point San Bruno Blvd.South San Francisco, CA 94080-4990(650) 225-1000FAX: (650) 225-2021; URL: http://www.gene.com/gene/about/community17<strong>11</strong>. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.General Growth Propertiesc/o Corporate Communications<strong>11</strong>0 N. Wacker DriveChicago, IL 606061712. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.GeneralGeneralGeneral Mills <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box <strong>11</strong>13Minneapolis, MN 55440(763) 764-22<strong>11</strong>Contact for Merit Scholarship Prog.: Cynthia Ann<strong>The</strong>ien; Address for “Challenge U” ScholarshipProg.: Scholarship America, Inc., P.O. Box 297, St.Peter, MN 56082, tel.: (507) 931-1682; FAX:(763) 764-4<strong>11</strong>4; E-mail:mills999@mail.genmills.com; URL: http://www.generalmills.com/corporate/commitment/community/ <strong>Foundation</strong>1713. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.GeneralGeneral Motors <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.300 Renaissance Ctr., M.C. 482-C27-D76Detroit, MI 48265-3000(313) 665-0824URL: http://www.gm.com/company/gmability1714. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000, 2001.1715. American Red Cross, National, DC.$300,000.1716. Tavis Smiley <strong>Foundation</strong>, Los Angeles, CA.$25,000.Georgia Power <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.241 Ralph McGill Blvd., N.E., Bin 10131Atlanta, GA 30308-3374FAX: (404) 506-1485; E-mail:gpfoundation@southernco.com; URL: http://www.southerncompany.com/gapower/charitable1717. American Red Cross, National, DC.$25,000, 2001.Georgia-Pacific <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.133 Peachtree St. N.E.Atlanta, GA 30303(404) 652-4000URL: http://www.gp.com/center/community/index.html1718. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000, 2001.GeorgiaGeorgiaGerber<strong>The</strong> Gerber <strong>Foundation</strong>4747 W. 48th St., Ste. 153Fremont, MI 49412-8<strong>11</strong>9(231) 924-3175FAX: (231) 924-7906; E-mail: tgf@ncresa.org;URL: http://www.gerberfoundation.org1719. Mercy Corps International, Portland, OR.$30,000. For Comfort Kits for children affectedby <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.Giant Eagle <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Giant Eagle, Inc.101 Kappa Dr.Pittsburgh, PA 15238(412) 963-6200Application address for scholarships: Giant Eagle<strong>Foundation</strong> Scholarship Prog., Giant Eagle, Inc.,c/o Human Resources Dept., 701 Alpha Dr.,Pittsburgh, PA 152381720. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000.Giant172


Giant Food <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 1804Washington, DC 20013(301) 341-4171FAX: (301) 618-4972; Application address: 6300Sheriff Rd., Landover, MD 207851721. Giant Food <strong>Foundation</strong>, DC. $1,000,000.1722. Giant Food <strong>Foundation</strong>, DC. $1,000,000.GiantGillmore<strong>The</strong> Frederick H. Gillmore Fundc/o Morris & McVeigh, LLP767 3rd Ave.New York, NY 10017-20231723. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $20,000. Forunrestricted support.Gimprich Family <strong>Foundation</strong>1 West 4th StreetNew York, NY 100121724. Structured Employment EconomicDevelopment Corporation, New York, NY.$6,000, 2002.GimprichGinsbergAlbert and Pearl Ginsberg <strong>Foundation</strong>,Inc.64-35 Yellowstone Blvd.Forest Hills, NY <strong>11</strong>3751725. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $5,000.1726. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY. $5,000.GlaxoSmithKlineGlaxoSmithKline Holdings (Americas) Inc.Corporate Giving Program5 Moore Dr.Research Triangle Park, NC 27709-3398(919) 483-2719Application address: P.O. Box 13398, ResearchTriangle Park, NC 27709; FAX: (919) 483-87651727. American Red Cross, National, DC.$267,753.1728. AmeriCares <strong>Foundation</strong>, New Canaan, CT.$34,802.1729. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$1,000,000.1730. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$45,901.GlobalGlobal Resourcec/o Corporate CommunicationsCA1731. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.GM Corporate Giving ProgramM.C. 482-<strong>11</strong>1-1343044 W. Grand Blvd.Detroit, MI 48202-3091(313) 556-4260URL: http://www.gm.com/company/gmability1732. American Red Cross, National, DC.$250,000.Golden Artists ColorsNew York, NY1733. New York <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Arts, NewYork, NY. $3,000. For New York Arts RecoveryFund.GMGoldenLIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERGoldenSam and Adele Golden <strong>Foundation</strong> forthe Artsc/o Mark Golden188 Bell Rd.New Berlin, NY 134<strong>11</strong>(607) 847-8158FAX: (607) 847-8158; E-mail:info@goldenfoundation.org; URL: http://www.goldenfoundation.org1734. New York <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Arts, NewYork, NY. $1,000. For New York Arts RecoveryFund.Goldhammer Family <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Robert F. Goldhammer284 Locha Dr.Jupiter, FL 334581735. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$20,000.<strong>The</strong> Faith Golding <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.900 3rd Ave., 35th Fl.New York, NY 100221736. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$10,000.Herman Goldman <strong>Foundation</strong>61 Broadway, 18th Fl.New York, NY 10006(212) 797-90901737. Structured Employment EconomicDevelopment Corporation, New York, NY.$50,000, 2002.GoldhammerGoldingGoldmanGoldmanRichard & Rhoda Goldman Fund1 Lombard St., Ste. 303San Francisco, CA 94<strong>11</strong>1(415) 788-1090FAX: (415) 788-7890; E-mail:info@goldmanfund.org; URL: http://www.goldmanfund.org1738. America’s Health Together, DC. $200,000.For expanding Facing Fear Together, nationalinitiative addressing mental health issues related toexposure to homeland terrorism in the U.S.1739. Jewish Community Federation of SanFrancisco, the Peninsula, Marin and SonomaCounties, San Francisco, CA. $500,000.GoldmanGoldman Sachs <strong>Foundation</strong>375 Park Ave., Ste. 1008New York, NY 10152(212) 902-5402FAX: (212) 888-9482; URL: http://www.gs.com/foundation1740. Goldman Sachs <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York,NY. $10,000,000.GoldsekerMorris Goldseker <strong>Foundation</strong> ofMaryland, Inc.1040 Park Ave., Ste. 310Baltimore, MD 21201(410) 837-5100FAX: (410) 837-7927; E-mail:tdebord@goldsekerfoundation.org; URL: http://www.goldsekerfoundation.org1741. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000.Horace W. Goldsmith <strong>Foundation</strong>375 Park Ave., Ste. 1602New York, NY 10152(212) 319-87001742. Gift of New York, New York, NY.$100,000.1743. Here is New York, New York, NY.$100,000, 2001.Goldsmith1744. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $500,000, 2001.GolkinPerry & Donna Golkin Family <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co.9 W. 57th St.New York, NY 100191745. Engine No. 22/Ladder No. 13 Family Fund,New York, NY. $5,000. For general support.GoodGood Guys’c/o Corporate Communications1600 Harbor Bay ParkwayAlameda, CA 945021746. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $1,000,000.<strong>The</strong> Goodrich <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o 4 Coliseum Ctr.2730 W. Tyvola Rd.Charlotte, NC 28217-4578(704) 423-7080FAX: (704) 423-7127; E-mail:mviser@corp.bfg.com1747. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.1748. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000.GouldGoodrichGoodyear<strong>The</strong> Goodyear Tire & Rubber CompanyContributions Program<strong>11</strong>44 E. Market St.Akron, OH 44316-0001(330) 796-8928FAX: (330) 796-8836; URL: http://www.goodyear.com/corporate/community.html1749. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $500,000.GoodyearGoodyear Tire & Rubber Company Fund<strong>11</strong>44 E. Market St.Akron, OH 44316-0001(330) 796-24081750. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000.Gordon<strong>The</strong> Gordon Family <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Goldman Sachs & Co.85 Broad St., Tax Dept.New York, NY 100041751. Windows of Hope Family Relief Fund, NewYork, NY. $1,500. For general support.Gordon<strong>The</strong> Jeff Gordon <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 880Harrisburg, NC 28075FAX: (704) 455-0623; E-mail:foundation@jgiracing.com; URL: http://www.jeffgordonfoundation.org1752. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000. To helprestore life to children affected by terrorist attacksof <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.GouldEdwin Gould <strong>Foundation</strong> for Children23 Gramercy Park S.New York, NY 10003(212) 982-52001753. Andrew Golkin Scholarship Fund, NewYork, NY. $10,000.1754. Gramercy Park Block Disaster Relief Effort,New York, NY. $10,000. To support <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th rescue workers stationed at Precinct 13.173


GPUSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEGPUGPU, Inc. Corporate Giving Program300 Madison Ave.Morristown, NJ 079621755. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $18,000.1756. Various organizations. $100,000.GrahamPhilip L. Graham Fundc/o <strong>The</strong> Washington Post Co.<strong>11</strong>50 15th St., N.W.Washington, DC 20071(202) 334-6640FAX: (202) 334-4498; E-mail:plgfund@washpost.com1757. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $90,000. For <strong>The</strong> Survivors’Fund.1758. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $65,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.1759. United Way of National Capital Area, DC.$40,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.GraingerW. W. Grainger, Inc. Corporate GivingProgram100 Grainger Pkwy.Lake Forest, IL 60045(847) 535-05401760. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.1761. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY. $1,500.1762. Various organizations. $50,000.Gramercy<strong>The</strong> Gramercy Park <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o Zemlock, Levy, Bick & Karnbad225 Broadway, Ste. 1202New York, NY 10007-3001(212) 964-41401763. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $2,500. For general support.Grand<strong>The</strong> Grand Marnier <strong>Foundation</strong>80 Rte. 4 E.Paramus, NJ 07652(201) 368-9500Fellowship application address: c/o Grand MarnierFilm Fellowships, 165 W. 65th St., 4th Fl., NewYork, NY 10023; URL: http://www.filmlinc.com1764. Windows of Hope Family Relief Fund, NewYork, NY. $25,000. For general support.Grand RapidsGrand Rapids Community <strong>Foundation</strong>209-C Waters Bldg.161 Ottawa Ave. N.W.Grand Rapids, MI 49503-2757(616) 454-1751FAX: (616) 454-6455; E-mail:grfound@grfoundation.org; URL: http://www.grfoundation.org1765. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $22,485.Granite Broadcasting Corporationc/o Corporate Communications767 3rd Ave - FL. 34New York, NY 100171766. Various organizations. $750,000.William T. Grant <strong>Foundation</strong>570 Lexington Ave., 18th Fl.New York, NY 10022-6837(212) 752-0071FAX: (212) 752-1398; E-mail:info@wtgrantfdn.org; URL: http://www.wtgrantfoundation.org/1767. Columbia University, New York, NY.$25,000. For Social Indicators Survey, study ofGraniteGrantimpact of World Trade <strong>Center</strong> bombing onwell-being of New York’s children.1768. Educational Broadcasting Corporation,New York, NY. $20,000, 2001. For pilot episodeof Kids Cope, project of In <strong>The</strong> Mix program onPBS. Kids Cope will do a series of broadcastprograms addressing the World Trade <strong>Center</strong>disaster from the perspective of students aged14-18 throughout New York.1769. Jamaica <strong>Center</strong> for Arts and Learning,Jamaica, NY. $15,000, 2001. For Artist Caresprogram, in response to the events of <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>, 2001, promoting healing through creativeexpression and using artists, storytellers, andcounselors/ therapists in structured workshops tohelp New York City children and youth.1770. New York Academy of Medicine, NewYork, NY. $25,000. For research project, <strong>The</strong>Impact of the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> Disaster on theMental Health of Children.1771. New York Academy of Medicine, NewYork, NY. $15,000. For research project, <strong>The</strong>Impact of the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> Disaster on theMental Health of Children.1772. New York Academy of Medicine, NewYork, NY. $10,000, 2001. For Moving from Crisisto Hope and Well-Being: A <strong>Response</strong> to theEvents of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>,2001, collaborativeprogram with New York City Board of Educationfocusing on healing as well as racism andintolerance.GrausteinWilliam Caspar Graustein Memorial FundOne Hamden Ctr.2319 Whitney Ave., Ste. 2BHamden, CT 06518(203) 230-3330FAX: (203) 230-3331; E-mail:gmfmail@wcgmf.org; URL: http://www.wcgmf.org1773. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.GrayGarland Gray <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Bruce B. GrayP.O. Box 397Richmond, VA 232181774. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.GreatGreat Lakes Technologies Groupc/o Corporate Communications26999 Central Park Blvd, Suite 380Southfield, MI 480761775. Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund, New York,NY. $9,520.1776. Focus: HOPE, Detroit, MI. $4,760. Toalleviate drop in support since the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thattacks.1777. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $4,760. For Bed and BreadProgram in the aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.GreaterGreater Jackson <strong>Foundation</strong>4500 I-55 NorthSuite 258Jackson, MS 392<strong>11</strong>1778. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $3,400.Greater New York AutomobileAssociationc/o Communications Division335 West 38th St.- 5th FloorNew York, NY 100181779. Greater New York Auto Dealers DisasterRelief Fund. $250,000.GreaterGreen Mountain Power Corporationc/o Corporate Communications163 Acorn LaneColchester, VT 054461780. Various organizations. $25,000. Fordonations to support victims of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thand their families.<strong>The</strong> Green River <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Goldman Sachs & Co.85 Broad St., Tax Dept.New York, NY 100041781. Neil D. Levin Educational Fund, NY.$1,000.GreenGreenGreenblattBurton G. and Anne C. Greenblatt<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.<strong>11</strong>1 Coolidge St.South Plainfield, NJ 070801782. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY. $500.GreenPoint<strong>The</strong> GreenPoint <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.90 Park Ave., 4th Fl.New York, NY 10016-1303(212) 834-1215FAX: (212) 834-1406; E-mail:gperry@greenpoint.com; URL: http://www.greenpoint.com1783. American Red Cross, National, DC.$25,000.1784. Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Family Fund(KBW Family Fund), Melville, NY. $250,000.1785. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $750,000.Greenwall<strong>The</strong> Greenwall <strong>Foundation</strong>2 Park Ave., 24th Fl.New York, NY 10016-5603(212) 679-7266FAX: (212) 679-7269; E-mail:admin@greenwall.org; URL: http://www.greenwall.org1786. HERE/Home for Contemporary <strong>The</strong>aterand Art, New York, NY. $5,000.1787. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $5,000.1788. New York State Fraternal Order of PoliceFund, Hicksville, NY. $5,000.1789. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $5,000.1790. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $5,000.1791. Soho Repertory <strong>The</strong>ater, New York, NY.$5,000. To provide emergency relief for lossesresulting from the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> disaster.GregoryAlexis Gregory <strong>Foundation</strong>1334 York Ave.New York, NY 1002<strong>11</strong>792. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $25,000.GrottoGrotto <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.5323 Lakeland Ave. N., Ste. 100Minneapolis, MN 55429-3<strong>11</strong>5Tel.: (763) 277-3434, ext. 3450; FAX: (763)277-3444; E-mail: info@grottofoundation.org;URL: http://www.grottofoundation.org1793. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000.Gruner & JahrNew York, NY1794. Bertelsmann Relief Fund, New York, NY.$67,000, 2002.Gruner174


GuffeyGuffey Family <strong>Foundation</strong>6908 Matthews Mint Hill Rd., PMB 256, Ste. 340Charlotte, NC 28227-44061795. State Street Heroes Fund, Brooklyn, NY.$100,000.Guggenheim<strong>The</strong> Harry Frank Guggenheim<strong>Foundation</strong>527 Madison Ave., 15th Fl.New York, NY 10022-4304(212) 644-4907FAX: (212) 644-5<strong>11</strong>0; E-mail: hfgacf@aol.com;URL: http://www.hfg.org1796. Columbia University, New York, NY.$18,004. For symposium on terrorism at Schoolof International and Public Affairs, with panelistsMartha Crenshaw, Gustavo Gorriti and EhudSprinzak.GuidantGuidant <strong>Foundation</strong><strong>11</strong>1 Monument Cir., Ste. 2900Indianapolis, IN 46204(317) 971-2272URL: http://www.guidant.com/foundation/1797. United Way of New York City, New York,NY. $<strong>11</strong>7,930.<strong>The</strong> Agnes Gund <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Agnes Gund517 Broadway, 3rd Fl.East Liverpool, OH 43920(330) 385-34001798. Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$10,000. For general support for Robin HoodRelief Fund.GundGund<strong>The</strong> George Gund <strong>Foundation</strong>1845 Guildhall Bldg.45 Prospect Ave. W.Cleveland, OH 44<strong>11</strong>5-1018(216) 241-3<strong>11</strong>4FAX: (216) 241-6560; E-mail: info@gundfdn.org;URL: http://www.gundfdn.org1799. American Civil Liberties Union<strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY. $50,000. Forprotecting civil liberties activities in wake of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.1800. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000, 2001.GuttmanStella and Charles Guttman <strong>Foundation</strong>,Inc.122 E. 42nd St. Ste. 2010New York, NY 10168(212) 371-7082FAX: (212) 371-8936; E-mail:info@guttmanfoundation.org; URL: http://fdncenter.org/grantmaker/guttman/1801. New York Academy of Medicine, NewYork, NY. $25,000. For planning phase ofpartnership among Office of School Health,mental health professionals, and NYC Board ofEducation to build a mental health infrastructurefor NYC public school community in wake of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.H.O.H.O. Penn, NYC Caterpillar Dealerc/o Corporate Communications699 Brush AveBronx, NY 104651802. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERWalter and Elise Haas Fund1 Lombard St., Ste. 305San Francisco, CA 94<strong>11</strong>1(415) 398-4474URL: http://www.haassr.org1803. Facing History and Ourselves National<strong>Foundation</strong>, Brookline, MA. $46,000. To pilotcurriculum studying legacies of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.<strong>The</strong> Andrew J. and Christine C. Hall<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box <strong>11</strong>84Southport, CT 06890-21841804. Citigroup Relief Fund, New York, NY.$10,000.HaasHallHallmarkHallmark Corporate <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Hallmark Cards, Inc.P.O. Box 419580, M.D. 323Kansas City, MO 64141-65801805. American Red Cross, Kansas City, KansasCity, MO. $27,532, 2001.1806. American Red Cross, Kansas City, KansasCity, MO. $7,268.1807. American Red Cross, Kansas City, KansasCity, MO. $6,443.1808. Greater Kansas City Community<strong>Foundation</strong>, Kansas City, MO. $50,000, 2001.1809. Greater Kansas City Community<strong>Foundation</strong>, Kansas City, MO. $33,887, 2001.1810. Salvation Army, Kansas and MissouriDivision, Kansas City, MO. $3,865.18<strong>11</strong>. Salvation Army, Kansas and MissouriDivision, Kansas City, MO. $2,290.HamiltonThomas H. Hamilton <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.204 Philadelphia Ave.Egg Harbor City, NJ 082151812. Undesignated. $10,000. For donations fordirect relief for victims of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th andtheir families.H&R<strong>The</strong> H&R Block <strong>Foundation</strong>4400 Main St.Kansas City, MO 64<strong>11</strong>1-1812(816) 932-83241813. American Red Cross, National, DC.$5,000.1814. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000.HandspringHandspring <strong>Foundation</strong>189 Bernardo Ave.Mountain View, CA 94043(650) 230-5446E-mail: foundation@handspring.com; URL: http://www.handspring.com/company/foundation/1815. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.Handtmann<strong>The</strong> Handtmann Family <strong>Foundation</strong>333 Lambert Rd.Carpinteria, CA 930131816. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $2,000.<strong>The</strong> Hanlon <strong>Foundation</strong>746 Walker Rd., PMB 10-186Great Falls, VA 220661817. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $5,000.HanlonHansen Family <strong>Foundation</strong>5050 Lincoln Dr., Ste. 480Edina, MN 55436-23031818. New York State Fraternal Order of PoliceFund, Hicksville, NY. $15,000.HansenHapag-LloydHapag-Lloyd AGc/o Corporate CommunicationsBallindamm 25, D-20095Hamburg, Germany1819. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $720,000.Harley-Davidson <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.3700 W. Juneau Ave.Milwaukee, WI 53208(414) 343-400<strong>11</strong>820. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000, 2001.HartfordHarleyHarrah’sHarrah’s Ak-Chin Casino Resortc/o Corporate Communications15406 Manicopa RdManicopa, AZ 852391821. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.HarrimanGladys and Roland Harriman <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Brown Brothers Harriman Trust Co.140 Broadway, 4th Fl.New York, NY 10005(212) 493-81821822. American Red Cross, National, DC.$250,000.1823. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $250,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.HarrisHarris BankChicago, IL1824. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $190,551.1825. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $150,000.Harris<strong>The</strong> Irving Harris <strong>Foundation</strong>191 N. Wacker Dr., Ste. 1500Chicago, IL 60606-1899(312) 621-0566FAX: (312) 621-91791826. Undesignated. $100,000. To lend expertiseto support early childhood and infant healthservices to those affected by the attacks.Harrisburg<strong>The</strong> Greater Harrisburg <strong>Foundation</strong>200 N. 3rd St., 8th Fl.P.O. Box 678Harrisburg, PA 17108-0678(717) 236-5040FAX: (717) 231-4463; E-mail: info@ght.org; URL:http://www.ghf.org1827. Undesignated. $32,000.Hartford<strong>The</strong> Hartford Financial Services Group,Inc. Corporate Giving ProgramHartford Plz.690 Asylum Ave., T-12-56Hartford, CT 06<strong>11</strong>5Tel.: (860) 547-5000, ext. 4995; FAX: (860)547-6393; E-mail:jennifer.kasparian@thehartford.com; URL: http://www.thehartford.com/about/affairs.html1828. Aon Memorial Education Fund, Chicago,IL. $50,000.1829. MMC Victims Relief Fund, New York, NY.$50,000.175


HartfordSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE1830. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $350,000.Hartford<strong>The</strong> John A. Hartford <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.55 E. 59th St., 16th Fl.New York, NY 10022(212) 832-7788FAX: (212) 593-4913; E-mail:mail@jhartfound.org; URL: http://www.jhartfound.org1831. Council on Senior <strong>Center</strong>s and Services ofNew York City, New York, NY. $153,000, 2001.For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>: Responding to the Needs ofOlder New Yorkers effort to help senior citizens’agencies in New York meet client and agencyneeds in aftermath of World Trade <strong>Center</strong> attack.Grant will provide funds for creation ofemergency response plans at member agencies,support agency staff training on problemidentification and treatment referral options forclients, and provide employee assistance optionsfor agency staff.HartfordHartford <strong>Foundation</strong> for Public Giving85 Gillett St.Hartford, CT 06105(860) 548-1888FAX: (860) 524-8346; E-mail: hfpg2@hfpg.org;URL: http://www.hfpg.org1832. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $51,000, 2001. Fordonations in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terroristattacks for individuals and families not supportedby other funds.HartmarxHartmarx Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>101 N. Wacker Dr., 23rd Fl.Chicago, IL 60606(312) 357-533<strong>11</strong>833. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000. Forundesignated purpose. Hartmarx is not acceptingproposals from any organizations that are notpresently being funded.HasbroHasbro Children’s <strong>Foundation</strong>10 Rockefeller Plz.New York, NY 10020-1903(917) 606-6226FAX: (917) 606-6264; URL: http://www.hasbro.org1834. National <strong>Philanthropic</strong> Trust, Jenkintown,PA. $250,000. To provide support services tosurviving children of passengers and crews aboardcrashed airplanes, clerical workers, secretaries,security personnel, and others lost at World Trade<strong>Center</strong>, the Pentagon, Fire, Police, EMS, and otherrescue workers.Hassanein<strong>The</strong> Salah M. Hassanein <strong>Foundation</strong>514 Via De La Valle, Ste. 209Solana Beach, CA 92075(858) 509-79791835. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $10,000. For general support.Hatfield<strong>The</strong> Hatfield Family <strong>Foundation</strong>12164 Occidental Rd.Sebastopol, CA 95472-96491836. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $12,076, 2001.HawaiiHawaii Community <strong>Foundation</strong><strong>11</strong>64 Bishop St., Ste. 800Honolulu, HI 96813(808) 537-6333FAX: (808) 521-6286; E-mail:info@hcf-hawaii.org; URL: http://www.hawaiicommunityfoundation.org1837. Hawaii Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Honolulu,HI. $370,000.HaworthHaworth Inc. Corporate Giving Program1 Haworth Ctr.Holland, MI 49423-9576FAX: (616) 393-37401838. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $350,000.1839. Various organizations. $650,000.Hazen<strong>The</strong> Edward W. Hazen <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.90 Broad St., Ste. 604New York, NY 10004(212) 889-3034Application address: 309 5th Ave., Rm. 200-3, NewYork, NY 10016; E-mail:hazen@hazenfoundation.org; URL: http://www.hazenfoundation.org1840. Funding Exchange, New York, NY. $5,000,2001. Toward the Peace and Racial Justice Fund.1841. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000, 2001. To aidthe families and victims of the World Trade<strong>Center</strong> tragedy.HCA<strong>The</strong> HCA <strong>Foundation</strong>1 Park Plz., Building 1-4ENashville, TN 37203(615) 344-2390FAX: (615) 344-5722; E-mail:joanne.pulles@hcahealthcare.com; URL: http://www.hcacaring.org/1842. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $2,000,000.HealthHealth <strong>Foundation</strong> of South Florida601 Brickell Key Dr., Ste. 901Miami, FL 33131(305) 374-7200FAX: (305) 374-7003; E-mail: pwood@hfsf.org;URL: http://www.hfsf.org1843. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.HealthCare<strong>The</strong> Healthcare <strong>Foundation</strong> for OrangeCounty1450 N. Tustin Ave., Ste. 103Santa Ana, CA 92705-8641(714) 245-1650FAX: 714-245-1653; E-mail: Susan Zepeda,C.E.O.: szepeda@hfoc.org or Doris Flander, Off.Mgr.: dflander@hfoc.org; URL: http://www.hfoc.org1844. American Red Cross, Orange CountyChapter. $5,000. For donations to be used locallyin Orange County in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>terrorist attacks.1845. United Way of Orange County Chapter,Irvine, CA. $5,000. For donations to be usedlocally in Orange County in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks.Healthcare<strong>The</strong> Healthcare <strong>Foundation</strong> of NewJersey70 S. Orange Ave., Ste. 245Livingston, NJ 07039(973) 535-8200FAX: (973) 535-8393; E-mail: info@hfnj.org;URL: http://www.hfnj.org/1846. Medical Society of New Jersey,Lawrenceville, NJ. $25,000. For BioterrorismInformational Outreach Campaign.1847. United Jewish Federation of MetroWest,Whippany, NJ. $26,000. For World Trade <strong>Center</strong>Relief Fund.HearstWilliam Randolph Hearst <strong>Foundation</strong>888 7th Ave., 45th Fl.New York, NY 10106-0057(212) 586-5404FAX: (212) 586-1917; Address for applicants fromwest of the Mississippi River: c/o Thomas Eastham,V.P. and Western Dir., 90 New Montgomery St.,Ste. 1212, San Francisco, CA 94105, tel.: (415)543-0400; URL: http://www.hearstfdn.org1848. Aaron Davis Hall, New York, NY. $50,000,2002.1849. Alliance of Resident <strong>The</strong>aters/New York(ART/NY), New York, NY. $50,000, 2002.1850. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000, 2001. To support the American RedCross - National Headquarters in its emergencyefforts in the wake of the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> andPentagon disasters.1851. ArtsConnection, New York, NY. $50,000,2002.1852. Asian American Federation of New York,New York, NY. $100,000, 2001. Toward technicalassistance programs and recovery efforts followingWorld Trade <strong>Center</strong> disaster.1853. Bloomingdale School of Music, New York,NY. $40,000, 2002.1854. Brooklyn Childrens Museum, Brooklyn,NY. $50,000, 2002.1855. Brooklyn Museum of Art, Brooklyn, NY.$50,000, 2002.1856. Brooklyn Youth Chorus, Brooklyn, NY.$40,000, 2002.1857. Coalition for the Homeless, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward the Crisis InterventionProgram.1858. Elders Share the Arts, Brooklyn, NY.$50,000, 2002.1859. Fund for the City of New York, New York,NY. $150,000, 2002. Toward 9/<strong>11</strong> New YorkNonprofits Up and Running.1860. Hamilton-Madison House, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002. Toward additional servicesneeded in the aftermath of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thattacks.1861. Jamaica <strong>Center</strong> for Arts and Learning,Jamaica, NY. $50,000, 2002.1862. Museum for African Art, Long Island City,NY. $50,000, 2002.1863. Museum of the City of New York, NewYork, NY. $50,000, 2002.1864. New York <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Arts, NewYork, NY. $150,000, 2002. To support technicalassistance to build capacity at small mid-sized artsorganizations.1865. New York Hall of Science, Corona, NY.$50,000, 2002.1866. New York Restoration Project, New York,NY. $50,000, 2002.1867. Queens Library <strong>Foundation</strong>, Jamaica, NY.$50,000, 2002.1868. Queens Museum of Art, Flushing, NY.$50,000, 2002.176


1869. Rotunda Gallery, Brooklyn, NY. $50,000,2002.1870. Salvation Army of Greater New York, NewYork, NY. $250,000, 2001. To support “OperationCompassion Under Fire,” the emergency effortsdeveloped in response to the World Trade <strong>Center</strong>collapse.1871. Structured Employment EconomicDevelopment Corporation, New York, NY.$150,000, 2002. Toward the Lower ManhattanSmall Business and Workforce Retention Projectto assist businesses and workers affected by theevents of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.1872. Symphony Space, New York, NY. $50,000,2002.1873. TADA <strong>The</strong>ater and Dance Alliance, NewYork, NY. $50,000, 2002.1874. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$250,000, 2001. To assist families of the fallenrescue workers in the World Trade <strong>Center</strong>disaster.HeinekenHeinekenc/o Corporate Communications360 Hamilton AveWhite Plains, NY 1060<strong>11</strong>875. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $125,000.1876. Netherlands American Chamber ofCommerce, LaVerne, CA. $50,000.1877. New York City Police <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewYork, NY. $125,000.1878. Various organizations. $200,000. Fordonations to support other disaster relieforganizations in the aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.HeinzH. J. Heinz Company <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 57Pittsburgh, PA 15230-0057(412) 456-5773FAX: (412) 456-7859; E-mail:heinz.foundation@hjheinz.com; URL: http://www.heinz.com/jsp/foundation.jsp1879. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000, 2001.1880. United Way of Allegheny County,Pittsburgh, PA. $67,000. To match employeecontributions to 9/<strong>11</strong> Fund.HeinzHoward Heinz Endowment30 Dominion Tower625 Liberty Ave.Pittsburgh, PA 15222-3<strong>11</strong>5(412) 281-5777FAX: (412) 281-5788; E-mail: info@heinz.org;URL: http://www.heinz.org1881. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.Vira I. Heinz Endowment30 Dominion Tower625 Liberty Ave.Pittsburgh, PA 15222-3<strong>11</strong>5(412) 281-5777FAX: (412) 281-5788; E-mail: info@heinz.org;URL: http://www.heinz.org1882. Pittsburgh <strong>Foundation</strong>, Pittsburgh, PA.$100,000, 2001. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.Help America <strong>Foundation</strong>, Ltd.c/o AtHome America, Inc.5625 W. <strong>11</strong>5th St.Alsip, IL 60803FAX: (708) 597-1435; E-mail:info@helpamericafoundation.org; URL: http://www.helpamericafoundation.org/1883. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $100,000, 2002.HeinzHelpLIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERHennessyHennessy <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o Syska & Hennessy, Inc.<strong>11</strong> W. 42nd St.New York, NY 10036-80021884. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $10,000.Paul B. Henry <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Varnum, Riddering, Schmidt, HowlettP.O. Box 352Grand Rapids, MI 49501-0352(616) 336-60001885. American Red Cross, Grand RapidsChapter, Grand Rapids, MI. $5,000.HenryHerbalifeHerbalife Family <strong>Foundation</strong>1800 Century Park E.Los Angeles, CA 90067-1501(310) 410-9600FAX: (310) 557-39251886. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.<strong>The</strong> Herbst <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.30 Van Ness Ave., Ste. 3600San Francisco, CA 94102(415) 252-12201887. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.HerbstHeritageHeritage Fund of Bartholomew County,Inc.P.O. Box 1547Columbus, IN 47202(812) 376-7772FAX: (812) 376-0051; E-mail: hfgrants@kiva.net;URL: http://www.heritagefundbc.com1888. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000.HermesHermes <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o Ropes & Gray1 International Pl.Boston, MA 02<strong>11</strong>0-26241889. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $1,000. For general support.HerrickHerrick <strong>Foundation</strong>150 W. Jefferson, Ave., Ste. 2500Detroit, MI 48226(313) 496-7585FAX: (313) 496-84521890. Childrens Home of Detroit, Grosse PointeWoods, MI. $5,000, 2002.Hess <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.75 Eisenhower Pkwy.Roseland, NJ 070681891. Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$20,000. For Relief Fund.HessHewittHewitt Associates LLC Corporate GivingProgramc/o Corp. Contribs.100 Half Day Rd.Lincolnshire, IL 600691892. American Red Cross, National, DC.$161,802.1893. National Organization for VictimAssistance, DC. $36,593.1894. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $129,414.Hewlett<strong>The</strong> William and Flora Hewlett<strong>Foundation</strong>2121 Sand Hill Rd.Menlo Park, CA 94025(650) 234-4500FAX: (650) 234-4501; E-mail: info@hewlett.org;URL: http://www.hewlett.org1895. Fund for Public Schools, Brooklyn, NY.$19,000, 2001. For programs to help children dealwith terrorist attacks of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> byimplementing Sera Learning Programs.1896. Human Rights Watch, New York, NY.$75,000, 2001.1897. International Crisis Group (Belgium),Brussels, Belgium. $400,000, 2002. Towardcreation of global terrorism division and fieldoffices in the Middle East and thePakistan-Afghanistan region which will addressroot causes of terrorism and to advocate improvedand coordinated international policy againstterrorism.1898. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $75,000.1899. Safe Horizon, New York, NY. $25,000,2001.HewlettHewlett-Packard Company <strong>Foundation</strong>3000 Hanover St., M.S. 20AHPalo Alto, CA 94304-<strong>11</strong>12(650) 857-2982FAX: (650) 857-2982; E-mail:philanthropy_ed@hp.com; Application address:P.O. Box 10301, Palo Alto, CA 94303; URL: http://www.hp.com/go/grants1900. American Red Cross, National, DC.$3,000,000.1901. American Red Cross, National, DC.$718,133.1902. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $235,815.HiberniaHibernia Corporation ContributionsProgramc/o Corp. Contribs.313 Carondelet St.New Orleans, LA 70130URL: http://www.hibernia.com/in_your_community1903. American Red Cross, National, DC.$40,777.HIFNc/o Corporate Communications750 University AvenueLos Gatos, CA 950321904. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.HIFN<strong>The</strong> John W. Hill/Hill and Knowlton<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.466 Lexington Ave.New York, NY 10017-31401905. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000, 2001.Conrad N. Hilton <strong>Foundation</strong>10100 Santa Monica Blvd., Ste. 1000Los Angeles, CA 90067(310) 556-4694FAX: (310) 556-2301; E-mail:cnhf@hiltonfoundation.org; URL: http://www.hiltonfoundation.org1906. American Red Cross, National, DC.$200,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> relief efforts.HiltonHillHilton177


HiltonSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEHiltonHilton Hotels Corporation ContributionsProgramc/o Contribs. Review Comm.9336 Civic <strong>Center</strong> Dr.Beverly Hills, CA 90210(310) 278-4321FAX: (310) 205-7678; URL: http://www.hiltonworldwide.com/en/ww/company_info/philanthropy_citizenship.jhtml1907. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000. For donation made on behalf ofHilton, HHonors Worldwide and Hilton Family ofHotels.HispanicHispanic Broadcasting Corporationc/o Corporate Communications3102 Oak Lawn Avenue, Suite 215Dallas, TX 752191908. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $100,000.HitachiHitachi America, Ltd. Corporate GivingProgram50 Prospect Ave.Tarrytown, NY 10591-4698(914) 332-58001909. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000. For combined corporate contributionfrom Hitachi North American Group Companiesin response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks.Hitachi<strong>The</strong> Hitachi <strong>Foundation</strong>1509 22nd St., N.W.Washington, DC 20037-1073(202) 457-0588Nomination address: <strong>The</strong> Yoshiyama Award, P.O.Box 19247, Washington, DC 20036-9247; FAX:(202) 296-1098; URL: http://www.hitachi.org;URL: http://www.hitachifoundation.org1910. American Red Cross, DC Chapter, DC.$50,000. For donation to Liberty Disaster ReliefFund for victims and families of the <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>, 2001 attack on America.19<strong>11</strong>. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000. For donations to victims and the familiesof <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001 attack on America.HoblitzelleHoblitzelle <strong>Foundation</strong>5956 Sherry Ln., Ste. 901Dallas, TX 75225-6522(214) 373-0462URL: http://www.hoblitzelle.org1912. American Red Cross, Dallas Area Chapter,Dallas, TX. $25,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001,response.1913. Salvation Army of Dallas, Dallas, TX.$10,000. For North Texas Homefront Coalition,to educate communities about increased humanand charitable needs following <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thterrorist attacks.Home<strong>The</strong> Home Depot, Inc. Corporate GivingProgram2455 Paces Ferry Rd.Atlanta, GA 30339-4089Tel.: (770) 433-82<strong>11</strong>, ext. 826881914. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000.HomeHome Shopping Networkc/o Corporate Communications12000 25th Court NorthSt. Petersburg, FL 337161915. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $20,000.HONHON INDUSTRIES Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box <strong>11</strong>09Muscatine, IA 52761-0071Application address: 414 E. 3rd St., Muscatine, IA52761-007<strong>11</strong>916. American Red Cross, National, DC.$91,150.HoneywellHoneywell International Inc. CorporateGiving Program101 Columbia Rd.Morristown, NJ 07962-2245Application address: P.O. Box 2245, Morristown, NJ07962-22451917. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000.HorizonHorizon Blue Cross Blue Shieldc/o Corporate Communications3 Penn PlazaNewark, NJ 071051918. American Red Cross, National, DC.$102,500.1919. Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield, Newark,NJ. $1,000,000. To pay health benefits for eligiblefamilies who experienced a change in their healthcoverage as a result of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks.HosioskyIssai & Ellen Hosiosky <strong>Foundation</strong>New York, NY1920. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $622,500.W. R. Hotchkiss <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 64235St. Paul, MN 55164-02351921. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$75,000.HotchkissHouseholdHousehold International, Inc. CorporateGiving Programc/o <strong>Philanthropic</strong> Svcs.2700 Sanders Rd.Prospect Heights, IL 60070(847) 564-6010FAX: (847) 564-7094; URL: http://www.household.com/corp/hiau_community_commit.jsp1922. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $500,000.1923. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $300,000.1924. New York State Fraternal Order of PoliceFund, Hicksville, NY. $500,000.1925. Union Community Fund, DC. $100,000.HoustonGreater Houston Community <strong>Foundation</strong>4550 Post Oak Pl., Ste. 100Houston, TX 77027-3106(713) 333-2200FAX: (713) 333-2220; E-mail: lgardner@ghcf.org;URL: http://www.ghcf.org1926. Undesignated. $22,000.Hovnanian Enterprisesc/o Corporate Communications412 Montrose LaneAbsecon, NJ 082051927. National Housing Endowment, DC.$1,000,000.HovnanianHRH Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Tax Dept.4951 Lake Brook Dr., Ste. 500Glen Allen, VA 230601928. American Red Cross, National, DC. $50,2002.HRH1929. Amy Toyen Memorial Scholarship Fund,Avon, CT. $10,000, 2002.1930. Aon Memorial Education Fund, Chicago,IL. $75,000, 2002.1931. Aon Memorial Education Fund, Chicago,IL. $25,000.1932. Cheshire Education <strong>Foundation</strong>, Cheshire,CT. $1,000.1933. Comfort Zone Camp, Blairstown, NJ.$40,140, 2002.1934. Cove Family Fund, Glen Rock, NJ.$10,000, 2002.1935. Garden Pathways, Bakersfield, CA.$35,000, 2002.1936. Hobin Keane & Klares Memorial GolfTournament, Westport, CT. $10,000, 2002.1937. Hospice of Medina County, Medina, OH.$25, 2002.1938. Individual beneficiaries. $331,785, 2002.1939. Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Family Fund(KBW Family Fund), Melville, NY. $150,000,2002.1940. Mark S. Jardin Scholarship Fund, Hartford,CT. $1,000, 2002.1941. MMC Victims Relief Fund, New York, NY.$77,000, 2002.1942. MMC Victims Relief Fund, New York, NY.$25,000.1943. Our Lady of Fatima, Wilton, CT. $10,000,2002.1944. Sandler O’Neill Assistance <strong>Foundation</strong>,Chatham, NJ. $125,000.1945. Sandler O’Neill Assistance <strong>Foundation</strong>,Chatham, NJ. $75,000, 2002.HSBCHSBC Bank USA Corporate GivingProgram452 5th Ave.New York, NY 10018(212) 525-8239URL: http://us.hsbc.com/inside/community/communities.asp1946. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.1947. <strong>Foundation</strong> for Ethnic Understanding, NewYork, NY. $15,000.1948. New York City Partnership <strong>Foundation</strong>,New York, NY. $25,000. Toward <strong>Foundation</strong>’sBusiness Assistance call center.1949. Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association of theCity of New York, New York, NY. $500,000.1950. Uniformed Fire Officers Association ofGreater New York, New York, NY. $500,000.<strong>The</strong> Huffy <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.225 Byers Rd.Miamisburg, OH 453421951. American Red Cross, National, DC.$10,000.HuffyHughesHoward Hughes Medical Institutec/o Office of Grants and Special Progs.4000 Jones Bridge Rd.Chevy Chase, MD 20815-6789(301) 215-88701952. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000.1953. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000.178


<strong>The</strong> Humana <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.500 W. Main St.Louisville, KY 40202(502) 580-3613URL: http://www.humanafoundation.org1954. American Red Cross, National, DC.$491,133, 2001.1955. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Louisville,Louisville, KY. $35,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> anniversaryevent, and for study of merged governmentconducted by Brookings Institution inWashington, DC.HumanaHundredHundred Club of Colorado SpringsColorado Springs, CO1956. Silver Shield <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$351,303, 2002. To support the families of thefirefighters and police officers who lost their livesin the devastating terrorist attacks on New YorkCity on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.Huntington<strong>The</strong> Huntington <strong>Foundation</strong>41 S. High St., HC 0910Columbus, OH 43215(614) 480-38981957. United Way of Central Ohio, Columbus,OH. $150,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.Hy-Vee <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.5820 Westown Pkwy.West Des Moines, IA 50266-82231958. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.Hy-Vee<strong>The</strong> IFF <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.521 W. 57th St.New York, NY 100191959. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $125,000.IFFIkonixIkonix Groupc/o Corporate CommunicationsPO Box 1938Lafayette, CA 945491960. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.IllinoisIllinois Tool Works <strong>Foundation</strong>3600 W. Lake Ave.Glenview, IL 60025-58<strong>11</strong>(847) 724-7500FAX: (847) 657-4505; E-mail:mmallahan@itw.com; URL: http://www.itw.com/itw_foundation.html1961. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500,000, 2002.1962. Undesignated. $83,333.HuntingtonInco Alloys International, Inc. CorporateGiving Programc/o Corp. Contribs.P.O. Box 1958Huntington, WV 25720(304) 526-51001963. Red Cross of Canada, Ottawa, Canada.$100,000.IndependenceIndependence Community <strong>Foundation</strong>182 Atlantic Ave.Brooklyn, NY <strong>11</strong>201(718) 722-2300FAX: (718) 722-5757; E-mail: inquiries@icfny.org;URL: http://www.icfny.org1964. Independence Community <strong>Foundation</strong>,Brooklyn, NY. $100,000.1965. Independence Community <strong>Foundation</strong>,Brooklyn, NY. $34,000.LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERIndianapolis<strong>The</strong> Indianapolis <strong>Foundation</strong>615 N. Alabama St., Rm. <strong>11</strong>9Indianapolis, IN 46204(317) 634-2423FAX: (317) 684-0943; E-mail: program@cicf.org;URL: http://www.indyfund.org1966. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000, 2001.InfoSpaceInfoSpace <strong>Foundation</strong>601 108th Ave. N.E., Ste. 1200Bellevue, WA 98004(425) 201-89471967. American Red Cross, Seattle, WA. $10,000.For 9-<strong>11</strong> effort.INGING DIRECT Kids <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Communications Dept.1 South Orange Street, Suite 600Wilmington, DE 1980<strong>11</strong>968. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.1969. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.Intel <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Prog. Off.5200 N.E. Elam Young Pkwy., AG6-601Hillsboro, OR 97124-6497FAX: (503) 456-1539; E-mail:intel.foundation@intel.com; URL: http://www.intel.com/community/index.htm1970. American Red Cross in Greater New York,New York, NY. $1,254,000, 2002.1971. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,243,200, 2001.1972. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000, 2001.1973. American Red Cross, National, DC.$<strong>11</strong>,000, 2001. For relief to New York City andWashington, DC after the events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.Inter-Tel, Incorporatedc/o Corporate Communications120 North 44th Street, Suite 200Phoenix, AZ 85034-18261974. Undesignated. $250,000.IntelInter-TelInteractiveInteractive Brokers Groupc/o Corporate Communications980 N. Michigan Ave Suite 1998Chicago, IL 606<strong>11</strong>1975. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000.InternationalInternational Council of Shopping<strong>Center</strong>s Educational <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.1221 Ave. of the Americas, 41st Fl.New York, NY 10020-1099(646) 728-3800FAX: (212) 589-5555; E-mail: RCohen@icsc.org1976. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.InternationalInternational Paper Company <strong>Foundation</strong>400 Atlantic St.Stamford, CT 06921FAX: (203) 541-8261; URL: http://www.internationalpaper.com/our_world/philanthropy/index.asp1977. International Paper Company <strong>Foundation</strong>,Memphis, TN. $1,200,000, 2001.Internet Security Systemsc/o Corporate Communications6600 Peachtree Dunwoody No. RAtlanta, GA 303281978. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.InternetInvestmentInvestment Technology Group, Inc.c/o Corporate Communications320 E. 72nd Street, Suite 9CNew York, NY 100231979. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $1,000,000.1980. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $500,000.IonIdeaIonIdeac/o Corporate Communications10300 Eaton Place, Suite 300Fairfax, VA 220301981. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.1982. Undesignated. $25,000.IPSCOc/o Corporate Communications651 Warranville RoadLisle, IL 605321983. American Red Cross, National, DC.$20,000.IPSCOIsermannIsermann Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o Conroy, Smith & Co.385 Prospect Ave.Hackensack, NJ 0760<strong>11</strong>984. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $5,000.itelligence, Inc.c/o Corporate Communications4555 Lake Forest Drive, Suite 310Cincinnati, OH 452421985. American Red Cross, National, DC.$125,000.itelligenceITT Industries, Inc. Corporate GivingProgram4 W. Red Oak Ln.White Plains, NY 10604(914) 641-2157FAX: (914) 696-2977; URL: http://www.ittind.com/new/NEW-COMM.HTM1986. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $250,000.1987. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$250,000.JacobusRichard G. Jacobus Family <strong>Foundation</strong>,Inc.2323 N. Mayfair Rd.Wauwatosa, WI 53226(414) 475-65651988. United Way of Greater Milwaukee,Milwaukee, WI. $5,000.Jamieson <strong>Foundation</strong>1 Embaracadero Ctr., Ste. 1200San Francisco, CA 94<strong>11</strong>1(415) 732-3702FAX: (415) 732-3710; E-mail:sannesanfr@aol.com1989. American Red Cross, National, DC.$5,000.JamiesonITTJamieson179


JanusSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEJanus<strong>The</strong> Janus <strong>Foundation</strong>151 Detroit St.Denver, CO 80206(303) 333-3863FAX: (303) 394-7797; E-mail:janusfoundation@janus.com1990. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000, 2001. For disaster relief efforts in NewYork.1991. American Red Cross, National, DC.$3,924, 2001.1992. Aon Memorial Education Fund, Chicago,IL. $715, 2001.1993. Firefighters National Trust, Gig Harbor,WA. $2,241, 2001.1994. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500,000, 2001.1995. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $7,247, 2001.1996. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $5,734, 2003.JCCC <strong>Foundation</strong>12345 College Blvd. Box 25Overland Park, KS 662101997. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,700.JCCCJennings<strong>The</strong> Mary Hillman Jennings <strong>Foundation</strong>625 Stanwix St., Ste. 2203Pittsburgh, PA 15222(412) 434-5606FAX: (412) 434-59071998. American Red Cross, Pittsburgh, PA.$25,000. To support direct relief for victims andtheir families in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>terrorist attacks.Jergens<strong>The</strong> Andrew Jergens <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o <strong>The</strong> Greater Cincinnati <strong>Foundation</strong>200 W. 4th St.Cincinnati, OH 45202(513) 241-28801999. Hamilton County Urban Search & RescueTask Force (USAR), Cincinnati, OH. $5,000.Jerome <strong>Foundation</strong>125 Park Square Ct.400 Sibley St.St. Paul, MN 55101-1928(651) 224-9431FAX: (651) 224-3439; E-mail:info@jeromefdn.org; Additional tel.: (800)995-3766 (MN and NY only); URL: http://www.jeromefdn.org2000. Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, NewYork, NY. $25,000.2001. Three-legged Dog, New York, NY.$10,000.George Frederick Jewett <strong>Foundation</strong><strong>The</strong> Russ Bldg.235 Montgomery St., Ste. 612San Francisco, CA 94104(415) 421-1351FAX: (415) 421-0721; E-mail:TFBjewettf@aol.com or ADGjewettf@aol.com2002. San Francisco General Hospital<strong>Foundation</strong>, San Francisco, CA. $100,000. Todevelop emergency map for community inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks.JeromeJewettJewish Community Federation ofCleveland1750 Euclid Ave.Cleveland, OH 44<strong>11</strong>5-2106Tel.: (216) 566-9200, ext. 268; FAX: (216)861-1230; E-mail: mbennett@jcfcleve.org; URL:http://www.jewishcleveland.org2003. United Jewish Communities, New York,NY. $181,000.Jewish Federation of Hartford40 Woodland DriveHartford, CT 060152004. United Jewish Community Relief Fund,New York, NY. $10,000.JL <strong>Foundation</strong>333 S. Hope St., Ste. 52Los Angeles, CA 90071(213) 486-93692005. Vera Institute of Justice, New York, NY.$10,000, 2002.2006. WNYC <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$10,000, 2002.JM Family Enterprises, Inc. CorporateGiving Programc/o Corp. Contribs.100 N.W. 12th Ave.Deerfield Beach, FL 334422007. United Way of Broward County, FortLauderdale, FL. $14,000.<strong>The</strong> JM <strong>Foundation</strong>60 E. 42nd St., Ste. 1651New York, NY 10165(212) 687-7735FAX: (212) 697-5495; URL: http://fdncenter.org/grantmaker/jm-milbank/2008. Manhattan Institute for Policy Research,New York, NY. $25,000. For Responding to theCrisis: Rebuilding New York Initiative.2009. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$25,000, 2002.JewishJewishJohnsonJohnson & Johnson Family of CompaniesContribution Fund1 Johnson & Johnson Plz.New Brunswick, NJ 08933(732) 524-32552010. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.20<strong>11</strong>. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $3,000,000.2012. Various organizations. $6,000,000. Tosupport local organizations with strongcommunity outreach to help speed relief directlyto those in need and help rebuild communities inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks.JLJMJMJohnsonJohnson Controls <strong>Foundation</strong>5757 N. Green Bay Ave.P.O. Box 591, M.S. X-46Milwaukee, WI 53201(414) 524-2296URL: http://www.johnsoncontrols.com/corpvalues/foundation.htm2013. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000, 2001.Christian A. Johnson Endeavor<strong>Foundation</strong>1060 Park Ave.New York, NY 10128-1033(212) 534-6620FAX: (212) 410-59092014. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000, 2001.Johnson2015. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $50,000, 2001.2016. Orpheon Little Orchestra Society, <strong>The</strong>,New York, NY. $14,000. For concert for 9/<strong>11</strong>Victims’ Families.2017. WNYC <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$10,000. To replace antenna lost in World Trade<strong>Center</strong> attack.2018. World Monuments Fund, New York, NY.$10,000.JohnsonHelen K. and Arthur E. Johnson<strong>Foundation</strong>1700 Broadway, Ste <strong>11</strong>00Denver, CO 80290-2301(303) 861-41272019. Care and Share, Colorado Springs, CO.$10,000, 2004.2020. Compa Food Ministries, Denver, CO.$15,000, 2004.2021. Food Bank for Larimer County, FortCollins, CO. $10,000, 2004.2022. Food Bank of the Rockies, Denver, CO.$20,000, 2004.2023. Longmont Meals on Wheels, Longmont,CO. $5,000, 2004.2024. Meals on Wheels of Boulder, Boulder, CO.$10,000, 2004.2025. Meals on Wheels of Greeley, Greeley, CO.$10,000, 2004.2026. Project Angel Heart, Denver, CO. $10,000,2004.2027. Weld Food Bank, Greeley, CO. $10,000,2004.Johnson<strong>The</strong> Robert Wood Johnson <strong>Foundation</strong>Rte. 1 and College Rd. E.P.O. Box 2316Princeton, NJ 08543-2316(609) 452-8701E-mail: mail@rwjf.org; URL: http://www.rwjf.org2028. America’s Health Together, DC. $563,000,2002.2029. American Academy of Pediatrics, Elk GroveVillage, IL. $100,000, 2002.2030. American Red Cross, Mercer CountyChapter, Princeton, NJ. $149,619. To improvecentral Jersey disaster response preparedness andeducation.2031. Art Science Research Laboratory, Inc.,New York, NY. $700,000, 2002. Toward tools,clothes and supplies for recovery workers at WorldTrade <strong>Center</strong> site.2032. Art Science Research Laboratory, Inc.,New York, NY. $100,000, 2002. Toward tools,clothes and supplies for recovery workers at WorldTrade <strong>Center</strong> site.2033. Asian American Federation of New York,New York, NY. $199,874.2034. Association of Academic Health <strong>Center</strong>s,DC. $25,315, 2002.2035. Association of Schools of Public Health,DC. $15,000, 2002.2036. Burness Communications, Bethesda, MD.$269,273.2037. Century <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$100,000. To develop policies and programs forimproving homeland security.2038. Charles B. Wang Community Health<strong>Center</strong>, New York, NY. $150,000, 2002. Towardprovision of mental health services in Chinatownin response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks.2039. Childrens National Medical <strong>Center</strong>, DC.$50,000, 2002.2040. Columbia University, New York, NY.$50,000, 2002. For project involving collection of180


oral histories of public health professionalresponse to 9/<strong>11</strong> and its aftermath.2041. Columbia University, New York, NY.$49,571. To assess effects of World Trade <strong>Center</strong>attacks on well-being of New York residents.2042. Committee for Hispanic Children andFamilies, New York, NY. $150,000, 2002. Fordisaster-related counseling.2043. Families and Work Institute, New York, NY.$180,000, 2002. To develop guide to assisteducators nationally to help children andadolescents cope with crises such as World Trade<strong>Center</strong> terrorist attacks.2044. International Communications Research,Media, PA. $245,000.2045. National Association of County and CityHealth Officials, DC. $35,000, 2002.2046. National Governors Association <strong>Center</strong> forBest Practices, DC. $100,000, 2002.2047. National Opinion Research <strong>Center</strong>,Chicago, IL. $78,275, 2001. For survey of publicresponse to national tragedy.2048. New York Academy of Medicine, NewYork, NY. $25,000, 2002.2049. RAND Corporation, Arlington, VA.$49,971. To analyze perceived attitudes amongpostal workers toward public health response toanthrax exposure.2050. Research <strong>Foundation</strong> of the City Universityof New York, New York, NY. $21,800, 2001. Todraft guidelines and disseminate key informationfor medical school educators on biologicalweapons.2051. Robert Wood Johnson <strong>Foundation</strong>,Princeton, NJ. $175,000.2052. Task Force for Child Survival andDevelopment, Decatur, GA. $2,867,359. Fortechnical assistance on research project at PublicHealth Informatics Institute: ModifyingInformation Systems to Improve BioterrorismReadiness and Laboratory Management.2053. Third Sector New England, Boston, MA.$50,000.2054. Trauma Intervention Program ofMerrimack County, Methuen, MA. $3,000. Toprovide comfort kits to area churches and familiesimpacted by World Trade <strong>Center</strong> disaster.2055. Trust for Americas Health, DC. $500,000.To develop educational campaign on public healthpreparedness.2056. United Hospital Fund of New York, NewYork, NY. $750,000, 2001. To improve awarenessof and enrollment in New York’s disaster reliefMedicaid program.2057. University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia,PA. $224,654, 2002.2058. Various organizations. $639,809. Forundesignated funds to various organizations withdistribution to be coordinated by United Way ofNew York and New York Community Trust.Daisy Marquis Jones <strong>Foundation</strong>1600 South Ave., Ste. 250Rochester, NY 14620-3921(585) 461-4950FAX: (585) 461-9752; E-mail: mail@dmjf.org;URL: http://www.dmjf.org2059. American Red Cross, National, DC.$5,000. For Disaster Relief Fund to help victimsand families of terrorist attacks of <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th, 2001.JonesLIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERJordan<strong>The</strong> Jordan <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.6001 River Rd., Ste. 100Columbus, GA 31904-2949(706) 649-30002060. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.JostensJostens, Inc. Corporate Giving Program5501 Norman <strong>Center</strong> Dr.Minneapolis, MN 55437(612) 830-32352061. Todd M. Beamer <strong>Foundation</strong>, Cranbury,NJ. $150,000, 2003. To support the HeroicChoices program and the <strong>Foundation</strong>’s mission toprovide long-term assistance to traumatizedchildren.JoukowskyJoukowsky Family <strong>Foundation</strong>410 Park Ave., Ste. 1610New York, NY 10022-4407FAX: (212) 355-3147; E-mail:info@joukowsky.org; URL: http://www.joukowsky.org2062. Lawrenceville School, Lawrenceville, NJ.$100,000. For challenge grant for 9/<strong>11</strong> funds.2063. Nightingale-Bamford School, New York,NY. $106,927. For 9/<strong>11</strong> challenge grant.Joyce<strong>The</strong> Joyce <strong>Foundation</strong>3 First National Plz.70 W. Madison St., Ste. 2750Chicago, IL 60602(312) 782-2464FAX: (312) 782-4160; E-mail: info@joycefdn.org;URL: http://www.joycefdn.org2064. Various organizations. $50,000. To supportlocal organizations that address human relationsand ethnic tensions raised by attacks of <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>.JuniorJunior League of Hartford993 Farmington AvenueWest Hartford, CT 061052065. Junior League of New York, New York, NY.$1,000.JuniperJuniper Networksc/o Corporate Communications<strong>11</strong>94 North Mathilda AvenueSunnyvale, CA 940892066. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.K-B Toysc/o Corporate Communications100 West StreetPittsfield, MA 012012067. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000.Kaiser Permanentec/o Corporate Communications1 Kaiser PlazaOakland, CA 946122068. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000.2069. Union Community Fund, DC. $500,000.K-BKaiserKalamazooKalamazoo Community <strong>Foundation</strong>151 S. Rose St., Ste. 332Kalamazoo, MI 49007(269) 381-4416FAX: (269) 381-3146; E-mail: info@kalfound.org;URL: http://www.kalfound.org2070. American Red Cross, National, DC.$17,500.Kanawha<strong>The</strong> Greater Kanawha Valley <strong>Foundation</strong>Huntington Sq., Ste. 1600900 Lee St. E.Charleston, WV 25301(304) 346-3620FAX: (304) 346-3640; E-mail: tgkvf@tgkvf.org;URL: http://www.tgkvf.org2071. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.Kandell<strong>The</strong> Kandell Fund59 E. 54th St.New York, NY 10022-42<strong>11</strong>2072. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY. $5,000.Kansas City Chiefsc/o Corporate Communications1 Arrowhead DriveKansas City, MO 641292073. Greater Kansas City Community<strong>Foundation</strong>, Kansas City, MO. $1,000,000.KauffmanKansas CityKansasKansas Health <strong>Foundation</strong>309 E. DouglasWichita, KS 67202-3405(316) 262-7676FAX: (316) 262-2044; Additional tel.: (800)373-7681; E-mail: nclaassen@khf.org; URL: http://www.kansashealth.org2074. Salvation Army of Wichita, Wichita, KS.$100,000. For effort to aid nation after <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th attacks.2075. United Way of the Plains, Wichita, KS.$100,000. For effort to aid nation after <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th attacks.Kaplan<strong>The</strong> J. M. Kaplan Fund, Inc.261 Madison Ave., 19th Fl.New York, NY 10016(212) 767-0630FAX: (212) 767-0639; Application address forpublication program: Furthermore, P.O. Box 667,Hudson, NY 12534; tel.: (518) 828-8900; URL:http://www.jmkfund.org2076. Citizens Union <strong>Foundation</strong> of the City ofNew York, New York, NY. $45,000. To establishspecial section on Web site for coverage of NewYork City’s rebuilding efforts following WorldTrade <strong>Center</strong> attack.2077. City Parks <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$25,000. To revitalize lower Manhattan’s parks inaftermath of World Trade <strong>Center</strong> attacks.2078. Fund for the City of New York, New York,NY. $50,000. To build New York Relief, Recovery,Rebuild website in response to World Trade<strong>Center</strong> attacks.KauffmanEwing Marion Kauffman <strong>Foundation</strong>4801 Rockhill Rd.Kansas City, MO 64<strong>11</strong>0-2046(816) 932-1000FAX: (816) 932-<strong>11</strong>00; E-mail: info@emkf.org;URL: http://www.emkf.org2079. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000. Fordisaster relief efforts in New York andWashington, DC (with $5,000 earmarked forDC).2080. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $20,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> Fund to be used to respond tourgent needs of victims and their families affectedby terrorists attacks in New York and Washington,DC.181


KauffmanSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEKauffmanMuriel McBrien Kauffman <strong>Foundation</strong>4801 Rockhill Rd.Kansas City, MO 64<strong>11</strong>0FAX: (913) 649-94382081. American Red Cross, Kansas City, KansasCity, MO. $1,000. For support of the GenevieveByrne Speaker Series on <strong>11</strong>/12/01 f/b/o theAmerican Red Cross Local Disaster Relief Fund.2082. Greater Kansas City Community<strong>Foundation</strong>, Kansas City, MO. $10,000. ForKansas City <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, which willprovide support of health and human services forvictims and families of 9/<strong>11</strong>/01 terrorist attacks inNYC and DC.KaufmanHenry & Elaine Kaufman <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.660 Madison Ave., 15th Fl.New York, NY 10021-84052083. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $50,000.Kayden<strong>The</strong> Kayden <strong>Foundation</strong>550 Mamaroneck Ave., Ste. 404Harrison, NY 10528-1612Application address: 10312 Shireoaks Ln., BocaRaton, FL 33498, tel.: (914) 381-10102084. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $1,000.KeckW. M. Keck <strong>Foundation</strong>550 S. Hope St., Ste. 2500Los Angeles, CA 90071(213) 680-3833FAX: (213) 614-0934; E-mail: info@wmkeck.org;URL: http://www.wmkeck.org2085. United Negro College Fund, VA. $500,000,2001. To support scholarships for students whowere economically affected by 9/<strong>11</strong> includingthose whose parents lost their jobs or wherestudents themselves lost part-time jobs.KelloggPeter & Cynthia K. Kellogg <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Spear, Leeds, & Kellogg120 BroadwayNew York, NY 10271-00932086. Andrew Golkin Scholarship Fund, NewYork, NY. $10,000.KelloggW. K. Kellogg <strong>Foundation</strong>1 Michigan Ave. E.Battle Creek, MI 49017-4058(269) 968-16<strong>11</strong>FAX: (269) 968-0413; URL: http://www.wkkf.org2087. Arab Community <strong>Center</strong> for Economic andSocial Services, Dearborn, MI. $450,000, 2002.To strengthen relationships betweenArab-American and Chaldean communities andnon-Arab communities through intensivecommunity outreach and educational programs inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks.2088. Arab-American and ChaldeanCommunities Social Services Council, LathrupVillage, MI. $450,000, 2002. To strengthenrelationships between Arab-American andChaldean and non-Arab communities throughintensive community outreach and educationalprograms in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terroristattacks.2089. Citizens Committee for Children of NewYork, New York, NY. $324,941, 2002. To provideadditional support to grantees whose work hasbeen affected by terrorist actions of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>,2001.2090. City Year, Boston, MA. $55,812, 2002.Toward development and distribution ofcurriculum, Facing Fear: Helping People Dealwith Terrorism and Tragic Events, to K-8students in the Washington, DC, area in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.2091. Columbia University, New York, NY.$1,169,822, 2002. To provide additional supportto grantees whose work has been affected byterrorists’ actions of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.2092. Columbia University, New York, NY.$295,000, 2002. To demonstrate (in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks) how to sustainsafety net providers through partnerships withcommunity and health and human serviceproviders.2093. District of Columbia Birth <strong>Center</strong>, DC.$125,000, 2002. To support poor neighborhoodswith high infant mortality rates in meeting newand unexpected demands as result of events of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.2094. Family Support America, Chicago, IL.$299,917, 2002. For program to build andmobilize network of existing family supportresources for times of crisis and disaster.2095. International <strong>Center</strong> in New York, NewYork, NY. $25,000, 2002. To promote long-termassistance and training to non-English speakingimmigrants affected by terrorist actions of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.2096. Learning Matters, New York, NY.$681,000. To empower youth to initiate dialogueon issues of race, diversity, and social andeconomic inequality in response to events of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.2097. New York Immigration Coalition, NewYork, NY. $625,000, 2002. For short-term reliefefforts on behalf of New York’s immigrantcommunity and long-term implications of policyproposals that arise in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>,2001 terrorist attacks.2098. New York Regional Association ofGrantmakers, New York, NY. $240,000, 2002. Topromote sustained, strategic philanthropy amongAfrican-American, Latino, and Asian-Americancommunities of New York metropolitan area inresponse to events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.2099. New York University, New York, NY.$275,000, 2002. To assure diversity of communityvoice in urban planning process to redesign andrebuild lower Manhattan.2100. Piatigorsky <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$20,000, 2002. For replacement of officeequipment and supplies lost as result of events of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.2101. Social Entreprise Alliance, San Francisco,CA. $300,000, 2002. To provide support andvisibility to organizations addressing long-termneeds of victims of terrorist actions of <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>, 2001.2102. Sponsors for Educational Opportunity,New York, NY. $500,000, 2002. To establish SEOCommunity Assistance Fund to give aid toorganizations and programs affected by events of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.2103. Women’s Funding Network, San Francisco,CA. $330,000, 2002. For work of women’s andgirls’ foundations in New York, New Jersey andWashington, DC in response to terrorist attackson <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.2104. Young Citizens, Inc., New York, NY.$150,000, 2002. For service-learning helperprograms by New York City teachers as a result ofterrorist attacks of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.KempnerHarris and Eliza Kempner Fund, Inc.2201 Market St., Ste. 601Galveston, TX 77550-1529(409) 762-1603FAX: (409) 762-5435; E-mail:information@kempnerfund.org; URL: http://www.kempnerfund.org2105. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000.William R. Kenan, Jr. Charitable TrustKenan Ctr.P.O. Box 3858, Bowles Dr.Chapel Hill, NC 27515-3858(919) 962-81502106. City University of New York, New York,NY. $2,500,000, 2002. For a fellowship programto support the best and brightest students fromNew York to remain in New York and attend theHonors College at CUNY.KenanKennecottKennecott Utah Copper Visitors <strong>Center</strong>Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 6001Magna, UT 84044-6001(801) 569-7433E-mail: cononell@kennecott.com2107. American Red Cross, National, DC.$5,686. For donation from KUC Employee Careand Share Campaign in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>terrorist attacks.Kennedy<strong>The</strong> Ethel & W. George Kennedy Family<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.1550 Madruga Ave., Ste. 225Coral Gables, FL 33146(305) 666-6226FAX: (305) 666-2441; E-mail:admin@kennedyfamilyfdn.org; URL: http://www.kennedyfamilyfdn.org2108. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000.2109. University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL.$200,000.Karen A. & Kevin W. Kennedy<strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Goldman Sachs & Co.85 Broad St., Tax Dept.New York, NY 100042<strong>11</strong>0. Undesignated. $250,000.KennedyKerenKeren Keshet - <strong>The</strong> Rainbow <strong>Foundation</strong>1015 5th Ave.New York, NY 10028(212) 396-88002<strong>11</strong>1. Engine No. 22/Ladder No. 13 Family Fund,New York, NY. $10,000. For emergency supportfollowing <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attack.Key <strong>Foundation</strong>127 Public Sq., M.C. OH-01-27-0705Cleveland, OH 44<strong>11</strong>4-1306(216) 689-5458FAX: (216) 689-5444; E-mail:key_foundation@keybank.com2<strong>11</strong>2. Akron Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Akron, OH.$450.2<strong>11</strong>3. American Red Cross, Greater ClevelandChapter, Cleveland, OH. $10,065, 2001.2<strong>11</strong>4. American Red Cross, National, DC.$926,024.2<strong>11</strong>5. American Society for the Prevention ofCruelty to Animals, New York, NY. $825.2<strong>11</strong>6. American Veterinary Medical <strong>Foundation</strong>,Schaumburg, IL. $750.2<strong>11</strong>7. AmeriCares <strong>Foundation</strong>, New Canaan, CT.$18,930.2<strong>11</strong>8. AmeriCares <strong>Foundation</strong>, New Canaan, CT.$510.2<strong>11</strong>9. Bowery Mission and Young Mens Home,New York, NY. $75.2120. Campus Crusade for Christ, New York,NY. $300.2121. Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund, New York,NY. $1,350.Key182


2122. Catholic Charities USA, Alexandria, VA.$25,914.2123. Catholic Community Services, Newark, NJ.$6,000.2124. City Mission, Cleveland, OH. $240.2125. Clear Channel Communications, SanAntonio, TX. $1,800.2126. Community Church of Colonie, Albany,NY. $1,950.2127. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $1,350.2128. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Greater LorainCounty, Lorain, OH. $300.2129. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of SoutheasternConnecticut, New London, CT. $2,025.2130. Doctors Without Borders USA, New York,NY. $150.2131. Episcopal Relief and Development, NewYork, NY. $750.2132. Federal Employee Education & AssistanceFund, Littleton, CO. $3,000.2133. Feed the Children, OK. $75.2134. Hotel Employees and RestaurantEmployees International Union (HERE), Local100, New York, NY. $750.2135. International Aid, Spring Lake, MI. $6,000.2136. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $157,920.2137. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $2,025.2138. Jewish Federation of Greater Washington,Rockville, MD. $1,800.2139. Kiwanis International <strong>Foundation</strong>,Indianapolis, IN. $225.2140. LCMS World Relief, Saint Louis, MO. $75.2141. MMC Victims Relief Fund, New York, NY.$375.2142. NASDAQ Issuers Disaster Relief Fund,New York, NY. $1,500.2143. National Disaster Search Dog <strong>Foundation</strong>,Ojai, CA. $150.2144. National Law Enforcement OfficersMemorial Fund, DC. $150.2145. National Organization for VictimAssistance, DC. $450.2146. Navy League of the United States,Arlington, VA. $900.2147. New York City Rescue Mission, NY. $630.2148. New York Community Trust, New York,NY. $1,350.2149. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $176,255.2150. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,947.2151. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $<strong>11</strong>,475.2152. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $1,875.2153. New York State Fraternal Order of PoliceFund, Hicksville, NY. $9,018.2154. New York State Fraternal Order of PoliceFund, Hicksville, NY. $175.2155. New York State World Trade <strong>Center</strong> ReliefFund, Albany, NY. $8,962.2156. New York State World Trade <strong>Center</strong> ReliefFund, Albany, NY. $125.2157. New York Stock Exchange Fallen HeroesFund, New York, NY. $67,761.2158. New York Stock Exchange Fallen HeroesFund, New York, NY. $100.2159. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $4,125.2160. Northwest Medical Teams International,Portland, OR. $5,790.LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDER2161. Northwest Medical Teams International,Portland, OR. $150.2162. Saint Bonaventure University, SaintBonaventure, NY. $150.2163. Saint Jude Church, NY. $300.2164. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $800.2165. Samaritans Purse, Boone, NC. $6,000.2166. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$2,400.2167. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY. $2,091.2168. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY. $40.2169. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $30,915.2170. Undesignated. $401,416.2171. Undesignated. $151,733.2172. United Brotherhood of Carpenters Local608, New York, NY. $90.2173. United Jewish Communities, New York,NY. $1,350.2174. United Methodist Committee on Relief,New York, NY. $750.2175. William J. and Dorothy K. O’Neill<strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY. $7,500.2176. Willoughby Rotary <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY. $750.2177. Windows of Hope Family Relief Fund, NewYork, NY. $2,100.2178. Windows of Hope Family Relief Fund, NewYork, NY. $200.2179. WTEN/Trustco Bank, NY. $150.KeySpanKeySpan Energy Delivery New EnglandCorporate Giving Program52 2nd Ave.Waltham, MA 02451(781) 466-5101FAX: (781) 290-48992180. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.KikkomanKikkoman Foods <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 69Walworth, WI 53184(262) 275-61812181. Research <strong>Foundation</strong> of the StateUniversity of New York, Albany, NY. $50,000. Toestablish <strong>The</strong> Children and Spouses’ SecondaryEducation Scholarship Fund for benefit offamilies of victims of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th air disastersin Pennsylvania and at the Pentagon in accordancewith the Memorandum of Understanding betweenSUNY and Kikkoma.Kimberly-Clark <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 619100Dallas, TX 75261-9100(972) 281-12002182. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.KimberlyKimcoKimco Realty Companyc/o Corporate Communications1533 Central AvenueAlbany, NY 122052183. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.KindredKindred Healthcarec/o Corporate Communications1313 St. Anthony PlaceLouisville, KY 402042184. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.KnightF. M. Kirby <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.17 DeHart St.P.O. Box 151Morristown, NJ 07963-0151(973) 538-4800URL: http://www.fdncenter.org/grantmaker/kirby2185. Helen Keller International, New York, NY.$25,000, 2001. For one-time increase of supportin response to extraordinary losses suffered asresult of World Trade <strong>Center</strong> disaster.KirbyKirkebyKirkeby <strong>Foundation</strong>730 Arizona Ave., Ste. 421Santa Monica, CA 90401(310) 451-94552186. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $3,000, 2001.Kirsch<strong>The</strong> Irving and Elaine Kirsch <strong>Foundation</strong>20 Corporate Woods Blvd.Albany, NY 122<strong>11</strong>(518) 465-45002187. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.KnightFaith & James Knight <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o R.J. GaughranP.O. Box 143Middletown, NJ 077482188. American Red Cross, Asbury Park, NJ.$10,000.KnightJohn S. and James L. Knight <strong>Foundation</strong>Wachovia Financial Ctr., Ste. 3300200 S. Biscayne Blvd.Miami, FL 33131-2349(305) 908-26002189. Access, Akron, OH. $50,000, 2002.2190. Aid to Victims of Domestic Assault, DelrayBeach, FL. $50,000, 2002.2191. AIDS Task Force, Fort Wayne, IN. $10,000,2002.2192. Akron Community Service <strong>Center</strong> andUrban League, Akron, OH. $100,000, 2002.2193. Akron-Canton Regional Foodbank, Akron,OH. $100,000, 2002.2194. Alexandra House, Blaine, MN. $17,000,2002.2195. America’s Second Harvest of the Big Bend,Tallahassee, FL. $10,000, 2002.2196. American Red Cross, Centre CommunitiesChapter, State College, PA. $10,000, 2002.2197. American Red Cross, Northeast IndianaChapter, Fort Wayne, IN. $10,000, 2002.2198. American Red Cross, Oconee ValleyChapter, Milledgeville, GA. $30,000, 2002.2199. Arab Community <strong>Center</strong> for Economic andSocial Services, Dearborn, MI. $100,000, 2002.2200. Arab-American and ChaldeanCommunities Social Services Council, LathrupVillage, MI. $100,000, 2002.2201. Asian Americans for CommunityInvolvement of Santa Clara County, San Jose, CA.$10,000, 2002.2202. ASPIRA of Florida, Miami, FL. $35,000,2002.2203. Associated Churches of Fort Wayne andAllen County, Fort Wayne, IN. $10,000, 2002.2204. Battered Womens Shelter, Akron, OH.$50,000, 2002.2205. Big Bend Cares, Tallahassee, FL. $10,000,2002.2206. Big Brothers/Big Sisters of Greater Miami,Miami, FL. $30,000, 2002.183


KnightSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE2207. Bill Wilson Marriage and FamilyCounseling <strong>Center</strong>, Santa Clara, CA. $10,000,2002.2208. Boulder County Safehouse, Boulder, CO.$21,930, 2002.2209. Boulder Shelter for the Homeless, Boulder,CO. $22,210, 2002.2210. Boys and Girls Club of Duluth, Duluth,MN. $10,000, 2002.22<strong>11</strong>. Boys and Girls Club of Fort Wayne, FortWayne, IN. $25,000, 2002.2212. Boys and Girls Club of Superior, Superior,WI. $10,000, 2002.2213. Boys and Girls Clubs of Long Beach, LongBeach, CA. $70,000, 2002.2214. Boys and Girls Clubs of Summit County,Akron, OH. $50,000, 2002.2215. Boys and Girls Clubs of the Gulf Coast,Biloxi, MS. $10,000, 2002.2216. Boysville of Michigan, Clinton, MI.$25,000, 2002.2217. Bread of Life EPA, East Palo Alto, CA.$15,000, 2002.2218. Brehon Institute for Human Services,Tallahassee, FL. $10,000, 2002.2219. Bridgeway House, Tallahassee, FL.$10,000, 2002.2220. Broward Coalition for the Homeless, FortLauderdale, FL. $35,000, 2002.2221. Broward Partnership for the Homeless, FortLauderdale, FL. $30,000, 2002.2222. Cabarrus Cooperative Christian Ministry,Concord, NC. $25,000, 2002.2223. Camillus House, Miami, FL. $25,000,2002.2224. Capital Area Healthy Start Coalition,Tallahassee, FL. $30,000, 2002.2225. Capital City Youth Services, Tallahassee,FL. $20,000, 2002.2226. CareTeam, Myrtle Beach, SC. $15,000,2002.2227. Catholic Charities of Fort Wayne, FortWayne, IN. $10,000, 2002.2228. Catholic Charities of Santa Clara County,San Jose, CA. $35,000, 2002.2229. Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese ofMiami, Miami, FL. $125,000, 2002.2230. Catholic Charities of Wichita, Wichita, KS.$15,000, 2002.2231. Catholic Social and Community Services,Biloxi, MS. $10,000, 2002.2232. Catholic Social Services of Summit County,Akron, OH. $25,000, 2002.2233. Catholic Social Services of the Diocese ofCharlotte, Charlotte, NC. $50,000, 2002.2234. <strong>Center</strong> Against Sexual and DomesticAbuse, Superior, WI. $5,000.2235. <strong>Center</strong> for Family Services of Palm BeachCounty, West Palm Beach, FL. $50,000, 2002.2236. <strong>Center</strong> for Health and Wellness, Wichita,KS. $25,000, 2002.2237. <strong>Center</strong> for Information and Crisis Services,Lantana, FL. $10,000, 2002.2238. <strong>Center</strong> of Hope, Wichita, KS. $15,000,2002.2239. Centre County Women’s Resource <strong>Center</strong>,State College, PA. $35,000, 2002.2240. Century <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$200,000. To study how new homeland securitymeasures affect freedom of information andfederal government reporting.2241. CHARLEE of Dade County, Miami, FL.$40,000, 2002.2242. Charlotte <strong>Center</strong> for Urban Ministry,Charlotte, NC. $25,000, 2002.2243. Charlotte Rescue Mission, Charlotte, NC.$50,000, 2002.2244. Children’s Clinic, Long Beach, CA.$50,000, 2002.2245. Children’s Haven and Adult <strong>Center</strong>,Sarasota, FL. $40,000, 2002.2246. Children’s Home Society of Florida,Tallahassee, FL. $10,000, 2002.2247. City Team Ministries, San Jose, CA.$50,000, 2002.2248. Clara-Mateo Alliance Community Shelter,Menlo Park, CA. $10,000, 2002.2249. Coalition on Temporary Shelter (COTS),Detroit, MI. $25,000, 2002.2250. Columbus Baptist Association, Columbus,GA. $15,000, 2002.2251. Committee for Dignity and Fairness for theHomeless Housing Development, Philadelphia,PA. $100,000, 2002.2252. Community Action Council forLexington-Fayette, Bourbon, Harrison andNicholas Counties, Lexington, KY. $100,000,2002.2253. Community Culinary School of Charlotte,Charlotte, NC. $10,000, 2002.2254. Community Harvest Food Bank ofNortheast Indiana, Fort Wayne, IN. $10,000,2002.2255. Community Kitchen of Myrtle Beach,Myrtle Beach, SC. $15,000, 2002.2256. Community Partnership for Homeless,Miami, FL. $125,000, 2002.2257. Community Service Council of ChesterCounty, West Chester, PA. $50,000, 2002.2258. Community Violence Intervention <strong>Center</strong>,Grand Forks, ND. $30,000, 2002.2259. Concern for the Poor, San Jose, CA.$20,000, 2002.2260. Cooperative Feeding Program, FortLauderdale, FL. $30,000, 2002.2261. Court Appointed Special Advocates(CASA) of Aberdeen Fifth Judicial Circuit,Aberdeen, SD. $25,000, 2002.2262. Covenant House Michigan, Detroit, MI.$25,000, 2002.2263. Crisis Assistance Ministry, Charlotte, NC.$150,000, 2002.2264. Crisis <strong>Center</strong> of Gary, Gary, IN. $40,000,2002.2265. CUP Inc., Charlotte, NC. $10,000, 2002.2266. Cupertino Community Services, Cupertino,CA. $10,000, 2002.2267. Daily Bread Community Food Bank,Miami, FL. $60,000, 2002.2268. Damiano <strong>Center</strong>, Duluth, MN. $10,000,2002.2269. Day Shelter, Charlotte, NC. $25,000, 2002.2270. Detroit Rescue Mission Ministries, Detroit,MI. $75,000, 2002.2271. Diocese of San Jose, Santa Clara, CA.$10,000, 2002.2272. Eastside Emergency <strong>Center</strong>, Detroit, MI.$25,000, 2002.2273. ECHO Outreach Ministries, Tallahassee,FL. $20,000, 2002.2274. Ecumenical Hunger Program, East PaloAlto, CA. $20,000, 2002.2275. Emergency Family Assistance Association,Boulder, CO. $33,520, 2002.2276. Emergency Housing Consortium of SantaClara County, San Jose, CA. $35,000, 2002.2277. Episcopal Social Services, Wichita, KS.$10,000, 2002.2278. Family <strong>Center</strong>, Charlotte, NC. $25,000,2002.2279. Family Resource <strong>Center</strong> of South Florida,Miami, FL. $50,000, 2002.2280. Family Service <strong>Center</strong> of South Carolina,Columbia, SC. $50,000, 2002.2281. Family Service of Chester County, WestChester, PA. $100,000, 2002.2282. Family Service of Montgomery County,Norristown, PA. $25,000, 2002.2283. Farm Share, Florida City, FL. $50,000,2002.2284. First Witness Child Abuse Resource<strong>Center</strong>, Duluth, MN. $20,000, 2002.2285. Focus: HOPE, Detroit, MI. $100,000,2002.2286. Food Bank of Oakland County, Pontiac,MI. $50,000, 2002.2287. Food Bank of South Jersey, Camden, NJ.$25,000, 2002.2288. Food Bank of State College, State College,PA. $20,000, 2002.2289. Forgotten Harvest, Southfield, MI. $75,000,2002.2290. <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, New York, New York,NY. $75,000. For general operating support andto catalog foundation and corporate giving inresponse to events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.2291. <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, New York, New York,NY. $75,000. For general operating support andto catalog foundation and corporate giving inresponse to events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.2292. <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, New York, New York,NY. $45,000, 2002. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th<strong>Philanthropic</strong> <strong>Response</strong> Project.2293. Gleaners Community Food Bank, Detroit,MI. $75,000, 2002.2294. God’s Pantry Food Bank, Lexington, KY.$50,000, 2002.2295. Good Neighbors, Akron, OH. $25,000,2002.2296. Goodwill Industries of Greater Detroit,Detroit, MI. $50,000, 2002.2297. Goodwill Industries of Middle Georgia,Macon, GA. $25,000, 2002.2298. Goodwill Industries of the SouthernPiedmont, Charlotte, NC. $10,000, 2002.2299. Goodwill Industries of Upper SouthCarolina, Greenville, SC. $25,000, 2002.2300. Greater Philadelphia Food Bank,Philadelphia, PA. $150,000, 2002.2301. Greater Philadelphia Urban AffairsCoalition, Philadelphia, PA. $150,000, 2002.2302. Guadalupe Clinic, Wichita, KS. $25,000,2002.2303. Gulf Coast Womens <strong>Center</strong> forNonviolence, Biloxi, MS. $10,000, 2002.2304. Habitat for Humanity of Greater Akron,Akron, OH. $25,000, 2002.2305. Habitat for Humanity of Greater Miami,Miami, FL. $45,000, 2002.2306. Harvest Hope Food Bank, Columbia, SC.$75,000, 2002.2307. HAVEN (Help Against Violent EncountersNow), Pontiac, MI. $75,000, 2002.2308. Haven of Rest Ministries, Akron, OH.$50,000, 2002.2309. HelpSource, Ann Arbor, MI. $25,000,2002.2310. Homeless Care Force, Santa Clara, CA.$15,000, 2002.23<strong>11</strong>. HOPE of Manatee County, Bradenton, FL.$20,000, 2002.2312. Horace Mann-Ambridge NeighborhoodImprovement, Gary, IN. $50,000, 2002.2313. House of Restoration, Phenix City, AL.$40,000, 2002.184


2314. House of Time, Columbus, GA. $40,000,2002.2315. Hunter Health Clinic, Wichita, KS.$25,000, 2002.2316. Immigrant Resettlement and Cultural<strong>Center</strong>, San Jose, CA. $10,000, 2002.2317. Info Line, Akron, OH. $40,000, 2002.2318. Inn Between of Longmont, Longmont, CO.$10,000, 2002.2319. Inn Vision of Santa Clara Valley, San Jose,CA. $65,000, 2002.2320. Interfaith Ministries Wichita, Wichita, KS.$15,000, 2002.2321. Interval Brotherhood Homes Corporation,Akron, OH. $100,000, 2002.2322. Jewish Family Service, Southfield, MI.$75,000, 2002.2323. Jubilee <strong>Center</strong> of South Broward,Hollywood, FL. $15,000, 2002.2324. Kansas Food Bank Warehouse, Wichita,KS. $25,000, 2002.2325. L.I.F.T. Women’s Resource <strong>Center</strong>, Detroit,MI. $25,000, 2002.2326. Let’s Grow Akron, Akron, OH. $10,000,2002.2327. Lifetrack Resources, Saint Paul, MN.$33,000, 2002.2328. Lighthouse Emergency Services, Pontiac,MI. $75,000, 2002.2329. Lighthouse Mission, Macon, GA. $10,000,2002.2330. Loaves and Fishes Family Kitchen, SanJose, CA. $15,000, 2002.2331. Loaves and Fishes Ministry of Macon,Macon, GA. $25,000, 2002.2332. Long Beach Day Nursery, Long Beach,CA. $50,000, 2002.2333. Longmont Coalition for Women in Crisis,Longmont, CO. $12,340, 2002.2334. Lords Place, West Palm Beach, FL.$15,000, 2002.2335. Lutheran Services Florida, Tampa, FL.$20,000, 2002.2336. Lutheran Social Service of Kansas, Wichita,KS. $10,000, 2002.2337. Lutheran Social Services of Indiana, FortWayne, IN. $20,000, 2002.2338. Lutheran Social Services of North Florida,Tallahassee, FL. $10,000, 2002.2339. Macomb County Rotating EmergencyShelter Team, Mount Clemens, MI. $25,000,2002.2340. Macon Outreach at Mulberry, Macon, GA.$25,000, 2002.2341. Manatee Children’s Services, Bradenton,FL. $15,000, 2002.2342. Manatee Opportunity Council, Bradenton,FL. $12,500, 2002.2343. Meals on Wheels of Baldwin County,Milledgeville, GA. $5,000.2344. Meals on Wheels Plus of Manatee,Bradenton, FL. $12,500, 2002.2345. Mental Health Association of Mississippi,Gulfport, MS. $20,000, 2002.2346. Miami Rescue Mission, Miami, FL.$125,000, 2002.2347. Middle Georgia Community Food Bank,Macon, GA. $25,000, 2002.2348. Moore Community House, Biloxi, MS.$5,000.2349. Mothers in Crisis, Tallahassee, FL. $20,000,2002.2350. Mount Bethel Human ServicesCorporation, Fort Lauderdale, FL. $25,000, 2002.LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDER2351. National Security Archive Fund, DC.$150,000. To complete audit of federal Freedomof Information Act policy since terrorist attacks of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.2352. Neighbor to Neighbor, White Bear Lake,MN. $101,000, 2002.2353. New Image Emergency Shelter for theHomeless, Long Beach, CA. $10,000, 2002.2354. Next Door Solutions to Domestic Violence,San Jose, CA. $20,000, 2002.2355. Open Door Community House, Columbus,GA. $25,000, 2002.2356. Opportunity Parish EcumenicalNeighborhood Ministry, Akron, OH. $25,000,2002.2357. Ozone House, Ann Arbor, MI. $25,000,2002.2358. PACE <strong>Center</strong> for Girls of Leon County,Tallahassee, FL. $10,000, 2002.2359. Park <strong>Center</strong>, Fort Wayne, IN. $10,000,2002.2360. Philabundance, Philadelphia, PA. $100,000,2002.2361. Philadelphia Committee to EndHomelessness, Philadelphia, PA. $100,000, 2002.2362. Pilgrims’ Inn, Rock Hill, SC. $25,000,2002.2363. Planned Parenthood Mar Monte, San Jose,CA. $10,000, 2002.2364. Prairie Harvest Human Services<strong>Foundation</strong>, Grand Forks, ND. $20,000, 2002.2365. Pro Bono Project of Santa Clara County,San Jose, CA. $10,000, 2002.2366. RotaCare Bay Area, Gilroy, CA. $10,000,2002.2367. Ruth Rales Jewish Family Service, BocaRaton, FL. $10,000, 2002.2368. S.O.S. Community Services Crisis <strong>Center</strong>,Ypsilanti, MI. $25,000, 2002.2369. S.O.S. Health Care, Myrtle Beach, SC.$30,000, 2002.2370. Sacred Heart Community Service, San Jose,CA. $10,000, 2002.2371. Safe Harbor, Aberdeen, SD. $25,000, 2002.2372. Saint Jude House, Crown Point, IN.$20,000, 2002.2373. Saint Paul Western Palm Beach CountyFood Distribution <strong>Center</strong>, Belle Glade, FL.$20,000, 2002.2374. Saint Peters Home for Boys, Detroit, MI.$25,000, 2002.2375. Saint Vincent de Paul Society, Detroit, MI.$75,000, 2002.2376. Saint Vincent de Paul Society, Milledgeville,GA. $10,000, 2002.2377. Saint Vincent de Paul Society of SanMateo, San Mateo, CA. $20,000, 2002.2378. Saint Vincent de Paul Society of SantaClara County, Mountain View, CA. $25,000,2002.2379. Salvation Army of Aberdeen, Aberdeen,SD. $20,000, 2002.2380. Salvation Army of Akron, Akron, OH.$50,000, 2002.2381. Salvation Army of Biloxi, Biloxi, MS.$10,000, 2002.2382. Salvation Army of Broward County, FortLauderdale, FL. $65,000, 2002.2383. Salvation Army of Conway, Conway, SC.$40,000, 2002.2384. Salvation Army of Fort Wayne, Fort Wayne,IN. $10,000, 2002.2385. Salvation Army of Grand Forks, GrandForks, ND. $50,000, 2002.Knight2386. Salvation Army of Gulfport, Gulfport, MS.$20,000, 2002.2387. Salvation Army of Macon, Macon, GA.$75,000, 2002.2388. Salvation Army of Miami, Miami, FL.$125,000, 2002.2389. Salvation Army of Milledgeville,Milledgeville, GA. $30,000, 2002.2390. Salvation Army of Munster, Munster, IN.$25,000, 2002.2391. Salvation Army of Rock Hill, Rock Hill, SC.$25,000, 2002.2392. Salvation Army of Santa Clara County, SanJose, CA. $65,000, 2002.2393. San Jose Day Nursery, San Jose, CA.$15,000, 2002.2394. San Jose First Community Services, SanJose, CA. $15,000, 2002.2395. SCAN, Fort Wayne, IN. $10,000, 2002.2396. Second Harvest Food Bank of Metrolina,Charlotte, NC. $50,000, 2002.2397. Second Harvest Food Bank of Santa Claraand San Mateo Counties, San Jose, CA. $100,000,2002.2398. Second Harvest Food Bank of theChattahoochee Valley, Columbus, GA. $25,000,2002.2399. Second Harvest Northern Lakes FoodBank, Duluth, MN. $20,000, 2002.2400. Sexual Assault Crisis Agency, Long Beach,CA. $20,000, 2002.2401. Shelter Network of San Mateo County,Burlingame, CA. $25,000, 2002.2402. Shepherds Way, Fort Lauderdale, FL.$40,000, 2002.2403. Sistercare, Columbia, SC. $50,000, 2002.2404. South Central Improvement Alliance,Wichita, KS. $10,000, 2002.2405. South Florida Food Recovery, Miami, FL.$30,000, 2002.2406. South Mississippi Exchange Clubs ChildAbuse Prevention <strong>Center</strong>, Gulfport, MS. $15,000,2002.2407. Starfish Family Services, Inkster, MI.$25,000, 2002.2408. Starting Over, Miramar, FL. $15,000,2002.2409. Summit County Community Drug Board,Akron, OH. $25,000, 2002.2410. Sunnyvale Community Services, Sunnyvale,CA. $25,000, 2002.24<strong>11</strong>. Support Network for Battered Women,Mountain View, CA. $20,000, 2002.2412. Susan B. Anthony <strong>Center</strong>, Fort Lauderdale,FL. $15,000, 2002.2413. Switchboard of Miami, Miami, FL.$20,000, 2002.2414. Telephone Counseling and Referral Service,Tallahassee, FL. $30,000, 2002.2415. Think Detroit, Detroit, MI. $25,000, 2002.2416. Tooth Mobile, Santa Clara, CA. $20,000,2002.2417. Turn About, Tallahassee, FL. $10,000,2002.2418. Turning Point of Union County, Monroe,NC. $25,000, 2002.2419. Turnstone <strong>Center</strong> for Disabled Childrenand Adults, Fort Wayne, IN. $5,000.2420. Undesignated. $500,000. For memorialefforts for hijacking victims of Flight 93.2421. Union Organization for Social Service,Pennsauken, NJ. $50,000, 2002.2422. United Family Services, Charlotte, NC.$25,000, 2002.185


KnightSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE2423. Uptown Outreach Food Pantry, Columbus,GA. $15,000, 2002.2424. Urban League of Fort Wayne, Fort Wayne,IN. $5,000.2425. Urban Ministry of Palo Alto, Palo Alto, CA.$10,000, 2002.2426. Valley Rescue Mission, Columbus, GA.$40,000, 2002.2427. Village of Arts and Humanities,Philadelphia, PA. $150,000, 2002.2428. Vincent House, Fort Wayne, IN. $25,000,2002.2429. Voices for Children <strong>Foundation</strong>, Miami,FL. $20,000, 2002.2430. Warren-Conner Development Coalition,Detroit, MI. $25,000, 2002.2431. Wichita Childrens Home, Wichita, KS.$15,000, 2002.2432. Wichita Family Services Institute, Wichita,KS. $10,000, 2002.2433. Women in Distress of Broward County,Fort Lauderdale, FL. $20,000, 2002.2434. Women’s Coalition, Duluth, MN. $20,000,2002.2435. YMCA of Superior-Douglas County,Superior, WI. $5,000.2436. YMCA, Akron Metropolitan Board, Akron,OH. $25,000, 2002.2437. Young Men’s Christian Association of FortWayne, Fort Wayne, IN. $20,000, 2002.2438. Youth and Family Assistance, RedwoodCity, CA. $20,000, 2002.2439. Youth Service, Philadelphia, PA. $25,000,2002.2440. YWCA. of Fort Wayne, Fort Wayne, IN.$20,000, 2002.<strong>The</strong> Marion I. and Henry J. Knott<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.3904 Hickory Ave.Baltimore, MD 212<strong>11</strong>-1834(410) 235-7068FAX: (410) 889-2577; E-mail:knott@knottfoundation.org; URL: http://www.knottfoundation.org2441. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,500.KnottKoboKobo Productsc/o Corporate Communications3474 South Clinton AvenueSouth Plainfield, NJ 070802442. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.Koch <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.2830 N.W. 41st St., Ste. HGainesville, FL 32606(352) 373-74912443. Mount Manresa Retreat House, StatenIsland, NY. $50,000. For emergency relief effortsfollowing 9/<strong>11</strong> attack.Koch Industries, Inc. Corporate GivingProgram4<strong>11</strong>1 E. 37th St. N.Wichita, KS 67220-3203FAX: (316) 828-5739; URL: http://www.kochind.com/community/default.asp2444. Kansas Chamber Education <strong>Foundation</strong>,Topeka, KS. $1,000,000. For donation to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Scholarship fund, pass-throughfund of Kansas Chamber Education Fund whichcontributed all funds raised to Families ofFreedom Scholarship Fund.KochKochKohlberg<strong>The</strong> Kohlberg <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.<strong>11</strong>1 Radio Cir.Mount Kisco, NY 10549FAX: (914) 241-<strong>11</strong>95; E-mail:dehaan@Kfound.org2445. National <strong>Philanthropic</strong> Trust, Jenkintown,PA. $100,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Children’sFund.2446. National <strong>Philanthropic</strong> Trust, Jenkintown,PA. $300.2447. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $75,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.2448. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,600. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.Kohlberg Kravis Roberts <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Simpson, Thacher & BartlettOne Battery Park PlazaNew York, NY 10004-14122449. Heroes of New York Scholarship<strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY. $2,500,000. Toprovide for families of emergency and safetyworkers.KohlbergKornfeldEmily Davie and Joseph S. Kornfeld<strong>Foundation</strong>41 Schermerhorn St., Ste. 208Brooklyn, NY <strong>11</strong>201(718) 624-7969FAX: (718) 834-1204; E-mail:office@kornfeldfdn.org; URL: http://fdncenter.org/grantmaker/kornfeld/2450. Brooklyn Academy of Music, Brooklyn, NY.$10,000. For emergency operating support inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks.2451. City Harvest, New York, NY. $5,000. Toprovide refrigerated trucks for on-site delivery offood donations to emergency workers at WorldTrade <strong>Center</strong> site.2452. Forest Hills Community House, ForestHills, NY. $10,000, 2001. For 9/<strong>11</strong> Program.2453. Henry Street Settlement, New York, NY.$25,000. For emergency operating support inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks.2454. New York Academy of Medicine, NewYork, NY. $25,000, 2001. For donation to Special9/<strong>11</strong> fund.KPMGKPMG Consulting Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>106 Allen RoadLiberty Corner, NJ 079382455. Various organizations. $205,000. Tosupport the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> Fund, the NYFirefighters 9-<strong>11</strong> Disaster Fund, the UFA Widows& Children’s Fund and the WTC Police DisasterFund.KPMG<strong>The</strong> KPMG <strong>Foundation</strong>3 Chestnut Ridge Rd.Montvale, NJ 07645FAX: (201) 307-7093; E-mail: tperino@kpmg.com;URL: http://www.kpmgfoundation.org2456. KPMG Peat Marwick Disaster Relief Fund,Montvale, NJ. $1,000,000.KrahmDorothy H. Krahm Charitable<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o John T. Krahm128 Great Barrington Rd.West Stockbridge, MA 01266-92092457. New York City Police <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewYork, NY. $10,000.2458. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $10,000.2459. We Care Rockville <strong>Center</strong> Fund, RockvilleCentre, NY. $30,000.Kravis<strong>The</strong> Robert Kravis and Kimberly Kravis<strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co.9 W. 57th St.New York, NY 100192460. Ground Hero Kids, New York, NY.$10,000.Kresge<strong>The</strong> Kresge <strong>Foundation</strong>3215 W. Big Beaver Rd.P.O. Box 3151Troy, MI 48007-3151(248) 643-9630FAX: (248) 643-0588; URL: http://www.kresge.org2461. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $750,000. For challengegrant for Building Bridges Initiative, collaborativeworking to strengthen capacity of organizationsserving immigrants and new arrivals, in responseto terrorist attacks on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.2462. New York <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$500,000. For challenge grant for ImmigrantAccess Project to help agencies servingimmigrants respond to increasing demand forservices, in response to terrorist attacks on<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.2463. Nonprofit Finance Fund, New York, NY.$2,000,000. For challenge grant towardestablishment of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> NonprofitRecovery Fund.KressSamuel H. Kress <strong>Foundation</strong>174 E. 80th St.New York, NY 10021(212) 861-4993FAX: (212) 628-3146; E-mail:lisa@kressfoundation.org; URL: http://www.kressfoundation.org2464. Community Service Society of New York,New York, NY. $5,000, 2002. <strong>Response</strong> to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.2465. Engine No. 22/Ladder No. 13 Family Fund,New York, NY. $2,500, 2002. <strong>Response</strong> to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.2466. New York City Police <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewYork, NY. $10,000. For response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>,2001.2467. New York, State of, Albany, NY. $10,000.For response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.2468. Preservation League of New York State,Albany, NY. $10,000. For relief of historicbuildings in lower Manhattan.2469. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $5,000, 2002. <strong>Response</strong> to <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>, 2001.Krol<strong>The</strong> Jan M. and Eugenia Krol Charitable<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.1000 Bennett Blvd., Ste. 8Lakewood, NJ 08701(732) 886-21872470. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY. $5,000.For general support.KrumholzElroy and Terry Krumholz <strong>Foundation</strong>,Inc.P.O. Box 640085Oakland Gardens, NY <strong>11</strong>3642471. Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$10,000. To support direct relief for victims andtheir families in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>terrorist attacks.2472. Volunteer Engine Company, Bronx, NY.$1,000. To replace engine lost in collapse of theWorld Trade <strong>Center</strong>.186


