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September 3, 2002
After the Attacks: Grants Made for September 11 Causes
Following are grants made by corporations, foundations, and other organizations in response to the September 11 terrorist attacks. Compiled by Ziya Serdar Tumgoren.
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ABBOTT LABORATORIES FUND
Department 379
Building AP6D - Lower Level
100 Abbott Park Road
Abbott Park, Ill. 60064
(847) 937-7075
http://www.abbott.com/community/lab_fund.html
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $2,000,000 to be divided among American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.), AmeriCares Foundation (New Canaan, Conn.), and the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.). In addition, Abbott Laboratories donated more than 3 tons of medical supplies to hospitals in New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington, and provided $10,000 to the American Veterinary Medical Foundation (Schaumburg, Ill.) to provide care for injured search-and-rescue dogs, as well as animals of victims of the attack.
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ACADEMY OF MOTION PICTURE ARTS AND SCIENCES
Academy Foundation
8949 Wilshire Boulevard
Beverly Hills, Calif. 90211-1972
(310) 247-3000; fax (310) 859-9351 or (310) 859-9619
ampas@oscars.org
http://www.oscars.org
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $1,000,000 to emergency assistance and other nonprofit organizations.
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ACHELIS FOUNDATION
767 Third Avenue, Fourth Floor
New York, N.Y. 10017
(212) 644-0322; fax (212) 759-6510
main@achelis-bodman-fnds.org
http://fdncenter.org/grantmaker/achelis-bodman
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For activities by the Center for Public Health Preparedness designed to improve the ability of medical institutions in New York City to respond to public-health emergencies, especially biological terrorism, as part of a round of grants responding to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $100,000 to Columbia U., Mailman School of Public Health (New York, N.Y.).
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For relief efforts for refugees and other victims of the fighting in Afghanistan, as part of a round of grants responding to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $20,000 to Save the Children (Westport, Conn.).
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To develop and market Citizenship and Character, an instructional supplement for American government and history classes in U.S. high schools, as part of a round of grants responding to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $15,000 to Bill of Rights Institute (Washington, D.C.).
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ADC FOUNDATION
P.O. Box 1101
Minneapolis, Minn. 55440-1101
(952) 946-3474
http://www.adc.com/main_template/1,1034,25,00.html?contcat=0
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To support emergency-assistance organizations and other nonprofit health and human-service groups providing disaster-relief services to victims of the terrorist attacks in New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington: $50,000 to the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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ALCOA
201 Isabella Street
Pittsburgh, Pa. 15212-5858
http://www.alcoa.com
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To establish the Alcoa Relief Fund to assist victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $2,000,000. In addition, Alcoa will match all employee gifts to rescue and relief organizations with contributions to the Alcoa Relief Fund.
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To assist victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks in New York and Washington: $75,000 to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.).
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AMERADA HESS CORPORATION
1185 Avenue of the Americas
New York, N.Y. 10036
(212) 997-8500
http://www.hess.com
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To assist the families of New York City firefighters, police officers, and other rescue workers who died or were injured as a result of the attacks on the World Trade Center: $5,000,000.
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AMERICAN EXPRESS FOUNDATION
c/o American Express Company
American Express Tower
World Financial Center
New York, N.Y. 10285-4803
(212) 640-5661
http://www.home3.americanexpress.com/corp/philanthropy
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To provide grants, loans, and other assistance to small businesses in lower Manhattan that were affected by the attacks on the World Trade Center: $250,000 to Structured Employment Economic Development Corporation (Seedco) (New York, N.Y.).
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AMERICAN JEWISH WORLD SERVICE
45 West 36th Street, 10th Floor
New York, N.Y. 10018
(800) 889-7146
http://www.ajws.org
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To provide health insurance coverage for one month for families of deceased or unemployed workers of Windows of the World, a restaurant destroyed in the attacks on the World Trade Center: $151,870 to Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees New York Assistance Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide emergency financial support to the families of people who died or lost jobs as a result of the attacks on the World Trade Center: $40,000 to Asociacion Tepeyac de New York (New York, N.Y.).
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For advertisements in New York ethnic publications on the availability of disaster resources in the wake of the September 11 attacks: $25,500 to the Independent Press Association (New York, N.Y.).
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For a door-to-door survey to determine what people who live in predominantly Chinese neighborhoods need in the wake of the September 11 attacks: $25,000 to Chinese Staff and Workers Association (New York, N.Y.).
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To encourage communication among Arab Americans and manage volunteers who wanted to help after the September 11 attacks: $25,000 to Arab-American Family Support Center (Brooklyn, N.Y.).
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To provide mental-health services including drop-in centers, telephone help lines, and on-site counseling in the wake of the September 11 attacks: $10,000 to Jewish Board of Family and Children's Services (New York, N.Y.).
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To work with the New York City Department of Mental Health in their outreach efforts to counsel victims and rescue workers in the aftermath of the attacks on the World Trade Center: $10,000 to Mount Sinai Hospital, Disaster Psychiatry Outreach (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide food to rescue workers and to coordinate volunteer efforts at the site of the World Trade Center: $5,000 to Cross-Cultural Solutions (New Rochelle, N.Y.).
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ANHEUSER-BUSCH FOUNDATION
c/o Anheuser-Busch Companies
1 Busch Place
St. Louis, Mo. 63118
(314) 577-7368
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $1,000,000 to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.). In addition, Anheuser-Busch provided 9,500 cases of canned water to aid victims and relief workers in New York City.
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $1,000,000 each to Community Foundation for the National Capital Region, Survivors' Fund (Washington, D.C.) and the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.), and $200,000 to Salvation Army (Alexandria, Va.). In addition, Anheuser-Busch's distributors have contributed $5.2-million to the New York State World Trade Center Relief Fund (Albany, N.Y.).
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ANNENBERG FOUNDATION
St. Davids Center, Suite A-200
150 Radnor-Chester Road
St. Davids, Pa. 19087
(610) 341-9066
info@whannenberg.org
http://www.whannenberg.org
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $250,000 to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.).
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To support emergency-assistance organizations and other nonprofit health and human-service groups providing disaster-relief services to victims of the terrorist attacks in New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington: $250,000 to the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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For a counseling and education program for parents, teachers, and students coping with the effects of the September 11 attacks: $100,000 to New York Academy of Medicine, Office of School Health (New York, N.Y.).
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AOL TIME WARNER FOUNDATION
75 Rockefeller Plaza, 4th Floor
New York, N.Y. 10019
(212) 484-6565
AOLTWGrants@aol.com
http://aoltwfoundation.org
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $5,000,000 to be divided to be distributed among among American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.); Community Foundation for the National Capital Region, Survivors' Fund (Washington, D.C.); New York Firefighters 9-11 Disaster Relief Fund (Washington, D.C.); New York State Public/Private Initiatives, Twin Towers Fund (New York, N.Y.); New York State World Trade Center Relief Fund (New York, N.Y.); the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.); and World Trade Center Police Disaster Relief Fund (New York, N.Y.). In addition, AOL Time Warner will match all employee gifts of up to $1,000, and has donated products and services, including free AOL accounts for nonprofit and government rescue and relief workers and handheld wireless Internet devices.
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AT&T FOUNDATION
32 Avenue of the Americas, 24th Floor
New York, N.Y. 10013
(212) 387-4801; fax (212) 387-5809
http://www.att.com/foundation
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To support communications related to disaster-relief efforts in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $10,000,000 in pre-paid phone cards and more than 2,000 cellular phones, respectively, to relief and rescue workers in New York and Washington. In addition, AT&T has programmed its payphones in New York City to provide free outgoing calls.
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To provide support services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $1,000,000 to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.).
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To match employee gifts for disaster-relief efforts in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $300,000 each to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.) and the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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LILY AUCHINCLOSS FOUNDATION
16 East 79th Street, Number 31
New York, N.Y. 10021
(212) 737-9533; fax (212) 737-9578
info@lilyauch.org
http://www.lilyauch.org
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $25,000 to New York Times Foundation, 9/11 Neediest Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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AVON FOUNDATION
1345 Avenue of the Americas
New York, N.Y. 10105
(212) 282-5518; fax (212) 282-6049
http://www.avoncompany.com
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To match employee gifts to aid disaster-relief efforts in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks: up to $5,000 per employee to emergency-assistance and other nonprofit rescue and relief organizations.
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AVON PRODUCTS
1251 Avenue of the Americas
New York, N.Y. 10020
(212) 282-7100
http://www.avon.com
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To provide disaster-relief services in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $1,000,000 to American Red Cross of Greater New York (New York, N.Y.). In addition, Avon has established a relief fund to aid children affected by the disaster. The fund will be supported through sales of Heart of America pins.
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AXA GROUP
1290 Avenue of the Americas, 13th Floor
New York, N.Y. 10104
(212) 314-2566
http://www.axa-financial.com/index.html
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For a 2-to-1 match of employee gifts to establish the AXA 9/11 Relief Fund to support disaster-relief services for victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: up to $10,000,000 to be distributed among various emergency-assistance and other nonprofit organizations.
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BANK OF AMERICA FOUNDATION
Mail Code 1-007-18-01
100 North Tryon Street
Charlotte, N.C. 28255
(888) 488-9802
http://www.bankofamerica.com/foundation
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To support emergency-assistance organizations and other nonprofit health and human-service groups providing disaster-relief services to victims of the terrorist attacks in New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington: $1,000,000 to the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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BEAR STEARNS
383 Madison Avenue
New York, N.Y. 10167
(212) 272-2000
http://www.bearstearns.com
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To establish the Bear Stearns Charitable Foundation, which will benefit victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $10,000,000.
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BELLSOUTH CORPORATION
1155 Peachtree Street, N.E.
Atlanta, Ga. 30309
(404) 927-7417
http://www.bellsouth.com
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $1,000,000 to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.).
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BELLSOUTH FOUNDATION
1155 Peachtree Street, N.E.
Atlanta, Ga. 30309
(404) 249-2428
http://www.bellsouthcorp.com/bsf
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For Helping America Cope, an activity book designed to help families cope with the September 11 attacks: $25,000 to U. of Miami (Coral Gables, Fla.).
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BODMAN FOUNDATION
767 Third Avenue, Fourth Floor
New York, N.Y. 10017
(212) 644-0322; fax (212) 759-6510
main@achelis-bodman-fnds.org
http://fdncenter.org/grantmaker/achelis-bodman
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For research, articles, panels, and other events on rebuilding New York, as part of a round of grants responding to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $100,000 to Manhattan Institute for Policy Research (New York, N.Y.).
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For its Community Partnership, a citywide job training and placement effort by 15 nonprofit groups to assist workers displaced by the terrorist attacks and the economic recession, as part of a round of grants responding to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $75,000 to STRIVE/East Harlem Employment Services (New York, N.Y.).
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For an exhibition and public program series in collaboration with the Skyscraper Museum on the conception, design, engineering, building, and destruction of the World Trade Center, as part of a round of grants responding to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $20,000 to New-York Historical Society (New York, N.Y.).
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For relief efforts for refugees and other victims of the fighting in Afghanistan, as part of a round of grants responding to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $20,000 to Catholic Relief Services (Baltimore, Md.).
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BOEING COMPANY
100 North Riverside Plaza
Chicago, Ill. 60606
http://www.boeing.com/flash.html
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 attacks: $2,500,000 each to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.) and the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.). In addition, Boeing will match contributions by former and current employees for disaster-relief efforts.
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BP
Britannic House
1 Finsbury Circus
London, England EC2M 7BA
(44 20) 7496 4000; fax (44 20) 7496 4630
http://www.bp.com
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To provide disaster-relief services in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks: $2,000,000 to New York State Public/Private Initiatives, Twin Towers Fund (New York, N.Y.) and $2,000,000 to be distributed among other nonprofit rescue and relief organizations; $1,000,000 to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.); and a 3-to-1 match of employee gifts to the company's disaster-relief fund. BP also donated 1 million gallons of fuel for rescue and relief efforts.
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BRISTOL-MYERS SQUIBB FOUNDATION
345 Park Avenue
New York, N.Y. 10154
(212) 546-4393
http://www.bms.com/aboutbms/founda/data/founda.html
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks, and to benefit the victims and their families: $4,500,000 to be distributed among the John Jay College of Criminal Justice Foundation (New York, N.Y.); New York City Police Foundation (New York, N.Y.); New York Firefighters 9-11 Disaster Relief Fund (Washington, D.C.); September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.); and Uniformed Firefighter's Associations, Widows and Children Fund (New York, N.Y.); and up to $1,000,000 to match employee gifts to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.). In addition, Bristol-Myers has donated pain relievers, shampoos, skin-care products, and wound dressings to aid the relief efforts.
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EDYTH BUSH CHARITABLE FOUNDATION
P.O. Box 1967
Winter Park, Fla. 32790-1967
(407) 647-4322; fax (407) 647-7716
http://fdncenter.org/grantmaker/bush
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To send three child-grief counselors to New York City to work with children affected by the September 11 attack: $20,000 to Children's Home Society of Detroit (Detroit, Mich.).
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CALIFORNIA ENDOWMENT
21650 Oxnard Street, Suite 1200
Woodland Hills, Calif. 91367
(818) 703-3311
http://www.calendow.org
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To provide grants to nonprofit groups in California that have experienced an increase in demand for services and a decrease in donations in the wake of the September 11 attacks: $6,300,000 to United Ways and community foundations throughout California.
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To assist workers in the tourism industry in California's Alameda, San Francisco, San Mateo, and Santa Clara Counties who are experiencing economic distress due to the effects of the September 11 attacks and the economic recession: $972,563 to Working Partnerships USA (San Jose, Calif.).
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To provide emergency assistance and support services to tourism workers who have been unemployed or had their schedules reduced as a result of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $900,000 to Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy (Los Angeles, Calif.).
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To provide emergency financial assistance, advocacy services, and related support to workers in San Diego County who have been affected adversely by the September 11 attacks and the subsequent economic downturn: $568,830 to Center on Policy Initiatives (San Diego, Calif.).
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For grants, made through its 9/11 Special Opportunities Fund, to help nonprofit organizations working toward the elimination of cultural, racial, and religious bias in California: $377,595 over two years to Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith–San Diego (San Diego, Calif.), $350,000 over two years to Simon Wiesenthal Center/Museum of Tolerance (Los Angeles, Calif.), $300,000 over two years to California Council of Churches (Sacramento, Calif.), $219,962 to Capital Unity Council (Sacramento, Calif.), $205,850 over two years to National Conference for Community and Justice–Los Angeles (Los Angeles, Calif.), $200,000 each to Chinese for Affirmative Action (San Francisco, Calif.) and Facing History and Ourselves (Pasadena, Calif.), $188,991 over two years to Orange County Human Relations Council (Santa Ana, Calif.), $180,000 over two years to Los Angeles County Commission on Human Relations (Los Angeles, Calif.), $150,000 over two years to University Muslim Medical Association (Los Angeles, Calif.), $100,000 each over two years to Los Angeles Operation Hope/Project Islamic Hope (Los Angeles, Calif.) and National Conference for Community and Justice–Orange County (Newport Beach, Calif.), $84,250 to Skirball Museum (Los Angeles, Calif.), $50,000 over two years to Community Partners/Coming Together in Crisis (Los Angeles, Calif.), and $25,000 to Center for the Advancement of Nonviolence (Los Angeles, Calif.).
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CARNEGIE CORPORATION OF NEW YORK
437 Madison Avenue
New York, N.Y. 10022
(212) 371-3200; fax (212) 754-4073
http://www.carnegie.org
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To aid these New York City cultural groups and institutions, awarded through an anonymous donation to assist organizations struggling in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks: $10,000,000 to be distributed among 137 small and mid-sized organizations in New York that serve the public through dance, music, photography, poetry, or theater or that advance historic and scientific understanding.
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CARNEGIE HERO FUND COMMISSION
425 Sixth Avenue, Suite 1640
Pittsburgh, Pa. 15219-1823
(412) 281-1302; fax (412) 281-5751
carnegiehero@carnegiehero.org
http://www.carnegiehero.org
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To assist victims of the September 11 attacks, particularly the families of firefighters, police officers, and other emergency personnel that were killed or injured as a result of the attacks: $100,000.
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ANNIE E. CASEY FOUNDATION
701 St. Paul Street
Baltimore, Md. 21202
(410) 547-6600; fax (410) 547-6624
webmail@aecf.org
http://www.aecf.org
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To provide assistance to children and families affected by the September 11 terrorist attacks: $3,000,000 to be distributed among various emergency-assistance and other nonprofit organizations in New York and Washington.
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CHEVRON CORPORATION
575 Market Street
San Francisco, Calif. 94105
(415) 894-7700
http://www.chevron.com/index.html
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To assist victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $5,000,000 to emergency-assistance and other nonprofit organizations.
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CHEVRONTEXACO CORPORATION
575 Market Street
San Francisco, Calif. 94105
(415) 894-7700
http://www.chevron.com/index.html
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To benefit the families of New York City firefighters and police officers killed in the September 11 terrorist attacks: $100,000 to New York Stock Exchange Fallen Heroes Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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CINGULAR WIRELESS
5565 Glen Ridge Connector
Atlanta, Ga. 30342
http://www.cingular.com
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks, and to assist communications in relief and rescue efforts: up to $500,000 to match employee gifts to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.) and 3,500 cellular phones to rescue and relief workers.
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To support emergency-assistance organizations and other nonprofit health and human-service groups providing disaster-relief services to victims of the terrorist attacks in New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington: $500,000 to the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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CISCO SYSTEMS
170 West Tasman Drive
San Jose, Calif. 95134
(408) 527-2118
http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/750/philanthropy
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 attacks: $2,500,00 to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.) and technical assistance and products valued at $120,000 to American Red Cross--National Headquarters (Washington, D.C.).
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CITIGROUP FOUNDATION
153 East 53rd Street, Third Floor
New York, N.Y. 10043
(212) 559-9163; fax (212) 793-5944
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To establish this fund that will provide college scholarships to the children of victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $15,000,000 to Citigroup Relief Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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EDNA MCCONNELL CLARK FOUNDATION
250 Park Avenue
New York, N.Y. 10177-0026
(212) 551-9100; fax (212) 986-4558
info@emcf.org
http://www.emcf.org
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 attacks: $500,000 to the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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COCA-COLA COMPANY
P.O. Box 1734
Atlanta, Ga. 30301
http://www2.coca-cola.com
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $6,000,000 to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.) and $6,000,000 to be distributed among various relief organizations.