KT Family <strong>Foundation</strong>15701 Grooms Ct.Clinton Township, MI 48035-1012Application address: P.O. Box 337, Fraser, MI480262473. Garden Pathways, Bakersfield, CA. $5,500,2001.Kuwait Red CrescentP.O. Box 23167Safat, 139022474. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000.KTKuwaitLafargeLafarge North America Inc. CorporateGiving Program12950 Worldgate Dr., Ste. 500Herndon, VA 201702475. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $200,000.LakesideLakeside <strong>Foundation</strong>3470 Mt. Diablo Blvd., Ste. A-210Lafayette, CA 945492476. Federalist Society for Law and PublicPolicy Studies, DC. $10,000. For Barbara K.Olson Memorial Fund in memory of 9/<strong>11</strong> victim.2477. Independent Womens Forum, Arlington,VA. $10,000. For infant care project for widows of9/<strong>11</strong> victims.Lam Research Corporation <strong>Foundation</strong>4650 Cushing ParkwayFremont, CA 945382478. Undesignated. $100,000.2479. Undesignated. $100,000.LamLandLand O’Lakes <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 64150St. Paul, MN 55164-0150(651) 481-2222URL: http://www.foundation.landolakes.com/2480. America’s Second Harvest, Chicago, IL.$65,000.2481. American Red Cross, National, DC.$25,000.2482. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.Lane Family <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o BCRS Associates, LLC100 Wall St., <strong>11</strong>th Fl.New York, NY 100052483. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$25,750. For general support.LaneLangeloth<strong>The</strong> Jacob and Valeria Langeloth<strong>Foundation</strong>521 5th Ave., Ste. 1612New York, NY 10175-1699(212) 687-<strong>11</strong>33FAX: (212) 681-2628; E-mail: info@langeloth.org;URL: http://www.langeloth.org2484. Disaster Psychiatry Outreach, New York,NY. $100,000, 2001.2485. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $100,000, 2001.2486. New York City Police <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewYork, NY. $100,000, 2001.2487. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $100,000, 2001.LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERLatham & Watkins885 Thrid Avenue Suite 1000New York, NY 10022-48342488. Structured Employment EconomicDevelopment Corporation, New York, NY.$32,000, 2002.LathamLaurieBlanche & Irving Laurie <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 53Roseland, NJ 07068-57882489. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000. For generalsupport of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.Lazard Freresc/o Corporate Communications30 Rockefeller PlazaNew York, NY 100202490. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$1,000,000.LazardLearLear Corporation Contributions Programc/o Lear Corp. Contribs. Prog.P.O. Box 5008Southfield, MI 480862491. Various organizations. $250,000.Sara Lee Corporation ContributionsProgram3 First National Plz.Chicago, IL 60602-4260(312) 558-8448URL: http://www.saralee.com/ourcompany/communitiesHome.aspx2492. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $350,000.2493. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $175,000.LeeLee Enterprises, Incorporated CorporateGiving Program215 N. Main St.Davenport, IA 528012494. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000.2495. Catholic Charities USA, Alexandria, VA.$5,000. For Disaster Fund.2496. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $1,000.2497. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,500.2498. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500.2499. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$2,500.LeeLeeway<strong>The</strong> Leeway <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Wachovia Bank, N.A.123 S. Broad St., Ste. 2040Philadelphia, PA 19109(215) 545-4078FAX: (215) 545-4021; E-mail: info@leeway.org;URL: http://www.leeway.org2500. Undesignated. $17,250. Toward creation ofHarmony Grants Program, special program tosupport women-led arts projects that promoteracial, ethnic, national and religious tolerance inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks.LEF <strong>Foundation</strong>1095 Lodi Ln.St. Helena, CA 94574(707) 963-9591FAX: (707) 963-2109; New England address: P.O.Box 382066, Cambridge, MA 02238-2866, tel.:(617) 868-5603, FAX: (617) 868-5603; E-mail:lyda@lef-foundation.org; URL: http://www.lef-foundation.org2501. Codman Square Health <strong>Center</strong>, Dorchester,MA. $5,000, 2002. In support of the Artists AllSouls Project reaction to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.2502. Creative Time, New York, NY. $15,000,2002. In support of Tribute In Light.LEFLehmanLehman Brothers <strong>Foundation</strong>New York, NY2503. Broad Channel Volunteer Fire Department,Broad Channel, NY. $25,000, 2002. Replaceequipment lost on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.2504. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY.$2,500,000, 2002. Relief for families of firstresponders.2505. New York Presbyterian Hospital, New York,NY. $500,000, 2002. Replacement of7ambulances Destroyed 9/<strong>11</strong>/01.2506. New York Presbyterian Hospital, New York,NY. $250,000, 2002. Replacement of 7ambulances destroyed 9/<strong>11</strong>/01.2507. New York State World Trade <strong>Center</strong> ReliefFund, Albany, NY. $10,000, 2002. Relief forfamilies of NYSDTF Employers.2508. NYU Downtown Hospital, New York, NY.$3,000,000, 2002. Renovation/Expansion ofLehman Brothers Emergency <strong>Center</strong>.2509. NYU Downtown Hospital, New York, NY.$2,000,000, 2002. Renovation/Expansion ofLehman Brothers Emergency <strong>Center</strong>.2510. Undesignated. $1,715,000. Balance offunds committed.Lenfest<strong>The</strong> Lenfest <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.5 Tower Bridge300 Barr Harbor Dr., Ste. 450West Conshohocken, PA 19428(610) 828-4510FAX: (610) 828-0390; E-mail:lenfestfoundation@lenfestfoundation.org; URL:http://www.lenfestfoundation.org25<strong>11</strong>. United Way of Southeastern Pennsylvania,Philadelphia, PA. $100,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thFund.Lenfest<strong>The</strong> Lenfest <strong>Foundation</strong>5 Tower Bridge300 Barr Harbor Dr., Ste. 450West Conshohocken, PA 19428(610) 918-8400FAX: (610) 828-0390; E-mail:lenfestfoundation@lenfest.com2512. United Way of Southeastern Pennsylvania,Philadelphia, PA. $100,000.<strong>The</strong> Lennar <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o Lennar Corp.700 N.W. 107th Ave.Miami, FL 331722513. National Housing Endowment, DC.$1,000,000.LibertyLennarLibertyLiberty Bankc/o Corporate Communications315 Main StreetMiddletown, CT 064572514. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000.187


LibertySEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSELibertyLiberty Bank <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 1212Middletown, CT 06457(860) 704-2181Additional contact: Sue Murphy, tel.: (860)638-2959; URL: http://www.liberty-bank.com/liberty_foundation.asp2515. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $8,945.David L. Lieb <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.244 Pine RidgeBoone, NC 286072516. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY. $2,000.LiebLifebridge<strong>The</strong> Lifebridge <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.Times Sq. StationP.O. Box 793New York, NY 10108FAX: (212) 757-0246; E-mail:lifebridgenyc@aol.com; URL: http://www.lifebridge.org2517. Global Kids, New York, NY. $5,000.Toward educational programs for public schoolstudents in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks.2518. Healing Works, New York, NY. $5,000. Toeducate disadvantaged populations in specifictechniques of holistic care and guidance topractitioners donating free services to patientsaffected by <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks.Eli Lilly and Company <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Eli Lilly and Co.Lilly Corporate Ctr., D.C. 1627Indianapolis, IN 46285-0002URL: http://www.lilly.com/products/access/foundation.html2519. American Association of PastoralCounseling, Fairfax, VA. $50,000. For depressionand/or anxiety counseling to victims of <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th tragedies in New York, Washington, andPennsylvania.2520. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000, 2001. For relief aid assistance inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks.2521. Mental Health Association of New YorkCity, New York, NY. $100,000, 2001. To providepublic education and services in New York City inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks.2522. Mental Health Association, National,Alexandria, VA. $375,000, 2001. To developcoalition of mental health organizations to delivermental health education and services throughoutthe country in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terroristattacks.2523. National Depressive and Manic-DepressiveAssociation, Chicago, IL. $35,000, 2001. Formental health education and services in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks.Lilly Endowment Inc.2801 N. Meridian St.Indianapolis, IN 46208-0068(317) 924-5471FAX: (317) 926-4431; URL: http://www.lillyendowment.org2524. American Red Cross, National, DC.$10,000,000, 2001.2525. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000,000, 2001.2526. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $10,000,000, 2001.2527. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $4,660,100, 2002. Forcomprehensive national disaster training andpreparedness effort for faith-based disaster relieforganizations.LillyLillyLimitedLimited Brands <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Public Affairs Dept.3 Limited Pkwy.Columbus, OH 43230(614) 251-4000URL: http://www.limited.com/community/index.jsp2528. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000.LincolnLincoln Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.215 Centennial Mall S., Ste. 100Lincoln, NE 68508-1813(402) 474-2345FAX: (402) 476-8532; E-mail: lcf@lcf.org; URL:http://www.lcf.org2529. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,100.2530. Undesignated. $30,600.LincolnLincoln Financial Group <strong>Foundation</strong>1300 S. Clinton St.P.O. Box 7863Fort Wayne, IN 46801-7863(260) 455-3679E-mail: skemmish@lnc.com; URL: http://www.lfg.com/lfg/ipc/abt/cgv/index.html2531. American Red Cross, National, DC.$280,000, 2001.2532. Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association of theCity of New York, New York, NY. $75,000, 2001.<strong>The</strong> Lincy <strong>Foundation</strong>150 S. Rodeo Dr., Ste. 250Beverly Hills, CA 902122533. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$100,000.Lindenwood University209 S. KingshighwaySt.Charles, MO 633012534. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$1,000,000.LincyLindenwoodLinehanLinehan Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.515 Fairmont Ave., Ste. 400Towson, MD 21286(410) 769-61312535. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,500.Liquidnetc/o Corporate Communications498 7th Ave.New York, NY 100182536. Various organizations. $250,000.Lithia Motorsc/o Corporate Communications360 East Jackson StreetMedford, OR 975012537. Various organizations. $100,000.LiquidnetLithiaLittauer<strong>The</strong> Lucius N. Littauer <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.60 E. 42nd St., Ste. 2910New York, NY 10165(212) 697-26772538. City Harvest, New York, NY. $2,500. Toprovide aid to local nonprofits in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks.LockheedLockheed Martin Corporation<strong>Foundation</strong>6801 Rockledge Dr.Bethesda, MD 208172539. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $1,000,000.Loewenberg <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.450 Park Ave., Ste. 2700New York, NY 10022(212) 753-41002540. Sandler O’Neill Assistance <strong>Foundation</strong>,Chatham, NJ. $2,000.Loews <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o John J. Kenny655 Madison Ave.New York, NY 10021(212) 521-2650FAX: (212) 521-26342541. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$10,000. For Families of Freedom ScholarshipFund.LoewenbergLoewsLoganE. J. Logan <strong>Foundation</strong>32 E. 64th St., Rm. 4WNew York, NY 100212542. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $1,000, 2001. For general support.LordLord Baltimore Capital Corporationc/o Corporate Communications6225 Smith Avenue ,Baltimore, MD 212092543. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.Lortel<strong>The</strong> Lucille Lortel <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o Hecht & Co., PC322 Eighth Ave., 21st FlNew York, NY 10001(212) 924-2817FAX: (212) 989-0036; E-mail: swillett@lortel.org;URL: http://www.lortel.org2544. Acting Company, New York, NY. $20,000.2545. AMAS Musical <strong>The</strong>ater, New York, NY.$15,000.2546. Atlantic <strong>The</strong>ater Company, New York, NY.$50,000.2547. Bat <strong>The</strong>ater Company, New York, NY.$20,000.2548. Blue Heron <strong>The</strong>ater, New York, NY.$10,000.2549. Cherry Lane Alternative <strong>The</strong>ater, NewYork, NY. $10,000.2550. Classic Stage Company, New York, NY.$40,000.2551. Directors Company, New York, NY.$10,000.2552. Drama Department Incorporated, NewYork, NY. $50,000.2553. Ensemble Studio <strong>The</strong>ater (EST), NewYork, NY. $20,000.2554. Fifty-Second Street Project, New York, NY.$15,000.2555. Fiji <strong>The</strong>ater Company, Los Angeles, CA.$10,000.2556. Foundry <strong>The</strong>ater, New York, NY. $15,000.2557. Inside Broadway, New York, NY. $10,000.2558. International Arts Relations (INTAR), NewYork, NY. $20,000.2559. Irish Repertory <strong>The</strong>ater Company, NewYork, NY. $30,000.2560. Irondale Ensemble Project, New York, NY.$10,000.2561. Jean Cocteau Repertory <strong>The</strong>ater, NewYork, NY. $20,000.2562. La Mama Experimental <strong>The</strong>ater Club, NewYork, NY. $10,000.2563. Lark <strong>The</strong>ater Company, New York, NY.$15,000.2564. Mabou Mines Development <strong>Foundation</strong>,New York, NY. $20,000.188


2565. Manhattan Class Company, New York, NY.$30,000.2566. Melting Pot <strong>The</strong>ater, New York, NY.$20,000.2567. Mint <strong>The</strong>atre Company, New York, NY.$20,000.2568. New Federal <strong>The</strong>ater, New York, NY.$10,000.2569. New Group, New York, NY. $25,000.2570. Ontological-Hysteric <strong>The</strong>ater, New York,NY. $20,000.2571. Open Channels New York, New York, NY.$10,000.2572. Pan Asian Repertory <strong>The</strong>ater, New York,NY. $20,000.2573. Paper Bag Players, New York, NY. $10,000.2574. Pearl <strong>The</strong>ater Company, New York, NY.$20,000.2575. Performance Space 122, New York, NY.$10,000.2576. Pick Up Performance Company, New York,NY. $10,000.2577. Pregones Touring Puerto Rican <strong>The</strong>aterCollection, Bronx, NY. $20,000.2578. Primary Stages Company, New York, NY.$15,000.2579. Repertorio Espanol, New York, NY.$50,000.2580. Signature <strong>The</strong>ater Company, New York,NY. $50,000.2581. SITI Company, New York, NY. $10,000.2582. Soho Repertory <strong>The</strong>ater, New York, NY.$25,000.2583. TADA <strong>The</strong>ater and Dance Alliance, NewYork, NY. $10,000.2584. Target Margin <strong>The</strong>ater, Brooklyn, NY.$15,000.2585. Thalia Spanish <strong>The</strong>ater, Sunnyside, NY.$10,000.2586. Urban Stages, New York, NY. $15,000.2587. Vineyard <strong>The</strong>ater and Workshop <strong>Center</strong>,New York, NY. $50,000.2588. Westbeth <strong>The</strong>ater <strong>Center</strong>. $10,000.2589. Womens Project and Productions, NewYork, NY. $30,000.2590. Wooster Group, New York, NY. $25,000.2591. York <strong>The</strong>ater Company, New York, NY.$15,000.2592. Young Playwrights, New York, NY.$25,000.<strong>The</strong> Lost Tree Village Charitable<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.<strong>11</strong>555 Lost Tree WayNorth Palm Beach, FL 33408(561) 622-3780FAX: (561) 622-7558; E-mail: ltvcfi@aol.com2593. United Way of Palm Beach County, WestPalm Beach, FL. $10,000. To meet challengegrant from Countess de Hoernle of Boca Ratonfor response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks.Lowe’s Corporate Giving ProgramHwy. 268 E.P.O. Box <strong>11</strong><strong>11</strong>North Wilkesboro, NC 28656(919) 651-40002594. American Red Cross, National, DC.$285,000. For disaster relief efforts.LostLowe’sLowensteinLowenstein Family <strong>Foundation</strong>1060 Seven Oaks Ln.Mamaroneck, NY 105432595. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $2,000. For general support.LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERLowensteinLeon Lowenstein <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.126 E. 56th St., 28th Fl.New York, NY 10022(212) 319-0670FAX: (212) 688-01342596. Undesignated. $35,000. For relief andrecovery efforts and issues related to the aftermathof <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks.LozierLozier <strong>Foundation</strong>6336 Pershing Dr.Omaha, NE 68<strong>11</strong>0-<strong>11</strong>00(402) 457-8160E-mail: bob.braun@lozier.biz2597. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000. For generaloperating support for <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.LSGLSG Skychefsc/o Corporate Communications525 East Lamar BoulevardArllington, TX 760<strong>11</strong>2598. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.LTV<strong>The</strong> LTV <strong>Foundation</strong> Charitable andEducational TrustTax Dept.200 Public Sq., Ste. 39-210Cleveland, OH 44<strong>11</strong>4-2308Application address: 200 Public Sq., Ste. 38-506,Cleveland, OH 44<strong>11</strong>4-23082599. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000. Forassistance to victims affected by events of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.LubbockLubbock Area <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.1655 Main, Ste. 202Lubbock, TX 79401(806) 762-8061FAX: (806) 762-8551; E-mail:kathy@lubbockareafoundation.org; URL: http://www.lubbockareafoundation.org2600. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000.Lubrizol<strong>The</strong> Lubrizol <strong>Foundation</strong>29400 Lakeland Blvd., No. 053AWickliffe, OH 44092-2298(440) 347-1797FAX: (440) 347-1858; E-mail: kal@lubrizol.com;URL: http://www.lubrizol.com/foundation/default.asp2601. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000. To confirm first mailing as donationtoward efforts to respond to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>terrorist attacks.2602. American Red Cross, National, DC.$21,335.<strong>The</strong> Henry Luce <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.<strong>11</strong>1 W. 50th St., Ste. 4601New York, NY 10020(212) 489-7700FAX: (212) 581-9541; E-mail: hlf@hluce.org;URL: http://www.hluce.org2603. New York Historical Society, New York,NY. $400,000, 2001.LuceLucentLucent Technologies, Inc.c/o Corporate Communications600 Mountain AvenueNew Providence, NJ 079742604. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500,000.LucentLucent Technologies <strong>Foundation</strong>600 Mountain Ave.Murray Hill, NJ 07974(908) 582-4200E-mail: foundation@lucent.com; URL: http://www.lucent.com/news/foundation/2605. American Red Cross, National, DC.$860,000, 2001.2606. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000, 2001.2607. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $616,000.2608. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500,000, 2001.Luitpold Pharmaceuticals, Inc.c/o Corporate Communications1 Luitpold DriveShirley, NY <strong>11</strong>9672609. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.M & DLuitpoldLuminaLumina <strong>Foundation</strong> for Education, Inc.P.O. Box 1806Indianapolis, IN 46206-1806(317) 951-5300FAX: (317) 951-5063; URL: http://www.luminafoundation.org2610. <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, New York, New York,NY. $25,000, 2002. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th<strong>Philanthropic</strong> <strong>Response</strong> Project.26<strong>11</strong>. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$2,000,000.2612. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$1,000,000.LutheranLutheran Community <strong>Foundation</strong>625 Fourth Avenue SouthSuite 1415Minneapolis, MN 554142613. Lutheran Social Services of MetropolitanNew York, New York, NY. $33,501. For food shelfstocking in the aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.Lynch<strong>The</strong> Gerard P. Lynch Family <strong>Foundation</strong>80 Tortoise WayVero Beach, FL 32963FAX: (561) 234-25572614. Rescue 2 Family Fund, Brooklyn, NY.$5,000.LyndhurstLyndhurst <strong>Foundation</strong>517 E. 5th St.Chattanooga, TN 37403-1826(423) 756-0767FAX: (423) 756-0770; E-mail:jmurrah@lyndhurstfoundation.org; URL: http://www.lyndhurstfoundation.org2615. United Way of Greater Chattanooga,Chattanooga, TN. $60,000. For New York reliefeffort in response to terrorist attacks of <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th and for Invest in Children project inChattanooga.M & DM & D Relief Fundc/o Murphy & Durieu120 BroadwayNew York, NY 102712616. Individual beneficiaries. $275,700, 2002. Tosupport twent-three individuals and two charitablefoundations providing support to the families ofvictims of the terrorist attack on the World Trae<strong>Center</strong> on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.189


MacArthurSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEMacArthurJohn D. and Catherine T. MacArthur<strong>Foundation</strong>140 S. Dearborn St., Ste. <strong>11</strong>00Chicago, IL 60603-5285(312) 726-8000FAX: (312) 920-6258; E-mail:4answers@macfound.org; TDD: (312) 920-6285;URL: http://www.macfound.org2617. American Civil Liberties Union<strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY. $250,000. Towardwork to protect civil liberties in wake of the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks. Activities include outreach,litigation and legal analysis focused on rights ofArab-Americans, immigrants, and those detainedin connection with attacks.2618. Aspen Institute, DC. $300,000, 2001.Toward series of seminars for key members ofCongress from both parties on issues related to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks. Institute also sponsoredin-depth congressional conference in January onIslam, terrorism, and the U.S.2619. Brookings Institution, DC. $150,000. Toresearch broader foreign policy and securityimplications of terrorist attacks on U.S. policytoward Islamic world, with particular interest inexamining causes of Islamic extremism andopposition to U.S. Second project will study howU.S. can protect itself from external and internalattack while imposing fewest costs on Americaneconomy and way of life.2620. Carnegie Endowment for InternationalPeace, DC. $130,000, 2001. Toward projectsaddressing security issues in southern Eurasia,defined as Muslim regions of Russia and states ofCaucuses and Central Asia. Activities includingbringing visiting scholars from the region toCarnegie staff and examining how experience ofnuclear threat reduction cooperation between U.S.and Russian states may be modified to avertpotential nuclear crisis in Pakistan.2621. <strong>Center</strong> on Budget and Policy Priorities,DC. $250,000, 2001. To study how recentterrorist attacks on America have affectedgovernment spending. <strong>Center</strong> will make policyrecommendations about managing nationalsecurity-related pressures on federal and statebudgets on social programs.2622. Century <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$250,000. To establish task force that will analyzeand issue recommendations on mission, structure,and strategy of new Office of Homeland Security.Initiative will focus on long-term strategies forbetter protecting nation against future attackswhile preserving fundamental character ofAmerican life.2623. Chicago Council on Foreign Relations,Chicago, IL. $100,000, 2001. Toward publiceducation and networking related to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>attacks. Council also is organizing task force toassess and discuss implications of attacks onChicago, with special emphasis on including ArabAmerican and other immigrant communities inthe activities.2624. Council on Foreign Relations, New York,NY. $50,000. Toward programs related to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks. Activities include task forceon America’s response to terrorism, roundtablediscussions, and relevant publications.2625. Crossroads Fund, Chicago, IL. $20,000.Toward Critical <strong>Response</strong> Fund, which makesgrants to Chicago-area organizations working todefend civil rights and combat racism and hatecrimes. Particular attention is paid to fundingorganizations that work closely with immigrantgroups, especially those serving immigrants whosehomelands are currently in the midst of hostilities.2626. Heartland Alliance for Human Needs andHuman Rights, Chicago, IL. $75,000. TowardMidwest Immigrant and Human Rights <strong>Center</strong>,which has increased services in wake of theterrorist attacks. <strong>Center</strong> is developingmulti-lingual education materials on legal rights,coordinating outreach services for immigrants andrefugees in Chicago, conducting Know YourRights presentations, and monitoring detentionpractices through visit to jails in Illinois andWisconsin.2627. Human Rights Watch, New York, NY.$250,000, 2001. Toward efforts to monitorrefugee flows and the effects of hostilities oncivilian populations in sensitive areas abroad.Organization will also work in U.S. to monitorpossible adverse impacts on Muslim and otherethnic groups.2628. Institute for War and Peace Reporting,London, England. $130,000, 2001. For projectlinking journalists and analysts from Afghanistan,Pakistan, Iran, and central Asian states doingindependent reporting and analysis.2629. International Crisis Group (Belgium),Brussels, Belgium. $400,000, 2001. For projecttitled, Building Sustainable International DefensesAgainst Terrorism. Work will explore steps neededto preserve stability of states and regions inCentral and Southwest Asia.2630. International Peace Academy, New York,NY. $100,000. For policy research on role ofUnited Nations in addressing terrorism. Becausepast terrorist acts have often been perceived asdomestic in nature, U.N. as an international bodyhas not had to develop mechanisms to combatterrorism and political violence. Project supportsworkshops on terrorism and ways that U.N. canhelp sustain broadly supported response by theinternational community.2631. International Rescue Committee, NewYork, NY. $250,000. For activities on behalf ofrefugees and internationally displaced persons inAfghanistan and Pakistan. Work will include relief,protection, and resettlement services andmonitoring of relief efforts.2632. Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD.$15,000. For Watermark Project: Democratizationof Water Resource Management in Brazil.2633. Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights UnderLaw, Chicago, IL. $65,000, 2001. For workdesigned to reduce incidence of hate crime andlikely landlord and employer discriminationtoward people of Middle Eastern ancestry.2634. Lawyers Committee for Human Rights,New York, NY. $100,000. For project to preservecore democratic values in the face of terrorism.Work will focus on detention of non-citizens anduse of military tribunals following <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>attacks.2635. Lichtenstein Creative Media, New York,NY. $100,000. Toward distribution of MentalHealth in Troubled Times, educational kit drawnfrom <strong>The</strong> Intimate Mind documentary televisionprograms covering all aspects of mental healthrelating to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks and theiraftermath. Another initiative, America’s State ofMind, is two-hour town meeting that will bebroadcast on public radio stations worldwide.2636. Lumiere Productions, New York, NY.$50,000. Toward documentary film, Caught in theCrossfire, film about changing lives ofArab-Americans in New York as result of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks.2637. Mental Health Association, National,Alexandria, VA. $150,000. For project to improvecommunity responses to trauma, grief and relatedmental health needs and coordination of servicesto meet those needs. Result, Blueprint forResponding to Public Mental Health Needs inTimes of Crisis, and companion training program,will provide guidance on crisis response planning,budgetary issues, needs of children, and long-termmental health needs following a disaster.2638. Monterey Institute of International Studies,Monterey, CA. $100,000, 2001. Toward work toassess risk that weapons of mass destruction,including chemical and biological weapons, mightmove out of weakened state and into hands ofterrorists. Institute also will monitor effectivenessof ongoing U.S. government efforts to reform andrationalize more than 40 federal agencies involvedin responding to terrorist incidents, including newOffice of Homeland Security.2639. National Academy of Sciences, DC.$150,000. To accelerate efforts to reduce dangerof nuclear weapon use by terrorist organizations.Work specifically addresses aspects of accountingfor, monitoring, and protecting nuclear weaponsand materials in Russia, as well as stabilization ofcommunity of nuclear weapons scientists andtechnologists in Russia.2640. National Opinion Research <strong>Center</strong>,Chicago, IL. $220,000, 2001. Toward Public<strong>Response</strong> to a National Tragedy, research projectto learn how individuals readjust their lives inaftermath of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks and howthey react to additional events associated withactions taken against terrorism. Project builds onpast surveys of public reaction to previousdisasters.2641. National Public Radio, DC. $400,000,2001. For expanded news coverage on U.S.campaign against terrorism. Grant supports staff,travel, communications, and equipment incurredin providing comprehensive reporting to meetaudience demand for information.2642. National Security Archive Fund, DC.$200,000, 2001. Toward research, analysis, andpublic education to protect civil liberties. Projectbrings together coalition of organizations focusingon issues raised by new legislation designed tocombat terrorism.2643. National Video Resources, New York, NY.$65,000. Toward After 9/<strong>11</strong>, video collectionpromoting knowledge, understanding, andtolerance. Documentary films selected forcollection will include works on Arab world,Arab-American and East Indian communities inthe U.S., and best practices in organizing againstintolerance and hatred, and relevant films made byand about young people.2644. Physicians for Human Rights, Boston, MA.$200,000, 2001. To send three two-person teamsto Afghanistan region to monitor and documenthuman rights situation there, with view towardhelping movement of food, medicine, and shelterto refugees.2645. University of London, Cambridge,England. $150,000. For project to draw onEuropean experience in counter terrorist activitiesand to assess capabilities for coordinated actionamong European countries and U.S. Helping tobring varying national policies and practices intoalignment will significantly contribute to thesuccessful investigation and prosecution ofterrorists.2646. WGBH Educational <strong>Foundation</strong>, Boston,MA. $500,000, 2001. Toward Frontline’sexpanded programming in aftermath of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks. Documentary seriessignificantly increased number of hours on air toaccommodate new, original programs andadditional independent productions from aroundthe world.MacyJosiah Macy, Jr. <strong>Foundation</strong>44 E. 64th St.New York, NY 10021(212) 486-2424FAX: (212) 644-0765; E-mail:jmacyinfo@josiahmacyfoundation.org; URL: http://www.josiahmacyfoundation.org2647. American Red Cross in Greater New York,New York, NY. $25,000.2648. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.190


MaddoxJ. F Maddox <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 2588Hobbs, NM 88241-2588(505) 393-6338FAX: (505) 397-7266; URL: http://www.jfmaddox.org/2649. American Red Cross, National, DC.$13,000. For 9<strong>11</strong> Disaster Relief Fund.2650. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $2,000.MadisonMadison County Community <strong>Foundation</strong>33 W. 10th St.P.O. Box 1056Anderson, IN 46015-1056(765) 644-0002E-mail: mccf@madisonccf.org; URL: http://www.madisonccf.org2651. Undesignated. $600.Maine<strong>The</strong> Maine Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.245 Main St.Ellsworth, ME 04605(207) 667-9735Portland mailing address: 1 Monument Way, Ste.200, P.O. Box 7380, Portland, ME 04<strong>11</strong>2;Additional tels.: (207) 761-2440, (877) 700-6800;FAX: (207) 667-0447; E-mail: info@mainecf.org;grants@mainecf.org; URL: http://www.mainecf.org/2652. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $7,000.Major League Baseball245 Park AvenueNew York, NY 101672653. MLB-MLBPA Disaster Relief Fund, NewYork, NY. $5,000,000.Major League Baseball PlayersAssociationc/o Corporate Communications12 East 49th StreetNew York, NY 100172654. MLB-MLBPA Disaster Relief Fund, NewYork, NY. $5,000,000.MajorMajorManagementManagement Consultants for the ArtsNew York, NY2655. New York <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Arts, NewYork, NY. $3,000. For New York Arts RecoveryFund.MandalayMandalay Resort Groupc/o Corporate Communications3950 Las Vegas Blvd. SouthLas Vegas, NV 89<strong>11</strong>92656. Undesignated. $1,000,000. For the familiesof fallen police and firefighters.M & T Bankc/o Corporate CommunicationsP.O. Box 4649Buffalo, NY 142402657. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.Manulife Financial Corporationc/o Corporate Communications73 Tremont St.Boston, MA 021082658. Various organizations. $500,000.M&TManulifeLIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERMarathonMarathon Oil Company ContributionsProgram539 South Main St.Findlay, OH 45840(419) 422-21212659. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.2660. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $50,000.2661. Kansas Chamber Education <strong>Foundation</strong>,Topeka, KS. $200,000.2662. New York State World Trade <strong>Center</strong> ReliefFund, Albany, NY. $150,000.MarathonMarathon Oil <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.539 South Main St., Rm. 830-MFindlay, OH 45840(419) 422-21212663. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.2664. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $50,000.2665. Kansas Chamber Education <strong>Foundation</strong>,Topeka, KS. $200,000.2666. New York State World Trade <strong>Center</strong> ReliefFund, Albany, NY. $150,000.MarcusGrace R. and Allan D. Marcus <strong>Foundation</strong>7 W. 81st St., Apt. 5BNew York, NY 10024-60492667. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $5,000. For unrestricted support.Marriott<strong>The</strong> J. Willard and Alice S. Marriott<strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 150Washington, DC 200582668. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000. For program support.2669. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $1,000,000. For MarriottAssociates Assistance Fund for recovery effortsfollowing <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks.2670. Washington Redskins Leadership Council,DC. $10,000. For Redskins Relief Fund to benefitvictims of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks and theirfamilies.MarshMarsh & McLennan Companies, Inc.Corporate Giving Programc/o Grant Requests<strong>11</strong>66 Ave. of the AmericasNew York, NY 10036-2774FAX: (212) 345-48382671. MMC Victims Relief Fund, New York, NY.$10,000,000.<strong>The</strong> Marvin <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Bank of America10 Light St., MD4-302-17-06Baltimore, MD 21202-1435Application address: c/o 5550 Friendship Blvd.,Chevy Chase, MD 20815, tel.: (301) 986-67162672. American Red Cross, DC Chapter, DC.$8,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> relief.<strong>The</strong> William Marx <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o H.J. Behrman & Co., LLP2 Penn Plz., Ste. 1970New York, NY 101212673. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $10,000.MarvinMarxMattelMaslin<strong>The</strong> Lucille and Paul Maslin <strong>Foundation</strong>,Inc.61 Broadway, 19th Fl.New York, NY 10006-27942674. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $10,000. For general support.Mason<strong>The</strong> Carlos and Marguerite Mason Fundc/o Wachovia Bank of Georgia, N.A.191 Peachtree St., N.E.Atlanta, GA 30303(404) 332-6677E-mail: grantinquiries@wachovia.com; URL: http://www.wachovia.com/privatefoundations2675. American Red Cross, Metropolitan AtlantaChapter, Atlanta, GA. $25,000, 2001. Topurchase freezers for blood storage, related to theblood shortage in Georgia in the aftermath of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.MassachusettsMassachusetts Association of RealtorsCharitable and Educational <strong>Foundation</strong>256 Second AvenueWaltham, MA 024512676. National Association of Realtors, Chicago,IL. $15,000.MassachusettsMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyOffice of the ArtsCambridge, MA2677. Skyscraper Museum, New York, NY.$45,000. To enable the conservation of the onlyextant architectural model of the World Trade<strong>Center</strong> Complex.MassMutualMassMutual Financial Group CorporateGiving Programc/o Community Rels., F0951295 State St.Springfield, MA 0<strong>11</strong><strong>11</strong>-0001(860) 987-2085E-mail: rrose@massmutual.com; Applicationaddress for Hartford, CT: c/o Community Rels.,H356, 1295 State St., Springfield, MA0<strong>11</strong><strong>11</strong>-0001; URL: http://www.massmutual.com/mmfg/about/community.html2678. MassMutual <strong>Foundation</strong> of Hartford, Inc.,Hartford, CT. $121,397.MassMutual<strong>The</strong> MassMutual <strong>Foundation</strong> forHartford, Inc.c/o MassMutual Financial Group, CommunityRels.140 Garden St., H356Hartford, CT 06154(860) 987-2085Application address: 1295 State St., H356,Springfield, MA 0<strong>11</strong><strong>11</strong>-00012679. MassMutual <strong>Foundation</strong> of Hartford, Inc.,Hartford, CT. $100,000.Mast-JagermeisterMast-Jagermeister AGc/o Corporate CommunicationsJagermeisterstrabe 7 -15, Salzdahlumer road 46/48Wolfenbuettel, Germany 382962680. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $500,000.MattelMattel, Inc. Corporate Giving Program333 Continental Blvd.El Segundo, CA 902452681. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000.2682. Various organizations. $85,000.191


MaySEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE<strong>The</strong> May Department Stores Company<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.6<strong>11</strong> Olive St., Ste. 1350St. Louis, MO 63101-1799(314) 342-6299FAX: (314) 342-44612683. American Red Cross, National, DC.$400,000.2684. American Red Cross, National, DC.$37,898. For general support for <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>threlief.2685. American Red Cross, National, DC.$25,543. For general support for <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>threlief.MayMaytagMaytag Corporation <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 39403 W. 4th St. N.Newton, IA 50208-0039(641) 787-63572686. American Red Cross, National, DC.$42,925, 2001.2687. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $24,756, 2001.2688. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $20,000, 2001.Mazda<strong>The</strong> Mazda <strong>Foundation</strong> (USA), Inc.1025 Connecticut Ave. N.W., Ste. 910Washington, DC 20036FAX: (202) 223-6490; E-mail:bnocera@mazdausa.com; URL: http://www.mazdafoundation.org/2689. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $20,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.MBIAMBIA, Inc.c/o Corporate Communications13 King StreetArmonk, NY 105042690. Big Brothers/Big Sisters of New York City,New York, NY. $500,000, 2001.2691. Graifman Scholarship Fund, D.M.,Chestnut Ridge, NY. $18,600, 2001.2692. Undesignated. $1,480,000.MBNAMBNA America Bank, N.A. CorporateGiving Programc/o Community Rels. Dept.<strong>11</strong>00 N. King St.Wilmington, DE 19884-0713(800) 362-62552693. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $3,000, 2001.2694. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$1,000,000.McBeanAlletta Morris McBean Charitable Trust400 S. El Camino Real, Ste. 777San Mateo, CA 94402(650) 558-8480FAX: (605) 558-8481; E-mail:McBeanProperties@worldnet.att.net2695. American Red Cross, Newport Chapter,Newport, RI. $100,000, 2001. For relief offamilies of those who lost their lives in the disasterin New York on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.McCaw<strong>The</strong> Craig and Susan McCaw <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 2908Kirkland, WA 98083-29082696. Live Brave Coalition, Schaumburg, IL.$100,000.McConnell<strong>The</strong> McConnell <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 492050Redding, CA 96049-2050(530) 226-6200FAX: (530) 226-6210; E-mail:info@mcconnellfoundation.org; URL: http://www.mcconnellfoundation.org2697. Shasta Regional Community <strong>Foundation</strong>,Redding, CA. $10,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.McCormickRobert R. McCormick Tribune <strong>Foundation</strong>435 N. Michigan Ave., Ste. 770Chicago, IL 606<strong>11</strong>(312) 222-3512FAX: (312) 222-3523; E-mail: rrmtf@tribune.com;URL: http://www.rrmtf.org2698. Robert R. McCormick Tribune <strong>Foundation</strong>,Chicago, IL. $2,500,000. For grants to non-profitorganizations providing services to victims of the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks, their families, and thosein the community who were impacted.McCuneMcCune Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>345 E. Alameda St.Santa Fe, NM 87501-2229(505) 983-8300FAX: (505) 983-7887; E-mail:info@nmmccune.org; URL: http://www.nmmccune.org2699. YouthWorks, Santa Fe, NM. $30,000. Forgeneral operating support and emergency fundingto provide grief support services to Santa Fe areayouth related to terrorist attacks on the UnitedStates.2700. YouthWorks, Santa Fe, NM. $5,500, 2001.McDonald’s Corporation Charitable<strong>Foundation</strong>1 Kroc Dr.Oak Brook, IL 605232701. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.McDonald’sMcEnroeJohn McEnroe <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Burton Goldstein & Co., LLC156 W. 56th St.New York, NY 100192702. Greater Richmond Chapter of theAmerican Red Cross, Richmond, VA. $25,000.For 9/<strong>11</strong> Disaster Relief For general support.2703. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $25,000. For general support.2704. Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$25,000. For general support.2705. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$25,000. For general support.McFeelyMcFeely-Rogers <strong>Foundation</strong><strong>11</strong>10 Ligonier St., Ste. 300P.O. Box <strong>11</strong>0Latrobe, PA 15650-0<strong>11</strong>0(724) 537-5588FAX: (724) 537-55892706. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000.2707. Various organizations. $2,000. To supportlocal nonprofits with national 9/<strong>11</strong> reliefprograms.McGregor Fund333 W. Fort St., Ste. 2090Detroit, MI 48226-3134(313) 963-3495FAX: (313) 963-3512; E-mail:info@mcgregorfund.org; URL: http://www.mcgregorfund.org2708. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.McGregorMCI <strong>Foundation</strong>22001 Loudoun County Pkwy.Bldg. G1-3-<strong>11</strong>0Ashburn, VA 20147(703) 886-2356FAX: (703) 886-0094; URL: http://www.marcopolo-education.org/about/mci_foundation.aspx2709. American Red Cross, National, DC.$250,000.MCIMcInernyMcInerny <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Bank of Hawaii130 Merchant St.Honolulu, HI 96813(808) 538-4944FAX: (808) 538-4006; Mailing address: P.O. Box3170, Honolulu, HI 96802-3170; E-mail:pboyce@boh.com2710. Catholic Charities of Honolulu, Honolulu,HI. $50,000, 2002.27<strong>11</strong>. Catholic Charities of Honolulu, Honolulu,HI. $37,500, 2001.2712. Hawaii Foodbank, Honolulu, HI. $37,500,2001.2713. Hawaii Island Food Bank, Hilo, HI.$10,000, 2001.2714. Institute for Human Services, Honolulu,HI. $50,000, 2002.2715. Institute for Human Services, Honolulu,HI. $37,500, 2001.2716. Kauai Food Bank, Lihue, HI. $10,000,2001.2717. Maui Food Bank, Kahului, HI. $10,000,2001.2718. Pacific Gateway <strong>Center</strong>, Honolulu, HI.$20,000, 2002.2719. Salvation Army of Hawaiian Islands,Honolulu, HI. $50,000, 2002. (Oahu).2720. Salvation Army of Hawaiian Islands,Honolulu, HI. $37,500, 2001.2721. Salvation Army of Hawaiian Islands,Honolulu, HI. $20,000, 2002. (Maui).2722. United Way, Aloha, Honolulu, HI.$200,000, 2002.2723. Women Helping Women, Wailuku, HI.$30,000, 2002.2724. Women in Need (WIN), Waimanalo, HI.$20,000, 2002.2725. YWCA of Kauai, Lihue, HI. $20,000, 2002.<strong>The</strong> Robert and Janice McNair<strong>Foundation</strong>5 Post Oak Park4400 Post Oak Pkwy., Ste. 1400Houston, TX 770272726. Sandler O’Neill Assistance <strong>Foundation</strong>,Chatham, NJ. $250,000.McNairMcNeely<strong>The</strong> McNeely <strong>Foundation</strong>444 Pine St.St. Paul, MN 55101(651) 228-45032727. American Red Cross, National, DC.$2,191.2728. Blake Schools, Hopkins, MN. $5,000.2729. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $2,674.2730. LCMS World Relief, Saint Louis, MO.$150.2731. Mercy Corps International, Portland, OR.$50.2732. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,666.2733. New York State Fraternal Order of PoliceFund, Hicksville, NY. $1,072.192


2734. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $1,780.MDCMDC Holdings, Inc./Richmond America3600 S. Yosemite StreetDenver, CO 802372735. National Housing Endowment, DC.$1,000,000.<strong>The</strong> Mead Corporation <strong>Foundation</strong>Courthouse Plz. N.E.Dayton, OH 45463(937) 495-3031URL: http://www.mead.com/am/cc_frset.html2736. American Red Cross, National, DC.$309,570. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th disaster relieffund.MeadMeadows<strong>The</strong> Meadows <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.Wilson Historic District3003 Swiss Ave.Dallas, TX 75204-6090(214) 826-94312737. American Red Cross, Dallas Area Chapter,Dallas, TX. $188,500, 2001.2738. Salvation Army of Dallas, Dallas, TX.$150,000, 2001.2739. Texas Baptist Men, Dallas, TX. $38,500,2001.Medtronic<strong>The</strong> Medtronic <strong>Foundation</strong>710 Medtronic Pkwy.Minneapolis, MN 55432-5604(763) 514-4000FAX: (763) 505-2648; URL: http://www.medtronic.com/foundation2740. American Red Cross, Minneapolis,Minneapolis, MN. $200,000. For disaster relief.2741. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.2742. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$500,000.MellonMellon Financial Corporation Fund1 Mellon Ctr., Ste. 1830Pittsburgh, PA 15258-0001(412) 234-27322743. American Red Cross, Delaware,Wilmington, DE. $2,500.2744. American Red Cross, National, DC.$78,887. For Disaster Relief Fund.2745. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000, 2001.2746. American Society for the Prevention ofCruelty to Animals, New York, NY. $500.2747. AmeriCares <strong>Foundation</strong>, New Canaan, CT.$200.2748. Arizona Republic Charities, Tempe, AZ.$200.2749. Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund, New York,NY. $1,190.2750. CARE, Atlanta, GA. $75.2751. Catholic Charities of the Diocese ofPittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA. $180.2752. Catholic Charities USA, Alexandria, VA.$1,150.2753. Clear Channel Communications, SanAntonio, TX. $100.2754. Crossway Christian <strong>Center</strong>, Bronx, NY.$400.2755. Daily News Charities, New York, NY. $50.2756. Delaware Volunteer Firemen’s Association,Dover, DE. $100.2757. Engine No. 22/Ladder No. 13 Family Fund,New York, NY. $500.LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDER2758. Federal Drug Agents <strong>Foundation</strong>,Cedarhurst, NY. $50.2759. Garden City Community Fund, GardenCity, NY. $700.2760. Howard Stern Relief Fund, New York, NY.$630.2761. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $6,260.2762. LCMS World Relief, Saint Louis, MO.$150.2763. Leary Firefighters <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York,NY. $135.2764. Leonard Hatton Family Fund, NewRochelle, NY. $200.2765. Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles, CA.$250.2766. Lutheran Brotherhood, Greensburg, PA.$100.2767. Marin Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, Larkspur,CA. $150.2768. New York City Police <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewYork, NY. $25.2769. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000, 2001.2770. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $86,901. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.2771. New York Fire Safety <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewYork, NY. $25.2772. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $1,853.2773. New York State Fraternal Order of PoliceFund, Hicksville, NY. $650.2774. New York State World Trade <strong>Center</strong> ReliefFund, Albany, NY. $6,472.2775. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $2,350.2776. Orthodox Church in America, Syosset, NY.$270.2777. Robert R. McCormick Tribune <strong>Foundation</strong>,Chicago, IL. $875.2778. Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$100.2779. Rotary <strong>Foundation</strong> of New York, New York,NY. $30.2780. Saint Gregory Episcopal Church, Hamilton,NJ. $100.2781. Saint Sebastian Parish Association,Woodside, NY. $250.2782. Salvation Army of Western Pennsylvania,Pittsburgh, PA. $25,030. For Disaster ReliefFund.2783. Save the Children Federation, Westport,CT. $250.2784. Thiel College, Greenville, PA. $325.2785. Trentini Memorial Fund, Rowley Mall,MA. $25.2786. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY. $2,100.2787. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $665.2788. UNICEF, New York, NY. $30.2789. Union of American Hebrew Congregations,New York, NY. $250.2790. Union of American Hebrew Congregations,New York, NY. $18.2791. United Methodist Committee on Relief,New York, NY. $75.2792. United Service Organization ofMetropolitan Washington, Fort Myer, VA. $356.2793. Various organizations. $225,780.2794. Wallingford Presbyterian Church,Wallingford, CT. $200.2795. Washington County Department of PublicSafety, Washington, PA. $25.Mellon2796. Washington Family Relief Fund, DC. $100.2797. West Islip School District, West Islip, NY.$50.Mellon<strong>The</strong> Andrew W. Mellon <strong>Foundation</strong>140 E. 62nd St.New York, NY 10021(212) 838-8400FAX: (212) 223-2778; URL: http://www.mellon.org2798. Aaron Davis Hall, New York, NY. $50,000,2002.2799. Actors Fund of America, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002.2800. Alan Guttmacher Institute, New York, NY.$30,000, 2001. For New York disaster response.2801. Alley Pond Environmental <strong>Center</strong>,Douglaston, NY. $75,000, 2002.2802. Alliance of Resident <strong>The</strong>aters/New York(ART/NY), New York, NY. $2,650,000, 2001. Toprovide grants to small and mid-sized performingarts organizations.2803. Alliance of Resident <strong>The</strong>aters/New York(ART/NY), New York, NY. $35,000, 2002.2804. Alvin Ailey Dance <strong>The</strong>ater <strong>Foundation</strong>,New York, NY. $350,000, 2002.2805. American Craft Museum, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002.2806. American Federation of Arts, New York,NY. $150,000, 2002.2807. American Museum of Natural History,New York, NY. $1,750,000, 2002.2808. American Museum of the Moving Image,Astoria, NY. $200,000, 2002.2809. American Music <strong>Center</strong>, New York, NY.$2,650,000, 2001. To provide grants to small andmid-sized performing arts organizations.2810. American Music <strong>Center</strong>, New York, NY.$35,000, 2002.28<strong>11</strong>. American Symphony Orchestra League,New York, NY. $100,000, 2002.2812. Amigos del Museo del Barrio, New York,NY. $600,000, 2002.2813. Amigos del Museo del Barrio, New York,NY. $200,000, 2002.2814. Apollo <strong>The</strong>ater <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002.2815. Asia Society, New York, NY. $450,000,2002.2816. Asia Society, New York, NY. $100,000,2002.2817. Ballet <strong>The</strong>ater <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$1,000,000, 2002.2818. Big Apple Circus, New York, NY.$200,000, 2002.2819. Bronx Museum of the Arts, Bronx, NY.$275,000.2820. Bronx Museum of the Arts, Bronx, NY.$50,000, 2002.2821. Brooklyn Academy of Music, Brooklyn, NY.$1,000,000, 2002.2822. Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Brooklyn, NY.$300,000, 2002.2823. Brooklyn Childrens Museum, Brooklyn,NY. $225,000, 2002.2824. Brooklyn Information and Culture,Brooklyn, NY. $100,000, 2002.2825. Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences,Brooklyn, NY. $1,500,000, 2002.2826. Brooklyn Public Library, Brooklyn, NY.$867,000, 2002.2827. Carnegie Hall Corporation, New York, NY.$500,000, 2002.2828. Central Park Conservancy, New York, NY.$300,000, 2002.193


MellonSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE2829. Chamber Music Society of Lincoln <strong>Center</strong>,New York, NY. $50,000, 2002.2830. Children’s Museum of Manhattan, NewYork, NY. $225,000, 2002.2831. City <strong>Center</strong> Fifty-Fifth Street <strong>The</strong>ater<strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY. $35,000, 2002.2832. City Parks <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$1,000,000, 2002.2833. City Parks <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$750,000, 2002.2834. City Parks <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$300,000, 2002.2835. College Art Association, New York, NY.$50,000, 2002.2836. College Community Services, Brooklyn,NY. $25,000, 2002.2837. Conservancy for Historic Battery Park,New York, NY. $400,000, 2002.2838. Council on Arts & Humanities for StatenIsland Film Video Arts, Inc., Staten Island, NY.$20,000, 2002.2839. Cunningham Dance <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewYork, NY. $25,000, 2002.2840. Dahesh Museum, New York, NY. $50,000,2002.2841. Dance <strong>The</strong>ater of Harlem, New York, NY.$700,000, 2002.2842. Dia <strong>Center</strong> for the Arts, New York, NY.$275,000, 2002.2843. Discalced, Inc., Brooklyn, NY. $175,000,2002.2844. Drawing <strong>Center</strong>, New York, NY. $185,000,2002.2845. Drawing <strong>Center</strong>, New York, NY. $40,000,2002.2846. Educational Broadcasting Corporation,New York, NY. $500,000, 2002.2847. Elaine Kaufman Cultural <strong>Center</strong>, NewYork, NY. $75,000, 2002.2848. Eldridge Street Project, New York, NY.$15,000, 2002.2849. Frick Collection, New York, NY. $270,000,2002.2850. Green Guerillas, New York, NY. $80,000,2002.2851. Greenbelt Conservancy, Staten Island, NY.$60,000, 2002.2852. Harlem School of the Arts, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002.2853. Henry Street Settlement, New York, NY.$150,000, 2002.2854. InterAction/American Council forVoluntary International Action, DC. $140,000,2001. For New York disaster response.2855. International <strong>Center</strong> of Photography, NewYork, NY. $200,000, 2002.2856. International Print <strong>Center</strong> New York, NewYork, NY. $50,000, 2002.2857. International Rescue Committee, NewYork, NY. $65,000, 2001. For New York disasterresponse.2858. Intrepid Museum <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York,NY. $100,000, 2002.2859. Isabel ONeil <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Art of thePainted Finish, New York, NY. $50,000, 2002.2860. Jacques Marchais <strong>Center</strong> of Tibetan Art,Staten Island, NY. $130,000, 2002.2861. Jazz at Lincoln <strong>Center</strong>, New York, NY.$300,000, 2002.2862. Jewish Museum, New York, NY. $740,000,2002.2863. Joyce <strong>The</strong>ater <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002.2864. Kings Majestic Corporation, Brooklyn, NY.$240,000, 2002.2865. Lehman College <strong>Center</strong> for the PerformingArts, Bronx, NY. $50,000, 2002.2866. Lincoln <strong>Center</strong> for the Performing Arts,New York, NY. $500,000, 2002.2867. Lower East Side Tenement Museum, NewYork, NY. $300,000, 2002.2868. Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, NewYork, NY. $1,000,000, 2002.2869. Manhattan <strong>The</strong>ater Club, New York, NY.$450,000, 2002.2870. Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston,MA. $140,000, 2001. For New York disasterresponse through the Harvard Program in refugeetrauma.2871. Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston,MA. $65,000, 2001. For the New York disasterresponse.2872. Mercy Corps International, Portland, OR.$25,000, 2001.2873. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York,NY. $1,750,000, 2002.2874. Metropolitan Opera Association, New York,NY. $250,000, 2002.2875. Museum for African Art, Long Island City,NY. $250,000, 2002.2876. Museum of American Financial History,New York, NY. $30,000, 2002.2877. Museum of American Folk Art, New York,NY. $275,000, 2002.2878. Museum of American Folk Art, New York,NY. $200,000, 2002.2879. Museum of Jewish Heritage, New York, NY.$140,000, 2002.2880. Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY.$1,750,000, 2002.2881. Museum of the City of New York, NewYork, NY. $600,000, 2002.2882. National Academy of Design, New York,NY. $300,000, 2002.2883. New Museum of Contemporary Art, NewYork, NY. $650,000, 2002.2884. New York Academy of Art, New York, NY.$125,000, 2002.2885. New York Botanical Garden, Bronx, NY.$650,000, 2002.2886. New York City Ballet, New York, NY.$400,000, 2002.2887. New York City Opera, New York, NY.$400,000, 2002.2888. New York <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Arts, NewYork, NY. $2,650,000, 2001. To support small andmid-sized performing arts groups.2889. New York <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Arts, NewYork, NY. $35,000, 2002.2890. New York Hall of Science, Corona, NY.$200,000, 2002.2891. New York Public Library, New York, NY.$1,185,000, 2002.2892. New York Public Library, New York, NY.$732,500, 2002.2893. New York Restoration Project, New York,NY. $300,000, 2002.2894. New York Shakespeare Festival, New York,NY. $200,000, 2002.2895. New York Studio School of Drawing,Painting and Sculpture, New York, NY. $85,000,2002.2896. New York University Medical <strong>Center</strong><strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY. $25,000, 2002.2897. New Yorkers for Parks, New York, NY.$300,000, 2002.2898. New 42nd Street, New York, NY. $825,000,2002.2899. Paul Taylor Dance <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York,NY. $125,000, 2002.2900. Philharmonic Symphony Society of NewYork, New York, NY. $250,000, 2002.2901. Pierpont Morgan Library, New York, NY.$225,000, 2002.2902. Playwrights Horizons, New York, NY.$175,000, 2002.2903. Poets House, New York, NY. $25,000,2002.2904. Prospect Park Alliance, Brooklyn, NY.$300,000, 2002.2905. Queens Borough Public Library, Jamaica,NY. $838,000, 2002.2906. Queens Botanical Garden Society, Flushing,NY. $150,000, 2002.2907. Queens Council on the Arts, Woodhaven,NY. $40,000, 2002.2908. Queens Museum of Art, Flushing, NY.$150,000, 2002.2909. Randalls Island Sports <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewYork, NY. $100,000, 2002.2910. Riverside Park Fund, New York, NY.$85,000, 2002.29<strong>11</strong>. Roundabout <strong>The</strong>ater Company, New York,NY. $675,000, 2002.2912. Save the Children Federation, Westport,CT. $64,000, 2001.2913. Second Stage <strong>The</strong>ater, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002.2914. Smithsonian Institution, DC. $750,000,2002.2915. Smithsonian Institution, DC. $750,000,2002.2916. Solomon R. Guggenheim <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewYork, NY. $150,000, 2002.2917. Sons of the Revolution in the State of NewYork, New York, NY. $150,000, 2002.2918. South Street Seaport Museum, New York,NY. $350,000, 2002.2919. Staten Island Botanical Garden, StatenIsland, NY. $100,000, 2002.2920. Staten Island Childrens Museum, StatenIsland, NY. $225,000, 2002.2921. Staten Island Historical Society, StatenIsland, NY. $150,000, 2002.2922. Staten Island Zoological Society, StatenIsland, NY. $25,000, 2002.2923. Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, NY.$600,000, 2002.2924. Symphony Space, New York, NY.$150,000, 2002.2925. <strong>The</strong>ater Development Fund (TDF), NewYork, NY. $200,000, 2002.2926. <strong>The</strong>aterworks/USA, New York, NY.$150,000, 2002.2927. Town Hall <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$75,000, 2002.2928. University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia,PA. $150,000, 2001. For New York disasterresponse.2929. Vivian Beaumont <strong>The</strong>ater, New York, NY.$675,000, 2002.2930. Wave Hill, Bronx, NY. $200,000, 2002.2931. Whitney Museum of American Art, NewYork, NY. $1,500,000, 2002.2932. Wildlife Conservation Society, Bronx, NY.$300,000, 2002.Mercantile Bankshares Corp.c/o Corporate Communications2 Hopkins PlazaBaltimore, MD 212032933. American Red Cross, National, DC.$55,000. To match gifts to the American RedCross Disaster Relief Fund.Mercantile194


Mercer<strong>The</strong> Johnny Mercer <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Prager and Fenton675 3rd Ave.New York, NY 10017(212) 382-27902934. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $50,000.Merck<strong>The</strong> Merck Company <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 100Whitehouse Station, NJ 08889-0100(908) 423-1000FAX: (908) 423-1987; URL: http://www.merck.com/about/cr/policies_performance/social/philanthropy.html2935. America’s Fund for Afghan Children,Washington, DC. $60.2936. America’s Fund for Afghan Children,Washington, DC. $60.2937. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,195,355.2938. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000, 2001. For Liberty Disaster ReliefFund.2939. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000. For Liberty Disaster Relief Fund.2940. American Red Cross, National, DC.$62,220, 2001. For Liberty Disaster Relief Fund.2941. American Red Cross, National, DC.$4,141.2942. American Red Cross, National, DC.$4,140.2943. New Jersey Network (NJN) <strong>Foundation</strong>,Trenton, NJ. $25,000. For Remembrance andReflection Service.2944. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,285,060.2945. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $390.2946. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $<strong>11</strong>,000.2947. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $<strong>11</strong>,000.2948. Society for the Prevention of Cruelty toAnimals, Huntington, NY. $1,000.2949. Society for the Prevention of Cruelty toAnimals, Huntington, NY. $500.2950. Society for the Prevention of Cruelty toAnimals, Huntington, NY. $500.2951. United Way of Harrisonburg andRockingham County, Harrisonburg, VA. $390.2952. United Way of Harrisonburg andRockingham County, Harrisonburg, VA. $390.2953. United Way of Hunterdon County,Lebanon, NJ. $4,141.2954. United Way of Hunterdon County,Lebanon, NJ. $4,140.2955. United Way of New York City, New York,NY. $4,530.2956. United Way of Tri-State, New York, NY.$1,000,000, 2001. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.2957. United Way of Tri-State, New York, NY.$162,668, 2001. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.2958. United Way of Tri-State, New York, NY.$36,466, 2001. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.MerckMerck Family Fund303 Adams St.Milton, MA 02186(617) 696-3580FAX: (617) 696-7262; E-mail: merck@merckff.org;URL: http://www.merckff.org2959. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERMerck<strong>The</strong> John Merck Fund47 Winter St., 7th Fl.Boston, MA 02108FAX: (617) 556-4130; E-mail: info@jmfund.org;URL: http://www.jmfund.org2960. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000, 2001.Merrill<strong>The</strong> Jane and Randy Merrill <strong>Foundation</strong>,Inc.4246 Sentinel Post Rd.Atlanta, GA 30327(404) 816-<strong>11</strong>452961. United Way of Metropolitan Atlanta,Atlanta, GA. $5,000, 2001.MerrillMerrill Lynch & Co., Inc. Corporate GivingProgramc/o Corp. Contribs.2 World Financial Ctr., 5th Fl.New York, NY 10281(212) 236-43192962. Borough of Manhattan Community Collegeof the City University of New York, New York,NY. $500,000.2963. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$5,000,000.2964. South Street Seaport <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewYork, NY. $500,000.2965. Undesignated. $1,200,000.2966. Various organizations. $2,300,000.2967. Wall Street Rising Corporation, New York,NY. $500,000.MetalMetal Industries <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.861 N. Hercules Ave.Clearwater, FL 33765-19222968. Army Emergency Relief, Alexandria, VA.$17,000. For Pentagon Victim’s Fund.2969. Federal Employee Education & AssistanceFund, Littleton, CO. $17,000. For FEEA WorldTrade <strong>Center</strong>/Pentagon Fund.2970. Navy Marine Corps Relief Society,Arlington, VA. $17,000. For Pentagon AssistanceFund for Navy and Marine Corps victims of 9/<strong>11</strong>.MetLifeMetLife <strong>Foundation</strong>27-01 Queens Plz. N.Long Island City, NY <strong>11</strong>101(212) 578-6272URL: http://www.metlife.org2971. ACCION USA, Boston, MA. $100,000. For9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief, through program on Diversityand Inclusion.2972. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.2973. Childrens Health Fund, New York, NY.$150,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.2974. Childrens Health Fund, New York, NY.$125,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.2975. Childrens Health Fund, New York, NY.$100,000, 2001.2976. Civic Capital Corporation, New York, NY.$250,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.2977. Coalition of Voluntary Mental Health,Mental Retardation, and Alcoholism Agencies,New York, NY. $100,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.2978. Families and Work Institute, New York, NY.$125,000, 2001.2979. FDNY Fire Safety Education Fund,Brooklyn, NY. $50,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.2980. Floating Hospital, New York, NY.$135,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.2981. Floating Hospital, New York, NY.$135,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.2982. Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, NewYork, NY. $20,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.2983. Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, NewYork, NY. $20,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.2984. Manhattan Youth Recreation andResources, New York, NY. $70,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong>disaster relief.2985. Maternity <strong>Center</strong> Association, New York,NY. $80,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.2986. Municipal Art Society of New York, NewYork, NY. $25,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.2987. National Organization on Disability.$50,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief, through programon Diversity and Inclusion.2988. National Organization on Disability.$25,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief, through programfor diversity and inclusion.2989. New York Academy of Medicine, NewYork, NY. $75,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.2990. New York Academy of Medicine, NewYork, NY. $75,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.2991. New York City Public/Private Initiatives,New York, NY. $100,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.2992. Nonprofit Finance Fund, New York, NY.$300,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.2993. Renaissance Economic DevelopmentCorporation, New York, NY. $500,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong>disaster relief.2994. Saint Vincents Hospital and Medical<strong>Center</strong> of New York, New York, NY. $100,000.For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.2995. Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island <strong>Foundation</strong>,New York, NY. $100,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.2996. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$1,000,000. For disaster relief.2997. United Neighborhood Houses of New York,New York, NY. $140,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.2998. United Way of New York City, New York,NY. $1,000,000. For disaster relief through<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.2999. YMCA of Greater New York, New York,NY. $30,000. For disaster relief.3000. YMCA of Greater New York, New York,NY. $27,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.3001. YMCA of Greater New York, New York,NY. $19,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief, throughprogram on diversity and inclusion.Metris Companies <strong>Foundation</strong>10900 Wayzata Blvd.Minnetonka, MN 553053002. American Red Cross, National, DC.$15,138.3003. Metris Companies <strong>Foundation</strong>,Minnetonka, MN. $31,669.MeyerMetrisMeyerMeyer Family <strong>Foundation</strong>1 Westbrook Corp. Ctr., Ste. 300Westchester, IL 60154(708) 449-7755FAX: (708) 449-7701 or (708) 449-7754; E-mail:cmcrobe@interaccess.co, ormeyerfamilyfoundation@msn.com3004. American Red Cross, National, DC.$25,000.3005. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $25,000.195


MeyerSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEMeyerEugene and Agnes E. Meyer <strong>Foundation</strong>1400 16th St. N.W., Ste. 360Washington, DC 20036(202) 483-8294FAX: (202) 328-6850; E-mail:meyer@meyerfnd.org; URL: http://www.meyerfoundation.org3006. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $50,000, 2001. For SurvivorsFund, to support the long-term educational,health and rehabilitation, grief counseling andother support needs of the individuals andfamilies affected by the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terroristattack at the Pentagon.3007. <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, DC, DC. $8,998. Forworkshops following the events of <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th, Nonprofits in a Time of Crisis and Change.3008. Salvation Army of Washington, DC, DC.$15,000. For operating support for disaster reliefefforts at the Pentagon, including assistance tofamilies affected by employment lay-offs.3009. Smithsonian Institution, DC. $15,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>: Bearing Witness to Historyexhibition.3010. United Way of National Capital Area, DC.$50,000, 2001. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.MGM Mirage, Inc.c/o Corporate Communications3260 Industrial RoadLas Vegas, NV 8910930<strong>11</strong>. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.MGMMichelinMichelin North America, Inc. CorporateGiving ProgramP.O. Box 19001Greenville, SC 29602-9001(864) 458-60383012. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.3013. Michelin North America, Inc. CorporateGiving Program, Greenville, SC. $2,000,000.MicrosoftMicrosoft Corporation CommunityAffairsc/o Community Affairs1 Microsoft WayRedmond, WA 98052-6399(425) 706-8185Application address for auction donations: c/oMicrosoft Community Affairs, Auction Donation, 1Microsoft Way, Redmond, WA 98052-6399;E-mail: giving@microsoft.com; URL: http://www.microsoft.com/mscorp/citizenship3014. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000,000.3015. Various organizations. $1,300,000.MidlandMidland Area Community <strong>Foundation</strong>109 E. Main St.P.O. Box 289Midland, MI 48640(989) 839-9661FAX: (989) 839-9907; E-mail:info@midlandfoundation.com,dspencer@midlandfoundation.com; URL: http://www.midlandfoundation.com3016. American Red Cross, Midland Chapter,Midland, MI. $90. For newspaper ad suggestingthat contributions be sent directly to the local RedCross.Milano <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o Robert J. DiQuollo175 South St., Ste. 200Morristown, NJ 079603017. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$10,000.MilanoMIM Corporationc/o Corporate Communications100 Clearbrook RoadElmsford, NY 105233018. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.MIMMinneapolis<strong>The</strong> Minneapolis <strong>Foundation</strong>800 IDS <strong>Center</strong>80 S. Eighth St.Minneapolis, MN 55402(612) 672-3878Application address: c/o Minnesota NonprofitsAssistance Fund: Kate Barr, Exec. Dir.,Community Loan Technologies, 2801 21st Ave. S.,Ste. 210 Minneapolis, MN 55407, tel: (612)278-7180; URL: http://www.mplsfoundation.org3019. Minneapolis <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong>, Minneapolis,MN. $506,<strong>11</strong>0. To provide short and long-termrelief to victims of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, their familiesand impacted communities.Minnesota<strong>The</strong> Minnesota Mutual <strong>Foundation</strong>Minnesota Mutual Life Ctr.400 N. Robert St.St. Paul, MN 55101(651) 665-3501Application information tel.: (651) 665-3448; FAX:(651) 665-35513020. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $20,000.Mississippi Power <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 4079Gulfport, MS 39502(228) 865-59043021. American Red Cross, National, DC.$5,000.MississippiMitchellMitchell, Silberberg & Knupp <strong>Foundation</strong><strong>11</strong>377 W. Olympic Blvd., Ste. 200Los Angeles, CA 900643022. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $17,630. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.MitsubishiMitsubishi Chemical America, Inc.Corporate Giving Program1 N. Lexington Ave.White Plains, NY 10601(914) 761-94503023. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.Mitsubishi Corporation - TokyoTokyo, Japan3024. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000.MitsubishiMitsubishiMitsubishi Electric America <strong>Foundation</strong>1560 Wilson Blvd., Ste. <strong>11</strong>50Arlington, VA 22209FAX: (703) 276-8260; E-mail:colleen.maher@meus.mea.com; URL: http://www.meaf.org3025. American Red Cross, National, DC.$450,000.3026. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $450,000.3027. Pittsburgh <strong>Foundation</strong>, Pittsburgh, PA.$100,000.MitsubishiMitsubishi Heavy Industries America, Inc.630 Fifth Avenue, Suite 3155New York, NY 10<strong>11</strong>13028. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$10,000.MitsubishiMitsubishi Heavy Industries JapanTokyo, Japan3029. Keidanren, Tokyo, Japan. $1,000,000. For9/<strong>11</strong>disaster relief efforts.MitsubishiMitsubishi International CorporationContributions Programc/o Public Rels. Dept.520 Madison Ave., 23rd Fl.New York, NY 10022(212) 605-20823030. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000.3031. World Trade <strong>Center</strong> Disaster Fund,London, England. $1,000,000. To matchemployee gifts.Mitsubishi Motors USA <strong>Foundation</strong>6400 Katella Ave.Cypress, CA 90630-52083032. American Red Cross, National, DC.$200,000.MitsubishiMitsui<strong>The</strong> Mitsui U.S.A. <strong>Foundation</strong>200 Park Ave.New York, NY 101663033. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000.MizuhoMizuho Financial Groupc/o Corporate Communications6-1 Marunouchi 1-chome, Chiyoda-ku 1-chomeTokyo, Japan 100-00053034. American Red Cross in Japan, Japan.$1,000,000. To support relief efforts for attackvictims and to go toward ongoing rescue operationin the U.S.Mnuchin<strong>The</strong> Steven T. Mnuchin <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Goldman Sachs & Co.85 Broad St., Tax Dept.New York, NY 100043035. Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund, New York,NY. $20,000. For general support.MoffittL. R. Moffitt & L. Q. Moffitt <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o FirstMerit Bank, N.A.121 S. Main St., Ste. 200Akron, OH 44308(330) 384-7320FAX: (330) 849-8992; E-mail:brenda.moubray@firstmerit.com3036. American Red Cross, Summit CountyChapter, Summit, NJ. $1,000.Mohegan Tribe/Mohegan Sunc/o Communications Dept.1 Mohegan Sun Blvd.Uncasville, CT 063823037. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$1,000,000.MoheganMolton<strong>The</strong> Molton Family <strong>Foundation</strong>161 E. Chicago, Ste. 29AChicago, IL 606<strong>11</strong>3038. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Telethon Fund.196


Monsanto Fund800 N. Lindbergh Blvd.St. Louis, MO 63167(314) 694-4391FAX: (314) 694-7658; E-mail:monsanto.fund@monsanto.com; URL: http://www.monsantofund.org/3039. American Red Cross, National, DC.$250,000, 2002.3040. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$250,000, 2002.MonsantoMontereyMonterey Fund, Inc.c/o Bear Stearns & Co.1 Metrotech Ctr. N.Brooklyn, NY <strong>11</strong>2013041. Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund, New York,NY. $1,100.3042. Gift of New York, New York, NY. $10,000.For general support.3043. Municipal 9<strong>11</strong> Fund, New York, NY.$6,000.3044. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $58,375. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.3045. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $2,500. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.3046. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $73,575.For support in the adftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3047. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $<strong>11</strong>,850.3048. Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$28,700. For general support of Robin HoodRelief Fund.3049. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY. $4,500.3050. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY. $3,500.For Widows’ and Children’s Fund, assistingfamilies of victims killed on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3051. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $30,900. For support in the aftermathof <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3052. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $3,000. For Widows’ and Children’sFund, assisting families of victims killed on<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3053. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $1,000. For support in the aftermath of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3054. Windows of Hope Family Relief Fund, NewYork, NY. $5,000.MONYMONY <strong>Foundation</strong>1740 Broadway, 10-36New York, NY 10019(212) 708-24683055. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $43,169. Foradministrative processing related to 9/<strong>11</strong> efforts.3056. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.3057. Various organizations. $2,350. Fordonations too nonprofits assisting with 9/<strong>11</strong>disaster.Moody’s Investors Servicesc/o Corporate Communications99 Church StreetNew York, NY 100073058. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$250,000.Moody’sLIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERMorganJ. P. Morgan Chase & Co. ContributionsProgram1 Chase Manhattan Plz., 5th Fl.New York, NY 10081(212) 552-<strong>11</strong>12URL: http://www.jpmorganchase.com/grants3059. Battery Dance Corporation, New York, NY.$15,000.3060. Financial Planning Association, Atlanta,GA. $230,000.3061. Financial Planning Association, Atlanta,GA. $10,000.3062. Manhattan Youth Recreation andResources, New York, NY. $25,000, 2002.Morgan<strong>The</strong> J. P. Morgan Chase <strong>Foundation</strong>1 Chase Manhattan Plz., 5th Fl.New York, NY 10081(212) 270-0377URL: http://www.jpmorganchase.com/grants3063. Morgan Chase <strong>Foundation</strong>, JP, New York,NY. $9,302,500.3064. Morgan Chase <strong>Foundation</strong>, JP, New York,NY. $2,670,456.3065. Morgan Chase <strong>Foundation</strong>, JP, New York,NY. $792,322, 2001.MorganMorgan Stanley Corporate GivingProgramc/o Community Affairs Dept.1601 Broadway, 12th Fl.New York, NY 10019(212) 259-1235E-mail: whatadifference@morganstanley.com;URL: http://www.morganstanley.com/about/inside/community.html3066. <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, New York, New York,NY. $10,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th <strong>Philanthropic</strong><strong>Response</strong> Project.3067. Morgan Stanley Victims’ Relief Fund, NewYork, NY. $10,000,000.Mosaic<strong>The</strong> Mosaic Fundc/o Satterlee, Stephens, Burke & Burke230 Park Ave., Ste. <strong>11</strong>30New York, NY 10169-15993068. World Trade <strong>Center</strong> Disaster Fund,London, England. $25,000. For general support.MotorolaMotorola <strong>Foundation</strong>1303 E. Algonquin Rd.Schaumburg, IL 60196(847) 576-6200URL: http://www.motorola.com/Motorola<strong>Foundation</strong>/3069. Abilities, Inc., Albertson, NY. $86,164. For9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.3070. American Red Cross, National, DC.$70,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.3071. Federal Employee Education & AssistanceFund, Littleton, CO. $315,933. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disasterrelief.3072. Live Brave Coalition, Schaumburg, IL.$200,000.3073. New York City Police <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewYork, NY. $100,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.3074. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$1,033,962. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.3075. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $50,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.MottMottCharles Stewart Mott <strong>Foundation</strong>Mott <strong>Foundation</strong> Bldg., 503 S. Saginaw St., Ste.1200Flint, MI 48502-1851(810) 238-5651FAX: (810) 766-1753; E-mail: info@mott.org;Additional E-mail: publications@mott.org; URL:http://www.mott.org3076. ACCION New York, Brooklyn, NY.$100,000, 2001. For disaster and humanitarianrelief.3077. Advertising Council Inc., New York, NY.$100,000. For Campaign for Freedom Fund,designed to help Americans cope with the waragainst terrorism through timely and relevantpublic service announcements.3078. Advertising Council Inc., New York, NY.$100,000, 2001. For Campaign for FreedomFund, designed to help Americans cope with thewar against terrorism through timely and relevantpublic service announcements.3079. After-School Corporation, <strong>The</strong>, New York,NY. $300,000, 2001. For disaster andhumanitarian relief.3080. American Red Cross, Flint CountyChapter, Flint, MI. $300,000, 2001.3081. Arab American Heritage Council, Flint, MI.$160,137, 2002. To promote understanding andtolerance.3082. Arab Community <strong>Center</strong> for Economic andSocial Services, Dearborn, MI. $100,000, 2001.Toward education and outreach initiatives insoutheast Michigan.3083. Carelift International, Bala Cynwyd, PA.$50,000, 2001.3084. Centre for the Study of Violence andReconciliation, Braamfontein, South Africa.$262,000, 2001. For Violence in TransitionProject, Transitional Project, and ReconciliationProject. Grant will also support Centre toundertake specific activities focusing on impactand significance of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001 events inthe U.S. for South Africa’s own challenges.3085. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Greater Flint,Flint, MI. $200,000, 2001. To establish 100 Club,new fund at <strong>Foundation</strong> for recognition offundraising efforts conducted by Flint-areafirefighters and police for emergency personnelinvolved in <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks. Endowmentwill provide emergency and rescue equipment forlocal public safety departments.3086. <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, New York, New York,NY. $50,000, 2002. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th<strong>Philanthropic</strong> <strong>Response</strong> Project.3087. <strong>Foundation</strong> for Global Community, PaloAlto, CA. $51,600, 2002. To supportreconstruction in Afghanistan.3088. Genesee County Board of Commissioners,Flint, MI. $100,000, 2001.3089. Harvard University, Cambridge, MA.$40,000, 2001. For disaster and humanitarianrelief.3090. International Crisis Group (Belgium),Brussels, Belgium. $200,000, 2001.3091. International Institute of Flint, Flint, MI.$10,000. For county-wide memorial in honor ofvictims and heroes of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3092. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000, 2001.For direct relief to victims and their families andsupport of other nonprofit organizations.3093. People in Need <strong>Foundation</strong>, Prague, CzechRepublic. $250,000, 2001.3094. Salvation Army of Flint Area Chapter,Flint, MI. $100,000, 2001.3095. Studio in a School Association, New York,NY. $30,000, 2002.197


MottSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE3096. United Way of Flint County, Flint, MI.$300,000, 2001.MulfordVincent Mulford <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Mercantile-Safe Deposit & Trust Co.766 Old Hammonds Ferry Rd.Linthicum, MD 21090Application addresses: P.O. Box 635, Tuxedo Park,NY 10987; FAX: (845) 351-5752; E-mail:info@mulfordfdn.org; URL: http://www.mulfordfdn.org3097. American Red Cross, National, DC.$25,000.Muller<strong>The</strong> Robert & Elizabeth Muller<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o Dayton & D’Amato42-40 Bell Blvd.Bayside, NY <strong>11</strong>361-28613098. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000. Towardprogram providing emergency grants to youngwomen and women-led groups who are organizingin response to the events following <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th.3099. Undesignated. $5,000.Mutual Benefit Credit Unionc/o Corporate Communications139 East 4th StreetCincinnati, OH 452023100. Ohio Credit Union <strong>Foundation</strong>, Dublin,OH. $10,000.MutualMWVEMWVE Fund807 Lonsdale Bldg.Duluth, MN 55802(218) 727-82533101. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000.NagaseNagase America Corporationc/o Corporate Communications546 5th AvenueNew York, NY 100363102. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.Nash Finch <strong>Foundation</strong>7600 France Ave. SouthMinneapolis, MN 55440-03553103. Undesignated. $50,000.NashNationalNational Association of Chain DrugStores Education <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 1417-D49Alexandria, VA 22313Additional address: 413 N. Lee St., Alexandria, VA22314; URL: http://www.nacds.org3104. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.NationalNational Association of Realtorsc/o Corporate Communications700 <strong>11</strong>th Street NorthwestWashington, DC 200013105. National Association of Realtors, Chicago,IL. $1,000,000. To help pay mortgage and rentalcosts of the families of victims of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.NationalNational Association of Security Dealers(NASD), Inc.c/o Corporate Communications1735 K Street NorthwestWashington, DC 200063106. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $1,000,000.NationalNational Association of <strong>The</strong>atre Ownersc/o Communications Dept.4605 Lankershim Blvd.North Hollywood, CA 916023107. Various organizations. $5,000,000.NationalNational <strong>Center</strong> for Outreachc/o Communications Dept.975 Observatory DriveMadison, WI 537063108. Undesignated. $100,000. To support aCommunity <strong>Response</strong> Grants program for pubictelevision stations serving their communitythrough outreach activities.NationalNational City Corporation ContributionsProgramNational City Ctr.1900 E. 9th St., LOC-2157Cleveland, OH 44<strong>11</strong>4-3484(216) 222-20003109. American Red Cross, Greater ClevelandChapter, Cleveland, OH. $455,000. For grant insupport of 9/<strong>11</strong>efforts.NationalNational Collegiate Athletic Association(NCAA)c/o Communications Dept.700 West Washington Street, P.O. Box 6222Indianapolis, IN 462063<strong>11</strong>0. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$5,000,000. To benefit former or current NCAAstudent-athletes who were permanently disabledand members of their families; firefighters, policeofficers and emergency medical technicians whowere permanently disabled during the WTCtragedy and members of their families.NationalNational Distributing Companyc/o Corporate Communications1 National Dr. SWAtlanta, GA 303363<strong>11</strong>1. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.National Hockey League <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o National Hockey League1251 Ave. of the Americas, 47th Fl.New York, NY 10020-<strong>11</strong>04(212) 789-20003<strong>11</strong>2. Undesignated. $1,200,000.NationalNationalNational Penn Bankc/o Corporate CommunicationsP.O. Box 547Boyertown, PA 195123<strong>11</strong>3. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.Nationwide <strong>Foundation</strong>1 Nationwide Plz., 1-22-05Columbus, OH 43215-2220Tel.: (614) 249-4310; URL: http://www.nationwide.com/aboutus/community/fndatn.htm3<strong>11</strong>4. American Red Cross, DC Chapter, DC.$100,000. For Liberty Disaster Relief Fund.3<strong>11</strong>5. American Red Cross, National, DC.$990,000.NationwideNCC Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o National City Bank1900 E. 9th St., LOC 2157Cleveland, OH 44<strong>11</strong>4(216) 222-2994E-mail: bruce.mccrodden@nationalcity.com orjoanne.clark@nationalcity.com3<strong>11</strong>6. Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Family Fund(KBW Family Fund), Melville, NY. $25,000.NEC <strong>Foundation</strong> of America8 Corporate <strong>Center</strong> Dr.Melville, NY <strong>11</strong>747(631) 753-7021FAX: (516) 753-7096; E-mail:foundation@necusa.com; URL: http://necfoundation.org3<strong>11</strong>7. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$300,000.NCCNECNECNEC USA, Inc. Corporate Giving Programc/o Corp. Comm. Div.8 Corporate <strong>Center</strong> Dr.Melville, NY <strong>11</strong>747(631) 753-7045FAX: (631) 753-7434; E-mail:lwojtecki@necusa.com3<strong>11</strong>8. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $700,000.Neuberger<strong>The</strong> Neuberger Berman <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Neuberger Berman Trust Co. of Delaware919 Market St., Ste. 506, Mellon Bank Ctr.Wilmington, DE 19801-30653<strong>11</strong>9. American Red Cross, National, DC.$600,000, 2001.3120. American Red Cross, National, DC.$78,252, 2001.3121. Engine Company 21, New York, NY.$100,000, 2001.3122. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $20,000, 2001.3123. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $200,000,2001.3124. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $135,000,2001.3125. New York State World Trade <strong>Center</strong> ReliefFund, Albany, NY. $165,000, 2001.New Era Cap Companyc/o Corporate CommunicationsP.O Box 208Derby, NY 140473126. MLB-MLBPA Disaster Relief Fund, NewYork, NY. $250,000.NewNew Hampshire<strong>The</strong> New Hampshire Charitable<strong>Foundation</strong>37 Pleasant St.Concord, NH 03301-4005(603) 225-6641FAX: (603) 225-1700; E-mail: info@nhcf.org, orrs@nhcf.org; URL: http://www.nhcf.org3127. New Hampshire Charitable Fund,Concord, NH. $330,000.3128. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $18,500, 2001.3129. Portsmouth Christian Academy,Portsmouth, NH. $<strong>11</strong>,600. For tuition assistanceto students whose families were directly affectedby <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.198


LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERNew YorkNew York<strong>The</strong> New York Community Trust2 Park Ave., 24th Fl.New York, NY 10016-9385(212) 686-0010FAX: (212) 532-8528; URL: http://www.nycommunitytrust.org3130. ADC Research Institute, DC. $40,000. Tocombat post-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th discriminationagainst Arab-American New Yorkers.3131. American Red Cross in Greater New York,New York, NY. $50,000. To use lessons learnedfrom <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th to help nonprofits andindividuals develop disaster plans and trainvolunteers.3132. Arab American Family Support <strong>Center</strong>,Brooklyn, NY. $70,000, 2002. For youth andcommunity programs that address anti-Arab biasand promote intergroup understanding.3133. Architecture Research Institute, New York,NY. $53,000, 2002. To promote a plan forrevitalizing the retail sector of lower Manhattan inthe wake of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3134. Asian American Legal Defense andEducation Fund, New York, NY. $40,000, 2002.To combat violence and discrimination againstAsian, Muslim and Arab Americans.3135. Borough of Manhattan Community CollegeFund, Brooklyn, NY. $10,000. To providescholarships to deserving students who havesuffered economic harm as result of 9/<strong>11</strong> disasterwith special consideration to students whothemselves have volunteered their services to helpother individuals harmed by 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster.3136. Bridge Fund of New York, New York, NY.$150,000, 2002. To expand eviction preventionservices for working poor families post-<strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th.3137. Brooklyn Bureau of Community Service,Brooklyn, NY. $25,000. For support services inresponding to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th disaster.3138. Brooklyn Bureau of Community Service,Brooklyn, NY. $25,000. To provide supportservices in responding to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th disaster.3139. Chhaya Community DevelopmentCorporation, Flushing, NY. $35,000, 2002. Tocombat housing discrimination against SouthAsians.3140. Citizens Committee for New York City,New York, NY. $50,000. To use lessons learnedfrom <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th to help neighborhoodgroups develop disaster preparedness plans.3141. City Harvest, New York, NY. $25,000,2002. To support a joint distribution effort withFood for Survival to get more food to the City’semergency feeding programs.3142. Columbia University, New York, NY.$75,000, 2002. To train physicians to diagnoseand treat bioterrorism-related diseases.3143. Educational Broadcasting Corporation,New York, NY. $50,000, 2002. For a publictelevision program that will give practicalemergency planning information to New Yorkers.3144. Engine No. 4 Ladder No. 15 Family Fund,New York, NY. $10,000, 2001. For generalsupport.3145. ESU-Bomb Squad Relief Fund, NorthMassapequa, NY. $10,000, 2001. For generalsupport.3146. Food for Survival, Bronx, NY. $25,000,2002. For joint distribution effort with CityHarvest to get more food to City’s emergencyfeeding programs.3147. <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, New York, New York,NY. $10,000, 2002. To support the <strong>Center</strong>’s 9/<strong>11</strong><strong>Philanthropic</strong> <strong>Response</strong> Project.3148. Friends of the Firefighters, Brooklyn, NY.$25,000, 2002. To coordinate counseling andsupport services for wives and children of injuredand deceased firefighters.3149. Fund for New Citizens, New York, NY.$60,000, 2002. To support an initiative to buildthe capacity of Arab and Muslim grassrootsgroups.3150. Fund for the City of New York, New York,NY. $10,000, 2002. For report and conference onimpact of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th events on State’sjudicial and legal systems.3151. Hotel Employees and RestaurantEmployees International Union (HERE), Local100, New York, NY. $50,000, 2002. To providejob training and placement services to restaurantworkers displaced after <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3152. Just Food, New York, NY. $25,000, 2002.To expand a cooperative food distributionprogram to low-income families.3153. Mothers’ Voices, New York, NY. $50,000,2001. To counterbalance loss of contributions dueto 9/<strong>11</strong>.3154. Municipal 9<strong>11</strong> Fund, New York, NY.$10,000, 2002. For general support.3155. National Fallen Firefighters <strong>Foundation</strong>,Emmitsburg, MD. $100,000, 2002. For memorialservice and counseling for families of firefighterskilled on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3156. New York Academy of Medicine, NewYork, NY. $800,000, 2002. To train New YorkCity teachers to help students deal with the eventsof <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3157. New York Academy of Medicine, NewYork, NY. $10,000, 2002. For forum to reviewhealth and mental health issues related to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3158. New York Cares, New York, NY. $35,000,2002. To use lessons from <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th todevelop a disaster response plan to coordinate anddeploy volunteers.3159. New York City Fire Department, NewYork, NY. $150,000, 2002. To help the FireDepartment apply the lessons of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thand upgrade its communications systems.3160. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $2,000,000.3161. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $3,627, 2002. Forgeneral support for <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.3162. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500, 2002. Forgeneral support for <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.3163. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500, 2002. Forgeneral support for <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.3164. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $268, 2002. Forgeneral support for <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.3165. New York Stock Exchange Fallen HeroesFund, New York, NY. $10,000, 2002. For generalsupport.3166. Nonprofit Coordinating Committee of NewYork, New York, NY. $50,000. To use lessonslearned from <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th to help nonprofitsdevelop business continuity plans for emergencysituations.3167. POPPA (Police Organization ProvidingPeer Assistance), New York, NY. $75,000, 2002.To provide counseling and support services forpolice officers and their families.3168. Public Health Research Institute of the Cityof New York, New York, NY. $90,000, 2002. Todevelop rapid testing procedures for organismsused in bioterrorism.3169. Regional Plan Association, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002. To promote an inclusive andinformed plan for rebuilding of downtownManhattan.3170. Rescue No. 5 Family Fund, Staten Island,NY. $10,000, 2001. For general support.3171. Saint Vincents Hospital and Medical<strong>Center</strong> of New York, New York, NY. $75,000. Foroutreach and mental health counseling forfirefighters and Port Authority police and theirfamilies affected by events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3172. Share New York, Bronx, NY. $25,000,2002. To expand a cooperative food distributionprogram.3173. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$100,000, 2001. For general support.3174. Union Community Fund, DC. $50,000,2002. To provide job training and placementservices to restaurant workers displaced after<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3175. 9-<strong>11</strong> United Services Group, New York,NY. $10,000. To develop transition plan totransfer services to Human Services Council.New YorkNew York <strong>Foundation</strong>350 5th Ave., No. 2901New York, NY 10<strong>11</strong>8(212) 594-8009URL: http://www.nyf.org/3176. Asociacion Tepeyac de New York, NewYork, NY. $19,000, 2001. For personnel servicesto support WTC Relief Project for Latinoimmigrants, which provides relief services andfinancial relief.3177. Bangladeshi-American FriendshipAssociation, Jamaica, NY. $12,600, 2001. To reachout to Bangladeshi and South Asian communitiesin wake of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks and assist inobtaining guidance and benefits-related services.3178. Central American Legal Assistance,Brooklyn, NY. $23,000, 2001. To begin searchingout immigrants who lost their jobs or closerelatives due to WTC attacks and have not yetsought help out of fear or not being aware ofresources available.3179. Chinese Staff and Workers Association,New York, NY. $38,500, 2001. To assess needs ofChinatown residents affected by attacks, and toaid individuals seeking assistance.3180. City Project, New York, NY. $20,8<strong>11</strong>, 2001.To call together coalition of nonprofits to createALTERBUDGET Agenda, which will documentdisruptions caused by 9/<strong>11</strong>.3181. Committee Against Anti-Asian Violence,New York, NY. $15,000, 2001. For post-9/<strong>11</strong>outreach work in poor and working-poor Asianimmigrant communities.3182. Community Action Project, Brooklyn, NY.$10,000, 2001. To help low-income immigrants ofFlatbush and East Flatbush directly affected bythe World Trade <strong>Center</strong> Tragedy.3183. Emerald Isle Immigration <strong>Center</strong>,Woodside, NY. $<strong>11</strong>,424, 2001. To provideseminars on benefits, new immigration laws, andemployment, and to temporarily expand servicehours to reach workers affected by 9/<strong>11</strong>.3184. Filipino American Human Services, NewYork, NY. $20,000, 2001. To assist Filipinofamilies affected by 9/<strong>11</strong>.3185. Global Kids, New York, NY. $<strong>11</strong>,250. Tointegrate post-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> issues into trainingsand workshops and to provide opportunities forstaff and youth leaders to conduct bias awarenesseducation activities in schools and youthorganizations.3186. Haitian American Alliance of New York,Brooklyn, NY. $15,000, 2001. To assess impact of9/<strong>11</strong> on the Haitian community and to developlong-term response.3187. Independent Press Association, SanFrancisco, CA. $12,000, 2001. To pay temporarystaff to place emergency ads regarding disasterrelief in ethnic press.3188. Latin American Workers Project, Brooklyn,NY. $28,500, 2001. To help relatives and199


New YorkSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEdislocated workers to gain access to multiple 9/<strong>11</strong>relief funds and to organize day-laborers atGround Zero.3189. National Mobilization Against Sweatshops,New York, NY. $30,500, 2001. For emergencysupport of Disaster Assistance Project for victimsof 9/<strong>11</strong> who have been largely ignored by otheremergency relief efforts.3190. Puerto Rican Legal Defense and EducationFund, New York, NY. $25,000, 2001. To providelegal services to immigrants affected by 9/<strong>11</strong>.3191. Roza Promotions, Staten Island, NY.$50,000. To assist low-income immigrant andrefugee families that lost jobs, wages, or otherbenefits following <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks.3192. Workers Awaaz, Long Island City, NY.$10,000, 2001. To organize free weekly walk-inclinic in Jackson Heights to assist South Asianimmigrants affected by 9/<strong>11</strong>.3193. Young Korean American Service andEducation <strong>Center</strong>, Flushing, NY. $10,000, 2001.To reach out to Korean-Americans affected by9/<strong>11</strong> who are not accessing relief information.New YorkNew York Life <strong>Foundation</strong>51 Madison Ave., Ste. 604New York, NY 10010-1655(212) 576-7341E-mail: nylfoundation@newyorklife.com; URL:http://www.newyorklife.com/foundation3194. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000, 2001.3195. Community Funds, Inc, New York, NY.$3,000,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th disaster relief.New YorkNew York Metsc/o Corporate Communications12301 Roosevelt AvenueCorona, NY <strong>11</strong>3683196. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $450,000.New York Rotary <strong>Foundation</strong>322 Eigth AvenueNew York, NY 100013197. Structured Employment EconomicDevelopment Corporation, New York, NY.$100,000, 2002.<strong>The</strong> New York Times Company<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.229 W. 43rd St.New York, NY 10036-3959(212) 556-1091FAX: (212) 556-4450; URL: http://www.nytimes.com/scholarship; URL: http://www.nytco.com/foundation3198. New York Historical Society, New York,NY. $25,000. For Unfinished Lives, exhibitiondrawing on New York Times series Profiles inGrief.New YorkNew YorkNew York<strong>The</strong> New York Women’s <strong>Foundation</strong>34 W. 22nd St.New York, NY 10010(212) 414-4342FAX: (212) 414-5708; E-mail: info@nywf.org;URL: http://www.nywf.org3199. Asian American Legal Defense andEducation Fund, New York, NY. $15,000. Toprovide direct legal assistance to at least 150 Asianimmigrant women who are eligible for monetaryrelief and/or whose immigration status is injeopardy as a result of the death of a spouse orfamily members in the World Trade <strong>Center</strong>tragedy. Also, to provide a comprehensive array ofservices, including multilingual legal advice,counseling, and referral services to low-income,non-English speaking Asian women who havebeen affected by the attacks.3200. <strong>Center</strong> for Anti-ViolenceEducation/Brooklyn Womens Martial Arts,Brooklyn, NY. $15,000. To provide self-defenseand anti-violence prevention workshops to womenand teen women at small grassroots organizationsthat are under increasing attack to due to racistbacklash following <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3201. Central Brooklyn Partnership, Brooklyn,NY. $15,000. To offer support services andtechnical assistance to low-income womenentrepreneurs in Fulton FIRST cooperativemarket for immigrant street vendors who facedecrease in business due to anti-immigrationsentiments and economic downturn after<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3202. Chinese Staff and Workers Association,New York, NY. $15,000. For start-up support forEmergency <strong>Response</strong> Plan comprising communityoutreach, environmental/community health, andexpansion of existing Labor Rights Clinic toaddress needs of Chinatown residents affectedboth directly and indirectly by events of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3203. Committee for Hispanic Children andFamilies, New York, NY. $15,000. For continuedsupport for grief counseling and post-traumaticstress therapy to Latina immigrants who areisolated and left out of the healing process becauseof language and cultural barriers.3204. Committee for Hispanic Children andFamilies, New York, NY. $10,000. To traincommunity-based agencies, PTAs, and churchgroups to provide grief counseling andpost-traumatic stress therapy to Latina immigrantsisolated from healing process because of languageand cultural barriers.3205. Community Voices Heard, New York, NY.$30,000. To monitor welfare centers to see ifsystems were running efficiently after <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th, contact their membership to assess need forunemployment insurance, and redouble theirefforts to campaign for the Jobs Creation Bill.3206. Community Voices Heard, New York, NY.$15,000. To push for low-income women to beincluded in rebuilding activities through mediaattention to experiences of low-wage workers, andteach public about impact of 9/<strong>11</strong> on pre-existingpoverty crisis in New York City.3207. Community Works, New York, NY. $5,000.For Honoring Our Heroes: Youth for Youth,performance event to help young people toexpress their emotions about <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thevents.3208. Creative Alternatives of New York, NewYork, NY. $15,000. To offset decline in artsfunding and service fees paid by client agencies inorder to continue weekly workshops that combineperforming arts with modern grouppsychotherapy for three community facilitiesaffected by <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3209. Forest Hills Community House, ForestHills, NY. $15,000. To hire counselor to provideemergency services for South Asian women inQueens experiencing acute stress and fear due toverbal and physical abuse, bias incidents, andprejudice arising out of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thattack.3210. Hope Program, Brooklyn, NY. $20,000. Togive women on public assistance job-readinesstraining, employment services, and psychologicalcounseling, demand for which rose exponentiallyafter <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th with the loss of at least100,000 jobs, many of which were in low-wageworkforce.32<strong>11</strong>. Iris House - A <strong>Center</strong> for Women Livingwith HIV, New York, NY. $15,000. To developemergency guidelines for staff and short-termintervention for clients, women with HIV/AIDSand their families, who are coping with increasedfeelings of isolation, fear, depression, andvulnerability brought on by events of <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th.3212. Latin American Workers Project, Brooklyn,NY. $15,000. To advocate for and organize LatinAmerican women day laborers who have lost theirjobs due to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, including workshopson labor and immigration laws, ESOL, mentalhealth, and domestic violence issues.3213. Local Development Corporation of EastNew York, Brooklyn, NY. $30,000. To helpwomen develop skills and resources to build theirsmall businesses in weakened post-9/<strong>11</strong> economicenvironment.3214. Maura Clarke-Ita Ford <strong>Center</strong>, Brooklyn,NY. $15,000. To cover cash flow problem causedby disruption of phone service, delays in fundingfrom foundations and the City, cancellation offundraising craft fair scheduled for <strong>September</strong>15th, 2001, and loss of anticipated revenues fromcookie orders.3215. Mercy <strong>Center</strong>, Bronx, NY. $15,000. Forcounseling, conflict resolution training, andalternatives to violence programs that includecommunity events for healing and remembranceand support groups, and for preparation ofdelegation of counselors to be sent toneighborhood agencies .3216. National Mobilization Against Sweatshops,New York, NY. $15,000. To assist Latina,Afro-Caribbean, and Eastern-Europeanimmigrants injured or otherwise affected by WorldTrade <strong>Center</strong> tragedy, many of whom live andwork in Lower Manhattan and northern Brooklynand have been overlooked in disaster relief efforts.3217. New York Asian Womens <strong>Center</strong>, NewYork, NY. $10,000. To strengthen capacity toprovide more efficient services to clients in timesof crisis.3218. Northern Manhattan ImprovementCorporation, New York, NY. $15,000. To advisesurvivors of victims about disaster relief servicesand resources and to offer legal services tocommunity residents regarding housing, publicassistance, disability, and domestic violence issuesthat arose due to the attacks.3219. Project Teen Aid, Brooklyn, NY. $4,000. Todevelop and implement emergency escape planfor children of Project Chance, Early Head Startprogram for low-income children in NorthernBrooklyn, to relocate to a safe place in the event ofanother emergency.3220. Reconciliation And Culture CooperativeNetwork (RACCOON), New York, NY. $15,000.To provide mental health and domestic violenceservices for refugee and immigrant women fromBalkan community who, coming to terms withviolence in their homelands, have beenretraumatized by violence in their newly adoptedcountry.3221. Sakhi for South Asian Women, New York,NY. $10,000. To offer domestic violencecounseling services to South Asian womenencountering rise in anti-immigrant attacks andfear of persecution for their immigrant status.3222. Shalom Task Force, New York, NY.$15,000. To work with Beit Shalom to identifyBukharian women and families living in Queenswho suffered losses from <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th tragedy,connect them to organizations providing disasterrelief, and temporarily relocate main office.3223. South Asian Youth Action (SAYA),Elmhurst, NY. $35,000. To offer girls workshopson issues such as gender discrimination,understanding the self in relation to thecommunity, leadership development, and otherskill-building activities; and to work withculturally-sensitive girls at schools in Queens.3224. South Asian Youth Action (SAYA),Elmhurst, NY. $15,000. To engage young people200


in hosting inter-cultural dialogues in schools andcommunity centers, train them to use the media toraise awareness about the effects of 9/<strong>11</strong>, andencourage them to develop strategies to worktowards peaceful resolutions.3225. T.O.P.S. For You, Brooklyn, NY. $10,000.For Bushwick Resource Coalition, representingservice providers in Brooklyn, to work withcommunity to address post-traumatic stresscaused by <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th tragedy.3226. Urban Justice <strong>Center</strong>, New York, NY.$15,000. To conduct interviews with domesticviolence survivors to better understand the impactof <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th events on their lives, and toanalyze changes in calls to the police, calls to theNYC domestic violence hot line, and child abusereports after <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3227. We Interrupt This Message, San Francisco,CA. $15,000. For 9<strong>11</strong> Media Training andTechnical Assistance Program designed to givevoice in news media to communities most affectedby wartime reality: women, Muslims,Arab-Americans, immigrants, and communities ofcolor.3228. Women’s Venture Fund, New York, NY.$15,000. For start-up support for Small BusinessDisaster Relief Program, giving technicalassistance to women-owned businesses frommerchant group, From the Ground Up.New York Yankeesc/o Corporate CommunicationsYankee Stadium, 161st Street and River AvenueBronx, NY 104523229. Undesignated. $1,000,000.New YorkNew YorkerNew Yorker/Advance Magazines, <strong>The</strong>New York, NY3230. New York <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Arts, NewYork, NY. $4,876. For New York Arts RecoveryFund.NewhouseSamuel I. Newhouse <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o Paul Scherer & Co. LLP335 Madison Ave., 9th Fl.New York, NY 100173231. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of New Jersey,Morristown, NJ. $1,000,000, 2001. To providecollege scholarships for children of victims of9/<strong>11</strong>.3232. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000, 2001.3233. Staten Island <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> Fund, StatenIsland, NY. $15,000.3234. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$1,000,000, 2001.Newland<strong>The</strong> Newland Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.230 Hampton Ct.Athens, GA 30605-1404(706) 543-3938FAX: (706) 354-6694; E-mail:newlandfamfdninc@mindspring.com3235. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $5,000.NextgenNextgen <strong>Foundation</strong> Charitable Trust10706 Beaver Dam RoadCockeysville, MD 210303236. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.NHL Players Associationc/o Corporate Communications69 JOY ST UNIT 1Boston, MA 02<strong>11</strong>43237. Undesignated. $500,000.NHLLIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERNIKENIKE <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o NIKE, Inc.1 Bowerman Dr.Beaverton, OR 97005-6453(503) 671-64533238. American Red Cross, National, DC.$144,000.3239. Catholic Charities USA, Alexandria, VA.$50,000.3240. Catholic Charities USA, Alexandria, VA.$50,000. To provide immediate counseling andfamily services for those affected by <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>terrorist attacks in New York City.3241. Federal Employee Education & AssistanceFund, Littleton, CO. $100,000.3242. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $50,000.3243. Mercy Corps International, Portland, OR.$25,000.3244. New York State Fraternal Order of PoliceFund, Hicksville, NY. $50,000.3245. Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association of theCity of New York, New York, NY. $175,000.3246. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $175,000.3247. Undesignated. $75,000. For programs andorganizations promoting racial and religious,healing, and community-building efforts.3248. United Methodist Committee on Relief,New York, NY. $50,000.3249. United Methodist Committee on Relief,New York, NY. $50,000. To provide immediatecounseling and family services for those affectedby <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks in New YorkCity.NiSourceNiSource Inc. Corporate Giving Programc/o Corp. Citizenship Dept.801 E. 86th Ave.Merrillville, IN 46410FAX: (219) 647-6225; URL: http://www.nisource.com/about/corpcit/index.asp3250. NiSource Inc. Corporate Giving Program,Merrillville, IN. $250,000.Nissan<strong>The</strong> Nissan <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 191Gardena, CA 90248-0191(310) 771-3330FAX: (310) 516-7967; E-mail:tiarzha.taylor@nissan_usa.com3251. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000, 2001.Nokomis<strong>The</strong> Nokomis <strong>Foundation</strong>161 Ottawa Ave. N.W., Ste. 305-CGrand Rapids, MI 49503(616) 451-0267FAX: (616) 451-9914; E-mail:kmulhern@nokomisfoundation.org; URL: http://www.nokomisfoundation.org3252. New York Womens <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York,NY. $10,000. Toward Women’s Disaster ReliefFund.Nordson<strong>The</strong> Nordson Corporation <strong>Foundation</strong>28601 Clemens Rd.Westlake, OH 44145-<strong>11</strong>19(440) 892-1580FAX: (216) 892-9253; URL: http://www.nordson.com/corporate/grants.html3253. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $30,000.Nordstrom, Inc. Corporate GivingProgram1617 6th Ave.Seattle, WA 981013254. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,868,000.NorthernNordstromNorfolk<strong>The</strong> Norfolk <strong>Foundation</strong>1 Commercial Pl., Ste 1410Norfolk, VA 23510-2<strong>11</strong>3(757) 622-7951FAX: (757) 622-1751; E-mail:info@norfolkfoundation.org; URL: http://www.norfolkfoundation.org3255. American Red Cross, Tidewater Chapter,Norfolk, VA. $12,500, 2001. For disaster relief.3256. United Way of South Hampton Roads,Norfolk, VA. $12,500, 2001.Norris<strong>The</strong> Kenneth T. and Eileen L. Norris<strong>Foundation</strong><strong>11</strong> Golden Shore, Ste. 450Long Beach, CA 90802(562) 435-8444FAX: (562) 436-0584; E-mail: gerringer@ktn.org;URL: http://www.norrisfoundation.org3257. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $205,000, 2001.3258. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $25,000, 2001.NorthNorth Jersey Media Group Inc. CorporateGiving Programc/o Corp. Contribs.150 River St.Hackensack, NJ 076013259. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of New Jersey,Morristown, NJ. $1,000,000. For disaster relieffund for northern New Jersey residents whosuffered losses from the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th disaster.NortheastNortheast Utilities <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 5563Hartford, CT 06102-5563(860) 721-4063Additional contact: Wendy Collier, tel.: (860)721-4043, E-mail: colliwj@nu.com; FAX: (860)721-4331; E-mail: hopkit@nu.com; URL: http://www.cl-p.com/community/partners/grants/nufoundation.asp3260. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $36,600.3261. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $36,600.3262. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $1,200.Northern<strong>The</strong> Northern Trust Company CharitableTrustc/o <strong>The</strong> Northern Trust Co., Community AffairsDiv.50 S. LaSalle St., M-5Chicago, IL 60675(312) 444-4059Application address: Community Affairs Div., 181W. Madison St., 5th Fl. Reception, Chicago, IL60602; URL: http://www.northerntrust.com/aboutus/community/charitable/index.html3263. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $89,124, 2001. Employee Matching Gifts to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.3264. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $127,700, 2001.Employee Matching Gifts to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thFund.3265. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000, 2001.201


NorthernSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE3266. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $102,132,2001. Employee matching gifts to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thFund.3267. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $100,000,2001.NorthropNorthrop Grumman CorporationContributions Program1840 Century Park E.Los Angeles, CA 90067(310) 553-62623268. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $125,000.3269. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $150,000.3270. New York State Fraternal Order of PoliceFund, Hicksville, NY. $125,000.3271. Northrop Grumman CorporationContributions Program, Los Angeles, CA.$100,000.Northrop<strong>The</strong> Northrop Grumman <strong>Foundation</strong>1840 Century Park E.Los Angeles, CA 900673272. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $75,000.3273. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.3274. New York State Fraternal Order of PoliceFund, Hicksville, NY. $75,000.3275. Undesignated. $250,000. For donations toInternational Association of Firefighters, NewYork Fraternal Order of Police, and various Worldtrade <strong>Center</strong> Funds including <strong>The</strong> <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th Fund (established by United Way of NewYork City and New York Community Trusts) andEmployee Assistance Fund for NorthropGrumman employees directly affected by terroristattacks.NorthwestNorthwest Minnesota <strong>Foundation</strong>(NWMF)4225 Technology Dr. N.W.Bemidji, MN 56601(218) 759-2057FAX: (218) 759-2328; E-mail: nwmf@nwmf.org;Additional tel.: (800) 659-7859; URL: http://www.nwmf.org3276. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000.Northwestern Mutual <strong>Foundation</strong>720 E. Wisconsin Ave.Milwaukee, WI 53202(414) 665-29043277. American Red Cross, National, DC.$376,000.NorthwesternNortonPeter Norton Family <strong>Foundation</strong>225 Arizona, Ste. 350Santa Monica, CA 90401(310) 576-77003278. Bridge Fund of New York, New York, NY.$25,000. For Project Recovery.3279. New Museum of Contemporary Art, NewYork, NY. $10,000. For stabilization grant in theaftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.Novartis U.S. <strong>Foundation</strong>556 Morris Ave.Summit, NJ 079013280. American Red Cross, National, DC.$3,000,000.NovartisNoyesJessie Smith Noyes <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.6 E. 39th St., 12th Fl.New York, NY 10016-0<strong>11</strong>2(212) 684-6577FAX: (212) 689-6549; E-mail: noyes@noyes.org;URL: http://www.noyes.org3281. Municipal Art Society of New York, NewYork, NY. $20,000. For Imagine New Yorkvisioning project through which public canexpress their ideas and hopes about rebuilding ofLower Manhattan, and to expand capacity ofImagine New York web site to allow for continuedmonitoring.3282. Municipal Art Society of New York, NewYork, NY. $7,500. For Imagine New York, seriesof community-based workshops that will gatherbroad base of ideas and opinions about rebuildingand memorializing World Trade <strong>Center</strong> site.Nicholas H. Noyes, Jr. Memorial<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.1950 E. Greyhound Pass, No. 18-356Carmel, IN 46033-7730(317) 844-8009FAX: (317) 844-8099; E-mail:admin@noyesfoundation.org; URL: http://www.noyesfoundation.org3283. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th disaster relief.NRG Energy, Inc.c/o Corporate Communications1221 Nicollet AvenueMinneapolis, MN 554033284. NRG Energy Inc., Minneapolis, MN.$1,000,000.3285. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$1,000,000.NVIDIAc/o Corporate Communications2701 San Tomas ExpresswaySanta Clara, CA 950503286. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.Nymox Pharmaceutical Corporationc/o Corporate Communications230 West Passaic StreetMaywood, NJ 076073287. Various organizations. $20,000.<strong>The</strong> NYSEG <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 5224Binghamton, NY 13902-5224(607) 762-73333288. American Red Cross, National, DC.$25,000.NoyesNRGNVIDIANymoxNYSEGO’Neill<strong>The</strong> William J. and Dorothy K. O’Neill<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.30195 Chagrin Blvd., Ste. 250Cleveland, OH 44124(216) 831-9667FAX: (216) 831-3779; E-mail: oneillfdn@aol.com;URL: http://www.oneillfdn.org3289. <strong>Center</strong> for Independence of the Disabled,New York, NY. $30,000.3290. Structured Employment EconomicDevelopment Corporation, New York, NY.$15,000, 2002.<strong>The</strong> Oak <strong>Foundation</strong> U.S.A.47 Winter St., 6th FloorBoston, MA 02108FAX: 617) 542-5570; E-mail: oak@oakfnd.org;URL: http://www.oakfnd.org3291. Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$500,000. For Robin Hood Relief Fund to helpvictims of the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> attacks.Oakleaf <strong>Foundation</strong>5140 Wells Fargo Ctr.90 S. 7th St.Minneapolis, MN 554023292. WNYC,NewYork, NY. $10,000. ForEmergency Fund.Oberkotter <strong>Foundation</strong>1600 Market St., Ste. 3600Philadelphia, PA 19103-7286(215) 751-2601FAX: (215) 751-2678; E-mail:RDIMARTINO@Schnader.com3293. American Red Cross, DC Chapter, DC.$10,000. For National Disaster Relief Fund.OakOakleafOberkotterOfficeOffice Depot, Inc. Corporate GivingProgramc/o Donations2200 Old Germantown Rd.Delray Beach, FL 33445(561) 438-33793294. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $250,000.OfficeMax Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>3605 Warrensville Ctr. Rd.Shaker Heights, OH 44122(216) 471-69003295. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$1,000,000.OfficeMaxOhio Casualty <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.9450 Seward Rd.Fairfield, OH 45014FAX: (513) 603-3181; E-mail:debby.jordan@ocas.com3296. United Way of Butler County, Butler, PA.$25,000.OhioOhrstrom<strong>The</strong> Ohrstrom <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o Curtis Mallet, et. al101 Park Ave., Ste. 3500New York, NY 10178-00613297. New York Womens <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York,NY. $50,000. For NYWF Disaster Relief Fund,helping nonprofits serving low-income womenand girls affected by the events of 9/<strong>11</strong>/01.3298. Richards Street Heroes Fund, New York,NY. $50,000. For families of victims from RedHook Fire Department.3299. Tides <strong>Foundation</strong>, San Francisco, CA.$50,000. To assist people in 9/<strong>11</strong>/01 tragedy inNew York City.3300. Unitarian Church of All Souls, New York,NY. $50,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong>/01 Emergency ReliefFund.Oldcastle, Inc.c/o Corporate Communications375 Northridge RoadAtlanta, GA 303053301. Oldcastle, Inc., Atlanta, GA. $400,000.Oldcastle202


Olson<strong>The</strong> Delmar and Audria M. Olson Family<strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Gary A. Olson, Tr.5721 Riegel’s Point Rd.Sarasota, FL 342423302. Salvation Army of Sarasota, Sarasota, FL.$20,000. For disaster relief.OlympicOlympic Opticalc/o Corporate Communications3975 Vantech Drive, Suite 2Memphis, TN 36<strong>11</strong>53303. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $20,000.Ondeo Nalco Company ContributionsProgram1601 W. Diehl Rd.Ondeo Nalco Ctr.Naperville, IL 60563-<strong>11</strong>983304. American Red Cross, National, DC.$40,000.Oneida Limitedc/o Corporate Communications163-181 Kenwood AvenueOneida, NY 134213305. American Red Cross, National, DC.$13,257.OndeoOneidaOpenOpen Society Institute400 W. 59th St.New York, NY 10019(212) 548-0600FAX: (212) 548-4600; URL: http://www.soros.org3306. American Bar Association, DC. $75,000,2002. For Immigration Pro Bono Program,focusing on immigrants affected by post-9/<strong>11</strong>policies.3307. American Civil Liberties Union<strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY. $175,000. ForSecurity and Civil Liberties Task Force,responding to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks.3308. American Civil Liberties Union<strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY. $75,000, 2002. Foradvocacy, monitoring, and litigation to protectsecurity and civil liberties in the wake of 9/<strong>11</strong>.3309. American Civil Liberties Union <strong>Foundation</strong>of Northern California, San Francisco, CA.$75,000. For Campaign Against Racial Profiling,including Driving While Black or BrownCampaign and post <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> work.3310. American Immigration Law <strong>Foundation</strong>,DC. $50,000, 2002. For advocacy, documentation,and public education around the detention ofnon-citizens post-9/<strong>11</strong>.33<strong>11</strong>. American-Arab Anti-DiscriminationCommittee, DC. $75,000, 2002. To producereport on civil rights and civil liberties violationssuffered by Arab Americans in the wake of 9/<strong>11</strong>.3312. Arab American Institute <strong>Foundation</strong>, DC.$75,000, 2002. For policy advocacy and series ofworkshops for Arab American communitiesaround national security and civil liberties issuespost-9/<strong>11</strong>.3313. Asian American Legal Defense andEducation Fund, New York, NY. $50,000, 2002.To fund anti-violence work and continuedocumenting incidents of hate crimes affectingSouth Asians and other Asian Americans, providefree legal assistance to victims, and launchcommunity organizing effort.3314. Catholic Legal Immigration Network, NY.$60,000, 2002. To serve increasing number ofimmigrants affected by broad detention policiesinstituted post-9/<strong>11</strong>.3315. <strong>Center</strong> for National Security Studies, DC.$50,000, 2002. For Emergency Project to DefendLIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERCivil Liberties and Protect Security in Defense ofFreedom at a Time of Crisis.3316. Citizens and Immigrants for Equal Justice,Mesquite, TX. $50,000, 2002. For post-9/<strong>11</strong>advocacy on behalf of detained immigrants andtheir families.3317. Columbia University, New York, NY.$12,994. Toward <strong>The</strong> Making of Iranian Cinemaconference, postponed after <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3318. Constitution Project, DC. $75,000, 2002.For Liberty and Security Initiative in the wake of9/<strong>11</strong>.3319. Electronic Privacy Information <strong>Center</strong>(EPIC), DC. $150,000. To address challengesposed by deployment of systems of statesurveillance after <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks.3320. Fiscal Policy Institute, New York, NY.$75,000, 2002. For fiscal analysis activities relatedto post-9/<strong>11</strong> issues, particularly rebuilding oflower Manhattan.3321. Florence Immigrant and Refugee RightsProject, Florence, AZ. $60,000, 2002. To supportthe Project’s work with the Detention WatchNetwork.3322. Fund for Independent Publishing, NewYork, NY. $50,000. For publishing project, CivilLiberties in the Wake of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3323. Heartland Alliance for Human Needs andHuman Rights, Chicago, IL. $50,000, 2002. Torespond to the needs of immigrants and refugeesin the Midwest affected by new anti-terrorist lawsand policies.3324. Lawyers Committee for Human Rights,New York, NY. $100,000, 2002. For work ondetention advocacy and policy monitoring in thewake of 9/<strong>11</strong>.3325. Leadership Conference Education Fund,DC. $100,000, 2002. For public educationcampaign to promote sensible policy responses to9/<strong>11</strong> as they affect civil rights, civil liberties, andimmigration issues.3326. Legal Aid Society, New York, NY. $75,000,2002. For representation of immigrants placed indeportation proceedings as a result of post-9/<strong>11</strong>crackdowns.3327. Lutheran Immigration and RefugeeService, New York, NY. $80,000, 2002. Formonitoring and watchdog activities and tocoordinate work with member organizations in thewake of 9/<strong>11</strong>.3328. Lutheran Immigration and RefugeeService, New York, NY. $60,000, 2002. To helpsecure pro-immigrant sentiments and policiespost-9/<strong>11</strong> through grassroots education, mediaoutreach, and advocacy related to immigrants inINS detention.3329. Mexican American Legal Defense andEducational Fund (MALDEF) PropertyManagement Corporation, Los Angeles, CA.$50,000, 2001. To address the impact of 9/<strong>11</strong> onLatino communities.3330. Migration Policy Institute, DC. $150,000,2001. For policy development work on striking theproper balance between national security concernsand civil liberties/civil rights in the wake of 9/<strong>11</strong>.3331. National Asian Pacific American LegalConsortium, DC. $125,000, 2002. For monitoringof hate crimes and of federal agency regulations/legislation relating to immigrants and nationalsecurity post-9/<strong>11</strong>.3332. National Council of La Raza, Los Angeles,CA. $50,000, 2001. To address the impact of 9/<strong>11</strong>on Latino communities.3333. National Immigration Forum, DC. $50,000,2002. For on-going advocacy for fair treatment ofimmigrants and refugees in the aftermath of 9/<strong>11</strong>.3334. New York Immigration Coalition, NewYork, NY. $75,000, 2002. To act as main advocacyvoice for immigrants in New York City in thewake of 9/<strong>11</strong>.3335. New York State Defenders Association,Albany, NY. $75,000, 2002. To address legalneeds of immigrants detained or taken to jail bythe INS or other law enforcement agencies in thewake of 9/<strong>11</strong>.3336. Tides <strong>Foundation</strong>, San Francisco, CA.$350,000, 2002. For Tides 9/<strong>11</strong> Democracy Fundfor regranting to Arab, Muslim, Sikh, and SouthAsian organizations responding to erosions of civilliberties and rights post-9/<strong>11</strong>.3337. Trial Lawyers Care, Inc., New York, NY.$50,000, 2002. For pro bono legal assistanceprogram for victims of 9/<strong>11</strong> who are applying tothe Victims Compensation Fund or other reliefprograms.3338. Women’s Commission for Refugee Womenand Children, New York, NY. $60,000, 2002. ForDetention Asylum Project, focusing on women,adolescents and children in the wake of 9/<strong>11</strong>.OPNET Technologies, Inc.c/o Corporate Communications7255 Woodmont AvenueBethesda, MD 208143339. American Red Cross, National, DC.$25,000.OshkoshOPNETOppenheimerFundsOppenheimerFunds, Inc. CorporateGiving Program498 7th Ave.New York, NY 100183340. MassMutual <strong>Foundation</strong> of Hartford, Inc.,Hartford, CT. $177,188.3341. MassMutual <strong>Foundation</strong> of Hartford, Inc.,Hartford, CT. $10,000.OrangeOrange County Community <strong>Foundation</strong>30 Corporate Park, Ste. 410Irvine, CA 92606(949) 553-4202FAX: (949) 553-42<strong>11</strong>; E-mail: occf@oc-cf.org;URL: http://www.oc-cf.org3342. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $<strong>11</strong>,000.3343. United Way of Orange County Chapter,Irvine, CA. $25,000. For American Red Crossprograms related to events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.<strong>The</strong> Oregon Community <strong>Foundation</strong>1221 S.W. Yamhill, No. 100Portland, OR 97205(503) 227-6846FAX: (503) 274-7771; E-mail: info@ocf1.org;URL: http://www.ocf1.org3344. Community Funds, Inc, New York, NY.$33,751, 2001.OregonOshkoshOshkosh Area Community <strong>Foundation</strong>404 N. Main St., Ste. 205P.O. Box 1726Oshkosh, WI 54903(920) 426-3993FAX: (920) 426-6997; E-mail:info@oshkoshareacf.org; URL: http://www.oshkoshareacf.org3345. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,320.203


OverbrookSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEOverbrook<strong>The</strong> Overbrook <strong>Foundation</strong>122 E. 42nd St., Ste. 2500New York, NY 10168-2500(212) 661-8710FAX: (212) 661-8664; URL: http://www.overbrook.org3346. Fund for the City of New York, New York,NY. $1,000,000. To assist nonprofits affectedfinancially by the events of 9/<strong>11</strong>.3347. Robert R. McCormick Tribune <strong>Foundation</strong>,Chicago, IL. $1,000.Oxford <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.125D Lancaster Ave.Strasburg, PA 17579(717) 687-9335FAX: (717) 687-9336; E-mail:pcalhoun@oxfordfoundation.org; URL: http://www.oxfordfoundation.org/3348. <strong>The</strong> Heritage <strong>Foundation</strong>, DC. $25,000.For Homeland Security.OxfordPackard<strong>The</strong> David and Lucile Packard <strong>Foundation</strong>300 2nd St., Ste. 200Los Altos, CA 94022(650) 948-7658URL: http://www.packard.org3349. CIVICUS: World Alliance for CitizenParticipation, DC. $34,750. For Global Survey ofCivil Society Organizations: Assessing 9-<strong>11</strong>-01and Its Aftermath project.3350. Family Planning Association of Pakistan,Lahore, Pakistan. $500,000, 2001. To assistAfghan refugees in Pakistan.3351. United Nations <strong>Foundation</strong>, DC. $500,000,2001. To meet emergency reproductive healthneeds of Afghan refugee women.PaleyWilliam S. Paley <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.1 E. 53rd St., Rm. 1400New York, NY 10022(212) 888-2520FAX: (212) 308-78453352. Citigroup Relief Fund, New York, NY.$25,000. For scholarships.3353. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.3354. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$25,000.Palmer<strong>The</strong> Palmer <strong>Foundation</strong>1025 56th St.Kenosha, WI 53140FAX: 262) 842-0069; E-mail:thepalmerfoundation@mcleodusa.net; URL: http://www.thepalmerfoundation.org3355. American Red Cross, Falls ChurchChapter, Falls Church, VA. $28,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th victims assistance programs.3356. National Organization for VictimAssistance, DC. $100,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thFund.PanasonicPanasonic Corporate Giving Programc/o Corp. Contribs. Dept.1 Panasonic Way, 3G7Secaucus, NJ 07094(201) 348-70003357. New Jersey Chamber of Commerce,Trenton, NJ. $1,200,000.3358. New Jersey Department of Education,Trenton, NJ. $1,000,000.<strong>The</strong> Larry and Nancy Pantirer Family<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o Larry Pantirer and Nancy Pantirer60 E. Hartshorn Dr.Short Hills, NJ 070783359. Save A Patriot Fellowship, Westminster,MD. $5,000.PantirerPark <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 550Ithaca, NY 14851(607) 272-9124FAX: (607) 272-60573360. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000, 2001.3361. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000, 2001.3362. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000, 2001.3363. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $20,000, 2001.3364. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $20,000, 2001.3365. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $15,000, 2001.3366. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $15,000, 2001.3367. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $15,000, 2001.3368. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $15,000, 2001.3369. Washington Performing Arts Society,Washington, DC. $100,000. For educationalinitiative to encourage interaction between artistsand students.ParkParsons<strong>The</strong> Ralph M. Parsons <strong>Foundation</strong>1055 Wilshire Blvd., Ste. 1701Los Angeles, CA 90017(213) 482-3185FAX: (213) 482-8878; URL: http://www.parsonsfoundation.org3370. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500,000, 2001.Party City Corporationc/o Corporate Communications400 Commons WayRockaway, NJ 078663371. American Red Cross, National, DC.$25,000.3372. American Red Cross, National, DC.$25,000.PartyPasadenaPasadena Community <strong>Foundation</strong>16 N. Marengo Ave., Ste. 300Pasadena, CA 9<strong>11</strong>01(626) 796-2097FAX: (626) 583-4738; E-mail:pcfstaff@pasadenacf.org; URL: http://www.pasadenacf.org3373. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $500, 2001.3374. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $7,925, 2001.3375. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $1,000, 2001.3376. Undesignated. $25,090.PayneFrank E. Payne and Seba B. Payne<strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Bank of America231 S. LaSalle St.Chicago, IL 60697(312) 828-17853377. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $100,000.Pearle Vision <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.2465 Joe Field Rd.Dallas, TX 75229(972) 277-6191FAX: (972) 277-6422; E-mail:trinaparasiliti@pearlevision.com3378. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000.PEMCO <strong>Foundation</strong>325 Eastlake Ave. E.Seattle, WA 981093379. American Red Cross, National, DC.$24,880.PearlePEMCOPeninsulaPeninsula Community <strong>Foundation</strong>1700 S. El Camino Real, Ste. 300San Mateo, CA 94402-3049(650) 358-9369FAX: (650) 358-9817; E-mail: inquiry@pcf.org;URL: http://www.pcf.org3380. American Red Cross, Burlingame, CA.$1,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Disaster Relief Fundgeneral support.3381. Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund, New York,NY. $36,846, 2001. For general support.3382. Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund, New York,NY. $23,300, 2001.3383. Goldman Sachs <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York,NY. $10,000, 2001. For humanitarian aid for 9/<strong>11</strong>in New York and Washington, DC.3384. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000, 2001.3385. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $43,171, 2001.3386. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $40,000, 2001. For families of fallenfirefighters and EMS personnel in NYC.3387. Valley Presbyterian Church, Portola Valley,CA. $10,000, 2001.Penn<strong>The</strong> William Penn <strong>Foundation</strong>2 Logan Sq., <strong>11</strong>th Fl.100 N. 18th St.Philadelphia, PA 19103-2757(215) 988-1830FAX: (215) 988-1823; E-mail:moreinfo@williampennfoundation.org; URL: http://www.williampennfoundation.org3388. United Way of Southeastern Pennsylvania,Philadelphia, PA. $250,000, 2001.PenneyJ. C. Penney Corporation, Inc. CorporateGiving ProgramP.O. Box 10001Dallas, TX 75301-8101(972) 431-1349FAX: (972) 431-1355; URL: http://www.jcpenneyinc.com/company/commrel3389. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.3390. Undesignated. $700,000.People’sPeople’s Bank Corporate Giving ProgramBridgeport Ctr.850 Main St.Bridgeport, CT 06604-4913(203) 338-2850FAX: (203) 338-3461; URL: http://www.peoples.com/im/cda/multi_elements/1,6832,13006,00.html3391. American Red Cross, National, DC.$37,266.204


PeoplesPeoples Energy CorporationContributions Program130 E. Randolph Dr.Chicago, IL 60601(312) 240-75163392. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $13,000.PepsiCo<strong>The</strong> PepsiCo <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.700 Anderson Hill Rd.Purchase, NY 10577(914) 253-3153URL: http://www.pepsico.com/citizenship/contributions.shtml3393. Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$1,000,000, 2001.3394. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $100,000, 2001.3395. Structured Employment EconomicDevelopment Corporation, New York, NY.$1,500,000. For continuation of Lower ManhattanSmall Business and Workforce Retention Projectin the aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3396. Undesignated. $2,500,000.PerkinElmer <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o PerkinElmer, Inc.45 William St.Wellesley, MA 02481-4004(781) 237-51003397. Citigroup Relief Fund, New York, NY.$100,000.PerkinElmerPETCO<strong>The</strong> PETCO <strong>Foundation</strong>9125 Rehco Rd.San Diego, CA 92121-2270(858) 453-7845E-mail: petcofoundation@petco.com; URL: http://www.petco.com/corpinfo_foundation.asp3398. Petco <strong>Foundation</strong>, San Diego, CA.$650,000.3399. Petco <strong>Foundation</strong>, San Diego, CA. $73,000.For matching gifts relating to the events of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.<strong>The</strong> Pew Charitable Trusts1 Commerce Sq.2005 Market St., Ste. 1700Philadelphia, PA 19103-7077(215) 575-9050FAX: (215) 575-4939; E-mail: info@pewtrusts.org;URL: http://www.pewtrusts.org3400. CARE International, Baltimore, MD.$500,000, 2001. To provide emergency relief toAfghan refugees.3401. Rock the Vote Education Fund, LosAngeles, CA. $100,000, 2001. To betterunderstand young Americans’ issues and concernsin light of the events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th and theiraftermath.PewPfizer<strong>The</strong> Pfizer <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.235 E. 42nd St.New York, NY 10017(212) 733-4250Tel. for publications and guidelines: (800) 733-4717;URL: http://www.pfizer.com/pfizerinc/philanthropy3402. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$5,000,000, 2001.PfizerPfizer Inc. Corporate Giving Program235 E. 42nd St.New York, NY 10017-5755URL: http://www.pfizer.com/pfizerinc/philanthropy3403. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.3404. Anxiety Disorders Association of America,Rockville, MD. $75,000.LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDER3405. Arlington, County of, Arlington, VA.$15,000.3406. Bar of City of New York, City Bar Fund,New York, NY. $10,000.3407. Bedford Stuyvesant Volunteer AmbulanceCorps, Brooklyn, NY. $<strong>11</strong>0,000.3408. Big Brothers/Big Sisters of New York City,New York, NY. $50,000.3409. Disaster Psychiatry Outreach, New York,NY. $100,000.3410. Hazollah Ambulance, Brooklyn, NY.$100,000.34<strong>11</strong>. Helen Keller International, New York, NY.$250,000.3412. International Society for Traumatic StressStudies, Northbrook, IL. $75,000.3413. Jewish Board of Family and ChildrensServices, New York, NY. $30,000.3414. Mineola Volunteer Ambulance Corp,Mineola, NY. $3,500.3415. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000.3416. Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$100,000.3417. Saint Vincents Hospital and Medical<strong>Center</strong> of New York, New York, NY. $400,000.3418. Saint Vincents Hospital and Medical<strong>Center</strong> of New York, New York, NY. $400,000.3419. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $100,000.3420. Sidran Traumatic Stress <strong>Foundation</strong>,Baltimore, MD. $75,000.3421. United Way of New York City, New York,NY. $250,000. For operating support relating tothe events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3422. Virginia Mason Medical <strong>Center</strong>, Seattle,WA. $20,000.3423. Vulcan Hall <strong>Foundation</strong>, Brooklyn, NY.$100,000.PGA TourPGA Tour Charities, Inc.100 PGA Tour Blvd.Ponte Vedra Beach, FL 32082(904) 285-37003424. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $250,000, 2001.3425. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $200,000, 2001.3426. Manhattan Youth Recreation andResources, New York, NY. $50,000, 2001.3427. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $509,102,2001.3428. New York State World Trade <strong>Center</strong> ReliefFund, Albany, NY. $9,102, 2001.3429. Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$250,000, 2001.3430. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$1,250,000, 2001.PG&E<strong>The</strong> PG&E Corporation <strong>Foundation</strong>Spear Tower., Tax Dept.1 Market St., Ste. 400San Francisco, CA 94105Application address: 77 Beale St., Ste. B32, SanFrancisco, CA 941053431. New York State World Trade <strong>Center</strong> ReliefFund, Albany, NY. $1,000,000.PharmaciaPharmacia Corporation ContributionsProgram100 Rte. 206 N.Peapack, NJ 079773432. Stuyvesant High School, New York, NY.$5,000, 2002.PharmaciaPharmacia <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.100 Rte. 206 N.Peapack, NJ 07977(908) 901-8766FAX: (908) 901-1839; E-mail:erica.ferry@pharmacia.com3433. Childrens Health Fund, New York, NY.$500,000, 2001. For Mobile Medical Program.3434. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500,000.3435. United States Association for UnitedNations High Commissioner for Refugees, DC.$200,000. To support aid to Afghan refugees inPakistan.Phelps Dodge <strong>Foundation</strong>1 N. Central Ave.Phoenix, AZ 85004(602) 366-80503436. American Red Cross, National, DC.$64,784.PhoenixPhelpsPhiladelphia<strong>The</strong> Philadelphia <strong>Foundation</strong>1234 Market St., Ste. 1800Philadelphia, PA 19107-3794(215) 563-6417FAX: (215) 563-6882; URL: http://www.philafound.org3437. American Red Cross, Southeast PAChapter, Philadelphia, PA. $50,000. Foremergency relief and disaster fund.3438. American Red Cross, Southeast PAChapter, Philadelphia, PA. $50,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th local disaster relief.3439. American Red Cross, Southeast PAChapter, Philadelphia, PA. $50,000, 2001. Fornational disaster relief efforts.3440. Children’s Aid Society, New York, NY.$50,000. For general support of WTC ReliefFund.3441. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $25,000.3442. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $14,395. For general operating support.3443. Massachusetts 9/<strong>11</strong> Fund, Boston, MA.$369,029. For general operating support.3444. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $250,000.3445. Philadelphia <strong>Foundation</strong>, Philadelphia, PA.$204,564.3446. Philadelphia <strong>Foundation</strong>, Philadelphia, PA.$6,175.3447. Philadelphia <strong>Foundation</strong>, Philadelphia, PA.$5,000.3448. Philadelphia <strong>Foundation</strong>, Philadelphia, PA.$100.PhillipsPhillips Petroleum <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.700 Plaza Office Bldg.Bartlesville, OK 74004(918) 661-9072Application address: 16 C4 Phillips Bldg.,Bartlesville, OK, 740043449. Phillips Petroleum <strong>Foundation</strong>, Bartlesville,OK. $3,000,000.Phoenix<strong>The</strong> Phoenix <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.1 American RowHartford, CT 06102-5056(860) 403-78313450. ACCION New York, Brooklyn, NY.$25,000.3451. Community Food Resource <strong>Center</strong>, NewYork, NY. $20,000, 2001.3452. <strong>Foundation</strong> for Alger Families, Jersey City,NJ. $50,000, 2001.205


PhoenixSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE3453. Lacrosse <strong>Foundation</strong>, Baltimore, MD.$10,000.3454. Manhattan Youth Recreation andResources, New York, NY. $52,000.3455. Missouri Savings for Tuition (MOST),Saint Louis, MO. $10,000, 2001. For unrestrictedsupport in memory of Peter Genco, a victim ofthe <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks.3456. Montefiore Medical <strong>Center</strong>, Bronx, NY.$250,000.3457. Neil D. Levin Educational Fund, NY.$10,000, 2001.3458. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $175,000, 2001.3459. Princeton University, Princeton, NJ.$10,000, 2001.3460. Safe Horizon, New York, NY. $50,000.3461. Saint Vincents Hospital and Medical<strong>Center</strong> of New York, New York, NY. $10,000.3462. Thomas Burke Family Trust, Boston, MA.$10,000.3463. Trinity College, Hartford, CT. $100,000,2001.3464. Undesignated. $393,000.PhoenixvillePhoenixville Community Health<strong>Foundation</strong>1260 Valley Forge Rd., Ste. 102Phoenixville, PA 19460(610) 917-9890FAX: (610) 917-9861; E-mail: pchf1@juno.com;URL: http://www.pchf1.org/3465. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.Piedmont Natural Gas Company, Inc.Corporate Giving Programc/o Corp. Contribs.1915 Rexford Rd.Charlotte, NC 282<strong>11</strong>3466. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000.Pinnacle Entertainmentc/o Corporate Communications330 N. Brand Street, Suite <strong>11</strong>00Glendale, CA 912033467. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$200,000.<strong>The</strong> Marion D. and Jane E. PiperCharitable <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o M&T Bank1 M&T Plz., 8th Fl.Buffalo, NY 142033468. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.PiedmontPinnaclePiperPiperVirginia G. Piper Charitable Trust6720 N. Scottsdale Rd., Ste. 350Scottsdale, AZ 85253(480) 948-5853FAX: (480) 348-1316; E-mail: info@pipertrust.org;URL: http://www.pipertrust.org3469. Live Brave Coalition, Schaumburg, IL.$50,000. For public service announcements as aresult of the events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, 2001.Pitney Bowes Inc. Corporate GivingProgram1 Elmcroft Rd., MSC 6315Stamford, CT 06926-0700FAX: (203) 351-6303; E-mail:polly.obrien@pb.com3470. American Red Cross, National, DC.$107,434.Pitney3471. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $107,434.3472. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $107,434.Pittsburgh<strong>The</strong> Pittsburgh <strong>Foundation</strong>1 PPG Pl., 30th Fl.Pittsburgh, PA 15222-5401(412) 391-5122FAX: (412) 391-7259; E-mail: email@pghfdn.org;URL: http://www.pittsburghfoundation.org3473. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $882,996, 2001.3474. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $386,522.3475. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000, 2001.3476. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $16,182, 2001.PLACEPLACE Fund6300 Wilson Mills Rd.Mayfield Village, OH 44143-2182(440) 446-73983477. Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund, New York,NY. $12,500. For general support.Plum Creek <strong>Foundation</strong>999 3rd Ave., Ste. 4300Seattle, WA 98104(206) 467-3600FAX: (206) 467-3614; E-mail:foundation@plumcreek.com; URL: http://www.plumcreek.com/company/foundation.cfm3478. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000. For disaster relief fund.PlumPlumPlum <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 1613Studio City, CA 91604(818) 766-8064FAX: (818) 766-80643479. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.PNC<strong>The</strong> PNC <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o PNC Advisors620 Liberty Ave., 25th Fl., 2 PNC Plz.Pittsburgh, PA 15222(412) 762-7076URL: http://www.pnc.com/aboutus/pncfoundation.html3480. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $340,362, 2001.PNM <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.Alvarado Sq., M.S. 1225Albuquerque, NM 87158(505) 241-2284URL: http://www.pnmfoundation.org3481. Greater New Orleans <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewOrleans, LA. $<strong>11</strong>6,158. Toward educationalassistance to surviving children of victims of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th terrorist attacks.3482. Greater New Orleans <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewOrleans, LA. $13,750.PNMPohanka<strong>The</strong> John J. Pohanka Family <strong>Foundation</strong>4608 St. Barnabas Rd.Marlow Heights, MD 207483483. Moms With A Mission, Alexandria, VA.$3,000. For general support.Polk Bros. <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.20 W. Kinzie St., Ste. <strong>11</strong>10Chicago, IL 60610-4600(312) 527-4684FAX: (312) 527-4681; E-mail:info@polkbrosfdn.org; URL: http://www.polkbrosfdn.org/3484. Crossroads Fund, Chicago, IL. $2,500.3485. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000.Lucile and Maurice Pollak FundP.O. Box 357Manahawkin, NJ 08050(609) 978-87183486. Undesignated. $4,450. To aid localnonprofits that were disrupted or suffered loss ofincome after 9/<strong>11</strong> and to provide direct relief forvictims and their families.<strong>The</strong> Pollock-Krasner <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.863 Park Ave.New York, NY 10021(212) 517-5400FAX: (212) 288-2836; E-mail: grants@pkf.org;URL: http://www.pkf.org3487. Individual beneficiaries. $402,700. Forgrants to individual artists affected by WorldTrade <strong>Center</strong> disaster.PolkPollakPollockPortlandPortland <strong>Foundation</strong><strong>11</strong>2 E. Main St.Portland, IN 47371(260) 726-4260FAX: (260) 726-4273; E-mail: portfoun@jayco.net;URL: http://www.portlandfoundation.org3488. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000.PPLPPL Corporation Contributions Program2 N. 9th St., A9-4Allentown, PA 18101(610) 774-52223489. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.3490. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.Prebon Groupc/o Corporate Communications101 Hudson StrettJersey City, NJ 073023491. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $250,000.3492. New York State Fraternal Order of PoliceFund, Hicksville, NY. $250,000.PrebonPriceT. Rowe Price Associates <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.100 E. Pratt St.Baltimore, MD 21202(410) 345-3603FAX: (410) 345-28483493. American Red Cross, National, DC.$8,220.3494. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $8,240.3495. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $250.3496. Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association of theCity of New York, New York, NY. $100,000.3497. Salvation Army of Baltimore, Baltimore,MD. $800.3498. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $100,000.3499. Uniformed Fire Officers Association ofGreater New York, New York, NY. $50,000.3500. Various organizations. $27,635.206


Price<strong>The</strong> Louis and Harold Price <strong>Foundation</strong>,Inc.20 Wilsey Sq., 2nd Fl.Ridgewood, NJ 07450(201) 445-9980FAX: (201) 445-9982; E-mail:grantinquiry@pricefoundation.org; URL: http://www.pricefoundation.org3501. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.PrincePrince Charitable Trusts303 W. Madison St., Ste. 1900Chicago, IL 60606(312) 419-8700FAX: (312) 419-8558; Additional address: PrinceCharitable Trusts, 816 Connecticut Ave., N.W.,Washington, DC 20006, Tel.: (202) 728-0646;E-mail: Kpauly@princetrusts.org (DC office);URL: http://www.fdncenter.org/grantmaker/prince/3502. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $12,500, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> Fund - to be used for families offirefighters and police officers lost trying to assistvictims, divided equally between rescue personnelin New York City and Washington, DC/Virginia.3503. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $12,500, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> Fund - to be used for families offirefighters and police officers lost trying to assistvictims, divided equally between rescue personnelin New York City and Washington, DC/Virginia.PrincessPrincess Grace <strong>Foundation</strong> - U.S.A.150 E. 58th St., 21st Fl.New York, NY 10155(212) 317-1470FAX: (212) 317-1473; E-mail:pgfusa@pgfusa.com; URL: http://www.pgfusa.com3504. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$200,000.PrincipalPrincipal Financial Group <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.7<strong>11</strong> High St.Des Moines, IA 50392-0150(515) 248-3172FAX: (515) 246-5475; E-mail:murphy.jodi@principal.com; URL: http://www.principal.com/about/giving3505. American Red Cross, Central IowaChapter, Des Moines, IA. $500,000, 2001. Fordisaster relief services.3506. American Red Cross, Central IowaChapter, Des Moines, IA. $133,616, 2001.3507. Aon Memorial Education Fund, Chicago,IL. $25,000, 2001.3508. Empire BlueCross BlueShield, Melville, NY.$25,000, 2001.3509. MMC Victims Relief Fund, New York, NY.$25,000, 2001.3510. New York Business DevelopmentCorporation, Albany, NY. $250,000, 2001.35<strong>11</strong>. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $325,000, 2001.3512. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $53,928, 2001.3513. Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association of theCity of New York, New York, NY. $25,000, 2001.3514. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$500,000, 2001.3515. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$62,459, 2001.3516. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $75,000, 2001.LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERProcter<strong>The</strong> Procter & Gamble FundP.O. Box 599Cincinnati, OH 45201(513) 983-2173Inf. line: (513) 945-8454; FAX: (513) 983-2147;E-mail: pgfund.im@pg.com3517. American Dental Association, Chicago, IL.$1,000. To help displaced New York dentists.3518. American Red Cross, National, DC.$250,000, 2002.3519. Army Emergency Relief, Alexandria, VA.$5,000.3520. Dental Society of Cincinnati, Cincinnati,OH. $5,000. Toward fundraiser to help forensicdentists working with NYC Medical Examiner.3521. Navy Marine Corps Relief Society,Arlington, VA. $5,000.3522. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,750,000, 2002.3523. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $250,000, 2002.3524. Salvation Army of Newfoundland, SaintJohns, Canada. $1,000.3525. UNICEF, New York, NY. $100,000.ProgressProgress Energy <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 2591Raleigh, NC 27602-2591(919) 546-6441E-mail: merrilee.jacobson@pgnmail.com; URL:http://www.progress-energy.com/community/foundation/index.asp3526. American Red Cross, Raleigh, Raleigh, NC.$250,000. For general support in the wake ofevents of 9/<strong>11</strong>.3527. American Red Cross, Tampa, Tampa, FL.$250,000. For general support in the wake ofevents of 9/<strong>11</strong>.Progress Energy Service Companyc/o Corporate CommunicationsP.O. Box 1551Raleigh, NC 276023528. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000.ProgressProspect<strong>The</strong> Prospect Hill <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.99 Park Ave., Ste. 2220New York, NY 10016-1601(212) 370-<strong>11</strong>65FAX: (212) 599-6282; E-mail:lcallanan@prospect-hill.org; URL: http://fdncenter.org/grantmaker/prospecthill/3529. New York Conservation Education Fund,New York, NY. $30,000. For participation inplanning efforts to rebuild lower Manhattan.3530. South Street Seaport Museum, New York,NY. $20,000. Toward programming and ticketdistribution for visitors to former World Trade<strong>Center</strong> viewing platform.3531. Undesignated. $14,980.Provident Bankc/o Corporate Communications22 Firstfield Road No. 201Gaithersburg, MD 208783532. American Red Cross, National, DC.$10,000.Providian Financial CorporationContributions Programc/o Community Giving Comm.201 Mission St.San Francisco, CA 94105Additional application address: NH: ProvidianNational Bank, 53 Regional Dr., Concord, NH03301; FAX: (415) 278-6047; E-mail:ProvidentProvidianloren_brown@providian.com; URL: http://www.providian.com/cg/index.htm3533. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.3534. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $20,000.Prudential<strong>The</strong> Prudential <strong>Foundation</strong>Prudential Plz.751 Broad St., 15th Fl.Newark, NJ 07102-3777(973) 802-4791E-mail: community.resources@prudential.com;URL: http://www.prudential.com3535. American Red Cross, National, DC.$3,000,000, 2001. Part of the <strong>Foundation</strong>’s grantwas earmarked for the Metropolian New JerseyChapter, which is assisting affected residents inNew Jersey.3536. United Way of Tri-State, New York, NY.$1,264,726.PrynePryne <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Phillip Pryne7 Vista Del GolfoLong Beach, CA 90803-41663537. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000. For generalsupport for <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.3538. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$10,000. For <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th Fund.3539. United Way, Inc., Region IV -Harbor/Southeast Region, Long Beach, CA.$15,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.PSEG <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.80 Park Plz., T-10Newark, NJ 07101(973) 430-78423540. Various organizations. $672,000. Toprovide grants to families of deceased andNJ-based disaster response agencies.PulliamPSEGPublicPublic Strategies, Inc.c/o Corporate Communications4040 Broadway StreetSan Antonio, TX 782093541. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.PulliamNina Mason Pulliam Charitable Trust135 N. Pennsylvania St., Ste. 1200Indianapolis, IN 46204(317) 231-6075Application address for Arizona organizations: 2201E. Camelback Rd. Ste. 600B, Phoenix, AZ 85016,tel.: (602) 955-3000; URL: http://www.ninapulliamtrust.org3542. Arizona Republic Charities, Tempe, AZ.$50,000, 2001. For Disaster Relief Fund toorganizations providing services to and addressingneeds of victims of Terrorist acts in New YorkCity and Washington DC and their families.3543. <strong>Center</strong> for Animal Care and Control, NewYork, NY. $15,000, 2001. For disaster relief toprovide assistance for animals that have beendisplaced or have lost their human familymembers in wake of terrorist attacks in New YorkCity.3544. Fox 59 WXIN Indianapolis, Indianapolis,IN. $50,000, 2001. For Disaster Relief Fund fororganizations providing services to and addressingneeds of victims of Terrorist acts in New YorkCity and Washington DC and their families.3545. Humane Society of New York, New York,NY. $10,000, 2001. For disaster relief to provideassistance for animals that have been displaced or207


PulliamSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEhave lost their human family members in terroristattack in New York City.Pulte Homes, Inc. Corporate GivingProgramc/o Charitable Giving Office100 Bloomfield Hills Pkwy., Ste. 300Bloomfield Hills, MI 48304(248) 433-4534URL: http://www.pulte.com/about_us/contributions_missionstatement.asp3546. National Housing Endowment, DC.$1,000,000.<strong>The</strong> Quaker Oats <strong>Foundation</strong>Quaker Tower321 N. Clark St., Ste. 27-5Chicago, IL 60610(312) 222-73773547. Undesignated. $19,000.PulteQuakerQUALCOMMQUALCOMM Incorporated CorporateGiving Programc/o Corp. Giving Dept., L-733D5775 Morehouse Dr.San Diego, CA 92121(858) 651-3200FAX: (858) 651-3255; E-mail:giving@qualcomm.com; URL: http://www.qualcomm.com/Community3548. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.3549. Undesignated. $17,000.RadioRadio One, Inc.c/o Corporate Communications5900 Princess Garden - 7th FloorLanham, MD 207063550. Undesignated. $100,000. To benefitfamilies of injured or killed <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th rescueworkers.RandomRandom House, Inc. Corporate GivingProgram201 E. 50th St.New York, NY 10022(212) 782-9000E-mail: mfallon-houska@randomhouse.com3551. Bertelsmann Relief Fund, New York, NY.$134,000, 2002.RaskobRaskob <strong>Foundation</strong> for CatholicActivities, Inc.P.O. Box 4019Wilmington, DE 19807-0019(302) 655-4440FAX: (302) 655-3223; URL: http://www.rfca.org3552. Archdiocese of New York, New York, NY.$53,800, 2001. Toward Disaster Relief Fund ofArchdiocese of New York.3553. Archdiocese of New York, New York, NY.$40,000, 2001. To assist in disaster relief fromterrorist attack on the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> in NewYork City on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.3554. Diocese of Arlington, Arlington, VA.$15,000, 2001.3555. Diocese of Brooklyn, Brooklyn, NY. $7,000.3556. Roman Catholic Military Chaplaincy, DC.$2,000.3557. Saint Vincents Hospital and Medical<strong>Center</strong> of New York, New York, NY. $10,000,2001.<strong>The</strong> Rawlings <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.2554 Players Ct.Wellington, FL 334143558. American Red Cross, Louisville, KY.$4,200. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.RawlingsRBC Dain Rauscher <strong>Foundation</strong>Dain Rauscher Plz., MS67D460 S. 6th St.Minneapolis, MN 55402-4422(612) 371-2765E-mail: sherry.koster@rbcdain.com; URL: http://www.rbcdain.com/communityinvolvement3559. American Red Cross, National, DC.$25,000.3560. Various organizations. $47,000.RBCRead-RiteRead-Ritec/o Corporate Communications44100 Osgood RoadFremont, CA 945393561. KRON 4 Relief Fund, San Francisco, CA.$84,077.Reader’s Digest <strong>Foundation</strong>Reader’s Digest Rd.Pleasantville, NY 10570-7000(914) 244-5370FAX: (914) 238-7642; E-mail:carolyn.malile@readersdigest.com; URL: http://www.readersdigest.com/corporate/rd_foundation.html3562. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000.3563. Various organizations. $<strong>11</strong>0,000.Red Wing Shoe Company, Inc.314 Main StreetRed Wing, MN 550663564. American Red Cross, National, DC.$3,547.Reader’s<strong>The</strong> Reed <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.444 Madison Ave., Ste. 2901New York, NY 10022(212) 223-1330FAX: (212) 754-0078; E-mail:trf@reedfoundation.org3565. Undesignated. $26,000. For donations inthe aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th to supportanimal relief (ASPCA) and civil rights for SouthAsians.Reiman <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.<strong>11</strong>5 S. 84th St., No. 221Milwaukee, WI 532143566. Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$150,000. For Robin Hood Relief Fund.RedReedReimanRemalaSatya and Rao Remala <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Wellspring Group10900 N.E. 4th St., Ste. 920Bellevue, WA 980043567. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.ResnickResnick Family <strong>Foundation</strong><strong>11</strong>444 W. Olympic Blvd., 10th Fl.Los Angeles, CA 900643568. American Red Cross, National, DC. $625,2002.3569. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $32,433. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.Retirement<strong>The</strong> Retirement Research <strong>Foundation</strong>8765 W. Higgins Rd., Ste. 430Chicago, IL 60631-4170(773) 714-8080FAX: (773) 714-8089; E-mail: info@rrf.org,hennessy@rrf.org; URL: http://www.rrf.org3570. Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese ofNew York, New York, NY. $50,000, 2001.3571. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $50,000, 2001.RevsonCharles H. Revson <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.55 E. 59th St., 23rd Fl.New York, NY 10022(212) 935-3340FAX: (212) 688-0633; E-mail:info@revsonfoundation.org; URL: http://www.revsonfoundation.org3572. Facing History and Ourselves National<strong>Foundation</strong>, Brookline, MA. $600,000, 2001.3573. Legal Aid Society, New York, NY.$200,000. For emergency grant to meetdramatically increased needs in the aftermath ofthe <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks.3574. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000. To joinwith others to support relief efforts of <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th Fund.Donald W. Reynolds <strong>Foundation</strong>1701 Village <strong>Center</strong> Cir.Las Vegas, NV 89134(702) 804-6000FAX: (702) 804-6099; E-mail:generalquestions@dwrf.org; URL: http://www.dwreynolds.org3575. Mended Hearts, Las Vegas, NV. $5,000.For annual program support.ReynoldsReynoldsR. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company<strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 2959Winston-Salem, NC 27102(336) 741-00493576. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000.3577. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500,000.RGK <strong>Foundation</strong>1301 W. 25th St., Ste. 300Austin, TX 78705-4236(512) 474-9298FAX: (512) 474-7281; E-mail:shaffey@rgkfoundation.org; URL: http://www.rgkfoundation.org3578. American Red Cross, Central Chapter,Austin, TX. $38,000, 2001. For board memberdiscretionary grants for Liberty Disaster ReliefFund to aid victims of New York terrorist attack.RGKRhode Island<strong>The</strong> Rhode Island <strong>Foundation</strong>1 Union Sta.Providence, RI 02903(401) 274-4564FAX: (401) 331-8085; URL: http://www.rifoundation.org3579. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $144,500.3580. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000, 2001.3581. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $15,500, 2001.3582. United Way of New York City, New York,NY. $89,136, 2001. For relief efforts after<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.208


3583. United Way of Southeastern New England,Providence, RI. $5,000. To support local affiliateof the United Way.Shelly and Donald Rich <strong>Foundation</strong>Oglethorpe University4484 Peachtree Road NEAtlanta, GA 303193584. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$10,000.RichRichRich Products Corporation ContributionsProgram<strong>11</strong>50 Niagara St.Buffalo, NY 14240-0245(716) 878-8932FAX: (716) 878-87653585. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000.RichardsonSmith Richardson <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.60 Jesup Rd.Westport, CT 06880(203) 222-6222FAX: (203) 222-6282; URL: http://www.srf.org3586. Federal Employee Education & AssistanceFund, Littleton, CO. $30,000. For World Trade<strong>Center</strong>/Pentagon Fund, which assists federalemployees and their families affected by<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3587. Navy Marine Corps Relief Society,Arlington, VA. $30,000. For Pentagon AssistanceFund, providing for college education ofdependent spouses and children of militaryvictims of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks.3588. Windows of Hope Family Relief Fund, NewYork, NY. $50,000.3589. Windows of Hope Family Relief Fund, NewYork, NY. $5,000.RichlandRichland County <strong>Foundation</strong>24 W. 3rd St., Ste. 100Mansfield, OH 44902-1209(419) 525-3020FAX: (419) 525-1590; E-mail:info@rcfoundation.org; URL: http://www.rcfoundation.org3590. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,500.3591. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000.<strong>The</strong> Riggio <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Robinson, Silverman, Pearce, et. al1290 Ave. of the AmericasNew York, NY 101043592. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$1,000,000, 2002.RiggioRiklis<strong>The</strong> Judith Riklis <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o George V. Delson Assocs.<strong>11</strong>0 E. 59th St.New York, NY 100223593. Engine No. 22/Ladder No. 13 Family Fund,New York, NY. $1,000.RippelFannie E. Rippel <strong>Foundation</strong>180 Mount Airy Rd., Ste. 200Basking Ridge, NJ 07920-2021(908) 766-0404FAX: (908) 766-0527; E-mail:rippel@attglobal.net; URL: http://fdncenter.org/grantmaker/rippel3594. NYU Downtown Hospital, New York, NY.$350,000.3595. Saint Vincents Hospital and Medical<strong>Center</strong> of New York, New York, NY. $100,000,2002. Toward general relief efforts mounted asLIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERresult of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001 terrorist attacks onthe World Trade <strong>Center</strong> in New York.<strong>The</strong> Charles E. and Mabel M. RitchieMemorial <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o FirstMerit Bank, N.A.121 S. Main St., Ste. 200Akron, OH 44308(330) 384-7320FAX: (330) 849-8992; E-mail:brenda.moubray@firstmerit.com3596. American Red Cross, Summit CountyChapter, Summit, NJ. $5,000.RitchieRite Aid Corporation ContributionsProgram30 Hunter Ln.Camp Hill, PA 170<strong>11</strong>(717) 761-26333597. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.Rite Aid, New York Cityc/o Corporate CommunicationsCAN’T FINDNew York, NY3598. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $25,000.RiteRiteRiverRiver Rock <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 14South Freeport, ME 04078-00143599. America Speaks, Inc., DC. $5,000. To bringfacilitators from around the country and world toListening to the City, a gathering to provide inputto decision makers for redevelopment of lowerManhattan.J. H. Robbins <strong>Foundation</strong>503 Princeton Rd.San Mateo, CA 94402-3231(650) 343-53003600. American Red Cross, DC Chapter, DC.$1,000. For disaster relief.RobbinsRobertsonRobertson <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Dorian A. Vergos & Co., LLC592 5th Ave., 2nd Fl.New York, NY 10036-2602(212) 307-71803601. Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$1,000,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Relief Fund.Robertson Stephensc/o Corporate Communications555 California Street, Suite 2600San Francisco, CA 941043602. Various organizations. $1,000,000.Robertson<strong>The</strong> Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>826 Broadway, 7th Fl.New York, NY 10003(212) 227-6601FAX: (212) 227-6698; E-mail: info@rhnyc.net;URL: http://www.robinhood.org3603. Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$7,000,000.RobinRobinsRobins <strong>Foundation</strong>1021 E. Cary St., 8th Fl.Richmond, VA 23219(804) 697-6917Application address: P.O. Box <strong>11</strong>24, Richmond, VA23218; URL: http://www.robins-foundation.org3604. Richmond Symphony, Richmond, VA.$10,000. For memorial concert for 9/<strong>11</strong>.Robinson<strong>The</strong> Jim and Linda Robinson <strong>Foundation</strong>,Inc.c/o <strong>The</strong> Ayco Co., LLPP.O. Box 8019Ballston Spa, NY 12020-80193605. Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$10,000. For general support.James E. Robison <strong>Foundation</strong>17 Greenbriar Cir.Armonk, NY 10504-13533606. Undesignated. $5,000.RockefellerRobison<strong>The</strong> Roby <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o CSAM466 Lexington Ave., 17th Fl.New York, NY 10017-31403607. Credit Suisse/First Boston CorporateContributions Program, NY. $30,000. For WorldTrade <strong>Center</strong> Disaster Fund.RobyRoche<strong>The</strong> Roche <strong>Foundation</strong>340 Kingsland St.Nutley, NJ 07<strong>11</strong>0-<strong>11</strong>99(973) 562-2055Application address: P.O. Box 278, Nutley, NJ07<strong>11</strong>0; FAX: (973) 562-29993608. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $15,000.RochesterRochester Area Community <strong>Foundation</strong>500 East Ave.Rochester, NY 14607-1912(585) 271-4100FAX: (518) 271-4292; E-mail: jleonard@racf.org;URL: http://www.racf.org3609. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $226,591.RockefellerRockefeller Brothers Fund, Inc.437 Madison Ave., 37th Fl.New York, NY 10022-7001(212) 812-4200FAX: (212) 812-4299; General E-mail:info@rbf.org; E-mail for annual report:anreport@rbf.org; URL: http://www.rbf.org3610. America Speaks, Inc., DC. $30,000, 2002.For Listening to the City II, which will bring focusto the range of interests in rebuilding lowerManhattan.36<strong>11</strong>. <strong>Center</strong> for Economic and EnvironmentalPartners, Albany, NY. $40,000, 2002. For HighPerformance Buildings Initiative, which seeks toadvance green building technology into themainstream. Grant made in response to the eventsof <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3612. <strong>Center</strong> for Media and Public Affairs, DC.$75,000, 2002. To conduct content analysis ofAmerican media coverage of international newsafter the terrorist attacks of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.3613. Circle <strong>Foundation</strong>, Bethesda, MD.$125,000. For Improving PolicymakersUnderstanding of U.S. Public Opinion onAmerica’s Role in the Post-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th World.3614. EastWest Institute, New York, NY. $4,800.For RBF conference at Pocantico Conference<strong>Center</strong> to examine ways to improve strategicframework for America’s broader engagementwith the Islamic world, and to preparecomprehensive report that makesrecommendations for U.S. policy strategies.3615. <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, New York, New York,NY. $25,000, 2002. To support the <strong>Center</strong>’s 9/<strong>11</strong><strong>Philanthropic</strong> <strong>Response</strong> Project.3616. Global Kids, New York, NY. $15,000, 2002.For efforts to engage New York City young peoplein the development and implementation of plansfor rebuilding lower Manhattan.209


RockefellerSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE3617. H. John Heinz III <strong>Center</strong> for Science,Economics and the Environment, DC. $50,000.For project, Alerting Americans to GlobalChallenges, to explore different initiatives thatcould help Americans understand the world as aninterdependent system, to educate them on keyissues, and to counter widely-held misperceptionsthat inhibit progre.3618. Human Rights Watch, New York, NY.$100,000, 2001. To monitor human rights abusesat the borders of Afghanistan and alert policymakers to violations.3619. Legal Aid Society, New York, NY. $75,000,2001. For general support of programs andservices related to legal needs of low-incomeresidents affected directly and indirectly by<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3620. Municipal Art Society of New York, NewYork, NY. $50,000, 2002. For Imagine New York,which aims to include as broad a spectrum aspossible in the rebuilding plans for lowerManhattan.3621. National Public Radio, DC. $50,000, 2002.For continued coverage of national andinternational policy responses to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3622. New York <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Arts, NewYork, NY. $150,000, 2001. For Arts RecoveryFund.3623. New York Regional Association ofGrantmakers, New York, NY. $15,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Conduit Funds Report.3624. New York University, New York, NY.$75,000, 2002. For Conversations with the Cityseries, a mechanism for democratizing therebuilding process. Grant made in response to theevents of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3625. Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, NY. $50,000,2002. To continue advocating for progressivebuilding techniques and to involve community indecisions regarding the rebuilding of lowerManhattan.3626. Puerto Rican Legal Defense and EducationFund, New York, NY. $75,000, 2001. For generalsupport to provide advocacy, translation services,and legal assistance for lower-income immigrantworkers harmed by World Trade <strong>Center</strong> disaster.3627. Regional Plan Association, New York, NY.$300,000, 2002. To continue to facilitate civicdialogue among various constituencies in the cityabout rebuilding of lower Manhattan.3628. Regional Plan Association, New York, NY.$100,000, 2001. To create civic dialogue amongvarious constituencies in the city about rebuildingof lower Manhattan.3629. Regional Plan Association, New York, NY.$60,000. For Civic Alliance to Rebuild Downtowninitiative.3630. Regional Plan Association, New York, NY.$16,000. For production of Listening to the Cityreport.3631. Undesignated. $49,000. For donations tocombination of relief and rebuilding efforts inNew York City and selected strategic, long-terminitiatives at the national and international levels.Grant made in response to events of <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th.3632. United Nations Association of the UnitedStates of America, New York, NY. $70,200. Forefforts to organize U.S.-Iran Dialogue onMultilateral Issues, co-sponsored byTeheran-based Institute for Political andInternational Studies (IPIS), bringing togetherparticipants from Iran and the U.S. on an informaltrack to examine multilateral i.3633. WNET Channel 13, New York, NY.$50,000, 2002. For Wide Angle, series ofdocumentaries focused on expanding Americanaudiences’ understanding of the internationalscene. Grant made in response to the events of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3634. World Policy Institute at the New School,New York, NY. $125,000. For project andconferences, Dialogues - Islamic World, theUnited States, and the West, bringing togethervoices from various religious, intellectual,economic, and political sectors of Western andIslamic societies to identify and discuss majorthemes o.Rockefeller<strong>The</strong> Rockefeller <strong>Foundation</strong>420 5th Ave.New York, NY 10018-2702(212) 869-8500URL: http://www.rockfound.org3635. American Civil Liberties Union<strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY. $275,000, 2002.Toward creating Security and Civil Liberties TaskForce to conduct broad public outreach aimed atprotecting rights and civil liberties of Americans,most particularly Arab-Americans and Muslims,including those detained, in the wake of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorists attacks.3636. Amnesty International USA, New York,NY. $100,000, 2002. For crisis response work inthe wake of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attack on the WorldTrade <strong>Center</strong>.3637. Arab American Family Support <strong>Center</strong>,Brooklyn, NY. $250,000, 2001. To respond to theimpact of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> World Trade <strong>Center</strong>disaster on New York’s Arab-Americancommunity.3638. Asia Society, New York, NY. $100,000,2002. Toward exhibition, Through Afghan Eyes:A Culture in Conflict, 1987-1992, and relatedpublic programs. Grant made in response to theevents of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3639. Asian American Arts Alliance, New York,NY. $100,000, 2002. Toward initiative to providetechnical and financial assistance to AsianAmerican arts organizations during thepost-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> cultural funding crisis.3640. Asian American Federation of New York,New York, NY. $50,000. For researchdocumenting economic impact of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>tragedy on Manhattan’s Chinatown communityand use of findings as objective framework forengaging Chinatown’s diverse interests in series ofcommunity dialogues on how to rebuild.3641. Asian American Legal Defense andEducation Fund, New York, NY. $200,000, 2001.For emergency programs to address anti-Asianbacklash following the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> World Trade<strong>Center</strong> disaster.3642. Asian Resource <strong>Foundation</strong>, Bangkok,Thailand. $135,840, 2002. For research fellowshipprogram, Islam in Transition in Southeast Asia: AView from Within, for young Muslim intellectualsin the region. Grant made in response to theevents of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3643. Association of Hispanic Arts, New York,NY. $100,000, 2002. Toward initiative to providetechnical and financial assistance to Latino artsorganizations during the post-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>cultural funding crisis.3644. Brennan <strong>Center</strong> for Justice, New York, NY.$150,000, 2002. To document gaps andshortcomings in New York City unemploymentinsurance benefit program and developcomprehensive study of informal economy in NewYork City in which low-wage workers live out theircareers. Grant made in response to the events of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3645. Brennan <strong>Center</strong> for Justice, New York, NY.$30,000, 2001. To provide staff time for coalitionbuilding and development policy proposals thatincrease minority access and providefamily-supporting wages in post-9/<strong>11</strong>reconstruction projects in New York City.3646. Brown University, Providence, RI. $45,000,2002. Toward Thomas J. Watson Jr. Institute forInternational Studies’ 9<strong>11</strong> plus 1: <strong>The</strong> Art of Warin the Information Age, multi-media exhibitionand symposium engaging artists and socialscientists on the rhetoric, representations andtechnologies of the war on terror.3647. Citizens Committee for New York City,New York, NY. $180,285, 2002. Toward programto strengthen neighborhood assets throughcompetitive awards and technical support for NewYork City community groups concerned withenhancing inter-group relations. Grant made inresponse to the events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3648. Citizens Union <strong>Foundation</strong> of the City ofNew York, New York, NY. $100,000, 2002. Toprovide information to New York City residentsand members of City Council regarding processand options for rebuilding lower Manhattan in thewake of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attack on the World Trade<strong>Center</strong>.3649. CityKids <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$50,000, 2002. For BridgeBuilder Initiative, whichprovides skills training and leadershipdevelopment for New York City youth in responseto an increase in violence, racial prejudice, andsubstance abuse observed among young people inthe wake of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attack on the WorldTrade <strong>Center</strong>.3650. Columbia University, New York, NY.$132,894, 2001. Toward <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001,Oral History and Narrative Memory Project.3651. Columbia University, New York, NY.$48,000, 2002. For Oral History Research Office’s<strong>The</strong> <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001, Oral History andNarrative Memory Project.3652. Consortium for Worker Education, NewYork, NY. $75,000, 2001. For newly-created staffposition to promote coalition building andlow-income, worker-friendly proposals to rebuildNew York City in the wake of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thattack on the World Trade <strong>Center</strong>.3653. Economic Policy Institute, DC. $150,000,2001. To develop economic stimulus proposalsthat will strengthen the economy and meet theneeds of working families and to monitor federalrelief efforts undertaken in response to the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks.3654. Global Kids, New York, NY. $30,000, 2002.Toward Annual Youth Conference to promoteyouth development, global awareness, and civicparticipation, focusing on xenophobia, racism anddiscrimination. Grant made in response to theevents of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3655. Graduate School and University <strong>Center</strong> ofthe City University of New York, New York, NY.$100,000. Toward Greater New York City Project,effort to map impacts of, frame issues resultingfrom, and disseminate information about,rebuilding processes in the wake of the <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong> attacks so as to stimulate within marginalizedcommunities meaningful part.3656. Greater New York Labor-ReligionCoalition, New York, NY. $25,000, 2002. Forefforts to encourage local clergy andcongregations to engage with and advocate forlow-wage workers, particularly those dislocated inthe wake of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks.3657. Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy,DC. $50,000, 2001. For Good Jobs New Yorkproject to launch Reconstruction Watch, whichwill monitor reconstruction and economicdevelopment projects that emerge as a result ofthe <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attack on the World Trade<strong>Center</strong>, in order to promote a fair and effectiveuse of economic development resources in thecity’s rebuilding effort.3658. Islamic Circle of North America, Jamaica,NY. $100,000, 2001. Toward providing legal andfamily support services to Arab-American andother Muslims detained in the wake of the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th World Trade <strong>Center</strong> attacks.210


3659. Legacy Project, New York, NY. $25,000.Toward conference organized jointly with PaceUniversity and exhibition to be held at BaruchCollege to frame aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>,2001, in broader context.3660. Lewisporte Middle School, Lewisporte,Canada. $52,500, 2001. For one-time grant tosupport computer laboratory with upgradedhardware and network connections. Grant madein recognition of aid provided by the School andcommunity of Lewisporte to stranded airlinepassengers, including Rockefeller <strong>Foundation</strong>trustees and staff, following the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>disaster.3661. Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, NewYork, NY. $50,000, 2001. Toward participation inrebuilding the arts in downtown Manhattanfollowing the attack on the World Trade <strong>Center</strong>.3662. Ms. <strong>Foundation</strong> for Women, New York, NY.$35,000, 2001. Toward poll to gauge publicopinion on policies crucial to lifting and helpingfamilies out of poverty in the precarious economicclimate following the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terroristattacks.3663. Municipal Art Society of New York, NewYork, NY. $75,000, 2002. For Imagine New York:Giving Voice to the People’s Visions, project toencourage greater New York City metropolitanarea residents to share their ideas and visions forrebuilding and memorializing the World Trade<strong>Center</strong> site, and to revitalize their owncommunities.3664. Municipal Art Society of New York, NewYork, NY. $62,385, 2002. Toward Creative Citiesconference, to explore ways to put culture andcommunities at the heart of a new paradigm andencourage creativity in all its forms in ways thatwill become intrinsic and integral to daily life ofNew York City in the wake of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>attack on the World Trade <strong>Center</strong>.3665. National Employment Law Project, NewYork, NY. $223,792, 2001. For efforts tocoordinate volunteer legal services available in theaftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> World Trade <strong>Center</strong>disaster, and to ensure that low-wage workers andimmigrants have access to these services.3666. National Public Radio, DC. $200,000,2002. For continuation of special news coverageof recovery efforts since the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacksand war in Afghanistan.3667. National Video Resources, New York, NY.$65,000, 2001. Toward creation of After 9/<strong>11</strong>: AVideo Collection that Promotes Knowledge,Understanding and Tolerance, to give face andvoice to Arab-Americans, Middle Eastern andAsian communities in the U.S. and to helpgrassroots organizations combat anti-Arabprejudices in their communities.3668. New York City Employment and TrainingCoalition, New York, NY. $50,000, 2002. Toconduct a series of industry-specific employerroundtables about post-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> labormarket needs.3669. New York <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$500,000, 2001. For Immigrant Access Project,which will provide funds to community-basedorganizations in immigrant neighborhoods tostrengthen staff capacity to help immigrantsaccess benefits and services available after the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> World Trade <strong>Center</strong> disaster.3670. New York <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Arts, NewYork, NY. $350,000, 2001. For Arts RebuildingInitiative, which will provide expertise andadvocacy on behalf of artists and artsorganizations adversely affected by the <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong> World Trade <strong>Center</strong> disaster.3671. New York <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Arts, NewYork, NY. $200,000, 2002. Toward ArtsLeadership Initiative, peer-based developmentprogram to help small arts organizations whoserve artists and communities of color to buildLIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERsustainability, and cooperative project withHarlem Arts Alliance to provide technical andfinancial assistance to build capacity ofAfrican-American arts organizations during thepost-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> cultural funding crisis.3672. New York University, New York, NY.$400,000. Toward Listening to the City, projectproviding people who live and work in the NewYork metropolitan region opportunity toparticipate in public discussions about rebuildingdowntown New York in the wake of the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attack on the World Trade Cent.3673. Philadelphia Tabernacle PentacostalChurch, Lewisporte, Canada. $15,000, 2001. Tosupport the church’s ability to provide emergencyservices, such as those provided to strandedinternational travelers following the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>attack on the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> in New York.3674. Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, NY. $75,000,2002. Toward series of town meetings to promotepublic discussion of New York City’s rebuildingefforts.3675. Rockefeller <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$59,900. For emergency supplies as part of the<strong>Foundation</strong>’s response to the World Trade <strong>Center</strong>disaster.3676. Service Employees International UnionEducation and Assistance Fund, DC. $500,000,2001. For multi-language outreach andinformation dissemination campaign on benefitaccess targeted at low-wage and immigrantworkers affected by the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> disaster.3677. South Asian Youth Action (SAYA),Elmhurst, NY. $200,000, 2001. For Peace andUnity Initiative in response to the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>World Trade <strong>Center</strong> disaster and fororganizational development activities.RockwellRockwell Automation Trust Fund1201 South 2nd StreetMilwaukee, WI 532043678. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.RockwellRockwell Collinsc/o Corporate CommunicationsCedar Rapids MunicipCedar Rapids, IA 524013679. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.Rohatyn<strong>The</strong> Felix and Elizabeth Rohatyn<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.810 5th Ave.New York, NY 100213680. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $10,000, 2001. For unrestrictedsupport.3681. Undesignated. $50,000.RohmRohm and Haas Company ContributionsProgram100 Independence Mall W.Philadelphia, PA 19106-2399(215) 592-3644Application address in Chicago, IL: Joe Wojtonik, c/oMorton International, Inc., 123 N. Wacker Dr.,Chicago, IL 60606; FAX: (215) 592-6808; E-mail:alexandra_samuels@rohmhaas.com; URL: http://www.rohmhaas.com/community/index.htm3682. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000, 2001.3683. American Red Cross, National, DC.$75,000, 2001.3684. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $75,000, 2003.RolexRolex Watch U.S.A.c/o Corporate Communications665 5th AvenueNew York, NY 100223685. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $2,000,000.RonaldRonald McDonald House Charities1 Kroc Dr.Oak Brook, IL 60523(630) 623-7048FAX: (630) 623-7488; URL: http://www.rmhc.org3686. Points of Light <strong>Foundation</strong>, DC.$1,000,000.Ronald McDonald House Charities ofNortheastern Ohio, Inc.955 W. St. Clair Ave., Ste. 5<strong>11</strong>Cleveland, OH 44<strong>11</strong>3-1235(216) 687-9153FAX: (216) 687-9157; E-mail:rmhcneo@localnet.com3687. American Red Cross, National, DC.$55,000.RudinRonaldRoseRose Community <strong>Foundation</strong> andAffiliates600 S. Cherry St., Ste. 1200Denver, CO 80246-1712(303) 398-7400FAX: (303) 398-7430; E-mail: rcf@rcfdenver.org;URL: http://www.rcfdenver.org3688. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000. Toadminister <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.RosemoreRosemorec/o Corporate Communications701 Wilson Point RoadMiddle River, MD 212203689. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000.RosenbergSunny and Abe Rosenberg <strong>Foundation</strong>,Inc.888 7th Ave., 24th Fl.New York, NY 10019(212) 660-1214FAX: (212) 660-2180; E-mail:info@rosenbergfoundation.org; URL: http://www.rosenbergfoundation.org3690. American Jewish World Service, New York,NY. $60,000. To aid <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th relief effort.RothRoth Staffing Companies, Inc.c/o Corporate Communications333 City Boulevard WestOrange, CA 928683691. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.RoyalRoyal Bank of Canada (RBC) FinancialGroupc/o Corporate CommunicationsP.O. Box 1, Royal Bank PlazaToronto, Ontario M5J 2J53692. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000.RudinMay and Samuel Rudin Family<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o Rudin345 Park Ave.New York, NY 10154(212) 407-24003693. Borough of Manhattan Community CollegeFund, Brooklyn, NY. $50,000. To rebuild socialspace lost as result of 9/<strong>11</strong>.2<strong>11</strong>


RudinSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE3694. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $10,000. For scholarships.3695. Whitney Museum of American Art, NewYork, NY. $<strong>11</strong>,044. For event for 9/<strong>11</strong> police, fireand rescue workers.RuralRural Development <strong>Foundation</strong>Warsaw, Poland3696. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000.Russell<strong>The</strong> Russell Family <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 2567Gig Harbor, WA 98335(253) 858-5050Toll Free tel: (888) 252-4331; FAX: (253)851-0460; E-mail: info@trff.org; URL: http://www.trff.org3697. American Red Cross, Tacoma Chapter,Tacoma, WA. $10,000. For disaster relief efforts inNew York and Washington D.C.RyanRichard Nelson Ryan <strong>Foundation</strong>787 7th Ave.New York, NY 10019-60993698. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $20,000. For unrestricted support.S & G <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 20000, No. 25185Jackson, WY 83001(307) 733-77073699. FT Fiduciary Trust Memorial Fund, SanMateo, CA. $25,000. For general operatingsupport.Safeco Corporation ContributionsProgramSafeco Plz.4333 Brooklyn Ave. N.E.Seattle, WA 98185(206) 545-5299Application address: c/o Safeco Community Rels.,Safeco Plz., T-8, Seattle, WA 98185; FAX: (206)545-5730; E-mail: comrel@safeco.com; URL:http://www.safeco.com/safeco/about/giving/giving.asp3700. Various organizations. $80,500.S & GSafecoSafewaySafeway Inc. Corporate Giving Program5918 Stoneridge Mall Rd.Pleasanton, CA 94588-32293701. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.SafraEdmond J. Safra <strong>Foundation</strong>3702. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $1,000,000.Saint Paul<strong>The</strong> Saint Paul <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.600 5th St. Ctr.55 5th St., E.St. Paul, MN 55101-1797(651) 224-5463Additional tel: (800) 875-6167; FAX: (651)224-8123; E-mail: inbox@saintpaulfoundation.org;URL: http://saintpaulfoundation.org3703. Saint Paul <strong>Foundation</strong>, Saint Paul, MN.$25,000.3704. Saint Paul <strong>Foundation</strong>, Saint Paul, MN.$375.Saks Incorporated Corporate GivingProgram750 Lakeshore Pkwy.Birmingham, AL 352<strong>11</strong>FAX: (205) 940-4984; URL: http://www.saksincorporated.com/about_us/community.html3705. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $245,000.Saks Incorporated <strong>Foundation</strong>750 Lakeshore Pkwy., Tax Dept.Birmingham, AL 352<strong>11</strong>Application address: 12 E. 49th St., New York, NY100173706. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000.SaksSaksSamek<strong>The</strong> Edward & Marthann Samek<strong>Foundation</strong>509 St. Davids Ave.St. Davids, PA 190873707. Bucknell University, Lewisburg, PA. $100.For Bucknell 9/<strong>11</strong> Victims.Samuels<strong>The</strong> Fan Fox and Leslie R. Samuels<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.350 5th Ave., Ste. 4301New York, NY 10<strong>11</strong>8(212) 239-3030FAX: (212) 239-3039; E-mail: info@samuels.org;URL: http://www.samuels.org3708. New York School for Circus Arts, NewYork, NY. $15,000. To support post-9/<strong>11</strong> artisticand administrative goals and core activities,including creation and performance of 25thanniversary tour production.San AngeloSan Angelo Health <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 3550San Angelo, TX 76902-3550(325) 486-0185FAX: (325) 486-<strong>11</strong>25; E-mail:sahf.tx@sahfoundation.org; URL: http://www.sahfoundation.org3709. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $250,000. Tosupport 9/<strong>11</strong> relief and recovery with an emphasison health care.SancoaSancoa <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Sancoa Intl.<strong>11</strong>000 Midlantic Dr.Mount Laurel, NJ 080543710. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $3,763. For generalsupport.SANYO Manufacturing CorporationContributions Program3333 SANYO Rd.Forrest City, AR 72335(870) 633-503037<strong>11</strong>. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.SAP America, Inc. Corporate GivingProgram3999 West Chester PikeNewtown Square, PA 19073(610) 661-2731FAX: (610) 661-2732; E-mail:laurie.mcgrath@sap.com3712. Undesignated. $3,000,000. To supportfamily members of victims of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.SANYOSAPSasco <strong>Foundation</strong>67A E. 77th St.New York, NY 10021-18133713. Children’s Aid Society, New York, NY.$15,000.SascoSavingsSavings Bank of Manchester <strong>Foundation</strong>,Inc.c/o Sheila Flanagen923 Main St.Manchester, CT 06040(860) 645-25893714. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.SBCSBC <strong>Foundation</strong>130 E. Travis, Ste. 350San Antonio, TX 78205(210) 351-22183715. American Red Cross, National, DC.$507,693.3716. AmeriCares <strong>Foundation</strong>, New Canaan, CT.$8,883.3717. Catholic Charities USA, Alexandria, VA.$57,417.3718. Communications Workers of America, DC.$44,297.3719. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $124,026.3720. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $155,648.3721. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $1,000,000, 2001.3722. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $375.3723. Salvation Army of Greater New York, NewYork, NY. $87,174.3724. SBC Pioneers, Dallas, TX. $88,067.3725. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$47,254.3726. United Jewish Communities, New York,NY. $9,762.Scaife Family <strong>Foundation</strong>West Tower, Ste. 903777 So. Flagler Dr.West Palm Beach, FL 33401(561) 659-<strong>11</strong>88URL: http://www.scaife.com3727. Independent Womens Forum, Arlington,VA. $100,000. For Infant Care Project.ScaifeScherman<strong>The</strong> Scherman <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.16 E. 52nd St., Ste. 601New York, NY 10022-5306(212) 832-3086FAX: (212) 838-0154; E-mail: info@scherman.org;URL: http://www.scherman.org3728. Asian American Legal Defense andEducation Fund, New York, NY. $10,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th-related activities.3729. Brooklyn Academy of Music, Brooklyn, NY.$10,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th recovery.3730. Citizens Committee for New York City,New York, NY. $10,000, 2001.3731. Puerto Rican Legal Defense and EducationFund, New York, NY. $10,000. For <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th-related activities.SchiffRobert C. & Adele R. Schiff <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o U.S. Bank, N.A.P.O. Box <strong>11</strong>18, CN-OH-W10XCincinnati, OH 452013732. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$10,000, 2002.212


Schlanger<strong>The</strong> Schlanger Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.48 Pembroke Dr.Glen Cove, NY <strong>11</strong>5423733. Andrew Golkin Scholarship Fund, NewYork, NY. $5,000.Schmidt<strong>The</strong>odore & Elizabeth Schmidt Family<strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Merrill Lynch Trust Co.P.O. Box 1525, MSC 06-03Pennington, NJ 08534-15253734. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000. For generaloperating support.SchragerPhillip and Terri Schrager <strong>Foundation</strong>4343 S. 96th St.Omaha, NE 68127-12833735. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,622.Schumann<strong>The</strong> Schumann Fund for New Jersey, Inc.21 Van Vleck St.Montclair, NJ 07042(973) 509-9883URL: http://fdncenter.org/grantmaker/schumann/3736. Regional Plan Association, New York, NY.$50,000, 2001. For the Civil Alliance, whichensures public participation in the rebuilding ofLower Manhattan, and specifically, to allow NJorganizations to engage in the process.Schwab<strong>The</strong> Charles Schwab Corporation<strong>Foundation</strong>101 Montgomery St., M.S. SF120KNY-28San Francisco, CA 94104(877) 408-5438FAX: (415) 636-3262; E-mail: cis@schwab.com3737. American Red Cross in Greater New York,New York, NY. $25,702. For World Trade <strong>Center</strong>Disaster Relief.3738. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.3739. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $12,752.3740. Various organizations. $52,248.SchwabSchwab Fund for Charitable Giving101 Montgomery St.San Francisco, CA 94104-4122(800) 746-6216FAX: (415) 989-2003; E-mail:questions@schwabcharitable.org; URL: http://www.schwabcharitable.org/3741. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $75,000.ScrippsScripps Howard <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 5380312 Walnut St., 28th Fl.Cincinnati, OH 45202(513) 977-3035FAX: (513) 977-3800; E-mail:cottingham@scripps.com; Application address forGreater Cincinnati Fund and Journalism Fund:P.O. Box 5380, Cincinnati, Ohio 45201-5380;URL: http://www.scripps.com/foundation3742. American Red Cross, National, DC.$36,224, 2001. For response to tragedy inNYC/DC.3743. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $85,700, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.3744. Structured Employment EconomicDevelopment Corporation, New York, NY.$25,000, 2002.LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERSeabury<strong>The</strong> Seabury <strong>Foundation</strong><strong>11</strong><strong>11</strong> N. Wells St., Ste. 503Chicago, IL 60610FAX: (312) 587-7332; E-mail:seabury@seaburyfoundation.org3745. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.SearsSears, Roebuck and Co. ContributionsProgramc/o Community Affairs Dept.3333 Beverly Rd., BC-127AHoffman Estates, IL 60179(847) 286-5506FAX: (847) 286-5918; E-mail: lgibb03@sears.com;URL: http://www.sears.com/community3746. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000.3747. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500,000.Seattle<strong>The</strong> Seattle <strong>Foundation</strong>425 Pike St., Ste. 510Seattle, WA 98101(206) 622-2294FAX: (206) 622-7673; E-mail:info@seattlefoundation.org; URL: http://www.seattlefoundation.org3748. American Jewish World Service, New York,NY. $26,148. To provide general support to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.3749. American Red Cross, National, DC.$16,670. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Disaster ReliefFund.3750. Catholic Charities USA, Alexandria, VA.$24,250. To provide general support for<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th relief efforts.3751. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $20,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.3752. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $20,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.3753. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $20,000, 2001. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.3754. Pride <strong>Foundation</strong>, Seattle, WA. $5,000. For9/<strong>11</strong> Northwest Pooled Fund to benefit KingCounty organizations responding to needs relatedto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001 tragedies.3755. Safe Horizon, New York, NY. $40,000. Toprovide general support for <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th reliefefforts.3756. Save the Children Federation, Westport,CT. $35,000, 2001. For Microlending Program.3757. Structured Employment EconomicDevelopment Corporation, New York, NY.$50,000, 2002.Seaver<strong>The</strong> Seaver Institute<strong>11</strong>6<strong>11</strong> San Vicente Blvd., Ste. 545Los Angeles, CA 90049(310) 979-0298E-mail: vsd@theseaverinstitute.org3758. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000.George and Effie Seay Memorial Trustc/o Bank of AmericaP.O. Box 26688Richmond, VA 23261-6688(804) 788-29633759. Undesignated. $20,000.SeaySedgwick Publishingc/o Corporate CommunicationsCambridge, England3760. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$50,000.SedgwickSempraSempra Energy Corporate GivingProgramc/o Corp. Community Rels. Dept.101 Ash St., HQ15ESan Diego, CA 92101-3017(619) 696-42973761. Greater New Orleans <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewOrleans, LA. $500,000.3762. Greater New Orleans <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewOrleans, LA. $76,004.3763. Greater New Orleans <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewOrleans, LA. $18,147.3764. Greater New Orleans <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewOrleans, LA. $1,705.3765. International Brotherhood of ElectricalWorkers, DC. $10,000. For electrical workers whowere victims of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Tragedy.3766. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $250,000.3767. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $141,551.3768. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $23,560.3769. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,027.3770. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $2,000.3771. YMCA of Greater New York, New York,NY. $10,000. For grief counseling, child care, andemergency housing for victims of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thin the New York area.SeranoSerano Inc.c/o Corporate Communications1315 Allenhurst AvenueAsbury Park, NJ 077123772. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.Serimus <strong>Foundation</strong>19 Old Town Sq., Ste. 8Fort Collins, CO 80524(970) 224-32143773. American Red Cross, National, DC.$<strong>11</strong>,000.ShawSerimusSevernsSeverns Family <strong>Foundation</strong><strong>11</strong>68 Tangerine WaySunnyvale, CA 94087(408) 730-9627E-mail: dave@severnsfoundation.org; URL: http://www.severnsfoundation.org3774. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $5,000, 2001.3775. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $15,000, 2001.Sharp<strong>The</strong> Peter Jay Sharp <strong>Foundation</strong>545 Madison Ave., <strong>11</strong>th Fl.New York, NY 10022(212) 397-60603776. Windows of Hope Family Relief Fund, NewYork, NY. $50,000.Shaw<strong>The</strong> Jerome & Joyce Cutler Shaw Family<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.7245 Rue De RoarkLa Jolla, CA 920373777. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $1,000. For general support.213


ShefflerSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE<strong>The</strong> Dudley P. and Barbara K. Sheffler<strong>Foundation</strong>c/o William E. Reichard25109 Detroit Rd., Ste. 300Westlake, OH 441453778. Heroes of New York Scholarship<strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY. $1,000. Forscholarships.ShefflerShellShell Oil Company <strong>Foundation</strong>910 Louisiana, Ste. 41371 Shell Plz., P.O. Box 2999Houston, TX 77252FAX: (713) 241-3329; E-mail:socfoundation@shellus.com; URL: http://www.countonshell.com/community/involvement/shell_foundation.html3779. Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund, New York,NY. $1,000,000, 2001.3780. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $1,000,000, 2001.3781. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $3,000,000, 2001.Shizouka Bankc/o Corporate Communications10 Gofuku-cho, 1-chome, Shizuoka-shiShizuoka, Japan 420-87603782. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$100,000.ShopKo Stores, Inc. Corporate GivingProgramc/o Corp. Comm./Charitable Giving Comm.P.O. Box 19060Green Bay, WI 54307-9060E-mail: charity@shopko.com; URL: http://www.shopko.com/giving.html3783. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000.ShizoukaShopKoShulevitzNorman Shulevitz <strong>Foundation</strong>16440 Maddalena WayDelray Beach, FL 334463784. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.SidneySidney Frank Importing Co.c/o Corporate Communications20 Cedar StreetNew Rochelle, NY 108013785. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $250,000.<strong>The</strong> Thomas and Stacey Siebel<strong>Foundation</strong>c/o First Virtual Mgmt., Inc.2207 Bridgepointe Pkwy.San Mateo, CA 94404(650) 477-53793786. Siebel America Fund, San Mateo, CA.$3,069,391. For American Red Cross andSalvation Army 9/<strong>11</strong> relief work.Siebel Systems, Inc.c/o Corporate Communications2207 Bridgepointe ParkwaySan Mateo, CA 944043787. American Red Cross, National, DC.$3,200,000.3788. Siebel America Fund, San Mateo, CA.$1,800,000.SiebelSiebelSiemensSiemens Corporation ContributionsProgramCiticorp Ctr.153 E. 53rd St.New York, NY 10022-46<strong>11</strong>(800) 743-63673789. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,500,000.SiemensSiemens <strong>Foundation</strong>170 Wood Ave. S.Iselin, NJ 08830Toll free tel.: (877) 822-5233; FAX: (732)603-5890; E-mail: foundation@sc.siemens.com;URL: http://www.siemens-foundation.org3790. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $2,000,000.SigmaSigma-Aldrich Corporation ContributionsProgram3050 Spruce St.St. Louis, MO 63103(314) 771-57653791. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $125,000.3792. Sigma-Aldrich Corporation ContributionsProgram, Saint Louis, MO. $125,000.SimonSimon Property Groupc/o Communications Dept.<strong>11</strong>5 West Washington StreetIndianapolis, IN 462043793. American Red Cross, National, DC.$325,000.3794. Factory Mutual Family Fund, Johnston, RI.$25,000.3795. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $325,000.3796. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$325,000.Simon Youth <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.<strong>11</strong>5 W. Washington St., Ste. 1325Indianapolis, IN 46204(317) 263-23613797. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$129,400, 2002.SimonSinatra<strong>The</strong> Frank Sinatra <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Golden/Goldberg Acct. Corp.9100 Wilshire Blvd., Ste. 455-EBeverly Hills, CA 902123798. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $75,000.3799. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$50,000.Siragusa<strong>The</strong> Siragusa <strong>Foundation</strong>875 N. Michigan Ave., Ste. 3216Chicago, IL 606<strong>11</strong>(312) 280-0833FAX: (312) 943-4489; E-mail:information@siragusa.org; URL: http://www.siragusa.org3800. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.<strong>The</strong> Sirus Fund271 Madison Ave., Ste. 907New York, NY 10016(212) 252-8473FAX: (212) 252-84763801. Various organizations. $205,000. Fordonations to support relief and recovery effortsfor workers and communities affected by the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks, and to provide aid tolocal nonprofits.SirusSix Continents Hotelsc/o Corporate CommunicationsThree Ravinia Drive, Suite 2900Atlanta, GA 303463802. American Red Cross, National, DC.$423,923.3803. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500,000.SL Green Realty Corporationc/o Corporate Communications50 West 23rd StreetNew York, NY 100103804. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$1,000,000.SixSLSlifkaAlan B. Slifka <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.477 Madison Ave., 8th Fl.New York, NY 10022-5802(212) 303-94583805. Engine No. 22/Ladder No. 13 Family Fund,New York, NY. $1,000.SloanAlfred P. Sloan <strong>Foundation</strong>630 5th Ave., Ste. 2550New York, NY 10<strong>11</strong>1-0242(212) 649-1649FAX: (212) 757-5<strong>11</strong>7; URL: http://www.sloan.org3806. ACCION New York, Brooklyn, NY.$357,650, 2001. To respond to needs of smallNew York City entrepreneurs in post-attackrecovery period through New York AmericanDream Fund.3807. Advertising Council Inc., New York, NY.$1,265,628. To develop public education mediacampaign that will empower American citizens toprepare for and respond to potential terroristattacks.3808. Advertising Council Inc., New York, NY.$30,000. To conduct focus groups on HomelandSecurity.3809. Annapolis <strong>Center</strong> for Science-Based PublicPolicy, Annapolis, MD. $37,500, 2001. For forumand report on Disease Surveillance, Bioterrorismand Homeland Security.3810. Architecture Research Institute, New York,NY. $58,000. To fund activities of RebuildDowntown our Town.38<strong>11</strong>. Brookings Institution, DC. $250,000. Todevelop and test model of selective vaccinationand quarantine.3812. <strong>Center</strong> for Economic and EnvironmentalPartners, Albany, NY. $40,000, 2001. Forconference, High Performance Buildings:Implications for Security in a Built Environment.Grant made in response to the events of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3813. Chemical and Biological Arms ControlInstitute, Alexandria, VA. $30,000. To fundactivities to promote international cooperation infight against bioterrorism.3814. Childrens Hospital, Boston, MA. $289,585.To improve syndromic surveillance methods bydeveloping prototype tool for integrating multiplesignals together and sounding alarms.3815. City of New York, New York, NY. $38,000,2001. To cover pre-conference administrative andprinting expenses for Urban EmergencyManagement conference, cancelled due to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, and for future work onbioterrorism preparedness.3816. City University of New York, New York,NY. $350,000, 2001. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> DigitalArchive project, co-run with George MasonUniversity, electronic repository for e-mails,digital images, online diaries, and other electronicmedia related to the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacksin New York City and Washington, D.C.214


3817. De Paul University, Chicago, IL. $177,615,2001. For workshop of leading internationalcriminal law experts to prevent bioterrorism.3818. Earth Day New York, New York, NY.$10,000. Toward Rethinking Built Environment:High Performance Buildings - Barriers toTerrorism - Energy Security.3819. FDNY Fire Safety Education Fund,Brooklyn, NY. $45,000. To help New York CityFire Department retain services of consultants asit implements recommendations of recentMcKinsey study of what it should do to preparefor future catastrophic events.3820. Fund for the City of New York, New York,NY. $45,000. For Preparedness Project publicinformation campaign.3821. George Mason University, Fairfax, VA.$350,000, 2001. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> DigitalArchive project, co-run with the City Universityof New York, an electronic repository for e-mails,digital images, online diaries and other electronicmedia related to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terrorist attacks inNYC and Washington, D.C.3822. George Washington University, DC.$260,307. To define specific operational conceptsfor mass casualty regional care.3823. Georgetown University, DC. $633,836,2001. For plan to prepare Legal Aspects ofBioterrorist Events.3824. National Academy of Sciences, DC.$420,970, 2001. To prevent destructiveapplications of research biotechnology.3825. National Institute of Building Sciences, DC.$74,933. For workshop on Office of HomelandSecurity Guidance Document: Guidance forprotecting building environments from airbornechemical, biological or radiological attacks.3826. National Strategy Forum, Chicago, IL.$42,350. To conduct workshop entitled RegionalPlanning for Mass Casualty Care.3827. New York Academy of Medicine, NewYork, NY. $700,000. To develop and disseminatesyndromic surveillance software.3828. New York Biotechnology Association, NewYork, NY. $20,000, 2001. For planning grant todevelop concepts for Civilian Medical ReserveCorps.3829. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000, 2001.3830. New York University, New York, NY.$45,000. For evaluation of post-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>theconomic assistance for small businesses andnon-profits in lower Manhattan.3831. Pace University, New York, NY. $500,000,2001. To create online courses for students whoseeducation was disrupted as a result of <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>.3832. Pace University, New York, NY. $350,000,2001. For internships with downtown-based smallbusinesses and nonprofit groups that need help torecover from <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.3833. Project Rebirth, New York, NY. $294,000.To develop and launch state-of-the-art web sitecentered around rebuilding of Ground Zero.3834. Public Broadcasting Service (PBS),Alexandria, VA. $699,319. To producedocumentary about engineering efforts at GroundZero.3835. RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, CA.$734,200. To define practical steps that citizenscan take to prepare for and respond tocatastrophic terrorist attacks and developimplementation strategy.3836. Regional Plan Association, New York, NY.$100,000. To fund activities of Civic Alliance toRebuild Downtown New York.3837. Regional Plan Association, New York, NY.$30,000. To fund participation of RebuildLIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERDowntown Our Town in Civic Alliance toRebuild Downtown New York.3838. University of Colorado <strong>Foundation</strong>,Boulder, CO. $10,000. Toward workshop onScience, Technology and Security: Knowledge forthe Post-9/<strong>11</strong> World.3839. University of Maryland <strong>Foundation</strong>,Solomons, MD. $500,026, 2001. To develop aninstitutional framework to prevent deliberate orinadvertent use of biological pathogens fordestructive purposes.3840. University of Maryland <strong>Foundation</strong>,Solomons, MD. $45,000, 2001. For preliminaryassessment of domestic and international effortsto prevent dangerous uses of biological pathogens.3841. University of the Pacific, Stockton, CA.$45,000. For workshop, Bioterrorism and Beyond- Claiming Place for Public Health Law in LawSchool Curriculum.3842. Wayne State University, Detroit, MI.$45,000. For post-9/<strong>11</strong> activities of TruckingIndustry Program related to trucking security.SnowJohn Ben Snow Memorial Trust50 Presidential Plz., Ste. 106Syracuse, NY 13202Regional offices: c/o Allen R. Malcom, 104 ChurchAlley, Chestertown, MD 21620; c/o Emelie M.Williams, 2975 Knight Rd., Reno, NV 89509;URL: http://www.johnbensnow.com/jbsmt3843. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.Society<strong>The</strong> Society of the Friendly Sons of SaintPatrick in the City of New York80 Wall St., Ste. 712New York, NY 100053844. Saint Vincents Hospital and Medical<strong>Center</strong> of New York, New York, NY. $25,000. ForWorld Trade <strong>Center</strong> Victims and Survivors Fund.SolectronSolectron Corporation ContributionsProgramc/o Corp. Contribs.777 Gibraltar Dr.Milpitas, CA 95035URL: http://www.solectron.com/about/social.htm3845. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $250,000.SonocoSonoco <strong>Foundation</strong>1 N. 2nd St., M.S. A09Hartsville, SC 295503846. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.Sony USA Corporate Giving Programc/o Proposals1 Sony Dr.Park Ridge, NJ 07656-8003(201) 930-10003847. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$1,000,000.Sony USA <strong>Foundation</strong> Inc.550 Madison Ave., 33rd Fl.New York, NY 10022-32<strong>11</strong>3848. American Red Cross, National, DC.$3,000,000.3849. American Red Cross, National, DC.$15,000, 2001.3850. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$1,050,000, 2001.3851. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$15,000, 2001.SonySonySoutheasternSoundViewSoundView Technology Group, Inc.c/o Corporate Communications1700 E. Putnam Ave.Old Greenwich, CT 06870-13333852. Alliance for Downtown New York, NewYork, NY. $125,000.3853. Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund, New York,NY. $750,000.3854. Common Ground Community HousingDevelopment Fund Corporation, New York, NY.$2,750.3855. Euro Brokers Relief Fund, New York, NY.$300,000.3856. Family <strong>Center</strong>s, Greenwich, CT. $25,000.3857. <strong>Foundation</strong> for Alger Families, Jersey City,NJ. $250,000.3858. Friends in Deed, New York, NY. $5,000.3859. FT Fiduciary Trust Memorial Fund, SanMateo, CA. $500,000.3860. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $50,000.3861. John Ryan Fund, New York, NY. $100.3862. Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Family Fund(KBW Family Fund), Melville, NY. $500,000.3863. New York City Fire Department, NewYork, NY. $10,000.3864. New York City Partnership <strong>Foundation</strong>,New York, NY. $725,000.3865. New York Presbyterian Hospital, New York,NY. $125,000.3866. New York State Fraternal Order of PoliceFund, Hicksville, NY. $50,000.3867. NYC2012, New York, NY. $20,000.3868. NYU Downtown Hospital, New York, NY.$125,000.3869. Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$2,025,000.3870. Saint Jude Childrens Research Hospital,New York, NY. $12,500.3871. Saint Vincents Hospital and Medical<strong>Center</strong> of New York, New York, NY. $125,000.3872. Sandler O’Neill Assistance <strong>Foundation</strong>,Chatham, NJ. $300,000.3873. South Bronx Educational <strong>Foundation</strong>,Bronx, NY. $7,500.3874. Structured Employment EconomicDevelopment Corporation, New York, NY.$125,000, 2002.3875. Student Sponsor Partners, New York, NY.$5,000.3876. Trey Whitfield School, Brooklyn, NY.$5,000.3877. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$750,000.3878. UNICEF, New York, NY. $75,000.3879. Windows of Hope Family Relief Fund, NewYork, NY. $75,000.South<strong>The</strong> South Financial Group <strong>Foundation</strong>151 Corley Mill Rd.Lexington, SC 29072E-mail: bruce.thomas@carolinafirst.com; URL:http://www.thesouthgroup.com/community/foundation.html3880. South Carolina Cares Relief Fund,Greenville, SC. $100,000.Southeastern Conference2201 Richard Arrington Jr.Birmingham, AL 352033881. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$1,000,000.Southeastern215


SouthwestSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSESouthwestSouthwest Minnesota <strong>Foundation</strong>1390 Hwy. 15 S.P.O. Box 428Hutchinson, MN 55350(320) 587-48483882. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $2,500.Sovereign Bank <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Sovereign Bank<strong>11</strong>30 Berkshire Blvd.Wyomissing, PA 19610(610) 320-8504Application address: c/o Joseph E. Schupp,Sovereign Bank, Gateway Bldg., 201 Penn St.,Reading, PA 19601, tel.: (610) 988-2001;Additional tel.: (610) 208-8454; E-mail:g-white@sovereignbank.com3883. American Red Cross, National, DC.$875,000.3884. Various organizations. $125,000.SovereignSpahr<strong>The</strong> Spahr <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Thomas F. Allen1801 E. 9th St., Ste. 1300Cleveland, OH 44<strong>11</strong>4-3103(216) 771-40003885. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000. Forunrestricted support.SpearsBritney Spears <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Padell Nadell156 W. 56th St., 4th Fl.New York, NY 10019(212) 957-0900URL: http://www.britneyspears.com/3886. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$1,000,000. For donations to support children ofNew York City police and firefighters in theaftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.SpeckhardSpeckhard-Knight Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>771 Bogey Ct.Ann Arbor, MI 48103(734) 761-8752FAX for completed applications: (734) 827-0091;E-mail: info@skcf.org; URL: http://www.skcf.org3887. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000, 2001.SpectrianSpectrianc/o Corporate Communications<strong>11</strong>315 Sunrise Gold CircleRancho Cordova, CA 957423888. American Red Cross, National, DC.$10,000.3889. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $10,000.SpencerSpencer Charitable FundP.O. Box 197Larchmont, NY 10538-0197(914) 834-19003890. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.<strong>The</strong> Spencer <strong>Foundation</strong>875 N. Michigan Ave., Ste. 3930Chicago, IL 606<strong>11</strong>-1803(312) 337-7000FAX: (312) 337-0282; E-mail:information@spencer.org; URL: http://www.spencer.org3891. Social Science Research Council, NewYork, NY. $13,500. For supplementalSpencerdevelopment of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> website as it relatesto classroom support for teachers.SpewackBella Spewack Article 5 Trustc/o <strong>The</strong> Bank of New York, Tax Dept.1 Wall St., 28th Fl.New York, NY 10286Application address: 98 Riverside Dr., New York,NY 100243892. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $10,000. For operating support.SporranSporran, Inc.c/o Corporate CommunicationsPittsburgh, PA3893. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.SportsSports Authorityc/o Corporate Communications3201 North State Road 7Fort Lauderdale, FL 333193894. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.SportsSports Offshorec/o Corporate Communications3895. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000.SprintSprint <strong>Foundation</strong>6330 Sprint Pkwy.Overland Park, KS 66251(913) 762-4555Mailing address: P.O. Box <strong>11</strong>315, Kansas City, MO64<strong>11</strong>2; FAX: (913) 624-3490; URL: http://www.sprint.com/community/sprint_foundation3896. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000.St. Paul<strong>The</strong> St. Paul Companies, Inc. CorporateGiving Programc/o Community Affairs Dept., M.C. 514D385 Washington St.St. Paul, MN 55102-1396(651) 310-2623Additional contact: Deb L. Anderson, CommunityAffairs Admin., tel.: (651) 310-7875; URL: http://www.stpaultravelers.com/about/community/index.html3897. Various organizations. $91,500.St. PaulSt. Paul Travelers <strong>Foundation</strong>385 Washington St., M.C. 514DSt. Paul, MN 55102(651) 310-7757FAX: (651) 310-2327; URL: http://www.stpaultravelers.com/about/community/index.html3898. Manhattan College, Riverdale, NY.$250,000. For endowed scholarships in name ofJohn Vigiano, Jr. and Joseph Vigiano, publicservants who lost their lives in World Trade<strong>Center</strong> on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.3899. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000.3900. Working Playground, New York, NY.$10,000. For project support for Art RecoveryProgram which will assist low-income elementaryand high school youth respond to and continueprocessing tragic events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th,through the arts.StampsStamps Family Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>,Inc.c/o Summit Partners222 Berkeley St., 18th Fl.Boston, MA 02<strong>11</strong>63901. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $83,154. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.<strong>The</strong> Standard Register CompanyContributions Programc/o Community Contribs. Council600 Albany St.Dayton, OH 45408(937) 221-10003902. Undesignated. $100,000.3903. Undesignated. $100,000.<strong>The</strong> Stanley Works <strong>Foundation</strong>1000 Stanley Dr.New Britain, CT 06053(860) 225-5<strong>11</strong>13904. American Red Cross, National, DC.$200,000.3905. American Red Cross, National, DC.$5,000.StandardStanleyStantonJoan Stanton Irrevocable Charitable Trustc/o Starr & Co.350 Park Ave.New York, NY 100223906. New York Stock Exchange Fallen HeroesFund, New York, NY. $20,000.Star Tribune <strong>Foundation</strong>425 Portland Ave. S.Minneapolis, MN 55488(612) 673-7051FAX: (612) 673-7307; E-mail:sfleitman@startribune.com; URL: http://www.startribune.com/company/ic/home/community/foundation.htm3907. American Red Cross, Minneapolis,Minneapolis, MN. $30, 2001.3908. American Red Cross, Minneapolis,Minneapolis, MN. $25, 2001.3909. Salvation Army, Roseville, Roseville, MN.$75, 2001.3910. Salvation Army, Roseville, Roseville, MN.$50, 2001.StarStarbucks<strong>The</strong> Starbucks <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Starbucks Corp.2401 Utah Ave. S.Seattle, WA 98134(206) 318-7022Application address: P.O. Box 3824, Seattle, WA98124; URL: http://www.starbucks.com/aboutus/foundation.asp39<strong>11</strong>. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,200,000.StarkNelda C. and H. J. Lutcher Stark<strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 909Orange, TX 77631-0909(409) 883-3513FAX: (409) 883-3530; E-mail:stark@starkadmin.org; Address for physicaldelivery: 601 W. Green Ave. Orange TX77630-5718; URL: http://www.starkfoundation.org3912. Undesignated. $12,000, 2002. Landdedicated to 9/<strong>11</strong> victims’ memorial.216


LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERStarrStarr<strong>The</strong> Starr <strong>Foundation</strong>70 Pine St.New York, NY 10270(212) 770-6881FAX: (212) 425-6261; E-mail:grants@starrfoundation.org; URL: http://fdncenter.org/grantmaker/starr/3913. A Better Chance, New York, NY. $50,000,2001. For special grant made in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3914. Abyssinian Development Corporation, NewYork, NY. $50,000, 2001. For special grant madein response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3915. Ackerman Institute for the Family, NewYork, NY. $25,000, 2001. For special grant madein response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3916. Albert G. Oliver Program, New York, NY.$25,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3917. America’s Second Harvest, Chicago, IL.$200,000, 2001. For special grant made inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3918. American Russian Youth Orchestra, NewYork, NY. $25,000, 2001. For special grant madein response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3919. Aquinas High School, Bronx, NY. $5,000,2001. For special grant made in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3920. Asphalt Green, New York, NY. $25,000,2001. For special grant made in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3921. Audrey Cohen College, New York, NY.$25,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3922. Bargemusic, Brooklyn, NY. $50,000, 2001.For post 9/<strong>11</strong> repairs.3923. Bargemusic, Brooklyn, NY. $10,000, 2002.For special grant made in response to <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>.3924. Booker T. Washington Learning <strong>Center</strong>,New York, NY. $10,000. For special grant made inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3925. Boys Club of New York, New York, NY.$25,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3926. Bronx Preparatory Charter School, Bronx,NY. $25,000, 2001. For special grant made inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3927. Brooklyn Bureau of Community Service,Brooklyn, NY. $50,000, 2001. For special grantmade in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3928. Brooklyn Childrens Museum, Brooklyn,NY. $25,000, 2001. For special grant made inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3929. Brooklyn Kindergarten Society TomkinsChildrens <strong>Center</strong>, Brooklyn, NY. $25,000, 2001.For special grant made in response to <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>.3930. Brooklyn Public Library <strong>Foundation</strong>,Brooklyn, NY. $150,000, 2002. For New YorkLibraries Compact, special grant to New York,Brooklyn and Queens Libraries to replace lostCity funding after 9/<strong>11</strong>.3931. Burden <strong>Center</strong> for the Aging, New York,NY. $50,000, 2001. For special grant made inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3932. Casita Maria, Bronx, NY. $50,000, 2001.For special grant made in response to <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>.3933. <strong>Center</strong> for Family Life in Sunset Park,Brooklyn, NY. $50,000, 2001. For special grantmade in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3934. Charles B. Wang Community Health<strong>Center</strong>, New York, NY. $25,000, 2001. For specialgrant made in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3935. Children’s Aid Society, New York, NY.$100,000, 2001. For special grant made inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3936. Childrens Storefront, New York, NY.$50,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3937. Chinese American International School,San Francisco, CA. $25,000, 2001. For specialgrant made in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3938. Church Avenue Merchants BlockAssociation (CAMBA), Brooklyn, NY. $25,000,2001. For special grant made in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3939. Church of Saint Francis Xavier, New York,NY. $35,000. For special grant for Welcome Tableprogram, made in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3940. Church of Saint Francis Xavier, New York,NY. $35,000, 2002. For special grant made inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3941. Church of Saint Paul and Saint Andrew,New York, NY. $75,000, 2001. For special grantmade in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3942. Church of the Ascension, New York, NY.$20,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3943. CIA Officers Memorial <strong>Foundation</strong>, DC.$500,000, 2001. For general support.3944. City Harvest, New York, NY. $150,000,2001. For special grant made in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3945. City Meals on Wheels, New York, NY.$100,000, 2001. For special grant made inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3946. City Year, Boston, MA. $100,000. Towardchallenge grant made by Atlantic Philanthropies tolaunch City Year New York with 100 corpsmembers on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2003.3947. Coalition for the Homeless, New York, NY.$50,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3948. Common Ground Community HousingDevelopment Fund Corporation, New York, NY.$25,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3949. Community Food Resource <strong>Center</strong>, NewYork, NY. $100,000, 2001. For special grant madein response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3950. Cornelia Connelly <strong>Center</strong> for Education,New York, NY. $25,000, 2001. For special grantmade in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3951. Council on Foreign Relations, New York,NY. $50,000. For Homeland Security Report.3952. Cypress Hills Local DevelopmentCorporation, Brooklyn, NY. $25,000, 2001. Forspecial grant made in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3953. De La Salle Academy, New York, NY.$25,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3954. Doctors Without Borders USA, New York,NY. $50,000, 2001. For special grant made inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3955. Doe Fund, New York, NY. $50,000, 2001.For special grant made in response to <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>.3956. East Harlem Tutorial Program, New York,NY. $25,000, 2001. For special grant made inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3957. East Side Settlement House, New York, NY.$50,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3958. Educational Alliance, New York, NY.$50,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3959. Elaine Kaufman Cultural <strong>Center</strong>, NewYork, NY. $25,000, 2001. For special grant madein response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3960. Encore Community <strong>Center</strong>, New York, NY.$25,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3961. Family to Family - Iowa, Carroll, IA.$10,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3962. Food for Survival, Bronx, NY. $150,000,2001. For special grant made in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3963. Forest Hills Community House, ForestHills, NY. $50,000, 2001. For special grant madein response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3964. Fountain House, New York, NY. $10,000,2001. For special grant made in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3965. Fresh Air Fund, New York, NY. $50,000,2001. For special grant made in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3966. Futures and Options, New York, NY.$25,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3967. Goddard-Riverside Community <strong>Center</strong>,New York, NY. $25,000, 2001. For special grantmade in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3968. Gods Love We Deliver, New York, NY.$100,000, 2001. For special grant made inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3969. Good Shepherd Services, New York, NY.$50,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3970. Goodwill Industries of Greater New Yorkand Northern New Jersey, Astoria, NY. $50,000,2001. For special grant made in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3971. Grand Street Settlement, New York, NY.$50,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3972. Grosvenor Neighborhood House, NewYork, NY. $5,000, 2001. For special grant made inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3973. Habitat for Humanity International, NewYork, NY. $50,000, 2001. For special grant madein response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3974. Hamilton-Madison House, New York, NY.$50,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3975. Harlem Children Zone, New York, NY.$50,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3976. Hartley House, New York, NY. $25,000,2001. For special grant made in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3977. HealthCare Chaplaincy, New York, NY.$10,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3978. Hebrew Home for the Aged at Riverdale,Riverdale, NY. $50,000, 2001. For special grantmade in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3979. Heights and Hill Community Council,Brooklyn, NY. $25,000, 2001. For special grantmade in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3980. Helen Keller International, New York, NY.$100,000, 2001. For special grant made inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3981. Henry Street Settlement, New York, NY.$50,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3982. High School of Economics and Finance,New York, NY. $25,000, 2001. For special grantmade in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3983. Highbridge Community Life <strong>Center</strong>,Bronx, NY. $25,000, 2001. For special grant madein response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3984. Highschool of Leadership and PublicService, New York, NY. $25,000, 2001. Forspecial grant made in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3985. Himalayan Cataract Project, Burlington,VT. $10,000, 2001. For special grant made inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.217


StarrSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE3986. Hole in the Wall Gang Camp Fund, NewHaven, CT. $100,000, 2001. For special grantmade in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3987. Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen, New York,NY. $50,000, 2001. For special grant made inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3988. Hope Program, Brooklyn, NY. $5,000,2001. For special grant made in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3989. Hudson Guild, New York, NY. $25,000,2001. For special grant made in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3990. International Rescue Committee, NewYork, NY. $100,000, 2001. For special grant madein response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3991. Jacob A. Riis Neighborhood Settlement,Long Island City, NY. $25,000, 2001. For specialgrant made in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3992. Jesuit Volunteer Corps East, Baltimore,MD. $5,000, 2001. For special grant made inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3993. Jewish Child Care Association of New York,New York, NY. $10,000, 2001. For special grantmade in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3994. Kingsbridge Heights Community <strong>Center</strong>,Bronx, NY. $25,000, 2001. For special grant madein response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3995. KIPP Academy, Bronx, NY. $50,000, 2001.For special grant made in response to <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>.3996. Learning Leaders, New York, NY. $25,000,2001. For special grant made in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3997. Learning Project, New York, NY. $25,000,2001. For special grant made in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3998. Lenox Hill Neighborhood Association, NewYork, NY. $50,000, 2001. For special grant madein response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.3999. Literacy Inc., New York, NY. $10,000,2001. For special grant made in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4000. Little Sisters of the Assumption FamilyHealth Service, New York, NY. $50,000, 2001.For special grant made in response to <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>.4001. Lower East Side Tenement Museum, NewYork, NY. $5,000, 2001. For special grant made inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4002. Make the Road By Walking, Brooklyn, NY.$5,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4003. Manhattan Institute for Policy Research,New York, NY. $25,000, 2001. For special grantmade in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4004. Manpower Demonstration ResearchCorporation, New York, NY. $50,000, 2001. Forspecial grant made in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4005. Metropolitan New York CoordinatingCouncil on Jewish Poverty, New York, NY. $5,000,2001. For special grant made in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4006. Mid-Manhattan <strong>Center</strong>, New York, NY.$5,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4007. Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY.$25,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4008. National Action Council for Minorities inEngineering (NACME), New York, NY. $25,000,2001. For special grant made in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4009. Nativity Mission <strong>Center</strong>, New York, NY.$25,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4010. Nazareth Housing, New York, NY. $25,000,2001. For special grant made in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.40<strong>11</strong>. Neighborhood Coalition for Shelter, NewYork, NY. $25,000, 2001. For special grant madein response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4012. Neighbors Together Corp., Brooklyn, NY.$25,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4013. New Alternatives for Children, New York,NY. $25,000, 2001. For special grant made inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4014. New York City Police <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewYork, NY. $2,000,000, 2001.4015. New York City Police <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewYork, NY. $1,000,000. For technological andcommunications equipment to supportcounterterrorism and crime prevention program.4016. New York City Public/Private Initiatives,New York, NY. $200,000, 2002. Toward defrayingcosts associated with <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>commemoration.4017. New York Landmarks Conservancy, NewYork, NY. $10,000, 2001. For special grant madein response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4018. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY.$8,000,000, 2001. For services for <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th uniformed rescue workers and firstresponders and their families.4019. New York Public Library, New York, NY.$1,000,000, 2002. For special grant to New York,Brooklyn and Queens Libraries to replace lostCity funding after 9/<strong>11</strong>.4020. New York Public Library, New York, NY.$200,000, 2002. For New York LibrariesCompact: special grant to New York, Brooklynand Queens Libraries to replace lost City fundingafter 9/<strong>11</strong>.4021. New York Shakespeare Festival, New York,NY. $25,000, 2001. For special grant made inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4022. Notre Dame School, New York, NY.$25,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4023. NYU Downtown Hospital, New York, NY.$250,000, 2001.4024. Opportunities for a Better Tomorrow,Brooklyn, NY. $25,000, 2001. For special grantmade in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4025. Pentagon Memorial Fund, Arlington, VA.$100,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Memorial.4026. Phipps Community DevelopmentCorporation, New York, NY. $50,000, 2001. Forspecial grant made in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4027. Phoenix House <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$20,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4028. Planned Parenthood of MetropolitanWashinton DC, DC. $20,000, 2001. For specialgrant made in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4029. Planned Parenthood of New York City,New York, NY. $20,000, 2001. For special grantmade in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4030. Police Athletic League, New York, NY.$50,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4031. Posse <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY. $25,000,2001. For special grant made in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4032. Prep for Prep, New York, NY. $25,000,2001. For special grant made in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4033. Primary Care Development Corporation,New York, NY. $50,000, 2001. For special grantmade in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4034. Project Reach Youth, Brooklyn, NY.$10,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4035. Project Renewal, New York, NY. $50,000,2001. For special grant made in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4036. Queens Library <strong>Foundation</strong>, Jamaica, NY.$150,000, 2002. For New York LibrariesCompact, special grant to New York, Brooklynand Queens Libraries to replace lost City fundingafter 9/<strong>11</strong>.4037. Recording for the Blind and Dyslexic, NewYork, NY. $25,000, 2001. For special grant madein response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4038. Refugees International, DC. $25,000, 2001.For special grant made in response to <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>.4039. Replications, Inc., New York, NY. $25,000,2001. For special grant made in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4040. Ricardo OGorman Garden and <strong>Center</strong> forResources in the Humanities, New York, NY.$10,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4041. Saint Aloysius Education Clinic, New York,NY. $10,000, 2001. For special grant made inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4042. Saint Aloysius School, New York, NY.$25,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4043. Saint Johns Bread and Life Program,Brooklyn, NY. $35,000, 2001. For special grantmade in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4044. Saint Vincents Services, Brooklyn, NY.$25,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4045. School Choice Scholarships <strong>Foundation</strong>,Clifton Park, NY. $25,000, 2001. For special grantmade in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4046. Seamens Church Institute of New York andNew Jersey, New York, NY. $25,000, 2001. Forspecial grant made in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4047. Search and Care, New York, NY. $5,000,2001. For special grant made in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4048. Sheltering Arms Childrens Service, NewYork, NY. $25,000, 2001. For special grant madein response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4049. Spence-Chapin Services to Families andChildren, New York, NY. $25,000, 2001. Forspecial grant made in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4050. Stanley M. Isaacs Neighborhood <strong>Center</strong>,New York, NY. $50,000, 2001. For special grantmade in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4051. Starr <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong>, New York, NY.$873,217. For matching grant for AIG employeecontributions to American International Group(AIG) Disaster Relief Fund.4052. Starr <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong>, New York, NY.$63,229. For matching grant for AIG employeecontributions to American International Group(AIG) Disaster Relief Fund.4053. Student Sponsor Partners, New York, NY.$25,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4054. Studio in a School Association, New York,NY. $10,000, 2001. For special grant made inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4055. Stuyvesant High School, New York, NY.$25,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4056. TEAK Fellowship, New York, NY. $35,000,2001. For special grant made in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4057. Thurgood Marshall Scholarship Fund, NewYork, NY. $25,000, 2001. For special grant madein response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4058. Trickle Up Program, New York, NY.$25,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.218


4059. Union Settlement Association, New York,NY. $50,000, 2001. For special grant made inresponse to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4060. United Neighborhood Houses of New York,New York, NY. $50,000, 2001. For special grantmade in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4061. United Neighbors of East Midtown, NewYork, NY. $25,000, 2001. For special grant madein response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4062. University Settlement Society of New York,New York, NY. $50,000, 2001. For special grantmade in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4063. Urban Pathways, New York, NY. $25,000,2001. For special grant made in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4064. Vehicles, Inc., New York, NY. $25,000,2001. For special grant made in response to<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4065. Veritas <strong>The</strong>rapeutic Community<strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY. $10,000, 2001. Forspecial grant made in response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4066. Visiting Nurse Service of New York, NewYork, NY. $50,000, 2001. For special grant madein response to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4067. Vocational <strong>Foundation</strong>, Brooklyn, NY.$25,000, 2001. For special 9/<strong>11</strong> grant.4068. We Can, New York, NY. $50,000, 2001. Forspecial 9/<strong>11</strong> grant.4069. Wildlife Conservation Society, Bronx, NY.$50,000, 2001. For special 9/<strong>11</strong> grant.4070. WNET Channel 13, New York, NY.$50,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4071. WNYC <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$25,000, 2001. For special 9/<strong>11</strong> grant.4072. YM-YWHA, 92nd Street, New York, NY.$25,000, 2001. For special grant made in responseto <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4073. Yorkville Common Pantry, New York, NY.$100,000, 2001. For special 9/<strong>11</strong> grant.4074. Young Audiences-New York, New York,NY. $25,000, 2001. For special 9/<strong>11</strong> grant.4075. Young Audiences-New York, New York,NY. $5,000, 2001. For special 9/<strong>11</strong> grant.4076. Young Womens Leadership <strong>Foundation</strong>,New York, NY. $50,000, 2001. For special 9/<strong>11</strong>grant.Starwood<strong>The</strong> Starwood <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.<strong>11</strong><strong>11</strong> Westchester Ave.White Plains, NY 10604Application address: 777 Westchester Ave., WhitePlains, NY 106044077. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000.State Farm Companies1 State Farm Plaza, B-4Bloomington, IL 617104078. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,577,459.4079. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.4080. Illinois State University, Normal, IL.$5,000. To purchase T-shirts to benefit UnitedWay of New York City.4081. National Fallen Firefighters <strong>Foundation</strong>,Emmitsburg, MD. $100,000.4082. National Law Enforcement OfficersMemorial Fund, DC. $100,000.StateLIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERStateState Street Corporation ContributionsProgramc/o Community Affairs Dept.225 Franklin St.Boston, MA 02<strong>11</strong>0URL: http://www.statestreet.com/company/community_affairs/overview.html4083. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.4084. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$150,000.State Street <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Community Affairs Div.225 Franklin St., 12th Fl.Boston, MA 02<strong>11</strong>0(617) 664-1937URL: http://www.statestreet.com/company/community_affairs/global_philanthropy/overview.html4085. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$75,000, 2001.StateSteelcaseSteelcase <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 1967, CH-4EGrand Rapids, MI 49501-1967(616) 246-4695FAX: (616) 475-2200; E-mail:sbroman@steelcase.com4086. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000.4087. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000.<strong>The</strong> Steele <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.702 E. Osborn Rd., Ste. 200Phoenix, AZ 85014-5215Additional address: P.O. Box <strong>11</strong>12, Phoenix, AZ85001; E-mail: steele@bcattorneys.com4088. American Red Cross, Phoenix, AZ.$50,000.SteeleStephensD. R. and C. B. Stephens Charitable<strong>Foundation</strong>465 California St., Ste. 838San Francisco, CA 94104(415) 781-80004089. Windows of Hope Family Relief Fund, NewYork, NY. $1,000. For general operating support.Sterling<strong>The</strong> Sterling <strong>Foundation</strong>12 Schoolhouse Ln.Great Neck, NY <strong>11</strong>020(516) 487-17004090. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.William A. Stern <strong>Foundation</strong>1002 Dover Rd.Greensboro, NC 274084091. Undesignated. $1,000, 2002. For a 9/<strong>11</strong>sculpture project in Greensboro, NC.Sternberg Charitable Trust85 Bellevue Ave.Rye, NY 105804092. Andrew Golkin Scholarship Fund, NewYork, NY. $20,000.SternSternbergStranahanStranahan <strong>Foundation</strong>4159 Holland-Sylvania Rd., Ste. 206Toledo, OH 43623-2590(419) 882-5575FAX: (419) 882-2072; E-mail:mail@stranahanfoundation.org; URL: http://www.stranahanfoundation.org4093. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $2,500.StrykerStratfieldStratfield Fund10 Middle St.Bridgeport, CT 066044094. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $5,000. For general support.StratfordStratford <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Testa, Hurwitz & Thibeault125 High St.Boston, MA 02<strong>11</strong>0(617) 248-7300FAX: (617) 248-71004095. American Red Cross, National, DC.$25,000. For Disaster Relief Fund.4096. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $10,000.Straus<strong>The</strong> Aaron Straus & Lillie Straus<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.2 E. Read St., Ste. 100Baltimore, MD 21202(410) 539-8308FAX: (410) 837-77<strong>11</strong>; E-mail:info@strausfoundation.org; URL: http://www.strausfoundation.org4097. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000, 2001.Straus<strong>The</strong> Philip A. and Lynn Straus<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.1037 Constable Dr. S.Mamaroneck, NY 105434098. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $500,000.StraussLevi Strauss <strong>Foundation</strong><strong>11</strong>55 Battery St., 2nd Fl.San Francisco, CA 94<strong>11</strong>1(415) 501-6579Application address for Syringe Access Fund: Stuart C.Burden, Dir., Community Affairs, <strong>The</strong> Americas,<strong>11</strong>55 Battery St., San Francisco, CA 94<strong>11</strong>1, E-mail:syringeaccess@levi.com; URL: http://www.levistrauss.com/responsibility/foundation/index.htm4099. American Red Cross, National, DC.$25,000. For relief efforts in recovery of NewYork City World Trade <strong>Center</strong> disaster.4100. Hispanic Federation of New York City,New York, NY. $25,000. For relief for victims,particularly immigrants, of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> disasterin New York City and Washington, DC.4101. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000, 2001.4102. Points of Light <strong>Foundation</strong>, DC. $25,000.For Helping is Healing program that is providingongoing volunteer solutions in response to tragicevents of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4103. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$500,000, 2001. To provide scholarships tofamilies of victims of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> terroristattacks.StrykerStryker Short <strong>Foundation</strong>103 West Mountain AvenueFort Collins, CO 805244104. American Red Cross, National, DC.$286,897.4105. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $24,017.4106. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $486,151.219


StuartSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEStuartStuart <strong>Foundation</strong>50 California St., Ste. 3350San Francisco, CA 94<strong>11</strong>1-4735(415) 393-1551FAX: (415) 393-1552; URL: http://www.stuartfoundation.org4107. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000.Subaru of America <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.Subaru Plz.P.O. Box 6000Cherry Hill, NJ 08034-6000(856) 488-50994108. American Red Cross, National, DC.$26,085, 2001.<strong>The</strong> Summit <strong>Foundation</strong>2100 Pennsylvania Ave. N.W., Ste. 525Washington, DC 20037(202) 912-2900FAX: (202) 912-2901; E-mail:info@summitfdn.org; URL: http://www.summitfdn.org4109. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $75,000, 2001.<strong>The</strong> Summit Fund of Washington2100 Pennsylvania Ave., NW, Ste. 525Washington, DC 20037(202) 912-2900FAX: (202) 912-2901; E-mail:lhoward@summitfdn.org; URL: http://www.summitfund.org4<strong>11</strong>0. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $25,000.SubaruSummitSummitSummitSummit Partnersc/o Corporate Communications600 Atlantic AvenueBoston, MA 022104<strong>11</strong>1. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500,000.Suncor Energy <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Corporate CommunicationsP.O. Box 38, <strong>11</strong>2 - 4th Avenue S.W.Calgary, Alberta T2P 2V54<strong>11</strong>2. Red Cross of Canada, Ottawa, Canada.$20,000.4<strong>11</strong>3. Red Cross of Canada, Ottawa, Canada.$13,734.SuncorSunLifeSunLife Financialc/o Corporate Communications96 Worcester StreetWellesley Hills, MA 024814<strong>11</strong>4. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500,000.SunocoSunoco, Inc. Corporate Giving Program10 Penn Ctr.1801 Market St.Philadelphia, PA 19103-1699(215) 977-30004<strong>11</strong>5. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000, 2004.4<strong>11</strong>6. Council of State Governments - EasternRegional Conference, New York, NY. $25,000,2001.4<strong>11</strong>7. Families of Flight 93, Somerset, PA.$100,000, 2001.4<strong>11</strong>8. FOP Fort Pitt Lodge No. 1, Pittsburgh, PA.$37,500, 2001.4<strong>11</strong>9. New Jersey Chamber of Commerce,Trenton, NJ. $200,000, 2001.4120. New York State World Trade <strong>Center</strong> ReliefFund, Albany, NY. $200,000, 2001.4121. New York State World Trade <strong>Center</strong> ReliefFund, Albany, NY. $25,000, 2001. NYS DTFEmployees.4122. Pittsburgh 9<strong>11</strong> Firefighters and WidowsDisaster Fund, Pittsburgh, PA. $37,500, 2001.4123. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$250,000, 2004.SuntorySuntory Internationalc/o Corporate Communications12 East 49th StreetNew York, NY 100174124. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500,000.SunTrustSunTrust Bank Corporate Giving ProgramP.O. Box 4418, Dept. 041Atlanta, GA 30302(404) 588-82504125. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000.SunTrust Bank, Atlanta <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o SunTrust Banks, Inc.P.O. Box 4418, M.C. 041Atlanta, GA 30302-4418(404) 588-8250FAX: (404) 724-3082; URL: http://www.suntrustatlantafoundation.org4126. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000.SunTrustSunTrustSunTrust MidAtlantic Charitable Trustc/o SunTrust Banks, Inc.P.O. Box 27385Richmond, VA 23261-7385Application address: 919 E. Main St., Richmond,VA 232194127. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.SuperiorSuperior Energy Servicesc/o Corporate Communications2439 Manhattan Blvd., Suite 500Harvey, LA 700584128. American Red Cross, Greater New OrleansChapter, New Orleans, LA. $225,000.4129. Red Cross of Canada, Ottawa, Canada.$10,000, 2001.4130. Various organizations. $20,000, 2001. Tosupport the the LA Bucks for Trucks Fund andthe LA Oilmen’s Clay Shoot Contest to benefitthe 9/<strong>11</strong> Relief Fund.SUPERVALU <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 990Minneapolis, MN 55440(952) 828-4000URL: http://www.supervalu.com/community/comm_main.html4131. American Red Cross, National, DC.$25,000.SUPERVALUSurdnaSurdna <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.330 Madison Ave., 30th Fl.New York, NY 10017-5001(212) 557-0010FAX: (212) 557-0003; E-mail:request@surdna.org; URL: http://www.surdna.org4132. After-School Corporation, <strong>The</strong>, New York,NY. $240,000, 2002. For creation and operationof after-school programs at 12 schools locatedsouth of Canal Street, near to Ground Zero.4133. Asian American Legal Defense andEducation Fund, New York, NY. $40,000, 2002.For Fighting Hate Violence and PoliceMisconduct, youth leadership initiative.4134. Comprehensive Development, New York,NY. $15,000, 2002. To address immediatepsychological needs of students of ManhattanComprehensive Night and Day High Schoolwhose immigrant population has suffered inaftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks.4135. Creative <strong>Response</strong> to Conflict, Nyack, NY.$30,000, 2002. For program to increaseunderstanding among students including programaddressing bias against Arab American students.4136. Educators for Social Responsibility, NewYork, NY. $50,000, 2002. Toward expansion ofoutreach to educational community in aftermathof <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>.4137. French Studio of Performing Arts, NewYork, NY. $25,000, 2002. To assist Siller family,victims of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks.4138. Global Kids, New York, NY. $25,000, 2002.For Youth Respond to 9/<strong>11</strong>, online forum toenable youth to process and learn about eventsstemming from the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> attacks.4139. Independent Production Fund, New York,NY. $30,000, 2002. For project to enhancenational community and educational outreachcampaign for <strong>The</strong> Islam Project, which includesdocumentary entitled, MUSLIMS, and relatedoutreach.4140. Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, NewYork, NY. $60,000, 2002. For immediate needs,directly related to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> losses.4141. Municipal Art Society of New York, NewYork, NY. $50,000, 2002. For Imagine New York,visioning process to gather individuals throughoutmetropolitan region to put forth their ideas forWorld Trade <strong>Center</strong> site and for City’s future.4142. Natural Resources Defense Council, NewYork, NY. $75,000, 2002. To assess environmentalimpact of the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> disaster.4143. Nonprofit Finance Fund, New York, NY.$75,000, 2002. For Nonprofit Recovery Fundwhich was set up to provide financial relief to NewYork nonprofits affected by the World Trade<strong>Center</strong> attack.4144. Regional Plan Association, New York, NY.$50,000, 2002. To coordinate work of new CivicAlliance to prepare plan for redevelopment ofLower Manhattan in the aftermath of <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>.4145. Research <strong>Foundation</strong> for Mental Hygiene,New York, NY. $235,000, 2002. For the TraumaConsortium to train mental health professional inup-to-the-minute diagnosis, referral and treatmentoptions relating to psychosocial trauma.4146. Rock the Vote Education Fund, LosAngeles, CA. $100,000. To bring teenagers fromacross the country together to explore domesticand international policies in post-<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>thAmerica.SusmanSusman and Asher <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Robert Asher77 W. Wacker Dr., Ste. 3220Chicago, IL 60601-1634(312) 782-16604147. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $10,500. For general support.SusquehannaSusquehanna International Groupc/o Corporate Communications401 City AvenueBala Cynwyd, PA 190044148. Port Authority Police BenevolentAssociation, Englewood Cliffs, NJ. $1,000,000.220


SwissSwiss ReInsurancec/o Corporate Communications237 Park AveNew York, NY 100174149. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000.<strong>The</strong> Sylvan Learning <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o Sylvan Learning Systems Inc.1001 Fleet St.Baltimore, MD 21202-4382(410) 843-80004150. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000.Syngenta Corporation ContributionsProgramc/o Corp. Contribs.1800 Concord PikeWilmington, DE 198504151. American Red Cross, National, DC.$200,000.SylvanSyngentaTalbotsTalbots Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o <strong>The</strong> Talbots, Inc.175 Beal St.Hingham, MA 02043Application address: 1 Talbots Dr., Hingham, MA020434152. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.4153. Various organizations. $350,000. Fordonations to United Way - 9/<strong>11</strong> Fund, SalvationArmy, New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund andTJX Family Memorial Trust.Tapper Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Act II Prescott Corp.509 Falmouth Rd.Mashpee, MA 026494154. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $10,000.4155. United Way of New York City, New York,NY. $10,000.TapperTargetTarget Stores1000 Nicollet MallMinneapolis, MN 554034156. American Red Cross, National, DC.$23,579. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> disaster relief.4157. Guns-N-Hoses Relief Fund, Spokane, WA.$500. For benefit event for families of police andfirefighters killed on <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4158. Retail Merchants Association of GreaterRichmond, Richmond, VA. $2,000. For RichmondResponds Campaign.TargetTarget Stores, Inc. Corporate GivingProgram1000 Nicollet Mall, TPS-3080Minneapolis, MN 55403(612) 696-60984159. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000. Toward emergency relief efforts in NewYork and Washington, DC associated with theevents of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>, 2001.4160. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000. Toward emergency assistance andevacuation of the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> in NewYork City following the events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>,2001.4161. American Red Cross, National, DC.$8,607. Toward emergency assistance andevacuation of the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> in NewYork City following the events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>,2001.LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERTauck<strong>The</strong> Tauck <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 5020Norwalk, CT 06855-1445(866) 826-2536FAX: (203) 286-1340; E-mail:info@tauckfoundation.org; URL: http://www.tauckfoundation.org4162. American Red Cross, National, DC.$13,333.4163. Fairfield County Community <strong>Foundation</strong>,Wilton, CT. $13,333.4164. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $13,333.TCFTCF <strong>Foundation</strong>200 Lake St. E., M.C. EXO-02-CWayzata, MN 55391-1693(952) 745-2757URL: http://www.tcfbank.com/About/about_community_relations.jsp4165. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $100,000.TD Bank Financial Groupc/o Corporate Communications55 King Street West, PO Box 1-Toronto DominionCentreToronto, Ontario M5K 1A24166. Various organizations. $500,000.<strong>The</strong> Teagle <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.10 Rockefeller Plz., Rm. 920New York, NY 10020-1903(212) 373-1970North Carolina office: 139 W. King St.,Hillsborough, NC 17178-2543; URL: http://fdncenter.org/grantmaker/teagle/4167. Various organizations. $397,500. To aidlocal nonprofits affected by the events of 9/<strong>11</strong>.TDTeagleTenetTenet Healthcare <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Barbara B. Luton3820 State St.Santa Barbara, CA 93105-3<strong>11</strong>2(805) 563-6865Application address: P.O. Box 31907, Santa Barbara,CA 93130; FAX: (805) 898-9104; E-mail:foundation@tenethealth.com; URL: http://www.etenet.com/GeneralInfo/thf.asp4168. American Red Cross in Greater New York,New York, NY. $443,874, 2002. Financialresources for the victims of the World Trade<strong>Center</strong> tragedies.4169. American Red Cross in Greater New York,New York, NY. $<strong>11</strong>,007.4170. American Red Cross, CentralMassachusetts, Worcester, MA. $375.4171. American Red Cross, Chalmette,Chalmette, LA. $230.4172. American Red Cross, Charlotte, Charlotte,NC. $100.4173. American Red Cross, Dallas Area Chapter,Dallas, TX. $75.4174. American Red Cross, DC Chapter, DC.$9,920.4175. American Red Cross, El Paso, El Paso, TX.$250.4176. American Red Cross, Fort Lauderdale, FortLauderdale, FL. $50.4177. American Red Cross, Greater Los AngelesChapter, Los Angeles, CA. $1,000.4178. American Red Cross, Greater New OrleansChapter, New Orleans, LA. $42,272.4179. American Red Cross, Hickory, Hickory,NC. $700.4180. American Red Cross, Modesto, Modesto,CA. $75.4181. American Red Cross, Nashville, Nashville,TN. $25.4182. American Red Cross, North Texas,McKinney, TX. $250.4183. American Red Cross, Pasadena, Pasadena,CA. $50.4184. American Red Cross, Rock Hill, Rock Hill,SC. $100.4185. American Red Cross, San Luis Obispo, SanLuis Obispo, CA. $200.4186. American Red Cross, Santa Barbara, SantaBarbara, CA. $100.4187. American Red Cross, Southeast PAChapter, Philadelphia, PA. $75.4188. American Red Cross, St. Louis, SaintLouis, MO. $4,018.4189. American Red Cross, Whittier, Whittier,CA. $235.4190. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $2,550. Support to the families of those lostin the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> disaster of <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>, 2001.4191. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $328,848, 2002.Financial resources for the victims of the WorldTrade <strong>Center</strong> tragedies.4192. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$370,634, 2002. Financial support for the victimsof the Wolrd Trade <strong>Center</strong> tragedy.TFC/Jewel Oscoc/o Corporate Communications1955 W. North Ave.Melrose Park, IL 601604193. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.TFC“<strong>The</strong> Producers”New York, NY4194. New York <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Arts, NewYork, NY. $100,000. For New York Arts RecoveryFund.<strong>The</strong>ThirdThird Wave <strong>Foundation</strong>5<strong>11</strong> W. 25th St., Ste. 301New York, NY 10001(212) 675-0700FAX: (212) 255-6653; E-mail:info@thirdwavefoundation.org; URL: http://www.thirdwavefoundation.org4195. Undesignated. $60,000. To financiallysupport organizations/individuals who are workingtowards social justice in the aftermath of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4196. Undesignated. $9,500. For racial justice,cultural visibility and religious tolerance work; tosupport women impacted by the economicdownturn post-9/<strong>11</strong>; to support alternative mediaand efforts to promote civil liberties and humanrights.ThompsonLucille S. Thompson Family <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Comerica BankP.O. Box 75000 M/C 3302Detroit, MI 48275-3302Application address: 4823 Old Kingston Pike, Ste.140, Knoxville, TN 37919, tel.: (865) 558-86544197. American Red Cross in Greater New York,New York, NY. $10,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.<strong>The</strong> Thomson Corporationc/o Corporate CommunicationsMetro <strong>Center</strong>, One Station PlaceStamford, CT4198. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000, 2001.ThomsonThomson221


ThomsonSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE4199. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500,000, 2001.4200. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$500,000, 2001.4201. Various organizations. $3,500,000.ThomsonThomson Financial Inc. Corporate GivingProgram22 Thomson Pl.Boston, MA 02210(617) 856-2000FAX: (617) 737-3177; E-mail:community.spirit@tfn.com; URL: http://www.thomson.com/corp/about/mg_fn/ab_mg_fn_community_relations.jsp4202. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500,000.3M <strong>Foundation</strong>3M Ctr., Bldg. 225-1S-23St. Paul, MN 55144-1000(651) 733-0144FAX: (651) 737-3061; E-mail:cfkleven@mmm.com; URL: http://www.3M.com/about3m/community4203. American Red Cross, National, DC.$385,941, 2001.4204. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $55,497, 2001.4205. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $58,562, 2001.ThyssenKruppc/o Corporate Communications3155 West Big Beaver RoadTroy, MI 480844206. Various organizations. $1,000,000.3MThyssenKruppTIAA-CREFTIAA-CREF730 3rd AvenueNew York, NY 100174207. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000.TidesTides <strong>Foundation</strong>Presidio Main Post, Bldg. No. 37P.O. Box 29903San Francisco, CA 94129-0903(415) 561-6400FAX: (415) 561-6401; E-mail: info@tides.org;URL: http://www.tidesfoundation.org4208. Abraham Fund, New York, NY. $<strong>11</strong>,000.Toward Jaffa Kindergarten Project, which workswith Arab and Jewish children, teachers andparents to promote tolerance and understanding.4209. Active Element <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$5,000. To provide youth perspectives on 9/<strong>11</strong>though book and video project, Another World isPossible.4210. Afghan Institute of Learning, Afghanistan.$15,000. To ensure equal protection andpromoting civil liberties and human rights in theaftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.42<strong>11</strong>. Afghan Women’s Association International,Fremont, CA. $5,000. For support to Afghanrefugees and the broader Afghan community, andto establish educational and micro credit programsin Afghanistan.4212. Afghan Women’s Resource <strong>Center</strong>,Peshawar, Pakistan. $10,000. To promote therights and interests of the female Afghan refugeecommunity in Peshwar, Pakistan, through trainingand educational opportunities.4213. American Civil Liberties Union<strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY. $10,000. To fundpublic education and outreach campaigns in theaftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, and to directlyprotect the civil liberties of Middle Eastern andArab detainees in Illinois and Michigan.4214. American Friends Service Committee,Philadelphia, PA. $<strong>11</strong>,500. To work to rebuildcommunities and relationships between people ofdifferent ethnic, racial and religious backgroundsin the aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4215. American-Arab Anti-DiscriminationCommittee, DC. $22,500. To ensure equalprotection and promote civil liberties and humanrights in the aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4216. Arab American Family Support <strong>Center</strong>,Brooklyn, NY. $10,000. To provide mental healthservices and interventions to affected ArabAmericans living in NYC in the aftermath of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4217. Asian American Legal Defense andEducation Fund, New York, NY. $10,000. Towork to rebuild communities and relationshipsbetween people of different ethnic, racial, andreligious backgrounds and to hire bilingual(Hindi/English) organizer to work with youth inNYC public schools to combat hate crimes in theaftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4218. Asian American Legal Defense andEducation Fund, New York, NY. $780. Toorganize Town Hall meeting to combat hatecrimes in the aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4219. Asociacion Tepeyac de New York, NewYork, NY. $16,500. To advocate for and supportsurviving families of undocumented Mexicanworker/victims in the aftermath of <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th.4220. Chinese Staff and Workers Association,New York, NY. $20,000. For Labor Rights Clinicand door-to-door outreach which enable Chineseworkers and small-business owners to access reliefand services in the aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4221. Committee Against Anti-Asian Violence,New York, NY. $20,000. To support advocacy onbehalf of families of victims of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th toaccess needed services.4222. Community Services Agency, DC. $17,500.To train union members to serve as counselors fordisplaced workers, and to financially assist theseworkers in the aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4223. Community Voices Heard, New York, NY.$10,000. To provide immediate relief for theworking poor affected by the events of 9/<strong>11</strong>, andspecifically, to engage in community organization,public education, and coalition building on behalfof low-income women in NYC.4224. Council on American-Islamic Relations,DC. $5,000. To establish the Interfaith CoalitionAgainst Hate Crimes project, which promotespeaceful co-existence between Muslims andnon-Muslims and denounces hate crimes.4225. DC Independent Media <strong>Center</strong>, DC.$5,000. To provide alternative media voices toeffectively frame the complex political, social, andeconomic history of the crisis of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4226. DC Pro Bono Bar Program, DC. $10,000.To provide legal services (including theestablishment of legal trusts) to the families of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th victims.4227. Desis Rising Up and Moving (DRUM),Jackson Heights, NY. $10,000. To organizelow-income South Asian immigrant Communitiesfor racial, economic, and social justice, and forINS De-Detention Campaign, which advocatesfor the end of human and civil rights abuses ofdetainees.4228. Ella Baker <strong>Center</strong> for Human Rights, SanFrancisco, CA. $10,000. To ensure equalprotection and promote civil liberties and humanrights in the aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4229. Fifth Avenue Committee, Brooklyn, NY.$10,000. To work to address the housing needs oflow-income families in the aftermath of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, with emphasis on HERE workersand women.4230. Hotel Employees and RestaurantEmployees International Union (HERE), Local100, New York, NY. $32,000. To manage newservice center for displaced workers (union andnon-union) and surviving families of deceasedworkers following <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4231. Hotel Employees and RestaurantEmployees International Union (HERE), Local100, New York, NY. $5,000. To create theWindows on Another World video, whichadvocates on behalf of undocumented workersand the working poor at the federal level.4232. Independent Media Institute, SanFrancisco, CA. $10,000. To provide alternativemedia voices to effectively frame the complexpolitical, social, and economic history of the crisisof <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4233. Independent Press Association, SanFrancisco, CA. $17,500. To provide alternativemedia voices to effectively frame the complexpolitical, social, and economic history of the crisisof <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4234. Intergroup Clearinghouse, San Francisco,CA. $5,000. To combat hate violence anddiscrimination against Bay Area Muslims, Arabs,South Asians, and Sikhs in the aftermath of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th though training, technicalassistance, victim assistance, and education.4235. International Human Rights Law Group,DC. $21,500. To ensure equal protection andpromote civil liberties and human rights in theaftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4236. Islamic Networks, San Jose, CA. $10,000.To develop a media campaign to educate thepublic about Muslim Americans, and to supportwomen’s interfaith communities in an effort tominimize post-9/<strong>11</strong>backlash against Arab, Asianand Muslim Americans.4237. Jews for Racial and Economic Justice, NewYork, NY. $10,000. To promote peacefulco-existence and combat anti-Arab, anti-Asian,anti-Muslim, and anti-immigrant fervor in NYCin the aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4238. Lambda Legal Defense and EducationFund, New York, NY. $2,500. To advocate onbehalf of gay and lesbian surviving partners inorder to overcome unique legal and policy barriersin receiving benefits and recognition following<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4239. Middle East Research and InformationProject, DC. $10,000. To provide alternativemedia voices to effectively frame the complexpolitical, social, and economic history of the crisisof <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4240. National Asian Pacific American LegalConsortium, DC. $5,000. To ensure equalprotection and promote civil liberties and humanrights in the aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4241. National Coalition Against Censorship,New York, NY. $10,000. To establish aclearinghouse of information on arts initiativesresponding to 9/<strong>11</strong> and to create a nationwideforum to explore the threat of censorship.4242. National Lawyers Guild- Bay Area, SanFrancisco, CA. $5,000. To establish hotline forMiddle Eastern men who were called for aninterview with the Justice Department inNorthern California in the aftermath of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4243. National Mobilization Against Sweatshops,New York, NY. $10,000. To provide ongoingassistance to immigrant communities in lowerManhattan and Brooklyn that have been adverselyaffected by 9/<strong>11</strong>, particularly Latino,Afro-Caribbean, and Eastern European.4244. New York City ACORN, New York, NY.$15,000. To organize low-income communities to222


ensure that post-9/<strong>11</strong> rebuilding efforts andfederal funds benefit all New Yorkers.4245. New York City Gay and LesbianAnti-Violence Project, New York, NY. $5,000. Toprovide technical assistance and training to LGTBArab-American organizations in the aftermath of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4246. New York Community LeadershipInstitute/ Progressive America Fund New York,Brooklyn, NY. $15,000. To work with publicofficials to ensure that the rebuilding agenda oflower Manhattan recognizes issues of importanceto the working poor and low-income residents.4247. New York Taxi Workers Alliance, NewYork, NY. $10,000. To organize immigrant taxidrivers, three-quarters of whom are Muslim, Araband South Asian, around economic and safetyissues in light of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4248. Pacific News Service, San Francisco, CA.$5,000. To provide alternative media voices toeffectively frame the complex political, social andeconomic history of crisis surrounding <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th.4249. People’s Non-Violent <strong>Response</strong> Coalition,Oakland, CA. $2,500. To promote a non-violentresponse to 9/<strong>11</strong>, and to ensure the preservation ofcivil liberties and protect against discrimination.4250. Renaissance Economic DevelopmentCorporation, New York, NY. $5,000. To establishemergency loan funds to assist small businesses inlower Manhattan in the aftermath of <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th.4251. <strong>September</strong> Eleventh Families for PeacefulTomorrows, New York, NY. $5,000. To identifycommonalities and open dialogues in pursuanceof effective, non-violent responses to terrorism.4252. South Asian American Leaders ofTomorrow (SAALT), DC. $5,000. To amend itsdocumentary film on hate crimes against SouthAsian Americans in light of 9/<strong>11</strong> incident and toconvene educational workshops.4253. Tenants and Workers Support Committee,Alexandria, VA. $27,500. To providing immediaterelief for the working poor affected by the eventsof 9/<strong>11</strong>.4254. Urban Justice <strong>Center</strong>, New York, NY.$5,000. To provide technical assistance to SouthAsian community organizations in New York.4255. War Times, San Francisco, CA. $5,000. Tosupport peace movement in the US by addressingthe new state of perpetual war abroad and theattacks on civil liberties and immigrant rightsdomestically.4256. We Interrupt This Message, San Francisco,CA. $5,000. To provide training and technicalassistance to peace coalitions, Arab and Muslimcommunity groups and youth organizations with afocus on reframing the public debate around war,peace and justice.4257. Women’s Institute for LeadershipDevelopment (WILD) for Human Rights, SanFrancisco, CA. $5,000. To monitor domesticpolicies and hate crime incidences, and linkdomestic and foreign policies to address theerosion of civil rights and liberties.4258. Yesh Gvul, Jerusalem, Israel. $10,000. Topromote public education for Israeli soldiers tohelp them to understand their rights andresponsibilities, and to provide financial assistanceto families of imprisoned reservists.TilleyTilley Family <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Rose, Snyder & Jacobs15821 Ventura Blvd., Ste. 490Encino, CA 91436(818) 576-07374259. Windows of Hope Family Relief Fund, NewYork, NY. $400. For general support.LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERTim Hortons/<strong>The</strong> TDL Group Ltd.c/o Corporate Communications874 Sinclair RoadOakville, Ontario L6K 2Y14260. Red Cross of Canada, Ottawa, Canada.$1,000,000.Time Warner <strong>Foundation</strong>1 Time Warner Ctr.New York, NY 10019(212) 275-2893E-mail: aoltwfoundation@aol.com; URL: http://www.timewarner.com/public_service/time_warner_foundation/foundation.adp4261. Various organizations. $4,000,000. To helpalleviate the suffering caused by the events of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> and to rebuild hope throughcontributions toward relief efforts.TimTimeTimeTime Warner Inc. Corporate GivingProgram75 Rockerfeller Plz.New York, NY 10019(212) 484-8000URL: http://www.timewarner.com/public_service/index.adp4262. AOL Time Warner Inc. Corporate GivingProgram, New York, NY. $1,000,000.4263. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000.Tinker<strong>The</strong> Tinker <strong>Foundation</strong> Inc.55 E. 59th St., 21st Fl.New York, NY 10022(212) 421-6858FAX: (212) 223-3326; E-mail: tinker@tinker.org;URL: http://fdncenter.org/grantmaker/tinker4264. ACCION International, New York, NY.$25,000. For American Dream Disaster ReliefFund to provide immediate relief to existingclients and other small business owners affectedby events of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th, including loanforgiveness, lower-interest loans, or adjusted loanterms.TiptonTipton County <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.1020 W. Jefferson St.P.O. Box 412Tipton, IN 46072-0412(765) 675-8480FAX: (765) 675-8488; E-mail: tcf@tiptontel.com;URL: http://www.tiptoncountyfoundation.com4265. United Way - Tipton County, Tipton, IN.$2,575. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.Tisch <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.655 Madison Ave., 8th Fl.New York, NY 10021-8087(212) 521-29304266. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$10,000.<strong>The</strong> TJX <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o <strong>The</strong> TJX Cos., Inc.770 Cochituate Rd., Rte. 1EFramingham, MA 01701(508) 390-3199FAX: (508) 390-2091; URL: http://www.tjx.com/corprespons/commsupp.html4267. Massachusetts 9/<strong>11</strong> Fund, Boston, MA.$10,000.TischTJXTobiasRandall L. Tobias <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.500 E. 96th St., Ste. <strong>11</strong>0Indianapolis, IN 46240(317) 433-5505E-mail: snh@rltfound.org; URL: http://www.rltfound.org4268. Individual beneficiaries. $165,000. Towardsupporting current or future educational needs of93 children who lost a parent in the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>attacks living in Bernardsville, NJ.TockerTocker <strong>Foundation</strong>3814 Medical Pkwy.Austin, TX 78756-4002(512) 452-1044FAX: (512) 452-7690; E-mail: grants@tocker.org;URL: http://www.tocker.org4269. American Red Cross, National, DC.$5,000. For general support to all recipients in theaftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.Tokyo Electron limitedc/o Corporate Communications2400 Grove BoulevardAustin, TX 787414270. American Red Cross, National, DC.$250,000.Toll Brothersc/o Corporate Communications3103 Philmont AvenueHuntingdon Valley, PA 190064271. National Housing Endowment, DC.$1,000,000.Tops Markets LLC Corporate GivingProgramc/o Community Rels. Dept., A2526363 Main St.Williamsville, NY 14221(716) 635-5000Tel. for School Recycling Program: (800) 866-3954;FAX: (716) 633-0898; URL: http://www.topsmarkets.com/About/Community/comhome.html4272. Ahold USA American Heroes Fund,Chantilly, VA. $1,000,000.<strong>The</strong> Toro <strong>Foundation</strong>8<strong>11</strong>1 Lyndale Ave. S.Bloomington, MN 55420-<strong>11</strong>96(952) 887-89<strong>11</strong>4273. Undesignated. $17,920.ToshibaTokyoTollTopsToroTorontoToronto Blue Jays Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Corporate Communications1 Blue Jays Way, Suite 3200Toronto, Ontario M5V 1J14274. Red Cross of Canada, Ottawa, Canada.$15,000.ToshibaToshiba America Inc. Corporate GivingProgram1251 Ave. of the AmericasNew York, NY 100204275. American Red Cross, National, DC.$40,000.4276. Japanese Chamber of Commerce, NewYork, NY. $5,000.4277. New York State World Trade <strong>Center</strong> ReliefFund, Albany, NY. $500,000.4278. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$500,000.223


TotalFinaElfSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSETotalFinaElfTotalFinaElfc/o Corporate Communications2 place de la Coupole, 92400Courbevoie, France4279. New York State Fraternal Order of PoliceFund, Hicksville, NY. $500,000.Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc.Corporate Giving Programc/o Community Rels. Dept.19001 S. Western Ave.Torrance, CA 90509(310) 468-5249URL: http://www.toyota.com/about/community4280. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000. To support <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th reliefefforts.Toys “R” Us Children’s Fund, Inc.461 From Rd.Paramus, NJ 07652(201) 599-71524281. Toys R US Childrens Fund, Paramus, NJ.$1,703,270.ToyotaToysTransoceanTransocean Sedco Forex, Inc.c/o Corporate Communications1210 Winrock BoulevardHouston, TX 770574282. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $250,000.TrellisTrellis Fund1400 16th St. N.W., Ste. 710Washington, DC 20036(202) 939-3399FAX: (202) 939-3392; E-mail:gleicher@trellisfund.org; URL: http://fdncenter.org/grantmaker/trellis/4283. DC Employment Justice <strong>Center</strong>, DC.$60,000. For additional general operating supportto help address the needs of dislocated workers inthe wake of the <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th attacks and theresulting economic downturn.4284. Greater DC Cares, DC. $50,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> Disaster Relief program to integratenew volunteers into its system and match themwith nonprofits.TrendwestTrendwest Resortsc/o Corporate Communications9805 Willows RoadRedmond, WA 980524285. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $300,000.Tri State Ford Dealers4286. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $500,000.TriTriangleTriangle Community <strong>Foundation</strong>4813 Emperor Blvd., Ste. 130P.O. Box 12834Research Triangle Park, NC 27709(919) 474-8370FAX: (919) 941-9208; E-mail: info@trianglecf.org;E-mail for application: jan@trianglecf.org orkrystin@trianglecf.org; URL: http://www.trianglecf.org4287. American Red Cross, Durham, Durham,NC. $500. For the National Disaster Relief Fund.4288. American Red Cross, National, DC.$8,501.4289. American Red Cross, Raleigh, Raleigh, NC.$500. For national relief for New York Cityvictims.4290. District 7610 <strong>Foundation</strong>, Falls Church,VA. $695. For Pentagon Disaster Relief.4291. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $69,440.4292. Rotary <strong>Foundation</strong> of New York, New York,NY. $700. Toward tragedy in New York.4293. Rotary <strong>Foundation</strong> of Rotary International,Evanston, IL. $500. For disaster relief in District3270.4294. Salvation Army of Durham, Durham, NC.$1,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> Disaster Relief Fund.4295. United Way, Triangle, Morrisville, NC.$1,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> Disaster Relief Fund.4296. University Presbyterian Church, ChapelHill, NC. $1,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> DisasterRelief Fund.4297. Windows of Hope Family Relief Fund, NewYork, NY. $1,000.Tricon Global Restaurants, Incc/o Corporate Communications1441 Gardiner LaneLouisville, KY 402134298. Fund for Public Schools, Brooklyn, NY.$1,500,000.TriconTridentTrident Capitalc/o Corporate Communications325 Riverside AvenueWestport, CT 068804299. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $50,000.4300. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$50,000.TuckerMarcia Brady Tucker <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box <strong>11</strong>49Easton, MD 216014301. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $20,000. For grants to <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>threscue workers and their families and for otherpurposes given the condition that the rescueworkers and their families are provided for.<strong>The</strong> Tull Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>50 Hurt Plz., Ste. 1245Atlanta, GA 30303(404) 659-70794302. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000.Tully Family <strong>Foundation</strong>33 N. Dearborn St., No. 2450Chicago, IL 60602-31094303. Aon Memorial Education Fund, Chicago,IL. $25,000, 2001.TullTullyTulsaTulsa Community <strong>Foundation</strong>7010 S. Yale, Ste. <strong>11</strong>0Tulsa, OK 74136(918) 494-8823FAX: (918) 494-9826; E-mail: tulsacf@aol.com4304. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $45,805. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.TurboTurbo Sportswear2600 Main StreetSayerville, NJ 088724305. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.TXU Corp. Contributions Programc/o Corp. Citizenship Dept.1601 Bryan St., Ste. 19-<strong>11</strong>2Dallas, TX 75201(214) 812-31914306. Greater New Orleans <strong>Foundation</strong>, NewOrleans, LA. $500,000. Toward educationalassistance to surviving children of victims of the<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th terrorist attacks.4307. Undesignated. $500,000.Ty, Inc.c/o Corporate CommunicationsP.O. Box 5377Oak Brook, IL 605224308. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.U.S. Bancorp <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.BC-MN-H23K800 Nicollet MallMinneapolis, MN 55402(612) 303-4000FAX: (612) 303-0787; URL: http://www.usbank.com/about/community_relations/charit_giving.html4309. Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund, New York,NY. $3,920.4310. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $2,295.43<strong>11</strong>. Minnesota <strong>Foundation</strong>, Saint Paul, MN.$1,525.TXUU.S. Trust Corporation <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o United States Trust Co. of New York<strong>11</strong>4 W. 47th St.New York, NY 10036FAX: (212) 852-1314; E-mail:foundation@ustrust.com; URL: http://www.ustrust.com/ustrust/html/aboutUs/community/4312. New York City Partnership <strong>Foundation</strong>,New York, NY. $50,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> relief efforts.4313. Nonprofit Finance Fund, New York, NY.$50,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> relief efforts.4314. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$50,000.UAW8000 East JeffersonDetroit, MI 482144315. American Red Cross, National, DC.$250,000.UAW-GM Human Resource <strong>Center</strong>200 Walker St.Detroit, MI 482264316. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $1,000,000.UBS Securities LLC Corporate GivingProgramc/o Comm. and Mktg. Dept.P.O. Box 120300Stamford, CT 06912-0300(203) 719-4284FAX: (203) 719-42924317. Greater Kansas City Community<strong>Foundation</strong>, Kansas City, MO. $5,000,000.UDS <strong>Foundation</strong>6000 North Loop 1604 WestSan Antonio, TX 782494318. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000.TyU.S.U.S.UAWUAWUBSUDS224


Uni-Marts, Inc.c/o Corporate Communications477 East Beaver AvenueState College, PA 168014319. American Red Cross, National, DC.$20,000.Uni-MartsUniHealthUniHealth <strong>Foundation</strong>5959 Topanga Canyon Blvd., Ste. 390Woodland Hills, CA 91367-7930(818) 888-4090FAX: (818) 888-4094; E-mail:Webadmin@unihealthfoundation.org; URL: http://www.unihealthfoundation.org/4320. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, in collaboration with NewYork Community Trust.Unilever United States <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Univlever United States, Inc.390 Park Ave.New York, NY 10022(212) 888-12604321. Unilever United States <strong>Foundation</strong>,Englewood Cliffs, NJ. $2,000,000.4322. Unilever United States <strong>Foundation</strong>,Englewood Cliffs, NJ. $546,000, 2001.UnileverUnionUnion Bank of California <strong>Foundation</strong>Union Bank of California, N.A.400 California St., 8th Fl.San Francisco, CA 94104(415) 765-3890Application address for Los Angeles, Orange, andVentura Counties: Gabriela Martinez, Fdn. Officer,Union Bank of California, 445 S. Figueroa St.,M.C. G10-039, Los Angeles, CA 90071;Application address for San Diego, Imperial,Riverside, and San Bernardino Counties: KatherinePatoff, V.P., Union Bank of California, 530 B St.,M.C. S-650, San Diego, CA 92101; URL: http://www.uboc.com/about/main/0,,2485_3457,00.html4323. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000, 2001.UnionUnion Planters Community <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Union Planters BankP.O. Box 387Memphis, TN 381474324. American Red Cross, Memphis/JacksonChapter, Memphis, TN. $17,807, 2001.4325. American Red Cross, Memphis/JacksonChapter, Memphis, TN. $10,207, 2001. ForDisaster Relief Fund.4326. American Red Cross, Memphis/JacksonChapter, Memphis, TN. $8,092.4327. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $2,100.4328. Salvation Army of Memphis, Memphis,TN. $6,069.4329. United Way of Greater Memphis,Memphis, TN. $7,655.4330. United Way of Greater Memphis,Memphis, TN. $6,069.UnisysUnisys Corporation ContributionsProgramc/o Corp. Public Affairs Dept.Unisys WayBlue Bell, PA 19424(215) 986-2804E-mail: contributions@unisys.com; URL: http://www.unisys.com/about__unisys/careers/volunteerism.htm4331. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000.LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERUnitarianUnitarian Universalist Service Committee130 Prospect StreetCambridge, MA 021394332. Structured Employment EconomicDevelopment Corporation, New York, NY.$20,000, 2002.UnitedUnited Chinese Association of GreaterNew YorkNew York, NY4333. Undesignated. $40,000.UnitedUnited States-Japan <strong>Foundation</strong>145 E. 32nd St., 12th Fl.New York, NY 10016(212) 481-8753FAX: (212) 481-8762; E-mail: info@US-JF.org;Tokyo, Japan office address: Reinanzaka Bldg. 1F,1-14-2 Akasaka, Minato-ku, Tokyo 107-0052,Japan, tel.: (03) 3586-0541; FAX: (03) 3586-<strong>11</strong>28;E-mail: JDU05456@nifty.ne.jp; URL: http://www.us-jf.org4334. Trinity College, Hartford, CT. $50,000. ForScott M. Johnson Memorial Fund to honormemory of Scott M. Johnson as well as family ofThomas Johnson.UnitedUnited Way of Central Marylandc/o Communications Dept.100 South Charles Street - 5th Floor, P.O. Box1576Baltimore, MD 212034335. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000.UnitedUnited Way of Greater New Haven71 Orange StreetNew Haven, CT 065104336. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.4337. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000. Foremergency support for relief efforts, includingblood collection and grief counseling, in theaftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.UnitedUnited Way of Palm Beach26 Quantum BoulevardBoynton Beach, FL 334264338. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $700,000.UnocalUnocal Corporation ContributionsProgram2141 Rosecrans Ave., Ste. 4000El Segundo, CA 90245(310) 726-7737Additional application addresses: Anchorage, AK:Roxanne Sinz, Public Affairs Consultant, P.O. Box196247, Anchorage, AK 99519, tel.: (907)263-7623, Lafayette, LA, and Sugar Land, TX:Christine LeLaurin, Mgr., Investor and PublicRels., 14141 Southwest Freeway, Sugar Land, TX77478, tel.: (281) 287-5793; URL: http://www.unocal.com/responsibility4339. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000.4340. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000.van AmeringenUPS<strong>The</strong> UPS <strong>Foundation</strong>55 Glenlake Pkwy., N.E.Atlanta, GA 30328(404) 828-6374FAX: (404) 828-7435; URL: http://www.community.ups.com/community/philanthropy/reports.html4341. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000, 2001.4342. Undesignated. $1,000,000. For localagencies and national community-basedorganizations coordinating <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th reliefand eventual rebuilding efforts.UptonFrederick S. Upton <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Bank One Trust Co., N.A.P.O. Box 1308Milwaukee, WI 53201Application address: 100 Ridgeway, St. Joseph, MI49085; E-mail: supton@qtm.net; FAX: (269)982-03234343. American Red Cross, National, DC. $500.USAUSA Fundsc/o Corporate Communications10475 Crosspoint BoulevardFishers, IN 460384344. Scholarship America, Saint Peter, MN.$500,000. To assist dependents of those who werekilled or permanently disabled by the terroristattacks.USFreightwaysUSFreightways Corporationc/o Bank of America101 S. Tyron St., NC1-002-<strong>11</strong>-18Charlotte, NC 28255Application address: c/o TNT Freightways Corp.,9700 Higgins Rd., Ste. 570, Rosemont, IL 600184345. Undesignated. $400,000.4346. USFreightways Corporation, Charlotte,NC. $100,000.UTC Corporate Giving Program1 Financial Plz.Hartford, CT 06101FAX: (860) 493-4170; URL: http://www.utc.com/social/index.htm4347. American Red Cross, National, DC.$150,000.Valeoc/o Corporate Communications2709 Bond StreetRochester, MI 483094348. American Red Cross, National, DC.$250,000.UTCValeovan Ameringenvan Ameringen <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.509 Madison Ave.New York, NY 10022-5501(212) 758-6221URL: http://www.vanamfound.org/4349. Binding Together, New York, NY. $25,000.For mental health counselor for students,predominately minority former drug users nowlearning printing industry, and staff who aresharing signs of post-traumatic stress disorderafter <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4350. Bread and Roses Community Fund,Philadelphia, PA. $15,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th<strong>Response</strong>.4351. Healing Works, New York, NY. $15,000.For World Trade <strong>Center</strong> Disaster <strong>Response</strong>.4352. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000, 2001.225


van BeurenSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEvan Beurenvan Beuren Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.P.O. Box 4098Middletown, RI 02842(401) 846-8167FAX: (401) 849-6859; E-mail: vBCFnd@aol.com;URL: http://www.vbcf.net4353. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000, 2001. Forvictim relief.4354. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $25,000, 2001. To help victims offamilies of the World Trade <strong>Center</strong> Attack.Van Leer U.S. <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.275 Ferris Ave.East Providence, RI 029164355. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000.VanVanceH. A. Vance <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o Conifer Investments, Ltd.61 S. Main St.Hartford, CT 061074356. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.Verity, Inc.c/o Corporate Communications894 Ross DriveSunnyvale, CA 940894357. United Way, Silicon Valley, San Jose, CA.$1,000,000.VerityVerizonVerizon <strong>Foundation</strong>1095 Ave. of the Americas, Rm. 3200New York, NY 10036(800) 360-7955FAX: (212) 840-6988; E-mail:verizon.foundation@verizon.com; URL: http://foundation.verizon.com/4358. American Red Cross, Johnstown Chapter,Johnstown, PA. $25,000, 2001.4359. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000, 2001.4360. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000, 2001.4361. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,500,000, 2001.4362. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY.$1,000,000, 2001.VermontVermont Community <strong>Foundation</strong>3 Court St.P.O. Box 30Middlebury, VT 05753(802) 388-3355FAX: (802) 388-3398; E-mail: vcf@vermontcf.org;URL: http://www.vermontcf.org4363. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $31,200.VinikVinik Family <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Jeffrey N. Vinik, Tr.19 Stonecroft Cir.Weston, MA 024934364. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $100,000. Forgeneral support of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.Vivendi<strong>The</strong> Vivendi Universal <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.375 Park Ave.New York, NY 10152-01924365. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000,000.4366. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $2,000,000, 2001.4367. Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$1,000,000. For Concert for New York City.4368. Structured Employment EconomicDevelopment Corporation, New York, NY.$1,500,000.VNU, Inc.New York, NY4369. Structured Employment EconomicDevelopment Corporation, New York, NY.$79,777, 2002.VNUVodafoneVodafone-US <strong>Foundation</strong>2999 Oak Rd., 9th Fl.Walnut Creek, CA 94597(925) 210-2777FAX: (925) 210-27784370. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000. For victims of the recent <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th tragedy and their families. Grant made byVodaphone-US <strong>Foundation</strong> and Vodaphone UKCharitable Trust.von Liebig<strong>The</strong> William J. von Liebig <strong>Foundation</strong>,Inc.P.O. Box 620005Orlando, FL 32862-0005(407) 237-5907FAX: (407) 237-5604; E-mail:teresa.borcheck@suntrust.com; URL: http://www.vonliebigfoundation.com4371. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $250. For matchinggrant.WachoviaWachovia Corporation ContributionsProgram1 Wachovia Ctr.Charlotte, NC 28288-0013(704) 374-4689FAX: (704) 374-24844372. First Union <strong>Foundation</strong>/Wachovia<strong>Foundation</strong>, Charlotte, NC. $10,000.Wachovia<strong>The</strong> Wachovia <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o Wachovia Corp.301 S. College St., Ste. 2525Charlotte, NC 28288-0143(704) 374-4085Community Affairs contacts: CT, NJ, NY: YvonneCalcagno, 370 Scotch Rd., Trenton, NJ 08628, tel.:(609) 530-7357, FL: Connie Smith, 225 Water St.,7th Fl., FL0670, Jacksonville, FL 32202, tel.: (904)489-3268, DC, MD, VA: Anita Wynn, 102 E. CarySt., VA9603, Richmond, VA 23219, tel.: (804)697-7231, DE, PA: Kevin Dow, 1339 Chestnut St.,13th Fl., Philadelphia, PA 19107, tel.: (267)321-7664, Wachovia Securities, LLC: Tim Holtz,901 E. Byrd St., Richmond, VA 23219, tel.: (804)782-4140, NC, SC: Joseph D. Crocker, GA: BenBoswell; FAX: (704) 374-2484; URL: http://www.wachovia.com/inside/page/0,,139_414_430,00.html4373. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000. To assist in providing much-neededservices and supplies to victims of <strong>September</strong><strong>11</strong>th attacks.<strong>The</strong> Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz<strong>Foundation</strong>51 W. 52nd St.New York, NY 100194374. New York University, New York, NY.$5,000,000. To create new scholarship fund fordependents of firefighters and police officerskilled or injured as a result of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.WachtellWaddell & Reedc/o Corporate Communications6300 Lamar AvenueOverland Park, KS 662014375. Salvation Army, Kansas and MissouriDivision, Kansas City, MO. $80,000.WaddellWaittWaitt Family <strong>Foundation</strong>P.O. Box 1948La Jolla, CA 92037-1948(858) 661-4400Additional address: P.O. Box 1397, North SiouxCity, SD, 57049, tel.: (605) 232-9929, FAX: (605)232-9486; FAX: (858) 551-6871; E-mail:grants@waittfoundation.org; URL: http://www.waittfoundation.org/4376. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.Wal-Mart <strong>Foundation</strong>702 S.W. 8th St.Bentonville, AR 72716FAX: (479) 273-6850; URL: http://www.walmartfoundation.org4377. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000, 2002.4378. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000, 2002.4379. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $500,000, 2002. For disasterrelief following <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4380. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $500,000, 2002. For disasterrelief following <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4381. Undesignated. $3,300,000.WalgreenWalgreen Co. Contributions Program200 Wilmot Rd., M.S. 2255Deerfield, IL 60015(847) 914-2856FAX: (847) 914-3417; URL: http://www.walgreens.com/about/community/default.jhtml4382. American Red Cross, National, DC.$25,000.WalWallersteinJohanette Wallerstein InstituteLlewellyn Park1 Elm Court WayWest Orange, NJ 07052(973) 731-1394FAX: (973) 731-1395; E-mail:bwallerstein@comcast.net4383. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.4384. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong>Fund for police and fire families.Wanek<strong>The</strong> Wanek-Vogel <strong>Foundation</strong>, Ltd.c/o Ashley Furniture Industries, Inc.1 Ashley WayArcadia, WI 54612(608) 323-62494385. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $5,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.WarburgWarburg Pincus Partners LLC CorporateGiving Programc/o Corp. Contribs.466 Lexington Ave.New York, NY 100174386. Structured Employment EconomicDevelopment Corporation, New York, NY.$500,000, 2002.226


Warhol<strong>The</strong> Andy Warhol <strong>Foundation</strong> for theVisual Arts65 Bleecker St., 7th Fl.New York, NY 10012(212) 387-7555FAX: (212) 387-7560; URL: http://www.warholfoundation.org4387. A Gathering of the Tribes, New York, NY.$15,000, 2001.4388. Anthology Film Archives, New York, NY.$20,000, 2001.4389. Apex Art, New York, NY. $20,000, 2001.4390. Art in General, New York, NY. $25,000,2001.4391. Artists Space, New York, NY. $20,000,2001.4392. Asian American Arts Centre, New York,NY. $15,000, 2001.4393. Dieu Donne Paper Mill, New York, NY.$20,000, 2001.4394. Downtown Arts Projects, New York, NY.$20,000, 2001.4395. Downtown Community Television <strong>Center</strong>,New York, NY. $25,000, 2001.4396. Drawing <strong>Center</strong>, New York, NY. $25,000,2001.4397. Exit Art, New York, NY. $20,000, 2001.4398. Film/Video Arts, New York, NY. $20,000,2001.4399. Franklin Furnace Archive, New York, NY.$20,000, 2001.4400. Harvestworks, New York, NY. $20,000,2001.4401. Henry Street Settlement, New York, NY.$15,000, 2001.4402. HERE/Home for Contemporary <strong>The</strong>aterand Art, New York, NY. $25,000, 2001.4403. Kenkeleba House, New York, NY. $20,000,2001.4404. Lower East Side Printshop, New York, NY.$20,000, 2001.4405. Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, NewYork, NY. $50,000, 2001.4406. Millennium Film Workshop, New York, NY.$15,000, 2001.4407. Minetta Brook, New York, NY. $20,000,2001.4408. Museum for African Art, Long Island City,NY. $25,000, 2001.4409. Museum of Chinese in the Americas, NewYork, NY. $20,000, 2001.4410. New Museum of Contemporary Art, NewYork, NY. $25,000, 2001.44<strong>11</strong>. New York University, New York, NY.$10,000. For Listening to the City.4412. Nuyorican Poets Cafe, New York, NY.$15,000. For general operating support throughWarhol <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Emergency Fund forLower Manhattan Visual Arts Organizations.4413. P. S. 1 Contemporary Art <strong>Center</strong>, LongIsland City, NY. $20,000, 2001.4414. Performance Space 122, New York, NY.$25,000, 2001.4415. Rhizome Communications, New York, NY.$20,000, 2001.4416. Storefront for Art and Architecture, NewYork, NY. $20,000, 2001.4417. White Columns, New York, NY. $20,000,2001.4418. Women Make Movies, New York, NY.$25,000, 2001.4419. Wooster Group, New York, NY. $25,000,2001.LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDERWashington Mutual <strong>Foundation</strong>999 3rd Ave., No. 2913Seattle, WA 98104(800) 258-05434420. American Red Cross, National, DC.$250,000.WashingtonWD-40WD-40 Companyc/o Corporate Communications1061 Cudahy PlaceSan Diego, CA 921014421. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.WebsterWebster Bank Corporate Giving Programc/o Community Affairs Dept.Webster Plz.Waterbury, CT 06702Application address: 145 Bank St., Waterbury, CT067024422. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000.Weil, Gotshal & Manges <strong>Foundation</strong>767 5th Ave.New York, NY 10153(212) 310-80004423. Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese ofNew York, New York, NY. $100,000. For WTCSupport Fund.<strong>The</strong> Weill Family <strong>Foundation</strong>399 Park Ave., 3rd Fl.New York, NY 100224424. Citigroup Relief Fund, New York, NY.$100,000.WeilWeillWeinbergWilliam and Irene Weinberg Family<strong>Foundation</strong>7 Park <strong>Center</strong> CourtOwings Mills, MD 2<strong>11</strong>174425. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.Weinberg<strong>The</strong> Harry and Jeanette Weinberg<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.7 Park <strong>Center</strong> Ct.Owings Mills, MD 2<strong>11</strong>17-4200URL: http://www.hjweinbergfoundation.org4426. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000, 2002.Weingart <strong>Foundation</strong>1055 W. 7th St., Ste. 3050Los Angeles, CA 90017-2305(213) 688-7799FAX: (213) 688-1515; E-mail:info@weingartfnd.org; URL: http://www.weingartfnd.org4427. American Red Cross, National, DC.$500,000, 2002. To support relief efforts inresponse to the attacks at the WTC and thePentagon.WeingartWelchWelch Foods Inc. Corporate GivingProgram3 Concord Farms575 Virginia Rd.Concord, MA 01742-9101(978) 371-10004428. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $25,000.4429. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $16,000.Wells<strong>The</strong> Wells Fargo <strong>Foundation</strong>550 California St., 7th Fl.San Francisco, CA 94104(415) 396-5947Additional address: 333 S. Grand Ave., E2064-200,Los Angeles, CA 90071, tel.: (888) 886-1785;Application address for Wells Fargo Housing<strong>Foundation</strong>: Kimberly Jackson, Exec. Dir., WellsFargo Housing Fdn., MAC N9305-192, 90 S. 7thSt., Minneapolis, MN 55479, tel.: (612) 667-2146;Additional URL: http://www.wellsfargo.com/about/wfhf_oview.jhtml; URL: http://www.wellsfargo.com/donations; Alternate URL: http://www.wellsfargo.com/about/wfhf_oview.jhtml4430. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000, 2001.4431. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000, 2001.4432. American Red Cross, National, DC.$12,500.4433. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $3,000.Wendy’sWendy’s International, Inc. CorporateGiving Program4288 W. Dublin-Granville Rd.P.O. Box 256Dublin, OH 43017-0256(614) 764-3100URL: http://www.wendys.com/w-7-2.shtml4434. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$1,000,000. For the children and families of killedor injured firefighters, police, and emergencyworkers.WerblinDavid A. & Leah Ray Werblin <strong>Foundation</strong>,Inc.555 Pleasantville, SB 150Briarcliff Manor, NY 105104435. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY. $5,000.For general support.WestWest Central Initiative1000 Western Ave.Fergus Falls, MN 56537(218) 739-22394436. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.<strong>The</strong> Westlake <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o Konigsberg, Wolf & Co.440 Park Ave. S.New York, NY 100164437. Undesignated. $25,000.WestlakeWeyerhaeuserWeyerhaeuser Company <strong>Foundation</strong>EC2-2A8P.O. Box 9777Federal Way, WA 98063-9777(253) 924-3159FAX: (253) 924-3658; URL: http://www.weyerhaeuser.com/citizenship/philanthropy/weyerfoundation.asp4438. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $51,000. For<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.Whirlpool <strong>Foundation</strong>2000 N. M-63, M.D. 3106Benton Harbor, MI 49022-2692(269) 923-5580FAX: (269) 925-0154; URL: http://whirlpoolcorp.com/social_responsibility/whirlpoolfoundation/default.asp4439. American Red Cross, National, DC.$<strong>11</strong>8,004.4440. American Red Cross, National, DC.$33,352.WhirlpoolWhirlpool227


WhitfordSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEWhitfordJacques Whitford Companyc/o Corporate Communications75 Pearl St.Portland, ME 041014441. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.WholeWhole Foods Market, Inc. CorporateGiving Programc/o Corp. Contribs.601 N. Lamar, Ste. 300Austin, TX 78703URL: http://www.wholefoods.com/company/communitygiving.html4442. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $75,000.Wichita Falls Area Community<strong>Foundation</strong>719 Scott StreetSuite 414Wichita Falls, TX 760314443. Undesignated. $10,715.WichitaWiegandE. L. Wiegand <strong>Foundation</strong>Wiegand Ctr.165 W. Liberty St., Ste. 200Reno, NV 89501(775) 333-03104444. Futures in Education <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong>,Brooklyn, NY. $20,000. Toward scholarshipprogram for Catholic elementary school childrenwho lost a parent (firefighter or policeman).4445. Futures in Education <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong>,Brooklyn, NY. $15,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> ScholarshipProgram.WilcoxG.N. WilcoxHonolulu, HI4446. Catholic Charities of Honolulu, Honolulu,HI. $50,000, 2001.4447. Child and Family Service, Lihue, HI.$5,000, 2001.4448. Child and Family Service, Lihue, HI.$5,000, 2002.4449. Kauai Food Bank, Lihue, HI. $20,000,2001.4450. Maui Food Bank, Kahului, HI. $10,000,2001.4451. Maui Food Bank, Kahului, HI. $5,000,2001. (for the island of Lanai).4452. United Way of Kauai, Lihue, HI. $7,000,2002.4453. Various organizations. $52,000, 2002. Toeight church food pantries on the island of Kauai(Catholic Charities, Kauai Food Bank, MauiCommunity Food Bank, Child & FamilyServices).4454. Various organizations. $40,000, 2001. Toeight church food pantries on the island of Kauai(Catholic Charities, Kauai Food Bank, MauiCommunity Food Bank, Child & FamilyServices).Williams<strong>The</strong> Williams Companies <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.One Williams Ctr., MD47Tulsa, OK 74172(918) 573-4014URL: http://www.williams.com/community/foundation.asp4455. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $1,000,000. To helplaunch <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th response fund.WilliamsportWilliamsport-Lycoming <strong>Foundation</strong>220 W. 4th St., Ste. C, 3rd Fl.Williamsport, PA 17701-6102(570) 321-1500FAX: (570) 321-6434; E-mail:wlf@wlfoundation.org; URL: http://www.wlfoundation.org4456. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,500.WilsonMatilda R. Wilson Fund100 Renaissance Ctr., 34th Fl.Detroit, MI 48243(313) 259-7777FAX (for David P. Larsen): (313) 393-7579; E-mail(for David P. Larsen):roosterveen@bodmanllp.com4457. <strong>Foundation</strong> for Alger Families, Jersey City,NJ. $10,000. For operating support.Winfield<strong>The</strong> Winfield <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Bessemer Trust630 5th Ave., 34th Fl.New York, NY 10<strong>11</strong>1Application Address: c/o Hollyer, Brady, Smith &Hines, LLP, 551 5th Ave., New York, NY 10176,tel.: (212) 818-<strong>11</strong>104458. Navy Marine Corps Relief Society,Arlington, VA. $5,000. For Pentagon AssistanceFund.4459. Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY.$10,000. For World Trade <strong>Center</strong> victims.<strong>The</strong> Norman and Rosita Winston<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o Paul Weiss, Rifkind, et al.1285 Ave. of the AmericasNew York, NY 10019-6064(212) 373-30004460. WNET Channel 13, New York, NY.$10,000. For New York Voices Project.WinstonWinston-Salem<strong>The</strong> Winston-Salem <strong>Foundation</strong>860 W. 5th St.Winston-Salem, NC 27101-2506(336) 725-2382FAX: (336) 727-0581; E-mail:info@wsfoundation.org; URL: http://www.wsfoundation.org4461. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.With Arms Wide Open <strong>Foundation</strong>525 East College AvenuTallahassee, FL 323014462. New Yorkers for Children, New York, NY.$202,8<strong>11</strong>. To support the long-term needs ofchildren affected by the tragedies of 9/<strong>11</strong>.Wolfe Associates, Inc.34 S. 3rd St.Columbus, OH 43215(614) 460-37824463. American Red Cross, Columbus Chapter,Columbus, OH. $12,096. To match employeecontributions for Terrorist Relief Fund.WithWolfeWolfensohnWolfensohn Family <strong>Foundation</strong>1350 Ave. of the Americas, Ste. 2900New York, NY 10019(212) 974-0<strong>11</strong>1FAX: (212) 974-1437; URL: http://www.wolfensohn.org4464. American Red Cross in Greater New York,New York, NY. $10,400, 2001.4465. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $50,000, 2001.4466. New York State Fraternal Order of PoliceFund, Hicksville, NY. $25,000, 2001.4467. UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NewYork, NY. $25,000, 2001.WolkElliot K. Wolk Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.<strong>11</strong> Morris Ln.Scarsdale, NY 105834468. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $500. For unrestricted support.<strong>The</strong> Wolverine <strong>Foundation</strong>350 Park Ave., 18th Fl.New York, NY 100224469. Sandler O’Neill Assistance <strong>Foundation</strong>,Chatham, NJ. $25,000. For general support.WolverineWomen’s<strong>The</strong> Women’s <strong>Foundation</strong> of California340 Pine St., Ste. 302San Francisco, CA 94104(415) 837-<strong>11</strong>13FAX: (415) 837-<strong>11</strong>44; E-mail:info@womensfoundca.org; URL: http://www.womensfoundca.org4470. Afghan Elderly Association, Union City,CA. $10,000. For general support in the aftermathof <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4471. Afghan Women’s Association International,Fremont, CA. $10,000. For general support in theaftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4472. Global Exchange, San Francisco, CA.$22,500. For sister-to-sister schools andmicro-finance project in the aftermath of<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4473. Lyon-Martin Womens Health Services, SanFrancisco, CA. $10,000. For general support inthe aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4474. Narika, Berkeley, CA. $10,000. For generalsupport in the aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4475. New York Womens <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York,NY. $5,000. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.4476. Opportunities for Technology Info. Careers(OPTIC), Antioch, CA. $10,000. For generalsupport in the aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.4477. Revolutionary Afghan Women’sAssociation, Afghanistan. $90,000. For generalsupport for Afghan Women and Girls.4478. Washington Area Womens <strong>Foundation</strong>, DC.$2,500. For 9/<strong>11</strong> disaster relief.4479. Women’s Community Clinic, SanFrancisco, CA. $10,000. For general support inthe aftermath of <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th.Women’s<strong>The</strong> Women’s <strong>Foundation</strong> of Colorado1580 Logan St., Ste. 500Denver, CO 80203(303) 832-8800FAX: (303) 832-8362; E-mail: wfco@wfco.org;URL: http://www.wfco.org4480. New York Womens <strong>Foundation</strong>, New York,NY. $1,000.Wood Family <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o 1600 Riverview Tower900 S. Gay St.Knoxville, TN 379024481. United Way of America, Alexandria, VA.$2,000. For <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund.WoodWoodstockWoodstock <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.30 Rockefeller Plz., Ste. 5600New York, NY 10<strong>11</strong>2Application address: P.O. Box 489, Woodstock, VT05091, tel.: (802) 457-2355; FAX: (802)457-4663; E-mail: Mkoetsier@valley.net4482. New York Police and Fire Widows andChildrens Benefit Fund, New York, NY. $2,000.228


Woodward<strong>The</strong> David, Helen, and Marian WoodwardFund-Atlantac/o Wachovia Bank Trustee, N.A.191 Peachtree St., MC GA-8023Atlanta, GA 30303(404) 332-4152E-mail: grantinquiries@wachovia.com; URL: http://www.wachovia.com/privatefoundations4483. American Red Cross, Metropolitan AtlantaChapter, Atlanta, GA. $10,000. For assistance in<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th disaster relief.WorcesterGreater Worcester Community<strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.370 Main St., Ste. 650Worcester, MA 01608-1738(508) 755-0980FAX: (508) 755-3406; E-mail:atlisi@greaterworcester.org,conaghan@greaterworcester.org; URL: http://www.greaterworcester.org4484. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.Abe Wouk <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.c/o Gelfend, Rennert & Feldman1880 Century Park E., Ste. 1600Los Angeles, CA 90067Application address: 303 Crestview Dr., PalmSprings, CA 922624485. Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund, New York,NY. $5,000.WTEN-TVc/o Corporate Communications341 Northern BoulevardAlbany, NY 122044486. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$200,000.WoukWTEN-TVWurzburg<strong>The</strong> Warren S. Wurzburg, Sr. andMarjorie O. Wurzburg <strong>Foundation</strong>1414 Raleigh Rd., Ste. 150Chapel Hill, NC 27517Application address: 710 S. 4th St., Memphis, TN38101-07104487. Union of American Hebrew Congregations,New York, NY. $5,000. For general support.WyethWyeth Corporate Giving Program685 3rd Ave., 19th Fl.New York, NY 10017FAX: (212) 878-50794488. Alonso Children’s Tuition Fund, NY. $500,2001.4489. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000. Fro <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th relief andrecovery efforts.4490. American Red Cross, National, DC. $500,2001.4491. American Red Cross, National, DC. $500,2001.4492. American Red Cross, National, DC. $500,2001.4493. American Red Cross, Southeast PAChapter, Philadelphia, PA. $15,000, 2001.4494. Arts Council of the Morris Area, Madison,NJ. $12,500, 2001.4495. Bentley College, Waltham, MA. $500, 2001.4496. Bulaga Jr. Fund, John, NJ. $500, 2001.4497. Childrens Health Fund, New York, NY.$100,000, 2001.4498. Community Blood Services, ZZ. $5,000,2001.4499. Dimmling Memorial Trust, William J., NY.$500, 2001.LIST OF GRANTS BY FUNDER4500. Family Service of Morris County,Morristown, NJ. $<strong>11</strong>,000, 2001. Healing HandsProject.4501. Family Service of Morris County,Morristown, NJ. $5,000, 2001.4502. Independent Womens Forum, Arlington,VA. $5,000, 2001.4503. Kershaw Family Fund, Ralph, MA. $500,2001.4504. Madison 9<strong>11</strong> Family Assistance Fund, NJ.$10,000, 2001.4505. Marshall & Family Fund, Lori T., NY.$5,000, 2001.4506. McGinley Family Trust, Daniel, NJ. $500,2001.4507. Mint Brook Camp & Conference <strong>Center</strong>,Canada, Canada. $2,000, 2001.4508. New Jersey Tree <strong>Foundation</strong>, Camden City,NJ. $500, 2001.4509. New York State College Savings Program,NY. $5,000, 2001.4510. Novotny Memorial Scholarship Fund, <strong>The</strong>Brian, NJ. $500, 2001.45<strong>11</strong>. Our Lady of Shkodra Church, NY. $500,2001.4512. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $25,000, 2001.4513. Salvation Army National Headquarters,Alexandria, VA. $25,000, 2001.4514. Scott Hazelcorn Memorial Children’s<strong>Foundation</strong>, New York, NY. $5,000, 2001.4515. Service Employees International UnionEducation and Assistance Fund, DC. $100,000,2001.4516. Summit Area Public <strong>Foundation</strong>, Summit,NJ. $5,000, 2001.4517. Town of Orangeton, NY. $10,000, 2001.4518. Undesignated. $2,437,500. Balance offunds committed as of 6/04.4519. United Cerebral Palsy, DC. $500, 2001.4520. United Way of America, Alexandria, VA.$10,000, 2001. Back to Work Initiative.4521. United Way of Morris County, Morristown,NJ. $1,000,000.4522. United Way of Morris County, Morristown,NJ. $100,000, 2001.4523. United Way of Rockland County, WestNyack, NY. $100,000, 2001.4524. University of Pennsylvania Medical <strong>Center</strong>,Philadelphia, PA. $500, 2001.WyomingWyoming Community <strong>Foundation</strong>221 Ivinson Ave., Ste. 202Laramie, WY 82070-3038(307) 721-8300FAX: (307) 721-8333; E-mail: wcf@wycf.org;Additional tel.: toll free (866) 708-7878; URL:http://www.wycf.org4525. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $3,500.<strong>The</strong> Xerox <strong>Foundation</strong>800 Long Ridge Rd.P.O. Box 1600Stamford, CT 06904(203) 968-34454526. American Red Cross, National, DC.$50,000.4527. Twin Towers Fund, New York, NY.$1,000,000.XeroxXilinxc/o Corporate Communications2310 North 1st StreetSan Jose, CA 951314528. American Red Cross, National, DC.$1,000,000.Yamaha Corporation of AmericaCorporate Giving Programc/o Yamaha Cares Comm.P.O. Box 6600Buena Park, CA 90620E-mail: yamahacares@yamaha.com4529. American Red Cross, Orange CountyChapter. $16,800.Yellow Corporate <strong>Foundation</strong>10990 Roe Ave., M.S. A520Overland Park, KS 662<strong>11</strong>4530. American Red Cross, National, DC.$100,000.XilinxYamahaYen Chuang <strong>Foundation</strong>1247 Elko Dr.Sunnyvale, CA 94089(408) 747-17694531. International Association of Fire Fighters,DC. $5,000. For general support.YellowYeonas<strong>The</strong> Stephen G. and <strong>The</strong>lma S. Yeonas<strong>Foundation</strong>6867 Elm St., Ste. 210McLean, VA 22101-3623Application address: 7450 Old Maple Sq., McLean,VA 22102, tel.: (703) 883-02024532. Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the NationalCapital Region, DC. $5,000, 2002.4533. Greek Orthodox Church, New York, NY.$5,000.YenYoungGeorge & Fay Young <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc.5520 LBJ Fwy., Ste. 540Dallas, TX 75240(972) 404-4001FAX: (972) 385-89904534. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $25,000.Yum! Brands <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Yum! Brands, Inc.1441 Gardiner Ln.Louisville, KY 40213-59104535. Various organizations. $10,000.Yum!ZalaznickBarbara M. Zalaznick <strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Eric Kaplan335 Madison Ave., Ste. 1500New York, NY 100174536. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $18,000, 2001.M. B. and Edna Zale <strong>Foundation</strong>3102 Maple Ave., Ste. 225Dallas, TX 75201(214) 855-06274537. Undesignated. $37,500.ZarrowZaleZarrow<strong>The</strong> Maxine and Jack Zarrow Family<strong>Foundation</strong>401 S. Boston, Ste. 900Tulsa, OK 74103(918) 295-8004FAX: 918) 295-8049; E-mail: jgillert@zarrow.com;URL: http://www.zarrow.com4538. American Red Cross, National, DC.$25,000. For New York City victims and families.229


ZarrowSEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE4539. New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NewYork, NY. $25,000.Zellerbach<strong>The</strong> Zellerbach Family <strong>Foundation</strong>120 Montgomery St., Ste. 1550San Francisco, CA 94104(415) 421-2629FAX: (415) 421-6713; E-mail:info@zellerbachfamilyfoundation.org; URL: http://www.zellerbachfamilyfoundation.org4540. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000, 2001.ZimmermanMary and George Herbert Zimmerman<strong>Foundation</strong>200 Maple Park Blvd., Rm. 201St. Clair Shores, MI 480814541. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $10,000.Zisman<strong>The</strong> Simon & Sylvia Zisman Charitable<strong>Foundation</strong>c/o Sylvia Zisman460 E. Ocean Ave., Ste. 240Lantana, FL 334624542. New York Community Trust & United Wayof New York, New York, NY. $20,000.230


Index of Grant RecipientsA Better Chance, NY, 3913A Gathering of the Tribes, NY, 4387A Little Hope, NY, 1237Aaron Davis Hall, NY, 701, 1848, 2798Abilities, Inc., NY, 3069Abraham Fund, NY, 4208Abyssinian Development Corporation, NY, 3914Access, OH, 2189ACCION International, NY, 4264ACCION New York, NY, 969, 985, 986, 1546,3076, 3450, 3806ACCION USA, MA, 2971Ackerman Institute for the Family, NY, 391, 3915Acting Company, NY, 2544Action Alliance for Virginias Children and Youth,VA, 1575Active Element <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 4209Active Voice, CA, 906Actors Fund of America, NY, 2799ADC Research Institute, DC, 3130Advertising Council Inc., NY, 3077, 3078, 3807,3808Afghan Coalition, CA, 907Afghan Elderly Association, CA, 4470Afghan Institute of Learning, Afghanistan, 4210Afghan Women’s Association International, CA,42<strong>11</strong>, 4471Afghan Women’s Resource <strong>Center</strong>, Pakistan, 4212African Globe <strong>The</strong>aterWorks, NJ, 1351After-School Corporation, <strong>The</strong>, NY, 3079, 4132Ahold USA American Heroes Fund, VA, 4272Aid to Victims of Domestic Assault, FL, 2190AIDS <strong>Foundation</strong> of Chicago, IL, <strong>11</strong>7AIDS Task Force, IN, 2191AKC Canine Health <strong>Foundation</strong>, OH, 1352Akron Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, OH, 2<strong>11</strong>2Akron Community Service <strong>Center</strong> and UrbanLeague, OH, 2192Akron-Canton Regional Foodbank, OH, 2193Alan Guttmacher Institute, NY, 2800Albert G. Oliver Program, NY, 3916Alcoa <strong>Foundation</strong>, PA, 96, 100Alexandra House, MN, 2194Alianza Dominicana, NY, 862Alley Pond Environmental <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 2801Alliance for Downtown New York, NY, 281, 3852Alliance for the Arts, NY, 702, 1418Alliance of Neighbors of Monmouth County, NJ,1089Alliance of Resident <strong>The</strong>aters/New York(ART/NY), NY, <strong>11</strong>8, 703, 1849, 2802, 2803Alonso Children’s Tuition Fund, NY, 4488Alvin Ailey Dance <strong>The</strong>ater <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 2804Alzheimers Disease and Related DisordersAssociation, IL, 1576AMAS Musical <strong>The</strong>ater, NY, 2545America Reads, DC, 1692America Speaks, Inc., DC, 3599, 3610America’s Fund for Afghan Children, DC, 2935,2936America’s Health Together, DC, 1738, 2028America’s Second Harvest, IL, 46, <strong>11</strong>9, 2480, 3917America’s Second Harvest of the Big Bend, FL,2195American Academy of Pediatrics, IL, 2029American Association of Pastoral Counseling, VA,2519American Association of University Professors,DC, 1577American Bar Association, DC, 3306American Civil Liberties Union <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY,313, 1258, 1799, 2617, 3307, 3308, 3635,4213American Civil Liberties Union <strong>Foundation</strong> ofNorthern California, CA, 3309American Craft Museum, NY, 2805American Dental Association, IL, 563, 3517American Express <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 194American Federation of Arts, NY, 2806American Friends Service Committee, PA, 1578,4214American Group Psychotherapy Association, NY,908American Immigration Law <strong>Foundation</strong>, DC, 909,1579, 3310American India <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 384American Jewish Committee, NY, 428American Jewish World Service, NY, 3690, 3748American Museum of Natural History, NY, 2807American Museum of the Moving Image, NY, 704,2808American Music <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 705, 2809, 2810American Place <strong>The</strong>ater, NY, 706American Red Cross, AZ, 4088American Red Cross, CA, 3380American Red Cross, KY, 547, 1520, 3558American Red Cross, NJ, 2188American Red Cross, OH, <strong>11</strong>1, 1695American Red Cross, PA, 532, 1998American Red Cross, WA, 1967American Red Cross, WI, 1478American Red Cross in Greater New York, NY,120, 238, 269, 486, 487, 978, 1049, <strong>11</strong>55,1274, 1349, 1488, 1500, 1501, 1708, 1970,2647, 3131, 3737, 4168, 4169, 4197, 4464American Red Cross in Japan, Japan, 3034American Red Cross of Monroe County, PA, 1444American Red Cross, Abilene, TX, 1398American Red Cross, Bergen County Chapter, NJ,967American Red Cross, Berrien County Chapter, MI,444American Red Cross, Bethlehem Chapter, PA, 47American Red Cross, Cabarrus County Chapter,NC, 121American Red Cross, Central Chapter, TX, 20,3578American Red Cross, Central Iowa Chapter, IA,3505, 3506American Red Cross, Central Maryland Chapter,MD, 213American Red Cross, Central Massachusetts, MA,4170American Red Cross, Centre CommunitiesChapter, PA, 2196American Red Cross, Chalmette, LA, 4171American Red Cross, Charlotte, NC, 1430,4172American Red Cross, Columbus Chapter, OH,1050, 4463American Red Cross, Dallas Area Chapter, TX,48, 1276, 1277, 1912, 2737, 4173American Red Cross, DC Chapter, DC, 979,<strong>11</strong>45, 1910, 2672, 3<strong>11</strong>4, 3293, 3600, 4174American Red Cross, Delaware, DE, 1437,1438, 2743American Red Cross, Denver, CO, 49American Red Cross, Durham, NC, 4287American Red Cross, El Paso, TX, 4175American Red Cross, Falls Church Chapter,VA, 3355American Red Cross, Farmington, CT, 50American Red Cross, Flint County Chapter,MI, 3080American Red Cross, Fort Lauderdale, FL,4176American Red Cross, Grand Rapids Chapter,MI, 1885American Red Cross, Greater ClevelandChapter, OH, 1015-1019, 2<strong>11</strong>3, 3109American Red Cross, Greater Los AngelesChapter, CA, 51, 1452, 4177American Red Cross, Greater New OrleansChapter, LA, 4128, 4178American Red Cross, Harrisburg, PA, 52American Red Cross, Hickory, NC, 4179American Red Cross, Jacksonville, FL, 53American Red Cross, Johnstown Chapter, PA,1402, 4358American Red Cross, Kansas City, MO,1805-1807, 2081American Red Cross, Kern County, CA, 910,9<strong>11</strong>American Red Cross, La Grange, GA, 644American Red Cross, MassBay Chapter, MA,489American Red Cross, Memphis/JacksonChapter, TN, <strong>11</strong>46, 4324-4326American Red Cross, Mercer County Chapter,NJ, 1456, 2030American Red Cross, Metropolitan AtlantaChapter, GA, 649, 2675, 4483American Red Cross, Middletown, CT, 54American Red Cross, Midland Chapter, MI,3016American Red Cross, Minneapolis, MN, 2740,3907, 3908American Red Cross, Modesto, CA, 4180American Red Cross, Morristown, NJ, 55American Red Cross, Nashville, TN, 4181American Red Cross, Nassau County Chapter,NY, 56, 392American Red Cross, National, DC, 3, <strong>11</strong>, 12,19, 21, 22, 57, 80, 83-86, 90, 91, 95,97-99, 102, 107, 122, 193, 195, 205, 206,231