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COCA-COLA FOUNDATION
P.O. Drawer 1734
Atlanta, Ga. 30301
(404) 676-2568
http://www2.coca-cola.com/citizenship/foundation.html
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $100,000 to Tavis Smiley Foundation (Los Angeles, Calif.) and $84,150 to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.).
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COMMONWEALTH FUND
1 East 75th Street
New York, N.Y. 10021-2608
(212) 606-3800; fax (212) 606-3500
http://www.cmwf.org
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 attacks: $300,000 to various nonprofit organizations.
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COMPUTER ASSOCIATES INTERNATIONAL
1 Computer Associates Plaza
Islandia, N.Y. 11749
http://www.ca.com
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To benefit the children of victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks in New York City: $2,000,000 to New York KIN (Kids In Need) Fund (Islandia, N.Y.).
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JACK KENT COOKE FOUNDATION
44115 Woodridge Parkway, Suite 200
Lansdowne, Va. 20176
(703) 723-8000
http://www.jackkentcookefoundation.org
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To establish the Bridge to Tomorrow Grant Program to provide educational assistance to the dependents of people killed or permanently disabled in the attacks on the Pentagon and the World Trade Center, the crash of United Airlines Flight 93 in Pennsylvania, and the September and October 2001 anthrax attacks: $1,000,000.
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CREDIT SUISSE FIRST BOSTON FOUNDATION
11 Madison Avenue
New York, N.Y. 10010-3629
http://www.csfb.com/company_info/html/company_foundation_trust.shtml
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To benefit the families of firefighters and police officers who died in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $5,000,000 to New York Police and Fire Widows' & Children's Benefit Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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DELL COMPUTER
Box 45
1 Dell Way
Round Rock, Tex. 78682-9426
http://www.dell.com
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To assist organizations providing disaster-relief services related to the September 11 terrorist attacks: cash and products valued at $1,000,000 to various rescue and relief organizations.
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MICHAEL AND SUSAN DELL FOUNDATION
P.O. Box 163867
Austin, Tex. 78716-3867
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To match gifts from employees of Dell Computer to aid in the disaster-relief efforts related to the September 11 terrorist attacks: up to $1,000,000 to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.).
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DEUTSCHE BANK AMERICAS
31 West 52nd Street
New York, N.Y. 10019
http://www.db.com/community
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To provide emergency-relief services and other forms of assistance to individuals and organizations affected by the September 11 terrorist attacks: $9,000,000 to New York Police & Fire Widows' & Children's Benefit Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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DEUTSCHE BANK AMERICAS FOUNDATION
31 West 52nd Street
Mail Stop NYC 01-1407
New York, N.Y. 10019
(212) 250-7065; fax (646) 324-7229
http://www.db.com/community
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To provide emergency-relief services and other forms of assistance to individuals and organizations affected by the September 11 terrorist attacks: $4,000,000 and $497,823 in matching employee gifts, respectively, to be distributed among various relief organizations and benefit funds.
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WALT DISNEY COMPANY
500 South Buena Vista Street
Burbank, Calif. 91521
http://www.disney.com
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To establish this fund to aid victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $5,000,000 to DisneyHand: Survivor Relief Fund.
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GERALDINE R. DODGE FOUNDATION
P.O. Box 1239
Morristown, N.J. 07962-1239
(973) 540-8442; fax (973) 540-1211
http://www.grdodge.org
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For emergency programming in the days following the September 11 attacks, and for special projects to document New Jersey's response to the crisis, as part of a round of grants in response to the attacks and their aftermath: $75,000 to NJN Foundation (Trenton, N.J.).
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To create a garden based on the gardens of medieval Spain, representing an era when Christians, Muslims, and Jews lived together in peace, as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $75,000 to Newark Museum (Newark, N.J.).
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For expanded and special programming related to September 11, as part of a round of grants in response to the attacks and their aftermath: $50,000 to National Public Radio (Washington, D.C.).
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For the oral-history component of its efforts to present exhibitions and programs exploring how New Jersey residents' lives have changed since September 11, as part of a round of grants in response to the attacks and their aftermath: $50,000 to New Jersey Historical Society (Newark, N.J.).
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To establish the New American Ensemble, a social-action theater company for high-school students to give visibility and voice to the experiences of young immigrants, as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $50,000 to International Institute of N.J. (Jersey City, N.J.).
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For a televised town-hall meeting exploring notions of "American innocence and exceptionalism in a time of terror and global anxiety," as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $45,000 to Rutgers U., Institute on Ethnicity, Culture, & the Modern Experience (Newark, N.J.).
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For a symposium entitled "Theater: a Catalyst for Transformation," as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $40,000 to New Jersey Theatre Alliance (Madison, N.J.).
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To expand the School Visits program and to offer 30 sessions that allow teachers to read, write, and share poems that address the question "How does one live?," as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $38,000 to Geraldine R. Dodge Poetry Program (Morristown, N.J.).
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For a summer institute entitled "American Civil Liberties at Times of Crisis" for New Jersey high-school teachers, as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $35,000 to Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship (Princeton, N.J.).
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To develop and publish a booklet on the leadership and responses of New Jersey school principals following the September 11 attacks, as part of a round of grants in response to the attacks and their aftermath: $31,200 to Principals' Center for the Garden State (Princeton, N.J.).
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To commission a theater piece intended to express the American experience following the September 11 attacks, as part of a round of grants in response to the attacks and their aftermath: $30,000 to McCarter Theatre (Princeton, N.J.).
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To establish a cross-cultural education program serving students and teachers in 12 New Jersey high schools, as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $30,000 to Rutgers U., Middle Eastern Studies Department (New Brunswick, N.J.).
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For a multidimensional theater piece focusing on September 11 and its aftermath, as part of a round of grants in response to the attacks: $25,000 to African Globe Performing Arts Organization (Newark, N.J.).
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For a playwriting project for high-school students in New Jersey's Monmouth and Ocean Counties that fosters expression of their thoughts and feelings on the September 11 attacks and their aftermath, as part of a round of grants in response to the attacks: $25,000 to New Jersey Repertory Company (Long Branch, N.J.).
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To organize community residents to create a "Unity Quilt" depicting reflection, remembrance, and renewal, as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $25,000 to Arts Council of the Morris Area (Madison, N.J.).
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For a collaboration among five artists to create a multimedia performance on the artists' personal experiences of September 11 and afterward, as part of a round of grants in response to the attacks and their aftermath: $20,000 to Randy James Dance Works (Highland Park, N.J.).
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For Terrorism: Challenge and Response, a program for South Jersey schoolteachers designed to deepen classroom discussion of current events since September 11, as part of a round of grants in response to the attacks and their aftermath: $20,000 to World Affairs Council (Philadelphia, Pa.).
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To coordinate a community education and training campaign to help families in the Trenton, N.J., area deal with trauma, fear, and bias, as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $20,000 to Isles (Trenton, N.J.).
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To create an intergenerational theater project exploring what it means to be an American, as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $20,000 to Luna Stage Company (Montclair, N.J.).
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For a fund-raising drive to benefit this New York City radio station displaced by the September 11 attacks, as part of a round of grants in response to the attacks and their aftermath: $15,000 to WNYC (New York, N.Y.).
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For a multimedia program that enables families, students, and teachers to express their thoughts on the September 11 attacks through art, as part of a round of grants in response to the attacks and their aftermath: $15,000 to Institute for Arts & Humanities Education (New Brunswick, N.J.).
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For a partnership involving clergy members, municipal and school personnel, and police officers designed to help children express their responses to the September 11 attacks, as part of a round of grants in response to the attacks and their aftermath: $15,000 to South Brunswick Board of Education (Monmouth Junction, N.J.).
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For an exhibition that honors the spirit of New York City, including work from 1976 to the present, as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $15,000 to Perkins Center for the Arts (Moorestown, N.J.).
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To collaborate with the Liberty State Park Conservancy to design and plant memorial gardens and trees, as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $15,000 to New York/New Jersey Baykeeper (Highlands, N.J.).
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To develop a Web site for parents, students, and teachers featuring multimedia learning resources in direct response to the September 11 attacks, as part of a round of grants in response to the attacks and their aftermath: $15,000 to WGBH (Boston, Mass.).
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To develop an online resource that will include a gallery of creative responses to September 11 and the months since, as part of a round of grants in response to the attacks: $15,000 to ArtPride New Jersey (Trenton, N.J.).
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To promote the adoption of cost-effective steps to reduce emissions from construction vehicles and trucks at the World Trade Center site, as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $15,000 to Environmental Defense (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide special training for the young artists that made up the Touring Theatre, and for the Scholars on Stage post-play discussion series, as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $15,000 to George Street Playhouse (New Brunswick, N.J.).
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To publish and distribute My Father's Love, including notes on the book's use for grieving families, as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $15,000 to Sundance Parents Association (North Plainfield, N.J.).
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To work with community groups to examine ways to prevent adverse public-health and environmental consequences from potential threats to the security or safety of New Jersey's chemical manufacturing facilities, as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $15,000 to New Jersey Work Environment Council (Lawrenceville, N.J.).
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For two interactive workshops entitled "Teaching in a Suddenly Changing World" that will be broadcast on cable, as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $14,000 to Morris Area Consortium for Local Educational Television (Randolph, N.J.).
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To create a collaborative print piece as a memorial to September 11, as part of a round of grants in response to the attacks and their aftermath: $12,750 to Printmaking Council of New Jersey (Somerville, N.J.).
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To share expert resources and strategies with local professionals helping Morris County, N.J., preschoolers and their families cope with war and terrorism, as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $12,000 to Child & Family Resources (Randolph, N.J.).
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For an online music resource for children, teachers, and arts educators aimed at fostering community consensus, emotional courage, and peace and justice, as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $10,000 to Children's Music Network (Evanston, Ill.).
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For creative workshops for children, as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $10,000 to the Morris Museum (Morristown, N.J.).
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To collect and analyze health data on search-and-rescue dogs in order to develop preventive procedures and equipment and training techniques to help dogs cope with the physical and mental stresses of their tasks, as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $10,000 to AKC Canine Health Foundation (Aurora, Ohio).
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To exhibit photographs depicting the lives of Afghan refugees living along the border of Afghanistan and Pakistan, as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $10,000 to Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum (New Brunswick, N.J.).
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To organize its arts therapists and teaching artists to provide students with arts-based activities designed to help them deal with anger, fear, grief, and prejudice, as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $10,000 to Arts Horizons (Englewood, N.J.).
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To publish and distribute Wendell Berry's In the Presence of Fear: Three Essays for a Changed World, as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $10,000 to the Orion Society (Great Barrington, Mass.).
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To provide four-week retreats to three artists directly affected by the September 11 attacks, as part of a round of grants in response to the attacks and their aftermath: $9,000 to Vermont Studio Center (Johnson, Vt.).
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For Hearts, Hands, and Voices: a Children's Festival for Tolerance and Diversity, as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $6,150 to Montessori Children's House of Morristown (Morristown, N.J.).
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For a survey assessing the effects and implications of the September 11 attacks on New Jersey nonprofit groups, as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $5,000 to Center for Non-Profit Corporations (North Brunswick, N.J.).
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For an Asian arts festival that will benefit victims of the September 11 attacks, as part of a round of grants in response to the attacks and their aftermath: $5,000 to Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company (Fort Lee, N.J.).
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To produce a special newsletter and to transport and store excess dog food donated to search-and-rescue dogs involved in rescue efforts following the September 11 attacks, as part of a round of grants in response to the attacks and their aftermath: $5,000 to St. Hubert's Animal Welfare Center (Madison, N.J.).
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To create a foster-care program for animals brought to this facility by local military personnel who are being called into service, as part of a round of grants in response to the September 11 attacks and their aftermath: $2,000 to Monmouth County SPCA (Eatontown, N.J.).
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DRUGSTORE.COM FOUNDATION
13920 Southeast Eastgate Way, Suite 300
Bellevue, Wash. 98005
foundation@drugstore.com
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To match employee gifts to disaster-relief efforts related to the September 11 terrorist attacks: $55,000 to American Red Cross–Seattle (Seattle, Wash.).
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DUPONT COMPANY
DuPont Building
1007 Market Street
Wilmington, Del. 19898
http://www.dupont.com
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For the educational expenses of the children of firefighters, police officers, and other uniformed emergency personnel who died as a result of the September 11 attacks, and for various relief organizations, including the American Red Cross: $5,000,000.
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JESSIE BALL DUPONT FUND
225 Water Street, Suite 1200
Jacksonville, Fla. 32202-5176
(904) 353-0890 or (800) 252-3452
http://www.dupontfund.org
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For the September 11th Fund, established by the United Way of New York City and the New York Community Trust, to support emergency-assistance organizations and other nonprofit health and human-service groups providing disaster-relief services to victims of the terrorist attacks in New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington: $150,000 to United Way of Northeast Florida (Jacksonville, Fla.).
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For relief efforts in New York City in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $25,000 to Salvation Army (Jacksonville, Fla.).
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks in New York City: $25,000 to American Red Cross of the Delmarva Peninsula (Wilmington, Del.).
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To provide this organization in lower Manhattan that serves incarcerated people, or those at risk of incarceration, and their families, with internal grief counseling and staff support, and to defray expenses in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $25,000 to Osborne Association (New York, N.Y.).
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For financial assistance in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks for this organization in lower Manhattan that provides meals for homeless people, among other services: $10,000 to Christian Herald Association (New York, N.Y.).
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EL POMAR FOUNDATION
10 Lake Circle
Colorado Springs, Colo. 80906
(719) 577-7001; fax (719) 577-7010
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To reimburse it for costs associated with providing emergency-blood shipments in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks: $250,000 to Bonfils Blood Center (Denver, Colo.).
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EXXONMOBIL CORPORATION
5959 La Colinas Boulevard
Irving, Tex. 75039
(972) 444-1104
http://www.exxon.mobil.com
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For a 3-to-1 match of employee gifts to funds supporting disaster-relief efforts for victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $15,000,000 to be divided among American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.); the Children's Aid Society (New York, N.Y.); Community Foundation for the National Capital Region, Survivors' Fund (Washington, D.C.); New York State Public/Private Initiatives, Twin Towers Fund (New York, N.Y.); and New York State World Trade Center Relief Fund (Albany, N.Y.).
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To benefit the families of firemen, policemen, emergency medical personnel, and other public-safety and government workers injured or killed in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $2,000,000 to New York State Public/Private Initiatives, Twin Towers Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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To aid Washington-area victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $1,000,000 to Community Foundation for the National Capital Region, Survivors' Fund (Washington, D.C.).
-
To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $667,000 to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.).
-
To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $667,000 to New York State World Trade Center Relief Fund (Albany, N.Y.).
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To provide relief services to children orphaned as a result of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $667,000 to the Children's Aid Society (New York, N.Y.).
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FANNIE MAE
3900 Wisconsin Ave, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20016-2804
(202) 752-7000
http://www.fanniemae.com
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $10,000,000 and matches to all employee gifts. In addition, Fannie Mae has required its mortgage servicers to place a 90-day moratorium on foreclosures that might affect victims or their families.
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FEDERATION OF KOREAN INDUSTRIES
FKI Building, 281-1, Yoido-dong
Youngdungpo-gu
Seoul, Korea
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To benefit the families of firemen, policemen, emergency-medical personnel, and other public-safety and government workers injured or killed in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $500,000 to New York State Public/Private Initiatives, Twin Towers Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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To help victims of the September 11 terrorist attack on the Pentagon: $150,000 each to United States Army, Pentagon Victims Fund (Alexandria, Va.) and United States Navy, Pentagon Assistance Fund (Arlington, Va.).
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FORD FOUNDATION
320 East 43rd Street
New York, N.Y. 10017
(212) 573-5000
http://www.fordfound.org
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To support emergency-assistance organizations and other nonprofit health and human-service groups providing disaster-relief services to victims of the terrorist attacks in New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington, as part of the foundation's $10,000,000 pledge: $5,000,000 to the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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To assist nonprofit organizations providing disaster-relief services, including grief counseling, to residents in the Washington area in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks, and to improve coordination among donors and service providers working on community recovery problems: $1,200,000 to Washington Regional Association of Grantmakers (Washington, D.C.).
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To help replace this public-radio station's FM transmitter, which was destroyed in the September 11 terrorist attacks, as part of the foundation's $10,000,000 pledge: $1,000,000 to WNYC Foundation (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide financial and advisory assistance to nonprofit organizations located in the parts of lower Manhattan most seriously affected, both financially and physically, by the September 11 terrorist attacks, as part of the foundation's $10,000,000 pledge: $1,000,000 to Nonprofit Finance Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide legal services related to housing, health insurance, unemployment benefits, and survivor benefits to low-income people in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks, as part of the foundation's $10,000,000 pledge: $1,000,000 to Legal Aid Society (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide loans, grants, and technical assistance to small and micro-businesses ineligible for city, state, or federal assistance located near the site of the World Trade Center, as part of the foundation's $10,000,000 pledge: $1,000,000 to Structured Employment Economic Development Corporation (Seedco) (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide loans to nonprofit organizations based in lower Manhattan in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks, as part of the foundation's $10,000,000 pledge: $1,000,000 to Fund for the City of New York (New York, N.Y.).
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For communications activities designed to promote informed dialogue in response to the September 11 attacks, with an emphasis on protecting civil liberties and preventing discrimination: $300,000 to Fenton Communications (Washington, D.C.).
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FREDDIE MAC FOUNDATION
Mail Stop A-40
8250 Jones Branch Drive
McLean, Va. 22102
(703) 918-2222; fax (703) 918-8895
http://www.freddiemacfoundation.org
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $10,000,000 and 1-to-1 matches for all employee gifts of up to $10,000. In addition, Freddie Mac has placed a freeze on home foreclosures, waived delinquency fees, and reduced or eliminated interest rates on mortgages for victims of the attack, and placed a freeze on home foreclosures nationwide through September 25, 2001.