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE215, 216, 219, 229, 231, 232, 244, 276, 279,280, 282-291, 293, 343, 349, 352, 354, 355,367, 368, 393, 418, 424, 430-432, 435, 445,457, 459, 460, 471, 475, 481, 506-508,539-541, 548, 645, 651, 655, 688, 691, 692,858, 879-882, 885, 887, 894, 897, 904, 976,983, 1005, 1013, 1014, 1033, 1039, 1041,1042, 1047, 1051, 1090, 1098, <strong>11</strong>22, <strong>11</strong>34,<strong>11</strong>36, <strong>11</strong>56, <strong>11</strong>73, <strong>11</strong>75, <strong>11</strong>81, <strong>11</strong>86, <strong>11</strong>99,1210, 1214, 1222, 1224-1226, 1228, 1230,1255, 1257, 1270, 1273, 1299-1301,1303-1305, 1408, 1412, 1426, 1427, 1431,1445, 1448, 1449, 1451, 1453, 1479, 1485,1523, 1540, 1541, 1547, 1567, 1570-1572,1654, 1672, 1673, 1678, 1682, 1689, 1690,1698, 1703, 17<strong>11</strong>-1715, 1717, 1718, 1720,1727, 1732, 1747, 1748, 1750, 1783, 1813,1820, 1822, 1850, 1887, 1892, 1900, 1901,1903, 1904, 1906, 1907, 1909, 19<strong>11</strong>, 1916,1918, 1928, 1946, 1951, 1952, 1954, 1958,1968, 1971-1973, 1976, 1978, 1983, 1985,1989-1991, 1997, 2010, 2013, 2014, 2059,2067, 2068, 2070, 2107, 2108, 2<strong>11</strong>4, 2180,2182, 2441, 2474, 2481, 2494, 2520, 2524,2531, 2594, 2601, 2602, 2605, 2606, 2609,2649, 2657, 2659, 2663, 2668, 2683-2686,2701, 2708, 2709, 2727, 2736, 2741, 2744,2745, 2933, 2937-2942, 2972, 3002, 3004,30<strong>11</strong>, 3012, 3018, 3021, 3024, 3025, 3030,3032, 3039, 3070, 3097, 3104, 3<strong>11</strong>5, 3<strong>11</strong>9,3120, 3194, 3238, 3254, 3277, 3280, 3283,3286, 3288, 3304, 3305, 3339, 3371, 3372,3378, 3379, 3389, 3391, 3403, 3436, 3466,3468, 3470, 3478, 3489, 3493, 3518, 3528,3532, 3535, 3548, 3559, 3562, 3564, 3568,3576, 3590, 3682, 3683, 3687, 3701, 37<strong>11</strong>,3715, 3738, 3742, 3746, 3749, 3773, 3783,3787, 3793, 3802, 3848, 3849, 3883, 3888,3896, 3904, 3905, 4078, 4079, 4083, 4086,4095, 4099, 4104, 4108, 4<strong>11</strong>5, 4125-4127,4131, 4150-4152, 4156, 4159-4162, 4193,4198, 4203, 4269, 4270, 4275, 4280, 4288,4308, 4315, 4318, 4319, 4323, 4339, 4343,4347, 4348, 4359, 4360, 4370, 4373,4376-4378, 4382, 4420, 4427, 4430-4432,4439, 4440, 4489-4492, 4526, 4528, 4530,4538American Red Cross, New Canaan, CT, 58American Red Cross, New London Chapter, CT,1472American Red Cross, Newport Chapter, RI, 2695American Red Cross, North Texas, TX, 4182American Red Cross, Northeast Indiana Chapter,IN, 2197American Red Cross, Oconee Valley Chapter, GA,2198American Red Cross, Orange County Chapter, CA,1844, 4529American Red Cross, Palo Alto Chapter, CA, 23American Red Cross, Pasadena, CA, 4183American Red Cross, Portland, ME, ME, 59American Red Cross, Raleigh, NC, 3526, 4289American Red Cross, Rock Hill, SC, 4184American Red Cross, San Francisco Chapter, CA,24, 358, 912, 913, 1034American Red Cross, San Jose Chapter, CA, 25American Red Cross, San Luis Obispo, CA, 4185American Red Cross, Santa Barbara, CA, 4186American Red Cross, Southeast Michigan, MI,1642-1644American Red Cross, Southeast PA Chapter, PA,60, 406, 3437-3439, 4187, 4493American Red Cross, Southeastern FairfieldCounty, NJ, 914, 1205American Red Cross, Spartenburg Chapter, SC,476American Red Cross, Spokane Chapter, WA, 1683American Red Cross, St. Louis, MO, 4188American Red Cross, St. Paul Chapter, MN, 61American Red Cross, Summit County Chapter, NJ,3036, 3596American Red Cross, Tacoma Chapter, WA, 905,3697American Red Cross, Tampa, FL, 3527American Red Cross, Tidewater Chapter, VA, 3255American Red Cross, Tulsa Area Chapter, OK, 499American Red Cross, White Plains, NY, 62American Red Cross, Whittier, CA, 4189American Russian Youth Orchestra, NY, 3918American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty toAnimals, NY, 26, 1309, 2<strong>11</strong>5, 2746American Symphony Orchestra League, NY, 28<strong>11</strong>American Tribute <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 987American Veterinary Medical <strong>Foundation</strong>, IL, 4,2<strong>11</strong>6American Woman’s Economic Development(AWED), NY, 988American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee,DC, 33<strong>11</strong>, 4215AmeriCares <strong>Foundation</strong>, CT, 5, 123, 1662, 1696,1728, 2<strong>11</strong>7, 2<strong>11</strong>8, 2747, 3716Amigos del Museo del Barrio, NY, 707, 2812, 2813Amnesty International USA, NY, 3636Amy Toyen Memorial Scholarship Fund, CT, 1929Anderson <strong>Foundation</strong>, IL, 233Andrew Golkin Scholarship Fund, NY, 1753, 2086,3733, 4092Animal Medical <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 198Annapolis <strong>Center</strong> for Science-Based Public Policy,MD, 3809Anthology Film Archives, NY, 708, 4388Anti-Defamation League of B’nai B’rith, CA, 566Anxiety Disorders Association of America, MD,3404AOL Time Warner Inc. Corporate Giving Program,NY, 4262Aon Memorial Education Fund, IL, 124, 207, 372,1828, 1930, 1931, 1992, 3507, 4303Apex Art, NY, 4389Apollo <strong>The</strong>ater <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 2814Aquinas High School, NY, 3919Arab American Chamber of Commerce, MI, 192Arab American Family Support <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 1259,1580, 3132, 3637, 4216Arab American Heritage Council, MI, 3081Arab American Institute <strong>Foundation</strong>, DC, 314, 915,3312Arab Community <strong>Center</strong> for Economic and SocialServices, MI, 2087, 2199, 3082Arab-American and Chaldean Communities SocialServices Council, MI, 2088, 2200Arab-American Development Corporation, PA,1528Archdiocese of New York, NY, 3552, 3553Architecture Research Institute, NY, 3133, 3810Arizona Republic Charities, AZ, 2748, 3542Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families, AR,1581Arlington, County of, VA, 1516, 1691, 3405Army Emergency Relief, VA, 373, 1091, 1216,1524, 2968, 3519Art in General, NY, 125, 709, 4390Art Science Research Laboratory, Inc., NY, 2031,2032Artists Space, NY, 710, 4391ArtPride New Jersey <strong>Foundation</strong>, NJ, 1353Arts Council of the Morris Area, NJ, 1354, 4494Arts Horizons, NJ, 1355ArtsConnection, NY, 7<strong>11</strong>, 1851Asia Society, NY, 2815, 2816, 3638Asian American Arts Alliance, NY, 712, 3639Asian American Arts Centre, NY, 4392Asian American Coalition for Children andFamilies, NY, 863Asian American Federation of New York, NY, 126,989, <strong>11</strong>04, 1852, 2033, 3640Asian American Legal Defense and EducationFund, NY, 916, 1582, 3134, 3199, 3313, 3641,3728, 4133, 4217, 4218Asian Americans for Community Involvement ofSanta Clara County, CA, 2201Asian Americans for Equality, NY, 298, 315, 990Asian Pacific American Legal <strong>Center</strong> of SouthernCalifornia, CA, 555Asian Pacific Fund, CA, 567Asian Resource <strong>Foundation</strong>, Thailand, 3642Asociacion Tepeyac de New York, NY, 3176, 4219Aspen Institute, DC, 1583, 2618Asphalt Green, NY, 3920ASPIRA of Florida, FL, 2202Associated Churches of Fort Wayne and AllenCounty, IN, 2203Association of Academic Health <strong>Center</strong>s, DC,2034Association of Hispanic Arts, NY, 3643Association of Schools of Public Health, DC,2035Atlantic <strong>The</strong>ater Company, NY, 127, 713, 2546Audrey Cohen College, NY, 3921Aviation Volunteer Fire Department EngineCompany 3, NY, 316AXA <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., NY, 356Ballet Hispanico of New York, NY, 714Ballet Tech <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 715Ballet <strong>The</strong>ater <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 2817Baltimore Cares, MD, 105Baltimore Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, MD, 864Bangladeshi-American Friendship Association,NY, 3177Bank Information <strong>Center</strong>, DC, 1584Bar of City of New York, City Bar Fund, NY,128, 3406Bargemusic, NY, 716, 3922, 3923Bat <strong>The</strong>ater Company, NY, 2547Battered Womens Shelter, OH, 2204Battery Dance Corporation, NY, 3059Baxter International <strong>Foundation</strong>, IL, 412-414Beacon Police Department, NY, 446Bear Stearns Charitable <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 421Bedford Stuyvesant Volunteer AmbulanceCorps, NY, 3407Bentley College, MA, 4495Bereavement <strong>Center</strong> of Westchester, <strong>The</strong>, NY,129, 917Bertelsmann Relief Fund, NY, 268, 455, 474,485, 1794, 3551Best Buy Children’s <strong>Foundation</strong>, MN, 458Betances Health Unit, NY, <strong>11</strong>05Beyond Shelter, CA, 556Big Apple Circus, NY, 2818Big Bend Cares, FL, 2205Big Brothers/Big Sisters of Greater Miami, FL,2206Big Brothers/Big Sisters of New York City, NY,<strong>11</strong>2, 130, 317, 394, 395, 552, 2690, 3408Bill of Rights Institute, DC, 13Bill Wilson Marriage and Family Counseling<strong>Center</strong>, CA, 2207Binding Together, NY, 4349Black United Fund Bay Area, CA, 568Blake Schools, MN, 2728Bloomingdale School of Music, NY, 1853Blue Heron <strong>The</strong>ater, NY, 2548BMG, NY, 456Bonfils Blood <strong>Center</strong>, CO, 1470Booker T. Washington Learning <strong>Center</strong>, NY,3924Borough of Manhattan Community CollegeFund, NY, 3135, 3693Borough of Manhattan Community College ofthe City University of New York, NY, 131,2962Borough of Manhattan Community CollegePerforming Arts <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 717Boston University, MA, 718, 1356Boulder County Safehouse, CO, 2208Boulder Shelter for the Homeless, CO, 2209Bowery Mission and Young Mens Home, NY,2<strong>11</strong>9Boy Scouts of America, NY, 1238Boys & Girls Club of America, GA, 1239Boys and Girls Club of Duluth, MN, 2210Boys and Girls Club of Fort Wayne, IN, 22<strong>11</strong>Boys and Girls Club of Superior, WI, 2212Boys and Girls Clubs of Long Beach, CA, 2213Boys and Girls Clubs of Summit County, OH,2214Boys and Girls Clubs of the Gulf Coast, MS,2215Boys Choir of Harlem, NY, 719Boys Club of New York, NY, 3925232


INDEX OF GRANT RECIPIENTSBoysville of Michigan, MI, 2216BP <strong>Foundation</strong>, IL, 500, 501Bread and Roses Community Fund, PA, 4350Bread of Life EPA, CA, 2217Brecht Forum, NY, 1585Brehon Institute for Human Services, FL, 2218Brennan <strong>Center</strong> for Justice, NY, 3644, 3645Bridge Fund of New York, NY, 1419, 1548, 3136,3278Bridgeway House, FL, 2219Broad Channel Volunteer Fire Department, NY,2503Bronx Community Services, NY, 1240Bronx Council on the Arts, NY, 720Bronx County Historical Society, NY, 721Bronx Museum of the Arts, NY, 722, 2819, 2820Bronx Preparatory Charter School, NY, 3926Brookings Institution, DC, 2619, 38<strong>11</strong>Brooklyn Academy of Music, NY, 132, 723, 2450,2821, 3729Brooklyn Alliance, NY, 991Brooklyn Arts Council, NY, 724Brooklyn Botanic Garden, NY, 725, 2822Brooklyn Bureau of Community Service, NY, 3137,3138, 3927Brooklyn Childrens Museum, NY, 726, 1854, 2823,3928Brooklyn Conservatory of Music, NY, 727Brooklyn Economic Development Corporation,NY, 992Brooklyn Historical Society, NY, 728Brooklyn Information and Culture, NY, 2824Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences, NY, 2825Brooklyn Kindergarten Society Tomkins Childrens<strong>Center</strong>, NY, 3929Brooklyn Legal Services Corporation, NY, 133Brooklyn Museum of Art, NY, 1855Brooklyn Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra, NY,729Brooklyn Public Library, NY, 2826Brooklyn Public Library <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 3930Brooklyn Youth Chorus, NY, 730, 1856Broward Coalition for the Homeless, FL, 2220Broward Partnership for the Homeless, FL, 2221Brown University, RI, 731, 3646Bucknell University, PA, 3707Bulaga Jr. Fund, John, NJ, 4496Burden <strong>Center</strong> for the Aging, NY, 3931Burness Communications, MD, 2036Cabarrus Cooperative Christian Ministry, NC,2222California Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 569California Council of Churches, CA, 570California State University, CA, 918Camillus House, FL, 2223Campus Crusade for Christ, NY, 2120Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund, NY, 374, 405, 524,654, 693, 899, 1052, <strong>11</strong>63, 1310, 1549, 1775,2121, 2749, 3035, 3041, 3381, 3382, 3477,3779, 3853, 4309, 4485Capital Area Healthy Start Coalition, FL, 2224Capital City Youth Services, FL, 2225Capital Unity Council, CA, 571CARE, GA, 2750Care and Share, CO, 2019CARE International, MD, 3400Carelift International, PA, 3083CareTeam, SC, 2226Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, DC,2620Carnegie Hall Corporation, NY, 2827Casita Maria, NY, 3932Castillo Cultural <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 732Catholic Big Brothers of New York, NY, <strong>11</strong>3Catholic Charities of Fort Wayne, IN, 2227Catholic Charities of Honolulu, HI, 2710, 27<strong>11</strong>,4446Catholic Charities of Santa Clara County, CA,2228Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of Miami,FL, 2229Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of New York,NY, 3570, 4423Catholic Charities of the Diocese of Pittsburgh, PA,2751Catholic Charities of Wichita, KS, 2230Catholic Charities USA, VA, 659, <strong>11</strong>47, 2122,2495, 2752, 3239, 3240, 3717, 3750Catholic Community Services, NJ, 2123Catholic Legal Immigration Network, NY, 3314Catholic Relief Services, MD, 27Catholic Relief Services, NY, 477Catholic Social and Community Services, MS,2231Catholic Social Services of Summit County, OH,2232Catholic Social Services of the Diocese ofCharlotte, NC, 2233<strong>Center</strong> Against Sexual and Domestic Abuse, WI,2234<strong>Center</strong> for Animal Care and Control, NY, 3543<strong>Center</strong> for Anti-Violence Education/BrooklynWomens Martial Arts, NY, 3200<strong>Center</strong> for Arts Education, NY, 733<strong>Center</strong> for Constitutional Rights, NY, 1586<strong>Center</strong> for Economic and Environmental Partners,NY, 36<strong>11</strong>, 3812<strong>Center</strong> for Family Life in Sunset Park, NY, 3933<strong>Center</strong> for Family Services of Palm Beach County,FL, 2235<strong>Center</strong> for Health and Wellness, KS, 2236<strong>Center</strong> for Independence of the Disabled, NY, 3289<strong>Center</strong> for Information and Crisis Services, FL,2237<strong>Center</strong> for Investigative Reporting, CA, 734<strong>Center</strong> for Media and Public Affairs, DC, 3612<strong>Center</strong> for National Security Studies, DC, 318,3315<strong>Center</strong> for Nonprofit Corporations, NJ, 1357<strong>Center</strong> for the Advancement of Nonviolence, CA,572<strong>Center</strong> for Traditional Music and Dance, NY, 735<strong>Center</strong> of Hope, KS, 2238<strong>Center</strong> on Budget and Policy Priorities, DC, 1587,2621<strong>Center</strong> on Policy Initiatives, CA, 573Central American Legal Assistance, NY, 3178Central Brooklyn Partnership, NY, 3201Central Labor Rehabilitation Council of New York,NY, 1473Central Park Conservancy, NY, 1543, 2828Centre County Women’s Resource <strong>Center</strong>, PA,2239Centre for Development and Conflict ManagementStudies, Nigeria, 1588Centre for the Study of Violence andReconciliation, South Africa, 3084Century <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 2037, 2240, 2622Chamber Music America, NY, 736Chamber Music Society of Lincoln <strong>Center</strong>, NY,2829CHARLEE of Dade County, FL, 2241Charles B. Wang Community Health <strong>Center</strong>, NY,2038, 3934Charlotte <strong>Center</strong> for Urban Ministry, NC, 2242Charlotte Rescue Mission, NC, 2243Chemical and Biological Arms Control Institute,VA, 3813Cherry Lane Alternative <strong>The</strong>ater, NY, 2549Cheshire Education <strong>Foundation</strong>, CT, 1932Chhaya Community Development Corporation,NY, 319, 919, 3139Chicago Council on Foreign Relations, IL, 2623Child and Family Resources, NJ, 1358Child and Family Service, HI, 4447, 4448Children’s Aid Society, NY, 134, 375, 409, 1241,1502, 1503, 3440, 3713, 3935Children’s Clinic, CA, 2244Children’s Haven and Adult <strong>Center</strong>, FL, 2245Children’s Home Society of Florida, FL, 2246Children’s Museum of Manhattan, NY, 737, 2830Children’s Museum of the Arts, NY, 396Children’s Music Network, IL, 1359Childrens Action Alliance, AZ, 1589Childrens Defense Fund, DC, 1590Childrens Health Fund, NY, 2973-2975, 3433,4497Childrens Home of Detroit, MI, 1099, 1890Childrens Hope <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 447Childrens Hospital, MA, 3814Childrens National Medical <strong>Center</strong>, DC, 920,921, 2039Childrens Storefront, NY, 3936Chinatown Manpower Project, NY, 993Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, , 1591Chinese American International School, CA,3937Chinese For Affirmative Action, CA, 574Chinese Staff and Workers Association, NY,3179, 3202, 4220Chinese-American Planning Council, NY, 922Chris Faughman Memorial Fund, GA, 294Christian Herald Association, NY, 1439Christopher Robert Clarke <strong>Foundation</strong>, NJ,1242Church Avenue Merchants Block Association(CAMBA), NY, 923, 3938Church of Saint Francis Xavier, NY, 3939,3940Church of Saint Paul and Saint Andrew, NY,3941Church of the Ascension, NY, 3942CIA Officers Memorial <strong>Foundation</strong>, DC, 3943Circle <strong>Foundation</strong>, MD, 1592, 3613Circle in the Square <strong>The</strong>ater School, NY, 738Citigroup Relief Fund, NY, 994, 1804, 3352,3397, 4424Citizens and Immigrants for Equal Justice, TX,3316Citizens Budget Commission, NY, 1260Citizens Committee for Children of New York,NY, 865, 2089Citizens Committee for New York City, NY,3140, 3647, 3730Citizens Union <strong>Foundation</strong> of the City of NewYork, NY, 2076, 3648City <strong>Center</strong> Fifty-Fifth Street <strong>The</strong>ater<strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 739, 2831City Harvest, NY, <strong>11</strong>4, 135, 467, 553, 1243,1668, 2451, 2538, 3141, 3944City Limits Community Information Service,NY, 1593, 1594City Lore, NY, 740City Meals on Wheels, NY, 299, 300, 320, 321,3945City Mission, OH, 2124City of New York, NY, 980, 3815City Parks <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 2077, 2832-2834City Project, NY, 3180City Team Ministries, CA, 2247City University of New York, NY, 2106, 3816City Year, MA, 2090, 3946CityKids <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 1244, 3649Civic Capital Corporation, NY, 13<strong>11</strong>, 2976CIVICUS: World Alliance for CitizenParticipation, DC, 3349Clara-Mateo Alliance Community Shelter, CA,2248Classic Stage Company, NY, 2550Clear Channel Communications, TX, 2125,2753Coalition for the Homeless, NY, 1857, 3947Coalition of Voluntary Mental Health, MentalRetardation, and Alcoholism Agencies,NY, 2977Coalition on Temporary Shelter (COTS), MI,2249Codman Square Health <strong>Center</strong>, MA, 2501College Art Association, NY, 2835College Community Services, NY, 2836Columbia University, NY, 14, 741, 924, <strong>11</strong>06,<strong>11</strong>07, 1767, 1796, 2040, 2041, 2091,2092, 3142, 3317, 3650, 3651Columbus Baptist Association, GA, 2250Comfort Zone Camp, NJ, 1933Committee Against Anti-Asian Violence, NY,3181, 4221Committee for Dignity and Fairness for theHomeless Housing Development, PA,2251233


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSECommittee for Hispanic Children and Families,NY, 2042, 3203, 3204Common Cents New York, NY, 301, 322, 1595Common Ground Community HousingDevelopment Fund Corporation, NY, 3854,3948Commonwealth of Virginia, VA, 1403Communications Network, DC, 1596Communications Workers of America, DC, 3718Community Action Council for Lexington-Fayette,Bourbon, Harrison and Nicholas Counties,KY, 2252Community Action Project, NY, 3182Community Blood Services, ZZ, 4498Community Church of Colonie, NY, 2126Community Culinary School of Charlotte, NC,2253Community Food Resource <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 3451,3949Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for Greater Buffalo, NY,1272Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for Greater New Haven,CT, <strong>11</strong>18Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for Monterey County, CA,575Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for the National CapitalRegion, DC, 63, 220, 239, 656, 660-662, 679,866, 867, 925, 1092, 1504, 1505, 1512, 1517,1521, 1651, 1663, 1757, 2127, 2461, 2539,2660, 2664, 2669, 3006, 3424, 3780, 4109,4<strong>11</strong>0, 4532Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Greater Flint, MI, 3085Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Greater Lorain County,OH, 2128Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Louisville, KY, 1955Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of New Jersey, NJ, <strong>11</strong>64,<strong>11</strong>65, 3231, 3259Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Northern Colorado,CO, 484Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of Santa Cruz, CA, 576Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of SoutheasternConnecticut, CT, 2129Community <strong>Foundation</strong> of the Napa Valley, CA,577Community <strong>Foundation</strong> Serving Riverside and SanBernardino Counties, CA, 578Community <strong>Foundation</strong> Silicon Valley, CA, 579Community Funds, Inc, NY, 1010, 3195, 3344Community Harvest Food Bank of NortheastIndiana, IN, 2254Community Kitchen of Myrtle Beach, SC, 2255Community Partners, CA, 580Community Partnership for Homeless, FL, 2256Community Resource Exchange, NY, 302, 323Community Service Council of Chester County,PA, 2257Community Service Society of New York, NY,1669, 2464Community Services Agency, DC, 1474, 4222Community Violence Intervention <strong>Center</strong>, ND,2258Community Voices Heard, NY, 3205, 3206, 4223Community Works, NY, 136, 3207Community YMCA, NJ, 868Compa Food Ministries, CO, 2020Comprehensive Development, NY, 4134Computer Associates International, Inc., NY, 1213Concern for the Poor, CA, 2259Concert Artists Guild, NY, 742Conservancy for Historic Battery Park, NY, 2837Consortium for Worker Education, NY, 3652Constitution Project, DC, 3318Cooperative Feeding Program, FL, 2260Cornelia Connelly <strong>Center</strong> for Education, NY, 3950Council of Religious Leaders of MetropolitanChicago, IL, 926Council of State Governments - Eastern RegionalConference, NY, 4<strong>11</strong>6Council on American-Islamic Relations, DC, 4224Council on Arts & Humanities for Staten IslandFilm Video Arts, Inc., NY, 743, 2838Council on Foreign Relations, NY, 1597, 2624,3951Council on Senior <strong>Center</strong>s and Services of NewYork City, NY, 303, 304, 324, 325, 1831County College of Morris, NJ, 1360Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA) ofAberdeen Fifth Judicial Circuit, SD, 2261Cove Family Fund, NJ, 1934Covenant House Michigan, MI, 2262Creative Alternatives of New York, NY, 3208Creative <strong>Response</strong> to Conflict, NY, 4135Creative Time, NY, 137, 744, 2502Credit Suisse/First Boston Corporate ContributionsProgram, NY, 694, 3607Crisis Assistance Ministry, NC, 2263Crisis <strong>Center</strong> of Gary, IN, 2264Crossroads Fund, IL, 1256, 2625, 3484Crossway Christian <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 2754Cunningham Dance <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 2839CUP Inc., NC, 2265Cupertino Community Services, CA, 2266Cypress Hills Local Development Corporation, NY,3952Daedalus Productions, NY, 1336, 1337Dahesh Museum, NY, 2840Daily Bread Community Food Bank, FL, 2267Daily News Charities, NY, 2755DaimlerChrysler Corporation Fund, MI, 1275Damiano <strong>Center</strong>, MN, 2268Dance <strong>The</strong>ater of Harlem, NY, 745, 2841Dance <strong>The</strong>ater Workshop (DTW), NY, 746Dancing in the Streets, NY, 747Day Shelter, NC, 2269DC Employment Justice <strong>Center</strong>, DC, 4283DC Independent Media <strong>Center</strong>, DC, 4225DC Pro Bono Bar Program, DC, 4226De La Salle Academy, NY, 3953De Paul University, IL, 3817Deep Dish T.V. Network, NY, 1598Delaware Volunteer Firemen’s Association, DE,2756Dental Society of Cincinnati, OH, 3520Desis Rising Up and Moving (DRUM), NY, 4227Detroit Rescue Mission Ministries, MI, 2270Dia <strong>Center</strong> for the Arts, NY, 748, 2842Dieu Donne Paper Mill, NY, 4393Dimmling Memorial Trust, William J., NY, 4499Diocese of Arlington, VA, 3554Diocese of Brooklyn, NY, 3555Diocese of San Jose, CA, 2271Direct Relief International, CA, 1283Directors Company, NY, 2551Disaster Psychiatry Outreach, NY, 2484, 3409Discalced, Inc., NY, 2843District of Columbia Birth <strong>Center</strong>, DC, 2093District of Columbia Public Schools, DC, 1093District of Columbia, Government of, DC, 1513District 7610 <strong>Foundation</strong>, VA, 4290Doctors Without Borders USA, NY, 2130, 3954Doe Fund, NY, 3955Downtown Arts Projects, NY, 4394Downtown Community Television <strong>Center</strong>, NY,4395Drama Department Incorporated, NY, 2552Drawing <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 2844, 2845, 4396Duke University, NC, 749Earth Day New York, NY, 3818East Bay Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 581East Harlem Business Capital Corporation, NY,995East Harlem Employment Services, NY, 478East Harlem Tutorial Program, NY, 3956East Side Settlement House, NY, 3957Eastside Emergency <strong>Center</strong>, MI, 2272EastWest Institute, NY, 3614Echo Hill Outdoor School, MD, 551ECHO Outreach Ministries, FL, 2273Economic Policy Institute, DC, 1599, 3653Ecumenical Hunger Program, CA, 2274Education Development <strong>Center</strong>, MA, 1261Educational Alliance, NY, 3958Educational Broadcasting Corporation, NY, 750,1600, 1768, 2846, 3143Educators for Social Responsibility, NY, 927, 4136El Dorado Community <strong>Foundation</strong> for Youthand Family Services, CA, 582Elaine Kaufman Cultural <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 2847,3959Elders Share the Arts, NY, 1858Eldridge Street Project, NY, 2848Electronic Privacy Information <strong>Center</strong> (EPIC),DC, 3319Ella Baker <strong>Center</strong> for Human Rights, CA, 4228Emerald Isle Immigration <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 3183Emergency Family Assistance Association, CO,2275Emergency Housing Consortium of SantaClara County, CA, 2276Empire BlueCross BlueShield, NY, 3508Encore Community <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 3960Engine Company 21, NY, 3121Engine No. 22/Ladder No. 13 Family Fund,NY, 663, 664, 1745, 2<strong>11</strong>1, 2465, 2757,3593, 3805Engine No. 4 Ladder No. 15 Family Fund, NY,3144Engine 8 Ladder Association, NY, 387Ensemble Studio <strong>The</strong>ater (EST), NY, 751,2553Environmental Defense, NY, 1361Episcopal Relief and Development, NY, 2131Episcopal Social Services, KS, 2277Ernst & Young <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 1496ESU-Bomb Squad Relief Fund, NY, 3145Euro Brokers Relief Fund, NY, 1312, 3855Exit Art, NY, 4397Face to Face International, NY, 1245Facing History and Ourselves National<strong>Foundation</strong>, MA, 583, 1262, 1803, 3572Factory Mutual Family Fund, RI, 3794Fairfield County Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, CT,15<strong>11</strong>, 4163Families and Work Institute, NY, 2043, 2978Families of Flight 93, PA, 4<strong>11</strong>7Family <strong>Center</strong>, NC, 2278Family <strong>Center</strong>s, CT, 3856Family Planning Association of Pakistan,Pakistan, 3350Family Resource <strong>Center</strong> of South Florida, FL,2279Family Service <strong>Center</strong> of South Carolina, SC,2280Family Service of Chester County, PA, 2281Family Service of Montgomery County, PA,2282Family Service of Morris County, NJ, 4500,4501Family Support America, IL, 2094Family to Family - Iowa, IA, 3961Farm Share, FL, 2283Farmington Hills Police BenevolentAssociation, MI, 665, 1645FDNY Fire Safety Education Fund, NY, 2979,3819Federal Drug Agents <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 2758Federal Employee Education & AssistanceFund, CO, 448, 1217, 2132, 2969, 3071,3241, 3586Federalist Society for Law and Public PolicyStudies, DC, 2476Feed the Children, OK, 2133Fenton Communications, DC, 1601Fifth Avenue Committee, NY, 4229Fifty-Second Street Project, NY, 752, 2554Fiji <strong>The</strong>ater Company, CA, 2555Filipino American Human Services, NY, 3184Film/Video Arts, NY, 753, 4398Financial Markets <strong>Center</strong>, VA, 1263Financial Planning Association, GA, 3060,3061Fire Rescue Development Program, IL, 376,1537Firefighters Fund of Fairfax County, VA, 1489Firefighters National Trust, WA, 1993Firemens Fund, NY, 1424First Union <strong>Foundation</strong>/Wachovia <strong>Foundation</strong>,NC, 4372234


INDEX OF GRANT RECIPIENTSFirst Witness Child Abuse Resource <strong>Center</strong>, MN,2284Fiscal Policy Institute, NY, 3320Floating Hospital, NY, 2980, 2981Florence Immigrant and Refugee Rights Project,AZ, 3321Flushing Council on Culture and the Arts, NY, 754Focus: HOPE, MI, 1776, 2285Food and Friends, DC, 138Food Bank for Larimer County, CO, 2021Food Bank of Oakland County, MI, 2286Food Bank of South Jersey, NJ, 2287Food Bank of State College, PA, 2288Food Bank of the Rockies, CO, 2022Food for Survival, NY, 139, 1670, 3146, 3962Foodcare, NY, 140FOP Fort Pitt Lodge No. 1, PA, 4<strong>11</strong>8Ford <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 1602Fords <strong>The</strong>ater, DC, 141Forest Hills Community House, NY, 2452, 3209,3963Forgotten Harvest, MI, 2289<strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, DC, DC, 3007<strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Center</strong>, New York, NY, 584, 755, 869,870, 928, 996, 1603, 2290-2292, 2610, 3066,3086, 3147, 3615<strong>Foundation</strong> for Alger Families, NJ, <strong>11</strong>00, 3452,3857, 4457<strong>Foundation</strong> for Ethnic Understanding, NY, 1947<strong>Foundation</strong> for Global Community, CA, 3087Foundry <strong>The</strong>ater, NY, 2556Fountain House, NY, 3964Four Way Books, NY, 756Fox 59 WXIN Indianapolis, IN, 3544Franklin Furnace Archive, NY, 4399French Studio of Performing Arts, NY, 4137Fresh Air Fund, NY, 3965Fresno Regional <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 585Frick Collection, NY, 2849Friends in Deed, NY, 3858Friends of the Firefighters, NY, 3148FT Fiduciary Trust Memorial Fund, CA, 267, 377,3699, 3859Fund for Independent Publishing, NY, 3322Fund for New Citizens, NY, 3149Fund for Public Schools, NY, 757, 1895, 4298Fund for the City of New York, NY, 397, 929,1604, 1859, 2078, 3150, 3346, 3820Funding Exchange, NY, 1840Futures and Options, NY, 3966Futures in Education <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong>, NY, 4444,4445Garden City Community Fund, NY, 2759Garden Pathways, CA, 28, 255, 1409, 1935, 2473Gateway Community Services, MI, 142Gay Mens Health Crisis (GMHC), NY, 143General Conference of Seventh-Day Adventists,MD, 44Genesee County Board of Commissioners, MI,3088George Eastman House/International Museum ofPhotography and Film, NY, 1447George Mason University, VA, 3821George Street Playhouse, NJ, 1362George Washington University, DC, 3822Georgetown University, DC, 1264, 3823Geraldine R. Dodge Poetry Program, NJ, 1363Giant Food <strong>Foundation</strong>, DC, 1721, 1722Gift of New York, NY, 144, 543, 1742, 3042Gleaners Community Food Bank, MI, 2293Glendale Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 586Glide Memorial <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 587Global Exchange, CA, 4472Global Kids, NY, 2517, 3185, 3616, 3654, 4138God’s Pantry Food Bank, KY, 2294Goddard-Riverside Community <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 3967Gods Love We Deliver, NY, 145, 449, 3968Goldman Sachs <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 1740, 3383Good Neighbors, OH, 2295Good Shepherd Services, NY, 1246, 3969Goodwill Industries of Greater Detroit, MI, 2296Goodwill Industries of Greater New York andNorthern New Jersey, NY, 1483, 3970Goodwill Industries of Middle Georgia, GA, 2297Goodwill Industries of the Southern Piedmont, NC,2298Goodwill Industries of Upper South Carolina, SC,2299Graduate School and University <strong>Center</strong> of the CityUniversity of New York, NY, 1605, 3655Graduate School of Islamic and Social Studies, DC,930Graifman Scholarship Fund, D.M., NY, 2691Gramercy Park Block Disaster Relief Effort, NY,1754Grand Street Settlement, NY, 3971Greater DC Cares, DC, 4284Greater Kansas City Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, MO,1808, 1809, 2073, 2082, 4317Greater New Orleans <strong>Foundation</strong>, LA, 1476, 1487,1499, 3481, 3482, 3761-3764, 4306Greater New York Auto Dealers Disaster ReliefFund, NY, 1779Greater New York Hospital Association, NY, <strong>11</strong>08Greater New York Hospital <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 64,221, 680-683Greater New York Labor-Religion Coalition, NY,3656Greater Philadelphia Food Bank, PA, 2300Greater Philadelphia Urban Affairs Coalition, PA,2301Greater Richmond Chapter of the American RedCross, VA, 146, 2702Greater Washington EducationalTelecommunications Association, VA, 758Greek Orthodox Church, NY, 4533Green Guerillas, NY, 2850Greenbelt Conservancy, NY, 2851Grosvenor Neighborhood House, NY, 3972Ground Hero Kids, NY, 522, 2460Guadalupe Clinic, KS, 2302Gulf Coast Womens <strong>Center</strong> for Nonviolence, MS,2303Guns-N-Hoses Relief Fund, WA, 4157H. John Heinz III <strong>Center</strong> for Science, Economicsand the Environment, DC, 3617H. T. Dance Company, NY, 759Habitat for Humanity International, NY, 3973Habitat for Humanity of Greater Akron, OH, 2304Habitat for Humanity of Greater Miami, FL, 2305Haitian American Alliance of New York, NY, 3186Hamilton County Urban Search & Rescue TaskForce (USAR), OH, 1999Hamilton-Madison House, NY, 1860, 3974Harlem Children Zone, NY, 3975Harlem School of the Arts, NY, 760, 2852Harlem Textile Works, NY, 761Hartley House, NY, 3976Harvard University, MA, 3089Harvest Hope Food Bank, SC, 2306Harvestworks, NY, 4400Harvey Young Yurman Relief Fund, xx, 1550Hate Free Zone Campaign of Washington, WA, 931HAVEN (Help Against Violent Encounters Now),MI, 2307Haven of Rest Ministries, OH, 2308Hawaii Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, HI, 1837Hawaii Foodbank, HI, 2712Hawaii Island Food Bank, HI, 2713Hazollah Ambulance, NY, 3410Healing Works, NY, 2518, 4351HealthCare Chaplaincy, NY, 147, 509, 3977Heartland Alliance for Human Needs and HumanRights, IL, 2626, 3323Hebrew Home for the Aged at Riverdale, NY, 3978Hebrew Union College, Jewish Institute of Religion,CA, 588Heights and Hill Community Council, NY, 3979Helen Keller International, NY, 305, 326, 2185,34<strong>11</strong>, 3980HelpSource, MI, 2309Henry Street Settlement, NY, 2453, 2853, 3981,4401Here is New York, NY, 1743HERE/Home for Contemporary <strong>The</strong>ater and Art,NY, 762, 1786, 4402Heroes of New York Scholarship <strong>Foundation</strong>,NY, 2449, 3778High Five Tickets to the Arts, NY, 763High School of Economics and Finance, NY,3982Highbridge Community Life <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 3983Highschool of Leadership and Public Service,NY, 3984Himalayan Cataract Project, VT, 3985Hispanic Committee of Virginia, VA, 148Hispanic Federation of New York City, NY,149, 932, 4100Historic House Trust of New York City, NY,764Hobin Keane & Klares Memorial GolfTournament, CT, 1936Hole in the Wall Gang Camp Fund, CT, 3986Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen, NY, 150, 1420,3987Homeless Care Force, CA, 2310HOPE of Manatee County, FL, 23<strong>11</strong>Hope Program, NY, 3210, 3988HOPE Worldwide, PA, 270Horace Mann-Ambridge NeighborhoodImprovement, IN, 2312Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield, NJ, 1919Horizons <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 589Hospice of Medina County, OH, 1937Hospital Audiences, NY, 765Hotel Employees and Restaurant EmployeesInternational Union (HERE), Local 100,NY, 2134, 3151, 4230, 4231Houchin Blood Services, CA, 933, 934House of Restoration, AL, 2313House of Time, GA, 2314Howard Stern Relief Fund, NY, 2760Hudson Guild, NY, 3989Human Rights Education and Law Project(HELP), NJ, 1606Human Rights Watch, NY, 306, 327, 766, 1607,1608, 1896, 2627, 3618Humane Society of New York, NY, 344, 3545Humboldt Area <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 590Hundred Club of Colorado Springs, CO, 1471Hunter Health Clinic, KS, 2315Hunts Point Local Development Corporation,NY, 997Illinois State University, IL, 4080Immigrant Resettlement and Cultural <strong>Center</strong>,CA, 2316Independence Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY,1964, 1965Independent Media Institute, CA, 4232Independent Press Association, CA, 3187, 4233Independent Production Fund, NY, 4139Independent Sector, DC, 1609Independent Womens Forum, VA, 2477, 3727,4502Individual beneficiaries, , <strong>11</strong>66, <strong>11</strong>67, 1313,1551, 1938, 2616, 3487, 4268Info Line, OH, 2317Inn Between of Longmont, CO, 2318Inn Vision of Santa Clara Valley, CA, 2319Inside Broadway, NY, 2557Inspiration Cafe, IL, 151Institute for Arts and Humanities Education,NJ, 1364Institute for Human Services, HI, 2714, 2715Institute for War and Peace Reporting,England, 2628Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy,DC, 3657InterAction/American Council for VoluntaryInternational Action, DC, 2854Interfaith Alliance <strong>Foundation</strong>, DC, 1610Interfaith Ministries Wichita, KS, 935, 2320Intergroup Clearinghouse, CA, 4234International Aid, MI, 2135International Arts Relations (INTAR), NY,2558International Association of Fire Fighters, DC,29, 65, 196, 222, 256, 271, 295, 347, 359,450, 510, 549, 666, 684, 884, 888, 1053,235


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE<strong>11</strong>14, <strong>11</strong>48, <strong>11</strong>68, <strong>11</strong>69, 1278, 1340, 1414,1535, 1664, 1679, 1787, 1817, 1875, 1883,1908, 1922, 2136, 2137, 2485, 2496, 2729,2761, 3242, 3263, 3268, 3272, 3373, 3425,3441, 3442, 3491, 3571, 3598, 3694, 3719,3739, 3774, 3791, 3860, 3889, 4096, 4105,4154, 4190, 4299, 4310, 4531International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers,DC, 3765International <strong>Center</strong> in New York, NY, 2095International <strong>Center</strong> of Photography, NY, 152,2855International Communications Research, PA, 2044International Crisis Group (Belgium), Belgium,1897, 2629, 3090International Human Rights Law Group, DC, 4235International Institute of Flint, MI, 3091International Institute of New Jersey, NJ, 1365,1366International Paper Company <strong>Foundation</strong>, TN,1977International Peace Academy, NY, 2630International Print <strong>Center</strong> New York, NY, 767,2856International Rescue Committee, NY, 16<strong>11</strong>, 1612,2631, 2857, 3990International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies,IL, 3412Internews Network, CA, 768Interval Brotherhood Homes Corporation, OH,2321Intrepid Museum <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 2858Iris House - A <strong>Center</strong> for Women Living with HIV,NY, 32<strong>11</strong>Irish Repertory <strong>The</strong>ater Company, NY, 769, 2559Irondale Ensemble Project, NY, 2560Isabel ONeil <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Art of the PaintedFinish, NY, 2859Isamu Noguchi <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 770Islamic Circle of North America, NY, 3658Islamic Networks, CA, 4236Islamic Social Services Association, AZ, 936Islamic Society of San Francisco, CA, 937ISLES, NJ, 1367Jacob A. Riis Neighborhood Settlement, NY, 3991Jacques Marchais <strong>Center</strong> of Tibetan Art, NY, 2860Jamaica Business Resource <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 998Jamaica <strong>Center</strong> for Arts and Learning, NY, 771,1769, 1861James E. Hayden Memorial Fund, MA, 1552Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum, NJ, 1368Japanese American Citizens League, CA, 938Japanese Chamber of Commerce, NY, 4276Jazz at Lincoln <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 2861Jean Cocteau Repertory <strong>The</strong>ater, NY, 2561Jesuit Volunteer Corps East, MD, 3992Jewish Board of Family and Childrens Services,NY, 3413Jewish Child Care Association of New York, NY,3993Jewish Community Federation of San Francisco,the Peninsula, Marin and Sonoma Counties,CA, 1739Jewish Family Service, MI, 2322Jewish Federation Council of Greater Los Angeles,CA, 461Jewish Federation of Greater Washington, MD,2138Jewish Museum, NY, 2862Jews for Racial and Economic Justice, NY, 4237John A. Noble Collection, NY, 772John Deere <strong>Foundation</strong>, IL, 1293John F. Kennedy Library <strong>Foundation</strong>, MA, 773John Jay College of Criminal Justice <strong>Foundation</strong>,NY, 5<strong>11</strong>John Ryan Fund, NY, 3861Johns Hopkins University, MD, 473, 2632Joint Industry Board of the Electrical Industry, NY,1314Jose Limon Dance <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 774Joyce <strong>The</strong>ater <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 2863Jubilee <strong>Center</strong> of South Broward, FL, 2323Junior League of New York, NY, 2065Just Food, NY, 3152Kansas Chamber Education <strong>Foundation</strong>, KS, 2444,2661, 2665Kansas Food Bank Warehouse, KS, 2324Kauai Food Bank, HI, 2716, 4449Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Family Fund (KBWFamily Fund), NY, 201, 416, <strong>11</strong>01, 1294,1484, 1531, 1553, 1554, 1661, 1686, 1784,1939, 3<strong>11</strong>6, 3862Keidanren, Japan, 3029Kenkeleba House, NY, 4403Kent <strong>Foundation</strong>, VA, 1227Kentucky Youth Advocates, KY, 1613Kern County Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 591Kershaw Family Fund, Ralph, MA, 4503King Manor Association of Long Island, NY, 775Kings Majestic Corporation, NY, 2864Kingsbridge Heights Community <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 3994KIPP Academy, NY, 3995Kitchen Sisters Productions, CA, 1614Kiwanis International <strong>Foundation</strong>, IN, 2139KPMG Peat Marwick Disaster Relief Fund, NJ,2456KRON 4 Relief Fund, CA, 3561L.I.F.T. Women’s Resource <strong>Center</strong>, MI, 2325La Mama Experimental <strong>The</strong>ater Club, NY, 776,2562Lacrosse <strong>Foundation</strong>, MD, 3453Lake, Snell, Perry and Associates, DC, <strong>11</strong>09Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund, NY,4238Lark <strong>The</strong>ater Company, NY, 2563Latin American Workers Project, NY, 3188, 3212Lawrenceville School, NJ, 2062Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law,IL, 2633Lawyers Committee for Human Rights, NY, 328,2634, 3324LCMS World Relief, MO, 2140, 2730, 2762Leadership Conference Education Fund, DC, 3325Learning Leaders, NY, 3996Learning Matters, NY, 2096Learning Project, NY, 3997Leary Firefighters <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 2763Leary Firefighters <strong>Foundation</strong> Fund for New YorksBravest, MA, 648Legacy Project, NY, 3659Legal Aid Society, NY, 153, 329, 1615, 3326, 3573,3619Legal Defense Institute, Peru, 1616Lehman College <strong>Center</strong> for the Performing Arts,NY, 2865Lehman College of the City University of NewYork, NY, 999Lenox Hill Neighborhood Association, NY, 3998Leonard Hatton Family Fund, NY, 2764Let’s Grow Akron, OH, 2326Lewisporte Middle School, Canada, 3660Liberty Hill <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 592Lichtenstein Creative Media, NY, 2635Lifetrack Resources, MN, 2327Lighthouse Emergency Services, MI, 2328Lighthouse Mission, GA, 2329Lincoln <strong>Center</strong> for the Performing Arts, NY, 2866Link Media, CA, 1617Literacy Inc., NY, 3999Little Sisters of the Assumption Family HealthService, NY, 4000Live Brave Coalition, IL, 1685, 2696, 3072, 3469Loaves and Fishes Family Kitchen, CA, 2330Loaves and Fishes Ministry of Macon, GA, 2331Local Development Corporation of East New York,NY, 3213Lohgarh Sikh Education <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 939Long Beach Day Nursery, CA, 2332Longmont Coalition for Women in Crisis, CO,2333Longmont Meals on Wheels, CO, 2023Lords Place, FL, 2334Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy, CA, 557,593, 1618Los Angeles Brotherhood Crusade, CA, 594Los Angeles Coalition to End Hunger andHomelessness, CA, 558Los Angeles Commission on Assaults AgainstWomen, CA, 559Los Angeles County Commission on HumanRelations, CA, 595Los Angeles Firemen’s Relief Association, CA,667Los Angeles Regional Foodbank, CA, 560Los Angeles Times, CA, 2765Lower East Side Printshop, NY, 777, 4404Lower East Side Tenement Museum, NY, 778,2867, 4001Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, NY, 154,779, 2000, 2868, 2982, 2983, 3661, 4140,4405Lumiere Productions, NY, 2636Luna Stage Company, NJ, 1369Lutheran Brotherhood, PA, 2766Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service,NY, 3327, 3328Lutheran Services Florida, FL, 2335Lutheran Social Service of Kansas, KS, 2336Lutheran Social Services of Indiana, IN, 2337Lutheran Social Services of Metropolitan NewYork, NY, 2613Lutheran Social Services of North Florida, FL,2338Lyon-Martin Womens Health Services, CA,4473Mabou Mines Development <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY,155, 780, 2564Macomb County Rotating Emergency ShelterTeam, MI, 2339Macon Outreach at Mulberry, GA, 2340Madison 9<strong>11</strong> Family Assistance Fund, NJ, 4504Main Street Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, CT, 66Make the Road By Walking, NY, 4002Manatee Children’s Services, FL, 2341Manatee Opportunity Council, FL, 2342Manhattan Class Company, NY, 2565Manhattan College, NY, 3898Manhattan Institute for Policy Research, NY,479, 2008, 4003Manhattan <strong>The</strong>ater Club, NY, 2869Manhattan Youth Recreation and Resources,NY, 2984, 3062, 3426, 3454Manpower Demonstration ResearchCorporation, NY, 4004Marin Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 596, 2767Mark S. Jardin Scholarship Fund, CT, 1940Marshall & Family Fund, Lori T., NY, 4505Martha Graham <strong>Center</strong> of ContemporaryDance, NY, 781Masjidul Waritheen, CA, 940Massachusetts General Hospital, MA, 2870,2871Massachusetts 9/<strong>11</strong> Fund, MA, 1555, 3443,4267MassMutual <strong>Foundation</strong> of Hartford, Inc., CT,2678, 2679, 3340, 3341Maternity <strong>Center</strong> Association, NY, 2985Maui Food Bank, HI, 2717, 4450, 4451Maura Clarke-Ita Ford <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 3214Mazon-A Jewish <strong>Response</strong> to Hunger, CA, 597McCarter <strong>The</strong>ater Company, NJ, 1370McGinley Family Trust, Daniel, NJ, 4506Meals on Wheels of Baldwin County, GA, 2343Meals on Wheels of Boulder, CO, 2024Meals on Wheels of Greeley, CO, 2025Meals on Wheels Plus of Manatee, FL, 2344Medical Society of New Jersey, NJ, 1846Melting Pot <strong>The</strong>ater, NY, 2566Mended Hearts, NV, 3575Mendocino County Community <strong>Foundation</strong>,CA, 598Mental Health Association of Mississippi, MS,2345Mental Health Association of New York City,NY, 2521Mental Health Association, National, VA, 2522,2637Mercy <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 3215236


INDEX OF GRANT RECIPIENTSMercy Corps International, OR, 67, 1719, 2731,2872, 3243Metris Companies <strong>Foundation</strong>, MN, 3003Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY, 2873Metropolitan New York Coordinating Council onJewish Poverty, NY, 4005Metropolitan Opera, NY, 941, 1315Metropolitan Opera Association, NY, 2874Mexican American Legal Defense and EducationalFund (MALDEF) Property ManagementCorporation, CA, 3329Miami Rescue Mission, FL, 2346Michelin North America, Inc. Corporate GivingProgram, SC, 3013MicroFinance Network, DC, 1316Mid-Manhattan <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 4006Middle East Institute, DC, 1619Middle East Research and Information Project,DC, 4239Middle Georgia Community Food Bank, GA, 2347Migration Policy Institute, DC, 3330Millennium Film Workshop, NY, 4406Mindbuilders Creative Arts Company, NY, 782Mineola Volunteer Ambulance Corp, NY, 3414Minetta Brook, NY, 4407Minneapolis <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong>, MN, 3019Minnesota <strong>Foundation</strong>, MN, 43<strong>11</strong>Mint Brook Camp & Conference <strong>Center</strong>, Canada,4507Mint <strong>The</strong>atre Company, NY, 2567Missouri Savings for Tuition (MOST), MO, 3455MLB-MLBPA Disaster Relief Fund, NY, 2653,2654, 3126MMC Victims Relief Fund, NY, 156, 208, 378,942, 1284, 1295, 1317, 1457, 1490, 1829,1941, 1942, 2141, 2671, 3509Momentum AIDS Project, NY, 157Moms With A Mission, VA, 3483Montefiore Medical <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 3456Monterey Institute of International Studies, CA,2638Montessori Childrens House of Morristown, NJ,1371Montgomery County Fire and Rescue Service,MD, 1491Moore Community House, MS, 2348Morgan Chase <strong>Foundation</strong>, JP, NY, 3063-3065Morgan Stanley Victims’ Relief Fund, NY, 3067Morris Museum, NJ, 1372Mothers in Crisis, FL, 2349Mothers’ Voices, NY, 3153Mount Bethel Human Services Corporation, FL,2350Mount Manresa Retreat House, NY, 2443Mount Sinai Hospital and Medical <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 158Ms. <strong>Foundation</strong> for Women, NY, 3662Multicultural Collaborative, CA, 599Municipal Art Society of New York, NY, 1318,1704, 2986, 3281, 3282, 3620, 3663, 3664,4141Municipal 9<strong>11</strong> Fund, NY, 3043, 3154Museum for African Art, NY, 783, 1862, 2875,4408Museum of American Financial History, NY, 2876Museum of American Folk Art, NY, 784, 2877,2878Museum of Chinese in the Americas, NY, 943,4409Museum of Jewish Heritage, NY, 785, 2879Museum of Modern Art, NY, 2880, 4007Museum of the City of New York, NY, 159, 786,1863, 2881Muslim Student Association of United States andCanada, DC, 944Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company, NJ, 1373Narika, CA, 4474NASDAQ Issuers Disaster Relief Fund, NY, 1450,2142National Academy of Design, NY, 2882National Academy of Sciences, DC, 787, 2639,3824National Action Council for Minorities inEngineering (NACME), NY, 4008National Asian Pacific American LegalConsortium, DC, 945, 946, 3331, 4240National Association of County and City HealthOfficials, DC, 2045National Association of Realtors, IL, 554, 1514,2676, 3105National <strong>Center</strong> for Disability Services, NY, 160National <strong>Center</strong> for Victims of Crime, VA, 161National <strong>Center</strong> on Education and the Economy,DC, 1620National Choral Council, NY, 788National Coalition Against Censorship, NY, 4241National Conference for Community and Justice,CA, 600National Conference for Community and Justice,NY, 947, 948National Conference for Community and Justice -Orange County Region, CA, 601National Council of La Raza, CA, 3332National Council on Independent Living, IL, 1542National Council on the Aging, DC, 307, 330National Crime Prevention Council, NY, 512National Dance Institute, NY, 789National Depressive and Manic-DepressiveAssociation, IL, 2523National Disaster Search Dog <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA,425, 2143National Domestic Violence Hotline, TX, 162National Employment Law Project, NY, 3665National Fallen Firefighters <strong>Foundation</strong>, MD, 108,3155, 4081National Governors Association <strong>Center</strong> for BestPractices, DC, 2046National Housing Endowment, DC, 422, 891,1927, 2513, 2735, 3546, 4271National Immigration Forum, DC, 3333National Immigration Project of the NationalLawyers Guild, MA, 1621National Institute of Building Sciences, DC, 3825National Law Enforcement Officers MemorialFund, DC, 2144, 4082National Lawyers Guild- Bay Area, CA, 4242National Mobilization Against Sweatshops, NY,3189, 3216, 4243National Opinion Research <strong>Center</strong>, IL, 2047, 2640National Organization for Victim Assistance, DC,1893, 2145, 3356National Organization on Disability, DC, 2987,2988National Outdoor Leadership School, WY, 1247National <strong>Philanthropic</strong> Trust, PA, 525, 856, 1319,1834, 2445, 2446National Public Radio, DC, 790, 1374, 2641, 3621,3666National Security Archive Fund, DC, 1265, 2351,2642National Strategy Forum, IL, 3826National Video Resources, NY, 2643, 3667Nativity Mission <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 4009Natural Resources Defense Council, NY, 4142Navy League of the United States, VA, 2146Navy Marine Corps Relief Society, VA, 379, 1094,1218, 2970, 3521, 3587, 4458Nazareth Housing, NY, 4010Neighbor to Neighbor, MN, 2352Neighborhood Coalition for Shelter, NY, 40<strong>11</strong>Neighborhood Housing Services of New York City,NY, 1320, 1556Neighbors Together Corp., NY, 4012Neil D. Levin Educational Fund, NY, 1781, 3457Netherlands American Chamber of Commerce,CA, 1876New Alternatives for Children, NY, 4013New Direction Services, NY, 163New Federal <strong>The</strong>ater, NY, 2568New Group, NY, 2569New Hampshire Charitable Fund, NH, 3127New Image Emergency Shelter for the Homeless,CA, 2353New Jersey Chamber of Commerce, NJ, 3357,4<strong>11</strong>9New Jersey Department of Education, NJ, 3358New Jersey Historical Society, NJ, 1375New Jersey Network (NJN) <strong>Foundation</strong>, NJ,388, 1376, 2943New Jersey Repertory Company, NJ, 1377New Jersey <strong>The</strong>ater Alliance, NJ, 1378New Jersey Tree <strong>Foundation</strong>, NJ, 4508New Jersey Work Environmental Council, NJ,1379New Museum of Contemporary Art, NY, 164,791, 2883, 3279, 4410New School University, NY, 165, 792New Victory <strong>The</strong>ater, NY, 793New York Academy of Art, NY, 2884New York Academy of Medicine, NY, 245, 513,<strong>11</strong>10, 1248, 1770-1772, 1801, 2048, 2454,2989, 2990, 3156, 3157, 3827New York Asian Womens <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 3217New York Biotechnology Association, NY, 3828New York Blood <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 166New York Botanical Garden, NY, 2885New York Business Development Corporation,NY, 3510New York Cares, NY, 308, 331, 3158New York City ACORN, NY, 4244New York City Ballet, NY, 2886New York City Coalition Against Hunger, NY,167New York City Employment and TrainingCoalition, NY, 3668New York City Fire Department, NY, <strong>11</strong>57,3159, 3863New York City Gay and Lesbian Anti-ViolenceProject, NY, 168, 4245New York City Opera, NY, 1421, 2887New York City Partnership <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY,1948, 3864, 4312New York City Police <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 68, 223,514, 1342, 1877, 2457, 2466, 2486, 2768,3073, 4014, 4015New York City Public Safety Memorial Fund,DC, 45New York City Public/Private Initiatives, NY,296, 1043, 2991, 4016New York City Rescue Mission, NY, 2147New York Community Leadership Institute/Progressive America Fund New York, NY,4246New York Community Trust, NY, 2148New York Community Trust & United Way ofNew York, NY, 6, 7, 9, 16, 18, 30, 69, 70,79, 81, 87, 88, 92, 101, 104, <strong>11</strong>5, 189, 191,203, 209, 210, 214, 218, 230, 240, 243,251, 252, 258, 259, 265, 266, 292, 332,348, 351, 353, 360, 361, 363, 364, 369,383, 386, 389, 398, 404, 4<strong>11</strong>, 415, 417,419, 420, 427, 429, 434, 436, 440, 441,443, 451, 464, 466, 468, 469, 472, 482,483, 488, 490-494, 504, 515, 520, 521,523, 526-528, 531, 534-538, 544-546,561, 642, 643, 653, 658, 668, 689, 695,878, 886, 890, 892, 893, 895, 900, 901,949, 963-966, 968, 970, 974, 975, 977,984, 1007, 1020-1030, 1035, 1046, 1048,1054-1084, 1095, <strong>11</strong>13, <strong>11</strong>15, <strong>11</strong>16,<strong>11</strong>19-<strong>11</strong>21, <strong>11</strong>23-<strong>11</strong>28, <strong>11</strong>30, <strong>11</strong>31, <strong>11</strong>33,<strong>11</strong>35, <strong>11</strong>37-<strong>11</strong>42, <strong>11</strong>44, <strong>11</strong>49, <strong>11</strong>54, <strong>11</strong>58,<strong>11</strong>59, <strong>11</strong>62, <strong>11</strong>74, <strong>11</strong>76, <strong>11</strong>77, <strong>11</strong>79,<strong>11</strong>80, <strong>11</strong>82, <strong>11</strong>84, <strong>11</strong>87, 1200-1204, 1207,12<strong>11</strong>, 1223, 1231, 1232, 1236, 1254,1279, 1282, 1287-1289, 1291, 1302, 1306,1308, 1335, 1338, 1339, 1345, 1350,1400, 1404-1406, 1410, 1413, 1425,1433-1435, 1446, 1454, 1455, 1458, 1459,1477, 1492, 1495, 1498, 1510, 1515,1518, 1519, 1522, 1533, 1538, 1539,1557, 1565, 1566, 1568, 1573, 1622,1623, 1648-1650, 1652, 1655-1657, 1665,1671, 1680, 1684, 1693, 1694, 1699,1723, 1731, 1741, 1752, 1755, 1758,1760, 1765, 1773, 1774, 1778, 1785,1793, 1800, 1802, 1814, 1815, 1819,1821, 1823-1825, 1830, 1832, 1833, 1836,1838, 1841-1843, 1879, 1881, 1886, 1888,1894, 1898, 1902, 1905, 1914, 1915,1917, 1920, 1923, 1953, 1960, 1961,237


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE1966, 1969, 1975, 1981, 1986, 1994, 1995,20<strong>11</strong>, 2060, 2066, 2071, 2079, 2080, 2105,2149, 2150, 2183, 2184, 2186, 2187, 2442,2447, 2448, 2475, 2482, 2489, 2492, 2493,2497, 2498, 2514, 2515, 2525, 2528, 2529,2535, 2543, 2597-2600, 2604, 2607, 2608,2648, 2650, 2652, 2681, 2687-2689, 2693,2706, 2732, 2769, 2770, 2944, 2945, 2959,2960, 3014, 3020, 3022, 3023, 3026, 3033,3038, 3044, 3045, 3055, 3056, 3092, 3098,3101, 3102, 3<strong>11</strong>1, 3<strong>11</strong>3, 3<strong>11</strong>8, 3122, 3128,3160-3164, 3232, 3236, 3251, 3253, 3257,3260, 3264, 3265, 3269, 3273, 3276, 3294,3303, 3345, 3353, 3360-3368, 3370, 3374,3384, 3392, 3415, 3434, 3444, 3458, 3465,3471, 3473-3476, 3479, 3480, 3485, 3488,3490, 3494, 3501-3503, 35<strong>11</strong>, 3512, 3522,3523, 3533, 3534, 3537, 3541, 3567, 3569,3574, 3577, 3579-3581, 3585, 3591, 3597,3608, 3609, 3678, 3679, 3684, 3688, 3689,3691, 3692, 3696, 3705, 3706, 3709, 3710,3714, 3720, 3734, 3735, 3741, 3743, 3745,3747, 3751-3753, 3758, 3766-3769, 3772,3775, 3781, 3784, 3789, 3790, 3798, 3800,3803, 3829, 3843, 3845, 3846, 3882, 3885,3887, 3890, 3893-3895, 3899, 3901, 39<strong>11</strong>,4077, 4087, 4090, 4093, 4097, 4101, 4106,4107, 4<strong>11</strong>1, 4<strong>11</strong>4, 4124, 4149, 4164, 4191,4199, 4202, 4204, 4207, 4263, 4285, 4286,4291, 4302, 4304, 4305, 4320, 4331,4335-4338, 4340, 4341, 4352, 4353, 4355,4356, 4361, 4363-4366, 4371, 4383-4385,4421, 4422, 4425, 4426, 4433, 4436, 4438,4441, 4442, 4455, 4456, 4461, 4465, 4484,4525, 4534, 4536, 4540-4542New York Conservation Education Fund, NY, 3529New York Dental Society, NY, 564New York Fire Safety <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 224, 2771New York Firemen’s Association, NY, 1229New York Forensic Dental Society, NY, 565New York <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 1266, 2462, 3669New York <strong>Foundation</strong> for the Arts, NY, 794, 1012,<strong>11</strong>83, 1267, 1292, 1321, 1422, 1428, 1429,1733, 1734, 1864, 2655, 2888, 2889, 3230,3622, 3670, 3671, 4194New York Hall of Science, NY, 795, 1865, 2890New York Historical Society, NY, 345, 480, 796,2603, 3198New York Immigration Coalition, NY, 1268, 2097,3334New York Landmarks Conservancy, NY, 4017New York Lawyers for the Public Interest, NY,1249New York Legal Assistance Group, NY, 309, 333,334New York Police and Fire Widows and ChildrensBenefit Fund, NY, 31, <strong>11</strong>0, 225, 410, 495,1250, 1285, 1286, 1322, 1460, 1884, 2151,2152, 2504, 2680, 2772, 2934, 2946, 2947,3005, 3046, 3123, 3124, 3196, 3266, 3267,3377, 3427, 3495, 3785, 3795, 4018, 4165,4362, 4428, 4429, 4482New York Presbyterian Hospital, NY, 1658, 2505,2506, 3865New York Public Library, NY, 2891, 2892, 4019,4020New York Regional Association of Grantmakers,NY, <strong>11</strong>6, 2098, 3623New York Restoration Project, NY, 1866, 2893New York School for Circus Arts, NY, 3708New York Shakespeare Festival, NY, 797, 2894,4021New York State College Savings Program, NY,4509New York State Defenders Association, NY, 3335New York State Fraternal Order of Police Fund,NY, 257, <strong>11</strong>70, 1341, 1461, 1666, 1788, 1818,1924, 2153, 2154, 2733, 2773, 3244, 3270,3274, 3492, 3866, 4279, 4466New York State World Trade <strong>Center</strong> Relief Fund,NY, 93, 237, 241, <strong>11</strong>88, 1290, 1323, 1415,1462, 1506, 1507, 1536, 1558, 2155, 2156,2507, 2662, 2666, 2774, 3125, 3428, 3431,4120, 4121, 4277New York Stock Exchange Fallen Heroes Fund,NY, 950, 1324, 1559, 2157, 2158, 3165, 3906New York Studio School of Drawing, Painting andSculpture, NY, 798, 2895New York Taxi Workers Alliance, NY, 4247New York Times 9/<strong>11</strong> Neediest Fund, NY, 8, 32,71, 226, 227, 254, 346, 669-673, 690, 696,1037, <strong>11</strong>50, 1280, 14<strong>11</strong>, 1700, 1725, 1744,1746, 1749, 1763, 1789, 1792, 1816, 1835,1889, 1959, 1979, 1980, 1984, 2015, 2083,2084, 2159, 2487, 2542, 2595, 2667, 2674,2703, 2775, 3047, 3106, 3235, 3385, 3680,3685, 3698, 3702, 3721, 3722, 3777, 3892,4094, 4098, 4147, 4282, 4301, 4354, 4468,4539New York University, NY, 169, 951, 10<strong>11</strong>, <strong>11</strong><strong>11</strong>,1251, 2099, 3624, 3672, 3830, 4374, 44<strong>11</strong>New York University Medical <strong>Center</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong>,NY, 2896New York Womens <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 72, 3252,3297, 4475, 4480New York/New Jersey Baykeeper, NJ, 1380New York, State of, NY, 380, 1527, 2467New Yorkers for Children, NY, 871, 872, 4462New Yorkers for Parks, NY, 2897New 42nd Street, NY, 2898Newark Museum, NJ, 1381Newsday Community Service Fund, NY, 385Next Door Solutions to Domestic Violence, CA,2354Nightingale-Bamford School, NY, 2063NiSource Inc. Corporate Giving Program, IN,3250Nonprofit Coordinating Committee of New York,NY, 1000, 3166Nonprofit Finance Fund, NY, 1001, 1252, 1325,1624, 2463, 2992, 4143, 4313North Shore Child and Family Guidance <strong>Center</strong>,NY, 170North Valley Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 602Northern Manhattan Improvement Corporation,NY, 3218Northern Westchester Shelter, NY, 171Northrop Grumman Corporation ContributionsProgram, CA, 3271Northwest Medical Teams International, OR, 2160,2161Notre Dame School, NY, 4022Novotny Memorial Scholarship Fund, <strong>The</strong> Brian,NJ, 4510NPower NY, NY, 310, 335NRG Energy Inc., MN, 3284Nuyorican Poets Cafe, NY, 799, 4412NYC2012, NY, 3867NYU Downtown Hospital, NY, 1326, 2508, 2509,3594, 3868, 4023Ohio Credit Union <strong>Foundation</strong>, OH, 3100Oldcastle, Inc., GA, 3301Ontological-Hysteric <strong>The</strong>ater, NY, 800, 2570Open Channels New York, NY, 801, 2571Open Door Community House, GA, 2355Operation HOPE, CA, 603Opportunities for a Better Tomorrow, NY, 4024Opportunities for Technology Info. Careers(OPTIC), CA, 4476Opportunity Parish Ecumenical NeighborhoodMinistry, OH, 2356Orange County Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 604Orange County Human Relations Council, CA,605Orion Society, MA, 1382Orpheon Little Orchestra Society, <strong>The</strong>, NY, 802,2016Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, NY, 803Orthodox Church in America, NY, 2776Osborne Association, NY, 1440Our Lady of Fatima, CT, 1943Our Lady of Shkodra Church, NY, 45<strong>11</strong>Ozone House, MI, 2357P. S. 1 Contemporary Art <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 804, 4413P.S. 122, NY, 172P.S. 234 Parents and Teachers Association, Inc.,NY, 336PACE <strong>Center</strong> for Girls of Leon County, FL,2358Pace University, NY, 3831, 3832Pacific Gateway <strong>Center</strong>, HI, 2718Pacific News Service, CA, 4248Pan Asian Repertory <strong>The</strong>ater, NY, 805, 2572Paper Bag Players, NY, 806, 2573Park <strong>Center</strong>, IN, 2359Partners for Democratic Change, CA, 606Partnership for After School Education, NY,399, 452Pasadena <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 607Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association of the Cityof New York, NY, 1219, 1416, 1493, 1709,1949, 2532, 3245, 3496, 3513Paul Taylor Dance <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 807, 2899Pearl <strong>The</strong>ater Company, NY, 2574Peninsula Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 608Pentagon Memorial Fund, VA, 4025People in Need <strong>Foundation</strong>, Czech Republic,3093People’s Non-Violent <strong>Response</strong> Coalition, CA,4249Performance Space 122, NY, 808, 2575, 4414Perkins <strong>Center</strong> for the Arts, NJ, 1383Petco <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 3398, 3399Philabundance, PA, 2360Philadelphia Committee to End Homelessness,PA, 2361Philadelphia <strong>Foundation</strong>, PA, 3445-3448Philadelphia Tabernacle Pentacostal Church,Canada, 3673Philharmonic Symphony Society of New York,NY, 2900Phillips Petroleum <strong>Foundation</strong>, OK, 3449Phipps Community Development Corporation,NY, 4026Phoenix House <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 4027Physicians for Human Rights, MA, 1625, 2644Piatigorsky <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 2100Pick Up Performance Company, NY, 2576Pierpont Morgan Library, NY, 2901Pilgrims’ Inn, SC, 2362Pittsburgh <strong>Foundation</strong>, PA, 1882, 3027Pittsburgh 9<strong>11</strong> Firefighters and WidowsDisaster Fund, PA, 4122Planned Parenthood Mar Monte, CA, 2363Planned Parenthood of MetropolitanWashinton DC, DC, 4028Planned Parenthood of New York City, NY,4029Playwrights Horizons, NY, 809, 2902Poets and Writers, NY, 810Poets House, NY, 8<strong>11</strong>, 2903Points of Light <strong>Foundation</strong>, DC, 873, 3686,4102Police Athletic League, NY, 4030Policemen and Firemen Fund of Saint Louis,MO, 1281POPPA (Police Organization Providing PeerAssistance), NY, 3167Port Authority Police Benevolent Association,NJ, 1220, 1463, 4148Portsmouth Christian Academy, NH, 3129Posse <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 4031Prairie Harvest Human Services <strong>Foundation</strong>,ND, 2364Pratt Institute, NY, 1327, 1626, 3625, 3674Pregones Touring Puerto Rican <strong>The</strong>aterCollection, NY, 812, 2577Prep for Prep, NY, 4032Preservation League of New York State, NY,2468Pride <strong>Foundation</strong>, WA, 3754Primary Care Development Corporation, NY,4033Primary Stages Company, NY, 2578Princeton University, NJ, 3459Principals <strong>Center</strong> for the Garden State, NJ,1384Printmaking Council of New Jersey, NJ, 1385Pro Bono Project of Santa Clara County, CA,2365Project Angel Food, CA, 173238


INDEX OF GRANT RECIPIENTSProject Angel Heart, CO, 2026Project Open Hand, CA, 174Project Reach Youth, NY, 4034Project Rebirth, NY, 3833Project Renewal, NY, 400, 401, 4035Project Teen Aid, NY, 3219Prospect Park Alliance, NY, 2904Public Art Fund, NY, 813Public Broadcasting Service (PBS), VA, 3834Public Health Research Institute of the City of NewYork, NY, 3168Public Interest Projects, NY, 1627Publicolor, NY, 814Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund,NY, 952, 3190, 3626, 3731Queens Borough Public Library, NY, 2905Queens Botanical Garden Society, NY, 815, 2906Queens College of the City University of New York<strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 816Queens Council on the Arts, NY, 817, 2907Queens Library <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 1867, 4036Queens Museum of Art, NY, 818, 1868, 2908Queens Symphony Orchestra, NY, 819Queens <strong>The</strong>ater in the Park, NY, 820RAND Corporation, CA, 3835RAND Corporation, VA, 2049Randalls Island Sports <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 2909Randy James Dance Works, NJ, 1386Reconciliation And Culture Cooperative Network(RACCOON), NY, 3220Recording for the Blind and Dyslexic, NY, 4037Red Cross of Canada, Canada, 365, 366, 1206,1963, 4<strong>11</strong>2, 4<strong>11</strong>3, 4129, 4260, 4274Refugees International, DC, 4038Regional Plan Association, NY, 337, <strong>11</strong>12, 1387,1628, 3169, 3627-3630, 3736, 3836, 3837,4144Renaissance Economic Development Corporation,NY, 1560, 2993, 4250RENEW International, NJ, 1343Repertorio Espanol, NY, 821, 2579Replications, Inc., NY, 4039Rescue No. 5 Family Fund, NY, 3170Rescue 2 Family Fund, NY, 2614Research <strong>Foundation</strong> for Mental Hygiene, NY, 338,4145Research <strong>Foundation</strong> of the City University of NewYork, NY, 2050Research <strong>Foundation</strong> of the State University ofNew York, NY, 2181Retail Merchants Association of GreaterRichmond, VA, 4158Rethinking Schools, WI, 1629Revolutionary Afghan Women’s Association,Afghanistan, 4477Rhizome Communications, NY, 4415Ricardo OGorman Garden and <strong>Center</strong> forResources in the Humanities, NY, 4040Richards Street Heroes Fund, NY, 3298Richmond Symphony, VA, 3604Riverside Park Fund, NY, 2910Robert R. McCormick Tribune <strong>Foundation</strong>, IL,470, 2698, 2777, 3347Robert Wood Johnson <strong>Foundation</strong>, NJ, 2051Robin Hood <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 235, 433, 685, 902,<strong>11</strong>51, 1646, 1798, 1891, 2471, 2704, 2778,3048, 3291, 3393, 3416, 3429, 3566, 3601,3603, 3605, 3869, 4367, 4459Rock the Vote Education Fund, CA, 1630, 3401,4146Rockefeller <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 3675Roman Catholic Military Chaplaincy, DC, 3556RotaCare Bay Area, CA, 2366Rotary <strong>Foundation</strong> of New York, NY, 2779, 4292Rotary <strong>Foundation</strong> of Rotary International, IL,4293Rotunda Gallery, NY, 1869Roundabout <strong>The</strong>ater Company, NY, 29<strong>11</strong>Roza Promotions, NY, 3191Rutgers, <strong>The</strong> State University of New Jersey, NJ,1388, 1389, 1631Ruth Rales Jewish Family Service, FL, 2367S.O.S. Community Services Crisis <strong>Center</strong>, MI,2368S.O.S. Health Care, SC, 2369Sacramento Regional <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 609Sacred Heart Community Service, CA, 2370Safe Harbor, SD, 2371Safe Horizon, NY, 175, 176, 453, 1328, 1899,3460, 3755Saint Aloysius Education Clinic, NY, 4041Saint Aloysius School, NY, 4042Saint Bonaventure University, NY, 2162Saint Francis Xavier Welcome Table, NY, 1329Saint Gregory Episcopal Church, NJ, 248, 2780Saint Huberts Animal Welfare <strong>Center</strong>, NJ, 1390Saint Johns Bread and Life Program, NY, 177,4043Saint Jude Childrens Research Hospital, NY, 3870Saint Jude Church, NY, 2163Saint Jude House, IN, 2372Saint Paul <strong>Foundation</strong>, MN, 462, 505, 542, 3703,3704Saint Paul Western Palm Beach County FoodDistribution <strong>Center</strong>, FL, 2373Saint Peters Home for Boys, MI, 2374Saint Sebastian Parish Association, NY, 249, 2781Saint Vincent de Paul Society, GA, 2376Saint Vincent de Paul Society, MI, 2375Saint Vincent de Paul Society of San Mateo, CA,2377Saint Vincent de Paul Society of Santa ClaraCounty, CA, 2378Saint Vincents Hospital and Medical <strong>Center</strong> ofNew York, NY, 402, 516, 1002, 1423, 2994,3171, 3417, 3418, 3461, 3557, 3595, 3844,3871Saint Vincents Services, NY, 4044Sakhi for South Asian Women, NY, 3221Salvation Army National Headquarters, VA, 33,2<strong>11</strong>, 212, 242, 437, 517, 674, 686, 697, <strong>11</strong>52,<strong>11</strong>89, 1777, 1790, 2164, 2526, 2527, 2734,3261, 3375, 3394, 3419, 3472, 4205, 4316,4327, 4379, 4380, 4512, 4513Salvation Army New Jersey DivisonalHeadquarters, NJ, 953, 954Salvation Army of Aberdeen, SD, 2379Salvation Army of Akron, OH, 2380Salvation Army of Atlanta, GA, 650Salvation Army of Austin, TX, 34Salvation Army of Baltimore, MD, 3497Salvation Army of Biloxi, MS, 2381Salvation Army of Broward County, FL, 2382Salvation Army of Conway, SC, 2383Salvation Army of Dallas, TX, 1399, 1913, 2738Salvation Army of Durham, NC, 4294Salvation Army of Flint Area Chapter, MI, 3094Salvation Army of Fort Wayne, IN, 2384Salvation Army of Grand Forks, ND, 2385Salvation Army of Greater New York, NY, 73,<strong>11</strong>60, 1443, 1870, 3723Salvation Army of Gulfport, MS, 2386Salvation Army of Hartford, CT, 74Salvation Army of Hawaiian Islands, HI, 2719-2721Salvation Army of Houston, TX, 75Salvation Army of Jacksonville, FL, 1441Salvation Army of Los Angeles, CA, 76Salvation Army of Macon, GA, 2387Salvation Army of Memphis, TN, 4328Salvation Army of Miami, FL, 2388Salvation Army of Milledgeville, GA, 2389Salvation Army of Munster, IN, 2390Salvation Army of Newfoundland, Canada, 3524Salvation Army of Reading, PA, 439Salvation Army of Rock Hill, SC, 2391Salvation Army of San Francisco, CA, 35, 36Salvation Army of Santa Clara County, CA, 37,2392Salvation Army of Sarasota, FL, 3302Salvation Army of Washington, DC, DC, 877, 3008Salvation Army of Western Pennsylvania, PA, 533,2782Salvation Army of Wichita, KS, 2074Salvation Army, Kansas and Missouri Division,MO, 1810, 18<strong>11</strong>, 4375Salvation Army, Roseville, MN, 3909, 3910Salvation Army, U.S.A. Eastern Territory, NY,77Samaritans Purse, NC, 2165San Diego <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 610San Francisco <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 6<strong>11</strong>San Francisco General Hospital <strong>Foundation</strong>,CA, 2002San Jose Day Nursery, CA, 2393San Jose First Community Services, CA, 2394San Luis Obispo County Community<strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 612Sanctuary for Families, NY, 178Sandler O’Neill Assistance <strong>Foundation</strong>, NJ,202, 1009, <strong>11</strong>02, <strong>11</strong>17, 1271, 1330, 1561,1562, 1687, 1944, 1945, 2540, 2726,3872, 4469Santa Barbara <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 613Saratoga International <strong>The</strong>ater Institute (SITI),NY, 822Save A Patriot Fellowship, MD, 3359Save the Children Federation, CT, 2783, 2912,3756Save the Children Federation, NY, 15SBC Pioneers, TX, 3724SCAN, IN, 2395Scholarship America, MN, 179, 272, 381, 687,698, 860, 861, 898, 1085, 1346, 1659,1921, 2166, 2499, 2534, 2541, 26<strong>11</strong>,2612, 2963, 3040, 3<strong>11</strong>0, 3<strong>11</strong>7, 3295,3430, 3467, 3538, 3796, 3797, 3881,4103, 4314, 4344School Choice Scholarships <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY,4045Scott Hazelcorn Memorial Children’s<strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 4514Seamens Church Institute of New York andNew Jersey, NY, 4046Search and Care, NY, 4047Second Harvest Food Bank of Metrolina, NC,2396Second Harvest Food Bank of Santa Clara andSan Mateo Counties, CA, 2397Second Harvest Food Bank of theChattahoochee Valley, GA, 2398Second Harvest Northern Lakes Food Bank,MN, 2399Second Stage <strong>The</strong>ater, NY, 2913<strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong>th Fund, NY see New YorkCommunity Trust & United Way of NewYork<strong>September</strong> Eleventh Families for PeacefulTomorrows, NY, 4251Service Employees International UnionEducation and Assistance Fund, DC,3676, 4515Services Now for Adult Persons (SNAP), NY,180Seventh Generation Fund for IndianDevelopment, CA, 614Sexual Assault Crisis Agency, CA, 2400Shalom Task Force, NY, 3222Shanksville Volunteer Fire Company, PA, <strong>11</strong>90Share New York, NY, 3172Shasta Regional Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA,615, 2697Shelter House, VA, 181Shelter Network of San Mateo County, CA,2401Shelter Partnership, CA, 562Sheltering Arms Childrens Service, NY, 4048Shepherds Way, FL, 2402Sidran Traumatic Stress <strong>Foundation</strong>, MD, 182,3420Siebel America Fund, CA, 3786, 3788Sigma-Aldrich Corporation ContributionsProgram, MO, 3792Signature <strong>The</strong>ater Company, NY, 823, 2580Silver Shield <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 183, 263, 1956Simon Wiesenthal <strong>Center</strong>, CA, 616Sistercare, SC, 2403SITI Company, NY, 2581Skyscraper Museum, NY, 2677Smithsonian Institution, DC, 2914, 2915, 3009Snug Harbor Cultural <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 824239


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSESocial Entreprise Alliance, CA, 2101Social Science Research Council, NY, 3891Society for the Preservation of Weeksville andBedford-Stuyvesant History, NY, 825Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals,NY, 2948-2950Socrates Sculpture Park, NY, 826Soho Repertory <strong>The</strong>ater, NY, 184, 827, 1791, 2582Solano Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 617Solomon R. Guggenheim <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 2916Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, NY, 1253Sonoma County Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 618Sonora Area <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 619Sons of the Revolution in the State of New York,NY, 2917South Asian American Leaders of Tomorrow(SAALT), DC, 4252South Asian Youth Action (SAYA), NY, 3223,3224, 3677South Bronx Educational <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 3873South Brunswick Board of Education, NJ, 1391South Carolina Cares Relief Fund, SC, 859, 3880South Central Improvement Alliance, KS, 2404South Florida Food Recovery, FL, 2405South Mississippi Exchange Clubs Child AbusePrevention <strong>Center</strong>, MS, 2406South Street Seaport <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 2964South Street Seaport Museum, NY, 2918, 3530Special Operations Warrior <strong>Foundation</strong>, FL, 1526Spence-Chapin Services to Families and Children,NY, 4049Sponsors for Educational Opportunity, NY, 2102Squad 41 Associations Heroes Fund, NY, 1086,1087Stanley M. Isaacs Neighborhood <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 4050Starfish Family Services, MI, 2407Starr <strong>Foundation</strong>, <strong>The</strong>, NY, 4051, 4052Starting Over, FL, 2408State Street Heroes Fund, NY, 1795State University of New York at Albany, NY, 1331Staten Island Botanical Garden, NY, 828, 2919Staten Island Childrens Museum, NY, 829, 2920Staten Island Historical Society, NY, 830, 2921Staten Island Institute of Arts and Sciences, NY,831Staten Island <strong>September</strong> <strong>11</strong> Fund, NY, 3233Staten Island Victims Relief Fund, NY, 971Staten Island Zoological Society, NY, 832, 2922Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 2995Storefront for Art and Architecture, NY, 4416Structured Employment Economic DevelopmentCorporation, NY, 1234, 1632, 1724, 1737,1871, 2488, 3197, 3290, 3395, 3744, 3757,3874, 4332, 4368, 4369, 4386Student Sponsor Partners, NY, 3875, 4053Studio in a School Association, NY, 833, 3095,4054Studio Museum in Harlem, NY, 834, 2923Stuyvesant High School, NY, 3432, 4055Summit Area Public <strong>Foundation</strong>, NJ, 390, 4516Summit County Community Drug Board, OH,2409Sundance School, CO, 1392Sunnyvale Community Services, CA, 2410Support Network for Battered Women, CA, 24<strong>11</strong>Susan B. Anthony <strong>Center</strong>, FL, 2412Switchboard of Miami, FL, 2413Symphony Space, NY, 835, 1872, 2924T.O.P.S. For You, NY, 3225TADA <strong>The</strong>ater and Dance Alliance, NY, 836,1873, 2583Target Margin <strong>The</strong>ater, NY, 837, 2584Task Force for Child Survival and Development,GA, 2052Tavis Smiley <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 1044, 1716Teachers and Writers Collaborative, NY, 838TEAK Fellowship, NY, 4056Telephone Counseling and Referral Service, FL,2414Tenants and Workers Support Committee, VA,4253Texas Baptist Men, TX, 2739Thalia Spanish <strong>The</strong>ater, NY, 839, 2585<strong>The</strong> Heritage <strong>Foundation</strong>, DC, 3348<strong>The</strong>ater Development Fund (TDF), NY, 2925<strong>The</strong>ater for a New Audience, NY, 840<strong>The</strong>aterworks/USA, NY, 2926<strong>The</strong>atre for A New City <strong>Foundation</strong>, Inc., NY, 841Thiel College, PA, 2784Think Detroit, MI, 2415Third Sector New England, MA, 2053Third Street Music School Settlement, NY, 842Thomas A. Edison <strong>Foundation</strong> for Non-TraditionalEducation, NJ, 1633Thomas A. Edison State College <strong>Foundation</strong>, NJ,1634Thomas Burke Family Trust, MA, 3462Three-legged Dog, NY, 2001Thurgood Marshall Scholarship Fund, NY, 4057Tides <strong>Center</strong>, CA, 1635, 1636Tides <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 3299, 3336Todd M. Beamer <strong>Foundation</strong>, NJ, 857, 2061Tomah, City of, WI, 236Tooth Mobile, CA, 2416Town Hall <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 843, 1701, 2927Town of Orangeton, NY, 4517Toys R US Childrens Fund, NJ, 4281Trauma Intervention Program of MerrimackCounty, MA, 2054Trentini Memorial Fund, MA, 2785Trey Whitfield School, NY, 3876Trial Lawyers Care, Inc., NY, 3337Trickle Up Program, NY, 4058Trinity Church, NY, 496Trinity College, CT, 3463, 4334Trisha Brown Dance Company, NY, 844Truckee Tahoe Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 620Trust for Americas Health, DC, 2055Trust for Jewish Philanthropy, NY, 264Turn About, FL, 2417Turning Point of Union County, NC, 2418Turnstone <strong>Center</strong> for Disabled Children andAdults, IN, 2419Twin Towers Fund, NY, 2, 38, 78, 109, 190, 253,273, 350, 382, 423, 426, 442, 530, 657, 903,972, 1008, 1088, <strong>11</strong>32, <strong>11</strong>71, <strong>11</strong>91, 1235,1296, 1297, 1464, 1508, 1509, 1525, 1532,1544, 1563, 1569, 1574, 1667, 1705, 1706,1726, 1729, 1730, 1735, 1736, 1761, 1782,1874, 1987, 2009, 2072, 2167, 2168, 2470,2483, 2490, 2516, 2533, 2694, 2705, 2742,2786, 2996, 3017, 3028, 3037, 3049, 3050,3058, 3074, 3173, 3234, 3285, 3354, 3402,3504, 3514, 3515, 3584, 3592, 3725, 3732,3760, 3782, 3799, 3804, 3847, 3850, 3851,3877, 3886, 4084, 4085, 4123, 4192, 4200,4266, 4278, 4300, 4434, 4435, 4486, 4527UFA Widows and Childrens Fund, NY, 228, 247,438, 518, 675, 973, <strong>11</strong>72, 1221, 1298, 1344,1417, 1494, 1710, 1996, 2169, 2458, 2469,2673, 2787, 3051-3053, 3075, 3246, 3258,3262, 3342, 3386, 3498, 3516, 3770, 4467Undesignated, , 1, 17, 89, 103, 106, 217, 362, 407,529, 646, 647, 652, 699, 874, 889, <strong>11</strong>03, <strong>11</strong>43,<strong>11</strong>61, 1208, 1209, 1432, 1497, 1529, 1530,1534, 1647, 1688, 1697, 1702, 1812, 1826,1827, 1926, 1962, 1974, 1982, 2<strong>11</strong>0, 2170,2171, 2420, 2478, 2479, 2500, 2510, 2530,2596, 2651, 2656, 2692, 2965, 3099, 3103,3108, 3<strong>11</strong>2, 3229, 3237, 3247, 3275, 3376,3390, 3396, 3464, 3486, 3531, 3547, 3549,3550, 3565, 3606, 3631, 3681, 3712, 3759,3902, 3903, 3912, 4091, 4195, 4196, 4273,4307, 4333, 4342, 4345, 4381, 4437, 4443,4518, 4537UNICEF, NY, 2788, 3525, 3878Uniformed Fire Officers Association of GreaterNew York, NY, 1950, 3499Unilever United States <strong>Foundation</strong>, NJ, 4321, 4322Union Community Fund, DC, 1269, 1925, 2069,3174Union of American Hebrew Congregations, NY,<strong>11</strong>53, 1233, 2789, 2790, 4487Union Organization for Social Service, NJ, 2421Union Settlement Association, NY, 339, 4059Union <strong>The</strong>ological Seminary, NY, 250Unitarian Church of All Souls, NY, 3300United Brotherhood of Carpenters Local 608,NY, 2172United Cerebral Palsy, DC, 4519United Family Services, NC, 2422United Hospital Fund of New York, NY, 2056United Jewish Communities, NY, 463, 1465,1466, 2003, 2173, 3726United Jewish Community Relief Fund, NY,1482, 2004United Jewish Federation of MetroWest, NJ,1847United Methodist Church, VA, 1674United Methodist Committee on Relief, NY,2174, 2791, 3248, 3249United Nations Association of the UnitedStates of America, NY, 3632United Nations <strong>Foundation</strong>, DC, 3351United Negro College Fund, VA, 2085United Neighborhood Houses of New York,NY, 3<strong>11</strong>, 340, 875, 955-957, 2997, 4060United Neighbors of East Midtown, NY, 4061United Seamens Service, NY, 312, 341United Service Organization of MetropolitanNew York, NY, 519United Service Organization of MetropolitanWashington, VA, 2792United States Association for United NationsHigh Commissioner for Refugees, DC,3435United Way - Tipton County, IN, 4265United Way California Capital Region, CA, 621United Way of Allegheny County, PA, 1880United Way of America, VA, 4481, 4520United Way of Broward County, FL, 2007United Way of Butler County, PA, 3296United Way of Capital Area, TX, 39United Way of Cayuga County, NY, 1480United Way of Central Ohio, OH, 1957United Way of Flint County, MI, 3096United Way of Fresno County, CA, 622United Way of Greater Chattanooga, TN, 2615United Way of Greater Memphis, TN, 4329,4330United Way of Greater Milwaukee, WI, 1988United Way of Greater Rochester, NY, 40United Way of Harrisonburg and RockinghamCounty, VA, 2951, 2952United Way of Hunterdon County, NJ, 2953,2954United Way of Kauai, HI, 4452United Way of Kern County, CA, 623United Way of Lake County, OH, 1031United Way of Massachusetts Bay, MA, 497,498, 876United Way of Metropolitan Atlanta, GA, 1045,2961United Way of Metropolitan Nashville, TN,1675United Way of Monterey County, CA, 624United Way of Morris County, NJ, 4521, 4522United Way of Mount Baldy, CA, 625United Way of National Capital Area, DC, 274,1759, 3010United Way of New York City, NY, 676, 677,1407, 1797, 2955, 2998, 3421, 3582, 4155United Way of Northeast Florida, FL, 1442United Way of Orange County Chapter, CA,626, 1845, 3343United Way of Palm Beach County, FL, 2593United Way of Passaic Valley, NJ, 454United Way of Rockland County, NY, 4523United Way of San Diego County, CA, 627United Way of San Joaquin County, CA, 628United Way of Sonoma-Mendocino-Lake, CA,629United Way of South Hampton Roads, VA,3256United Way of Southeastern New England, RI,3583United Way of Southeastern Pennsylvania, PA,246, 408, 25<strong>11</strong>, 2512, 3388United Way of Stanislaus County, CA, 630United Way of the Bay Area, CA, 631, 1036240


INDEX OF GRANT RECIPIENTSUnited Way of the Inland Valleys, CA, 632United Way of the Plains, KS, 2075United Way of Tri-State, NY, 2956-2958, 3536United Way of Ventura County, CA, 633United Way, Aloha, HI, 2722United Way, Inc., CA, 634United Way, Inc., Region IV - Harbor/SoutheastRegion, CA, 3539United Way, Silicon Valley, CA, 41, 635, 4357United Way, Triangle, NC, 4295United Way, Valley of the Sun, AZ, 261, 262University Muslim Medical Association, CA, 636University of California, CA, 1637University of California, Berkeley, CA, 958University of Colorado <strong>Foundation</strong>, CO, 3838University of London, England, 2645University of Maryland <strong>Foundation</strong>, MD, 845,3839, 3840University of Miami, FL, 2109University of Pennsylvania, PA, 199, 2057, 2928University of Pennsylvania Medical <strong>Center</strong>, PA,4524University of Richmond Chaplaincy, VA, 959University of the Pacific, CA, 3841University Presbyterian Church, NC, 4296University Settlement Society of New York, NY,4062Uptown Outreach Food Pantry, GA, 2423Urban Justice <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 3226, 4254Urban League of Fort Wayne, IN, 2424Urban Ministry of Palo Alto, CA, 2425Urban Pathways, NY, 4063Urban Stages, NY, 2586UrbanGlass/New York Contemporary Glass<strong>Center</strong>, NY, 846USFreightways Corporation, NC, 4346USO Council of Georgia, GA, 503Valley Presbyterian Church, CA, 3387Valley Rescue Mission, GA, 2426Vanguard Public <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 637Various organizations, , 10, 82, 94, 185, 197, 200,204, 260, 277, 278, 297, 357, 370, 371, 403,465, 550, 896, 1038, 1040, 1096, 1097, <strong>11</strong>29,<strong>11</strong>78, <strong>11</strong>85, 1215, 1307, 1332, 1436, 1475,1486, 1545, 1564, 1653, 1660, 1676, 1681,1756, 1762, 1766, 1780, 1839, 1878, 2012,2058, 2064, 2455, 2491, 2536, 2537, 2658,2682, 2707, 2793, 2966, 3015, 3057, 3107,3287, 3500, 3540, 3560, 3563, 3602, 3700,3740, 3801, 3884, 3897, 4130, 4153, 4166,4167, 4201, 4206, 4261, 4453, 4454, 4535Vehicles, Inc., NY, 4064Ventura County Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 638Vera Institute of Justice, NY, 2005Veritas <strong>The</strong>rapeutic Community <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY,4065Vermont Studio <strong>Center</strong>, VT, 1393Village of Arts and Humanities, PA, 2427Vincent House, IN, 2428Vineyard <strong>The</strong>ater and Workshop <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 847,2587Virginia Department of Emergency Management,VA, 1401Virginia Mason Medical <strong>Center</strong>, WA, 3422Visiting Nurse Service of New York, NY, 4066Vital Voices Global Partnership, DC, 960Vivian Beaumont <strong>The</strong>ater, NY, 2929Vocational <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 4067Voices for Alabamas Children, AL, 1638Voices for Children <strong>Foundation</strong>, FL, 2429Volunteer Engine Company, NY, 2472Volunteer Fire Department of Berlin, PA, <strong>11</strong>92Volunteer Fire Department of Central City, PA,<strong>11</strong>93Volunteer Fire Department of Friedens, PA, <strong>11</strong>94Volunteer Fire Department of Hooversville, PA,<strong>11</strong>95Volunteer Fire Department of Listie, PA, <strong>11</strong>96Volunteer Fire Department of Somerset, PA, <strong>11</strong>97Volunteer Fire Department of Stoystown, PA, <strong>11</strong>98Vulcan Hall <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 3423WNYC,NY,3292Wall Street Rising Corporation, NY, 1003, 1333,1707, 2967Wallingford Presbyterian Church, CT, 2794Walnut Avenue Womens <strong>Center</strong>, CA, 639Walt Disney Company <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 1347,1348War Times, CA, 4255Warren-Conner Development Coalition, MI, 2430Washington Area Womens <strong>Foundation</strong>, DC, 4478Washington County Department of Public Safety,PA, 2795Washington Family Relief Fund, DC, 234, 2796Washington Performing Arts Society, DC, 3369Washington Redskins Leadership Council, DC,2670Washington Regional Association of Grantmakers,DC, 1639WAVE (Work, Achievement, Values andEducation), DC, 961, 962Wave Hill, NY, 848, 2930Wayne State University, MI, 3842We Can, NY, 4068We Care Rockville <strong>Center</strong> Fund, NY, 2459We Interrupt This Message, CA, 3227, 4256Weld Food Bank, CO, 2027West Hawaii AIDS <strong>Foundation</strong>, HI, 186West Islip School District, NY, 2797Westbeth <strong>The</strong>ater <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 2588WGBH Educational <strong>Foundation</strong>, MA, 1394, 2646White Columns, NY, 4417Whitney Museum of American Art, NY, 2931,3695Wichita Childrens Home, KS, 2431Wichita Family Services Institute, KS, 2432Wildlife Conservation Society, NY, 2932, 4069William J. and Dorothy K. O’Neill <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY,2175Willoughby Rotary <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 2176Windows of Hope Family Relief Fund, NY, 42,678, 1004, 1006, 1032, 1751, 1764, 2177,2178, 3054, 3588, 3589, 3776, 3879, 4089,4259, 4297Wisconsin Council on Children and Families, WI,1640WNET Channel 13, NY, 3633, 4070, 4460WNYC <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY, 849, 1395, 1481, 1641,1677, 2006, 2017, 4071Women Helping Women, HI, 2723Women in Distress of Broward County, FL, 2433Women in Need (WIN), HI, 2724Women Make Movies, NY, 4418Women’s Coalition, MN, 2434Women’s Commission for Refugee Women andChildren, NY, 3338Women’s Community Clinic, CA, 4479Women’s Funding Network, CA, 2103Women’s Institute for Leadership Development(WILD) for Human Rights, CA, 4257Women’s Venture Fund, NY, 3228Womens <strong>Foundation</strong>, CA, 640Womens Project and Productions, NY, 850,2589Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship<strong>Foundation</strong>, NJ, 1396Wooster Group, NY, 851, 2590, 4419Workers Awaaz, NY, 3192Working Group, CA, 852Working in Support of Education, NY, 1334Working Partnerships USA, CA, 641Working Playground, NY, 3900World Affairs Council of Philadelphia, PA,1397World Monuments Fund, NY, 2018World Music Institute, NY, 853World Policy Institute at the New School, NY,3634World Trade <strong>Center</strong> Disaster Fund, England,700, 3031, 3068World Trade <strong>Center</strong> Port Authority MemorialFund, NY, 1467-1469World Vision International, WA, 43WTEN/Trustco Bank, NY, 2179Yesh Gvul, Israel, 4258Yeshiva University, NY, 502YM-YWHA, 92nd Street, NY, 4072YMCA of Greater New York, NY, 981,2999-3001, 3771YMCA of Superior-Douglas County, WI, 2435YMCA of the USA, Armed Services -Washington Office, VA, 982YMCA, Akron Metropolitan Board, OH, 2436York <strong>The</strong>ater Company, NY, 2591Yorkville Common Pantry, NY, 187, 4073Young Audiences-New York, NY, 854, 4074,4075Young Citizens, Inc., NY, 342, 2104Young Korean American Service andEducation <strong>Center</strong>, NY, 3193Young Men’s Christian Association of FortWayne, IN, 2437Young Playwrights, NY, 855, 2592Young Womens Leadership <strong>Foundation</strong>, NY,4076Youth and Family Assistance, CA, 2438Youth Empowerment America, GA, 275Youth Service, PA, 2439YouthWorks, NM, 2699, 2700YWCA of Kauai, HI, 2725YWCA. of Fort Wayne, IN, 244020/20 Vision Education Fund, DC, 1212651 Kings Majestic Corporation, NY, 1889-<strong>11</strong> United Services Group, NY, 31759<strong>11</strong> Healing Hands, CA, 883241


Index of SubjectsAbuse prevention, contribution 559, 2234Abuse prevention, Women 2234Adoption, employee matching gifts 2730Adoption, Immigrants/refugees 2730Adoption, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Children 2730Adult education—literacy & basic skills,contribution 4064Adult education—literacy & basic skills,Economically disadvantaged 3214Adult education—literacy & basic skills, generalsupport 3214Adult education—literacy & basic skills,Hispanics/Latinos 3214Adult education—literacy & basic skills, Victimsand families, economically affected 4064Adult education—literacy & basic skills, Women3214Adult/continuing education, contribution 3652,4212Adult/continuing education, Immigrants/refugees4212Adult/continuing education, Women 4212Affected businesses, communityimprovement/development 998, 999, 1003Affected businesses, education 999Affected nonprofits, communityimprovement/development 1000, 1001Afghanistan, civil rights 4210, 4477Afghanistan, international affairs/development4210, 4477African Americans/Blacks, communityimprovement/development 3914African Americans/Blacks, education 2085, 3916,4040, 4057African Americans/Blacks, housing/shelter 3914African Americans/Blacks, humanservices—multipurpose 2424, 3924, 4040Aging/elderly/senior citizens,food/nutrition/agriculture 321, 449, 2343,3945Aging/elderly/senior citizens, health—general 3978Aging/elderly/senior citizens, health—specificdiseases 1576Aging/elderly/senior citizens, humanservices—multipurpose 180, 330, 3931,4005, 4047, 4061, 4470Aging, centers & services 180, 303, 304, 307, 324,325, 330, 1831, 2344, 2352, 3931, 4047,4061, 4470Aging, contribution 180, 303, 304, 307, 324, 325,330, 1831, 2344, 2352, 3931, 4047, 4061,4470Aging, Economically disadvantaged 4061Aging, Ethnic/racial minorities, general 4061Aging, Ethnic/racial minorities, other specifiedgroup 4470Aging, Immigrants/refugees 4470Agriculture/food, contribution 2020Agriculture/food, management/technical aid 2020Agriculture, contribution 2283Agriculture, farm cooperatives 2283AIDS, contribution 2191, 2205, 2226, 3153Alzheimers disease, Aging/elderly/senior citizens1576Alzheimers disease, contribution 1576Alzheimers disease, Mentally/emotionally disabled1576American Red Cross, contribution 107, <strong>11</strong>1, 213,293, 358, 444, 499, 532, 547, 905, 910, 9<strong>11</strong>,914, 1015, 1016, 1019, 1034, 1050, <strong>11</strong>45,1205, 1398, 1437, 1444, 1456, 1472, 1478,1501, 1520, 1644, 1683, 1695, 1844, 1885,1912, 1967, 2030, 2081, 2<strong>11</strong>3, 2188,2196-2198, 2672, 2695, 2702, 2737, 2743,3016, 3036, 3<strong>11</strong>4, 3131, 3255, 3380, 3437,3438, 3506, 3558, 3578, 3596, 3600, 3697,4088, 4<strong>11</strong>5, 4324, 4325, 4464, 4490-4493American Red Cross, employee matching gifts 20,23-25, 48-56, 58, 59, 61, 62, 476, 1452,1500, 1970, 3849, 3907, 3908, 4170-4177,4179-4189, 4463, 4529American Red Cross, Relief and recoveryworkers/volunteers 547American Red Cross, Victims and families,economically affected 547, 1205, 1456American Red Cross, Victims and families,injured and deceased - General 547, 1205,1456, 1472, 2695Anatomy (animal), contribution 1352Animal welfare, contribution 198, 199, 344, 1309,1390, 2746, 3398, 3543, 3545Animal welfare, employee matching gifts 26, 2<strong>11</strong>5,2<strong>11</strong>6, 2143, 3399Animals/wildlife, contribution 425, 446Animals/wildlife, special services 425, 446Architecture, contribution 2677, 3810, 4416Archives, contribution 708, 1265, 2351, 2642,4388, 4399Arms control, contribution 3813Art conservation, contribution 2018Art therapy, program development 3208Arts councils, contribution 154, 720, 724, 743,754, 779, 817, 1354, 2000, 2838, 2868,2907, 2982, 2983, 3661, 4140, 4405, 4494Arts education, contribution 7<strong>11</strong>, 733, 760, 798,846, 1355, 1364, 1851, 2852, 2882, 2884,2895Arts/cultural programs, contribution 2500, 3659Arts/culture/humanities, England 2628Arts, alliance 702, 712, 1353, 1418, 3639Arts, artist’s services 762, 810, 2799, 4402Arts, artists services 1393, 1786, 3487Arts, association 703, 736, 788, 1378, 1849, 2802,2803, 28<strong>11</strong>, 2835, 3187, 3643Arts, contribution 543, 702, 703, 705, 707, 712,715, 732, 736, 739, 762, 765, 771, 774, 780,788, 794, 807, 810, 813, 824, 841, 843, 849,853, 1012, <strong>11</strong>83, 1267, 1292, 1321, 1351,1353, 1376, 1378, 1383, 1393, 1395, 1418,1422, 1428, 1429, 1481, 1677, 1701, 1733,1734, 1742, 1769, 1786, 1849, 1858, 1861,1864, 2006, 2427, 2558, 2564, 2588, 2655,2799, 2802-2804, 2806, 2809-2817, 2824,2831, 2835, 2839, 2847, 2858, 2859, 2863,2874, 2888, 2889, 2899, 2916, 2925, 2927,2943, 3042, 3081, 3187, 3230, 3487, 3612,3622, 3638, 3639, 3643, 3670, 3671, 3959,4194, 4387, 4392, 4397, 4400, 4402, 4407,4417Arts, cultural/ethnic awareness 712, 853, 1351,2815, 2816, 3081, 3638, 3639, 3643, 4387,4392Arts, Ethnic/racial minorities, general 3227Arts, Ethnic/racial minorities, other specifiedgroup 3227Arts, fund raising 794, 813, 1012, <strong>11</strong>83, 1267,1292, 1321, 1422, 1428, 1429, 1733, 1734,1864, 2655, 2888, 2889, 2925, 3230, 3622,3670, 3671, 4194Arts, Immigrants/refugees 3227Arts, management/ technical aid 1733, 2655,3227, 3230, 4194Arts, management/technical aid 2806Arts, multipurpose centers/programs 543, 732,765, 771, 824, 1383, 1742, 1769, 1858,1861, 2427, 2558, 2588, 2824, 2847, 3042,3959, 4397, 4407Arts, program development 3227Arts, public education 1353Arts, public policy 3612Arts, services 705, 2809, 2810, 4387, 4400, 4417Arts, single organization support 707, 715, 739,774, 780, 807, 841, 843, 849, 1376, 1395,1481, 1677, 1701, 2006, 2564, 2804,2812-2814, 2817, 2831, 2839, 2858, 2859,2863, 2874, 2899, 2916, 2927, 2943Arts, Women 3227Asians/Pacific islanders, arts/culture/humanities1373, 4252Asians/Pacific islanders, civil rights 72, 909, 918,919, 927, 935, 938, 959, 990, 3139, 3181,3199, 3223, 3224, 3252, 4217, 4218, 4221,4227, 4240, 4252, 4254, 4475, 4480Asians/Pacific islanders, communityimprovement/development 1373, 4220, 4276Asians/Pacific islanders, crime/courts/legalservices 909, 3199, 3221, 3224, 4218, 4227,4240, 4474Asians/Pacific islanders, education 918, 927, 938,3193, 3937Asians/Pacific islanders, employment 993, 3179,3192, 3202, 4220Asians/Pacific islanders, health—general 3934Asians/Pacific islanders, housing/shelter 919, 3139Asians/Pacific islanders, humanservices—multipurpose 72, 126, 883, 918,989, 1852, 3184, 3193, 3202, 3209, 3217,3221, 3252, 4474, 4475, 4480Asians/Pacific islanders, mental health/substanceabuse 72, 2033, 3209, 3252, 4475, 4480Asians/Pacific islanders, recreation/sports/athletics1373Asians/Pacific islanders, safety/disaster relief 883Asians/Pacific islanders, youth development 3223,3224243