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BILL & MELINDA GATES FOUNDATION
P.O. Box 23350
Seattle, Wash. 98102
(206) 709-3140
http://www.gatesfoundation.org
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $1,000,000 each to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.); New York Times Foundation, 9/11 Neediest Fund (New York, N.Y.); and the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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GE FUND
3135 Easton Turnpike
Fairfield, Conn. 06431
(203) 373-3216
http://www.ge.com/community/fund.html
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To benefit the families of firemen, policemen, emergency medical personnel, and other public-safety and government workers injured or killed as a result of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $10,000,000 to New York State Public/Private Initiatives, Twin Towers Fund (New York, N.Y.) and more than $1,300,000 to match gifts from current and retired employees to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.). In addition, GE donated medical equipment, portable generators, and other equipment for relief efforts.
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GEORGE FAMILY FOUNDATION
1818 Oliver Avenue South
Minneapolis, Minn. 55405
(612) 377-8400
http://www.fpadvisors.com
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For its Strategic Blood Reserve, created in response to the September 11 attacks: $25,000 to American Red Cross (Washington, D.C.).
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RICHARD AND RHODA GOLDMAN FUND
1 Lombard Street, Suite 303
San Francisco, Calif. 94111
(415) 788-1090; fax (415) 788-7890
info@goldmanfund.org
http://www.goldmanfund.org
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To provide funds to the Agency Coordinating Body for Afghan Relief, in Islamabad, Pakistan, in response to the refugee crisis created by the war in Afghanistan: $265,000 to Give2Asia (San Francisco, Calif.).
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GOLDMAN, SACHS & COMPANY
85 Broad Street, Seventh Floor
New York, N.Y. 10004
(212) 902-5727; fax (212) 902-3925
http://www.gs.com
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 attacks: $10,000,000 to various rescue and relief organizations.
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GREENPOINT FOUNDATION
90 Park Avenue, Fourth Floor
New York, N.Y. 10016
212) 834-1215; fax (212) 834-1406
http://www.greenpoint.com
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To support emergency-assistance organizations and other nonprofit health and human-service groups providing disaster-relief services to victims of the terrorist attacks in New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington: $750,000 to the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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For families of employees of Keefe, Bruyette & Woodf who were killed in the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center: $250,000.
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $25,000 to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.).
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GEORGE GUND FOUNDATION
1845 Guildhall Building
45 Prospect Avenue West
Cleveland, Ohio 44115
(216) 241-3114; fax (216) 241-6560
http://www.gundfdn.org
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To protect civil liberties in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks: $50,000 over two years to American Civil Liberties Union Foundation (New York, N.Y.).
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To support emergency-assistance organizations and other nonprofit health and human-service groups providing disaster-relief services to victims of the terrorist attacks in New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington: $50,000 to the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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HASBRO CHARITABLE TRUST
1027 Newport Avenue
Pawtucket, R.I. 02862
http://www.hasbro.org
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To provide disaster-relief services in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $15,000 to American Red Cross, Libety Fund (Washington, D.C.). Hasbro Charitable Trust also contributed toys and educational products to assist children affected by the attacks, including donations to the Family Assistance Center in New York and five displaced elementary schools.
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HASBRO CHILDREN'S FOUNDATION
32 West 23rd Street
New York, N.Y. 10010
(917) 606-6226; fax (917) 606-6264
http://www.hasbro.org
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To establish the September 11th Children's Fund to support programs that address the long-term emotional, mental, and physical health and well-being of children and families affected by the September 11 attack: $250,000 to New York Community Trust (New York, N.Y.).
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WILLIAM RANDOLPH HEARST FOUNDATION
888 Seventh Avenue, 45th Floor
New York, N.Y. 10106-0057
(212) 586-5404; fax (212) 586-1917
http://hearstfdn.org
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For the 9/11 New York Nonprofits Up and Running program: $150,000 to Fund for the City of New York (New York, N.Y.).
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For the Lower Manhattan Small Business and Workforce Retention Project to assist businesses and workers affected by the September 11 attacks: $150,000 to Structured Employment Economic Development Corporation (Seedco) (New York, N.Y.).
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VIRA I. HEINZ ENDOWMENTS
30 CNG Tower
625 Liberty Avenue
Pittsburgh, Pa. 15222-3115
(412) 281-5777; fax (412) 281-5788
info@heinz.org
http://www.heinz.org
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To support emergency-assistance organizations and other nonprofit health and human-service groups providing disaster-relief services to victims of the terrorist attacks in New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington: $100,000 to the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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WILLIAM & FLORA HEWLETT FOUNDATION
525 Middlefield Road, Suite 200
Menlo Park, Calif. 94025
(650) 329-1070; fax (650) 329-9342
info@hewlett.org
http://www.hewlett.org
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To establish a Global Terrorism division—as well as field offices in the Middle East and the Pakistan-Afghanistan region—to address the root causes of terrorism and to advocate improved and coordinated international policy against terrorism: $400,000 to International Crisis Group (New York, N.Y.).
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For administrative expenses related to disaster-relief services for victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $75,000 to United Way of New York City (New York, N.Y.).
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To address discrimination and violence against Arab-Americans in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $75,000 to Human Rights Watch (New York, N.Y.).
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For a New York public-school program to help children cope with the September 11 terrorist attacks: $25,000 to New York Community Trust (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide emergency services to the victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center: $25,000 to Safe Horizon (New York, N.Y.).
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HEWLETT-PACKARD COMPANY FOUNDATION
P.O. Box 10301
Palo Alto, Calif. 94303-0890
(650) 857-3053
http://webcenter.hp.com/grants
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $3,000,000 to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.); up to $2,000,000 jointly to match employee gifts to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.) and the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.); and product donations valued at $250,000 to various emergency-assistance and relief organizations.
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HITACHI AMERICA
2000 Sierra Point Parkway
Brisbane, Calif. 94005
http://www.hitachi.com
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $1,000,000 to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.). Hitachi also donated products to rescue and relief workers, including DNA gene-sequencing technology, demolition hammers, and heavy duty cutting hardware.
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HITACHI FOUNDATION
1509 22nd Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20037
(202) 457-0588; fax (202) 296-1098
http://www.hitachi.org
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $50,000 to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.).
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HOME DEPOT
2455 Paces Ferry Road
Atlanta, Ga. 30339-4089
http://www.homedepot.com
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To support emergency-assistance organizations and other nonprofit health and human-service groups providing disaster-relief services to victims of the terrorist attacks in New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington: $1,000,000 to the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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HOWARD HUGHES MEDICAL INSTITUTE
Office of Grants and Special Programs
4000 Jones Bridge Road
Chevy Chase, Md. 20815-6789
(301) 215-8873; fax (301) 215-8888
grantswww@hhmi.org
http://www.hhmi.org/grants
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 attacks: $50,000 each to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.) and the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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IBM
Corporate Giving Program
Old Orchard Road
Armonk, N.Y. 10504
(914) 765-1900
ibmgives@vnet.ibm.com
http://www.ibm.com/ibm/ibmgives
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To support emergency-assistance organizations and other nonprofit health and human-service groups providing disaster-relief services to victims of the terrorist attacks in New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington: $5,000,000 to the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.). In addition, IBM donated products, services, and office space to nonprofit relief organizations, the New York City government, and businesses affected by the attack.
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INDEPENDENCE COMMUNITY FOUNDATION
182 Atlantic Avenue
Brooklyn, N.Y. 11201
(718) 722-2300; fax (718) 722-5757
inquiries@icfny.org
http://www.icbny.com/site2/content/contact.asp
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To establish the Independence 9/11 Fund, which will provide assistance with housing, living and educational expenses, funeral costs, and travel expenses for the families of people in New York who were injured or killed in the September 11 terrorist attacks: $100,000 to Independence 9/11 Fund (Brooklyn, N.Y.).
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ITTLESON FOUNDATION
15 East 67th Street
New York, N.Y. 10021
(212) 794-2008; fax (212) 794-0351
http://www.ittlesonfoundation.org
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To provide trauma and grief counseling to the families of those killed in the World Trade Center attacks and to provide counseling services to paramedics, area employees, and personnel from schools in lower Manhattan and in adjacent counties in which many of the victims lived: $25,000 to Saint Vincents Catholic Medical Centers of New York (New York, N.Y.).
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To respond to special mental-health needs generated by the September 11 attacks by organizing a training conference for therapists in the New York region, which will also be attended by therapists from such countries as Argentina and Lebanon who are experienced in treating children and adults who are traumatized or are living in traumatic situations: $20,000 to Institute for Psychoanalytic Training and Research Clinical Center (New York, N.Y.).
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For its trained volunteers to provide emergency on-site counseling at offices and organizations affected by the September 11 attacks, to help other caregivers deal with bereavement and trauma, to expand therapy services available to low-income and unemployed people, and to provide stress-reduction and trauma services to police officers, firefighters, and other emergency personnel: $15,000 to Healing Works (New York, N.Y.).
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To address the emotional needs of police personnel stemming from the World Trade Center attacks: $10,000 to New York City Police Foundation, Heroes Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide mental-health services to the families of firefighters who perished at the World Trade Center, as well as services to meet the needs of surviving firefighters and their families: $10,000 to New York Firefighters 9-11 Disaster Relief Fund, Counseling Service Unit (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide emergency financial support to these groups serving homeless people that were devastated financially by the World Trade Center attacks: $1,500 each to SoHo Partnership (New York, N.Y.) and TriBeCa Partnership (New York, N.Y.).
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ITW FOUNDATION
3600 West Lake Avenue
Glenview, Ill. 60025
(847) 724-7500
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To support emergency-assistance organizations and other nonprofit health and human-service groups providing disaster-relief services to victims of the terrorist attacks in New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington: $500,000 to the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.) and 3-to-1 matches of employee gifts of up to $2,000 to disaster-relief efforts. In addition, ITW donated products, including respirators and masks, for rescue and relief workers.
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ROBERT WOOD JOHNSON FOUNDATION
College Road East
P.O. Box 2316
Princeton, N.J. 08543
(609) 452-8701
mail@rwjf.org
http://www.rwjf.org
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To support organizations providing disaster-relief services in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $5,000,000 to various emergency-assistance and other nonprofit organizations.
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For Public Response to a National Tragedy, a survey of American responses to the events of September 11: $78,275 to National Opinion Research Center (Chicago, Ill.).
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JOHNSON & JOHNSON
Worldwide Contributions Program
1 Johnson & Johnson Plaza
New Brunswick, N.J. 08933
http://www.jnj.com
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To establish a fund to help local community organizations, including community-health centers, mental-health and counseling centers, Head Start programs, and the Salvation Army, provide disaster-relief support for victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $6,000,000. In addition, Johnson & Johnson's existing disaster-relief program has donated medical products to assist the rescue and relief efforts in New York City.
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To support emergency-assistance organizations and other nonprofit health and human-service groups providing disaster-relief services to victims of the terrorist attacks in New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington: $3,000,000 to the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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For a 2-to-1 match of employee gifts to disaster-relief efforts related to the September 11 terrorist attacks: up to $1,000,000 to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.).
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W.K. KELLOGG FOUNDATION
1 Michigan Avenue East
Battle Creek, Mich. 49017-4058
(616) 968-1611; fax (616) 968-0413
http://www.wkkf.org
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To provide additional support to grantees whose work has been affected by the September 11 attacks: $1,169,822 to Columbia U. (New York, N.Y.).
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To encourage young people to discuss issues of race, diversity, and social and economic inequality in the wake of the September 11 attacks: $681,000 to Learning Matters Inc. (New York, N.Y.).
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For short-term relief efforts to help immigrants in New York and and to deal with the long-term implications of policy proposals made in response to the September 11 attacks: $625,000 to New York Immigration Coalition (New York, N.Y.).
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To establish the SEO Community Assistance Fund to assist organizations and programs affected by the September 11 attacks: $500,000 to Sponsors for Educational Opportunity (New York, N.Y.).
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To support the work of women's and girls' foundations in New Jersey, New York, and Washington, DC, in response to the September 11 attacks: $330,000 to Women's Funding Network (San Francisco, Calif.).
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To provide additional support to grantees whose work has been affected by the September 11 attacks: $324,941 to Citizens' Committee For Children of New York (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide support and visibility to organizations that are focusing on the long-term needs of victims of the September 11 attacks: $300,000 to Social Entrepreneurs' Alliance for Change (San Francisco, Calif.).
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To promote sustained, strategic philanthropy among blacks, Latinos, and Asian-Americans in the New York metropolitan area in the wake of the September 11 attacks: $240,000 to New York Regional Association of Grantmakers (New York, N.Y.).
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For service-learning programs by New York City teachers in the wake of the September 11 attacks: $150,000 to Young Citizens Inc. (New York, N.Y.).
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To help poor neighborhoods with high infant-mortality rates to meet new and unexpected demands as a result of the September 11 attacks: $125,000 to District of Columbia Birth Center (Washington, D.C.).
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To develop and distribute Facing Fear: Helping People Deal with Terrorism and Tragic Events, a curriculum for kindergarten to eighth-grade students in the Washington area in response to the September 11 attacks: $55,812 to City Year (Washington, D.C.).
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To encourage policy makers to provide long-term assistance and training to non-English-speaking immigrants affected by the September 11 attacks: $25,000 to International Center in New York (New York, N.Y.).
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JOHN S. AND JAMES L. KNIGHT FOUNDATION
1 Biscayne Tower, Suite 3800, 2 South Biscayne Boulevard
Miami, Fla. 33131
(305) 908-2600
http://www.knightfdn.org
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To provide direct services to people who have been most affected by the events of September 11 and by the weakened economy: $10,000,000 to be divided among 246 nonprofit groups in the 26 U.S. communities in which the foundation makes local grants.
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To aid victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks in New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington: $5,000,000 to nonprofit rescue and relief organizations.
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For memorial efforts to honor the passengers of United Airlines Flight 93, who died during an apparent attempt to disrupt the September 11 hijacking: up to $500,000.
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KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS
1 Columbus Plaza
New Haven, Conn. 06510-3325
(203) 772-2130
info@kofc.org
http://www.kofc.org
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To provide emergency cash assistance through its Heroes Fund to 334 families of firefighters, police officers, and emergency personnel killed in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks: $1,000,000.
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KORET FOUNDATION
33 New Montgomery Street, Suite 1090
San Francisco, Calif. 94105
(415) 882-7740; fax (415) 882-7775
koret@koretfoundation.org
http://www.koretfoundation.org
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To support emergency-assistance organizations and other nonprofit health and human-service groups providing disaster-relief services to victims of the terrorist attacks in New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington: $150,000 to the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks through the national chapter's Liberty Fund: $100,000 to American Red Cross–Bay Area Chapter (San Francisco, Calif.).
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KRESGE FOUNDATION
P.O. Box 3151
Troy, Mich. 48007-3151
(248) 643-9630; fax (248) 643-0588
http://www.kresge.org
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To help establish the $30-million September 11, 2001 Nonprofit Recovery Fund: $2,000,000 to Nonprofit Finance Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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To expand its Bridging Differences Initiative in the wake of the September 11 attacks: $750,000 challenge grant to Community Foundation for the National Capital Region (Washington, D.C.).
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LEVI STRAUSS FOUNDATION
1155 Battery Street, LS7
San Francisco, Calif. 94111
lsf@levi.com
http://www.levistrauss.com/responsibility/foundation/grants/index.htm
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For the Families of Freedom Scholarship Fund to provide undergraduate scholarships for the spouses and children of people injured or killed as a result of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $500,000 to Citizens' Scholarship Foundation of America (St. Peter, Minn.).
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LILLY ENDOWMENT
P.O. Box 88068
Indianapolis, Ind. 46208-0068
(317) 924-5471; fax (317) 926-4431
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $10,000,000 each to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.) and the Salvation Army (Alexandria, Va.).
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To support emergency-assistance organizations and other nonprofit health and human-service groups providing disaster-relief services to victims of the terrorist attacks in New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington: $10,000,000 to the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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LIZ CLAIBORNE FOUNDATION
1440 Broadway
New York, N.Y. 10018
(212) 626-5704; fax (212) 626-5304
http://www.lizclaiborne.com/lizinc/foundation/default.asp
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To benefit the families of firemen, policemen, emergency medical personnel, and other public-safety and government workers injured or killed in the September 11 terrorist attacks: $1,000,000 to New York State Public/Private Initiatives, Twin Towers Fund (New York, N.Y.). In addition, Liz Claiborne will match all employee gifts to the disaster-relief efforts, and has donated apparel for rescue workers and victims of the attacks.
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LUCILLE LORTEL FOUNDATION
322 Eighth Avenue, 21st Floor
New York, N.Y. 10001
(212) 924-2817; fax (212) 989-0036
grants@lortel.org
http://www.lortel.org
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To provide operating support to 49 small and mid-size nonprofit theaters in New York City that were affected by the attacks on the World Trade Center: $1,000,000.
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LOWE'S COMPANIES
P.O. Box 1111
North Wilkesboro, N.C. 28656
http://www.lowes.com
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $1,000,000 to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.). Lowe's also matched all employee contributions to organizations involved in the disaster-relief efforts, and provided face masks and gloves to rescue and relief workers.
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HENRY LUCE FOUNDATION
111 West 50th Street, Suite 4601
New York, N.Y. 10020
(212) 489-7700; fax (212) 581-9541
hlf@hluce.org
http://www.hluce.org
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For September 11th: History Responds, a program to provide historical perspective after the World Trade Center attacks: $400,000 to New-York Historical Society (New York, N.Y.).
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LUMINA FOUNDATION FOR EDUCATION
30 South Meridian Street
Indianapolis, Ind. 46204-3503
(317) 951-5704; fax (317) 951-5063
http://www.luminafoundation.org
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To create the Families of Freedom Scholarship Fund to provide undergraduate scholarships for the spouses and children of people injured or killed as a result of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $2,000,000 and $1,000,000 challenge grant, respectively, to Citizens' Scholarship Foundation of America (St. Peter, Minn.).
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JOHN D. AND CATHERINE T. MACARTHUR FOUNDATION
140 South Dearborn Street, Suite 1100
Chicago, Ill. 60603
(312) 726-8000
http://www.macfound.org
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To help Frontline, a network series, to quickly produce documentaries on background issues related to the September 11 terrorist attacks, as part of a $5-million dollar commitment: $500,000 to Public Broadcasting Service (Washington, D.C.).