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEAthletics/sports, amateur leagues 3200, 3453Athletics/sports, contribution 1936, 3453, 3867Athletics/sports, Crime/abuse victims 3200Athletics/sports, Ethnic/racial minorities, general3200Athletics/sports, general support 3200Athletics/sports, golf 1936Athletics/sports, Olympics 3867Athletics/sports, Women 3200Ballet, contribution 714, 715, 2817, 2886Belgium, crime/courts/legal services 2629Belgium, international affairs/development 1897,2629, 3090Big Brothers/Big Sisters, contribution <strong>11</strong>2, <strong>11</strong>3,130, 317, 394, 395, 552, 2206, 2690, 3408Big Brothers/Big Sisters, Victims and families,injured and deceased - Children <strong>11</strong>3Biological sciences, contribution 3828Blind & vision impaired, health—specific diseases34<strong>11</strong>, 3980, 3985Blind & vision impaired, internationalaffairs/development 34<strong>11</strong>, 3980, 3985Blind & vision impaired, safety/disaster relief 3980Botanical gardens, contribution 725, 815, 828,2822, 2885, 2906, 2919Boy scouts, contribution 1238Boys & girls clubs, contribution 1239, 2210-2215Boys & young men, youth development 395, 1238,1239, 3408, 3925Boys clubs, contribution 3925Business & industry, contribution 1314, 3029,3060, 3061, 3069, 3825Business school/education, Affected businesses999Business school/education, contribution 2691,4495Business school/education, general support 999Camps, Children & youth 1933, 3965, 3986Camps, contribution 1933, 3965, 3986, 4507,4514Camps, Economically disadvantaged 3965Camps, Ethnic/racial minorities, general 3965Canada, education 3660Canada, human services—multipurpose 365, 366,1206, 1963, 3524, 4<strong>11</strong>2, 4<strong>11</strong>3, 4129, 4260,4274Canada, recreation/sports/athletics 4507Canada, religion 3673Canada, safety/disaster relief 365, 366, 1206,1963, 4<strong>11</strong>2, 4<strong>11</strong>3, 4129, 4260, 4274Centennials & commemorations, contribution388, 496, 2420, 4016, 4<strong>11</strong>7Centennials & commemorations, Crime/abusevictims 496Ceramic arts, contribution 846Cerebral palsy, contribution 4519Child abuse prevention, contribution 2284, 2395,2406Child development, contribution 2052Child development, Economically disadvantaged3219Child development, education 3219Child development, Infants/toddlers 3219Child development, program development 3219Child development, services 2052Children & youth, arts/culture/humanities 396,1363, 3928, 4054, 4074, 4075Children & youth, civil rights 1371, 3132, 4217Children & youth, communityimprovement/development 136, 2783Children & youth, contribution 255, 375, 409,447, 452, 458, 525, 857, 865, 871, 872, 1213,1241, 1358, 1503, 1575, 1589, 1590, 1613,1638, 1752, 1834, 1935, 2042, 2061, 2089,2207, 2216, 2225, 2246, 2261, 2264, 2284,2341, 2407, 2432, 2438, 2439, 2446, 2473,2935, 2936, 3079, 3357, 3413, 3440, 3713,3886, 3935, 3975, 3993, 4013, 4034, 4044,4048, 4049, 4132, 4281, 4321, 4447, 4448,4462, 4514Children & youth, Crime/abuse victims 2446Children & youth, crime/courts/legal services 162,3215, 3226Children & youth, Economically disadvantaged67, 2731, 2935, 2936, 3975, 4034Children & youth, education 202, 263, 399, 452,502, 898, 994, 1085, <strong>11</strong>00, <strong>11</strong>02, 1227,1242, 1247, 1275, 1346, 1363, 1371, 1487,1499, 1692, 1753, 1828, 1950, 2129, 2140,2444, 2446, 2449, 2517, 2534, 26<strong>11</strong>, 2612,2728, 2797, 3447, 3481, 3482, 3876, 3913,3916, 3937, 3953, 3956, 3995-3997, 4009,4031, 4032, 4039-4042, 4045, 4054, 4074,4075, 4103, 4268, 4281, 4298, 4306, 4344,4346Children & youth, employee matching gifts 28, 67,1502, 2139, 2731, 3536, 4322Children & youth, environment 1247Children & youth, Ethnic/racial minorities, general3975, 4034Children & youth, food/nutrition/agriculture 2133Children & youth, health—general 2973, 2974,2980Children & youth, health—specific diseases 3986Children & youth, housing/shelter 3771, 4010Children & youth, human services—multipurpose67, 136, 162, 171, 175, 181, 202, 370, 371,410, 438, 452, 458, 518, 525, 865, <strong>11</strong>00,<strong>11</strong>02, 1241, 1250, 1322, 1344, 1371, 1416,1417, 1828, 2061, 2140, 2175, 2419, 2446,2449, 2455, 2460, 2680, 2731, 2934-2936,3215, 3226, 3357, 3413, 3713, 3771, 3785,3886, 3935, 3956, 3975, 3993, 4013, 4034,4037, 4040, 4044, 4048, 4049, 4165, 4281,4428, 4447, 4448, 4462, 4482Children & youth, Immigrants/refugees 67, 2731,2935, 2936Children & youth, internationalaffairs/development 2133, 2783, 2788, 3525,3878Children & youth, mental health/substance abuse67, 134, 170, 865, 1099, 1237, 1890, 1933,2446, 2731, 4281Children & youth, philanthropy/voluntarism 898Children & youth, recreation/sports/athletics 1371,1933, 3965, 3986Children & youth, safety/disaster relief 525, 1085,2973, 2980Children & youth, services 28, 67, 255, 375, 409,447, 452, 458, 525, 857, 865, 871, 872, 1213,1241, 1358, 1502, 1503, 1575, 1589, 1590,1613, 1638, 1752, 1834, 1935, 2042, 2061,2089, 2139, 2207, 2216, 2225, 2246, 2261,2264, 2284, 2341, 2407, 2432, 2438, 2439,2446, 2473, 2731, 2935, 2936, 3079, 3357,3413, 3440, 3536, 3713, 3886, 3935, 3975,3993, 4013, 4034, 4044, 4048, 4049, 4132,4281, 4321, 4322, 4447, 4448, 4462, 4514Children & youth, Victims and families,economically affected 1752, 3536Children & youth, Victims and families, injuredand deceased - Children 28, 255, 447, 452,1213, 1752, 1834, 1935, 2139, 2473, 3357,3536, 3886, 4281, 4321, 4322, 4462Children & youth, Victims and families, injuredand deceased - General 1752, 3536, 4281Children & youth, Victims and families, injuredand deceased - Uniformed service workersand fa 3886Children & youth, youth development 399, 452,1244, 2446, 3062, 3873, 4030Children, contribution 2332, 2393, 3727Children, day care 2332, 2393, 3727, 3771Children, education 3926, 3936, 3999Children, employee matching gifts 3771Children, health—general 1826Children, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Children 3771Children, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Uniformed service workers and fa3771Christian agencies & churches, contribution 44,570, 2203, 2247, 2308, 2329, 3673, 45<strong>11</strong>Christian agencies & churches, employeematching gifts 2120Circus arts, contribution 2818, 3708Civil liberties, advocacy 313, 1258, 1586, 1601,1799, 2617, 3307-3309, 3635, 4249, 4255,4257Civil liberties, contribution 313, 1258, 1586, 1601,1799, 2617, 3307-3309, 3319, 3635, 4241,4249, 4255, 4257Civil liberties, Economically disadvantaged 4257Civil liberties, Ethnic/racial minorities, general1601, 4257Civil liberties, first amendment 4241Civil liberties, Immigrants/refugees 4255Civil liberties, right to privacy 3319Civil liberties, Women 4257Civil rights, advocacy 428, 566, 1585, 1590, 1616,2633, 3130, 3227, 3325, 3644, 3645, 4196,4228, 4231, 4235, 4256, 4257Civil rights, Afghanistan 4210, 4477Civil rights, Asians/Pacific islanders 909, 919, 990,3139, 3181, 3199, 3223, 4217, 4218, 4221,4227, 4240, 4254Civil rights, Children & youth 4217Civil rights, conferences/seminars 3223Civil rights, contribution 298, 313, 315, 428, 555,566, 572, 589, 595, 599, 614, 909, 916, 919,931, 945, 946, 952, 1245, 1258, 1268, 1579,1582, 1585, 1590, 1616, 1621, 1799, 2097,2285, 2617, 2627, 2633, 2987, 3130, 3134,3139, 3176, 3178, 3181, 3190, 3307, 3308,3310, 33<strong>11</strong>, 3313, 3314, 3316, 3321, 3325,3329, 3331-3334, 3484, 3626, 3635, 3641,3644, 3645, 3662, 3728, 3731, 3754, 4133,4196, 4210, 4212, 4213, 4217-4219, 4221,4227, 4228, 4231, 4235, 4238, 4240, 4242,4245, 4254-4257, 4471, 4477Civil rights, disabled 2987Civil rights, Economically disadvantaged 1245,1776, 2285, 3181, 3199, 4228, 4231, 4257Civil rights, employee matching gifts 1256, 1776Civil rights, Ethnic/racial minorities, general 931,1776, 2285, 3227, 4196, 4228, 4235, 4257Civil rights, Ethnic/racial minorities, otherspecified group 909, 2627, 3227, 3484, 4213,4242, 4245, 4256Civil rights, gays/lesbians 589, 3754, 4238, 4245Civil rights, general support 990, 3199Civil rights, government agencies 595Civil rights, Hispanics/Latinos 3176, 3190, 4219Civil rights, immigrants 909, 931, 1256, 1268,1579, 1621, 2097, 2627, 3176, 3178, 3199,3310, 3314, 3316, 3321, 3333, 3334, 3484,4213, 4219, 4227, 4254, 4255Civil rights, Immigrants/refugees 990, 3190, 3227,4212, 4228, 4231, 4235, 4240, 4254Civil rights, Men 4242Civil rights, minorities 298, 315, 555, 599, 614,916, 919, 945, 946, 952, 990, 1582, 1776,2285, 3134, 3139, 3181, 3190, 33<strong>11</strong>, 3313,3329, 3331, 3332, 3626, 3641, 3728, 3731,4133, 4217, 4218, 4221, 4240, 4242, 4245,4254Civil rights, Pakistan 4212Civil rights, Peru 1616Civil rights, program development 3227Civil rights, public education 572, 3130, 3325Civil rights, single organization support 313,1258, 1799, 2617, 3307, 3308, 3635Civil rights, South Africa 3084Civil rights, Victims and families, economicallyaffected 3176, 3178, 3181, 3190, 3626Civil rights, women 1245, 3199, 3223, 3227,3662, 4196, 4210, 4212, 4257, 4471, 4477Civil rights, Youth/adolescents, female 3223College (community/junior), contribution 1360,2836, 2962, 3135, 3693College, contribution 727, 816, 1634, 2784, 3463,3898, 3921, 4334Community development, Affected businesses998, 999, 1003Community development, AfricanAmericans/Blacks 3914Community development, alliance 319Community development, Asians/Pacific islanders1373, 4220, 4276244


INDEX OF SUBJECTSCommunity development, business promotion385, 1003, 3828, 4<strong>11</strong>9, 4158, 4276Community development, Children & youth 136Community development, citizen coalitions 592,2201, 2252, 2301, 2430, 3140, 3182, 3189,3206, 3216, 3647, 3730, 3979, 4002, 4223Community development, contribution 100, 105,136, 296, 302, 308, 319, 323, 331, 385, 390,587, 592, 641, 761, 969, 1043, 1234, 1316,1357, 1367, 1373, 1546, 1560, 1578, 1593,1594, 1602, 1610, 1620, 1632, 1669, 1724,1737, 1866, 1871, 1948, 2065, 2101, 2201,2252, 2301, 2312, 2326, 2342, 2356, 2427,2430, 2464, 2670, 2824, 2893, 2971, 2991,2993, 3076, 3140, 3158, 3180, 3182, 3189,3195, 3247, 3290, 3332, 3395, 3450, 3510,3647, 3730, 3744, 3757, 3806, 3828, 3854,3864, 3874, 3914, 3927, 3938, 3948, 3979,3998, 4002, 4016, 4058, 4<strong>11</strong>9, 4158, 4220,4223, 4250, 4264, 4276, 4292, 4293, 4332,4368, 4386, 4516Community development, Economicallydisadvantaged 592, 1234, 1560, 1632, 1724,1737, 1871, 2464, 3182, 3201, 3206, 3216,3290, 3395, 3744, 3757, 3854, 3874, 3938,3948, 4002, 4058, 4223, 4332, 4368, 4386Community development, employee matchinggifts 96Community development, Ethnic/racial minorities,general 1234, 1724, 1737, 1871, 3201, 3216,3290, 3395, 3744, 3757, 3874, 3938, 4002,4332, 4368, 4386Community development, fund raising 390, 2670,4516Community development, general support 985,986, 988, 995, 998, 999, 1003, 3216Community development, Immigrants/refugees1560, 3182, 3201, 3216Community development, management/ technicalaid 998, 3201Community development, management/technicalaid 302, 323, 641, 3332Community development, neighborhoodassociations 3938, 3998Community development, neighborhooddevelopment 136, 319, 390, 587, 1367, 1373,1578, 1593, 1594, 1610, 1669, 1866, 2312,2326, 2342, 2356, 2427, 2464, 2824, 2893,3195, 3247, 3854, 3914, 3927, 3948, 4516Community development, program development3201, 3206, 3213Community development, public policy 1620,3180Community development, public/private ventures296, 1043, 2991, 4016Community development, research 1357Community development, seed money 3228Community development, service clubs 4292,4293Community development, single organizationsupport 3864Community development, small businesses 96,100, 761, 969, 985, 986, 988, 995, 998, 999,1234, 1316, 1546, 1560, 1632, 1724, 1737,1871, 1948, 2101, 2971, 2993, 3076, 3201,3213, 3228, 3290, 3395, 3450, 3510, 3744,3757, 3806, 3874, 4058, 4220, 4250, 4264,4332, 4368, 4386Community development, Victims and families,economically affected 969, 985, 986, 988,1234, 1546, 1632, 1724, 1737, 1871, 2993,3076, 3182, 3195, 3290, 3395, 3744, 3757,3806, 3874, 3914, 3927, 3938, 3948, 3998,4158, 4220, 4223, 4250, 4332, 4368, 4386Community development, Victims and families,injured and deceased - General 1632, 3195Community development, volunteer services 105,308, 331, 3158Community development, Women 988, 2065,3201, 3206, 3213, 3216, 3228, 4002, 4223Community development, womens clubs 2065Community improvement/development, Japan3029Computer science, contribution 3827Crime/abuse victims, arts/culture/humanities 496Crime/abuse victims, civil rights 72, 4234Crime/abuse victims, communityimprovement/development 60, 864, 2148,2955, 4326Crime/abuse victims, crime/courts/legal services162, 2234, 2495, 3200, 3221, 3226, 3520,4234, 4474Crime/abuse victims, education 2140, 2142, 2173,2446, 2653, 2654, 3126Crime/abuse victims, employment 2495, 3717Crime/abuse victims, health—general 1806, 1807,2127Crime/abuse victims, humanservices—multipurpose 60, 72, 161, 162,168, 171, 175, 181, 235, 453, 864, 1017,1018, 1276, 1277, 1496, 1806, 1807, 2054,2123, 2125, 2127, 2138, 2140, 2142, 2145,2148, 2155, 2156, 2173, 2446, 2495, 2653,2654, 2760, 2774, 2775, 2955, 3019, 3126,3209, 3221, 3226, 3347, 3356, 3717, 4234,4326, 4474, 4532Crime/abuse victims, mental health/substanceabuse 72, 453, 1277, 1806, 1807, 2054,2123, 2127, 2446, 3209, 3717, 4532Crime/abuse victims, recreation/sports/athletics3200Crime/abuse victims, safety/disaster relief 60, 235,496, 644, 864, 963, 1045, 2148, 2684, 2685,2764, 2955, 3068, 3423, 3520, 3724, 3901,4326Crime/abuse victims, youth development 2446Crime/courts/legal services, Belgium 2629Crime/courts/legal services, Peru 1616Crime/law enforcement, association 3306, 3335,3406Crime/law enforcement, contribution 223, 514,559, <strong>11</strong>70, 1281, 1709, 1738, 1818, 1924,2046, 2057, 2409, 2429, 2621, 2629, 2646,3085, 3150, 3270, 3274, 3306, 3316, 3335,3406, 3520, 3644, 3645, 4015, 4082, 4466Crime/law enforcement, counterterrorism 1738,2046, 2057, 2621, 2629, 2646, 4015Crime/law enforcement, Crime/abuse victims3520Crime/law enforcement, equal rights 3316Crime/law enforcement, fund raising 1281, 1709Crime/law enforcement, general support 3167Crime/law enforcement, government agencies2409Crime/law enforcement, police agencies 223, 514,<strong>11</strong>70, 1709, 1818, 1924, 3085, 3167, 3270,3274, 4015, 4082, 4466Crime/law enforcement, public education 4082Crime/law enforcement, public policy 559, 3150Crime/law enforcement, research 3150, 3644,3645Crime/law enforcement, single organizationsupport 2429Crime/law enforcement, Victims and families,injured and deceased - Uniformed serviceworkers and fa 223, 514, 1281, 1924, 4082Crime/violence prevention, contribution 512, 571,572, 2258, 4224Crime/violence prevention, Crime/abuse victims3200Crime/violence prevention, Ethnic/racialminorities, general 3200Crime/violence prevention, general support 3200Crime/violence prevention, Women 3200Crisis services, contribution 2237, 2239, 2371,2400, 2413, 2414Crisis services, hot-lines 2237, 2371, 2413, 2414Crisis services, rape victim services 2239, 2400Czech Republic, food/nutrition/agriculture 3093Czech Republic, international affairs/development3093Dance, Asians/Pacific islanders 1373Dance, contribution 155, 745, 747, 759, 774, 781,789, 807, 844, 1373, 1386, 2576, 2804,2839, 2841, 2843, 2899, 3059Dental care, contribution 563-565, 2416, 3517Direct financial aid/cash assistance, Children &youth 410, 1250, 1322, 2455, 2680, 2934,3785, 4165, 4428, 4482Direct financial aid/cash assistance, contribution2, 3, 6-9, <strong>11</strong>, 12, 16, 19, 78, 79, 83-88, 91,92, 95, 97-99, 101, 109, <strong>11</strong>0, <strong>11</strong>5, 122, 178,189, 193, 195, 203, 205, 209, 2<strong>11</strong>, 214, 216,218, 219, 225, 230-232, 238, 240, 243, 244,251-254, 259, 265, 269, 273, 279, 282-284,286, 332, 343, 346, 348, 350-353, 355,359-361, 363, 368, 369, 382, 383, 386, 392,393, 398, 404, 405, 410, 4<strong>11</strong>, 415-420,422-424, 426, 427, 429-431, 433-437,440-443, 451, 457, 459, 464, 466, 468, 469,471, 472, 475, 481-483, 486-488, 490,492-495, 504, 506, 507, 515, 517, 520, 521,523, 526, 527, 530, 531, 534, 537, 539-541,544-546, 548, 554, 561, 642, 643, 645, 651,653, 655, 657, 658, 663, 668, 689, 692, 695,697, 858, 878-882, 889-892, 894, 895, 897,900-903, 949, 950, 964, 966, 970, 972, 974,975, 977-979, 983, 984, 1007, 1008, 1013,1014, 1020-1026, 1033, 1035, 1037, 1039,1041, 1046-1049, 1051, 1054-1061, 1064,1088, 1090, 1095, <strong>11</strong>13, <strong>11</strong>15, <strong>11</strong>16, <strong>11</strong>19,<strong>11</strong>20, <strong>11</strong>22-<strong>11</strong>28, <strong>11</strong>30-<strong>11</strong>32, <strong>11</strong>34, <strong>11</strong>35,<strong>11</strong>37-<strong>11</strong>42, <strong>11</strong>49-<strong>11</strong>52, <strong>11</strong>54-<strong>11</strong>56, <strong>11</strong>58,<strong>11</strong>59, <strong>11</strong>62, <strong>11</strong>73-<strong>11</strong>77, <strong>11</strong>79-<strong>11</strong>82, <strong>11</strong>84,<strong>11</strong>87, <strong>11</strong>91, <strong>11</strong>99-1204, 1207, 1210, 12<strong>11</strong>,1222-1224, 1226, 1228, 1230-1232, 1235,1236, 1254, 1255, 1257, 1270, 1273, 1274,1279, 1282, 1285-1289, 1291, 1296-1299,1301, 1303-1306, 1308, 1322, 1324, 1335,1338, 1339, 1345, 1349, 1350, 1400,1404-1406, 1408, 1410-1412, 1425, 1426,1431, 1433-1435, 1445, 1446, 1448-1451,1455, 1458-1460, 1464, 1477, 1479, 1485,1488, 1492, 1495, 1498, 1510, 1513-1515,1518, 1519, 1522, 1523, 1525, 1532, 1533,1538-1541, 1544, 1547, 1549-1551, 1553,1554, 1557, 1559, 1563, 1565-1569, 1573,1574, 1622, 1623, 1642, 1648-1650, 1652,1654, 1656, 1657, 1662, 1665, 1667, 1672,1673, 1678, 1680, 1682, 1684, 1689, 1690,1693, 1698-1700, 1705, 1706, 1708,17<strong>11</strong>-1714, 1716-1718, 1720, 1723, 1725,1726, 1729, 1731, 1732, 1735, 1736, 1740,1741, 1746, 1747, 1750, 1755, 1758, 1760,1761, 1765, 1773, 1774, 1778, 1782-1785,1789, 1790, 1793, 1798, 1800, 1802, 1813,1814, 1819-1823, 1825, 1832, 1833, 1835,1836, 1838, 1841-1843, 1850, 1874, 1877,1879, 1881, 1884, 1886-1888, 1891, 1898,1900, 1904-1906, 1909-19<strong>11</strong>, 1914, 1915,1920, 1927, 1951-1954, 1958, 1960, 1961,1966, 1968, 1969, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1976,1979, 1981, 1983, 1985-1987, 1989-1991,1994, 1997, 1998, 20<strong>11</strong>, 2013-2015,2058-2060, 2066, 2068, 2070-2072, 2079,2105, 2108, 2<strong>11</strong>1, 2158, 2168, 2180,2182-2184, 2186, 2187, 2441, 2442, 2447,2448, 2457, 2466, 2470, 2471, 2474, 2475,2486, 2487, 2489, 2490, 2492, 2494, 2513,2515, 2516, 2520, 2524-2526, 2528, 2529,2533, 2535, 2539, 2543, 2597-2601, 2604,2606, 2608, 2609, 2647-2649, 2652, 2657,2659, 2663, 2667, 2668, 2673, 2674, 2676,2680, 2681, 2683, 2688, 2694, 2701,2704-2706, 2708, 2709, 2735, 2736, 2741,2742, 2745, 2768, 2769, 2772, 2778, 2786,2934, 2937-2942, 2944, 2946, 2947,2956-2960, 2972, 2996, 2998, 3004, 3005,30<strong>11</strong>, 3012, 3014, 3017, 3018, 3020-3026,3028, 3030, 3032, 3033, 3037-3039,3044-3046, 3049, 3050, 3056, 3058, 3067,3070, 3073, 3074, 3092, 3097, 3101, 3102,3104, 3106, 3<strong>11</strong>1, 3<strong>11</strong>3, 3<strong>11</strong>5, 3<strong>11</strong>8, 3<strong>11</strong>9,3122, 3123, 3128, 3160, 3165, 3194, 3196,3232, 3234-3236, 3254, 3257, 3260, 3261,3265, 3273, 3276, 3280, 3283, 3285, 3286,3288, 3291, 3294, 3303-3305, 3339, 3345,3353, 3354, 3360-3368, 3370-3372,3377-3379, 3381, 3382, 3384, 3385, 3389,3393, 3394, 3402, 3403, 3415, 3416, 3419,245


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE3427, 3429, 3439, 3444, 3465, 3466, 3468,3470-3476, 3478, 3479, 3485, 3488, 3489,3493-3495, 3501-3504, 35<strong>11</strong>, 3514, 3518,3522, 3523, 3532, 3533, 3535, 3537, 3541,3546, 3548, 3559, 3562, 3566-3569, 3574,3576, 3577, 3579-3581, 3584, 3585, 3590,3591, 3597, 3601, 3603, 3608, 3609, 3678,3679, 3683, 3684, 3687-3689, 3691, 3692,3696, 3701, 3706, 3710, 37<strong>11</strong>, 3714, 3734,3738, 3741, 3745-3747, 3749, 3751-3753,3758, 3760, 3766, 3772, 3775, 3779,3781-3785, 3787, 3788, 3790, 3793, 3795,3798-3800, 3802-3804, 3829, 3843,3845-3848, 3869, 3877, 3880, 3882, 3883,3885, 3887, 3888, 3890, 3892-3896, 3899,3904, 3906, 39<strong>11</strong>, 4014, 4077, 4079,4083-4087, 4090, 4093-4095, 4097, 4099,4101, 4107, 4<strong>11</strong>1, 4<strong>11</strong>4, 4124, 4127, 4131,4149-4152, 4156, 4159, 4160, 4165, 4168,4191, 4192, 4198-4200, 4202-4205, 4207,4263, 4266, 4269-4271, 4275, 4278, 4280,4282, 4285, 4286, 4288, 4291, 4300-4302,4305, 4308, 4315, 4316, 4318, 4320, 4323,4327, 4331, 4335, 4338-4341, 4343, 4348,4352-4356, 4358-4360, 4362-4364, 4370,4376-4380, 4382-4385, 4420-4422,4425-4428, 4430-4432, 4434, 4435,4439-4442, 4455, 4456, 4461, 4482-4484,4486, 4489, 4525-4528, 4530, 4534, 4536,4538-4542Direct financial aid/cash assistance, Economicallydisadvantaged 1716, 2157, 2455, 3546, 4271Direct financial aid/cash assistance, employeematching gifts 18, 21, 22, 30, 32, 33, 38, 57,68-70, 80, 81, 90, 102, 191, 206, 210, 212,215, 229, 258, 276, 280, 285, 287-292, 354,364, 367, 432, 460, 508, 528, 538, 654, 691,887, 965, 968, 976, 1005, 1042, 1098, <strong>11</strong>44,1214, 1225, 1250, 1300, 1302, 1413, 1427,1453, 1454, 1570-1572, 1671, 1694, 1703,1715, 1727, 1728, 1730, 1748, 1775, 1815,1824, 1830, 1892, 1894, 1901-1903, 1907,1916-1918, 1923, 1946, 1971, 1978, 1980,1995, 2010, 2067, 2<strong>11</strong>4, 2149, 2151, 2152,2157, 2167, 2455, 2481, 2482, 2493, 2514,2531, 2594, 2602, 2605, 2607, 2686, 2687,2734, 2744, 2770, 2933, 3002, 3120, 3124,3238, 3253, 3277, 3391, 3392, 3434, 3436,3458, 3480, 3490, 3512, 3515, 3528, 3534,3564, 3682, 3705, 3715, 3720, 3725, 3742,3743, 3767, 3768, 3773, 3789, 3905, 4051,4052, 4078, 4104, 4106, 4125, 4126, 4128,4162, 4164, 4169, 4178, 4193, 4319, 4336,4347, 4361, 4429, 4436Direct financial aid/cash assistance, Ethnic/racialminorities, general 1716Direct financial aid/cash assistance, generalsupport 3173, 3680Direct financial aid/cash assistance,Immigrants/refugees 1716Direct financial aid/cash assistance,Military/veterans 2539Direct financial aid/cash assistance, Relief andrecovery workers/volunteers 3, <strong>11</strong>, 12, 19, 21,22, 33, 57, 80, 83-86, 91, 95, 97, 99, 102,122, 193, 195, 205, 206, 2<strong>11</strong>, 212, 215, 216,219, 229, 231, 232, 238, 244, 269, 276, 279,280, 282-291, 343, 352, 354, 355, 367, 368,392, 393, 418, 424, 430-432, 435, 437, 457,459, 460, 471, 475, 481, 486, 487, 506-508,517, 539-541, 548, 645, 651, 655, 691, 692,697, 858, 879-882, 887, 894, 897, 976, 978,979, 983, 1005, 1013, 1033, 1039, 1041,1042, 1047, 1051, 1090, 1098, <strong>11</strong>22, <strong>11</strong>34,<strong>11</strong>36, <strong>11</strong>52, <strong>11</strong>56, <strong>11</strong>73, <strong>11</strong>75, <strong>11</strong>81, <strong>11</strong>99,1210, 1214, 1222, 1224-1226, 1228, 1230,1255, 1257, 1270, 1273, 1274, 1299-1301,1303-1305, 1349, 1408, 1412, 1426, 1427,1431, 1445, 1448, 1449, 1451, 1453, 1479,1485, 1523, 1540, 1541, 1547, 1567,1570-1572, 1642, 1654, 1672, 1673, 1678,1682, 1689, 1690, 1698, 1703, 1708,17<strong>11</strong>-1715, 1717, 1718, 1720, 1727, 1732,1747, 1748, 1750, 1783, 1790, 1813, 1820,1822, 1850, 1892, 1900, 1901, 1903, 1904,1906, 1907, 1909, 1910, 1916, 1918, 1946,1951, 1952, 1954, 1958, 1968, 1971-1973,1976, 1978, 1983, 1985, 1989-1991, 1997,2010, 2013, 2014, 2059, 2067, 2068, 2070,2108, 2<strong>11</strong>4, 2180, 2182, 2441, 2474, 2481,2494, 2520, 2524, 2526, 2531, 2594, 2601,2602, 2605, 2606, 2609, 2647, 2649, 2657,2659, 2663, 2668, 2683, 2686, 2701, 2708,2709, 2734, 2736, 2741, 2744, 2745, 2933,2937-2942, 2972, 3002, 3004, 30<strong>11</strong>, 3012,3018, 3021, 3024, 3025, 3030, 3032, 3039,3067, 3070, 3097, 3104, 3<strong>11</strong>5, 3<strong>11</strong>9, 3120,3194, 3238, 3254, 3261, 3277, 3280, 3283,3286, 3288, 3304, 3305, 3339, 3371, 3372,3378, 3379, 3389, 3391, 3403, 3419, 3436,3439, 3466, 3468, 3470, 3472, 3478, 3489,3493, 3518, 3528, 3532, 3548, 3559, 3562,3564, 3568, 3576, 3590, 3682, 3683, 3687,3701, 37<strong>11</strong>, 3715, 3738, 3742, 3746, 3749,3773, 3783, 3787, 3793, 3802, 3848, 3880,3883, 3888, 3896, 3904, 3905, 4078, 4079,4083, 4086, 4095, 4099, 4104, 4125-4128,4131, 4150-4152, 4156, 4159, 4160, 4162,4178, 4193, 4198, 4203, 4269, 4270, 4275,4280, 4288, 4308, 4315, 4316, 4318, 4319,4323, 4327, 4339, 4343, 4347, 4348, 4359,4360, 4370, 4376-4378, 4380, 4382, 4420,4427, 4430-4432, 4439, 4440, 4483, 4489,4526, 4528, 4530, 4538Direct financial aid/cash assistance, unspecifiedsupport <strong>11</strong>36Direct financial aid/cash assistance, Victims andfamilies, economically affected 3, 6-9, <strong>11</strong>, 12,16, 18, 19, 21, 22, 30, 32, 33, 57, 69, 70,79-81, 83-88, 90-92, 95, 97, 99, 101, 102,<strong>11</strong>5, 122, 178, 189, 191, 193, 195, 203, 205,206, 209-212, 214-216, 218, 219, 229-232,238, 240, 243, 244, 251, 252, 254, 258, 259,265, 269, 276, 279, 280, 282-292, 332, 343,346, 348, 351-355, 360, 361, 363, 364,367-369, 383, 386, 392, 393, 398, 404, 4<strong>11</strong>,415, 417-420, 422, 424, 427, 429-437, 440,441, 443, 451, 457, 459, 460, 464, 466, 468,469, 471, 472, 475, 481-483, 486-488,492-494, 504, 506-508, 515, 517, 520, 521,523, 526-528, 531, 534, 537-541, 544-546,548, 561, 642, 643, 645, 651, 653, 655, 658,668, 689, 691, 692, 695, 697, 858, 878-882,887, 890-892, 894, 895, 897, 900-902, 949,964-966, 968, 970, 974-979, 983, 984, 1005,1007, 1013, 1020-1026, 1033, 1035, 1037,1039, 1041, 1042, 1046, 1047, 1049, 1051,1054-1061, 1090, 1095, 1098, <strong>11</strong>13, <strong>11</strong>15,<strong>11</strong>16, <strong>11</strong>19, <strong>11</strong>20, <strong>11</strong>22-<strong>11</strong>28, <strong>11</strong>30, <strong>11</strong>31,<strong>11</strong>34-<strong>11</strong>42, <strong>11</strong>44, <strong>11</strong>49-<strong>11</strong>52, <strong>11</strong>54-<strong>11</strong>56,<strong>11</strong>58, <strong>11</strong>59, <strong>11</strong>62, <strong>11</strong>73-<strong>11</strong>77, <strong>11</strong>79-<strong>11</strong>82,<strong>11</strong>84, <strong>11</strong>87, <strong>11</strong>99-1204, 1207, 1210, 12<strong>11</strong>,1214, 1222-1226, 1228, 1230-1232, 1236,1254, 1255, 1257, 1270, 1273, 1274, 1279,1282, 1287-1289, 1291, 1299-1306, 1308,1335, 1338, 1339, 1345, 1349, 1350, 1400,1404-1406, 1408, 1410-1413, 1425-1427,1431, 1433-1435, 1445, 1446, 1448-1451,1453-1455, 1458, 1459, 1477, 1479, 1485,1488, 1492, 1495, 1498, 1510, 1513, 1515,1518, 1519, 1522, 1523, 1533, 1538-1541,1547, 1550, 1557, 1565-1568, 1570-1573,1622, 1623, 1642, 1648-1650, 1652, 1654,1656, 1657, 1665, 1671-1673, 1678, 1680,1682, 1684, 1689, 1690, 1693, 1694,1698-1700, 1703, 1708, 17<strong>11</strong>-1718, 1720,1723, 1725, 1727, 1731, 1732, 1741,1746-1748, 1750, 1755, 1758, 1760, 1765,1773, 1774, 1778, 1783, 1785, 1789, 1790,1793, 1798, 1800, 1802, 1813-1815,1819-1825, 1830, 1832, 1833, 1835, 1836,1838, 1841-1843, 1850, 1879, 1881,1886-1888, 1891, 1892, 1894, 1898,1900-1907, 1909-19<strong>11</strong>, 1914-1918, 1920,1923, 1927, 1946, 1951-1954, 1958, 1960,1961, 1966, 1968, 1969, 1971-1973, 1975,1976, 1978-1981, 1983, 1985, 1986,1989-1991, 1994, 1995, 1997, 1998, 2010,20<strong>11</strong>, 2013-2015, 2058-2060, 2066-2068,2070, 2071, 2079, 2105, 2108, 2<strong>11</strong>4, 2149,2180, 2182-2184, 2186, 2187, 2441, 2442,2447, 2448, 2471, 2474, 2475, 2481, 2482,2487, 2489, 2492-2494, 2513-2515, 2520,2524-2526, 2528, 2529, 2531, 2535, 2543,2594, 2597-2602, 2604-2609, 2647-2649,2652, 2657, 2659, 2663, 2667, 2668, 2674,2676, 2681, 2683, 2686-2688, 2701, 2704,2706, 2708, 2709, 2734-2736, 2741, 2744,2745, 2769, 2770, 2778, 2933, 2937-2942,2944, 2956-2960, 2972, 2998, 3002, 3004,30<strong>11</strong>, 3012, 3014, 3018, 3020-3026, 3030,3032, 3033, 3038, 3039, 3044, 3045, 3056,3070, 3092, 3097, 3101, 3102, 3104, 3106,3<strong>11</strong>1, 3<strong>11</strong>3, 3<strong>11</strong>5, 3<strong>11</strong>8-3120, 3122, 3128,3160, 3194, 3232, 3235, 3236, 3238, 3253,3254, 3257, 3260, 3261, 3265, 3273, 3276,3277, 3280, 3283, 3286, 3288, 3291, 3294,3303-3305, 3339, 3345, 3353, 3360-3368,3370-3372, 3378, 3379, 3384, 3385, 3389,3391-3394, 3403, 3415, 3416, 3419, 3429,3434, 3436, 3439, 3444, 3458, 3465, 3466,3468, 3470-3476, 3478-3480, 3485,3488-3490, 3493, 3494, 3501, 3503, 35<strong>11</strong>,3512, 3518, 3522, 3523, 3528, 3532-3535,3537, 3541, 3546, 3548, 3559, 3562, 3564,3566-3569, 3574, 3576, 3577, 3579-3581,3585, 3590, 3591, 3597, 3601, 3603, 3608,3609, 3678-3680, 3682-3684, 3687-3689,3691, 3692, 3696, 3701, 3705, 3706, 3710,37<strong>11</strong>, 3714, 3715, 3720, 3734, 3738,3741-3743, 3745-3747, 3749, 3751-3753,3758, 3766-3768, 3772, 3773, 3775, 3781,3783, 3784, 3787, 3789, 3790, 3793, 3798,3800, 3802, 3803, 3829, 3843, 3845, 3846,3848, 3869, 3880, 3882, 3883, 3885, 3887,3888, 3890, 3892-3896, 3899, 3904, 3905,39<strong>11</strong>, 4051, 4052, 4077-4079, 4083, 4086,4087, 4090, 4093-4095, 4097, 4099, 4101,4104, 4106, 4107, 4<strong>11</strong>1, 4<strong>11</strong>4, 4124-4128,4131, 4149-4152, 4156, 4159, 4160, 4162,4164, 4168, 4169, 4178, 4191, 4193, 4198,4199, 4202-4205, 4207, 4263, 4269-4271,4275, 4280, 4282, 4285, 4286, 4288, 4291,4302, 4305, 4308, 4315, 4316, 4318-4320,4323, 4327, 4331, 4335, 4336, 4338-4341,4343, 4347, 4348, 4352-4356, 4359-4361,4363, 4364, 4370, 4376-4380, 4382, 4383,4385, 4420-4422, 4425-4427, 4430-4432,4436, 4439-4442, 4455, 4456, 4461, 4483,4484, 4489, 4525, 4526, 4528, 4530, 4534,4536, 4538-4542Direct financial aid/cash assistance, Victims andfamilies, injured and deceased - Uniformedservice workers and fa 2, 3, 6-9, <strong>11</strong>, 12, 16,18, 19, 21, 22, 30, 32, 33, 38, 57, 68-70,78-81, 83-88, 90-92, 95, 97-99, 101, 102,109, <strong>11</strong>0, <strong>11</strong>0, <strong>11</strong>5, 122, 178, 189, 191, 193,195, 203, 205, 206, 209-212, 214-216, 218,219, 225, 225, 229-232, 238, 240, 243, 244,251-254, 258, 259, 265, 269, 273, 276, 279,280, 282-292, 332, 343, 346, 348, 350-355,359-361, 363, 364, 367-369, 382, 383, 386,392, 393, 398, 404, 405, 410, 410, 4<strong>11</strong>,415-420, 422-424, 426, 427, 429-437,440-443, 451, 457, 459, 460, 464, 466, 468,469, 471, 472, 475, 481-483, 486-488, 490,492-495, 495, 504, 506-508, 515, 517, 520,521, 523, 526-528, 530, 531, 534, 537-541,544-546, 548, 554, 561, 642, 643, 645, 651,653-655, 657, 658, 663, 663, 668, 689, 691,692, 695, 697, 858, 878-882, 887, 889-892,894, 895, 897, 900-902, 902, 903, 949, 950,950, 964-966, 968, 970, 972, 974-979, 983,984, 1005, 1007, 1008, 1013, 1014,1020-1026, 1033, 1035, 1037, 1039, 1041,1042, 1046, 1047, 1049, 1051, 1054-1061,1064, 1088, 1090, 1095, 1098, <strong>11</strong>13, <strong>11</strong>15,<strong>11</strong>16, <strong>11</strong>19, <strong>11</strong>20, <strong>11</strong>22-<strong>11</strong>28, <strong>11</strong>30-<strong>11</strong>32,<strong>11</strong>34-<strong>11</strong>42, <strong>11</strong>44, <strong>11</strong>49-<strong>11</strong>51, <strong>11</strong>51, <strong>11</strong>52,<strong>11</strong>54-<strong>11</strong>56, <strong>11</strong>58, <strong>11</strong>59, <strong>11</strong>62, <strong>11</strong>73-<strong>11</strong>77,<strong>11</strong>79-<strong>11</strong>82, <strong>11</strong>84, <strong>11</strong>87, <strong>11</strong>91, <strong>11</strong>99-1204,1207, 1210, 12<strong>11</strong>, 1214, 1222-1226, 1228,246


INDEX OF SUBJECTS1230-1232, 1235, 1236, 1250, 1250, 1254,1255, 1257, 1270, 1273, 1274, 1279, 1282,1285, 1285, 1286, 1286-1289, 1291,1296-1298, 1298-1306, 1308, 1322, 1322,1324, 1324, 1335, 1338, 1339, 1345, 1349,1350, 1400, 1404-1406, 1408, 1410-1413,1425-1427, 1431, 1433-1435, 1445, 1446,1448-1451, 1453-1455, 1458-1460, 1460,1464, 1477, 1479, 1485, 1488, 1492, 1495,1498, 1510, 1513-1515, 1518, 1519, 1522,1523, 1525, 1532, 1533, 1538-1541, 1544,1547, 1549-1551, 1553, 1554, 1557, 1559,1559, 1563, 1565-1574, 1622, 1623, 1642,1648-1650, 1652, 1654, 1656, 1657, 1662,1665, 1667, 1671-1673, 1678, 1680, 1682,1684, 1689, 1690, 1693, 1694, 1698-1700,1703, 1705, 1706, 1708, 17<strong>11</strong>-1715, 1717,1718, 1720, 1723, 1725-1732, 1735, 1736,1740, 1740, 1741, 1746-1748, 1750, 1755,1758, 1760, 1761, 1765, 1773-1775, 1778,1782-1785, 1789, 1790, 1793, 1798, 1800,1802, 1813-1815, 1819-1825, 1830, 1832,1833, 1835, 1836, 1838, 1841-1843, 1850,1874, 1877, 1879, 1881, 1884, 1884,1886-1888, 1891, 1892, 1894, 1898,1900-1907, 1909-19<strong>11</strong>, 1914-1918, 1920,1923, 1927, 1946, 1951-1954, 1958, 1960,1961, 1966, 1968, 1969, 1971-1973, 1975,1976, 1978-1981, 1983, 1985-1987,1989-1991, 1994, 1995, 1997, 1998, 2010,20<strong>11</strong>, 2013-2015, 2058-2060, 2066-2068,2070-2072, 2079, 2105, 2108, 2<strong>11</strong>1, 2<strong>11</strong>1,2<strong>11</strong>4, 2149, 2151, 2151, 2152, 2152, 2157,2157, 2158, 2158, 2167, 2168, 2180,2182-2184, 2186, 2187, 2441, 2442, 2447,2448, 2455, 2455, 2457, 2466, 2470, 2471,2474, 2475, 2481, 2482, 2486, 2487, 2489,2490, 2492-2494, 2513-2516, 2520,2524-2526, 2528, 2529, 2531, 2533, 2535,2539, 2543, 2594, 2597-2602, 2604-2609,2647-2649, 2652, 2657, 2659, 2663, 2667,2668, 2673, 2673, 2674, 2676, 2680, 2680,2681, 2683, 2686-2688, 2694, 2701,2704-2706, 2708, 2709, 2734-2736, 2741,2742, 2744, 2745, 2768-2770, 2772, 2772,2778, 2786, 2933, 2934, 2934, 2937-2942,2944, 2946, 2946, 2947, 2947, 2956-2960,2972, 2996, 2998, 3002, 3004, 3005, 3005,30<strong>11</strong>, 3012, 3014, 3017, 3018, 3020-3026,3028, 3030, 3032, 3033, 3037-3039,3044-3046, 3046, 3049, 3050, 3050, 3056,3058, 3067, 3067, 3070, 3073, 3074, 3092,3097, 3101, 3102, 3104, 3106, 3<strong>11</strong>1, 3<strong>11</strong>3,3<strong>11</strong>5, 3<strong>11</strong>8-3120, 3122, 3123, 3123, 3124,3124, 3128, 3160, 3165, 3165, 3173, 3194,3196, 3196, 3232, 3234-3236, 3238, 3253,3254, 3257, 3260, 3261, 3265, 3273, 3276,3277, 3280, 3283, 3285, 3286, 3288, 3291,3294, 3303-3305, 3339, 3345, 3353, 3354,3360-3368, 3370-3372, 3377, 3377-3379,3381, 3382, 3384, 3385, 3389, 3391-3393,3393, 3394, 3402, 3403, 3415, 3416, 3416,3419, 3427, 3427, 3429, 3429, 3434, 3436,3439, 3444, 3458, 3465, 3466, 3468,3470-3476, 3478-3480, 3485, 3488-3490,3493-3495, 3495, 3501-3504, 35<strong>11</strong>, 3512,3514, 3515, 3518, 3522, 3523, 3528,3532-3535, 3537, 3541, 3546, 3548, 3559,3562, 3564, 3566-3569, 3574, 3576, 3577,3579-3581, 3584, 3585, 3590, 3591, 3597,3601, 3603, 3603, 3608, 3609, 3678-3680,3682-3684, 3687-3689, 3691, 3692, 3696,3701, 3705, 3706, 3710, 37<strong>11</strong>, 3714, 3715,3720, 3725, 3734, 3738, 3741-3743,3745-3747, 3749, 3751-3753, 3758, 3760,3766-3768, 3772, 3773, 3775, 3779,3781-3785, 3785, 3787-3790, 3793, 3795,3795, 3798-3800, 3802-3804, 3829, 3843,3845-3848, 3869, 3877, 3880, 3882, 3883,3885, 3887, 3888, 3890, 3892-3896, 3899,3904-3906, 3906, 39<strong>11</strong>, 4014, 4051, 4052,4077-4079, 4083-4087, 4090, 4093-4095,4097, 4099, 4101, 4104, 4106, 4107, 4<strong>11</strong>1,4<strong>11</strong>4, 4124-4128, 4131, 4149-4152, 4156,4159, 4160, 4162, 4164, 4165, 4165, 4168,4169, 4178, 4191-4193, 4198-4200,4202-4205, 4207, 4263, 4266, 4269-4271,4275, 4278, 4280, 4282, 4285, 4286, 4288,4291, 4300-4302, 4305, 4308, 4315, 4316,4318-4320, 4323, 4327, 4331, 4335, 4336,4338-4341, 4343, 4347, 4348, 4352-4356,4358-4362, 4362-4364, 4370, 4376-4380,4382-4385, 4420-4422, 4425-4428, 4428,4429, 4429-4432, 4434, 4434-4436,4439-4442, 4455, 4456, 4461, 4482,4482-4484, 4486, 4489, 4525-4528, 4530,4534, 4536, 4538-4542Direct financial aid/cash assistance, Women <strong>11</strong>0,225, 410, 495, 663, 950, 1250, 1285, 1286,1298, 1322, 1324, 1460, 1559, 1884, 2<strong>11</strong>1,2151, 2152, 2158, 2673, 2680, 2772, 2934,2946, 2947, 3005, 3046, 3050, 3123, 3124,3165, 3196, 3377, 3427, 3495, 3785, 3795,3906, 4165, 4362, 4428, 4429, 4482Disabled, general, civil rights 2988Disabled, general, employment 3970Disabled, general, food/nutrition/agriculture 321,2343, 3945Disabled, general, human services—multipurpose160, 1542, 2419Disabled, general, safety/disaster relief 2988Disasters, Asians/Pacific islanders 883Disasters, Blind & vision impaired 3980Disasters, Children & youth 525, 1085, 2973,2980Disasters, civil defense 349, 473, 2028, 2034,2035, 2039, 2045, 2057, 3815, 3951Disasters, contribution 1, 7, 8, 10, 14, 45, 87, 89,92, 105, 108, <strong>11</strong>5, <strong>11</strong>6, 120, 197-200, 213,224, 226, 227, 234, 235, 238, 243, 246, 265,266, 277, 278, 294, 295, 297, 316, 356, 362,365, 374, 376, 385, 388, 403, 406-408, 415,425, 436, 439, 446, 451, 454, 462, 473, 478,496, 499, 503, 515, 524, 525, 529, 536, 542,543, 546, 644, 646-648, 652, 668-671, 673,690, 693, 696, 859, 864, 883-886, 893, 899,912, 928, 949, 963, 980, 1009, 1015, 1027,1029-1031, 1045, 1050, 1052, 1053,1061-1063, 1065, 1066, 1068-1070,1073-1078, 1080, 1082, 1084-1087, 1089,1097, <strong>11</strong>14, <strong>11</strong>17, <strong>11</strong>21, <strong>11</strong>23, <strong>11</strong>24, <strong>11</strong>29,<strong>11</strong>37, <strong>11</strong>43, <strong>11</strong>46, <strong>11</strong>54, <strong>11</strong>57, <strong>11</strong>61-<strong>11</strong>63,<strong>11</strong>68, <strong>11</strong>69, <strong>11</strong>71, <strong>11</strong>74, <strong>11</strong>76, <strong>11</strong>85, <strong>11</strong>90,<strong>11</strong>92-<strong>11</strong>98, 1203, 1206, 1215, 1271, 1280,1289, 1295, 1307, 1310, 1312, 1333, 1336,1337, 1343, 1390, 1392, 1403, 1438, 1456,1457, 1463, 1468, 1469, 1472, 1475, 1491,1508, 15<strong>11</strong>, 1529, 1533, 1534, 1537, 1555,1622, 1645, 1647, 1652, 1661, 1681, 1686,1687, 1702, 1707, 1739, 1741-1745, 1751,1752, 1756, 1763, 1764, 1766, 1778, 1779,1792, 1793, 1795, 1808, 1817, 1827, 1833,1844, 1845, 1876, 1878, 1883, 1886, 1888,1889, 1898, 1926, 1938, 1963, 1964, 1982,1999, 2000, 2009, 2028, 2034, 2035, 2039,2045, 2053, 2057, 2073, 2083, 2084, 2105,2<strong>11</strong>0, 2150, 2170, 2420, 2456, 2459, 2472,2479, 2483, 2484, 2491, 2503, 2512, 2515,2527, 2529, 2530, 2535-2537, 2593, 2595,2596, 2600, 2610, 2614, 2616, 2618,2650-2652, 2658, 2665, 2675, 2679, 2684,2685, 2693, 2703, 2706, 2726, 2764, 2945,2948-2955, 2961, 2973, 2979, 2980, 2982,2988, 2989, 2995, 3001, 3027, 3031,3034-3036, 3041-3043, 3047, 3054, 3068,3080, 3085, 3088, 3094, 3096, 3098-3101,3103, 3107, 3<strong>11</strong>2, 3<strong>11</strong>6, 3121, 3127, 3144,3145, 3148, 3154, 3157-3164, 3170, 3175,3229, 3237, 3255, 3256, 3268, 3276, 3287,3296, 3298, 3341, 3345, 3373, 3376, 3384,3388, 3390, 3396, 3405, 3409, 3423,3441-3443, 3445, 3446, 3448, 3449, 3452,3462, 3464, 3477, 3488, 3494, 3505, 3508,3520, 3544, 3557, 3561, 3583, 3588, 3589,3591-3593, 3596, 3602, 3631, 3675, 3686,3690, 3694, 3696, 3698, 3699, 3709, 3732,3735, 3758, 3776, 3777, 3815, 3819, 3850,3853, 3855, 3857, 3859, 3862, 3863, 3872,3879, 3882, 3884, 3901, 3943, 3951, 3954,3980, 3990, 4089, 4093, 4098, 4<strong>11</strong>2, 4122,4123, 4129, 4147, 4154, 4161, 4166, 4201,4206, 4259, 4260, 4263, 4265, 4267, 4272,4274, 4284, 4290, 4292-4296, 4326, 4333,4355, 4372, 4375, 4383, 4433, 4437, 4443,4457, 4461, 4468, 4469, 4485, 4488, 4496,4499, 4503-4506, 4510, 4525Disasters, Crime/abuse victims 60, 235, 496, 644,864, 963, 1045, 2148, 2684, 2685, 2764,2955, 3068, 3423, 3520, 3724, 3901, 4326Disasters, Disabled, general 2988Disasters, Economically disadvantaged 235, 478,2028, 2973, 2980, 3094, 3219, 4375Disasters, employee matching gifts 17, 29-32,39-41, 47, 60, 66, 69, 70, 94, 106, 204, 217,233, 260, 349, 366, 465, 476, 501, 535, 538,550, 684, 1038, 1096, 1098, <strong>11</strong>44, 1209,1302, 1332, 1413, 1452, 1509, 1530, 1564,1671, 1694, 1697, 1762, 1805, 1809, 1830,1893, 1962, 1965, 1974, 1995, 2<strong>11</strong>2, 2143,2148, 2171, 2478, 2497, 2498, 2514, 2678,2682, 2687, 2692, 2732, 2793, 3055, 3250,3263, 3340, 3500, 3526, 3527, 3536, 3547,3549, 3560, 3563, 3700, 3718-3720, 3724,3740, 3769, 3851, 3897, 3903, 4<strong>11</strong>3, 4163,4262, 4273, 4307, 4317, 4345, 4361, 4381,4436, 4535Disasters, Ethnic/racial minorities, general 478,3001Disasters, Ethnic/racial minorities, other specifiedgroup 197Disasters, fire prevention/control 108, 224, 316,376, <strong>11</strong>57, <strong>11</strong>90, <strong>11</strong>92-<strong>11</strong>98, 1392, 1491,1537, 2<strong>11</strong>2, 2472, 2503, 2979, 3085, 3121,3159, 3423, 3819, 3863Disasters, general support 987Disasters, Homeless 2973Disasters, Immigrants/refugees 478, 3990Disasters, Infants/toddlers 3219Disasters, preparedness & services 2053, 2456,3088, 3219, 3409, 3544Disasters, program development 3219Disasters, Relief and recovery workers/volunteers120, 238, 349, 912, 1098, 3709, 4161Disasters, search & rescue 198, 199, 425, 446,1390, 1999, 2143, 3085Disasters, Victims and families, economicallyaffected 7, 8, 30, 32, 39-41, 69, 70, 87, 92,<strong>11</strong>5, 120, 197, 234, 238, 243, 246, 265, 266,349, 356, 365, 366, 415, 436, 451, 454, 515,535, 536, 538, 546, 668, 883, 893, 912, 949,1027, 1029, 1030, 1061-1063, 1065, 1066,1068-1070, 1073-1078, 1080, 1082, 1084,1098, <strong>11</strong>21, <strong>11</strong>23, <strong>11</strong>24, <strong>11</strong>37, <strong>11</strong>44, <strong>11</strong>46,<strong>11</strong>54, <strong>11</strong>62, <strong>11</strong>74, <strong>11</strong>76, 1203, 1206, 1289,1302, 1413, 1456, 1533, 1622, 1652, 1671,1694, 1741, 1744, 1752, 1778, 1779, 1793,1830, 1833, 1886, 1888, 1893, 1898, 1963,1995, 2105, 2150, 2497, 2498, 2514, 2515,2529, 2535, 2600, 2650, 2652, 2687, 2693,2706, 2732, 2945, 3031, 3098, 3101,3160-3164, 3276, 3345, 3384, 3388, 3488,3494, 3536, 3591, 3696, 3709, 3720, 3735,3758, 3769, 3882, 4093, 4<strong>11</strong>2, 4<strong>11</strong>3, 4129,4260, 4262, 4263, 4265, 4274, 4290,4294-4296, 4317, 4355, 4361, 4383, 4433,4436, 4461, 4525Disasters, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Children 31, 1752, 3536Disasters, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Employees 1052, 1310Disasters, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - General 7, 8, 30, 32, 39-41, 69,70, 87, 92, <strong>11</strong>5, 120, 234, 238, 243, 246, 265,266, 349, 356, 365, 366, 415, 436, 451, 515,535, 536, 538, 546, 668, 883, 893, 912, 949,1027, 1029, 1030, 1061-1063, 1065, 1066,1068-1070, 1073-1078, 1080, 1082, 1084,1085, 1098, <strong>11</strong>21, <strong>11</strong>23, <strong>11</strong>24, <strong>11</strong>37, <strong>11</strong>44,<strong>11</strong>46, <strong>11</strong>54, <strong>11</strong>62, <strong>11</strong>74, <strong>11</strong>76, 1203, 1206,1289, 1302, 1413, 1456, 1472, 1533, 1622,1652, 1671, 1694, 1741, 1744, 1752, 1778,1779, 1793, 1830, 1833, 1886, 1888, 1893,247


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE1898, 1963, 1995, 2105, 2150, 2497, 2498,2514, 2515, 2529, 2535, 2600, 2650, 2652,2687, 2693, 2706, 2732, 2945, 3031, 3098,3101, 3160-3164, 3276, 3345, 3384, 3388,3488, 3494, 3536, 3557, 3591, 3696, 3709,3720, 3735, 3758, 3769, 3882, 4093, 4<strong>11</strong>2,4<strong>11</strong>3, 4129, 4260, 4262, 4263, 4265, 4274,4290, 4294-4296, 4317, 4355, 4361, 4383,4433, 4436, 4461, 4525Disasters, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Uniformed service workers and fa29, 31, 108, 224, 648, 1053, 1645, 3144,3145, 3170, 3719Disasters, Women 31, 3098Disasters, 9/<strong>11</strong>/01 1, 7, 8, 10, 14, 17, 29-32,39-41, 45, 47, 60, 66, 69, 70, 87, 89, 92, 94,105, 106, <strong>11</strong>5, <strong>11</strong>6, 120, 197, 200, 204, 213,217, 226, 227, 233-235, 238, 243, 246, 260,265, 266, 277, 278, 294, 295, 297, 356, 362,365, 366, 374, 385, 388, 403, 406-408, 415,436, 439, 451, 454, 462, 465, 476, 478, 496,499, 501, 503, 515, 524, 525, 529, 535, 536,538, 542, 543, 546, 550, 644, 646-648, 652,668-671, 673, 684, 690, 693, 696, 859, 864,883-886, 893, 899, 912, 928, 949, 963, 980,987, 1009, 1015, 1027, 1029-1031, 1038,1045, 1050, 1052, 1053, 1061-1063, 1065,1066, 1068-1070, 1073-1078, 1080, 1082,1084-1087, 1089, 1096-1098, <strong>11</strong>14, <strong>11</strong>17,<strong>11</strong>21, <strong>11</strong>23, <strong>11</strong>24, <strong>11</strong>29, <strong>11</strong>37, <strong>11</strong>43, <strong>11</strong>44,<strong>11</strong>46, <strong>11</strong>54, <strong>11</strong>61-<strong>11</strong>63, <strong>11</strong>68, <strong>11</strong>69, <strong>11</strong>71,<strong>11</strong>74, <strong>11</strong>76, <strong>11</strong>85, 1203, 1206, 1209, 1215,1271, 1280, 1289, 1295, 1302, 1307, 1310,1312, 1332, 1333, 1336, 1337, 1343, 1403,1413, 1438, 1452, 1456, 1457, 1463, 1468,1469, 1472, 1475, 1508, 1509, 15<strong>11</strong>, 1529,1530, 1533, 1534, 1537, 1555, 1564, 1622,1645, 1647, 1652, 1661, 1671, 1681, 1686,1687, 1694, 1697, 1702, 1707, 1739,1741-1745, 1751, 1752, 1756, 1762-1764,1766, 1778, 1779, 1792, 1793, 1795, 1805,1808, 1809, 1817, 1827, 1830, 1833, 1844,1845, 1876, 1878, 1883, 1886, 1888, 1889,1893, 1898, 1926, 1938, 1962-1965, 1974,1982, 1995, 2000, 2009, 2073, 2083, 2084,2105, 2<strong>11</strong>0, 2148, 2150, 2170, 2171, 2420,2459, 2478, 2479, 2483, 2484, 2491, 2497,2498, 2512, 2514, 2515, 2527, 2529, 2530,2535-2537, 2593, 2595, 2596, 2600, 2610,2614, 2616, 2618, 2650-2652, 2658, 2665,2675, 2678, 2679, 2682, 2684, 2685, 2687,2692, 2693, 2703, 2706, 2726, 2732, 2764,2793, 2945, 2948-2955, 2961, 2973, 2980,2982, 2988, 2989, 2995, 3001, 3027, 3031,3034-3036, 3041-3043, 3047, 3054, 3055,3068, 3080, 3094, 3096, 3098-3101, 3103,3107, 3<strong>11</strong>2, 3<strong>11</strong>6, 3127, 3144, 3145, 3148,3154, 3157, 3158, 3160-3164, 3170, 3175,3229, 3237, 3250, 3255, 3256, 3263, 3268,3276, 3287, 3296, 3298, 3340, 3341, 3345,3373, 3376, 3384, 3388, 3390, 3396, 3405,3423, 3441-3443, 3445, 3446, 3448, 3449,3452, 3462, 3464, 3477, 3488, 3494, 3500,3505, 3508, 3520, 3526, 3527, 3536, 3547,3549, 3557, 3560, 3561, 3563, 3583, 3588,3589, 3591-3593, 3596, 3602, 3631, 3675,3686, 3690, 3694, 3696, 3698-3700, 3709,3718-3720, 3724, 3732, 3735, 3740, 3758,3769, 3776, 3777, 3850, 3851, 3853, 3855,3857, 3859, 3862, 3872, 3879, 3882, 3884,3897, 3901, 3903, 3943, 3954, 3980, 3990,4089, 4093, 4098, 4<strong>11</strong>2, 4<strong>11</strong>3, 4122, 4123,4129, 4147, 4154, 4161, 4163, 4166, 4201,4206, 4259, 4260, 4262, 4263, 4265, 4267,4272-4274, 4284, 4290, 4292-4296, 4307,4317, 4326, 4333, 4345, 4355, 4361, 4372,4375, 4381, 4383, 4433, 4436, 4437, 4443,4457, 4461, 4468, 4469, 4485, 4488, 4496,4499, 4503-4506, 4510, 4525, 4535Dispute resolution, Asians/Pacific islanders 3224Dispute resolution, Children & youth 3215Dispute resolution, contribution 1840, 4135, 4234Dispute resolution, Crime/abuse victims 4234Dispute resolution, Economically disadvantaged3215Dispute resolution, Ethnic/racial minorities,general 3215Dispute resolution, Ethnic/racial minorities, otherspecified group 4234Dispute resolution, program development 3215,3224Dispute resolution, Women 3215Dispute resolution, Youth/adolescents 3224Domestic violence prevention, Asians/Pacificislanders 3221, 4474Domestic violence prevention, Children & youth162, 3226Domestic violence prevention, contribution 162,4474Domestic violence prevention, Crime/abusevictims 162, 3221, 3226, 4474Domestic violence prevention, general support3221Domestic violence prevention, research 3226Domestic violence prevention, Women 162, 3221,3226, 4474Drawing, contribution 2844, 2845, 4396Drop-out prevention, contribution 961, 962, 4134Early childhood education, contribution 3929,4208Early childhood education, Economicallydisadvantaged 3219Early childhood education, Infants/toddlers 3219,3929, 4208Early childhood education, program development3219Economic development, Children & youth 2783Economic development, contribution 15, 2337,2783, 2912, 2971, 36<strong>11</strong>, 3756, 3812Economic development, Economicallydisadvantaged 2783Economic development, general support 992Economic development, Victims and families,economically affected 2337Economic development, Victims and families,injured and deceased - General 2337Economically disadvantaged,arts/culture/humanities 4231Economically disadvantaged, civil rights 72, 1245,1776, 2285, 3063, 3064, 3181, 3199, 3252,4228, 4231, 4257, 4475, 4480Economically disadvantaged, communityimprovement/development 478, 592, 1234,1560, 1632, 1724, 1737, 1871, 2464, 2783,3063, 3064, 3182, 3201, 3206, 3216, 3290,3395, 3744, 3757, 3854, 3874, 3938, 3948,4002, 4026, 4058, 4223, 4332, 4368, 4386Economically disadvantaged, crime/courts/legalservices 133, 1615, 2495, 3199, 3212, 3215,4228Economically disadvantaged, education 3214,3219, 3875, 3876, 3916, 3926, 3956, 3997,4009, 4031, 4032, 4040, 4041, 4045, 4053,4056Economically disadvantaged, employment 478,557, 1234, 1474, 1871, 2495, 3205, 3210,3212, 3216, 3395, 3717, 3970, 4004, 4067,4222, 4253, 4476Economically disadvantaged,food/nutrition/agriculture 46, <strong>11</strong>4, <strong>11</strong>9, 138,140, 150, 167, 187, 321, 467, 1243, 1420,2133, 2343, 2480, 2538, 2613, 3093, 3152,3172, 3917, 3944, 3945, 3949, 3962, 3987,4043, 4073, 4451Economically disadvantaged, health—general 592,2028, 2161, 2518, 2973, 2974, 2980, 3934,4000, 4033, 4473Economically disadvantaged, housing/shelter 556,1320, 1419, 1548, 1556, 3136, 3278, 3546,3854, 3948, 3973, 4026, 4229, 4244, 4253,4271Economically disadvantaged, humanservices—multipurpose 34-37, 43, 67, 72,235, 556, 592, 953, 1474, 1716, 1776, 1777,1810, 18<strong>11</strong>, 2124, 2131, 2147, 2157, 2175,2285, 2455, 2464, 2495, 2731, 2775, 2935,2936, 3063, 3064, 3094, 3152, 3205, 3212,3214-3216, 3252, 3497, 3524, 3546, 3717,3786, 3858, 3924, 3933, 3956, 3961, 3975,3983, 3989, 3992, 4000, 4005, 4006, 4012,4034, 4040, 4050, 4061, 4222, 4223, 4246,4253, 4271, 4375, 4475, 4480Economically disadvantaged, internationalaffairs/development 1245, 2131, 2133, 2135,2161, 2165, 2762, 2783, 2788, 3093, 3243,3525, 3878, 4058, 4257Economically disadvantaged, mentalhealth/substance abuse 67, 72, 2028, 2731,3212, 3252, 3717, 4475, 4480Economically disadvantaged, publicaffairs/government 4004, 4246, 4257Economically disadvantaged,recreation/sports/athletics 3965Economically disadvantaged, religion 3992Economically disadvantaged, safety/disaster relief235, 478, 2028, 2973, 2980, 3094, 3219,4375Economically disadvantaged, youth development1244, 3873, 4030Economics, contribution 1263, 2876, 3617, 3657,3982Economics, Youth/adolescents 3982Education, African Americans/Blacks 3916, 4040Education, Asians/Pacific islanders 918, 3193Education, association 1577Education, Canada 3660Education, Children & youth 399, 452, 1371,1828, 2129, 2446, 2517, 3913, 3916, 3956,3996, 4032, 4040, 4041education, contribution 63, 124, 207, 249, 250,336, 342, 399, 448, 452, 5<strong>11</strong>, 814, 816, 845,915, 918, 939, 1217, 1261, 1334, 1371,1384, 1391, 1409, 1577, 1620, 1633, 1634,1781, 1867, 1895, 1930, 1932, 2050, 2053,2102, 2104, 2181, 2202, 2358, 2446, 2517,2661, 2969, 3071, 3079, 3135, 3193, 3241,3358, 3457, 3483, 3507, 3586, 3693,3838-3840, 3900, 3913, 3916, 3956, 3996,4022, 4032, 4040, 4041, 4056, 4132, 4136,4208, 4303Education, Crime/abuse victims 2446Education, Economically disadvantaged 3916,3956, 4032, 4040, 4041, 4056Education, employee matching gifts 1828, 1992,2129, 2141Education, England 2645Education, Ethnic/racial minorities, general 3956,4022, 4032, 4041Education, Ethnic/racial minorities, other specifiedgroup 915, 918, 939Education, fund raising 1334, 1781, 1895, 3457,3483Education, general support 248Education, gifted students 3916, 4022, 4032, 4056Education, government agencies 1391, 3358Education, Hispanics/Latinos 3916Education, Infants/toddlers 4208Education, management/technical aid 1384, 4136Education, Pakistan 4212Education, PTA groups 336Education, public policy 1620Education, research 1261, 2050, 2181Education, services 342, 399, 448, 452, 814, 915,918, 939, 1217, 1371, 1409, 2053, 2102,2104, 2129, 2202, 2358, 2446, 2517, 2969,3071, 3079, 3193, 3241, 3586, 3900, 3913,3956, 4040, 4041, 4056, 4132, 4208Education, single organization support 5<strong>11</strong>, 816,845, 1634, 1867, 3135, 3693, 3838-3840Education, special 124, 207, 248-250, 1828, 1930,1992, 3507, 4303Education, Victims and families, economicallyaffected 3193, 3241, 4056Education, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Children 124, 207, 248-250, 452,1828, 1930, 1992, 3507, 4303Education, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Employees 124, 207, 248-250,448, 1828, 1930, 1992, 2141, 3507, 4303248


INDEX OF SUBJECTSeducation, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - General 63, 3241Education, volunteer services 3996Education, Youth/adolescents 4056Education, Youth/adolescents, female 4022Elementary school/education, Children 3926,3936Elementary school/education, contribution 3926,3936Elementary school/education, Economicallydisadvantaged 3926Elementary school/education, Ethnic/racialminorities, general 3926Elementary school/education, Infants/toddlers4444Elementary school/education, scholarship funds4444Elementary school/education, Victims andfamilies, injured and deceased - Children4444Elementary school/education, Victims andfamilies, injured and deceased - Uniformedservice workers and fa 4444Elementary/secondary education, Asians/Pacificislanders 938, 3937Elementary/secondary education, Children &youth 1363, 2140, 2517, 2728, 2797, 3876,3913, 3937, 3953, 3995-3997, 4009, 4041,4042, 4045, 4054, 4074, 4075, 4298Elementary/secondary education, contribution583, 7<strong>11</strong>, 733, 757, 833, 854, 938, 1093,1262, 1334, 1355, 1363, 1391, 1803, 1851,1895, 2063, 2102, 2517, 2557, 2797, 3095,3129, 3572, 3660, 3876, 3900, 3913, 3937,3950, 3953, 3995-3997, 4009, 4041, 4042,4045, 4054, 4074, 4075, 4136Elementary/secondary education, Crime/abusevictims 2140Elementary/secondary education, Economicallydisadvantaged 3876, 3997, 4009, 4041, 4045Elementary/secondary education, employeematching gifts 501, 2140, 2728, 4298Elementary/secondary education, Ethnic/racialminorities, general 3876, 4041Elementary/secondary education, Ethnic/racialminorities, other specified group 938Elementary/secondary education, Girls & youngwomen 2063, 3950Elementary/secondary education,Immigrants/refugees 2140Elementary/secondary school reform, Children &youth 4039Elementary/secondary school reform, contribution1384, 1629, 2096, 4039Employment, alliance 557, 593, 1379, 1618, 3656,3668Employment, Asians/Pacific islanders 993Employment, contribution 148, 433, 463, 478,557, 574, 593, 761, 902, 961, 962, <strong>11</strong>51,<strong>11</strong>53, 1234, 1379, 1474, 1483, 1618, 1871,2253, 2408, 2495, 2704, 2778, 3151, 3174,3291, 3393, 3395, 3416, 3429, 3566, 3601,3603, 3652, 3656, 3665, 3668, 3676, 3869,3966, 4004, 4024, 4064, 4067, 4222, 4230,4283, 4349, 4476, 4478, 4515Employment, Crime/abuse victims 2495, 3717Employment, Economically disadvantaged 478,557, 1234, 1474, 1871, 2495, 3205, 3210,3395, 3717, 4004, 4067, 4222, 4476Employment, employee matching gifts 3717Employment, equal rights 574, 3665, 4283Employment, Ethnic/racial minorities, general478, 1234, 1871, 3395, 3717, 4024Employment, general support 988, 993Employment, Hispanics/Latinos 148Employment, Immigrants/refugees 478, 993,<strong>11</strong>53, 2495Employment, management/ technical aid 1483Employment, on-the-job training 3966Employment, program development 3205, 3210Employment, public policy 3205Employment, research 4004Employment, services 148, 433, 463, 478, 902,961, 962, 988, 993, <strong>11</strong>51, <strong>11</strong>53, 1234, 1474,1483, 1871, 2495, 2704, 2778, 3151, 3174,3210, 3291, 3393, 3395, 3416, 3429, 3566,3601, 3603, 3652, 3668, 3717, 3869, 4024,4064, 4067, 4222, 4230, 4283, 4349, 4476,4478Employment, single organization support 3676,4515Employment, training 761, 2253, 2408Employment, Victims and families, economicallyaffected 148, 433, 557, 902, 988, <strong>11</strong>51, 1234,1474, 1483, 1871, 2704, 2778, 3151, 3174,3291, 3393, 3395, 3416, 3429, 3566, 3601,3603, 3869, 4004, 4064, 4067, 4222, 4230,4283Employment, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Employees 3151Employment, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - General 433, 902, <strong>11</strong>51, <strong>11</strong>53,1483, 2704, 2778, 3291, 3393, 3416, 3429,3566, 3601, 3603, 3869, 4230Employment, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Uniformed service workers and fa902, <strong>11</strong>51, 3393, 3416, 3429, 3603Employment, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Union members/otherprofessional 3174Employment, Women 988, 3205, 3210, 4476,4478Employment, Youth/adolescents 3966, 4024, 4067Engineering & technology, contribution 3825Engineering school/education, contribution 4008Engineering school/education, Ethnic/racialminorities, general 4008England, arts/culture/humanities 2628England, education 2645England, human services—multipurpose 700England, international affairs/development 2628England, safety/disaster relief 3031, 3068Environment, alliance 1379, 1380, 2850, 3818Environment, association 1361, 4142Environment, beautification programs 1866, 2828,2850, 2893, 4508Environment, contribution 1212, 1361, 1379,1380, 1584, 1866, 2828, 2850, 2893, 3529,3617, 3809, 3818, 4068, 4142, 4508Environment, Homeless 4068Environment, information services 1584Environment, public education 3529Environment, public policy 3617, 3809Environment, recycling 4068Environment, water resources 1380Environmental education, Children & youth 1247Environmental education, contribution 551, 848,1247, 1543, 2801, 2930Environmental education, Victims and families,injured and deceased - Children 1247Ethnic/racial minorities, general,arts/culture/humanities 188, 1601, 3227,4196Ethnic/racial minorities, general, civil rights 931,1601, 1776, 1947, 2064, 2285, 3063, 3064,3227, 4196, 4214, 4228, 4235, 4257Ethnic/racial minorities, general, communityimprovement/development 478, 1234, 1724,1737, 1871, 3063, 3064, 3201, 3216, 3290,3395, 3744, 3757, 3874, 3938, 4002, 4332,4368, 4386Ethnic/racial minorities, general, crime/courts/legalservices 3200, 3215, 4228Ethnic/racial minorities, general, education 3875,3876, 3926, 3956, 4008, 4022, 4031, 4032,4041, 4053Ethnic/racial minorities, general, employment 478,1234, 1871, 3216, 3395, 3717, 4024, 4247Ethnic/racial minorities, general, health—general4000, 4033Ethnic/racial minorities, general, humanservices—multipurpose 1716, 1776, 2175,2285, 3001, 3063, 3064, 3215, 3216, 3717,3956, 3975, 4000, 4034, 4050, 4061Ethnic/racial minorities, general, internationalaffairs/development 4257Ethnic/racial minorities, general, mentalhealth/substance abuse 3717Ethnic/racial minorities, general, publicaffairs/government 4257Ethnic/racial minorities, general,recreation/sports/athletics 3200, 3965Ethnic/racial minorities, general, safety/disasterrelief 478, 3001Ethnic/racial minorities, general, youthdevelopment 1244Ethnic/racial minorities, other specified group,arts/culture/humanities 3227, 4236Ethnic/racial minorities, other specified group,civil rights 907, 909, 915, 918, 927, 935, 938,939, 959, 2627, 3082, 3132, 3220, 3227,3484, 4213, 4215, 4234, 4236, 4237, 4242,4245, 4256Ethnic/racial minorities, other specified group,crime/courts/legal services 909, 4234, 4242Ethnic/racial minorities, other specified group,education 915, 918, 927, 938, 939Ethnic/racial minorities, other specified group,human services—multipurpose 197, 918,936, 3220, 3222, 4216, 4234, 4470Ethnic/racial minorities, other specified group,international affairs/development 2627, 3484Ethnic/racial minorities, other specified group,mental health/substance abuse 3220, 4216Ethnic/racial minorities, other specified group,public affairs/government 915, 936, 3082,4256Ethnic/racial minorities, other specified group,religion 3082, 4236Ethnic/racial minorities, other specified group,safety/disaster relief 197Eye disease, Blind & vision impaired 34<strong>11</strong>, 3980,3985Eye disease, contribution 34<strong>11</strong>, 3980, 3985Eye diseases, contribution 305, 326, 2185Family planning, contribution 2363, 3350, 4028,4029Family planning, Women 4028, 4029Family services, Asians/Pacific islanders 3221,4474Family services, Children & youth 67, 162, 171,175, 181, 202, 370, 371, 410, 438, 518, <strong>11</strong>00,<strong>11</strong>02, 1250, 1322, 1344, 1371, 1416, 1417,2140, 2175, 2449, 2455, 2680, 2731, 2934,3215, 3226, 3413, 3785, 3886, 3975, 4049,4165, 4281, 4428, 4447, 4448, 4482Family services, contribution 2, 3, 8, <strong>11</strong>, 12, 19,63, 78, 82-86, 91, 93, 95, 97-99, 109, <strong>11</strong>0,121-123, 144, 146, 156, 162, 171, 175, 178,181, 190, 192, 193, 195, 196, 201, 202, 205,208, 216, 219, 222, 224, 225, 228, 231, 232,238, 244, 247, 253, 254, 256, 257, 267, 269,271, 273, 279, 282-284, 286, 332, 343, 346,347, 350, 352, 355, 359, 368, 371, 375, 377,378, 382, 387, 391-393, 405, 409, 410, 416,418, 421, 423, 424, 426, 430, 431, 435, 438,442, 445, 448, 450, 456, 457, 459, 475, 481,486, 487, 489, 490, 495, 506, 507, 510, 518,530, 531, 539-541, 548, 549, 645, 649-651,655-657, 659, 661-667, 672, 675, 678, 688,692, 700, 858, 871, 872, 879-882, 888, 889,894, 897, 903, 913, 942, 950, 967, 971-973,978, 979, 983, 1008, 1013, 1014, 1017,1018, 1028, 1032, 1033, 1037, 1039-1041,1047, 1049, 1051, 1056, 1064, 1067, 1071,1072, 1079, 1081, 1083, 1088, 1090,<strong>11</strong>00-<strong>11</strong>03, <strong>11</strong>18, <strong>11</strong>22, <strong>11</strong>32-<strong>11</strong>34, <strong>11</strong>39,<strong>11</strong>47, <strong>11</strong>48, <strong>11</strong>50, <strong>11</strong>53, <strong>11</strong>55, <strong>11</strong>56, <strong>11</strong>60,<strong>11</strong>73, <strong>11</strong>75, <strong>11</strong>81, <strong>11</strong>86, <strong>11</strong>88, <strong>11</strong>89, <strong>11</strong>91,<strong>11</strong>99, 1200, 1208, 1210, 1220-1222, 1224,1226, 1228-1230, 1235, 1255, 1257, 1259,1270, 1273, 1274, 1277, 1285, 1286, 1290,1294, 1296-1299, 1301, 1303-1305, 1317,1322-1324, 1340-1342, 1344, 1347-1349,1358, 1371, 1402, 1408, 14<strong>11</strong>, 1412,1414-1417, 1426, 1431, 1442, 1443, 1445,1448-1451, 1460-1462, 1464, 1466, 1467,1479, 1482, 1484-1486, 1488, 1490, 1493,1494, 1497, 1503, 1512, 1521, 1523, 1525,1531, 1532, 1535, 1536, 1540, 1541, 1544,1547, 1549, 1550, 1553, 1554, 1558, 1559,249


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE1563, 1567, 1569, 1574, 1580, 1640, 1642,1651, 1654, 1660, 1662-1664, 1666, 1667,1672, 1673, 1678, 1679, 1682, 1689, 1690,1698, 1700, 1705, 1706, 1708, 17<strong>11</strong>-1714,1717, 1718, 1720, 1722, 1725, 1726, 1729,1732, 1735, 1736, 1746, 1747, 1749, 1750,1757, 1761, 1780, 1782-1784, 1787-1789,1798, 1806, 1807, 1812, 1813, 1816, 1820,1822, 1832, 1835, 1839, 1841, 1850, 1870,1874, 1875, 1884, 1887, 1891, 1900, 1904,1906, 1908-19<strong>11</strong>, 1919, 1922, 1927, 1928,1939, 1941, 1942, 1951, 1952, 1954, 1958,1959, 1968, 1972, 1973, 1976, 1977, 1979,1983-1985, 1987, 1989-1991, 1993, 1997,1998, 2003, 2004, 2013-2015, 2042, 2043,2054, 2059, 2068, 2070, 2072, 2080, 2094,2107, 2108, 2<strong>11</strong>1, 2<strong>11</strong>8, 2137, 2154, 2156,2158, 2168, 2180, 2182, 2190, 2194, 2204,2207, 2208, 2235, 2239, 2246, 2264, 2275,2278-2282, 2303, 2307, 23<strong>11</strong>, 2322, 2333,2349, 2354, 2367, 2371, 2372, 2395, 2403,2406, 24<strong>11</strong>, 2417, 2418, 2422, 2432-2434,2438, 2439, 2441, 2449, 2458, 2465,2469-2471, 2474, 2485, 2487, 2490, 2494,2495, 2516, 2520, 2524, 2526, 2533, 2539,2540, 2542, 2601, 2606, 2609, 2647, 2649,2656, 2657, 2659, 2662-2664, 2666-2669,2671, 2673, 2674, 2680, 2683, 2694, 2701,2705, 2708, 2709, 2723, 2724, 2736,2740-2742, 2745, 2747, 2749, 2752, 2756,2757, 2760, 2761, 2763, 2767, 2768,2772-2775, 2779, 2786, 2787, 2796, 2934,2937-2942, 2946, 2947, 2956-2958, 2972,2978, 2996, 3003-3005, 3008, 3010-3013,3017-3019, 3021, 3024, 3025, 3028, 3030,3032, 3037, 3039, 3046, 3049, 3050, 3058,3063, 3065, 3067, 3070, 3074, 3092, 3097,3104, 3106, 3<strong>11</strong>5, 3<strong>11</strong>9, 3123, 3152, 3155,3165, 3194, 3196, 3233-3235, 3239, 3240,3242, 3244, 3246, 3249, 3254, 3258, 3259,3272, 3275, 3280, 3283, 3285, 3286, 3288,3293, 3301, 3304, 3305, 3339, 3342, 3343,3347, 3354, 3355, 3371, 3372, 3377-3379,3381, 3382, 3385, 3386, 3389, 3402, 3403,3413, 3425, 3427, 3428, 3431, 3439, 3440,3466, 3468, 3470, 3478, 3489, 3491-3493,3495, 3498, 3502-3504, 3509, 3514, 3516,3518, 3519, 3521, 3532, 3535, 3548, 3550,3554, 3555, 3557, 3559, 3562, 3568, 3570,3571, 3576, 3584, 3590, 3598, 3637, 3683,3685, 3687, 3701-3703, 37<strong>11</strong>, 3712, 3721,3737-3739, 3746, 3749, 3760, 3770, 3774,3779, 3780, 3782, 3783, 3785, 3787, 3788,3791-3793, 3795, 3799, 3802, 3804, 3805,3847, 3848, 3856, 3860, 3866, 3877, 3880,3883, 3886, 3888, 3889, 3892, 3896, 3904,3906, 3933, 3961, 3975, 4000, 4014, 4018,4049, 4079, 4081, 4083-4086, 4094-4096,4099, 4108-4<strong>11</strong>0, 4127, 4131, 4148,4150-4152, 4155-4157, 4159, 4160, 4165,4190, 4192, 4198, 4200, 4203, 4230, 4261,4266, 4269, 4270, 4275, 4277-4282,4287-4289, 4297, 4299-4301, 4308-4310,4315, 4318, 4323, 4339, 4343, 4348, 4354,4358-4360, 4362, 4365, 4370, 4373,4376-4378, 4382, 4384, 4420, 4427, 4428,4430-4432, 4434, 4435, 4439, 4440, 4447,4448, 4474, 4482, 4483, 4486, 4489, 4500,4501, 4504, 4521, 4526-4528, 4530-4532,4538, 4539Family services, counseling 2349, 2417, 4500,4501Family services, Crime/abuse victims 162, 171,175, 181, 1017, 1018, 1276, 1277, 1496,1806, 1807, 2054, 2123, 2125, 2127, 2138,2140, 2142, 2155, 2156, 2173, 2495, 2760,2774, 2775, 3019, 3221, 3226, 3347, 3717,4474, 4532Family services, domestic violence 162, 171, 175,181, 2190, 2194, 2204, 2208, 2239, 2303,2307, 23<strong>11</strong>, 2333, 2354, 2371, 2372, 2403,24<strong>11</strong>, 2418, 2433, 2434, 2723, 2724, 3212,3220, 3221, 3226, 4474Family services, Economically disadvantaged 67,2157, 2175, 2455, 2495, 2731, 2775, 3063,3064, 3152, 3212, 3215, 3717, 3933, 3961,3975, 4000Family services, employee matching gifts 21, 22,29, 31, 32, 38, 42, 57, 65, 67, 71, 80, 90, 102,206, 215, 229, 276, 280, 285, 287-291, 349,354, 367, 370, 432, 460, 508, 654, 691, 887,976, 1005, 1006, 1042, 1098, 1214, 1225,1250, 1300, 1424, 1427, 1453, 1496, 1502,1570-1572, 1643, 1696, 1703, 1715, 1721,1727, 1728, 1730, 1748, 1775, 1829, 1892,1901, 1903, 1907, 1916, 1918, 1946, 1971,1978, 1980, 1996, 2010, 2067, 2<strong>11</strong>4, 2121,2123, 2125, 2127, 2134, 2136, 2138,2140-2142, 2144, 2146, 2151-2153, 2155,2157, 2159, 2167, 2169, 2172, 2173, 2175,2179, 2455, 2481, 2496, 2531, 2594, 2602,2605, 2660, 2686, 2698, 2727, 2729-2731,2733, 2744, 2933, 3002, 3064, 3120, 3124,3238, 3262, 3277, 3284, 3391, 3436, 3515,3528, 3536, 3540, 3564, 3682, 3704,3715-3717, 3719, 3720, 3722, 3723, 3725,3726, 3742, 3773, 3905, 4051, 4052, 4078,4104, 4105, 4125, 4126, 4128, 4153, 4162,4169, 4178, 4193, 4319, 4347, 4429Family services, Ethnic/racial minorities, general2175, 3063, 3064, 3215, 3717, 3975, 4000Family services, Ethnic/racial minorities, otherspecified group 3220Family services, general support 1004, 1276,1278, 3173, 3221, 3680Family services, Hispanics/Latinos 3212Family services, Immigrants/refugees 67, <strong>11</strong>53,2140, 2495, 2730, 2731, 3220Family services, Military/veterans 445, 2539Family services, parent education 2395Family services, program development 3212,3215, 3220Family services, Relief and recoveryworkers/volunteers 3, <strong>11</strong>, 12, 19, 21, 22, 57,80, 83-86, 91, 95, 97, 99, 102, 121, 122, 146,193, 195, 205, 206, 215, 216, 219, 229, 231,232, 238, 244, 269, 276, 279, 280, 282-291,343, 349, 352, 354, 355, 367, 368, 391-393,418, 424, 430-432, 435, 457, 459, 460, 475,481, 486, 487, 506-508, 539-541, 548, 645,651, 655, 688, 691, 692, 858, 879-882, 887,894, 897, 976, 978, 979, 983, 1005, 1013,1033, 1039, 1041, 1042, 1047, 1051, 1090,1098, <strong>11</strong>22, <strong>11</strong>33, <strong>11</strong>34, <strong>11</strong>36, <strong>11</strong>56, <strong>11</strong>60,<strong>11</strong>73, <strong>11</strong>75, <strong>11</strong>81, <strong>11</strong>86, <strong>11</strong>99, 1210, 1214,1222, 1224-1226, 1228, 1230, 1255, 1257,1270, 1273, 1274, 1299-1301, 1303-1305,1349, 1408, 1412, 1426, 1427, 1431, 1443,1445, 1448, 1449, 1451, 1453, 1479, 1485,1523, 1540, 1541, 1547, 1567, 1570-1572,1642, 1643, 1654, 1672, 1673, 1678, 1682,1689, 1690, 1698, 1703, 1708, 17<strong>11</strong>-1715,1717, 1718, 1720, 1727, 1732, 1747, 1748,1750, 1783, 1813, 1820, 1822, 1850, 1870,1892, 1900, 1901, 1903, 1904, 1906, 1907,1909, 1910, 1916, 1918, 1928, 1946, 1951,1952, 1954, 1958, 1968, 1971-1973, 1976,1978, 1983, 1985, 1989-1991, 1997, 2010,2013, 2014, 2059, 2067, 2068, 2070, 2107,2108, 2<strong>11</strong>4, 2180, 2182, 2441, 2474, 2481,2494, 2520, 2524, 2526, 2531, 2594, 2601,2602, 2605, 2606, 2609, 2647, 2649, 2657,2659, 2663, 2668, 2683, 2686, 2701, 2708,2709, 2727, 2736, 2740, 2741, 2744, 2745,2933, 2937-2942, 2972, 3002, 3004, 30<strong>11</strong>,3012, 3018, 3021, 3024, 3025, 3030, 3032,3039, 3067, 3070, 3097, 3104, 3<strong>11</strong>5, 3<strong>11</strong>9,3120, 3194, 3238, 3254, 3277, 3280, 3283,3286, 3288, 3293, 3304, 3305, 3339, 3371,3372, 3378, 3379, 3389, 3391, 3403, 3436,3439, 3466, 3468, 3470, 3478, 3489, 3493,3518, 3528, 3532, 3548, 3559, 3562, 3564,3568, 3576, 3590, 3682, 3683, 3687, 3701,37<strong>11</strong>, 3715, 3723, 3737, 3738, 3742, 3746,3749, 3773, 3783, 3787, 3793, 3802, 3848,3880, 3883, 3888, 3896, 3904, 3905, 4078,4079, 4083, 4086, 4095, 4099, 4104, 4108,4125-4128, 4131, 4150-4152, 4156, 4159,4160, 4162, 4178, 4193, 4198, 4203, 4269,4270, 4275, 4280, 4288, 4308, 4315, 4318,4319, 4323, 4339, 4343, 4347, 4348, 4359,4360, 4370, 4373, 4376-4378, 4382, 4420,4427, 4430-4432, 4439, 4440, 4483, 4489,4526, 4528, 4530, 4538Family services, research 3226Family services, unspecified support <strong>11</strong>36Family services, Victims and families,economically affected 3, 8, <strong>11</strong>, 12, 19, 21, 22,32, 57, 80, 83-86, 90, 91, 93, 95, 97, 99, 102,121, 122, 146, 178, 192, 193, 195, 205, 206,215, 216, 219, 229, 231, 232, 238, 244, 254,269, 276, 279, 280, 282-291, 332, 343, 346,349, 352, 354, 355, 367, 368, 392, 393, 418,421, 424, 430-432, 435, 457, 459, 460, 475,481, 486, 487, 506-508, 531, 539-541, 548,645, 649-651, 655, 656, 688, 691, 692, 858,879-882, 887, 894, 897, 913, 971, 976, 978,979, 983, 1005, 1013, 1028, 1033, 1037,1039-1042, 1047, 1049, 1051, 1056, 1067,1072, 1081, 1090, 1098, <strong>11</strong>18, <strong>11</strong>22, <strong>11</strong>34,<strong>11</strong>36, <strong>11</strong>39, <strong>11</strong>47, <strong>11</strong>50, <strong>11</strong>55, <strong>11</strong>56, <strong>11</strong>60,<strong>11</strong>73, <strong>11</strong>75, <strong>11</strong>81, <strong>11</strong>86, <strong>11</strong>88, <strong>11</strong>89, <strong>11</strong>99,1200, 1210, 1214, 1222, 1224-1226, 1228,1230, 1255, 1257, 1270, 1273, 1274,1299-1301, 1303-1305, 1349, 1408, 14<strong>11</strong>,1412, 1426, 1427, 1431, 1442, 1443, 1445,1448-1451, 1453, 1479, 1482, 1485, 1486,1488, 1497, 1512, 1521, 1523, 1540, 1541,1547, 1550, 1558, 1567, 1570-1572, 1642,1643, 1654, 1660, 1663, 1672, 1673, 1678,1682, 1689, 1690, 1698, 1700, 1703, 1708,17<strong>11</strong>-1715, 1717, 1718, 1720-1722, 1725,1727, 1732, 1746-1750, 1757, 1780, 1783,1789, 1798, 1812, 1813, 1820, 1822, 1832,1835, 1839, 1841, 1850, 1870, 1887, 1891,1892, 1900, 1901, 1903, 1904, 1906, 1907,1909-19<strong>11</strong>, 1916, 1918, 1919, 1927, 1928,1946, 1951, 1952, 1954, 1958, 1959, 1968,1971-1973, 1976-1980, 1983-1985,1989-1991, 1997, 1998, 2003, 2004, 2010,2013-2015, 2059, 2067, 2068, 2070, 2080,2107, 2108, 2<strong>11</strong>4, 2180, 2182, 2441, 2471,2474, 2481, 2487, 2494, 2520, 2524, 2526,2531, 2594, 2601, 2602, 2605, 2606, 2609,2647, 2649, 2657, 2659, 2660, 2662-2664,2666-2668, 2674, 2683, 2686, 2698, 2701,2708, 2709, 2727, 2736, 2740, 2741, 2744,2745, 2933, 2937-2942, 2956-2958, 2972,3002-3004, 3008, 3010-3013, 3018, 3021,3024, 3025, 3030, 3032, 3039, 3063, 3064,3070, 3092, 3097, 3104, 3106, 3<strong>11</strong>5, 3<strong>11</strong>9,3120, 3194, 3233, 3235, 3238-3240, 3249,3254, 3277, 3280, 3283, 3284, 3286, 3288,3293, 3301, 3304, 3305, 3339, 3343, 3355,3371, 3372, 3378, 3379, 3385, 3389, 3391,3403, 3428, 3431, 3436, 3439, 3466, 3468,3470, 3478, 3489, 3493, 3503, 3518, 3528,3532, 3535, 3536, 3548, 3554, 3555, 3559,3562, 3564, 3568, 3570, 3576, 3590, 3680,3682, 3683, 3685, 3687, 3701, 3702, 37<strong>11</strong>,3715, 3720, 3721, 3723, 3737, 3738, 3742,3746, 3749, 3773, 3780, 3783, 3787, 3793,3802, 3848, 3880, 3883, 3888, 3892, 3896,3904, 3905, 3933, 3961, 4000, 4051, 4052,4078, 4079, 4083, 4086, 4094, 4095, 4099,4104, 4108-4<strong>11</strong>0, 4125-4128, 4131,4150-4153, 4155, 4156, 4159, 4160, 4162,4169, 4178, 4193, 4198, 4203, 4230, 4261,4269, 4270, 4275, 4277, 4280, 4282,4287-4289, 4308, 4315, 4318, 4319, 4323,4339, 4343, 4347, 4348, 4354, 4359, 4360,4365, 4370, 4373, 4376-4378, 4382, 4420,4427, 4430-4432, 4439, 4440, 4483, 4489,4521, 4526, 4528, 4530, 4538, 4539Family services, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Children 31, <strong>11</strong>0, 202, 225, 228,247, 410, 438, 490, 495, 518, 663, 667, 675,950, 973, <strong>11</strong>00, <strong>11</strong>02, 1250, 1285, 1286,1298, 1322, 1324, 1342, 1344, 1416, 1417,1460, 1493, 1494, 1559, 1884, 1996, 2<strong>11</strong>1,2151, 2152, 2157, 2158, 2449, 2455, 2458,250


INDEX OF SUBJECTS2469, 2540, 2673, 2680, 2730, 2772, 2787,2934, 2946, 2947, 3005, 3046, 3050, 3123,3124, 3165, 3196, 3246, 3258, 3262, 3342,3377, 3386, 3427, 3495, 3498, 3516, 3519,3521, 3536, 3770, 3785, 3795, 3886, 3906,4018, 4165, 4281, 4362, 4428, 4429, 4434,4482Family services, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Employees 42, 156, 201, 202,208, 405, 416, 448, 654, 678, 942, 1004,1006, 1032, <strong>11</strong>00-<strong>11</strong>02, 1208, 1294, 1317,1467, 1484, 1490, 1531, 1536, 1549, 1553,1554, 1775, 1784, 1829, 1939, 1941, 1942,1977, 2121, 2134, 2141, 2540, 2671, 2749,3065, 3067, 3275, 3381, 3382, 3509, 3779,4297, 4309Family services, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - General 3, 8, <strong>11</strong>, 12, 19, 21, 22,32, 57, 63, 71, 80, 83-86, 90, 91, 93, 95,97-99, 102, 121, 122, 144, 146, 178, 192,193, 195, 205, 206, 215, 216, 219, 229, 231,232, 238, 244, 254, 269, 276, 279, 280,282-291, 332, 343, 346, 349, 352, 354, 355,367, 368, 370, 371, 391-393, 418, 421, 424,430-432, 435, 457, 459, 460, 475, 481, 486,487, 489, 506-508, 531, 539-541, 548, 645,649-651, 655, 656, 659, 661, 662, 672, 688,691, 692, 700, 858, 879-882, 887, 894, 897,913, 967, 971, 976, 978, 979, 983, 1005,1013, 1028, 1033, 1037, 1039-1042, 1047,1049, 1051, 1056, 1067, 1072, 1081, 1090,1098, <strong>11</strong>03, <strong>11</strong>18, <strong>11</strong>22, <strong>11</strong>34, <strong>11</strong>36, <strong>11</strong>39,<strong>11</strong>47, <strong>11</strong>50, <strong>11</strong>53, <strong>11</strong>55, <strong>11</strong>56, <strong>11</strong>60, <strong>11</strong>73,<strong>11</strong>75, <strong>11</strong>81, <strong>11</strong>86, <strong>11</strong>88, <strong>11</strong>89, <strong>11</strong>99, 1200,1208, 1210, 1214, 1222, 1224-1226, 1228,1230, 1255, 1257, 1270, 1273, 1274, 1290,1299-1301, 1303-1305, 1323, 1347-1349,1402, 1408, 14<strong>11</strong>, 1412, 1415, 1426, 1427,1431, 1442, 1443, 1445, 1448-1451, 1453,1462, 1479, 1482, 1485, 1486, 1488, 1497,1512, 1521, 1523, 1540, 1541, 1547, 1550,1558, 1567, 1570-1572, 1642, 1643, 1651,1654, 1660, 1663, 1672, 1673, 1678, 1682,1689, 1690, 1698, 1700, 1703, 1708,17<strong>11</strong>-1715, 1717, 1718, 1720, 1725, 1727,1732, 1746-1750, 1757, 1780, 1783, 1789,1798, 1812, 1813, 1816, 1820, 1822, 1832,1835, 1839, 1841, 1850, 1870, 1887, 1891,1892, 1900, 1901, 1903, 1904, 1906, 1907,1909-19<strong>11</strong>, 1916, 1918, 1919, 1927, 1928,1946, 1951, 1952, 1954, 1958, 1959, 1968,1971-1973, 1976, 1978-1980, 1983-1985,1989-1991, 1997, 1998, 2003, 2004, 2010,2013-2015, 2059, 2067, 2068, 2070, 2080,2107, 2108, 2<strong>11</strong>4, 2180, 2182, 2441, 2471,2474, 2481, 2487, 2494, 2520, 2524, 2526,2531, 2542, 2594, 2601, 2602, 2605, 2606,2609, 2647, 2649, 2657, 2659, 2660,2662-2664, 2666-2669, 2674, 2683, 2686,2698, 2701, 2708, 2709, 2727, 2736, 2740,2741, 2744, 2745, 2767, 2779, 2796, 2933,2937-2942, 2956-2958, 2972, 3002-3004,3008, 3010-3013, 3018, 3021, 3024, 3025,3030, 3032, 3039, 3063, 3064, 3070, 3092,3097, 3104, 3106, 3<strong>11</strong>5, 3<strong>11</strong>9, 3120, 3194,3233, 3235, 3238-3240, 3249, 3254, 3259,3277, 3280, 3283, 3284, 3286, 3288, 3293,3301, 3304, 3305, 3339, 3343, 3355, 3371,3372, 3378, 3379, 3385, 3389, 3391, 3403,3428, 3431, 3436, 3439, 3466, 3468, 3470,3478, 3489, 3493, 3503, 3518, 3528, 3532,3535, 3536, 3540, 3548, 3554, 3555, 3557,3559, 3562, 3564, 3568, 3570, 3576, 3590,3680, 3682, 3683, 3685, 3687, 3701, 3702,37<strong>11</strong>, 3712, 3715, 3720, 3721, 3723, 3737,3738, 3742, 3746, 3749, 3773, 3780, 3783,3787, 3788, 3793, 3802, 3848, 3880, 3883,3888, 3892, 3896, 3904, 3905, 4051, 4052,4078, 4079, 4083, 4086, 4094, 4095, 4099,4104, 4108-4<strong>11</strong>0, 4125-4128, 4131,4150-4153, 4155, 4156, 4159, 4160, 4162,4169, 4178, 4193, 4198, 4203, 4230, 4261,4269, 4270, 4275, 4277, 4280-4282,4287-4289, 4308, 4315, 4318, 4319, 4323,4339, 4343, 4347, 4348, 4354, 4358-4360,4365, 4370, 4373, 4376-4378, 4382, 4420,4427, 4430-4432, 4439, 4440, 4483, 4489,4521, 4526, 4528, 4530, 4538, 4539Family services, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Uniformed service workers and fa2, 29, 31, 38, 65, 78, 82, 109, <strong>11</strong>0, 123, 190,196, 222, 224, 225, 228, 247, 253, 256, 257,271, 273, 347, 350, 359, 370, 371, 382, 387,410, 423, 426, 438, 442, 445, 450, 456, 495,510, 518, 530, 549, 657, 663-667, 675, 888,889, 903, 950, 972, 973, 1008, 1014, 1064,1071, 1079, 1083, 1088, <strong>11</strong>32, <strong>11</strong>48, <strong>11</strong>91,1220, 1221, 1229, 1235, 1250, 1278, 1285,1286, 1296-1298, 1322, 1324, 1340-1342,1344, 1414, 1416, 1417, 1424, 1460, 1461,1464, 1467, 1493, 1494, 1525, 1532, 1535,1536, 1544, 1559, 1563, 1569, 1574, 1662,1664, 1666, 1667, 1679, 1696, 1705, 1706,1721, 1722, 1726, 1728-1730, 1735, 1736,1761, 1782, 1787, 1788, 1874, 1875, 1884,1908, 1922, 1987, 1993, 1996, 2072, 2<strong>11</strong>1,2<strong>11</strong>8, 2136, 2137, 2144, 2146, 2151-2154,2157-2159, 2167-2169, 2179, 2449, 2455,2458, 2465, 2469, 2470, 2485, 2490, 2496,2516, 2533, 2539, 2656, 2673, 2680, 2694,2705, 2729, 2733, 2742, 2747, 2752, 2756,2757, 2761, 2763, 2768, 2772, 2773, 2786,2787, 2934, 2946, 2947, 2996, 3005, 3017,3028, 3037, 3046, 3049, 3050, 3058, 3067,3074, 3123, 3124, 3155, 3165, 3173, 3196,3234, 3242, 3244, 3246, 3258, 3262, 3272,3275, 3285, 3342, 3354, 3377, 3386, 3402,3425, 3427, 3491, 3492, 3495, 3498, 3502,3504, 3514-3516, 3519, 3521, 3550, 3571,3584, 3598, 3716, 3719, 3722, 3725, 3739,3760, 3770, 3774, 3782, 3785, 3791, 3792,3795, 3799, 3804, 3805, 3847, 3860, 3866,3877, 3886, 3889, 3906, 4014, 4018, 4081,4084, 4085, 4096, 4105, 4148, 4157, 4165,4190, 4192, 4200, 4266, 4278, 4279,4299-4301, 4310, 4362, 4384, 4428, 4429,4434, 4435, 4482, 4486, 4527, 4531Family services, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Union members/otherprofessional 42, 678, 1032, 1294, 2134,2172, 4297, 4309Family services, Women 31, <strong>11</strong>0, 162, 171, 175,181, 225, 228, 247, 370, 371, 410, 438, 495,518, 663, 667, 675, 950, 973, 1250, 1285,1286, 1298, 1322, 1324, 1342, 1344, 1416,1417, 1460, 1493, 1494, 1559, 1884, 1996,2<strong>11</strong>1, 2151, 2152, 2158, 2458, 2469, 2673,2680, 2772, 2787, 2934, 2946, 2947, 3005,3046, 3050, 3123, 3124, 3165, 3196, 3212,3215, 3220, 3221, 3226, 3246, 3258, 3262,3342, 3377, 3386, 3427, 3495, 3498, 3516,3770, 3785, 3795, 3906, 4018, 4165, 4362,4428, 4429, 4474, 4482Federated giving programs, AZ 261, 262Federated giving programs, CA 461, 567, 568,594, 621-635, 1036, 3539Federated giving programs, DC 274, 1759Federated giving programs, HI 2722Federated giving programs, KS 2075Federated giving programs, MA 497, 498, 876Federated giving programs, NJ 1847, 4522Federated giving programs, NY 149, 676, 677,932, 1010, 1407, 1465, 1480, 1797, 3344,3582, 4100, 4523Federated giving programs, OH 1957Federated giving programs, PA 1880, 25<strong>11</strong>, 4350Federated giving programs, TN 1675, 2615Federated giving programs, VA 4481, 4520Federated giving programs, WI 1988Film/video, Asians/Pacific islanders 4252Film/video, contribution 704, 708, 753, 1336,1337, 2643, 2646, 2808, 3667, 3833, 4231,4252, 4388, 4398, 4406, 4418Film/video, Economically disadvantaged 4231Film/video, Immigrants/refugees 4231Financial services, contribution 1325, 1584, 2992,3060, 3061, 3455, 3510, 4143, 4313Financial services, employee matching gifts 2463Financial services, general support 992Folk arts, contribution 735, 740, 4393Food banks, contribution <strong>11</strong>9, 140, 187, 560,1670, 2021, 2022, 2193, 2195, 2254, 2267,2286-2288, 2293, 2294, 2300, 2306, 2324,2347, 2396-2399, 2423, 2480, 2712, 2713,2716, 2717, 3146, 3917, 3944, 3962,4449-4451Food banks, Economically disadvantaged 46, <strong>11</strong>9,140, 187, 2480, 3917, 3944, 3962, 4451Food banks, employee matching gifts 46Food banks, Homeless 187Food banks, Relief and recoveryworkers/volunteers 46, <strong>11</strong>9, 2480, 3917Food banks, Victims and families, economicallyaffected 46, <strong>11</strong>9, 2480, 3917, 3944, 3962Food distribution, Aging/elderly/senior citizens321, 449, 2343, 3945Food distribution, contribution 145, 173, 174,299, 300, 320, 321, 449, 2023-2025, 2027,2343, 2344, 3945, 3968Food distribution, Disabled, general 321, 2343,3945Food distribution, Economically disadvantaged321, 2343, 3945Food distribution, meals on wheels 145, 173, 174,299, 300, 320, 321, 449, 2023-2025, 2027,2343, 2344, 3945, 3968Food distribution, People with AIDS (PWAs) 145,173, 3968Food distribution, Victims and families,economically affected 3945Food services, Children & youth 2133Food services, commodity distribution 2283Food services, congregate meals 150, 1329, 2255,2260, 2323, 2339, 3987Food services, contribution <strong>11</strong>4, <strong>11</strong>7, 135, 138,139, 143, 150, 157, 167, 177, 186, 242, 467,553, 597, 904, <strong>11</strong>60, 1243, 1329, 1420,1443, 1668, 1870, 2019, 2020, 2026, 2217,2253, 2255, 2260, 2274, 2283, 2289, 2323,2330, 2339, 2360, 2373, 2405, 2451, 2538,2613, 3093, 3141, 3152, 3172, 3451, 3949,3987, 4043, 4073Food services, Economically disadvantaged <strong>11</strong>4,138, 150, 167, 467, 1243, 1420, 2133, 2538,2613, 3093, 3152, 3172, 3949, 3987, 4043,4073Food services, employee matching gifts 2133,3723Food services, Immigrants/refugees 3093Food services, People with AIDS (PWAs) <strong>11</strong>7,138, 143, 157, 186Food services, Relief and recoveryworkers/volunteers 135, 139, 242, 904, <strong>11</strong>60,1443, 1870, 2451, 3723Food services, Victims and families, economicallyaffected <strong>11</strong>4, 167, 467, 904, <strong>11</strong>60, 1420,1443, 1870, 2613, 3723, 3949, 3987, 4073Food services, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - General 904, <strong>11</strong>60, 1443, 1870,3723Food/nutrition/agriculture, Czech Republic 3093Foreign policy, contribution 1597, 2623, 2624,2629, 2641, 3484, 4257Foreign policy, Economically disadvantaged 4257Foreign policy, Ethnic/racial minorities, general4257Foreign policy, Ethnic/racial minorities, otherspecified group 3484Foreign policy, Immigrants/refugees 3484Foreign policy, Women 4257Foster care, contribution 2241Foster care, employee matching gifts 2730Foster care, Immigrants/refugees 2730Foster care, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Children 2730<strong>Foundation</strong>s (community), contribution 220, 239,505, 569, 575-579, 581, 582, 585, 586, 589,590, 596, 598, 602, 604, 607-609, 6<strong>11</strong>-613,615, 617-620, 638, 660, 679, 866, 867, 925,1092, <strong>11</strong>64, <strong>11</strong>65, 1272, 1504, 1517, 1882,1955, 2082, 2461, 2697, 3006, 3231, 3424251


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE<strong>Foundation</strong>s (community), employee matchinggifts 1505<strong>Foundation</strong>s (community), Victims and families,economically affected 239, 3006<strong>Foundation</strong>s (community), Victims and families,injured and deceased - General 239, 3006<strong>Foundation</strong>s (corporate), contribution 500, 694,3271, 3607<strong>Foundation</strong>s (private independent), contribution470, 1266, 2051, 2462, 2777, 3669<strong>Foundation</strong>s (private operating), contribution 929,1859, 2031, 2032, 2037, 2078, 2240, 2622,2643, 3667, 3820<strong>Foundation</strong>s (private operating), Relief andrecovery workers/volunteers 2031, 2032<strong>Foundation</strong>s (public), contribution 637, 640, 685,2103, 2625, 3048, 3299, 3336, 3605, 3662,3754, 4459Fraternal societies, contribution <strong>11</strong>70, 1818, 1924,3270, 3274, 4<strong>11</strong>8, 4466Fraternal societies, Victims and families, injuredand deceased - Uniformed service workersand fa 1924Gays/lesbians, civil rights 4238, 4245Gays/lesbians, crime/courts/legal services 4238Gays/lesbians, health—general 4473Girls & young women, education 2063, 3950Girls & young women, youth development 395,1239, 3408Goodwill Industries, contribution 2296-2299,3970Goodwill Industries, Economically disadvantaged3970Goodwill Industries, Victims and families,economically affected 3970Government/public administration, contribution4<strong>11</strong>6, 4517Graduate/professional education, contribution1396, 1605, 3655Health care clinics & centers, contribution 636,<strong>11</strong>05, 2038, 2236, 2244, 2302, 2315, 2366,2501, 4023, 4479Health care clinics & centers, Women 4479Health care, Asians/Pacific islanders 3934Health care, blood supply 166, 933, 934, 1430,1470, 1471, 2675, 4337, 4498Health care, Children 1826Health care, contribution 63, 156, 166, 208, 255,424, 445, 471, 509, 661, 662, 678, 688, 765,933, 934, 942, 1032, <strong>11</strong>33, 1284, 1430,1470, 1471, 1490, 1806, 1807, 1826, 1941,2002, 2034, 2107, 2161, 2178, 2224, 2473,2671, 2675, 2800, 2985, 3083, 3407, 3410,3414, 3509, 3934, 3977, 4108, 4287, 4289,4297, 4337, 4498Health care, counseling/pastoral care 509, 3977Health care, Crime/abuse victims 1806, 1807,2127Health care, Economically disadvantaged 2161,3934Health care, emergency transport services <strong>11</strong>33,3407, 3410, 3414Health care, employee matching gifts 28, 42, 1829,2127, 2141, 2160, 2177, 2727, 3262Health care, EMS 2002, 2034, 3083Health care, financing 942, 1004Health care, general support 1004Health care, HMOs 3934Health care, Immigrants/refugees 3934Health care, infants 1826, 2224Health care, insurance 42, 678, 1032, 1490, 2177,2178, 4297Health care, Military/veterans 445Health care, patient services 765Health care, prenatal care 2224Health care, Relief and recoveryworkers/volunteers 424, 471, 688, <strong>11</strong>33,2107, 2727, 4108Health care, reproductive health 2800, 2985Health care, Victims and families, economicallyaffected 424, 471, 688, 2107, 2727, 4108,4287, 4289Health care, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Children 28, 255, 1284, 2473,3262Health care, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Employees 42, 156, 208, 678,942, 1004, 1032, 1284, 1490, 1829, 1941,2141, 2177, 2178, 2671, 3509, 4297Health care, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - General 63, 424, 471, 661, 662,688, 1430, 1471, 2107, 2727, 3977, 4108,4287, 4289, 4337Health care, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Uniformed service workers and fa445, 3262Health care, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Union members/otherprofessional 42, 678, 1032, 4297Health care, Women 3262Health organizations, Children & youth 3986Health organizations, contribution 3986Health—general, Pakistan 3350Heart/circulatory disease, contribution 3575Higher education, African Americans/Blacks2085, 4057Higher education, Children & youth 202, 263,898, 994, <strong>11</strong>02, 1227, 1275, 1346, 1487,1499, 1753, 1828, 1950, 2444, 2449, 2534,26<strong>11</strong>, 2612, 3447, 3481, 3482, 4031, 4103,4306, 4344, 4346Higher education, contribution 124, 131, 165,179, 183, 194, 202, 207, 249, 250, 263, 272,372, 381, 455, 687, 698, 860, 861, 898, 944,994, <strong>11</strong>02, 1216, 1218, 1227, 1275, 1330,1346, 1476, 1487, 1499, 1561, 1562, 1577,1659, 1753, 1804, 1921, 1929-1931, 1944,1945, 1950, 1956, 2085, 2086, 2444, 2449,2540, 2541, 2612, 2963, 3040, 3<strong>11</strong>0, 3<strong>11</strong>7,3295, 3430, 3447, 3455, 3467, 3481, 3499,3507, 3519, 3521, 3538, 3733, 3761, 3796,3797, 3881, 4031, 4057, 4092, 4103, 4303,4306, 43<strong>11</strong>, 4314, 4346, 4374, 4445Higher education, Crime/abuse victims 2142,2173Higher education, Economically disadvantaged4031Higher education, employee matching gifts 268,474, 485, 1794, 1828, 1992, 2132, 2142,2162, 2166, 2173, 2499, 2534, 26<strong>11</strong>, 3482,3551, 3762-3764, 4344Higher education, Ethnic/racial minorities, general4031Higher education, general support 248Higher education, Military/veterans 1216, 1218Higher education, Victims and families,economically affected 131, 2085Higher education, Victims and families, injuredand deceased - Children 124, 179, 183, 194,202, 207, 248-250, 263, 268, 455, 474, 485,861, 898, 994, <strong>11</strong>02, 1216, 1218, 1227,1275, 1330, 1346, 1476, 1487, 1499, 1561,1562, 1659, 1753, 1794, 1828, 1921, 1929,1930, 1944, 1945, 1950, 1992, 2132, 2166,2444, 2449, 2499, 2534, 2540, 2541, 26<strong>11</strong>,2612, 2963, 3040, 3<strong>11</strong>7, 3295, 3430, 3447,3467, 3481, 3482, 3499, 3507, 3519, 3521,3551, 3733, 3761-3764, 4031, 4103, 4303,4306, 43<strong>11</strong>, 4314, 4344, 4346, 4374, 4445Higher education, Victims and families, injuredand deceased - Employees 124, 202, 207,248-250, <strong>11</strong>02, 1330, 1561, 1562, 1828,1930, 1944, 1945, 1992, 2132, 2540, 3507,4303Higher education, Victims and families, injuredand deceased - General 1227, 3<strong>11</strong>0Higher education, Victims and families, injuredand deceased - Uniformed service workersand fa 183, 263, 1216, 1218, 1950, 2449,3499, 3519, 3521, 4374Higher education, Women 2499Hispanics/Latinos, civil rights 3176, 3190, 4219Hispanics/Latinos, crime/courts/legal services3190, 3212Hispanics/Latinos, education 3214, 3916Hispanics/Latinos, employment 148, 3188, 3212,4253Hispanics/Latinos, housing/shelter 4253Hispanics/Latinos, human services—multipurpose3212, 3214, 3932, 4219, 4253Hispanics/Latinos, mental health/substance abuse3203, 3204, 3212Hispanics/Latinos, philanthropy/voluntarism 149Historic preservation/ historical societies,contribution 2018, 2995, 4017Historic preservation/historical societies,contribution 345, 480, 721, 728, 764, 775,796, 825, 830, 1318, 1375, 1704, 2468,2603, 2837, 2848, 2917, 2921, 2986, 3198,3281, 3282, 3620, 3663, 3664, 4141Historical activities, contribution 108, 3833Historical activities, general support 987Historical activities, Victims and families, injuredand deceased - Uniformed service workersand fa 108History & archaeology, contribution 583, 616,740, 773, 1262, 1803, 1858, 3572Hmo financing/insurance, contribution 1919Hmo financing/insurance, Victims and families,economically affected 1919Hmo financing/insurance, Victims and families,injured and deceased - General 1919Homeless, contribution 151, 556, 1439, 1857,2189, 2217, 2220, 2221, 2223, 2248, 2256,2269, 2276, 2310, 2313, 2318, 2319, 2334,2353, 2357, 2361, 2402, 2408, 2428, 3947,3955, 3988, 40<strong>11</strong>, 4063, 4068Homeless, Economically disadvantaged 556Homeless, employment 3964Homeless, environment 4068Homeless, food/nutrition/agriculture 187Homeless, health—general 2973, 2974Homeless, housing/shelter 2<strong>11</strong>9, 4010, 40<strong>11</strong>Homeless, human services 151, 556, 1439, 1857,2189, 2217, 2220, 2221, 2223, 2248, 2256,2269, 2276, 2310, 2313, 2318, 2319, 2334,2353, 2357, 2361, 2402, 2408, 2428, 3947,3955, 3988, 40<strong>11</strong>, 4063, 4068Homeless, human services—multipurpose 151,1439, 2147, 3786, 3947, 3955, 3988, 40<strong>11</strong>,4035, 4063, 4068Homeless, mental health/substance abuse 3964Homeless, Mentally/emotionally disabled 4063Homeless, safety/disaster relief 2973Homeless, Substance abusers 4063Homeless, Victims and families, economicallyaffected 556Hospices, contribution 1937Hospitals (general), contribution 402, 516, <strong>11</strong>08,1326, 1423, 1658, 2056, 2505, 2506, 2508,2509, 2870, 2871, 2896, 2994, 3171, 3417,3418, 3422, 3456, 3461, 3594, 3595, 3844,3865, 3868, 3871Hospitals (general), Victims and families,economically affected 2056Hospitals (general), Victims and families, injuredand deceased - General 2056Hospitals (specialty), contribution 920, 921, 3814,3870Housing/shelter, African Americans/Blacks 3914Housing/shelter, Asians/Pacific islanders 919,3139Housing/shelter, Children & youth 3771, 4010Housing/shelter, contribution 422, 554, 556, 562,891, 919, 1320, 1419, 1514, 1548, 1556,1857, 2189, 2208, 2209, 2220, 2221, 2223,2248, 2249, 2251, 2256, 2269, 2276, 2304,2305, 2313, 2318, 2319, 2331, 2334, 2339,2353, 2362, 2401, 2402, 2428, 2513, 2676,2735, 3105, 3136, 3139, 3278, 3546, 3854,3914, 3948, 3952, 3973, 4010, 40<strong>11</strong>, 4026,4229, 4244, 4253, 4271Housing/shelter, development 1320, 1556, 2251,2304, 2305, 3854, 3914, 3948, 3952, 3973,4010, 4026, 4229, 4244Housing/shelter, Economically disadvantaged 556,1320, 1419, 1548, 1556, 3136, 3278, 3546,3854, 3948, 3973, 4026, 4229, 4244, 4253,4271252


INDEX OF SUBJECTSHousing/shelter, employee matching gifts 2<strong>11</strong>9,3771Housing/shelter, equal rights 3139Housing/shelter, expense aid 554, 1419, 1548,3105, 3136, 3278Housing/shelter, Hispanics/Latinos 4253Housing/shelter, homeless 556, 562, 1857, 2<strong>11</strong>9,2189, 2209, 2220, 2221, 2223, 2248, 2249,2256, 2269, 2276, 2313, 2318, 2319, 2331,2334, 2339, 2353, 2362, 2401, 2402, 2428,4010, 40<strong>11</strong>Housing/shelter, management/technical aid 562Housing/shelter, Men 2<strong>11</strong>9Housing/shelter, Offenders/ex-offenders 2<strong>11</strong>9Housing/shelter, services 422, 891, 1320, 1514,1556, 2513, 2676, 2735, 3546, 4271Housing/shelter, temporary shelter 2208Housing/shelter, tenants organizations 4253Housing/shelter, Victims and families,economically affected 422, 556, 891, 1320,1419, 1548, 1556, 2513, 2676, 2735, 3105,3136, 3278, 3546, 3914, 3948, 3952, 3973,4026, 4229, 4244, 4253, 4271Housing/shelter, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Children 3771Housing/shelter, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - General 422, 554, 891, 1419,1514, 1548, 2513, 2676, 2735, 3105, 3278,3546, 3952, 4271Housing/shelter, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Uniformed service workers and fa3771Housing/shelter, volunteer services 2304, 2305,3973Housing/shelter, Women 4010, 4229Human rights (international), contribution 2627,4210, 4471, 4477Human rights (international), Ethnic/racialminorities, other specified group 2627Human rights (international),Immigrants/refugees 2627Human rights (international), Women 4210, 4471,4477Human services—multipurpose, Canada 365, 366,1206, 1963, 3524, 4<strong>11</strong>2, 4<strong>11</strong>3, 4129, 4260,4274Human services—multipurpose, England 700Human services—multipurpose, Japan 3034Human services—multipurpose, Pakistan 4212Human services, Aging/elderly/senior citizens 180,330, 4005Human services, alliance 558, 599, 863, 1575,1581, 1613, 1638, 1640, 2089, 2094, 2301,2361, 3175Human services, Asians/Pacific islanders 72, 883,918, 3209, 3252, 4475, 4480Human services, association 303, 304, 307, 3<strong>11</strong>,324, 325, 330, 340, 875, 955-957, 1831,2997Human services, Children & youth 136, 370, 371,410, 438, 518, <strong>11</strong>00, 1250, 1322, 1344,1416, 1417, 1828, 2140, 2419, 2455, 2680,2731, 2934, 3771, 3785, 4037, 4165, 4428,4482Human services, contribution 2, 3, 6-9, <strong>11</strong>, 12, 16,19, 78, 79, 82-88, 91-93, 95, 97-99, 101,109, <strong>11</strong>0, <strong>11</strong>5, 120-124, 136, 142, 146, 156,160, 161, 163, 168, 178, 180, 189, 190, 192,193, 195-197, 201, 203, 205, 208, 209, 2<strong>11</strong>,214, 216, 218, 219, 222, 223, 225-228,230-232, 234, 235, 238, 240, 243, 244, 246,247, 251-257, 259, 265-267, 269, 271, 273,279, 282-284, 286, 303, 304, 307, 3<strong>11</strong>, 324,325, 330, 332, 340, 343, 346-348, 350-353,355, 356, 359-361, 363, 365, 368, 369, 371,377-379, 382, 383, 386, 387, 392, 393, 398,400, 401, 404-406, 408, 410, 4<strong>11</strong>, 415-424,426, 427, 429-431, 433-438, 440-443, 445,448, 450, 451, 453, 454, 456, 457, 459, 463,464, 466, 468, 469, 471, 472, 475, 481-483,486-490, 492-495, 504, 506, 507, 510, 514,515, 517-521, 523, 526, 527, 530, 531, 534,536, 537, 539-541, 544-546, 548, 549, 554,558, 561, 591, 592, 599, 610, 642, 643, 645,649-651, 653, 655-659, 661-675, 678, 685,688-690, 692, 695-697, 700, 858, 859, 863,864, 868, 875, 878-883, 888, 890-895, 897,900-904, 912, 913, 918, 922, 942, 949, 950,955-957, 964, 966, 967, 970-975, 977-979,982-984, 1007, 1008, 1013, 1014, 1017,1018, 1020-1033, 1035, 1037, 1039-1041,1046-1049, 1051, 1054-1084, 1088, 1090,1094, 1095, <strong>11</strong>00, <strong>11</strong>01, <strong>11</strong>03, <strong>11</strong>13, <strong>11</strong>15,<strong>11</strong>16, <strong>11</strong>18-<strong>11</strong>28, <strong>11</strong>30-<strong>11</strong>32, <strong>11</strong>34, <strong>11</strong>35,<strong>11</strong>37-<strong>11</strong>42, <strong>11</strong>46-<strong>11</strong>56, <strong>11</strong>58-<strong>11</strong>60, <strong>11</strong>62,<strong>11</strong>72-<strong>11</strong>82, <strong>11</strong>84, <strong>11</strong>86-<strong>11</strong>89, <strong>11</strong>91,<strong>11</strong>99-1208, 1210, 12<strong>11</strong>, 1216, 1217,1220-1224, 1226, 1228-1232, 1235, 1236,1240, 1246, 1254, 1255, 1257, 1269, 1270,1273, 1274, 1279, 1280, 1282-1291, 1293,1294, 1296-1299, 1301, 1303-1306, 1308,1317, 1322-1324, 1328, 1335, 1338-1342,1344, 1345, 1347-1350, 1400, 1402,1404-1406, 1408, 1410-1412, 1414-1417,1425, 1426, 1431, 1433-1436, 1440, 1442,1443, 1445, 1446, 1448-1451, 1455,1458-1462, 1464, 1466, 1467, 1474, 1477,1479, 1482-1486, 1488-1490, 1492-1495,1497, 1498, 1510-1515, 1518, 1519,1521-1525, 1531-1533, 1535, 1536,1538-1542, 1544, 1547, 1549, 1551-1554,1557-1559, 1563, 1565-1569, 1573-1575,1581, 1602, 1613, 1622, 1623, 1638, 1640,1642, 1646, 1648-1654, 1656, 1657, 1660,1662-1667, 1669, 1672-1674, 1678-1680,1682, 1684, 1689, 1690, 1693, 1698-1700,1705, 1706, 1708, 1710-1714, 1716-1718,1720, 1722, 1723, 1725, 1726, 1729, 1731,1732, 1735, 1736, 1739-1741, 1744, 1746,1747, 1749, 1750, 1754, 1755, 1757, 1758,1760, 1761, 1763, 1765, 1773, 1774,1778-1780, 1782-1785, 1787-1790, 1792,1793, 1798, 1800, 1802, 1806, 1807,1812-1814, 1816, 1819-1823, 1825,1831-1833, 1835-1839, 1841-1843, 1845,1850, 1870, 1874, 1875, 1877, 1879, 1881,1884, 1886-1889, 1891, 1898-1900,1904-1906, 1908-19<strong>11</strong>, 1914, 1915, 1920,1922, 1924, 1925, 1927, 1928, 1930, 1934,1939, 1941, 1942, 1951-1954, 1958-1961,1963, 1966, 1968, 1969, 1972, 1973,1975-1977, 1979, 1981, 1983-1987,1989-1991, 1993, 1994, 1997, 1998, 2004,2005, 20<strong>11</strong>-2015, 2058-2060, 2066,2068-2073, 2079, 2080, 2083, 2084, 2089,2094, 2105, 2107, 2108, 2<strong>11</strong>1, 2<strong>11</strong>8, 2137,2150, 2154, 2156, 2158, 2164, 2168, 2178,2180, 2182-2184, 2186, 2187, 2192, 2205,2218, 2222, 2226-2233, 2238, 2242, 2247,2257-2259, 2263, 2265, 2266, 2268, 2272,2273, 2275, 2277, 2294, 2301, 2309, 2317,2320, 2328, 2335-2338, 2340, 2350, 2352,2356, 2361, 2362, 2364, 2368-2370,2375-2378, 2394, 2410, 2414, 2419, 2421,2425, 2441, 2442, 2447, 2448, 2456-2458,2464-2466, 2469-2471, 2474, 2475,2485-2487, 2489, 2490, 2492, 2494, 2495,2504, 2512, 2513, 2515, 2516, 2520,2524-2529, 2533, 2535, 2539, 2540, 2542,2543, 2593, 2595, 2597-2601, 2604, 2606,2608, 2609, 2621, 2626, 2647-2650,2652-2654, 2656, 2657, 2659, 2662-2664,2666-2669, 2671, 2673, 2674, 2676, 2680,2681, 2683, 2688, 2693, 2694, 2701,2703-27<strong>11</strong>, 2714, 2715, 2735, 2736,2740-2742, 2745, 2747-2752, 2754-2757,2759-2761, 2763, 2766-2769, 2771-2776,2778-2781, 2786, 2787, 2789-2792, 2794,2796, 2836, 2934, 2937-2942, 2944-2961,2969, 2970, 2972, 2996-2998, 3003-3005,3008, 3010-3014, 3016-3026, 3028, 3030,3032-3034, 3037-3039, 3044-3053, 3056,3058, 3065, 3067, 3070, 3071, 3073-3075,3080, 3092, 3094, 3096, 3097, 3101, 3102,3104-3106, 3<strong>11</strong>1, 3<strong>11</strong>3, 3<strong>11</strong>5, 3<strong>11</strong>8, 3<strong>11</strong>9,3122, 3123, 3126-3128, 3137, 3138,3160-3165, 3175, 3194-3196, 3232-3236,3239-3242, 3244, 3246, 3249, 3252, 3254,3257-3261, 3265, 3267, 3272, 3273, 3275,3276, 3280, 3283, 3285, 3286, 3288, 3289,3291, 3293, 3294, 3296, 3297, 3301,3303-3305, 3323, 3339, 3341-3343, 3345,3347, 3353-3356, 3360-3368, 3370-3372,3377-3379, 3381-3389, 3393, 3394, 3402,3403, 3415, 3416, 3419, 3421, 3425,3427-3429, 3431, 3439, 3444, 3445, 3448,3452, 3460, 3465, 3466, 3468, 3470-3476,3478, 3479, 3485, 3488, 3489, 3491-3495,3497, 3498, 3501-3505, 3507, 3509, 35<strong>11</strong>,3514, 3516, 3518, 3519, 3521-3524, 3532,3533, 3535, 3537, 3541, 3542, 3546, 3548,3550, 3554-3557, 3559, 3561, 3562,3566-3571, 3574, 3576, 3577, 3579-3581,3583-3587, 3590, 3591, 3597, 3598, 3601,3603, 3605, 3608, 3609, 3675, 3678, 3679,3683-3685, 3687-3689, 3691, 3692, 3696,3698, 3701-3703, 3706, 3710-3712, 3714,3721, 3734, 3735, 3737-3739, 3741,3745-3747, 3749-3753, 3755, 3758, 3760,3765, 3766, 3770, 3772, 3774, 3775, 3777,3779-3788, 3790-3793, 3795, 3798-3805,3829, 3843, 3845-3848, 3857, 3858, 3860,3866, 3869, 3877, 3880, 3882, 3883, 3885,3887-3890, 3892-3896, 3899, 3904, 3906,39<strong>11</strong>, 3939-3942, 3969, 3974, 3992, 3998,4005, 4006, 4014, 4018, 4035, 4037, 4046,4059, 4077, 4079-4081, 4083-4087, 4090,4093-4099, 4101, 4107-4<strong>11</strong>2, 4<strong>11</strong>4, 4124,4127, 4129, 4131, 4147-4152, 4155, 4156,4159-4161, 4165, 4168, 4190-4192,4197-4200, 4202-4205, 4207, 4222, 4223,4234, 4246, 4253, 4260, 4261, 4263, 4265,4266, 4269-4271, 4274, 4275, 4277-4280,4282, 4285-4291, 4294-4297, 4299-4303,4305, 4308-4310, 4315, 4316, 4318, 4320,4323, 4326, 4327, 4329-4331, 4335,4337-4341, 4343, 4348, 4352-4360,4362-4365, 4367, 4370, 4372, 4373,4376-4380, 4382-4385, 4420-4423,4425-4428, 4430-4435, 4439-4442, 4446,4452, 4455-4459, 4461, 4467, 4468, 4475,4478, 4480, 4482-4484, 4486, 4489, 4521,4525-4528, 4530-4532, 4534, 4536,4538-4542Human services, Crime/abuse victims 60, 72, 161,168, 235, 453, 864, 1017, 1018, 1276, 1496,1806, 1807, 2123, 2125, 2127, 2140, 2142,2145, 2148, 2155, 2156, 2173, 2495, 2653,2654, 2760, 2774, 2775, 2955, 3019, 3126,3209, 3347, 3356, 3717, 4234, 4326, 4532Human services, Disabled, general 160, 1542,2419Human services, Economically disadvantaged 43,72, 235, 592, 1474, 1716, 1777, 2124, 2131,2157, 2455, 2464, 2495, 2731, 2775, 3094,3205, 3216, 3252, 3497, 3524, 3546, 3717,3786, 3858, 3992, 4005, 4006, 4222, 4223,4246, 4253, 4271, 4475, 4480Human services, emergency aid 2, 3, 6-9, <strong>11</strong>, 12,16, 18, 19, 21, 22, 27, 29-33, 38-43, 57, 60,65, 68-73, 78-88, 90-93, 95, 97-99, 101, 102,109, <strong>11</strong>0, <strong>11</strong>5, 120-124, 146, 156, 178,189-193, 195-197, 201, 203, 205, 206,208-212, 214-216, 218, 219, 222, 223,225-232, 234, 235, 238, 240, 243, 244, 247,251-259, 265-267, 269, 271, 273, 276, 279,280, 282-292, 332, 343, 346-355, 359-361,363-371, 377-379, 382, 383, 386, 387, 392,393, 398, 404, 405, 410, 4<strong>11</strong>, 415-424, 426,427, 429-438, 440-443, 445, 448, 450, 451,453, 454, 456, 457, 459, 460, 463, 464, 466,468, 469, 471, 472, 475, 481-483, 486-490,492-495, 504, 506-508, 510, 514, 515, 517,518, 520, 521, 523, 526-528, 530, 531,534-541, 544-546, 548, 549, 554, 561, 642,643, 645, 649-651, 653-659, 661-675, 678,688-692, 695-697, 700, 858, 864, 878-883,887, 888, 890-895, 897, 900-904, 912, 913,942, 949, 950, 964-968, 970-979, 983, 984,1004-1008, 1013, 1014, 1017, 1018,1020-1033, 1035, 1037, 1039-1042,1046-1049, 1051, 1054-1084, 1088, 1090,253


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE1094, 1095, 1098, <strong>11</strong>00, <strong>11</strong>01, <strong>11</strong>03, <strong>11</strong>13,<strong>11</strong>15, <strong>11</strong>16, <strong>11</strong>18-<strong>11</strong>28, <strong>11</strong>30-<strong>11</strong>32,<strong>11</strong>34-<strong>11</strong>42, <strong>11</strong>44, <strong>11</strong>46-<strong>11</strong>56, <strong>11</strong>58-<strong>11</strong>60,<strong>11</strong>62, <strong>11</strong>73-<strong>11</strong>77, <strong>11</strong>79-<strong>11</strong>82, <strong>11</strong>84,<strong>11</strong>86-<strong>11</strong>89, <strong>11</strong>91, <strong>11</strong>99-1208, 1210, 12<strong>11</strong>,1214, 1216, 1217, 1220-1226, 1228-1232,1235, 1236, 1250, 1254, 1255, 1257, 1269,1270, 1273, 1274, 1276, 1278-1280,1282-1291, 1293, 1294, 1296-1306, 1308,1317, 1322-1324, 1335, 1338-1342, 1344,1345, 1347-1350, 1400, 1402, 1404-1406,1408, 1410-1417, 1424-1427, 1431,1433-1436, 1442, 1443, 1445, 1446,1448-1451, 1453-1455, 1458-1462, 1464,1466, 1467, 1477, 1479, 1482-1486,1488-1490, 1492-1498, 1510, 1512, 1514,1515, 1518, 1519, 1521-1525, 1531-1533,1535, 1536, 1538-1542, 1544, 1547, 1549,1552-1554, 1557-1559, 1563, 1565-1574,1622, 1623, 1642, 1643, 1646, 1648-1654,1656, 1657, 1660, 1662-1667, 1671-1673,1678-1680, 1682, 1684, 1689, 1690, 1693,1694, 1696, 1698-1700, 1703, 1705, 1706,1708, 17<strong>11</strong>-1718, 1720-1723, 1725-1732,1735, 1736, 1741, 1744, 1746-1750, 1754,1755, 1757, 1758, 1760, 1761, 1763, 1765,1773-1775, 1777-1780, 1782-1785,1787-1790, 1792, 1793, 1798, 1800, 1802,1806, 1807, 1812-1816, 1819-1825,1828-1830, 1832, 1833, 1835-1839,1841-1843, 1850, 1870, 1874, 1875, 1877,1879, 1881, 1884, 1886-1889, 1891, 1892,1894, 1898, 1900-19<strong>11</strong>, 1914-1918, 1920,1922-1925, 1927, 1928, 1930, 1939, 1941,1942, 1946, 1951-1954, 1958-1961, 1963,1966, 1968, 1969, 1971-1973, 1975-1981,1983-1987, 1989-1991, 1993-1998, 2004,2010-2015, 2058-2060, 2066-2073, 2079,2080, 2083, 2084, 2105, 2107, 2108, 2<strong>11</strong>1,2<strong>11</strong>4, 2<strong>11</strong>8, 2121, 2123, 2125, 2127, 2134,2136, 2137, 2140-2142, 2144-2146,2148-2159, 2164, 2167-2169, 2172, 2173,2177-2180, 2182-2184, 2186, 2187, 2222,2238, 2263, 2265, 2268, 2272, 2275, 2294,2328, 2362, 2368, 2441, 2442, 2447, 2448,2455-2458, 2465, 2466, 2469-2471, 2474,2475, 2481, 2482, 2485-2487, 2489, 2490,2492-2498, 2504, 2513-2516, 2520,2524-2526, 2528, 2529, 2531, 2533, 2535,2539, 2540, 2542, 2543, 2594, 2595,2597-2602, 2604-2609, 2647-2650,2652-2654, 2656, 2657, 2659, 2660,2662-2664, 2666-2669, 2671, 2673, 2674,2676, 2678, 2680, 2681, 2683, 2686-2688,2693, 2694, 2701, 2703-2706, 2708, 2709,2727, 2729-2736, 2740-2742, 2744, 2745,2747, 2749, 2752, 2756, 2757, 2760, 2761,2763, 2767-2775, 2778, 2779, 2786, 2787,2794, 2796, 2933, 2934, 2937-2942,2944-2961, 2969, 2970, 2972, 2996, 2998,3002-3005, 3008, 3010-3014, 3017-3026,3028, 3030, 3032, 3033, 3037-3039,3044-3047, 3049, 3050, 3056, 3058, 3065,3067, 3070, 3071, 3073, 3074, 3092, 3097,3101, 3102, 3104-3106, 3109, 3<strong>11</strong>1, 3<strong>11</strong>3,3<strong>11</strong>5, 3<strong>11</strong>8-3120, 3122-3124, 3126, 3128,3160-3165, 3173, 3194, 3196, 3232-3236,3238-3242, 3244, 3246, 3249, 3252-3254,3257-3262, 3265-3267, 3272, 3273,3275-3277, 3280, 3283-3286, 3288, 3291,3293, 3294, 3297, 3301, 3303-3305,3339-3343, 3345, 3347, 3353-3355,3360-3368, 3370-3372, 3377-3379, 3381,3382, 3384-3389, 3391-3394, 3402, 3403,3415, 3416, 3419, 3421, 3425, 3427-3429,3431, 3434, 3436, 3439, 3444, 3445, 3448,3452, 3458, 3465, 3466, 3468, 3470-3476,3478-3480, 3485, 3488-3495, 3497, 3498,3501-3504, 3507, 3509, 35<strong>11</strong>, 3512,3514-3516, 3518, 3519, 3521-3524, 3528,3532-3535, 3537, 3540, 3541, 3546, 3548,3550, 3554, 3555, 3559, 3561, 3562, 3564,3566-3571, 3574, 3576, 3577, 3579-3581,3583-3587, 3590, 3591, 3597, 3598, 3601,3603, 3608, 3609, 3675, 3678-3680,3682-3685, 3687-3689, 3691, 3692, 3696,3698, 3701, 3702, 3705, 3706, 3710-3712,3714-3717, 3719-3723, 3725, 3726, 3734,3735, 3737-3739, 3741-3743, 3745-3747,3749, 3751-3753, 3758, 3760, 3766-3775,3777, 3779-3793, 3795, 3798-3805, 3829,3843, 3845-3848, 3857, 3860, 3866, 3869,3877, 3880, 3882, 3883, 3885, 3887-3890,3892-3896, 3899, 3904-3906, 39<strong>11</strong>, 4014,4018, 4051, 4052, 4077-4079, 4081,4083-4087, 4090, 4093-4099, 4101,4104-4<strong>11</strong>4, 4124-4129, 4131, 4147-4153,4155, 4156, 4159-4162, 4164, 4165, 4168,4169, 4178, 4190-4193, 4197-4200,4202-4205, 4207, 4223, 4253, 4260, 4261,4263, 4265, 4266, 4269-4271, 4274, 4275,4277-4280, 4282, 4285-4291, 4294-4297,4299-4303, 4305, 4308-4310, 4315-4320,4323, 4326, 4327, 4329-4331, 4335-4341,4343, 4347, 4348, 4352-4365, 4367, 4370,4372, 4373, 4376-4380, 4382-4385,4420-4422, 4425-4436, 4439-4442,4455-4458, 4461, 4468, 4475, 4478, 4480,4482-4484, 4486, 4489, 4521, 4525-4528,4530-4532, 4534, 4536, 4538-4542Human services, employee matching gifts 18, 21,22, 27, 29-33, 38-43, 57, 60, 65, 68-73, 80,81, 90, 102, 191, 206, 210, 212, 215, 229,258, 276, 280, 285, 287-292, 349, 354, 364,366, 367, 370, 432, 460, 508, 528, 535, 538,654, 691, 887, 965, 968, 976, 1005, 1006,1042, 1098, <strong>11</strong>44, 1214, 1225, 1250, 1300,1302, 1413, 1424, 1427, 1453, 1454, 1473,1496, 1570-1572, 1643, 1671, 1688, 1694,1696, 1703, 1715, 1721, 1727, 1728, 1730,1748, 1775, 1777, 1815, 1824, 1828-1830,1892-1894, 1901-1903, 1907, 1916-1918,1923, 1946, 1971, 1978, 1980, 1995, 1996,2007, 2010, 2067, 2<strong>11</strong>4, 2120-2128, 2131,2134, 2136, 2140-2142, 2144-2146, 2148,2149, 2151-2153, 2155, 2157, 2159, 2163,2167, 2169, 2172, 2173, 2176, 2177, 2179,2455, 2481, 2482, 2493, 2496-2498, 2514,2531, 2594, 2602, 2605, 2607, 2660, 2678,2686, 2687, 2698, 2727, 2729-2734, 2744,2770, 2933, 3002, 3109, 3120, 3124, 3238,3253, 3262, 3266, 3277, 3284, 3340, 3391,3392, 3434, 3436, 3458, 3480, 3490, 3512,3515, 3528, 3534, 3540, 3564, 3682, 3704,3705, 3715-3717, 3719, 3720, 3722, 3723,3725, 3726, 3742, 3743, 3767-3769, 3771,3773, 3789, 3905, 4051, 4052, 4078,4104-4106, 4<strong>11</strong>3, 4125, 4126, 4128, 4153,4162, 4164, 4169, 4178, 4193, 4317, 4319,4336, 4347, 4361, 4429, 4436Human services, Ethnic/racial minorities, general1716, 3216, 3717Human services, Ethnic/racial minorities, otherspecified group 197, 918, 4234Human services, fund raising <strong>11</strong>72, 1710, 2504,3016, 3051-3053, 3075, 3266, 3267, 4467Human services, general support 1004, 1276,1278, 3173, 3216, 3680Human services, Hispanics/Latinos 4253Human services, Homeless 3786, 4035Human services, Immigrants/refugees 43, 72,<strong>11</strong>53, 1716, 2140, 2495, 2730, 2731, 3216,3252, 4005, 4475, 4480Human services, information services 2317, 2414,3218Human services, management/ technical aid 2527Human services, management/technical aid 922Human services, Mentally/emotionally disabled4035, 4037Human services, Military/veterans 445, 982, 1216,1524, 2539, 2792, 3556human services, program development 3205,3209, 3218, 3225Human services, public policy 2621Human services, Relief and recoveryworkers/volunteers 3, <strong>11</strong>, 12, 19, 21, 22, 33,57, 73, 80, 83-86, 91, 95, 97, 99, 102,120-122, 146, 193, 195, 205, 206, 2<strong>11</strong>, 212,215, 216, 219, 229, 231, 232, 238, 244, 269,276, 279, 280, 282-291, 343, 349, 352, 354,355, 367, 368, 392, 393, 418, 424, 430-432,435, 437, 457, 459, 460, 471, 475, 481, 486,487, 506-508, 517, 539-541, 548, 645, 651,655, 674, 688, 691, 692, 697, 858, 879-882,887, 894, 897, 904, 912, 976, 978, 979, 983,1005, 1013, 1033, 1039, 1041, 1042, 1047,1051, 1090, 1098, <strong>11</strong>22, <strong>11</strong>34, <strong>11</strong>36, <strong>11</strong>52,<strong>11</strong>56, <strong>11</strong>60, <strong>11</strong>73, <strong>11</strong>75, <strong>11</strong>81, <strong>11</strong>86, <strong>11</strong>99,1210, 1214, 1222, 1224-1226, 1228, 1230,1255, 1257, 1270, 1273, 1274, 1299-1301,1303-1305, 1349, 1408, 1412, 1426, 1427,1431, 1443, 1445, 1448, 1449, 1451, 1453,1479, 1485, 1523, 1540, 1541, 1547, 1567,1570-1572, 1642, 1643, 1654, 1672, 1673,1678, 1682, 1689, 1690, 1698, 1703, 1708,17<strong>11</strong>-1715, 1717, 1718, 1720, 1727, 1732,1747, 1748, 1750, 1783, 1790, 1813, 1820,1822, 1850, 1870, 1892, 1900, 1901, 1903,1904, 1906, 1907, 1909, 1910, 1916, 1918,1928, 1946, 1951, 1952, 1954, 1958, 1968,1971-1973, 1976, 1978, 1983, 1985,1989-1991, 1997, 2010, 2013, 2014, 2059,2067, 2068, 2070, 2107, 2108, 2<strong>11</strong>4, 2164,2180, 2182, 2441, 2474, 2481, 2494, 2520,2524, 2526, 2531, 2594, 2601, 2602, 2605,2606, 2609, 2647, 2649, 2657, 2659, 2663,2668, 2683, 2686, 2701, 2708, 2709, 2727,2734, 2736, 2740, 2741, 2744, 2745, 2933,2937-2942, 2972, 3002, 3004, 30<strong>11</strong>, 3012,3018, 3021, 3024, 3025, 3030, 3032, 3039,3067, 3070, 3097, 3104, 3109, 3<strong>11</strong>5, 3<strong>11</strong>9,3120, 3194, 3238, 3254, 3261, 3277, 3280,3283, 3286, 3288, 3293, 3304, 3305, 3339,3371, 3372, 3378, 3379, 3389, 3391, 3403,3419, 3436, 3439, 3466, 3468, 3470, 3472,3478, 3489, 3493, 3518, 3528, 3532, 3548,3559, 3562, 3564, 3568, 3576, 3590, 3682,3683, 3687, 3701, 37<strong>11</strong>, 3715, 3723, 3737,3738, 3742, 3746, 3749, 3773, 3783, 3787,3793, 3802, 3848, 3880, 3883, 3888, 3896,3904, 3905, 4078, 4079, 4083, 4086, 4095,4099, 4104, 4108, 4125-4128, 4131,4150-4152, 4156, 4159-4162, 4178, 4193,4197, 4198, 4203, 4269, 4270, 4275, 4280,4288, 4308, 4315, 4316, 4318, 4319, 4323,4327, 4339, 4343, 4347, 4348, 4359, 4360,4370, 4373, 4376-4378, 4380, 4382, 4420,4427, 4430-4432, 4439, 4440, 4483, 4489,4526, 4528, 4530, 4538Human services, special populations 160, 2005,2205, 2226, 2259, 2364, 2419, 3289, 4037,4046Human services, Substance abusers 4035Human services, transportation 180Human services, travelers’ aid 2626, 3323Human services, unspecified support <strong>11</strong>36Human services, victim aid 161, 168, 1328, 1893,1899, 2258, 3356, 3460, 3557, 3755, 4234Human services, Victims and families,economically affected 3, 6-9, <strong>11</strong>, 12, 16, 18,19, 21, 22, 27, 30, 32, 33, 39-41, 57, 69, 70,73, 79-81, 83-88, 90-93, 95, 97, 99, 101,102, <strong>11</strong>5, 120-122, 146, 178, 189, 191-193,195, 197, 203, 205, 206, 209-212, 214-216,218, 219, 229-232, 234, 238, 240, 243, 244,246, 251, 252, 254, 258, 259, 265, 266, 269,276, 279, 280, 282-292, 332, 343, 346, 348,349, 351-356, 360, 361, 363-369, 383, 386,392, 393, 398, 404, 4<strong>11</strong>, 415, 417-422, 424,427, 429-437, 440, 441, 443, 451, 454, 457,459, 460, 464, 466, 468, 469, 471, 472, 475,481-483, 486-488, 492-494, 504, 506-508,515, 517, 520, 521, 523, 526-528, 531,534-541, 544-546, 548, 558, 561, 642, 643,645, 649-651, 653, 655, 656, 658, 668, 674,688, 689, 691, 692, 695, 697, 858, 878-883,887, 890-895, 897, 900-902, 904, 912, 913,949, 964-966, 968, 970, 971, 974-979, 983,984, 1005, 1007, 1013, 1020-1030, 1033,1035, 1037, 1039-1042, 1046, 1047, 1049,1051, 1054-1063, 1065-1070, 1072-1078,1080-1082, 1084, 1090, 1095, 1098, <strong>11</strong>13,254


INDEX OF SUBJECTS<strong>11</strong>15, <strong>11</strong>16, <strong>11</strong>18-<strong>11</strong>28, <strong>11</strong>30, <strong>11</strong>31,<strong>11</strong>34-<strong>11</strong>42, <strong>11</strong>44, <strong>11</strong>46, <strong>11</strong>47, <strong>11</strong>49-<strong>11</strong>52,<strong>11</strong>54-<strong>11</strong>56, <strong>11</strong>58-<strong>11</strong>60, <strong>11</strong>62, <strong>11</strong>73-<strong>11</strong>82,<strong>11</strong>84, <strong>11</strong>86-<strong>11</strong>89, <strong>11</strong>99-1207, 1210, 12<strong>11</strong>,1214, 1222-1226, 1228, 1230-1232, 1236,1254, 1255, 1257, 1270, 1273, 1274, 1279,1282, 1287-1289, 1291, 1293, 1299-1306,1308, 1335, 1338, 1339, 1345, 1349, 1350,1400, 1404-1406, 1408, 1410-1413,1425-1427, 1431, 1433-1436, 1442, 1443,1445, 1446, 1448-1451, 1453-1455, 1458,1459, 1473, 1474, 1477, 1479, 1482, 1483,1485, 1486, 1488, 1492, 1495, 1497, 1498,1510, 1512, 1513, 1515, 1518, 1519,1521-1523, 1533, 1538-1541, 1547, 1552,1557, 1558, 1565-1568, 1570-1573, 1622,1623, 1642, 1643, 1646, 1648-1650, 1652,1654, 1656, 1657, 1660, 1663, 1665,1671-1673, 1678, 1680, 1682, 1684,1688-1690, 1693, 1694, 1698-1700, 1703,1708, 17<strong>11</strong>-1718, 1720-1723, 1725, 1727,1731, 1732, 1741, 1744, 1746-1750, 1755,1757, 1758, 1760, 1765, 1773, 1774,1777-1780, 1783, 1785, 1789, 1790, 1793,1798, 1800, 1802, 1812-1815, 1819-1825,1830, 1832, 1833, 1835, 1836, 1838, 1839,1841-1843, 1850, 1870, 1879, 1881,1886-1888, 1891-1894, 1898-1907,1909-19<strong>11</strong>, 1914-1918, 1920, 1923, 1927,1928, 1946, 1951-1954, 1958-1961, 1963,1966, 1968, 1969, 1971-1973, 1975-1981,1983-1986, 1989-1991, 1994, 1995, 1997,1998, 2004, 2010-2015, 2058-2060,2066-2068, 2070, 2071, 2079, 2080, 2105,2107, 2108, 2<strong>11</strong>4, 2149, 2150, 2164, 2180,2182-2184, 2186, 2187, 2337, 2441, 2442,2447, 2448, 2471, 2474, 2475, 2481, 2482,2487, 2489, 2492-2494, 2497, 2498,2513-2515, 2520, 2524-2526, 2528, 2529,2531, 2535, 2543, 2594, 2597-2602,2604-2609, 2647-2650, 2652, 2657, 2659,2660, 2662-2664, 2666-2668, 2674, 2676,2681, 2683, 2686-2688, 2693, 2698, 2701,2704, 2706-2709, 2727, 2732, 2734-2736,2740, 2741, 2744, 2745, 2769, 2770, 2778,2933, 2937-2942, 2944, 2945, 2956-2960,2972, 2998, 3002-3004, 3008, 3010-3014,3018, 3020-3026, 3030, 3032, 3033, 3038,3039, 3044, 3045, 3056, 3070, 3092, 3097,3101, 3102, 3104-3106, 3109, 3<strong>11</strong>1, 3<strong>11</strong>3,3<strong>11</strong>5, 3<strong>11</strong>8-3120, 3122, 3128, 3160-3164,3194, 3195, 3232, 3233, 3235, 3236,3238-3241, 3249, 3253, 3254, 3257, 3260,3261, 3265, 3273, 3276, 3277, 3280, 3283,3284, 3286, 3288, 3291, 3293, 3294, 3301,3303-3305, 3339, 3343, 3345, 3353, 3355,3360-3368, 3370-3372, 3378, 3379, 3384,3385, 3388, 3389, 3391-3394, 3403, 3415,3416, 3419, 3421, 3428, 3429, 3431, 3434,3436, 3439, 3444, 3458, 3465, 3466, 3468,3470-3476, 3478-3480, 3485, 3488-3490,3493, 3494, 3501, 3503, 35<strong>11</strong>, 3512, 3518,3522, 3523, 3528, 3532-3535, 3537, 3541,3542, 3546, 3548, 3554, 3555, 3559, 3562,3564, 3566-3570, 3574, 3576, 3577,3579-3581, 3585, 3590, 3591, 3597, 3601,3603, 3608, 3609, 3678-3680, 3682-3685,3687-3689, 3691, 3692, 3696, 3701, 3702,3705, 3706, 3710, 37<strong>11</strong>, 3714, 3715, 3720,3721, 3723, 3734, 3735, 3737, 3738,3741-3743, 3745-3747, 3749, 3751-3753,3758, 3765-3769, 3772, 3773, 3775, 3780,3781, 3783, 3784, 3786, 3787, 3789, 3790,3793, 3798, 3800-3803, 3829, 3843, 3845,3846, 3848, 3869, 3880, 3882, 3883, 3885,3887, 3888, 3890, 3892-3896, 3899, 3904,3905, 39<strong>11</strong>, 3939-3942, 3969, 3974, 3992,3998, 4006, 4051, 4052, 4059, 4077-4079,4083, 4086, 4087, 4090, 4093-4095, 4097,4099, 4101, 4104, 4106-4<strong>11</strong>4, 4124-4129,4131, 4149-4153, 4155, 4156, 4159, 4160,4162, 4164, 4168, 4169, 4178, 4191, 4193,4197-4199, 4202-4205, 4207, 4222, 4223,4246, 4253, 4260, 4261, 4263, 4265,4269-4271, 4274, 4275, 4277, 4280, 4282,4285-4291, 4294-4296, 4302, 4305, 4308,4315-4320, 4323, 4327, 4331, 4335, 4336,4338-4341, 4343, 4347, 4348, 4352-4357,4359-4361, 4363-4365, 4367, 4370, 4373,4376-4380, 4382, 4383, 4385, 4420-4422,4425-4427, 4430-4433, 4436, 4439-4442,4455, 4456, 4461, 4483, 4484, 4489, 4521,4525, 4526, 4528, 4530, 4534, 4536,4538-4542Human services, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Children 31, <strong>11</strong>0, 124, 225, 228,247, 255, 410, 438, 490, 495, 518, 663, 667,675, 950, 973, <strong>11</strong>00, 1216, 1250, 1284-1286,1298, 1322, 1324, 1342, 1344, 1416, 1417,1460, 1493, 1494, 1559, 1828, 1884, 1930,1996, 2<strong>11</strong>1, 2151, 2152, 2157, 2158, 2455,2458, 2469, 2540, 2653, 2654, 2673, 2680,2730, 2772, 2787, 2934, 2946, 2947, 3005,3046, 3050, 3123, 3124, 3126, 3165, 3196,3246, 3258, 3262, 3342, 3377, 3386, 3427,3495, 3498, 3507, 3516, 3519, 3521, 3770,3771, 3785, 3795, 3906, 4018, 4165, 4303,4362, 4428, 4429, 4434, 4482Human services, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Employees 42, 124, 156, 201,208, 405, 416, 448, 654, 678, 942, 1004,1006, 1032, <strong>11</strong>00, <strong>11</strong>01, 1208, 1284, 1293,1294, 1317, 1467, 1484, 1490, 1531, 1536,1549, 1551, 1553, 1554, 1740, 1775, 1784,1828, 1829, 1930, 1939, 1941, 1942, 1977,2121, 2134, 2141, 2177, 2178, 2540, 2671,2749, 3065, 3067, 3275, 3381, 3382, 3507,3509, 3779, 4297, 4303, 4309Human services, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - General 3, 6-9, <strong>11</strong>, 12, 16, 18, 19,21, 22, 27, 30, 32, 33, 39-41, 43, 57, 69-71,79-81, 83-88, 90-93, 95, 97-99, 101, 102,<strong>11</strong>5, 120-122, 146, 178, 189, 191-193, 195,203, 205, 206, 209-212, 214-216, 218, 219,229-232, 234, 238, 240, 243, 244, 246, 251,252, 254, 258, 259, 265, 266, 269, 276, 279,280, 282-292, 332, 343, 346, 348, 349,351-356, 360, 361, 363-371, 383, 386, 392,393, 398, 404, 4<strong>11</strong>, 415, 417-422, 424, 427,429-437, 440, 441, 443, 451, 457, 459, 460,464, 466, 468, 469, 471, 472, 475, 481-483,486-489, 492-494, 504, 506-508, 515, 517,520, 521, 523, 526-528, 531, 534-541,544-546, 548, 554, 561, 642, 643, 645,649-651, 653, 655, 656, 658, 659, 661, 662,668, 672, 674, 688, 689, 691, 692, 695, 697,700, 858, 878-883, 887, 890-895, 897,900-902, 904, 912, 913, 949, 964-968, 970,971, 974-979, 982-984, 1005, 1007, 1013,1020-1030, 1033, 1035, 1037, 1039-1042,1046, 1047, 1049, 1051, 1054-1063,1065-1070, 1072-1078, 1080-1082, 1084,1090, 1095, 1098, <strong>11</strong>03, <strong>11</strong>13, <strong>11</strong>15, <strong>11</strong>16,<strong>11</strong>18-<strong>11</strong>28, <strong>11</strong>30, <strong>11</strong>31, <strong>11</strong>34-<strong>11</strong>42, <strong>11</strong>44,<strong>11</strong>46, <strong>11</strong>47, <strong>11</strong>49-<strong>11</strong>56, <strong>11</strong>58-<strong>11</strong>60, <strong>11</strong>62,<strong>11</strong>73-<strong>11</strong>82, <strong>11</strong>84, <strong>11</strong>86-<strong>11</strong>89, <strong>11</strong>99-1208,1210, 12<strong>11</strong>, 1214, 1222-1226, 1228,1230-1232, 1236, 1254, 1255, 1257, 1270,1273, 1274, 1279, 1282, 1287-1291,1299-1306, 1308, 1323, 1335, 1338, 1339,1345, 1347-1350, 1400, 1402, 1404-1406,1408, 1410-1413, 1415, 1425-1427, 1431,1433-1436, 1442, 1443, 1445, 1446,1448-1451, 1453-1455, 1458, 1459, 1462,1477, 1479, 1482, 1483, 1485, 1486, 1488,1492, 1495, 1497, 1498, 1510, 1512-1515,1518, 1519, 1521-1523, 1533, 1538-1541,1547, 1552, 1557, 1558, 1565-1568,1570-1573, 1622, 1623, 1642, 1643, 1646,1648-1654, 1656, 1657, 1660, 1663, 1665,1671-1673, 1678, 1680, 1682, 1684, 1689,1690, 1693, 1694, 1698-1700, 1703, 1708,17<strong>11</strong>-1715, 1717, 1718, 1720, 1723, 1725,1727, 1731, 1732, 1741, 1744, 1746-1750,1755, 1757, 1758, 1760, 1765, 1773, 1774,1777-1780, 1783, 1785, 1789, 1790, 1793,1798, 1800, 1802, 1812-1816, 1819-1825,1830, 1832, 1833, 1835, 1836, 1838, 1839,1841-1843, 1850, 1870, 1879, 1881,1886-1888, 1891-1894, 1898-1907,1909-19<strong>11</strong>, 1914-1918, 1920, 1923, 1927,1928, 1946, 1951-1954, 1958-1961, 1963,1966, 1968, 1969, 1971-1973, 1975, 1976,1978-1981, 1983-1986, 1989-1991, 1994,1995, 1997, 1998, 2004, 2010-2015,2058-2060, 2066-2068, 2070, 2071, 2079,2080, 2105, 2107, 2108, 2<strong>11</strong>4, 2149, 2150,2164, 2180, 2182-2184, 2186, 2187, 2337,2441, 2442, 2447, 2448, 2471, 2474, 2475,2481, 2482, 2487, 2489, 2492-2494, 2497,2498, 2513-2515, 2520, 2524-2526, 2528,2529, 2531, 2535, 2542, 2543, 2594,2597-2602, 2604-2609, 2647-2650, 2652,2657, 2659, 2660, 2662-2664, 2666-2669,2674, 2676, 2681, 2683, 2686-2688, 2693,2698, 2701, 2704, 2706-2709, 2727, 2732,2734-2736, 2740, 2741, 2744, 2745, 2767,2769, 2770, 2778, 2779, 2796, 2933,2937-2942, 2944, 2945, 2956-2960, 2972,2998, 3002-3004, 3008, 3010-3014, 3018,3020-3026, 3030, 3032, 3033, 3038, 3039,3044, 3045, 3056, 3070, 3092, 3097, 3101,3102, 3104-3106, 3109, 3<strong>11</strong>1, 3<strong>11</strong>3, 3<strong>11</strong>5,3<strong>11</strong>8-3120, 3122, 3128, 3160-3164, 3194,3195, 3218, 3232, 3233, 3235, 3236,3238-3241, 3249, 3253, 3254, 3257,3259-3261, 3265, 3273, 3276, 3277, 3280,3283, 3284, 3286, 3288, 3291, 3293, 3294,3301, 3303-3305, 3339, 3343, 3345, 3353,3355, 3360-3368, 3370-3372, 3378, 3379,3384, 3385, 3388, 3389, 3391-3394, 3403,3415, 3416, 3419, 3421, 3428, 3429, 3431,3434, 3436, 3439, 3444, 3458, 3465, 3466,3468, 3470-3476, 3478-3480, 3485,3488-3490, 3493, 3494, 3501, 3503, 35<strong>11</strong>,3512, 3518, 3522, 3523, 3528, 3532-3535,3537, 3540-3542, 3546, 3548, 3554, 3555,3557, 3559, 3562, 3564, 3566-3570, 3574,3576, 3577, 3579-3581, 3585, 3590, 3591,3597, 3601, 3603, 3608, 3609, 3678-3680,3682-3685, 3687-3689, 3691, 3692, 3696,3701, 3702, 3705, 3706, 3710-3712, 3714,3715, 3720, 3721, 3723, 3734, 3735, 3737,3738, 3741-3743, 3745-3747, 3749,3751-3753, 3758, 3766-3769, 3772, 3773,3775, 3780, 3781, 3783, 3784, 3786-3790,3793, 3798, 3800-3803, 3829, 3843, 3845,3846, 3848, 3869, 3880, 3882, 3883, 3885,3887, 3888, 3890, 3892-3896, 3899, 3904,3905, 39<strong>11</strong>, 3941, 3942, 3969, 3974, 4051,4052, 4059, 4077-4079, 4083, 4086, 4087,4090, 4093-4095, 4097, 4099, 4101, 4104,4106-4<strong>11</strong>4, 4124-4129, 4131, 4149-4153,4155, 4156, 4159, 4160, 4162, 4164, 4168,4169, 4178, 4191, 4193, 4197-4199,4202-4205, 4207, 4260, 4261, 4263, 4265,4269-4271, 4274, 4275, 4277, 4280, 4282,4285-4291, 4294-4296, 4302, 4305, 4308,4315-4320, 4323, 4327, 4331, 4335-4341,4343, 4347, 4348, 4352-4361, 4363-4365,4367, 4370, 4373, 4376-4380, 4382, 4383,4385, 4420-4422, 4425-4427, 4430-4433,4436, 4439-4442, 4455, 4456, 4461, 4483,4484, 4489, 4521, 4525, 4526, 4528, 4530,4534, 4536, 4538-4542Human services, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Uniformed service workers and fa2, 29, 31, 38, 65, 68, 78, 82, 109, <strong>11</strong>0, 123,190, 196, 222, 223, 225, 228, 247, 253, 256,257, 271, 273, 347, 350, 359, 370, 371, 382,387, 410, 423, 426, 438, 442, 445, 450, 456,495, 510, 514, 518, 530, 549, 657, 663-667,675, 888, 902, 903, 950, 972, 973, 1008,1014, 1064, 1071, 1079, 1083, 1088, <strong>11</strong>32,<strong>11</strong>48, <strong>11</strong>51, <strong>11</strong>91, 1216, 1220, 1221, 1229,1235, 1250, 1278, 1285, 1286, 1296-1298,1322, 1324, 1340-1342, 1344, 1414, 1416,1417, 1424, 1460, 1461, 1464, 1467, 1493,1494, 1524, 1525, 1532, 1535, 1536, 1544,1559, 1563, 1569, 1574, 1662, 1664, 1666,1667, 1679, 1696, 1705, 1706, 1721, 1722,1726, 1728-1730, 1735, 1736, 1740, 1754,255


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE1761, 1782, 1787, 1788, 1874, 1875, 1877,1884, 1908, 1922, 1924, 1987, 1993, 1996,2072, 2<strong>11</strong>1, 2<strong>11</strong>8, 2136, 2137, 2144, 2146,2151-2154, 2157-2159, 2167-2169, 2179,2455, 2457, 2458, 2465, 2466, 2469, 2470,2485, 2486, 2490, 2496, 2516, 2533, 2539,2656, 2673, 2680, 2694, 2705, 2729, 2733,2742, 2747, 2752, 2756, 2757, 2761, 2763,2768, 2771-2773, 2786, 2787, 2934, 2946,2947, 2996, 3005, 3017, 3028, 3037, 3046,3049, 3050, 3058, 3067, 3073, 3074, 3123,3124, 3165, 3173, 3196, 3234, 3242, 3244,3246, 3258, 3262, 3272, 3275, 3285, 3342,3354, 3377, 3386, 3393, 3402, 3416, 3425,3427, 3429, 3491, 3492, 3495, 3498, 3502,3504, 3514-3516, 3519, 3521, 3550, 3556,3571, 3584, 3598, 3603, 3716, 3719, 3722,3725, 3739, 3760, 3770, 3771, 3774, 3782,3785, 3791, 3792, 3795, 3799, 3804, 3805,3847, 3860, 3866, 3877, 3889, 3906, 4014,4018, 4081, 4084, 4085, 4096, 4105, 4148,4165, 4190, 4192, 4200, 4266, 4278, 4279,4299-4301, 4310, 4362, 4384, 4428, 4429,4434, 4435, 4482, 4486, 4527, 4531Human services, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Union members/otherprofessional 42, 678, 1032, 1269, 1293,1294, 1473, 1925, 2069, 2134, 2172, 3765,4297, 4309Human services, volunteer services 3992Human services, Women 31, 72, <strong>11</strong>0, 225, 228,247, 370, 371, 410, 438, 495, 518, 663, 667,675, 950, 973, 1250, 1285, 1286, 1298,1322, 1324, 1342, 1344, 1416, 1417, 1460,1493, 1494, 1559, 1884, 1996, 2<strong>11</strong>1, 2151,2152, 2158, 2458, 2469, 2673, 2680, 2772,2787, 2934, 2946, 2947, 3005, 3046, 3050,3123, 3124, 3165, 3196, 3205, 3209, 3216,3246, 3252, 3258, 3262, 3297, 3342, 3377,3386, 3427, 3495, 3498, 3516, 3770, 3785,3795, 3906, 4018, 4165, 4223, 4362, 4428,4429, 4475, 4478, 4480, 4482Humanities, contribution 743, 1364, 2838Immigrants/refugees, arts/culture/humanities3227, 4001, 4231Immigrants/refugees, civil rights 72, 909, 931,990, 1256, 2627, 3176, 3178, 3190, 3199,3220, 3227, 3252, 3484, 4212, 4219, 4227,4228, 4231, 4235, 4237, 4240, 4254, 4255,4475, 4480Immigrants/refugees, communityimprovement/development 478, 1560, 3182,3201, 3216Immigrants/refugees, crime/courts/legal services909, 2495, 3178, 3190, 3199, 4227, 4228,4240Immigrants/refugees, education 2140, 4212Immigrants/refugees, employment 478, 993, <strong>11</strong>53,2495, 3192, 3216, 4247Immigrants/refugees, food/nutrition/agriculture3093Immigrants/refugees, health—general 3934Immigrants/refugees, humanservices—multipurpose 43, 67, 72, <strong>11</strong>53,1256, 1716, 2140, 2495, 2730, 2731, 2935,2936, 3183, 3186, 3216, 3217, 3220, 3252,4005, 4212, 4219, 4243, 4470, 4475, 4480Immigrants/refugees, internationalaffairs/development 2627, 3093, 3400, 3435,3484, 3990, 4038, 4255Immigrants/refugees, mental health/substanceabuse 67, 72, 2033, 2730, 2731, 3203, 3204,3220, 3252, 4475, 4480Immigrants/refugees, safety/disaster relief 478,3990Infants/toddlers, education 3219, 3929, 3999,4208, 4444Infants/toddlers, health—general 1826Infants/toddlers, human services—multipurpose3727Infants/toddlers, international affairs/development4208Infants/toddlers, safety/disaster relief 3219International affairs/development, Afghanistan4210, 4477International affairs/development, Belgium 1897,2629, 3090International affairs/development, Czech Republic3093International affairs/development, England 2628International affairs/development, Israel 4258International affairs/development, Nigeria 1588International affairs/development, South Africa3084International affairs/development, Thailand 3642International affairs, association 1397, 1597, 2623,2624, 2854International affairs, contribution 318, 1265,1397, 1597, 1619, 2095, 2351, 2620, 2621,2623, 2624, 2641, 2642, 2854, 3087, 3090,3185, 3315, 3330, 3614, 3616, 3632, 3634,3654, 3826, 4138, 4239, 4248International affairs, goodwill promotion 2095,3087, 3185, 3616, 3654, 4138, 4248International affairs, national security 318, 1265,2351, 2621, 2642, 3315, 3826International affairs, public education 2641International affairs, public policy 3090, 3330,3614, 3634International affairs, research 1619, 2620, 4239International affairs, U.N. 3632International conflict resolution, contribution2629, 2641, 3090, 4208International conflict resolution, Infants/toddlers4208International development/relief, Children &youth 2783, 2788, 3525, 3878International development/relief, contribution1245, 2783, 2788, 3243, 3525, 3861, 3878,4038, 42<strong>11</strong>, 4472International development/relief, Economicallydisadvantaged 1245, 2135, 2783, 2788, 3243,3525, 3878International development/relief, employeematching gifts 2135International development/relief,Immigrants/refugees 4038International development/relief, Women 1245,42<strong>11</strong>International development, contribution 15, 384,606, 1719, 2854, 2872, 2912, 3351, 3614,3642, 3748, 3756International economic development, contribution1316, 1588, 4058, 4264International economic development,Economically disadvantaged 4058International exchange, arts 822, 2581, 2815,2816, 3638, 3918International exchange, contribution 822, 2581,2815, 2816, 3638, 3918, 4472International exchange, Youth/adolescents 3918International human rights, contribution 306, 327,328, 766, 1606-1608, 1625, 1896, 2634,2644, 3084, 3324, 3351, 3618, 3636International migration/refugee issues,contribution 16<strong>11</strong>, 1612, 2627, 2631, 2857,3093, 3330, 3338, 3435, 3990, 4038, 42<strong>11</strong>International migration/refugee issues,Economically disadvantaged 3093International migration/refugee issues,Ethnic/racial minorities, other specifiedgroup 2627International migration/refugee issues,Immigrants/refugees 2627, 3093, 3435,3990, 4038International migration/refugee issues, Women42<strong>11</strong>International peace/security, contribution 1212,1578, 1588, 2620, 2628, 2630, 4258International relief, Blind & vision impaired 34<strong>11</strong>,3980, 3985International relief, Children & youth 2133International relief, contribution 5, 270, 305, 326,477, 16<strong>11</strong>, 1612, 2161, 2185, 2631, 2762,2857, 3083, 3093, 3248, 3400, 34<strong>11</strong>, 3954,3980, 3985, 3990International relief, Economically disadvantaged2131, 2133, 2161, 2165, 2762, 3093International relief, employee matching gifts 2<strong>11</strong>7,2130, 2131, 2133, 2160, 2165, 2174International relief, Immigrants/refugees 3093,3400, 3990International studies, contribution 1619, 2618,2638, 4239International terrorism, contribution 1738, 1796,1897, 2618, 2621, 2627, 2629, 2641, 2646,3083, 3090, 3951, 4251International terrorism, Ethnic/racial minorities,other specified group 2627International terrorism, Immigrants/refugees 2627Islam, contribution 906, 930, 940, 944, 2618,3082, 3658, 4224, 4236Islam, Ethnic/racial minorities, other specifiedgroup 3082, 4236Islam, Women 4236Islam, Youth/adolescents 940Israel, international affairs/development 4258Japan, community improvement/development3029Japan, human services—multipurpose 3034Japan, safety/disaster relief 3034Jewish agencies & temples, contribution 264,1233, 2848, 4487Journalism & publishing, contribution 734, 756,1343, 1382, 1593, 1594, 2765, 3187, 3322,4233, 4248Journalism & publishing, general support 987Labor studies, contribution 2043, 2978Labor unions/ organizations, Asians/Pacificislanders 3202, 4220Labor unions/ organizations, contribution 312,4220, 4247, 4253Labor unions/ organizations, Economicallydisadvantaged 3212, 3216, 4253Labor unions/ organizations, employee matchinggifts 1473Labor unions/ organizations, Ethnic/racialminorities, general 3216, 4247Labor unions/ organizations, general support 3216Labor unions/ organizations, Hispanics/Latinos3212, 4253Labor unions/ organizations, Immigrants/refugees3216, 4247Labor unions/ organizations, programdevelopment 3212Labor unions/ organizations, seed money 3202Labor unions/ organizations, Victims and families,economically affected 1473, 4220, 4253Labor unions/ organizations, Victims and families,injured and deceased - Union members/otherprofessional 1473Labor unions/ organizations, Women 3212, 3216Labor unions/organizations, Asians/Pacificislanders 3179, 3192Labor unions/organizations, contribution 341,557, 593, 1314, 1618, 3179, 3188, 3189,3192, 3656, 3676, 4515Labor unions/organizations, Economicallydisadvantaged 557Labor unions/organizations, Hispanics/Latinos3188Labor unions/organizations, Immigrants/refugees3192Labor unions/organizations, Victims and families,economically affected 557, 3179, 3188, 3192Law school/education, contribution 5<strong>11</strong>Law/international law, contribution 2476, 3318Leadership development, contribution 915, 936,960, 4246Leadership development, Economicallydisadvantaged 4246Leadership development, Ethnic/racial minorities,other specified group 915, 936Leadership development, Victims and families,economically affected 4246Legal services, Asians/Pacific islanders 909, 3199,4218, 4227, 4240Legal services, contribution 128, 133, 153, 176,309, 328, 329, 333, 334, 463, 555, 909, 916,256


INDEX OF SUBJECTS945, 946, 952, 1249, 1361, 1579, 1582,1606, 1615, 1616, 1621, 2261, 2365, 2429,2495, 2633, 2634, 3134, 3178, 3190, 3306,3310, 3313, 3314, 3324, 3326, 3329, 3331,3335, 3337, 3359, 3406, 3573, 3619, 3626,3641, 3665, 3728, 3731, 4133, 4218,4226-4228, 4238, 4240, 4242Legal services, Crime/abuse victims 2495Legal services, Economically disadvantaged 133,1615, 2495, 3199, 3212, 4228Legal services, Ethnic/racial minorities, general4228Legal services, Ethnic/racial minorities, otherspecified group 909, 4242Legal services, Gays/lesbians 4238Legal services, general support 3199Legal services, guardianship 2429Legal services, Hispanics/Latinos 3190, 3212Legal services, Immigrants/refugees 909, 2495,3178, 3190, 3199, 4227, 4228, 4240Legal services, Men 4242Legal services, program development 3212, 3218Legal services, public interest law 328, 916, 952,1249, 1361, 1582, 1606, 1616, 2633, 2634,3134, 3190, 3199, 3313, 3324, 3329, 3626,3641, 3665, 3728, 3731, 4133, 4218, 4238Legal services, Relief and recoveryworkers/volunteers 133Legal services, Victims and families, economicallyaffected 128, 153, 176, 1615, 3178, 3190,3619, 3626, 4226Legal services, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - General 128, 153, 176, 3218,4226Legal services, Women 3199, 3212Libraries (medical), contribution 513, <strong>11</strong>10, 1248,1770-1772, 1801, 2048, 2454, 2990, 3156Libraries (public), contribution 1867, 2826, 2891,2892, 2905, 3930, 4019, 4020, 4036Libraries (special), contribution 773, 8<strong>11</strong>, 2901,2903Literature, Children & youth 1363Literature, contribution 756, 810, 8<strong>11</strong>, 838, 1363,2903Media/ communications, contribution 137, 744,1601, 2057, 2753, 4196, 4209, 4225, 4232,4236Media/ communications, Ethnic/racial minorities,general 1601, 3227, 4196Media/ communications, Ethnic/racial minorities,other specified group 3227, 4236Media/ communications, Immigrants/refugees3227Media/ communications, program development3227Media/ communications, Women 3227, 4196,4236Media/ communications, Youth/adolescents 4209Media/communications, contribution 852, 1596,1617, 2036, 2044, 2502, 2628, 2635, 2636,3077, 3078, 3612, 3807, 3808, 4139, 4415Medical care, contribution 412, 2028, 2327, 2369,2518, 2981, 3709, 4033, 4351, 4473Medical care, Economically disadvantaged 2028,2518, 4033, 4473Medical care, employee matching gifts 413, 414Medical care, Ethnic/racial minorities, general4033Medical care, Gays/lesbians 4473Medical care, general support 1002Medical care, in-patient care 1002Medical care, outpatient care 412-414, 2028,2369, 2518, 2981, 3709, 4033, 4351, 4473Medical care, rehabilitation 2327Medical care, Relief and recoveryworkers/volunteers 3709Medical care, Victims and families, economicallyaffected 412-414, 2518, 3709, 4033Medical care, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - General 412-414, 2518, 3709Medical care, Women 4473Medical research, contribution 2800, 3168Medical school/education, contribution 4524Medicine/medical care, administration/regulation4524Medicine/medical care, association <strong>11</strong>08, 1625,1846, 2029, 2644Medicine/medical care, bioethics 4000, 4066Medicine/medical care, Children & youth 2974Medicine/medical care, contribution 14, 221, 513,680-683, <strong>11</strong>08, <strong>11</strong>10, 1248, 1625,1770-1772, 1801, 1846, 2029, 2039, 2045,2046, 2048, 2053, 2055, 2056, 2454, 2644,2896, 2974, 2975, 2990, 3156, 3157, 3433,3809, 3870, 3954, 4000, 4066, 4497, 4524Medicine/medical care, Economicallydisadvantaged 2974, 4000Medicine/medical care, employee matching gifts2130Medicine/medical care, Ethnic/racial minorities,general 4000Medicine/medical care, fund raising 2056, 2974,2975, 3433, 4497Medicine/medical care, Homeless 2974Medicine/medical care, information services 513,<strong>11</strong>10, 1248, 1770-1772, 1801, 2048, 2454,2990, 3156Medicine/medical care, management/ technical aid14Medicine/medical care, management/technical aid2974, 2975, 3433, 4497Medicine/medical care, public policy 221,680-683, 2039, 2045, 2046, 2053, 2055,3809Medicine/medical care, research 221, 680-683,3157Medicine/medical care, single organizationsupport 2896, 3870Medicine/medical care, Victims and families,economically affected 2056, 4000Medicine/medical care, Victims and families,injured and deceased - General 2056Medicine/medical care, volunteer services 2130,3954Men, civil rights 4242Men, crime/courts/legal services 4242Men, housing/shelter 2<strong>11</strong>9Mental health/crisis services, alliance 2977Mental health/crisis services, Asians/Pacificislanders 2033Mental health/crisis services, association 908,2519Mental health/crisis services, contribution 147,338, 908, 2033, 2519, 2635, 2977, 3157,4145Mental health/crisis services, Immigrants/refugees2033Mental health/crisis services, Mentally/emotionallydisabled 2033Mental health/crisis services, public education2635Mental health/crisis services, public policy 147,2033Mental health/crisis services, research 338, 3157,4145Mental health/crisis services, Victims and families,injured and deceased - General 147Mental health, Asians/Pacific islanders 72, 2033,3209, 3252, 4475, 4480Mental health, association 2345, 2637Mental health, Children & youth 67, 134, 170,865, 1099, 1237, 1890, 1933, 2446, 2731,4281Mental health, clinics 170, 2359Mental health, contribution <strong>11</strong>, 12, 19, 83-86, 91,95, 97, 99, 121, 122, 129, 134, 146, 147, 158,169, 170, 182, 193, 195, 205, 2<strong>11</strong>, 216, 219,223, 231, 232, 244, 245, 255, 279, 282-284,286, 343, 352, 355, 368, 391-393, 412, 418,424, 430, 431, 433, 435, 437, 445, 453, 457,459, 463, 471, 475, 481, 486, 487, 506, 507,514, 517, 539-541, 548, 645, 655, 661, 662,674, 688, 692, 697, 858, 865, 879-882, 894,897, 902, 908, 917, 978, 983, 1013, 1033,1039, 1041, 1047, 1090, 1099, <strong>11</strong>22, <strong>11</strong>34,<strong>11</strong>51, <strong>11</strong>52, <strong>11</strong>56, <strong>11</strong>60, <strong>11</strong>73, <strong>11</strong>75, <strong>11</strong>81,<strong>11</strong>86, <strong>11</strong>89, <strong>11</strong>99, 1210, 1219, 1222, 1224,1226, 1228, 1230, 1237, 1255, 1257, 1270,1273, 1277, 1299, 1301, 1303-1305, 1349,1408, 1412, 1426, 1431, 1440, 1443, 1445,1448, 1449, 1451, 1479, 1485, 1523, 1540,1541, 1547, 1567, 1642, 1651, 1654, 1672,1673, 1678, 1682, 1689, 1690, 1698, 1708,17<strong>11</strong>-1714, 1717, 1718, 1720, 1732, 1738,1747, 1750, 1783, 1790, 1806, 1807, 1813,1820, 1822, 1850, 1870, 1877, 1887, 1890,1900, 1904, 1906, 1909, 19<strong>11</strong>, 1928, 1933,1935, 1949, 1951, 1952, 1954, 1958, 1968,1972, 1973, 1976, 1983, 1985, 1989-1991,1997, 1998, 2013, 2014, 2028, 2033, 2054,2059, 2068, 2070, 2107, 2108, 2164, 2180,2182, 2345, 2359, 2412, 2441, 2446, 2457,2466, 2473, 2474, 2484, 2486, 2494,2520-2524, 2526, 2532, 2601, 2606, 2609,2637, 2649, 2657, 2659, 2663, 2668, 2683,2701, 2704, 2709, 2736, 2741, 2745, 2768,2778, 2937-2942, 2972, 3003, 3004,30<strong>11</strong>-3013, 3018, 3021, 3023-3025, 3030,3032, 3039, 3070, 3073, 3097, 3104, 3<strong>11</strong>5,3<strong>11</strong>9, 3148, 3155, 3194, 3240, 3245, 3249,3252, 3254, 3261, 3280, 3283, 3286, 3288,3291, 3301, 3304, 3305, 3339, 3343, 3371,3372, 3378, 3379, 3389, 3393, 3394, 3403,3404, 3409, 3412, 3416, 3419, 3420, 3429,3439, 3466, 3468, 3470, 3472, 3478, 3493,3496, 3513, 3518, 3532, 3535, 3548, 3557,3559, 3562, 3566, 3568, 3575, 3576, 3590,3601, 3603, 3683, 3687, 3701, 37<strong>11</strong>, 3737,3738, 3746, 3749, 3783, 3787, 3793, 3802,3848, 3869, 3883, 3888, 3896, 3904, 3915,3964, 4079, 4083, 4095, 4099, 4108, 4131,4150-4152, 4156, 4159, 4160, 4198, 4203,4205, 4216, 4261, 4269, 4270, 4275, 4280,4281, 4287-4289, 4308, 4315, 4316, 4318,4323, 4327, 4337, 4339, 4341, 4343, 4348,4358-4360, 4370, 4373, 4376-4380, 4382,4420, 4427, 4430-4432, 4439, 4440, 4475,4480, 4483, 4489, 4526, 4528, 4530, 4532,4538Mental health, counseling/support groups <strong>11</strong>, 12,19, 21, 22, 28, 33, 57, 64, 67, 68, 72, 73, 80,83-86, 90, 91, 95, 97, 99, 102, 121, 122, 134,146, 147, 169, 193, 195, 205, 206, 2<strong>11</strong>, 212,215, 216, 219, 223, 229, 231, 232, 244, 245,255, 276, 279, 280, 282-291, 343, 352, 354,355, 367, 368, 391-393, 412-414, 418, 424,430-433, 435, 437, 445, 453, 457, 459, 460,463, 471, 475, 481, 486, 487, 506-508, 514,517, 539-541, 548, 645, 655, 661, 662, 674,688, 691, 692, 697, 858, 865, 879-882, 887,894, 897, 902, 908, 976, 978, 983, 1005,1013, 1033, 1039, 1041, 1042, 1047, 1090,1098, 1099, <strong>11</strong>22, <strong>11</strong>34, <strong>11</strong>36, <strong>11</strong>51, <strong>11</strong>52,<strong>11</strong>56, <strong>11</strong>60, <strong>11</strong>73, <strong>11</strong>75, <strong>11</strong>81, <strong>11</strong>86, <strong>11</strong>89,<strong>11</strong>99, 1210, 1214, 1219, 1222, 1224-1226,1228, 1230, 1255, 1257, 1270, 1273, 1277,1299-1301, 1303-1305, 1349, 1408, 1412,1426, 1427, 1431, 1440, 1443, 1445, 1448,1449, 1451, 1453, 1479, 1485, 1523, 1540,1541, 1547, 1567, 1570-1572, 1642, 1651,1654, 1672, 1673, 1678, 1682, 1689, 1690,1698, 1703, 1708, 17<strong>11</strong>-1715, 1717, 1718,1720, 1727, 1732, 1747, 1748, 1750, 1783,1790, 1806, 1807, 1813, 1820, 1822, 1850,1870, 1877, 1887, 1890, 1892, 1900, 1901,1903, 1904, 1906, 1907, 1909, 19<strong>11</strong>, 1916,1918, 1928, 1935, 1946, 1949, 1951, 1952,1954, 1958, 1968, 1971-1973, 1976, 1978,1983, 1985, 1989-1991, 1997, 1998, 2010,2013, 2014, 2054, 2059, 2067, 2068, 2070,2107, 2108, 2<strong>11</strong>4, 2123, 2127, 2164, 2180,2182, 2441, 2446, 2457, 2466, 2473, 2474,2481, 2486, 2494, 2520-2522, 2524, 2526,2531, 2532, 2594, 2601, 2602, 2605, 2606,2609, 2649, 2657, 2659, 2663, 2668, 2683,2686, 2701, 2704, 2709, 2727, 2730, 2731,2734, 2736, 2741, 2744, 2745, 2768, 2778,2933, 2937-2942, 2972, 3002-3004,30<strong>11</strong>-3013, 3018, 3021, 3023-3025, 3030,3032, 3039, 3070, 3073, 3097, 3104, 3<strong>11</strong>5,3<strong>11</strong>9, 3120, 3148, 3155, 3167, 3194, 3203,257


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE3204, 3209, 32<strong>11</strong>, 3212, 3220, 3225, 3238,3240, 3245, 3249, 3252, 3254, 3261, 3277,3280, 3283, 3286, 3288, 3291, 3301, 3304,3305, 3339, 3343, 3371, 3372, 3378, 3379,3389, 3391, 3393, 3394, 3403, 3416, 3419,3429, 3436, 3439, 3466, 3468, 3470, 3472,3478, 3493, 3496, 3513, 3518, 3528, 3532,3535, 3548, 3557, 3559, 3562, 3564, 3566,3568, 3575, 3576, 3590, 3601, 3603, 3682,3683, 3687, 3701, 37<strong>11</strong>, 3715, 3717, 3723,3737, 3738, 3742, 3746, 3749, 3773, 3783,3787, 3793, 3802, 3848, 3869, 3883, 3888,3896, 3904, 3905, 4078, 4079, 4083, 4095,4099, 4104, 4108, 4125, 4126, 4128, 4131,4150-4152, 4156, 4159, 4160, 4162, 4178,4193, 4198, 4203, 4205, 4216, 4261, 4269,4270, 4275, 4280, 4281, 4287-4289, 4308,4315, 4316, 4318, 4319, 4323, 4327, 4337,4339, 4341, 4343, 4347, 4348, 4358-4360,4370, 4373, 4376-4380, 4382, 4420, 4427,4430-4432, 4439, 4440, 4475, 4480, 4483,4489, 4526, 4528, 4530, 4532, 4538Mental health, Crime/abuse victims 72, 453, 1277,1806, 1807, 2054, 2123, 2127, 2446, 3209,3717, 4532Mental health, disorders 3404, 3412, 3420Mental health, Economically disadvantaged 67,72, 2028, 2731, 3212, 3252, 3717, 4475,4480Mental health, employee matching gifts 21, 22, 28,33, 57, 64, 67, 68, 72, 73, 80, 90, 102, 206,212, 215, 229, 276, 280, 285, 287-291, 354,367, 413, 414, 432, 460, 508, 691, 887, 976,1005, 1042, 1098, 1214, 1225, 1300, 1427,1453, 1570-1572, 1703, 1715, 1727, 1748,1892, 1901, 1903, 1907, 1916, 1918, 1946,1971, 1978, 2010, 2067, 2<strong>11</strong>4, 2123, 2127,2481, 2531, 2594, 2602, 2605, 2686, 2727,2730, 2731, 2734, 2744, 2933, 3002, 3120,3238, 3277, 3391, 3436, 3528, 3564, 3682,3715, 3717, 3723, 3742, 3773, 3905, 4078,4104, 4125, 4126, 4128, 4162, 4178, 4193,4319, 4347Mental health, Ethnic/racial minorities, general3717Mental health, Ethnic/racial minorities, otherspecified group 3220, 4216Mental health, general support 3167Mental health, grief/bereavement counseling 129,182, 917, 1237, 1933Mental health, Hispanics/Latinos 3203, 3204,3212Mental health, Homeless 3964Mental health, Immigrants/refugees 67, 72, 2033,2730, 2731, 3203, 3204, 3220, 3252, 4475,4480Mental health, Mentally/emotionally disabled2033, 3404, 3412, 3420, 3964Mental health, Military/veterans 445Mental health, People with AIDS (PWAs) 32<strong>11</strong>Mental health, program development 3203, 3204,3209, 32<strong>11</strong>, 3212, 3220, 3225Mental health, Relief and recoveryworkers/volunteers <strong>11</strong>, 12, 19, 21, 22, 33, 57,73, 80, 83-86, 91, 95, 97, 99, 102, 121, 122,146, 158, 193, 195, 205, 206, 2<strong>11</strong>, 212, 215,216, 219, 229, 231, 232, 244, 276, 279, 280,282-291, 343, 352, 354, 355, 367, 368,391-393, 418, 424, 430-432, 435, 437, 457,459, 460, 471, 475, 481, 486, 487, 506-508,517, 539-541, 548, 645, 655, 674, 688, 691,692, 697, 858, 879-882, 887, 894, 897, 976,978, 983, 1005, 1013, 1033, 1039, 1041,1042, 1047, 1090, 1098, <strong>11</strong>22, <strong>11</strong>34, <strong>11</strong>36,<strong>11</strong>52, <strong>11</strong>56, <strong>11</strong>60, <strong>11</strong>73, <strong>11</strong>75, <strong>11</strong>81, <strong>11</strong>86,<strong>11</strong>99, 1210, 1214, 1222, 1224-1226, 1228,1230, 1255, 1257, 1270, 1273, 1299-1301,1303-1305, 1349, 1408, 1412, 1426, 1427,1431, 1443, 1445, 1448, 1449, 1451, 1453,1479, 1485, 1523, 1540, 1541, 1547, 1567,1570-1572, 1642, 1654, 1672, 1673, 1678,1682, 1689, 1690, 1698, 1703, 1708,17<strong>11</strong>-1715, 1717, 1718, 1720, 1727, 1732,1747, 1748, 1750, 1783, 1790, 1813, 1820,1822, 1850, 1870, 1892, 1900, 1901, 1903,1904, 1906, 1907, 1909, 1916, 1918, 1928,1946, 1951, 1952, 1954, 1958, 1968,1971-1973, 1976, 1978, 1983, 1985,1989-1991, 1997, 2010, 2013, 2014, 2059,2067, 2068, 2070, 2107, 2108, 2<strong>11</strong>4, 2164,2180, 2182, 2441, 2474, 2481, 2494, 2520,2524, 2526, 2531, 2594, 2601, 2602, 2605,2606, 2609, 2649, 2657, 2659, 2663, 2668,2683, 2686, 2701, 2709, 2727, 2734, 2736,2741, 2744, 2745, 2933, 2937-2942, 2972,3002, 3004, 30<strong>11</strong>, 3012, 3018, 3021, 3024,3025, 3030, 3032, 3039, 3070, 3097, 3104,3<strong>11</strong>5, 3<strong>11</strong>9, 3120, 3194, 3238, 3254, 3261,3277, 3280, 3283, 3286, 3288, 3304, 3305,3339, 3371, 3372, 3378, 3379, 3389, 3391,3403, 3419, 3436, 3439, 3466, 3468, 3470,3472, 3478, 3493, 3518, 3528, 3532, 3548,3559, 3562, 3564, 3568, 3576, 3590, 3682,3683, 3687, 3701, 37<strong>11</strong>, 3715, 3723, 3737,3738, 3742, 3746, 3749, 3773, 3783, 3787,3793, 3802, 3848, 3883, 3888, 3896, 3904,3905, 4078, 4079, 4083, 4095, 4099, 4104,4108, 4125, 4126, 4128, 4131, 4150-4152,4156, 4159, 4160, 4162, 4178, 4193, 4198,4203, 4269, 4270, 4275, 4280, 4288, 4308,4315, 4316, 4318, 4319, 4323, 4327, 4339,4343, 4347, 4348, 4359, 4360, 4370, 4373,4376-4378, 4380, 4382, 4420, 4427,4430-4432, 4439, 4440, 4483, 4489, 4526,4528, 4530, 4538Mental health, transitional care 2412, 3964Mental health, treatment 158, 1738, 2028, 2033,2484, 2521-2523, 3409, 3915Mental health, unspecified support <strong>11</strong>36Mental health, Victims and families, economicallyaffected <strong>11</strong>, 12, 19, 21, 22, 33, 57, 73, 80,83-86, 90, 91, 95, 97, 99, 102, 121, 122, 146,193, 195, 205, 206, 2<strong>11</strong>, 212, 215, 216, 219,229, 231, 232, 244, 276, 279, 280, 282-291,343, 352, 354, 355, 367, 368, 392, 393,412-414, 418, 424, 430-433, 435, 437, 457,459, 460, 471, 475, 481, 486, 487, 506-508,517, 539-541, 548, 645, 655, 674, 688, 691,692, 697, 858, 879-882, 887, 894, 897, 902,976, 978, 983, 1005, 1013, 1033, 1039,1041, 1042, 1047, 1090, 1098, <strong>11</strong>22, <strong>11</strong>34,<strong>11</strong>36, <strong>11</strong>51, <strong>11</strong>52, <strong>11</strong>56, <strong>11</strong>60, <strong>11</strong>73, <strong>11</strong>75,<strong>11</strong>81, <strong>11</strong>86, <strong>11</strong>89, <strong>11</strong>99, 1210, 1214, 1222,1224-1226, 1228, 1230, 1255, 1257, 1270,1273, 1299-1301, 1303-1305, 1349, 1408,1412, 1426, 1427, 1431, 1443, 1445, 1448,1449, 1451, 1453, 1479, 1485, 1523, 1540,1541, 1547, 1567, 1570-1572, 1642, 1654,1672, 1673, 1678, 1682, 1689, 1690, 1698,1703, 1708, 17<strong>11</strong>-1715, 1717, 1718, 1720,1727, 1732, 1747, 1748, 1750, 1783, 1790,1813, 1820, 1822, 1850, 1870, 1887, 1892,1900, 1901, 1903, 1904, 1906, 1907, 1909,19<strong>11</strong>, 1916, 1918, 1928, 1946, 1951, 1952,1954, 1958, 1968, 1971-1973, 1976, 1978,1983, 1985, 1989-1991, 1997, 1998, 2010,2013, 2014, 2059, 2067, 2068, 2070, 2107,2108, 2<strong>11</strong>4, 2164, 2180, 2182, 2441, 2474,2481, 2494, 2520, 2523, 2524, 2526, 2531,2594, 2601, 2602, 2605, 2606, 2609, 2649,2657, 2659, 2663, 2668, 2683, 2686, 2701,2704, 2709, 2727, 2734, 2736, 2741, 2744,2745, 2778, 2933, 2937-2942, 2972,3002-3004, 30<strong>11</strong>-3013, 3018, 3021,3023-3025, 3030, 3032, 3039, 3070, 3097,3104, 3<strong>11</strong>5, 3<strong>11</strong>9, 3120, 3194, 3238, 3240,3249, 3254, 3261, 3277, 3280, 3283, 3286,3288, 3291, 3301, 3304, 3305, 3339, 3343,3371, 3372, 3378, 3379, 3389, 3391, 3393,3394, 3403, 3416, 3419, 3429, 3436, 3439,3466, 3468, 3470, 3472, 3478, 3493, 3518,3528, 3532, 3535, 3548, 3559, 3562, 3564,3566, 3568, 3576, 3590, 3601, 3603, 3682,3683, 3687, 3701, 37<strong>11</strong>, 3715, 3723, 3737,3738, 3742, 3746, 3749, 3773, 3783, 3787,3793, 3802, 3848, 3869, 3883, 3888, 3896,3904, 3905, 4078, 4079, 4083, 4095, 4099,4104, 4108, 4125, 4126, 4128, 4131,4150-4152, 4156, 4159, 4160, 4162, 4178,4193, 4198, 4203, 4205, 4261, 4269, 4270,4275, 4280, 4287-4289, 4308, 4315, 4316,4318, 4319, 4323, 4327, 4339, 4341, 4343,4347, 4348, 4359, 4360, 4370, 4373,4376-4380, 4382, 4420, 4427, 4430-4432,4439, 4440, 4483, 4489, 4526, 4528, 4530,4538Mental health, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Children 28, 255, 1099, 1237,1935, 2473, 2730, 4281Mental health, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - General <strong>11</strong>, 12, 19, 21, 22, 33, 57,80, 83-86, 90, 91, 95, 97, 99, 102, 121, 122,129, 146, 147, 158, 193, 195, 205, 206, 2<strong>11</strong>,212, 215, 216, 219, 229, 231, 232, 244, 276,279, 280, 282-291, 343, 352, 354, 355, 367,368, 391-393, 412-414, 418, 424, 430-433,435, 437, 457, 459, 460, 471, 475, 481, 486,487, 506-508, 517, 539-541, 548, 645, 655,661, 662, 674, 688, 691, 692, 697, 858,879-882, 887, 894, 897, 902, 976, 978, 983,1005, 1013, 1033, 1039, 1041, 1042, 1047,1090, 1098, <strong>11</strong>22, <strong>11</strong>34, <strong>11</strong>36, <strong>11</strong>51, <strong>11</strong>52,<strong>11</strong>56, <strong>11</strong>60, <strong>11</strong>73, <strong>11</strong>75, <strong>11</strong>81, <strong>11</strong>86, <strong>11</strong>89,<strong>11</strong>99, 1210, 1214, 1222, 1224-1226, 1228,1230, 1255, 1257, 1270, 1273, 1299-1301,1303-1305, 1349, 1408, 1412, 1426, 1427,1431, 1443, 1445, 1448, 1449, 1451, 1453,1479, 1485, 1523, 1540, 1541, 1547, 1567,1570-1572, 1642, 1651, 1654, 1672, 1673,1678, 1682, 1689, 1690, 1698, 1703, 1708,17<strong>11</strong>-1715, 1717, 1718, 1720, 1727, 1732,1747, 1748, 1750, 1783, 1790, 1813, 1820,1822, 1850, 1870, 1887, 1892, 1900, 1901,1903, 1904, 1906, 1907, 1909, 19<strong>11</strong>, 1916,1918, 1928, 1946, 1951, 1952, 1954, 1958,1968, 1971-1973, 1976, 1978, 1983, 1985,1989-1991, 1997, 1998, 2010, 2013, 2014,2059, 2067, 2068, 2070, 2107, 2108, 2<strong>11</strong>4,2164, 2180, 2182, 2441, 2474, 2481, 2494,2520, 2523, 2524, 2526, 2531, 2594, 2601,2602, 2605, 2606, 2609, 2649, 2657, 2659,2663, 2668, 2683, 2686, 2701, 2704, 2709,2727, 2734, 2736, 2741, 2744, 2745, 2778,2933, 2937-2942, 2972, 3002-3004,30<strong>11</strong>-3013, 3018, 3021, 3023-3025, 3030,3032, 3039, 3070, 3097, 3104, 3<strong>11</strong>5, 3<strong>11</strong>9,3120, 3194, 3238, 3240, 3249, 3254, 3261,3277, 3280, 3283, 3286, 3288, 3291, 3301,3304, 3305, 3339, 3343, 3371, 3372, 3378,3379, 3389, 3391, 3393, 3394, 3403, 3416,3419, 3429, 3436, 3439, 3466, 3468, 3470,3472, 3478, 3493, 3518, 3528, 3532, 3535,3548, 3557, 3559, 3562, 3564, 3566, 3568,3576, 3590, 3601, 3603, 3682, 3683, 3687,3701, 37<strong>11</strong>, 3715, 3723, 3737, 3738, 3742,3746, 3749, 3773, 3783, 3787, 3793, 3802,3848, 3869, 3883, 3888, 3896, 3904, 3905,3915, 4078, 4079, 4083, 4095, 4099, 4104,4108, 4125, 4126, 4128, 4131, 4150-4152,4156, 4159, 4160, 4162, 4178, 4193, 4198,4203, 4205, 4261, 4269, 4270, 4275, 4280,4281, 4287-4289, 4308, 4315, 4316, 4318,4319, 4323, 4327, 4337, 4339, 4341, 4343,4347, 4348, 4358-4360, 4370, 4373,4376-4380, 4382, 4420, 4427, 4430-4432,4439, 4440, 4483, 4489, 4526, 4528, 4530,4538Mental health, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Uniformed service workers and fa68, 223, 445, 514, 902, <strong>11</strong>51, 1219, 1877,1949, 2457, 2466, 2486, 2532, 2768, 3073,3155, 3245, 3393, 3416, 3429, 3496, 3513,3603Mental health, Women 72, 3203, 3204, 3209,32<strong>11</strong>, 3212, 3220, 3252, 4475, 4480Mentally disabled, centers & services 1542Mentally disabled, contribution 1542Mentally disabled, Disabled, general 1542Mentally/emotionally disabled, employment 3964Mentally/emotionally disabled, health—specificdiseases 1576258