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To explore ways to preserve the stability of nations and regions in Central and Southwest Asia in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks, as part of a $5-million commitment: $400,000 to the International Crisis Group (Brussels, Belgium).
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To help finance foreign correspondents reporting on the war in Afghanistan, as part of a $5-million commitment to issues related to the September 11 terrorist attacks: $400,000 to National Public Radio (Washington, D.C.).
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To convene key congressional members from both parties for a series of seminars related to the September 11 terrorist attacks, as part of a $5-million commitment: $300,000 to Aspen Institute Congressional Seminars (Washington, D.C.).
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To analyze and make policy recommendations about managing national security-related pressures on federal and state budgets and social programs in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks, as part of a $5-million commitment: $250,000 to Center for Budget and Policy Priorities (Washington, D.C.).
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To conduct research on how the September 11 terrorist attacks have affected federal spending: $250,000 to Center on Budget and Policy Priorities (Washington, D.C.).
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To monitor refugees and the effects of the war in Afghanistan on civilians abroad, and to monitor the potential backlash on Muslims and other ethnic groups in America, as part of a $5-million commitment to issues related to the September 11 terrorist attacks: $250,000 to Human Rights Watch (New York, N.Y.).
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To study how individuals readjusted their lives in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks, and how they react to subsequent efforts to combat terrorism: $220,000 to National Opinion Research Center (Chicago, Ill.).
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To organize a coalition of organizations to address issues raised by anti-terrorism legislation, as part of a $5-million commitment to issues related to the September 11 terrorist attacks: $200,000 to Center for National Security Studies (Washington, D.C.).
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To send two three-person teams to the Afghanistan region to monitor and document the human-rights situation, particularly to expedite the provision of food, medicine, and shelter to refugees, as part of a $5-million commitment to issues related to the September 11 terrorist attacks: $200,000 to Physicians for Human Rights (Boston, Mass.).
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For projects that link independent journalists, analysts, and news media from Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran, and the Central Asian states, in order to generate information and pave the way for an independent news media in the event of a political transition in Afghanistan, as part of a $5-million commitment to issues related to the September 11 terrorist attacks: $130,000 to Institute for War and Peace Reporting (London, England).
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For work related to technical and diplomatic issues concerning nuclear materials in Pakistan, and for a project to examine threats to regional stability and the capacity of nations to deal with those threats, as part of a $5-million commitment to issues related to the September 11 terrorist attacks: $130,000 to the Carnegie Endowment of Washington (Washington, D.C.).
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To assess the risk that terrorists might gain control of weapons of mass destruction, including chemical and biological weapons, from weakened nations, as part of a $5-million commitment to issues related to the September 11 terrorist attacks: $100,000 to the Monterey Institute (Monterey, Calif.).
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To investigate topics related to the September 11 terrorist attacks, and to create a task force including Arab-Americans and other immigrants to assess and discuss the implications of the attacks for Chicago, as part of a $5-million commitment: $100,000 to the Chicago Council on Foreign Relations (Chicago, Ill.).
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For a project to reduce incidents of hate crime, as part of a $5-million commitment to issues related to the September 11 terrorist attacks: $65,000 to Chicago Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law (Chicago, Ill.).
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MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
245 Park Avenue
New York, N.Y. 10167
http://mlb.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/mlb/homepage/mlb_homepage.jsp
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To establish this disaster-relief fund to assist victims of the September 11 attacks: $5,000,000 to MLB-MLBPA Disaster Relief Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL PLAYERS ASSOCIATION
12 East 49th Street, 24th Floor
New York, N.Y. 10017
http://bigleaguers.yahoo.com
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To establish this disaster-relief fund to assist victims of the September 11 attacks: $5,000,000 to MLB-MLBPA Disaster Relief Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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MARSH & MCLENNAN COMPANIES
1166 Avenue of the Americas
New York, N.Y. 10036
(212) 345-5000
http://www.marshmac.com
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To establish this fund to benefit employees affected by the September 11 tragedy: $10,000,000 to MMC Victims Relief Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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ROBERT R. MCCORMICK TRIBUNE FOUNDATION
435 North Michigan Avenue, Suite 770
Chicago, Ill. 60611
(312) 222-3512
http://www.rrmtf.org
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To establish its Disaster Relief Fund to assist victims of the September 11 attacks: $2,500,000 challenge grant.
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For disaster-relief centers set up in response to the September 11 terrorist attacks: $500,000 to Brooklyn Bureau of Community Service (Brooklyn, N.Y.).
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For the Community Relief and Revitalization Initiative in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $500,000 to Asian American Federation of New York (New York, N.Y.).
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For the Families of Freedom Scholarship Fund, which provides higher-education scholarships to youths directly affected by the September 11 terrorist attacks: $500,000 to Citizens' Scholarship Foundation of America (St. Peter, Minn.).
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For the Lower Manhattan Small Business and Workforce Retention Project, designed to sustain businesses affected by the attacks on the World Trade Center: $500,000 to Structured Employment Economic Development Corporation (SEEDCO) (New York, N.Y.).
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To coordinate and distribute donated food to needy victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $500,000 to Community Food Bank of New Jersey (Hillside, N.J.).
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To provide case-management and victim services and emergency cash assistance to immigrant and low-income families affected by the September 11 attacks: $500,000 to the Children's Aid Society (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide case-management services and emergency cash assistance to immigrant and low-wage workers who lost their jobs as a result of the September 11 attacks: $500,000 to Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of New York (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide counseling and social services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $500,000 to Safe Horizon (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks in New York and Washington: $500,000 to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.).
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To provide emergency financial assistance and counseling to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $500,000 to Community Service Society of New York (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide emergency food assistance to victims and their families, rescue workers, and low-income displaced workers in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $500,000 each to City Harvest (New York, N.Y.) and Food for Survival (New York, N.Y.) and $150,000 to Island Harvest (Mineola, N.Y.).
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To provide employment assistance and services to people whose livelihoods were affected by the September 11 terrorist attacks: $500,000 to Federation Employment and Guidelines Services (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide job training and placement services to workers displaced by the September 11 attacks: $500,000 to YWCA of the City of New York (New York, N.Y.) and $100,000 to Jewish Vocational Service of Essex County (East Orange, N.J.).
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For case-management, employment, and victim services for workers displaced by the September 11 attacks: $425,000 to Federation Employment and Guidelines Services (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide grants, loans, and other assistance to small businesses in lower Manhattan that were affected by the attacks on the World Trade Center: $425,000 to Structured Employment Economic Development Corporation (Seedco) (New York, N.Y.).
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For Project Ayuda to provide disaster-relief services to people affected by the September 11 terrorist attacks: $400,000 to Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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For the Disaster Relief Employment Program in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $400,000 to Brooklyn Bureau of Community Service (Brooklyn, N.Y.).
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For the Disaster Relief Small Businesses and Jobs Program in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $400,000 to Asian Americans for Equality (New York, N.Y.).
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For the Disaster Relief Workforce Development Initiative in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $400,000 to Asian American Federation of New York (New York, N.Y.).
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To assist victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks, including low-income, displaced workers: $400,000 to the Hispanic Federation (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide counseling and emergency services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $350,000 each to Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of New York (New York, N.Y.) and Children's Aid Society (New York, N.Y.), and $150,000 to Family Service League (Huntington, N.Y.).
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To provide emergency financial assistance to individuals and families affected by the September 11 terrorist attacks: $350,000 to Salvation Army–National Capital and Virginia Division (Washington, D.C.) and $50,000 to Windows of Hope Family Relief Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide services to victims and volunteers in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $350,000 to Salvation Army of Greater New York (New York, N.Y.).
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For an emergency financial-assistance program for low-wage workers displaced by the September 11 attacks: $300,000 to Community Service Society of New York (New York, N.Y.).
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For its Disaster Relief Fund for victims of the September 11 attacks: $300,000 to Safe Horizon (New York, N.Y.).
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For job programs and support services for low-income workers and families displaced by the September 11 attacks: $300,000 to Chinese-American Planning Council (New York, N.Y.).
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To benefit the families of New York City police officers and personnel who were injured or killed in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $300,000 to New York City Police Foundation (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide case-management, job-placement, and cash-assistance services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $300,000 to Catholic Charities of Brooklyn & Queens (Brooklyn, N.Y.).
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To provide disaster-relief services to immigrants in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $300,000 to International Institute of New Jersey (Jersey City, N.J.).
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $300,000 to Jewish Board of Family and Children's Services (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide emergency food assistance in response to the September 11 terrorist attacks: $300,000 to Long Island Cares (Brentwood, N.Y.).
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To provide employment and referral services and vocational counseling to individuals affected by the September 11 terrorist attacks: $300,000 to Chinatown Manpower Project (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide small loans and technical assistance to small businesses affected by the September 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center: $300,000 to ACCION New York (Brooklyn, N.Y.).
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For job training and placement for workers displaced by the September 11 attacks: $250,000 to Northern Virginia Family Services (Falls Church, Va.).