INDEX OF SUBJECTSMentally/emotionally disabled, humanservices—multipurpose 4035, 4037, 4063Mentally/emotionally disabled, mentalhealth/substance abuse 2033, 3404, 3412,3420, 3964Military/veterans organizations, contribution 1524Military/veterans organizations, Victims andfamilies, injured and deceased - Uniformedservice workers and fa 1524Military/veterans, education 1216, 1218Military/veterans, health—general 445Military/veterans, human services—multipurpose445, 982, 1216, 1524, 2539, 2792, 3556Military/veterans, mental health/substance abuse445Military/veterans, public affairs/government 1524Military/veterans’ organizations, contribution 373,379, 1091, 1094, 2968, 2970, 3587, 4458Minorities/immigrants, Asians/Pacific islanders126, 989, 1852, 3184, 3193, 3202Minorities/immigrants, centers & services 126,197, 862, 863, 922, 936, 989, <strong>11</strong>04, <strong>11</strong>53,1256, 1259, 1365, 1366, 1528, 1580, 1776,1852, 2087, 2088, 2095, 2199, 2200, 2285,2316, 2495, 2626, 2718, 2730, 3091, 3149,3177, 3183, 3184, 3186, 3191, 3193, 3202,3222, 3323, 3327, 3328, 3637, 3640, 3932,4216, 4219, 4243Minorities/immigrants, contribution 126, 197,862, 863, 922, 936, <strong>11</strong>04, <strong>11</strong>53, 1259, 1365,1366, 1528, 1580, 1852, 2087, 2088, 2095,2199, 2200, 2285, 2316, 2495, 2626, 2718,3091, 3149, 3177, 3183, 3184, 3186, 3191,3193, 3323, 3327, 3328, 3637, 3640, 3932,4216, 4219, 4243Minorities/immigrants, Crime/abuse victims 2495Minorities/immigrants, Economicallydisadvantaged 1776, 2285, 2495Minorities/immigrants, employee matching gifts1256, 1776, 2730Minorities/immigrants, Ethnic/racial minorities,general 1776, 2285Minorities/immigrants, Ethnic/racial minorities,other specified group 197, 936, 3222, 4216Minorities/immigrants, general support 989Minorities/immigrants, Hispanics/Latinos 3932,4219Minorities/immigrants, program development3222Minorities/immigrants, seed money 3202Minorities/immigrants, Victims and families,economically affected 197, 3183, 3184, 3186,3193, 3932, 4243Minorities/immigrants, Victims and families,injured and deceased - Children 2730Minorities/immigrants, Victims and families,injured and deceased - General <strong>11</strong>53, 3222Minorities/immigrants, Women 3222Museums (art), contribution 164, 722, 783, 791,818, 831, 834, 1253, 1368, 1447, 1855,1862, 1868, 1869, 2805, 2806, 2819, 2820,2840, 2849, 2855, 2860, 2873, 2875, 2880,2882, 2883, 2901, 2908, 2916, 2923, 2931,3279, 3695, 4007, 4408, 4410, 4416Museums (children’s), contribution 726, 737, 829,1854, 2823, 2830, 2920Museums (childrens), Children & youth 396,3928Museums (childrens), contribution 396, 3928Museums (ethnic/folk arts), contribution 707,784, 785, 943, 2812, 2813, 2862, 2877-2879,4409Museums (history), contribution 159, 345, 480,775, 778, 786, 796, 848, 1863, 2603, 2867,2876, 2881, 2930, 2995, 3198, 4001Museums (history), Immigrants/refugees 4001Museums (marine/maritime), contribution 772,2858, 2918, 2964, 3530Museums (natural history), contribution 2807Museums (science & technology), contribution795, 1865, 2890Museums (specialized), contribution 704, 2677,2808Museums, contribution 1372, 1381, 2555, 2825,2914, 2915, 3009, 4403Music, choral 719, 730, 788, 1856Music, contribution 705, 716, 719, 727, 730, 736,742, 788, 803, 842, 853, 1359, 1646, 1853,1856, 2100, 2809, 2810, 2814, 2829, 2861,3918, 3922, 3923, 4367Music, ensembles & groups 736, 803, 2100, 2829,3918Music, Victims and families, economicallyaffected 1646, 4367Music, Victims and families, injured and deceased- General 1646, 4367Music, Youth/adolescents 3918Natural resources conservation & protection,contribution 1367, 1382, 2851, 3529, 36<strong>11</strong>,3812, 3818, 4142Neighborhood centers, African Americans/Blacks3924, 4040Neighborhood centers, Children & youth 2460,3956, 4040Neighborhood centers, contribution 3<strong>11</strong>, 339,340, 522, 771, 782, 875, 955-957, 1769,1860, 1861, 2243, 2270, 2295, 2331, 2346,2348, 2355, 2426, 2452, 2453, 2460, 2853,2997, 3924, 3956-3958, 3960, 3963, 3967,3971, 3972, 3976, 3981, 3983, 3989, 3991,3994, 4012, 4040, 4050, 4060, 4062, 4401Neighborhood centers, Economicallydisadvantaged 2147, 3924, 3956, 3983, 3989,4012, 4040, 4050Neighborhood centers, employee matching gifts2147Neighborhood centers, Ethnic/racial minorities,general 3956, 4050Neighborhood centers, Homeless 2147Neighborhood centers, Substance abusers 2147Neighborhood centers, Victims and families,economically affected 3924, 3957, 3958,3960, 3963, 3967, 3971, 3972, 3976, 3981,3983, 3989, 3991, 3994, 4012, 4050, 4060,4062Neighborhood centers, Victims and families,injured and deceased - General 3957, 3958,3960, 3963, 3967, 3971, 3972, 3976, 3981,3991, 3994, 4060, 4062Nigeria, international affairs/development 1588Nonprofit management, Affected nonprofits 1000,1001Nonprofit management, contribution 302, 310,323, 335, 357, 580, 896, <strong>11</strong>78, 1252, 1325,1357, 1604, 1624, 1635, 1636, 1639, 1676,2036, 2101, 2707, 2992, 3256, 3346, 3801,4143, 4167, 4284, 4313Nonprofit management, employee matching gifts2463, 3057Nonprofit management, general support 1000,1001Nonprofit management, Victims and families,economically affected <strong>11</strong>78, 2707, 3801Nonprofit management, Victims and families,injured and deceased - General <strong>11</strong>78, 2707,3801Nursing home/convalescent facility,Aging/elderly/senior citizens 3978Nursing home/convalescent facility, contribution3978OBGYN/Birthing centers, contribution 2093Offenders/ex-offenders, contribution 2219, 2329Offenders/ex-offenders, housing/shelter 2<strong>11</strong>9Offenders/ex-offenders, services 2329Offenders/ex-offenders, transitional care 2219Opera, contribution 941, 1421, 2874, 2887Orchestra (symphony), contribution 729, 802,819, 2016, 28<strong>11</strong>, 2900, 3604Orthodox Catholic agencies & churches,contribution 4533Pakistan, civil rights 4212Pakistan, education 4212Pakistan, health—general 3350Pakistan, human services—multipurpose 4212Parks/playgrounds, contribution 1543, 2077,2828, 2832-2834, 2837, 2851, 2897, 2904,2910Peace, contribution 3484, 4251, 4255Peace, Ethnic/racial minorities, other specifiedgroup 3484Peace, Immigrants/refugees 3484, 4255Pediatrics, contribution 2029People with AIDS (PWAs),food/nutrition/agriculture <strong>11</strong>7, 138, 143, 145,157, 173, 186, 3968People with AIDS (PWAs), humanservices—multipurpose 32<strong>11</strong>People with AIDS (PWAs), mentalhealth/substance abuse 32<strong>11</strong>Performing arts (multi-media), contribution 172,746, 801, 808, 2001, 2571, 2575, 4399,4400, 4414Performing arts centers, contribution 132, 701,717, 723, 739, 843, 1701, 1848, 2450, 2798,2821, 2827, 2831, 2863, 2865, 2866, 2927,3729Performing arts, Children & youth 4074, 4075Performing arts, contribution 188, 735, 738, 760,762, 763, 782, 789, 799, 835, 836, 842, 854,1351, 1377, 1786, 1853, 1872, 1873, 2583,2852, 2864, 2898, 2924, 3369, 3708, 4074,4075, 4137, 4402, 4412Performing arts, education 738, 760, 782, 789,836, 842, 854, 1377, 1853, 1873, 2583,2852, 3708, 4074, 4075Performing arts, Ethnic/racial minorities, general188Performing arts, program development 3208Peru, civil rights 1616Peru, crime/courts/legal services 1616philanthropy & voluntarism, contribution 484Philanthropy /voluntarism, contribution 3066Philanthropy /voluntarism, general support 996Philanthropy /voluntarism, public education 996,3066Philanthropy/ voluntarism, contribution <strong>11</strong>6, 928,2610, 3007, 3066Philanthropy/ voluntarism, general support 996Philanthropy/ voluntarism, information services<strong>11</strong>6, 928, 996, 2610, 3007, 3066Philanthropy/ voluntarism, research 928, 996,2610, 3066Philanthropy/voluntarism, association 2098, 2103,3166, 3623Philanthropy/voluntarism, contribution 264, 301,322, 584, 755, 856, 869, 870, 1319, 1595,1596, 1603, 1609, 1635, 1636, 2098, 2103,2290-2292, 2445, 2670, 3086, 3147, 3166,3349, 3615, 3623, 4508Philanthropy/voluntarism, fund raising 301, 322,1595Philanthropy/voluntarism, information services584, 755, 869, 870, 1603, 2290-2292, 3086,3147, 3615Philanthropy/voluntarism, management/technicalaid 856, 1319, 1596, 2445Philanthropy, contribution 294, 4496, 4499, 4503,4505, 4506Philanthropy, named trusts 294, 4496, 4499,4503, 4505, 4506Photography, contribution 152, 1447, 1743, 2855Protestant agencies & churches, contribution 587,2250, 2739Public affairs, association 4<strong>11</strong>6Public affairs, citizen participation 606, 3318,3349, 3599, 3610, 4256Public affairs, contribution 236, 314, 380, 606,734, 768, 1260, 1263, 1516, 1527, 1587,1599, 1685, 1691, 2005, 2047, 2076, 2467,2621, 2640, 2646, 2696, 3072, 3077, 3078,3082, 3180, 3312, 3318, 3320, 3349, 3405,3469, 3599, 3610, 3648, 3653, 3807, 3808,4<strong>11</strong>6, 4256Public affairs, Ethnic/racial minorities, otherspecified group 3082, 4256Public affairs, finance 1260, 1263, 1587, 1599,2621, 3180, 3320, 3653259


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSEPublic affairs, government agencies 236, 380,1516, 1527, 1691, 2467, 3405Public affairs, public education 314, 1685, 2076,2646, 2696, 3072, 3082, 3312, 3469, 3648Public affairs, research 2005, 2047, 2640Public health school/education, contribution 2035Public health, bioterrorism 14, 473, 2028, 2039,2045, 2046, 2057, 3815, 3827Public health, Children & youth 2973, 2980Public health, contribution 14, 473, 591, 592, 610,2028, 2034, 2035, 2039, 2045, 2046, 2052,2053, 2055, 2057, 2236, 2518, 2973, 2980,2989, 3153, 3168, 3709, 3815, 3827, 4351Public health, Economically disadvantaged 592,2028, 2518, 2973, 2980Public health, Homeless 2973Public health, Relief and recoveryworkers/volunteers 3709Public health, Victims and families, economicallyaffected 2518, 3709Public health, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - General 2518, 3709Public policy, contribution 479, 573, <strong>11</strong>09, 1260,1587, 1592, 1599, 1627, 2008, 2034, 2037,2049, 2053, 2076, 2240, 2476, 2619, 2622,3320, 3348, 3613, 3648, 3653, 3657, 38<strong>11</strong>,3835, 4003, 4004, 4257Public policy, Economically disadvantaged 4004,4257Public policy, Ethnic/racial minorities, general4257Public policy, research 479, 573, <strong>11</strong>09, 1260,1587, 1592, 1599, 1627, 2008, 2034, 2037,2049, 2053, 2076, 2240, 2476, 2619, 2622,3320, 3348, 3613, 3648, 3653, 3657, 38<strong>11</strong>,3835, 4003, 4004, 4257Public policy, Victims and families, economicallyaffected 4004Public policy, Women 4257Race/intergroup relations, Asians/Pacific islanders72, 918, 927, 935, 938, 959, 3224, 3252,4217, 4218, 4252, 4475, 4480Race/intergroup relations, Children & youth 1371,3132, 4217Race/intergroup relations, contribution 463, 571,595, 600, 601, 605, 616, 906, 907, 915, 918,923, 926, 927, 930, 935, 938-940, 944, 947,948, 959, 1371, 1601, 1653, 1840, 1947,2064, 2500, 2627, 3063, 3082, 3084, 3091,3132, 3247, 3252, 3484, 4196, 4214, 4215,4217, 4218, 4234, 4236, 4237, 4249, 4252,4475, 4480Race/intergroup relations, Crime/abuse victims72, 4234Race/intergroup relations, Economicallydisadvantaged 72, 3063, 3064, 3252, 4475,4480Race/intergroup relations, employee matchinggifts 72, 3064Race/intergroup relations, Ethnic/racial minorities,general 1601, 1947, 2064, 3063, 3064, 4196,4214Race/intergroup relations, Ethnic/racial minorities,other specified group 907, 915, 918, 927,935, 938, 939, 959, 2627, 3082, 3132, 3220,3484, 4215, 4234, 4236, 4237Race/intergroup relations, Immigrants/refugees72, 2627, 3220, 3252, 3484, 4237, 4475,4480Race/intergroup relations, program development3220, 3224Race/intergroup relations, Victims and families,economically affected 3063, 3064Race/intergroup relations, Victims and families,injured and deceased - General 1653, 3063,3064Race/intergroup relations, Women 72, 3220, 3252,4196, 4236, 4475, 4480Race/intergroup relations, Youth/adolescents 923,927, 940, 3224Radio, contribution 758, 790, 849, 1374, 1394,1395, 1481, 1614, 1641, 1677, 2006, 2017,2641, 3292, 3621, 3666, 4071Reading, Children 3999Reading, Children & youth 1692Reading, contribution 1692, 3999Reading, Infants/toddlers 3999Recreation/sports/athletics, Canada 4507Recreation, alliance 2897Recreation, Asians/Pacific islanders 1373Recreation, centers 3920Recreation, Children & youth 1371Recreation, community facilities 2909Recreation, contribution 1371, 1373, 1936, 2077,2832-2834, 2897, 2909, 2910, 3920Recreation, fairs & festivals 1371, 1373Recreation, fund raising 1936, 2077, 2832-2834,2909Recreation, single organization support 2910Relief and recovery workers/volunteers,crime/courts/legal services 133Relief and recovery workers/volunteers,food/nutrition/agriculture 46, <strong>11</strong>9, 135, 139,242, 904, <strong>11</strong>60, 1443, 1870, 2451, 2480,3723, 3917Relief and recovery workers/volunteers,health—general 424, 471, 688, <strong>11</strong>33, 2107,2727, 3709, 4108Relief and recovery workers/volunteers, humanservices—multipurpose 3, <strong>11</strong>, 12, 19, 21, 22,33, 57, 73, 80, 83-86, 91, 95, 97, 99, 102,120-122, 146, 193, 195, 205, 206, 2<strong>11</strong>, 212,215, 216, 219, 229, 231, 232, 238, 244, 269,276, 279, 280, 282-291, 343, 349, 352, 354,355, 367, 368, 391-393, 418, 424, 430-432,435, 437, 457, 459, 460, 471, 475, 481, 486,487, 506-508, 517, 539-541, 547, 548, 645,651, 655, 674, 688, 691, 692, 697, 858,879-882, 887, 894, 897, 904, 912, 976, 978,979, 983, 1005, 1013, 1033, 1039, 1041,1042, 1047, 1051, 1090, 1098, <strong>11</strong>22, <strong>11</strong>33,<strong>11</strong>34, <strong>11</strong>36, <strong>11</strong>52, <strong>11</strong>56, <strong>11</strong>60, <strong>11</strong>73, <strong>11</strong>75,<strong>11</strong>81, <strong>11</strong>86, <strong>11</strong>99, 1210, 1214, 1222,1224-1226, 1228, 1230, 1255, 1257, 1270,1273, 1274, 1299-1301, 1303-1305, 1349,1408, 1412, 1426, 1427, 1431, 1443, 1445,1448, 1449, 1451, 1453, 1479, 1485, 1523,1540, 1541, 1547, 1567, 1570-1572, 1642,1643, 1654, 1672, 1673, 1678, 1682, 1689,1690, 1698, 1703, 1708, 17<strong>11</strong>-1715, 1717,1718, 1720, 1727, 1732, 1747, 1748, 1750,1783, 1790, 1813, 1820, 1822, 1850, 1870,1892, 1900, 1901, 1903, 1904, 1906, 1907,1909, 1910, 1916, 1918, 1928, 1946, 1951,1952, 1954, 1958, 1968, 1971-1973, 1976,1978, 1983, 1985, 1989-1991, 1997, 2010,2013, 2014, 2059, 2067, 2068, 2070, 2107,2108, 2<strong>11</strong>4, 2164, 2180, 2182, 2441, 2474,2481, 2494, 2520, 2524, 2526, 2531, 2594,2601, 2602, 2605, 2606, 2609, 2647, 2649,2657, 2659, 2663, 2668, 2683, 2686, 2701,2708, 2709, 2727, 2734, 2736, 2740, 2741,2744, 2745, 2933, 2937-2942, 2972, 3002,3004, 30<strong>11</strong>, 3012, 3018, 3021, 3024, 3025,3030, 3032, 3039, 3067, 3070, 3097, 3104,3109, 3<strong>11</strong>5, 3<strong>11</strong>9, 3120, 3194, 3238, 3254,3261, 3277, 3280, 3283, 3286, 3288, 3293,3304, 3305, 3339, 3371, 3372, 3378, 3379,3389, 3391, 3403, 3419, 3436, 3439, 3466,3468, 3470, 3472, 3478, 3489, 3493, 3518,3528, 3532, 3548, 3559, 3562, 3564, 3568,3576, 3590, 3682, 3683, 3687, 3701, 37<strong>11</strong>,3715, 3723, 3737, 3738, 3742, 3746, 3749,3773, 3783, 3787, 3793, 3802, 3848, 3880,3883, 3888, 3896, 3904, 3905, 4078, 4079,4083, 4086, 4095, 4099, 4104, 4108,4125-4128, 4131, 4150-4152, 4156,4159-4162, 4178, 4193, 4197, 4198, 4203,4269, 4270, 4275, 4280, 4288, 4308, 4315,4316, 4318, 4319, 4323, 4327, 4339, 4343,4347, 4348, 4359, 4360, 4370, 4373,4376-4378, 4380, 4382, 4420, 4427,4430-4432, 4439, 4440, 4483, 4489, 4526,4528, 4530, 4538Relief and recovery workers/volunteers, mentalhealth/substance abuse <strong>11</strong>, 12, 19, 21, 22, 33,57, 73, 80, 83-86, 91, 95, 97, 99, 102, 121,122, 146, 158, 193, 195, 205, 206, 2<strong>11</strong>, 212,215, 216, 219, 229, 231, 232, 244, 276, 279,280, 282-291, 343, 352, 354, 355, 367, 368,391-393, 418, 424, 430-432, 435, 437, 457,459, 460, 471, 475, 481, 486, 487, 506-508,517, 539-541, 548, 645, 655, 674, 688, 691,692, 697, 858, 879-882, 887, 894, 897, 976,978, 983, 1005, 1013, 1033, 1039, 1041,1042, 1047, 1090, 1098, <strong>11</strong>22, <strong>11</strong>34, <strong>11</strong>36,<strong>11</strong>52, <strong>11</strong>56, <strong>11</strong>60, <strong>11</strong>73, <strong>11</strong>75, <strong>11</strong>81, <strong>11</strong>86,<strong>11</strong>99, 1210, 1214, 1222, 1224-1226, 1228,1230, 1255, 1257, 1270, 1273, 1299-1301,1303-1305, 1349, 1408, 1412, 1426, 1427,1431, 1443, 1445, 1448, 1449, 1451, 1453,1479, 1485, 1523, 1540, 1541, 1547, 1567,1570-1572, 1642, 1654, 1672, 1673, 1678,1682, 1689, 1690, 1698, 1703, 1708,17<strong>11</strong>-1715, 1717, 1718, 1720, 1727, 1732,1747, 1748, 1750, 1783, 1790, 1813, 1820,1822, 1850, 1870, 1892, 1900, 1901, 1903,1904, 1906, 1907, 1909, 1916, 1918, 1928,1946, 1951, 1952, 1954, 1958, 1968,1971-1973, 1976, 1978, 1983, 1985,1989-1991, 1997, 2010, 2013, 2014, 2059,2067, 2068, 2070, 2107, 2108, 2<strong>11</strong>4, 2164,2180, 2182, 2441, 2474, 2481, 2494, 2520,2524, 2526, 2531, 2594, 2601, 2602, 2605,2606, 2609, 2649, 2657, 2659, 2663, 2668,2683, 2686, 2701, 2709, 2727, 2734, 2736,2741, 2744, 2745, 2933, 2937-2942, 2972,3002, 3004, 30<strong>11</strong>, 3012, 3018, 3021, 3024,3025, 3030, 3032, 3039, 3070, 3097, 3104,3<strong>11</strong>5, 3<strong>11</strong>9, 3120, 3194, 3238, 3254, 3261,3277, 3280, 3283, 3286, 3288, 3304, 3305,3339, 3371, 3372, 3378, 3379, 3389, 3391,3403, 3419, 3436, 3439, 3466, 3468, 3470,3472, 3478, 3493, 3518, 3528, 3532, 3548,3559, 3562, 3564, 3568, 3576, 3590, 3682,3683, 3687, 3701, 37<strong>11</strong>, 3715, 3723, 3737,3738, 3742, 3746, 3749, 3773, 3783, 3787,3793, 3802, 3848, 3883, 3888, 3896, 3904,3905, 4078, 4079, 4083, 4095, 4099, 4104,4108, 4125, 4126, 4128, 4131, 4150-4152,4156, 4159, 4160, 4162, 4178, 4193, 4198,4203, 4269, 4270, 4275, 4280, 4288, 4308,4315, 4316, 4318, 4319, 4323, 4327, 4339,4343, 4347, 4348, 4359, 4360, 4370, 4373,4376-4378, 4380, 4382, 4420, 4427,4430-4432, 4439, 4440, 4483, 4489, 4526,4528, 4530, 4538Relief and recovery workers/volunteers,philanthropy/voluntarism 2031, 2032Relief and recovery workers/volunteers,safety/disaster relief 120, 238, 349, 912,1098, 3709, 4161Relief and recovery workers/volunteers, socialsciences 2031, 2032Religion, association 570, 937, 1233, 2203, 2250,2519, 4487Religion, Canada 3673Religion, contribution 570, 937, 1233, 1610, 2203,2250, 2519, 2618, 3300, 4487Religion, interfaith issues 1610, 3300Religion, public policy 2618Residential/custodial care, contribution 2216,2225, 2241, 2245, 2262, 2321, 2374, 2407,2431Residential/custodial care, group home 2216Residential/custodial care, half-way house 2225Residential/custodial care, People with AIDS(PWAs) 32<strong>11</strong>Residential/custodial care, program development32<strong>11</strong>Residential/custodial care, Women 32<strong>11</strong>Roman Catholic agencies & churches,contribution 1943, 2271, 2443, 3552, 3553,3992Roman Catholic agencies & churches,Economically disadvantaged 3992Roman Catholic agencies & churches, Victims andfamilies, economically affected 3992Safety/disaster relief, Canada 365, 366, 1206,1963, 4<strong>11</strong>2, 4<strong>11</strong>3, 4129, 4260, 4274260


INDEX OF SUBJECTSSafety/disaster relief, England 3031, 3068Safety/disaster relief, Japan 3034Safety/disasters, contribution 980, <strong>11</strong>90,<strong>11</strong>92-<strong>11</strong>98, 1281, 1357, 1401, 2795, 3108,3143, 3544, 4284Safety/disasters, employee matching gifts 3055Safety/disasters, fund raising 1281, 3544Safety/disasters, government agencies 980, 1401,2795Safety/disasters, information services 3108Safety/disasters, management/ technical aid 3055Safety/disasters, public education 3143Safety/disasters, research 1357Safety/disasters, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Uniformed service workers and fa1281Safety/disasters, volunteer services <strong>11</strong>90,<strong>11</strong>92-<strong>11</strong>98, 4284Salvation Army, contribution 439, 533, 877, 953,954, 1399, 1441, 18<strong>11</strong>, 1913, 2074,2379-2392, 2719-2721, 2738, 3302, 3375,3497, 3524, 4328, 4375, 4512, 4513Salvation Army, Economically disadvantaged34-37, 953, 1810, 18<strong>11</strong>, 3497, 3524, 4375Salvation Army, employee matching gifts 34-37,74-77, 686, 1810, 2782, 3909, 3910Scholarship funds, education 502, <strong>11</strong>66, <strong>11</strong>67,4444Scholarships/financial aid, AfricanAmericans/Blacks 2085, 4057Scholarships/financial aid, Children & youth 202,263, 502, 898, 994, 1085, <strong>11</strong>00, <strong>11</strong>02, 1227,1242, 1247, 1275, 1346, 1487, 1499, 1753,1828, 1950, 2444, 2449, 2534, 26<strong>11</strong>, 2612,3447, 3481, 3482, 3876, 4031, 4045, 4103,4268, 4281, 4306, 4344, 4346Scholarships/financial aid, contribution 124, 131,165, 179, 183, 194, 202, 207, 208, 249, 250,255, 263, 272, 372, 378, 381, 455, 463, 678,687, 698, 860, 861, 898, 994, 1085, <strong>11</strong>00,<strong>11</strong>02, 1216, 1218, 1227, 1242, 1247, 1275,1284, 1330, 1346, 1396, 1476, 1487, 1499,1526, 1561, 1562, 1659, 1753, 1781, 1804,1921, 1929-1931, 1935, 1940, 1944, 1945,1950, 1956, 2085, 2086, 2444, 2449, 2473,2540, 2541, 2612, 2653, 2654, 2691, 2758,2779, 2785, 2962, 2963, 3040, 3<strong>11</strong>0, 3<strong>11</strong>7,3126, 3295, 3430, 3447, 3457, 3467, 3481,3483, 3499, 3507, 3519, 3521, 3538, 3733,3761, 3778, 3794, 3796, 3797, 3875, 3876,3881, 4031, 4045, 4053, 4057, 4092, 4103,4268, 4281, 4303, 4306, 43<strong>11</strong>, 4314, 4346,4374, 4445, 4488, 4509, 4510Scholarships/financial aid, Crime/abuse victims2142, 2173, 2653, 2654, 3126Scholarships/financial aid, Economicallydisadvantaged 3875, 3876, 4031, 4045, 4053Scholarships/financial aid, employee matchinggifts 28, 268, 474, 485, 1794, 1828, 1992,1996, 2132, 2142, 2162, 2166, 2173, 2499,2534, 26<strong>11</strong>, 3262, 3482, 3551, 3762-3764,4344Scholarships/financial aid, Ethnic/racial minorities,general 3875, 3876, 4031, 4053Scholarships/financial aid, general support 248Scholarships/financial aid, Infants/toddlers 4444Scholarships/financial aid, Military/veterans 1216,1218Scholarships/financial aid, scholarship funds 502,<strong>11</strong>66, <strong>11</strong>67, 4444Scholarships/financial aid, Victims and families,economically affected 131, 2085Scholarships/financial aid, Victims and families,injured and deceased - Children 28, 124,179, 183, 194, 202, 207, 248-250, 255, 263,268, 455, 474, 485, 502, 861, 898, 994, <strong>11</strong>00,<strong>11</strong>02, 1216, 1218, 1227, 1242, 1247, 1275,1284, 1330, 1346, 1476, 1487, 1499, 1561,1562, 1659, 1753, 1794, 1828, 1921, 1929,1930, 1935, 1940, 1944, 1945, 1950, 1992,1996, 2132, 2166, 2444, 2449, 2473, 2499,2534, 2540, 2541, 26<strong>11</strong>, 2612, 2653, 2654,2758, 2785, 2963, 3040, 3<strong>11</strong>7, 3126, 3262,3295, 3430, 3447, 3467, 3481, 3482, 3499,3507, 3519, 3521, 3551, 3733, 3761-3764,4031, 4103, 4268, 4281, 4303, 4306, 43<strong>11</strong>,4314, 4344, 4346, 4374, 4444, 4445Scholarships/financial aid, Victims and families,injured and deceased - Employees 124, 202,207, 208, 248-250, 678, <strong>11</strong>00, <strong>11</strong>02, 1284,1330, 1561, 1562, 1828, 1930, 1944, 1945,1992, 2132, 2540, 3507, 4303Scholarships/financial aid, Victims and families,injured and deceased - General 1085, 1227,2779, 3<strong>11</strong>0, 4281Scholarships/financial aid, Victims and families,injured and deceased - Uniformed serviceworkers and fa 183, 263, 1216, 1218, 1950,1996, 2449, 2758, 3262, 3499, 3519, 3521,4374, 4444Scholarships/financial aid, Victims and families,injured and deceased - Union members/otherprofessional 678Scholarships/financial aid, Women 1996, 2499,3262Scholarships/financial aid, Youth/adolescents3875, 4053Science, association 787, 2639, 3824Science, contribution 787, 2639, 3824Sculpture, contribution 770, 826Secondary school/education, Asians/Pacificislanders 927Secondary school/education, contribution 13, 923,927, 2062, 3432, 3875, 3919, 3982, 3984,4022, 4053, 4055, 4134Secondary school/education, Economicallydisadvantaged 3875, 4053Secondary school/education, Ethnic/racialminorities, general 3875, 4022, 4053Secondary school/education, Ethnic/racialminorities, other specified group 927Secondary school/education, Youth/adolescents923, 927, 3432, 3875, 3919, 3982, 3984,4053, 4055Secondary school/education, Youth/adolescents,female 4022Sexual abuse prevention, contribution 2307, 2400Social sciences, contribution 1261, 1356, 1583,1591, 2031, 2032, 2049, 3659, 3835, 3891Social sciences, interdisciplinary studies 1356,2031, 2032, 2049, 3659, 3835, 3891Social sciences, Relief and recoveryworkers/volunteers 2031, 2032Social sciences, research 3891South Africa, civil rights 3084South Africa, international affairs/development3084Student services & organizations, AfricanAmericans/Blacks 3916Student services & organizations, Children &youth 3916Student services & organizations, contribution3916Student services & organizations, Economicallydisadvantaged 3916Student services & organizations,Hispanics/Latinos 3916Substance abuse, contribution 2314, 2349, 2409,2412, 2417, 2977, 4027, 4065Substance abuse, services 2349, 2409, 2417, 2977,4027Substance abuse, treatment 2314, 2412, 4065Substance abusers, humanservices—multipurpose 2147, 4035, 4063Substance abusers, mental health/substance abuse4027, 4065Telecommunications, contribution 310, 335, 1356,3319, 4415Telecommunications, electronic messagingservices 3319, 4415Telecommunications, message services 1356Television, contribution 388, 750, 758, 768, 1376,1394, 1598, 1600, 1646, 1768, 2846, 2943,3108, 3143, 3633, 3834, 4070, 4367, 4395,4460Television, Victims and families, economicallyaffected 1646, 4367Television, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - General 1646, 4367Thailand, international affairs/development 3642<strong>The</strong>ater (musical), contribution 2545<strong>The</strong>ater, contribution <strong>11</strong>8, 127, 141, 184, 275,703, 706, 713, 732, 738, 751, 752, 769, 776,780, 793, 797, 800, 805, 806, 809, 812,820-823, 827, 836, 837, 839-841, 847, 850,851, 855, 1362, 1369, 1370, 1377, 1378,1791, 1849, 1873, 2544, 2546-2554, 2556,2557, 2559-2570, 2572-2574, 2577-2592,2799, 2802, 2803, 2869, 2894, 2902, 29<strong>11</strong>,2913, 2925, 2926, 2929, 4021, 4419<strong>The</strong>ater, playwriting 855, 2592<strong>The</strong>ological school/education, contribution 588University, Children & youth 502University, contribution 718, 731, 741, 749, 792,845, 924, 951, 958, 10<strong>11</strong>, <strong>11</strong>06, <strong>11</strong>07, <strong>11</strong><strong>11</strong>,1251, 1264, 1327, 1331, 1356, 1388, 1389,1626, 1631, 1637, 1767, 2040, 2041, 2050,2091, 2092, 2099, 2106, 2109, 2181, 2632,2645, 2928, 3089, 3142, 3317, 3459, 3624,3625, 3646, 3650, 3651, 3672, 3674, 3707,3816, 3817, 3821-3823, 3830-3832,3838-3842, 44<strong>11</strong>University, scholarship funds 502University, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - Children 502Urban League, contribution 2192, 2424Urban/community development, Affectedbusinesses 1003Urban/community development, contribution 6, 7,9, 16, 79, 87, 88, 92, 101, <strong>11</strong>5, 189, 203, 209,214, 218, 230, 240, 243, 251, 252, 259, 265,281, 296, 337, 348, 351, 353, 360, 361, 363,369, 383, 386, 397, 398, 404, 4<strong>11</strong>, 415, 417,419, 420, 427, 429, 434, 436, 440, 441, 443,451, 464, 466, 468, 469, 472, 478, 482, 483,488, 492-494, 504, 515, 520, 521, 523, 526,527, 531, 534, 536, 537, 544-546, 561, 603,641-643, 653, 658, 668, 689, 695, 864, 878,890, 892, 893, 895, 900, 901, 906, 949, 964,966, 970, 974, 975, 977, 984, 1007,1020-1030, 1035, 1043, 1046, 1048, 1054,1055, 1057-1063, 1065, 1066, 1068-1070,1073-1078, 1080-1082, 1084, 1095, <strong>11</strong>12,<strong>11</strong>13, <strong>11</strong>15, <strong>11</strong>16, <strong>11</strong>19-<strong>11</strong>21, <strong>11</strong>23-<strong>11</strong>28,<strong>11</strong>30, <strong>11</strong>31, <strong>11</strong>35, <strong>11</strong>37, <strong>11</strong>38, <strong>11</strong>40-<strong>11</strong>42,<strong>11</strong>49, <strong>11</strong>54, <strong>11</strong>58, <strong>11</strong>59, <strong>11</strong>62, <strong>11</strong>74, <strong>11</strong>76,<strong>11</strong>77, <strong>11</strong>79, <strong>11</strong>80, <strong>11</strong>82, <strong>11</strong>84, <strong>11</strong>87,1201-1204, 1207, 12<strong>11</strong>, 1223, 1231, 1232,1234, 1236, 1254, 1279, 1282, 1287-1289,1291, 1306, 1308, 13<strong>11</strong>, 1333, 1335, 1338,1339, 1345, 1350, 1387, 1400, 1404-1406,1410, 1425, 1433-1435, 1446, 1455, 1458,1459, 1477, 1492, 1495, 1498, 1510, 1515,1518, 1519, 1522, 1533, 1538, 1539, 1546,1557, 1565, 1566, 1568, 1573, 1622, 1623,1628, 1632, 1639, 1648-1650, 1652, 1656,1657, 1665, 1680, 1684, 1693, 1699, 1707,1723, 1724, 1731, 1737, 1741, 1755, 1758,1760, 1765, 1773, 1774, 1778, 1785, 1793,1800, 1802, 1814, 1819, 1821, 1823, 1825,1833, 1836, 1838, 1842, 1843, 1871, 1879,1881, 1888, 1898, 1905, 1914, 1915, 1920,1948, 1953, 1960, 1961, 1966, 1969, 1975,1981, 1986, 1994, 20<strong>11</strong>, 2058, 2060, 2066,2071, 2079, 2105, 2150, 2183, 2184, 2186,2187, 2404, 2415, 2442, 2447, 2448, 2475,2488, 2489, 2492, 2515, 2525, 2528, 2529,2535, 2543, 2597-2600, 2604, 2608, 2648,2650, 2652, 2681, 2688, 2693, 2706, 2769,2898, 2944, 2945, 2955, 2959, 2960, 2967,2976, 2991, 2998, 3014, 3020, 3022, 3023,3026, 3033, 3038, 3044, 3045, 3056, 3063,3076, 3092, 3101, 3102, 3<strong>11</strong>1, 3<strong>11</strong>3, 3<strong>11</strong>8,3122, 3128, 3133, 3160-3164, 3169, 3197,3232, 3236, 3257, 3260, 3265, 3273, 3276,3290, 3294, 3303, 3345, 3353, 3360-3368,3370, 3384, 3395, 3415, 3421, 3444, 3450,3465, 3471, 3473-3476, 3479, 3485, 3488,3494, 3501, 35<strong>11</strong>, 3522, 3523, 3533, 3537,3541, 3567, 3569, 3574, 3577, 3579-3581,261


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE3585, 3591, 3597, 3608, 3609, 3627-3630,3678, 3679, 3684, 3688, 3689, 3691, 3692,3696, 3706, 3710, 3714, 3734-3736, 3741,3744, 3745, 3747, 3751-3753, 3757, 3758,3766, 3772, 3775, 3781, 3784, 3790, 3798,3800, 3801, 3803, 3806, 3810, 3829, 3836,3837, 3843, 3845, 3846, 3852, 3864, 3874,3882, 3885, 3887, 3890, 3893-3895, 3899,39<strong>11</strong>, 3952, 4016, 4026, 4077, 4087, 4090,4093, 4097, 4101, 4107, 4<strong>11</strong>1, 4<strong>11</strong>4, 4124,4144, 4149, 4199, 4202, 4204, 4207, 4263,4265, 4285, 4286, 4291, 4294-4296, 4302,4305, 4312, 4320, 4326, 4331, 4332, 4335,4338, 4340, 4352, 4353, 4355, 4356,4363-4365, 4368, 4369, 4383, 4385, 4386,4421, 4422, 4425, 4426, 4433, 4441, 4442,4455, 4456, 4461, 4484, 4525, 4534, 4536,4540-4542Urban/community development, Crime/abusevictims 60, 864, 2148, 2955, 4326Urban/community development, Economicallydisadvantaged 478, 1234, 1632, 1724, 1737,1871, 3063, 3064, 3290, 3395, 3744, 3757,3874, 4026, 4332, 4368, 4386Urban/community development, employeematching gifts 18, 30, 60, 69, 70, 81, 191,210, 258, 292, 364, 528, 535, 538, 965, 968,<strong>11</strong>44, 1302, 1413, 1454, 1671, 1694, 1815,1824, 1830, 1894, 1902, 1917, 1923, 1995,2148, 2149, 2482, 2493, 2497, 2498, 2514,2607, 2687, 2732, 2770, 3064, 3253, 3392,3434, 3458, 3480, 3490, 3512, 3534, 3705,3743, 3767-3769, 3789, 4106, 4164, 4336,4361, 4436Urban/community development, Ethnic/racialminorities, general 478, 1234, 1724, 1737,1871, 3063, 3064, 3290, 3395, 3744, 3757,3874, 4332, 4368, 4386Urban/community development, general support985, 986, 991, 995, 997, 1003Urban/community development,Immigrants/refugees 478Urban/community development, Victims andfamilies, economically affected 6, 7, 9, 16, 18,30, 69, 70, 79, 81, 87, 88, 92, 101, <strong>11</strong>5, 189,191, 203, 209, 210, 214, 218, 230, 240, 243,251, 252, 258, 259, 265, 292, 348, 351, 353,360, 361, 363, 364, 369, 383, 386, 398, 404,4<strong>11</strong>, 415, 417, 419, 420, 427, 429, 434, 436,440, 441, 443, 451, 464, 466, 468, 469, 472,482, 483, 488, 492-494, 504, 515, 520, 521,523, 526-528, 531, 534-538, 544-546, 561,642, 643, 653, 658, 668, 689, 695, 878, 890,892, 893, 895, 900, 901, 949, 964-966, 968,970, 974, 975, 977, 984-986, 1007,1020-1030, 1035, 1046, 1054, 1055,1057-1063, 1065, 1066, 1068-1070,1073-1078, 1080-1082, 1084, 1095, <strong>11</strong>13,<strong>11</strong>15, <strong>11</strong>16, <strong>11</strong>19-<strong>11</strong>21, <strong>11</strong>23-<strong>11</strong>28, <strong>11</strong>30,<strong>11</strong>31, <strong>11</strong>35, <strong>11</strong>37, <strong>11</strong>38, <strong>11</strong>40-<strong>11</strong>42, <strong>11</strong>44,<strong>11</strong>49, <strong>11</strong>54, <strong>11</strong>58, <strong>11</strong>59, <strong>11</strong>62, <strong>11</strong>74, <strong>11</strong>76,<strong>11</strong>77, <strong>11</strong>79, <strong>11</strong>80, <strong>11</strong>82, <strong>11</strong>84, <strong>11</strong>87,1201-1204, 1207, 12<strong>11</strong>, 1223, 1231, 1232,1234, 1236, 1254, 1279, 1282, 1287-1289,1291, 1302, 1306, 1308, 1335, 1338, 1339,1345, 1350, 1400, 1404-1406, 1410, 1413,1425, 1433-1435, 1446, 1454, 1455, 1458,1459, 1477, 1492, 1495, 1498, 1510, 1515,1518, 1519, 1522, 1533, 1538, 1539, 1546,1557, 1565, 1566, 1568, 1573, 1622, 1623,1632, 1648-1650, 1652, 1656, 1657, 1665,1671, 1680, 1684, 1693, 1694, 1699, 1723,1724, 1731, 1737, 1741, 1755, 1758, 1760,1765, 1773, 1774, 1778, 1785, 1793, 1800,1802, 1814, 1815, 1819, 1821, 1823-1825,1830, 1833, 1836, 1838, 1842, 1843, 1871,1879, 1881, 1888, 1894, 1898, 1902, 1905,1914, 1915, 1917, 1920, 1923, 1953, 1960,1961, 1966, 1969, 1975, 1981, 1986, 1994,1995, 20<strong>11</strong>, 2058, 2060, 2066, 2071, 2079,2105, 2149, 2150, 2183, 2184, 2186, 2187,2442, 2447, 2448, 2475, 2482, 2489, 2492,2493, 2497, 2498, 2514, 2515, 2525, 2528,2529, 2535, 2543, 2597-2600, 2604, 2607,2608, 2648, 2650, 2652, 2681, 2687, 2688,2693, 2706, 2732, 2769, 2770, 2944, 2945,2959, 2960, 2998, 3014, 3020, 3022, 3023,3026, 3033, 3038, 3044, 3045, 3056, 3063,3064, 3076, 3092, 3101, 3102, 3<strong>11</strong>1, 3<strong>11</strong>3,3<strong>11</strong>8, 3122, 3128, 3160-3164, 3232, 3236,3253, 3257, 3260, 3265, 3273, 3276, 3290,3294, 3303, 3345, 3353, 3360-3368, 3370,3384, 3392, 3395, 3415, 3421, 3434, 3444,3458, 3465, 3471, 3473-3476, 3479, 3480,3485, 3488, 3490, 3494, 3501, 35<strong>11</strong>, 3512,3522, 3523, 3533, 3534, 3537, 3541, 3567,3569, 3574, 3577, 3579-3581, 3585, 3591,3597, 3608, 3609, 3678, 3679, 3684, 3688,3689, 3691, 3692, 3696, 3705, 3706, 3710,3714, 3734, 3735, 3741, 3743-3745, 3747,3751-3753, 3757, 3758, 3766-3769, 3772,3775, 3781, 3784, 3789, 3790, 3798, 3800,3801, 3803, 3806, 3829, 3843, 3845, 3846,3874, 3882, 3885, 3887, 3890, 3893-3895,3899, 39<strong>11</strong>, 3952, 4026, 4077, 4087, 4090,4093, 4097, 4101, 4106, 4107, 4<strong>11</strong>1, 4<strong>11</strong>4,4124, 4149, 4164, 4199, 4202, 4204, 4207,4263, 4265, 4285, 4286, 4291, 4294-4296,4302, 4305, 4320, 4331, 4332, 4335, 4336,4338, 4340, 4352, 4353, 4355, 4356, 4361,4363-4365, 4368, 4383, 4385, 4386, 4421,4422, 4425, 4426, 4433, 4436, 4441, 4442,4455, 4456, 4461, 4484, 4525, 4534, 4536,4540-4542Urban/community development, Victims andfamilies, injured and deceased - General 6, 7,9, 16, 18, 30, 69, 70, 79, 81, 87, 88, 92, 101,<strong>11</strong>5, 189, 191, 203, 209, 210, 214, 218, 230,240, 243, 251, 252, 258, 259, 265, 292, 348,351, 353, 360, 361, 363, 364, 369, 383, 386,398, 404, 4<strong>11</strong>, 415, 417, 419, 420, 427, 429,434, 436, 440, 441, 443, 451, 464, 466, 468,469, 472, 482, 483, 488, 492-494, 504, 515,520, 521, 523, 526-528, 531, 534-538,544-546, 561, 642, 643, 653, 658, 668, 689,695, 878, 890, 892, 893, 895, 900, 901, 949,964-966, 968, 970, 974, 975, 977, 984, 1007,1020-1030, 1035, 1046, 1054, 1055,1057-1063, 1065, 1066, 1068-1070,1073-1078, 1080-1082, 1084, 1095, <strong>11</strong>13,<strong>11</strong>15, <strong>11</strong>16, <strong>11</strong>19-<strong>11</strong>21, <strong>11</strong>23-<strong>11</strong>28, <strong>11</strong>30,<strong>11</strong>31, <strong>11</strong>35, <strong>11</strong>37, <strong>11</strong>38, <strong>11</strong>40-<strong>11</strong>42, <strong>11</strong>44,<strong>11</strong>49, <strong>11</strong>54, <strong>11</strong>58, <strong>11</strong>59, <strong>11</strong>62, <strong>11</strong>74, <strong>11</strong>76,<strong>11</strong>77, <strong>11</strong>79, <strong>11</strong>80, <strong>11</strong>82, <strong>11</strong>84, <strong>11</strong>87,1201-1204, 1207, 12<strong>11</strong>, 1223, 1231, 1232,1236, 1254, 1279, 1282, 1287-1289, 1291,1302, 1306, 1308, 1335, 1338, 1339, 1345,1350, 1400, 1404-1406, 1410, 1413, 1425,1433-1435, 1446, 1454, 1455, 1458, 1459,1477, 1492, 1495, 1498, 1510, 1515, 1518,1519, 1522, 1533, 1538, 1539, 1557, 1565,1566, 1568, 1573, 1622, 1623, 1632,1648-1650, 1652, 1656, 1657, 1665, 1671,1680, 1684, 1693, 1694, 1699, 1723, 1731,1741, 1755, 1758, 1760, 1765, 1773, 1774,1778, 1785, 1793, 1800, 1802, 1814, 1815,1819, 1821, 1823-1825, 1830, 1833, 1836,1838, 1842, 1843, 1879, 1881, 1888, 1894,1898, 1902, 1905, 1914, 1915, 1917, 1920,1923, 1953, 1960, 1961, 1966, 1969, 1975,1981, 1986, 1994, 1995, 20<strong>11</strong>, 2058, 2060,2066, 2071, 2079, 2105, 2149, 2150, 2183,2184, 2186, 2187, 2442, 2447, 2448, 2475,2482, 2489, 2492, 2493, 2497, 2498, 2514,2515, 2525, 2528, 2529, 2535, 2543,2597-2600, 2604, 2607, 2608, 2648, 2650,2652, 2681, 2687, 2688, 2693, 2706, 2732,2769, 2770, 2944, 2945, 2959, 2960, 2998,3014, 3020, 3022, 3023, 3026, 3033, 3038,3044, 3045, 3056, 3063, 3064, 3092, 3101,3102, 3<strong>11</strong>1, 3<strong>11</strong>3, 3<strong>11</strong>8, 3122, 3128,3160-3164, 3232, 3236, 3253, 3257, 3260,3265, 3273, 3276, 3294, 3303, 3345, 3353,3360-3368, 3370, 3384, 3392, 3415, 3421,3434, 3444, 3458, 3465, 3471, 3473-3476,3479, 3480, 3485, 3488, 3490, 3494, 3501,35<strong>11</strong>, 3512, 3522, 3523, 3533, 3534, 3537,3541, 3567, 3569, 3574, 3577, 3579-3581,3585, 3591, 3597, 3608, 3609, 3678, 3679,3684, 3688, 3689, 3691, 3692, 3696, 3705,3706, 3710, 3714, 3734, 3735, 3741, 3743,3745, 3747, 3751-3753, 3758, 3766-3769,3772, 3775, 3781, 3784, 3789, 3790, 3798,3800, 3801, 3803, 3829, 3843, 3845, 3846,3882, 3885, 3887, 3890, 3893-3895, 3899,39<strong>11</strong>, 3952, 4077, 4087, 4090, 4093, 4097,4101, 4106, 4107, 4<strong>11</strong>1, 4<strong>11</strong>4, 4124, 4149,4164, 4199, 4202, 4204, 4207, 4263, 4265,4285, 4286, 4291, 4294-4296, 4302, 4305,4320, 4331, 4335, 4336, 4338, 4340, 4352,4353, 4355, 4356, 4361, 4363-4365, 4383,4385, 4421, 4422, 4425, 4426, 4433, 4436,4441, 4442, 4455, 4456, 4461, 4484, 4525,4534, 4536, 4540-4542Veterinary medicine, contribution 4, 1352Victims and families, economically affected,arts/culture/humanities 1646, 4367Victims and families, economically affected, civilrights 3063, 3064, 3176, 3178, 3181, 3190,3626Victims and families, economically affected,community improvement/development 6, 7,9, 16, 18, 30, 69, 70, 79, 81, 87, 88, 92, 101,<strong>11</strong>5, 189, 191, 203, 209, 210, 214, 218, 230,240, 243, 251, 252, 258, 259, 265, 292, 348,351, 353, 360, 361, 363, 364, 369, 383, 386,398, 404, 4<strong>11</strong>, 415, 417, 419, 420, 427, 429,434, 436, 440, 441, 443, 451, 464, 466, 468,469, 472, 482, 483, 488, 492-494, 504, 515,520, 521, 523, 526-528, 531, 534-538,544-546, 561, 642, 643, 653, 658, 668, 689,695, 878, 890, 892, 893, 895, 900, 901, 949,964-966, 968-970, 974, 975, 977, 984-986,988, 1007, 1020-1030, 1035, 1046, 1054,1055, 1057-1063, 1065, 1066, 1068-1070,1073-1078, 1080-1082, 1084, 1095, <strong>11</strong>13,<strong>11</strong>15, <strong>11</strong>16, <strong>11</strong>19-<strong>11</strong>21, <strong>11</strong>23-<strong>11</strong>28, <strong>11</strong>30,<strong>11</strong>31, <strong>11</strong>35, <strong>11</strong>37, <strong>11</strong>38, <strong>11</strong>40-<strong>11</strong>42, <strong>11</strong>44,<strong>11</strong>49, <strong>11</strong>54, <strong>11</strong>58, <strong>11</strong>59, <strong>11</strong>62, <strong>11</strong>74,<strong>11</strong>76-<strong>11</strong>80, <strong>11</strong>82, <strong>11</strong>84, <strong>11</strong>87, 1201-1204,1207, 12<strong>11</strong>, 1223, 1231, 1232, 1234, 1236,1254, 1279, 1282, 1287-1289, 1291, 1302,1306, 1308, 1335, 1338, 1339, 1345, 1350,1400, 1404-1406, 1410, 1413, 1425,1433-1435, 1446, 1454, 1455, 1458, 1459,1477, 1492, 1495, 1498, 1510, 1515, 1518,1519, 1522, 1533, 1538, 1539, 1546, 1557,1565, 1566, 1568, 1573, 1622, 1623, 1632,1648-1650, 1652, 1656, 1657, 1665, 1671,1680, 1684, 1693, 1694, 1699, 1723, 1724,1731, 1737, 1741, 1755, 1758, 1760, 1765,1773, 1774, 1778, 1785, 1793, 1800, 1802,1814, 1815, 1819, 1821, 1823-1825, 1830,1833, 1836, 1838, 1842, 1843, 1871, 1879,1881, 1888, 1894, 1898, 1902, 1905, 1914,1915, 1917, 1920, 1923, 1953, 1960, 1961,1966, 1969, 1975, 1981, 1986, 1994, 1995,20<strong>11</strong>, 2058, 2060, 2066, 2071, 2079, 2105,2149, 2150, 2183, 2184, 2186, 2187, 2337,2442, 2447, 2448, 2475, 2482, 2489, 2492,2493, 2497, 2498, 2514, 2515, 2525, 2528,2529, 2535, 2543, 2597-2600, 2604, 2607,2608, 2648, 2650, 2652, 2681, 2687, 2688,2693, 2706, 2707, 2732, 2769, 2770, 2944,2945, 2959, 2960, 2993, 2998, 3014, 3020,3022, 3023, 3026, 3033, 3038, 3044, 3045,3056, 3063, 3064, 3076, 3092, 3101, 3102,3<strong>11</strong>1, 3<strong>11</strong>3, 3<strong>11</strong>8, 3122, 3128, 3160-3164,3182, 3195, 3232, 3236, 3253, 3257, 3260,3265, 3273, 3276, 3290, 3294, 3303, 3345,3353, 3360-3368, 3370, 3384, 3392, 3395,3415, 3421, 3434, 3444, 3458, 3465, 3471,3473-3476, 3479, 3480, 3485, 3488, 3490,3494, 3501, 35<strong>11</strong>, 3512, 3522, 3523, 3533,3534, 3537, 3541, 3567, 3569, 3574, 3577,3579-3581, 3585, 3591, 3597, 3608, 3609,3678, 3679, 3684, 3688, 3689, 3691, 3692,3696, 3705, 3706, 3710, 3714, 3734, 3735,3741, 3743-3745, 3747, 3751-3753, 3757,3758, 3766-3769, 3772, 3775, 3781, 3784,3789, 3790, 3798, 3800, 3801, 3803, 3806,262


INDEX OF SUBJECTS3829, 3843, 3845, 3846, 3874, 3882, 3885,3887, 3890, 3893-3895, 3899, 39<strong>11</strong>, 3914,3927, 3938, 3948, 3952, 3998, 4026, 4077,4087, 4090, 4093, 4097, 4101, 4106, 4107,4<strong>11</strong>1, 4<strong>11</strong>4, 4124, 4149, 4158, 4164, 4199,4202, 4204, 4207, 4220, 4223, 4250, 4263,4265, 4285, 4286, 4291, 4294-4296, 4302,4305, 4320, 4331, 4332, 4335, 4336, 4338,4340, 4352, 4353, 4355, 4356, 4361,4363-4365, 4368, 4383, 4385, 4386, 4421,4422, 4425, 4426, 4433, 4436, 4441, 4442,4455, 4456, 4461, 4484, 4525, 4534, 4536,4540-4542Victims and families, economically affected,crime/courts/legal services 128, 153, 176,1615, 3178, 3190, 3619, 3626, 4226Victims and families, economically affected,education 131, 2085, 3193, 3241, 4056, 4064Victims and families, economically affected,employment 148, 433, 557, 902, 988, <strong>11</strong>51,1234, 1473, 1474, 1483, 1871, 2704, 2778,3151, 3174, 3179, 3188, 3192, 3291, 3393,3395, 3416, 3429, 3566, 3601, 3603, 3869,3970, 4004, 4064, 4067, 4220, 4222, 4230,4253, 4283Victims and families, economically affected,food/nutrition/agriculture 46, <strong>11</strong>4, <strong>11</strong>9, 167,467, 904, <strong>11</strong>60, 1420, 1443, 1870, 2480,2613, 3723, 3917, 3944, 3945, 3949, 3962,3987, 4073Victims and families, economically affected,health—general 412-414, 424, 471, 688,1919, 2056, 2107, 2518, 2727, 3709, 4000,4033, 4108, 4287, 4289Victims and families, economically affected,housing/shelter 422, 556, 891, 1320, 1419,1548, 1556, 2513, 2676, 2735, 3105, 3136,3278, 3546, 3914, 3948, 3952, 3973, 4026,4229, 4244, 4253, 4271Victims and families, economically affected,human services—multipurpose 3, 6-9, <strong>11</strong>,12, 16, 18, 19, 21, 22, 27, 30, 32, 33, 39-41,57, 69, 70, 73, 79-81, 83-88, 90-93, 95, 97,99, 101, 102, <strong>11</strong>5, 120-122, 146, 178, 189,191-193, 195, 197, 203, 205, 206, 209-212,214-216, 218, 219, 229-232, 234, 238, 240,243, 244, 246, 251, 252, 254, 258, 259, 265,266, 269, 276, 279, 280, 282-292, 332, 343,346, 348, 349, 351-356, 360, 361, 363-369,383, 386, 392, 393, 398, 404, 4<strong>11</strong>, 415,417-422, 424, 427, 429-437, 440, 441, 443,451, 454, 457, 459, 460, 464, 466, 468, 469,471, 472, 475, 481-483, 486-488, 492-494,504, 506-508, 515, 517, 520, 521, 523,526-528, 531, 534-541, 544-548, 556, 558,561, 642, 643, 645, 649-651, 653, 655, 656,658, 668, 674, 688, 689, 691, 692, 695, 697,858, 878-883, 887, 890-895, 897, 900-902,904, 912, 913, 949, 964-966, 968, 970, 971,974-979, 983, 984, 1005, 1007, 1013,1020-1030, 1033, 1035, 1037, 1039-1042,1046, 1047, 1049, 1051, 1054-1063,1065-1070, 1072-1078, 1080-1082, 1084,1090, 1095, 1098, <strong>11</strong>13, <strong>11</strong>15, <strong>11</strong>16,<strong>11</strong>18-<strong>11</strong>28, <strong>11</strong>30, <strong>11</strong>31, <strong>11</strong>34-<strong>11</strong>42, <strong>11</strong>44,<strong>11</strong>46, <strong>11</strong>47, <strong>11</strong>49-<strong>11</strong>52, <strong>11</strong>54-<strong>11</strong>56,<strong>11</strong>58-<strong>11</strong>60, <strong>11</strong>62, <strong>11</strong>73-<strong>11</strong>82, <strong>11</strong>84,<strong>11</strong>86-<strong>11</strong>89, <strong>11</strong>99-1207, 1210, 12<strong>11</strong>, 1214,1222-1226, 1228, 1230-1232, 1236, 1254,1255, 1257, 1270, 1273, 1274, 1279, 1282,1287-1289, 1291, 1293, 1299-1306, 1308,1335, 1338, 1339, 1345, 1349, 1350, 1400,1404-1406, 1408, 1410-1413, 1425-1427,1431, 1433-1436, 1442, 1443, 1445, 1446,1448-1451, 1453-1456, 1458, 1459, 1473,1474, 1477, 1479, 1482, 1483, 1485, 1486,1488, 1492, 1495, 1497, 1498, 1510, 1512,1513, 1515, 1518, 1519, 1521-1523, 1533,1538-1541, 1547, 1550, 1552, 1557, 1558,1565-1568, 1570-1573, 1622, 1623, 1642,1643, 1646, 1648-1650, 1652, 1654, 1656,1657, 1660, 1663, 1665, 1671-1673, 1678,1680, 1682, 1684, 1688-1690, 1693, 1694,1698-1700, 1703, 1708, 17<strong>11</strong>-1718,1720-1723, 1725, 1727, 1731, 1732, 1741,1744, 1746-1750, 1752, 1755, 1757, 1758,1760, 1765, 1773, 1774, 1777-1780, 1783,1785, 1789, 1790, 1793, 1798, 1800, 1802,1812-1815, 1819-1825, 1830, 1832, 1833,1835, 1836, 1838, 1839, 1841-1843, 1850,1870, 1879, 1881, 1886-1888, 1891-1894,1898-1907, 1909-19<strong>11</strong>, 1914-1920, 1923,1927, 1928, 1946, 1951-1954, 1958-1961,1963, 1966, 1968, 1969, 1971-1973,1975-1981, 1983-1986, 1989-1991, 1994,1995, 1997, 1998, 2003, 2004, 2010-2015,2058-2060, 2066-2068, 2070, 2071, 2079,2080, 2105, 2107, 2108, 2<strong>11</strong>4, 2149, 2150,2164, 2180, 2182-2184, 2186, 2187, 2337,2441, 2442, 2447, 2448, 2471, 2474, 2475,2481, 2482, 2487, 2489, 2492-2494, 2497,2498, 2513-2515, 2520, 2524-2526, 2528,2529, 2531, 2535, 2543, 2594, 2597-2602,2604-2609, 2647-2650, 2652, 2657, 2659,2660, 2662-2664, 2666-2668, 2674, 2676,2681, 2683, 2686-2688, 2693, 2698, 2701,2704, 2706-2709, 2727, 2732, 2734-2736,2740, 2741, 2744, 2745, 2769, 2770, 2778,2933, 2937-2942, 2944, 2945, 2956-2960,2972, 2998, 3002-3004, 3008, 3010-3014,3018, 3020-3026, 3030, 3032, 3033, 3038,3039, 3044, 3045, 3056, 3063, 3064, 3070,3092, 3097, 3098, 3101, 3102, 3104-3106,3109, 3<strong>11</strong>1, 3<strong>11</strong>3, 3<strong>11</strong>5, 3<strong>11</strong>8-3120, 3122,3128, 3160-3164, 3183, 3184, 3186,3193-3195, 3232, 3233, 3235, 3236,3238-3241, 3249, 3253, 3254, 3257, 3260,3261, 3265, 3273, 3276, 3277, 3280, 3283,3284, 3286, 3288, 3291, 3293, 3294, 3301,3303-3305, 3339, 3343, 3345, 3353, 3355,3360-3368, 3370-3372, 3378, 3379, 3384,3385, 3388, 3389, 3391-3394, 3403, 3415,3416, 3419, 3421, 3428, 3429, 3431, 3434,3436, 3439, 3444, 3458, 3465, 3466, 3468,3470-3476, 3478-3480, 3485, 3488-3490,3493, 3494, 3501, 3503, 35<strong>11</strong>, 3512, 3518,3522, 3523, 3528, 3532-3537, 3541, 3542,3546, 3548, 3554, 3555, 3559, 3562, 3564,3566-3570, 3574, 3576, 3577, 3579-3581,3585, 3590, 3591, 3597, 3601, 3603, 3608,3609, 3678-3680, 3682-3685, 3687-3689,3691, 3692, 3696, 3701, 3702, 3705, 3706,3710, 37<strong>11</strong>, 3714, 3715, 3720, 3721, 3723,3734, 3735, 3737, 3738, 3741-3743,3745-3747, 3749, 3751-3753, 3758,3765-3769, 3772, 3773, 3775, 3780, 3781,3783, 3784, 3786, 3787, 3789, 3790, 3793,3798, 3800-3803, 3829, 3843, 3845, 3846,3848, 3869, 3880, 3882, 3883, 3885, 3887,3888, 3890, 3892-3896, 3899, 3904, 3905,39<strong>11</strong>, 3924, 3932, 3933, 3939-3942, 3957,3958, 3960, 3961, 3963, 3967, 3969, 3971,3972, 3974, 3976, 3981, 3983, 3989, 3991,3992, 3994, 3998, 4000, 4006, 4012,4050-4052, 4059, 4060, 4062, 4077-4079,4083, 4086, 4087, 4090, 4093-4095, 4097,4099, 4101, 4104, 4106-4<strong>11</strong>4, 4124-4129,4131, 4149-4153, 4155, 4156, 4159, 4160,4162, 4164, 4168, 4169, 4178, 4191, 4193,4197-4199, 4202-4205, 4207, 4222, 4223,4230, 4243, 4246, 4253, 4260, 4261, 4263,4265, 4269-4271, 4274, 4275, 4277, 4280,4282, 4285-4291, 4294-4296, 4302, 4305,4308, 4315-4320, 4323, 4327, 4331, 4335,4336, 4338-4341, 4343, 4347, 4348,4352-4357, 4359-4361, 4363-4365, 4367,4370, 4373, 4376-4380, 4382, 4383, 4385,4420-4422, 4425-4427, 4430-4433, 4436,4439-4442, 4455, 4456, 4461, 4483, 4484,4489, 4521, 4525, 4526, 4528, 4530, 4534,4536, 4538-4542Victims and families, economically affected,mental health/substance abuse <strong>11</strong>, 12, 19, 21,22, 33, 57, 73, 80, 83-86, 90, 91, 95, 97, 99,102, 121, 122, 146, 193, 195, 205, 206, 2<strong>11</strong>,212, 215, 216, 219, 229, 231, 232, 244, 276,279, 280, 282-291, 343, 352, 354, 355, 367,368, 392, 393, 412-414, 418, 424, 430-433,435, 437, 457, 459, 460, 471, 475, 481, 486,487, 506-508, 517, 539-541, 548, 645, 655,674, 688, 691, 692, 697, 858, 879-882, 887,894, 897, 902, 976, 978, 983, 1005, 1013,1033, 1039, 1041, 1042, 1047, 1090, 1098,<strong>11</strong>22, <strong>11</strong>34, <strong>11</strong>36, <strong>11</strong>51, <strong>11</strong>52, <strong>11</strong>56, <strong>11</strong>60,<strong>11</strong>73, <strong>11</strong>75, <strong>11</strong>81, <strong>11</strong>86, <strong>11</strong>89, <strong>11</strong>99, 1210,1214, 1222, 1224-1226, 1228, 1230, 1255,1257, 1270, 1273, 1299-1301, 1303-1305,1349, 1408, 1412, 1426, 1427, 1431, 1443,1445, 1448, 1449, 1451, 1453, 1479, 1485,1523, 1540, 1541, 1547, 1567, 1570-1572,1642, 1654, 1672, 1673, 1678, 1682, 1689,1690, 1698, 1703, 1708, 17<strong>11</strong>-1715, 1717,1718, 1720, 1727, 1732, 1747, 1748, 1750,1783, 1790, 1813, 1820, 1822, 1850, 1870,1887, 1892, 1900, 1901, 1903, 1904, 1906,1907, 1909, 19<strong>11</strong>, 1916, 1918, 1928, 1946,1951, 1952, 1954, 1958, 1968, 1971-1973,1976, 1978, 1983, 1985, 1989-1991, 1997,1998, 2010, 2013, 2014, 2059, 2067, 2068,2070, 2107, 2108, 2<strong>11</strong>4, 2164, 2180, 2182,2441, 2474, 2481, 2494, 2520, 2523, 2524,2526, 2531, 2594, 2601, 2602, 2605, 2606,2609, 2649, 2657, 2659, 2663, 2668, 2683,2686, 2701, 2704, 2709, 2727, 2734, 2736,2741, 2744, 2745, 2778, 2933, 2937-2942,2972, 3002-3004, 30<strong>11</strong>-3013, 3018, 3021,3023-3025, 3030, 3032, 3039, 3070, 3097,3104, 3<strong>11</strong>5, 3<strong>11</strong>9, 3120, 3194, 3238, 3240,3249, 3254, 3261, 3277, 3280, 3283, 3286,3288, 3291, 3301, 3304, 3305, 3339, 3343,3371, 3372, 3378, 3379, 3389, 3391, 3393,3394, 3403, 3416, 3419, 3429, 3436, 3439,3466, 3468, 3470, 3472, 3478, 3493, 3518,3528, 3532, 3535, 3548, 3559, 3562, 3564,3566, 3568, 3576, 3590, 3601, 3603, 3682,3683, 3687, 3701, 37<strong>11</strong>, 3715, 3723, 3737,3738, 3742, 3746, 3749, 3773, 3783, 3787,3793, 3802, 3848, 3869, 3883, 3888, 3896,3904, 3905, 4078, 4079, 4083, 4095, 4099,4104, 4108, 4125, 4126, 4128, 4131,4150-4152, 4156, 4159, 4160, 4162, 4178,4193, 4198, 4203, 4205, 4261, 4269, 4270,4275, 4280, 4287-4289, 4308, 4315, 4316,4318, 4319, 4323, 4327, 4339, 4341, 4343,4347, 4348, 4359, 4360, 4370, 4373,4376-4380, 4382, 4420, 4427, 4430-4432,4439, 4440, 4483, 4489, 4526, 4528, 4530,4538Victims and families, economically affected,philanthropy/voluntarism 239, 1744, 1899,2993, 3006, 3542Victims and families, economically affected,public affairs/government 4004, 4246Victims and families, economically affected,religion 3992Victims and families, economically affected,safety/disaster relief 7, 8, 30, 32, 39-41, 69,70, 87, 92, <strong>11</strong>5, 120, 197, 234, 238, 243, 246,265, 266, 349, 356, 365, 366, 415, 436, 451,454, 515, 535, 536, 538, 546, 668, 883, 893,912, 949, 1027, 1029, 1030, 1061-1063,1065, 1066, 1068-1070, 1073-1078, 1080,1082, 1084, 1098, <strong>11</strong>21, <strong>11</strong>23, <strong>11</strong>24, <strong>11</strong>37,<strong>11</strong>44, <strong>11</strong>46, <strong>11</strong>54, <strong>11</strong>62, <strong>11</strong>74, <strong>11</strong>76, 1203,1206, 1289, 1302, 1413, 1456, 1533, 1622,1652, 1671, 1694, 1741, 1744, 1752, 1778,1779, 1793, 1830, 1833, 1886, 1888, 1893,1898, 1963, 1995, 2105, 2150, 2497, 2498,2514, 2515, 2529, 2535, 2600, 2650, 2652,2687, 2693, 2706, 2732, 2945, 3031, 3098,3101, 3160-3164, 3276, 3345, 3384, 3388,3488, 3494, 3536, 3591, 3696, 3709, 3720,3735, 3758, 3769, 3882, 4093, 4<strong>11</strong>2, 4<strong>11</strong>3,4129, 4260, 4262, 4263, 4265, 4274, 4290,4294-4296, 4317, 4355, 4361, 4383, 4433,4436, 4461, 4525Victims and families, injured and deceased -Children, education 28, 124, 179, 183, 194,202, 207, 248-250, 255, 263, 268, 452, 455,474, 485, 502, 861, 898, 994, <strong>11</strong>00, <strong>11</strong>02,1216, 1218, 1227, 1242, 1247, 1275, 1284,1330, 1346, 1476, 1487, 1499, 1561, 1562,263


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE1659, 1753, 1794, 1828, 1921, 1929, 1930,1935, 1940, 1944, 1945, 1950, 1992, 1996,2132, 2166, 2444, 2449, 2473, 2499, 2534,2540, 2541, 26<strong>11</strong>, 2612, 2653, 2654, 2758,2785, 2963, 3040, 3<strong>11</strong>7, 3126, 3262, 3295,3430, 3447, 3467, 3481, 3482, 3499, 3507,3519, 3521, 3551, 3733, 3761-3764, 4031,4103, 4268, 4281, 4303, 4306, 43<strong>11</strong>, 4314,4344, 4346, 4374, 4444, 4445Victims and families, injured and deceased -Children, environment 1247Victims and families, injured and deceased -Children, health—general 28, 255, 1284,2473, 3262Victims and families, injured and deceased -Children, housing/shelter 3771Victims and families, injured and deceased -Children, human services—multipurpose 28,31, <strong>11</strong>0, 124, 202, 225, 228, 247, 255, 410,438, 447, 452, 490, 495, 518, 663, 667, 675,950, 973, <strong>11</strong>00, <strong>11</strong>02, 1213, 1216, 1250,1284-1286, 1298, 1322, 1324, 1342, 1344,1416, 1417, 1460, 1493, 1494, 1559, 1752,1828, 1834, 1884, 1930, 1935, 1996, 2<strong>11</strong>1,2139, 2151, 2152, 2157, 2158, 2449, 2455,2458, 2469, 2473, 2540, 2653, 2654, 2673,2680, 2730, 2772, 2787, 2934, 2946, 2947,3005, 3046, 3050, 3123, 3124, 3126, 3165,3196, 3246, 3258, 3262, 3342, 3357, 3377,3386, 3427, 3495, 3498, 3507, 3516, 3519,3521, 3536, 3770, 3771, 3785, 3795, 3886,3906, 4018, 4165, 4281, 4303, 4321, 4322,4362, 4428, 4429, 4434, 4462, 4482Victims and families, injured and deceased -Children, mental health/substance abuse 28,255, 1099, 1237, 1935, 2473, 2730, 4281Victims and families, injured and deceased -Children, philanthropy/voluntarism 861, 898Victims and families, injured and deceased -Children, safety/disaster relief 31, 1752, 3536Victims and families, injured and deceased -Children, youth development <strong>11</strong>3, 452Victims and families, injured and deceased -Employees, education 124, 202, 207, 208,248-250, 448, 678, <strong>11</strong>00, <strong>11</strong>02, 1284, 1330,1561, 1562, 1828, 1930, 1944, 1945, 1992,2132, 2141, 2540, 3507, 4303Victims and families, injured and deceased -Employees, employment 3151Victims and families, injured and deceased -Employees, health—general 42, 156, 208,678, 942, 1004, 1032, 1284, 1490, 1829,1941, 2141, 2177, 2178, 2671, 3509, 4297Victims and families, injured and deceased -Employees, human services—multipurpose42, 124, 156, 201, 202, 208, 405, 416, 448,654, 678, 942, 1004, 1006, 1032, <strong>11</strong>00-<strong>11</strong>02,1208, 1284, 1293, 1294, 1317, 1467, 1484,1490, 1531, 1536, 1549, 1551, 1553, 1554,1740, 1775, 1784, 1828, 1829, 1930, 1939,1941, 1942, 1977, 2121, 2134, 2141, 2177,2178, 2540, 2671, 2749, 3065, 3067, 3275,3381, 3382, 3507, 3509, 3779, 4297, 4303,4309Victims and families, injured and deceased -Employees, philanthropy/voluntarism 1052,1310Victims and families, injured and deceased -Employees, safety/disaster relief 1052, 1310Victims and families, injured and deceased -General, arts/culture/humanities 1646, 4367Victims and families, injured and deceased -General, civil rights 1653, 3063, 3064Victims and families, injured and deceased -General, communityimprovement/development 6, 7, 9, 16, 18, 30,69, 70, 79, 81, 87, 88, 92, 101, <strong>11</strong>5, 189, 191,203, 209, 210, 214, 218, 230, 240, 243, 251,252, 258, 259, 265, 292, 348, 351, 353, 360,361, 363, 364, 369, 383, 386, 398, 404, 4<strong>11</strong>,415, 417, 419, 420, 427, 429, 434, 436, 440,441, 443, 451, 464, 466, 468, 469, 472, 482,483, 488, 492-494, 504, 515, 520, 521, 523,526-528, 531, 534-538, 544-546, 561, 642,643, 653, 658, 668, 689, 695, 878, 890, 892,893, 895, 900, 901, 949, 964-966, 968, 970,974, 975, 977, 984, 1007, 1020-1030, 1035,1046, 1054, 1055, 1057-1063, 1065, 1066,1068-1070, 1073-1078, 1080-1082, 1084,1095, <strong>11</strong>13, <strong>11</strong>15, <strong>11</strong>16, <strong>11</strong>19-<strong>11</strong>21,<strong>11</strong>23-<strong>11</strong>28, <strong>11</strong>30, <strong>11</strong>31, <strong>11</strong>35, <strong>11</strong>37, <strong>11</strong>38,<strong>11</strong>40-<strong>11</strong>42, <strong>11</strong>44, <strong>11</strong>49, <strong>11</strong>54, <strong>11</strong>58, <strong>11</strong>59,<strong>11</strong>62, <strong>11</strong>74, <strong>11</strong>76-<strong>11</strong>80, <strong>11</strong>82, <strong>11</strong>84, <strong>11</strong>87,1201-1204, 1207, 12<strong>11</strong>, 1223, 1231, 1232,1236, 1254, 1279, 1282, 1287-1289, 1291,1302, 1306, 1308, 1335, 1338, 1339, 1345,1350, 1400, 1404-1406, 1410, 1413, 1425,1433-1435, 1446, 1454, 1455, 1458, 1459,1477, 1492, 1495, 1498, 1510, 1515, 1518,1519, 1522, 1533, 1538, 1539, 1557, 1565,1566, 1568, 1573, 1622, 1623, 1632,1648-1650, 1652, 1656, 1657, 1665, 1671,1680, 1684, 1693, 1694, 1699, 1723, 1731,1741, 1755, 1758, 1760, 1765, 1773, 1774,1778, 1785, 1793, 1800, 1802, 1814, 1815,1819, 1821, 1823-1825, 1830, 1833, 1836,1838, 1842, 1843, 1879, 1881, 1888, 1894,1898, 1902, 1905, 1914, 1915, 1917, 1920,1923, 1953, 1960, 1961, 1966, 1969, 1975,1981, 1986, 1994, 1995, 20<strong>11</strong>, 2058, 2060,2066, 2071, 2079, 2105, 2149, 2150, 2183,2184, 2186, 2187, 2337, 2442, 2447, 2448,2475, 2482, 2489, 2492, 2493, 2497, 2498,2514, 2515, 2525, 2528, 2529, 2535, 2543,2597-2600, 2604, 2607, 2608, 2648, 2650,2652, 2681, 2687, 2688, 2693, 2706, 2707,2732, 2769, 2770, 2944, 2945, 2959, 2960,2998, 3014, 3020, 3022, 3023, 3026, 3033,3038, 3044, 3045, 3056, 3063, 3064, 3092,3101, 3102, 3<strong>11</strong>1, 3<strong>11</strong>3, 3<strong>11</strong>8, 3122, 3128,3160-3164, 3195, 3232, 3236, 3253, 3257,3260, 3265, 3273, 3276, 3294, 3303, 3345,3353, 3360-3368, 3370, 3384, 3392, 3415,3421, 3434, 3444, 3458, 3465, 3471,3473-3476, 3479, 3480, 3485, 3488, 3490,3494, 3501, 35<strong>11</strong>, 3512, 3522, 3523, 3533,3534, 3537, 3541, 3567, 3569, 3574, 3577,3579-3581, 3585, 3591, 3597, 3608, 3609,3678, 3679, 3684, 3688, 3689, 3691, 3692,3696, 3705, 3706, 3710, 3714, 3734, 3735,3741, 3743, 3745, 3747, 3751-3753, 3758,3766-3769, 3772, 3775, 3781, 3784, 3789,3790, 3798, 3800, 3801, 3803, 3829, 3843,3845, 3846, 3882, 3885, 3887, 3890,3893-3895, 3899, 39<strong>11</strong>, 3952, 4077, 4087,4090, 4093, 4097, 4101, 4106, 4107, 4<strong>11</strong>1,4<strong>11</strong>4, 4124, 4149, 4164, 4199, 4202, 4204,4207, 4263, 4265, 4285, 4286, 4291,4294-4296, 4302, 4305, 4320, 4331, 4335,4336, 4338, 4340, 4352, 4353, 4355, 4356,4361, 4363-4365, 4383, 4385, 4421, 4422,4425, 4426, 4433, 4436, 4441, 4442, 4455,4456, 4461, 4484, 4525, 4534, 4536,4540-4542Victims and families, injured and deceased -General, crime/courts/legal services 128, 153,176, 3218, 4226Victims and families, injured and deceased -General, education 63, 1085, 1227, 2779,3<strong>11</strong>0, 3241, 4281Victims and families, injured and deceased -General, employment 433, 902, <strong>11</strong>51, <strong>11</strong>53,1483, 2704, 2778, 3291, 3393, 3416, 3429,3566, 3601, 3603, 3869, 4230Victims and families, injured and deceased -General, food/nutrition/agriculture 904,<strong>11</strong>60, 1443, 1870, 3723Victims and families, injured and deceased -General, health—general 63, 412-414, 424,471, 661, 662, 688, 1430, 1471, 1919, 2056,2107, 2518, 2727, 3709, 3977, 4108, 4287,4289, 4337Victims and families, injured and deceased -General, housing/shelter 422, 554, 891, 1419,1514, 1548, 2513, 2676, 2735, 3105, 3278,3546, 3952, 4271Victims and families, injured and deceased -General, human services—multipurpose 3,6-9, <strong>11</strong>, 12, 16, 18, 19, 21, 22, 27, 30, 32,33, 39-41, 43, 57, 63, 69-71, 79-81, 83-88,90-93, 95, 97-99, 101, 102, <strong>11</strong>5, 120-122,144, 146, 178, 189, 191-193, 195, 203, 205,206, 209-212, 214-216, 218, 219, 229-232,234, 238, 240, 243, 244, 246, 251, 252, 254,258, 259, 265, 266, 269, 276, 279, 280,282-292, 332, 343, 346, 348, 349, 351-356,360, 361, 363-371, 383, 386, 391-393, 398,404, 4<strong>11</strong>, 415, 417-422, 424, 427, 429-437,440, 441, 443, 451, 457, 459, 460, 464, 466,468, 469, 471, 472, 475, 481-483, 486-489,492-494, 504, 506-508, 515, 517, 520, 521,523, 526-528, 531, 534-541, 544-548, 554,561, 642, 643, 645, 649-651, 653, 655, 656,658, 659, 661, 662, 668, 672, 674, 688, 689,691, 692, 695, 697, 700, 858, 878-883, 887,890-895, 897, 900-902, 904, 912, 913, 949,964-968, 970, 971, 974-979, 982-984, 1005,1007, 1013, 1020-1030, 1033, 1035, 1037,1039-1042, 1046, 1047, 1049, 1051,1054-1063, 1065-1070, 1072-1078,1080-1082, 1084, 1090, 1095, 1098, <strong>11</strong>03,<strong>11</strong>13, <strong>11</strong>15, <strong>11</strong>16, <strong>11</strong>18-<strong>11</strong>28, <strong>11</strong>30, <strong>11</strong>31,<strong>11</strong>34-<strong>11</strong>42, <strong>11</strong>44, <strong>11</strong>46, <strong>11</strong>47, <strong>11</strong>49-<strong>11</strong>56,<strong>11</strong>58-<strong>11</strong>60, <strong>11</strong>62, <strong>11</strong>73-<strong>11</strong>82, <strong>11</strong>84,<strong>11</strong>86-<strong>11</strong>89, <strong>11</strong>99-1208, 1210, 12<strong>11</strong>, 1214,1222-1226, 1228, 1230-1232, 1236, 1254,1255, 1257, 1270, 1273, 1274, 1279, 1282,1287-1291, 1299-1306, 1308, 1323, 1335,1338, 1339, 1345, 1347-1350, 1400, 1402,1404-1406, 1408, 1410-1413, 1415,1425-1427, 1431, 1433-1436, 1442, 1443,1445, 1446, 1448-1451, 1453-1456, 1458,1459, 1462, 1472, 1477, 1479, 1482, 1483,1485, 1486, 1488, 1492, 1495, 1497, 1498,1510, 1512-1515, 1518, 1519, 1521-1523,1533, 1538-1541, 1547, 1550, 1552, 1557,1558, 1565-1568, 1570-1573, 1622, 1623,1642, 1643, 1646, 1648-1654, 1656, 1657,1660, 1663, 1665, 1671-1673, 1678, 1680,1682, 1684, 1689, 1690, 1693, 1694,1698-1700, 1703, 1708, 17<strong>11</strong>-1715, 1717,1718, 1720, 1723, 1725, 1727, 1731, 1732,1741, 1744, 1746-1750, 1752, 1755, 1757,1758, 1760, 1765, 1773, 1774, 1777-1780,1783, 1785, 1789, 1790, 1793, 1798, 1800,1802, 1812-1816, 1819-1825, 1830, 1832,1833, 1835, 1836, 1838, 1839, 1841-1843,1850, 1870, 1879, 1881, 1886-1888,1891-1894, 1898-1907, 1909-19<strong>11</strong>,1914-1920, 1923, 1927, 1928, 1946,1951-1954, 1958-1961, 1963, 1966, 1968,1969, 1971-1973, 1975, 1976, 1978-1981,1983-1986, 1989-1991, 1994, 1995, 1997,1998, 2003, 2004, 2010-2015, 2058-2060,2066-2068, 2070, 2071, 2079, 2080, 2105,2107, 2108, 2<strong>11</strong>4, 2149, 2150, 2164, 2180,2182-2184, 2186, 2187, 2337, 2441, 2442,2447, 2448, 2471, 2474, 2475, 2481, 2482,2487, 2489, 2492-2494, 2497, 2498,2513-2515, 2520, 2524-2526, 2528, 2529,2531, 2535, 2542, 2543, 2594, 2597-2602,2604-2609, 2647-2650, 2652, 2657, 2659,2660, 2662-2664, 2666-2669, 2674, 2676,2681, 2683, 2686-2688, 2693, 2695, 2698,2701, 2704, 2706-2709, 2727, 2732,2734-2736, 2740, 2741, 2744, 2745, 2767,2769, 2770, 2778, 2779, 2796, 2933,2937-2942, 2944, 2945, 2956-2960, 2972,2998, 3002-3004, 3008, 3010-3014, 3018,3020-3026, 3030, 3032, 3033, 3038, 3039,3044, 3045, 3056, 3063, 3064, 3070, 3092,3097, 3098, 3101, 3102, 3104-3106, 3109,3<strong>11</strong>1, 3<strong>11</strong>3, 3<strong>11</strong>5, 3<strong>11</strong>8-3120, 3122, 3128,3160-3164, 3194, 3195, 3218, 3222, 3232,3233, 3235, 3236, 3238-3241, 3249, 3253,3254, 3257, 3259-3261, 3265, 3273, 3276,3277, 3280, 3283, 3284, 3286, 3288, 3291,3293, 3294, 3301, 3303-3305, 3339, 3343,3345, 3353, 3355, 3360-3368, 3370-3372,3378, 3379, 3384, 3385, 3388, 3389,3391-3394, 3403, 3415, 3416, 3419, 3421,3428, 3429, 3431, 3434, 3436, 3439, 3444,264


INDEX OF SUBJECTS3458, 3465, 3466, 3468, 3470-3476,3478-3480, 3485, 3488-3490, 3493, 3494,3501, 3503, 35<strong>11</strong>, 3512, 3518, 3522, 3523,3528, 3532-3537, 3540-3542, 3546, 3548,3554, 3555, 3557, 3559, 3562, 3564,3566-3570, 3574, 3576, 3577, 3579-3581,3585, 3590, 3591, 3597, 3601, 3603, 3608,3609, 3678-3680, 3682-3685, 3687-3689,3691, 3692, 3696, 3701, 3702, 3705, 3706,3710-3712, 3714, 3715, 3720, 3721, 3723,3734, 3735, 3737, 3738, 3741-3743,3745-3747, 3749, 3751-3753, 3758,3766-3769, 3772, 3773, 3775, 3780, 3781,3783, 3784, 3786-3790, 3793, 3798,3800-3803, 3829, 3843, 3845, 3846, 3848,3869, 3880, 3882, 3883, 3885, 3887, 3888,3890, 3892-3896, 3899, 3904, 3905, 39<strong>11</strong>,3941, 3942, 3957, 3958, 3960, 3963, 3967,3969, 3971, 3972, 3974, 3976, 3981, 3991,3994, 4051, 4052, 4059, 4060, 4062,4077-4079, 4083, 4086, 4087, 4090,4093-4095, 4097, 4099, 4101, 4104,4106-4<strong>11</strong>4, 4124-4129, 4131, 4149-4153,4155, 4156, 4159, 4160, 4162, 4164, 4168,4169, 4178, 4191, 4193, 4197-4199,4202-4205, 4207, 4230, 4260, 4261, 4263,4265, 4269-4271, 4274, 4275, 4277,4280-4282, 4285-4291, 4294-4296, 4302,4305, 4308, 4315-4320, 4323, 4327, 4331,4335-4341, 4343, 4347, 4348, 4352-4361,4363-4365, 4367, 4370, 4373, 4376-4380,4382, 4383, 4385, 4420-4422, 4425-4427,4430-4433, 4436, 4439-4442, 4455, 4456,4461, 4483, 4484, 4489, 4521, 4525, 4526,4528, 4530, 4534, 4536, 4538-4542Victims and families, injured and deceased -General, mental health/substance abuse <strong>11</strong>,12, 19, 21, 22, 33, 57, 80, 83-86, 90, 91, 95,97, 99, 102, 121, 122, 129, 146, 147, 158,193, 195, 205, 206, 2<strong>11</strong>, 212, 215, 216, 219,229, 231, 232, 244, 276, 279, 280, 282-291,343, 352, 354, 355, 367, 368, 391-393,412-414, 418, 424, 430-433, 435, 437, 457,459, 460, 471, 475, 481, 486, 487, 506-508,517, 539-541, 548, 645, 655, 661, 662, 674,688, 691, 692, 697, 858, 879-882, 887, 894,897, 902, 976, 978, 983, 1005, 1013, 1033,1039, 1041, 1042, 1047, 1090, 1098, <strong>11</strong>22,<strong>11</strong>34, <strong>11</strong>36, <strong>11</strong>51, <strong>11</strong>52, <strong>11</strong>56, <strong>11</strong>60, <strong>11</strong>73,<strong>11</strong>75, <strong>11</strong>81, <strong>11</strong>86, <strong>11</strong>89, <strong>11</strong>99, 1210, 1214,1222, 1224-1226, 1228, 1230, 1255, 1257,1270, 1273, 1299-1301, 1303-1305, 1349,1408, 1412, 1426, 1427, 1431, 1443, 1445,1448, 1449, 1451, 1453, 1479, 1485, 1523,1540, 1541, 1547, 1567, 1570-1572, 1642,1651, 1654, 1672, 1673, 1678, 1682, 1689,1690, 1698, 1703, 1708, 17<strong>11</strong>-1715, 1717,1718, 1720, 1727, 1732, 1747, 1748, 1750,1783, 1790, 1813, 1820, 1822, 1850, 1870,1887, 1892, 1900, 1901, 1903, 1904, 1906,1907, 1909, 19<strong>11</strong>, 1916, 1918, 1928, 1946,1951, 1952, 1954, 1958, 1968, 1971-1973,1976, 1978, 1983, 1985, 1989-1991, 1997,1998, 2010, 2013, 2014, 2059, 2067, 2068,2070, 2107, 2108, 2<strong>11</strong>4, 2164, 2180, 2182,2441, 2474, 2481, 2494, 2520, 2523, 2524,2526, 2531, 2594, 2601, 2602, 2605, 2606,2609, 2649, 2657, 2659, 2663, 2668, 2683,2686, 2701, 2704, 2709, 2727, 2734, 2736,2741, 2744, 2745, 2778, 2933, 2937-2942,2972, 3002-3004, 30<strong>11</strong>-3013, 3018, 3021,3023-3025, 3030, 3032, 3039, 3070, 3097,3104, 3<strong>11</strong>5, 3<strong>11</strong>9, 3120, 3194, 3238, 3240,3249, 3254, 3261, 3277, 3280, 3283, 3286,3288, 3291, 3301, 3304, 3305, 3339, 3343,3371, 3372, 3378, 3379, 3389, 3391, 3393,3394, 3403, 3416, 3419, 3429, 3436, 3439,3466, 3468, 3470, 3472, 3478, 3493, 3518,3528, 3532, 3535, 3548, 3557, 3559, 3562,3564, 3566, 3568, 3576, 3590, 3601, 3603,3682, 3683, 3687, 3701, 37<strong>11</strong>, 3715, 3723,3737, 3738, 3742, 3746, 3749, 3773, 3783,3787, 3793, 3802, 3848, 3869, 3883, 3888,3896, 3904, 3905, 3915, 4078, 4079, 4083,4095, 4099, 4104, 4108, 4125, 4126, 4128,4131, 4150-4152, 4156, 4159, 4160, 4162,4178, 4193, 4198, 4203, 4205, 4261, 4269,4270, 4275, 4280, 4281, 4287-4289, 4308,4315, 4316, 4318, 4319, 4323, 4327, 4337,4339, 4341, 4343, 4347, 4348, 4358-4360,4370, 4373, 4376-4380, 4382, 4420, 4427,4430-4432, 4439, 4440, 4483, 4489, 4526,4528, 4530, 4538Victims and families, injured and deceased -General, philanthropy/voluntarism 239,1744, 1899, 3006, 3542Victims and families, injured and deceased -General, safety/disaster relief 7, 8, 30, 32,39-41, 69, 70, 87, 92, <strong>11</strong>5, 120, 234, 238,243, 246, 265, 266, 349, 356, 365, 366, 415,436, 451, 515, 535, 536, 538, 546, 668, 883,893, 912, 949, 1027, 1029, 1030, 1061-1063,1065, 1066, 1068-1070, 1073-1078, 1080,1082, 1084, 1085, 1098, <strong>11</strong>21, <strong>11</strong>23, <strong>11</strong>24,<strong>11</strong>37, <strong>11</strong>44, <strong>11</strong>46, <strong>11</strong>54, <strong>11</strong>62, <strong>11</strong>74, <strong>11</strong>76,1203, 1206, 1289, 1302, 1413, 1456, 1472,1533, 1622, 1652, 1671, 1694, 1741, 1744,1752, 1778, 1779, 1793, 1830, 1833, 1886,1888, 1893, 1898, 1963, 1995, 2105, 2150,2497, 2498, 2514, 2515, 2529, 2535, 2600,2650, 2652, 2687, 2693, 2706, 2732, 2945,3031, 3098, 3101, 3160-3164, 3276, 3345,3384, 3388, 3488, 3494, 3536, 3557, 3591,3696, 3709, 3720, 3735, 3758, 3769, 3882,4093, 4<strong>11</strong>2, 4<strong>11</strong>3, 4129, 4260, 4262, 4263,4265, 4274, 4290, 4294-4296, 4317, 4355,4361, 4383, 4433, 4436, 4461, 4525Victims and families, injured and deceased -Uniformed service workers and fa,arts/culture/humanities 108Victims and families, injured and deceased -Uniformed service workers and fa,crime/courts/legal services 223, 514, 1281,1924, 4082Victims and families, injured and deceased -Uniformed service workers and fa, education183, 263, 902, <strong>11</strong>51, 1216, 1218, 1950,1996, 2449, 2758, 3262, 3393, 3416, 3429,3499, 3519, 3521, 3603, 4374, 4444Victims and families, injured and deceased -Uniformed service workers and fa, humanservices—multipurpose 2, 29, 31, 38, 65, 68,78, 82, 109, <strong>11</strong>0, 123, 190, 196, 222-225,228, 247, 253, 256, 257, 271, 273, 347, 350,359, 370, 371, 382, 387, 410, 423, 426, 438,442, 445, 445, 450, 456, 495, 510, 514, 518,530, 549, 657, 663-667, 675, 888, 889, 902,903, 950, 972, 973, 1008, 1014, 1064, 1071,1079, 1083, 1088, <strong>11</strong>32, <strong>11</strong>48, <strong>11</strong>51, <strong>11</strong>91,1216, 1220, 1221, 1229, 1235, 1250, 1278,1285, 1286, 1296-1298, 1322, 1324,1340-1342, 1344, 1414, 1416, 1417, 1424,1460, 1461, 1464, 1467, 1493, 1494, 1524,1525, 1532, 1535, 1536, 1544, 1559, 1563,1569, 1574, 1662, 1664, 1666, 1667, 1679,1696, 1705, 1706, 1721, 1722, 1726,1728-1730, 1735, 1736, 1740, 1754, 1761,1782, 1787, 1788, 1874, 1875, 1877, 1884,1908, 1922, 1924, 1987, 1993, 1996, 2072,2<strong>11</strong>1, 2<strong>11</strong>8, 2136, 2137, 2144, 2146,2151-2154, 2157-2159, 2167-2169, 2179,2449, 2455, 2457, 2458, 2465, 2466, 2469,2470, 2485, 2486, 2490, 2496, 2516, 2533,2539, 2656, 2673, 2680, 2694, 2705, 2729,2733, 2742, 2747, 2752, 2756, 2757, 2761,2763, 2768, 2771-2773, 2786, 2787, 2934,2946, 2947, 2996, 3005, 3017, 3028, 3037,3046, 3049, 3050, 3058, 3067, 3073, 3074,3123, 3124, 3155, 3165, 3173, 3196, 3234,3242, 3244, 3246, 3258, 3262, 3262, 3272,3275, 3285, 3342, 3354, 3377, 3386, 3393,3402, 3416, 3425, 3427, 3429, 3491, 3492,3495, 3498, 3502, 3504, 3514-3516, 3519,3521, 3550, 3556, 3571, 3584, 3598, 3603,3716, 3719, 3722, 3725, 3739, 3760, 3770,3771, 3771, 3774, 3782, 3785, 3791, 3792,3795, 3799, 3804, 3805, 3847, 3860, 3866,3877, 3886, 3889, 3906, 4014, 4018, 4081,4084, 4085, 4096, 4105, 4148, 4157, 4165,4190, 4192, 4200, 4266, 4278, 4279,4299-4301, 4310, 4362, 4384, 4428, 4429,4434, 4435, 4482, 4486, 4527, 4531Victims and families, injured and deceased -Uniformed service workers and fa, mentalhealth/substance abuse 68, 223, 445, 514,902, <strong>11</strong>51, 1219, 1877, 1924, 1949, 2457,2466, 2486, 2532, 2768, 3073, 3155, 3245,3393, 3416, 3429, 3496, 3513, 3603Victims and families, injured and deceased -Uniformed service workers and fa,philanthropy/voluntarism 237, 241, 1053,1281, 1524, 3144, 3145, 3170Victims and families, injured and deceased -Uniformed service workers and fa,safety/disaster relief 29, 31, 108, 224, 648,1053, 1281, 1645, 3144, 3145, 3170, 3719Victims and families, injured and deceased -Union members/other professional,education 678, 1473, 3174Victims and families, injured and deceased -Union members/other professional,health—general 42, 42, 678, 678, 1032, 1032,1269, 1293, 1294, 1473, 1925, 2069, 2134,2172, 3765, 4297, 4297, 4309Visual arts, Children & youth 4054Visual arts, contribution 125, 137, 709, 710, 744,748, 767, 777, 798, 804, 813, 833, 1318,1385, 1393, 1704, 2502, 2835, 2842, 2856,2859, 2884, 2895, 2986, 3095, 3281, 3282,3620, 3663, 3664, 4054, 4141, 4389-4391,4394, 4404, 4413, 4417Vocational rehabilitation, contribution 2327, 3069,3964Vocational rehabilitation, disabled/aging 2327,3069, 3964Vocational rehabilitation, Homeless 3964Vocational rehabilitation, Mentally/emotionallydisabled 3964Voluntarism promotion, contribution 308, 331,873, 2090, 3946, 4102Voluntarism promotion, Youth/adolescents 3946Voter education/rights, contribution 1630, 3401,4146Wildlife preservation & protection, contribution2932, 4069Women, arts/culture/humanities 3227, 4196, 4236Women, Asians/Pacific islanders 3217Women, centers & services 639, 2325, 2433, 3098,3214, 3215, 3217, 3297, 4212Women, Children & youth 3215Women, civil rights 72, 1245, 3199, 3220, 3227,3252, 4196, 4210, 4212, 4236, 4257, 4471,4475, 4477, 4480Women, community improvement/development988, 2065, 3201, 3206, 3213, 3216, 3228,4002, 4223Women, contribution 639, 2325, 2433, 3098,3297, 4212Women, crime/courts/legal services 162, 2234,3199, 3200, 3212, 3215, 3221, 3226, 4474Women, Economically disadvantaged 3214, 3215Women, education 1996, 2499, 3214, 3262, 4212Women, employment 988, 3205, 3210, 3212,3216, 4476, 4478Women, Ethnic/racial minorities, general 3215Women, general support 3214, 3217Women, health—general 3262, 4028, 4029, 4473,4479Women, Hispanics/Latinos 3214Women, housing/shelter 4010, 4229Women, human services—multipurpose 31, 72,<strong>11</strong>0, 162, 171, 175, 181, 225, 228, 247, 370,371, 410, 438, 495, 518, 663, 667, 675, 950,973, 1250, 1285, 1286, 1298, 1322, 1324,1342, 1344, 1416, 1417, 1460, 1493, 1494,1559, 1884, 1996, 2<strong>11</strong>1, 2151, 2152, 2158,2458, 2469, 2673, 2680, 2772, 2787, 2934,2946, 2947, 3005, 3046, 3050, 3098, 3123,3124, 3165, 3196, 3205, 3209, 32<strong>11</strong>, 3212,3214-3217, 3220-3222, 3226, 3246, 3252,3258, 3262, 3297, 3342, 3377, 3386, 3427,265


SEPTEMBER <strong>11</strong>: THE PHILANTHROPIC RESPONSE3495, 3498, 3516, 3770, 3785, 3795, 3906,4018, 4165, 4212, 4223, 4362, 4428, 4429,4474, 4475, 4478, 4480, 4482Women, Immigrants/refugees 3217, 4212Women, international affairs/development 1245,4210, 42<strong>11</strong>, 4257, 4471, 4477Women, mental health/substance abuse 72, 3203,3204, 3209, 32<strong>11</strong>, 3212, 3220, 3252, 4475,4480Women, program development 3215Women, public affairs/government 4257Women, recreation/sports/athletics 3200Women, religion 4236Women, safety/disaster relief 31, 3098Women, Victims and families, economicallyaffected 3098Women, Victims and families, injured anddeceased - General 3098Women’s studies, contribution 2477, 4502YM/YWCAs & YM/YWHAs, contribution 981,2435-2437, 2440, 2725, 2999-3001, 4072YM/YWCAs & YM/YWHAs, Ethnic/racialminorities, general 3001Youth development, adult and child programs2446Youth development, Asians/Pacific islanders 3223,3224Youth development, centers & clubs 1409, 2984,3062, 3426, 3454, 4030Youth development, citizenship 13, 3185, 3616,3654, 4138Youth development, community service clubs 301,322, 342, 814, 1595, 2090, 2104, 3946Youth development, conferences/seminars 3223Youth development, contribution 13, 275, 301,322, 342, 399, 452, 752, 814, 923, 940, 1244,1409, 1595, 2090, 2104, 2202, 2358, 2415,2446, 2554, 2699, 2700, 2984, 3185, 3426,3454, 3616, 3649, 3654, 3677, 3873, 3946,3966, 3984, 4030, 4076, 4138, 4209Youth development, Crime/abuse victims 2446Youth development, Economically disadvantaged1244, 3873, 4030Youth development, employee matching gifts 1044Youth development, Ethnic/racial minorities,general 1244Youth development, general support 3062Youth development, program development 3224Youth development, services 275, 399, 452, 752,923, 940, 1044, 1244, 2202, 2358, 2415,2554, 2699, 2700, 3223, 3224, 3649, 3677,3873, 3966, 3984, 4076, 4209Youth development, Victims and families, injuredand deceased - Children 452Youth/adolescents, arts/culture/humanities 3918,4209Youth/adolescents, civil rights 923, 927, 940, 3224Youth/adolescents, crime/courts/legal services3224Youth/adolescents, education 923, 927, 3432,3875, 3919, 3982, 3984, 4053, 4055, 4056Youth/adolescents, employment 3966, 4024, 4067Youth/adolescents, female, civil rights 3223Youth/adolescents, female, education 4022Youth/adolescents, female, youth development3223, 4076Youth/adolescents, human services—multipurpose3207Youth/adolescents, internationalaffairs/development 3918Youth/adolescents, philanthropy/voluntarism 3946Youth/adolescents, religion 940Youth/adolescents, social sciences 3982Youth/adolescents, youth development 923, 940,3224, 3946, 3966, 3984, 4209Youth, contribution 2262, 2700Youth, program development 3207Youth, services 2262, 2700, 3207Zoos/zoological societies, contribution 832, 2922,2932266


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