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To benefit the families of firefighters and police officers who died in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $250,000 to New York Police and Fire Widows' & Children's Benefit Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide college scholarships to the children of federal employees killed or injured in the September 11 terrorist attacks: $250,000 to Federal Employee Education & Assistance Fund (Littleton, Colo.).
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To provide emergency cash assistance to low-income workers displaced by the September 11 attacks: $250,000 to Federation of Protestant Welfare Agencies (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide emergency financial assistance and employment services to low-income workers affected by the September 11 terrorist attacks: $250,000 to Community Family Life Service (Washington, D.C.).
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To provide emergency food supplies to low-income families and individuals whose livelihoods were affected by the September 11 terrorist attacks: $250,000 to Capital Area Food Bank (Washington, D.C.).
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To provide mentor and counseling services to disadvantaged children directly affected by the September 11 terrorist attacks: $250,000 to Big Brothers Big Sisters of New York City (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide technical assistance and emergency cash grants to small businesses affected by the September 11 attacks: $250,000 to Women's Venture Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide relief services to victims of the September 11 attacks, including cash assistance for displaced workers: $240,000 to Catholic Family and Community Services (New York, N.Y.).
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For counseling services for individuals and families affected by the September 11 attacks: $200,000 to Long Island Council of Churches (Hempstead, N.Y.), $170,000 to William Wendt Center for Loss and Healing (Washington, D.C.), and $40,000 to Harlem Dowling Westside Center for Children and Family Services (New York, N.Y.).
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For programs for individuals and groups affected by the September 11 terrorist attacks: $200,000 to William Wendt Center for Loss and Healing (Washington, D.C.) and $150,000 to National Conference of Christians and Jews (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide counseling and emergency assistance to victims and rescue workers affected by the September 11 terrorist attacks: $200,000 to John Jay College Foundation (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide emergency financial assistance and job-placement services for victims of the September 11 attack on the Pentagon: $200,000 to Lutheran Social Services of the National Capital Area (Washington, D.C.).
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To provide emergency financial assistance and services to people affected by the September 11 terrorist attacks: $200,000 to Northern Virginia Family Service (Falls Church, Va.) and $160,000 to Center for Multicultural Human Services (Falls Church, Va.).
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To provide services to children affected by the September 11 terrorist attacks: $200,000 to Interfaith Neighbors (New York, N.Y.).
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To support emergency-services personnel in the wake of the September 11 attacks: $200,000 to Regional Emergency Medical Services Council of New York City (New York, N.Y.).
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For its disaster-relief program in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $160,000 to Big Brothers Big Sisters of Nassau County (Fernandina Beach, N.Y.).
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For the Open Heart–Open Mind Program to provide school-based mental-health services to children in the wake of the September 11 attacks: $150,000 to Partnership with Children (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide emergency food assistance to victims, rescue workers, and displaced workers in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks: $150,000 to Regional Food Bank of Northeastern New York (Latham, N.Y.).
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To provide services to children, families, and schools affected by the September 11 terrorist attacks: $150,000 to North Shore Child and Family Guidance Center (Roslyn Heights, N.Y.).
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To provide services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $150,000 to Family and Children's Association (Mineola, N.Y.).
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For services to youths and youth organizations affected by the September 11 attacks: $125,000 and $18,306, respectively, to Partnership for After School Education (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide counseling to victims of the September 11 terrorist attack on the Pentagon: $125,000 to Family and Child Services of Washington, D.C. (Washington, D.C.).
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To provide emergency financial assistance and employment services to workers displaced by the September 11 attacks: $125,000 to Community Services Agency of the Metro Washington Council, AFL-CIO (Washington, D.C.).
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For emergency assistance for workers displaced by the September 11 attacks: $100,000 each to Reston Interfaith (Reston, Va.) and Tenants' Support Committee (Alexandria, Va.).
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For peer-support groups and school- and community-based services in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $100,000 to Arab American Family Support Center (Brooklyn, N.Y.).
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For the Mentoring 9-11 Program: $100,000 to One to One, the National Mentoring Partnership (Alexandria, Va.).
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To provide disaster-relief services to individuals and families affected by the September 11 terrorist attacks: $100,000 to Westchester Jewish Community Service (White Plains, N.Y.).
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To provide job training and placement services to people directly affected by the September 11 terrorist attacks: $100,000 to HELP USA (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide legal services to individuals directly affected by the September 11 attacks: $100,000 to Legal Services of Northern Virginia (Falls Church, Va.).
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To provide mental-health services to victims, their families, and relief workers in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $100,000 to Disaster Psychiatric Outreach (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide services to disabled people in the wake of the September 11 attacks: $100,000 to Center for the Independence of the Disabled of New York (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $100,000 each to Child Care Council of Nassau (Franklin Square, N.Y.) and Child Care Council of Suffolk (Commack, N.Y.).
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To provide legal services to people affected by the September 11 attacks: $75,000 to Queens Legal Services Corporation (Queens, N.Y.).
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For a scholarship fund for the children of victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks, with an emphasis on the children of firefighters and police officers: $50,000 to Fordham U. (New York, N.Y.).
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For scholarships for the children of military personnel killed in the September 11 attacks: $50,000 to Retired Officers Association Scholarship Fund (Alexandria, Va.).
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For victim services and training to families and caregivers affected by the September 11 terrorist attacks: $50,000 to Blanton-Peale Institute (New York, N.Y.).
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To assist immigrant workers affected by the September 11 terrorist attacks: $50,000 to Committee Against Anti-Asian Violence (New York, N.Y.).
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To assist low-income, elderly people directly affected by the September 11 terrorist attacks: $50,000 to Centro Gerontologico Latino (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide assistance to the families of broadcast engineers killed in the September 11 terrorist attacks: $50,000 to Harold Ennes Scholarship Trust Fund (Indianapolis, Ind.).
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To provide cash assistance to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $50,000 each to Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund (New York, N.Y.) and Carr Futures World Trade Center Memorial Fund (Chicago, Ill.).
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To provide disaster-relief services to businesses and individuals affected by the September 11 terrorist attacks: $50,000 to Queens County Overall Economic Development Corporation (Kews Garden, N.Y.).
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To provide disaster-relief services to children and families affected by the September 11 terrorist attacks: $50,000 to Mercy Corps International (Portland, Ore.).
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To provide education assistance to the children of victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $50,000 to Aon Memorial Education Fund (Chicago, Ill.).
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To provide emergency financial assistance and other services to workers displaced by the September 11 attacks: $50,000 to United Community Ministries (Alexandria, Va.).
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To provide services to children affected by the September 11 attacks: $50,000 to Peninsula Counseling Center (Woodmere, N.Y.).
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For advocacy and support services for immigrant workers displaced by the September 11 attacks: $25,000 to Greater New York Labor-Religion Coalition (New York, N.Y.).
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For its efforts to support families affected by the September 11 terrorist attacks: $25,000 to Children's Museum of Manhattan, Growth Through Art & Museum Experience (New York, N.Y.).
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To provide tuition assistance to current and future students who lost family members or whose parents lost jobs as a direct result of the September 11 attacks: $25,000 to Fordham Preparatory School (Fordham, N.Y.).
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To subsidize hotel expenses for families traveling to Washington to identify, victims of the September 11 terrorist attack on the Pentagon or to attend funerals for those who were killed: $25,000 to USO (Washington, D.C.).
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To coordinate services among nonprofit organizations assisting victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $10,000 to Health and Welfare Council of Long Island (Hempstead, N.Y.).
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To provide emergency cash assistance to workers displaced by the September 11 attacks: $5,000 to Good Shepherd Housing (Alexandria, Va.).
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MEADOWS FOUNDATION
3003 Swiss Avenue
Dallas, Tex. 75204-6090
(214) 826-9431; fax (214) 827-7042
http://www.mfi.org
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For a public-awareness campaign to encourage local philanthropic giving to area nonprofit groups in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks: $150,000 to Salvation Army of Dallas (Dallas, Tex.).
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ANDREW W. MELLON FOUNDATION
140 East 62nd Street
New York, N.Y. 10021
(212) 838-8400
http://www.mellon.org
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To assist cultural and performing-arts organizations in New York City that were directly affected by the events of September 11, as part of the foundation's special $50-million commitment to such groups: approximately $28,000,000 to be distributed among 46 performing-arts groups, 12 museums, the City's three circulating library systems, and the Research Libraries of the New York Public Library (New York, N.Y.).
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To assist cultural and performing-arts organizations in New York City that were directly affected by the events of September 11, as part of the foundation's special $50-million commitment to such groups: $6,600,000 to be distributed among 29 musuems and related organizations in New York City.
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To assist public parks and related organizations, including zoos and botanical gardens, in New York City that were directly affected by the events of September 11, as part of the foundation's special $50-million commitment to such groups: $5,800,000 to be distributed among City Parks Foundation and other nonprofit groups (New York, N.Y.).
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To make grants to small and mid-sized performing-arts organizations in New York City that were directly affected by the events of September 11, as part of the foundation's special $50-million commitment to such groups: $2,650,000 each to Alliance of Resident Theatres/New York (New York, N.Y.), American Music Center (New York, N.Y.), and New York Foundation for the Arts (New York, N.Y.).
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MERCK & COMPANY
1 Merck Drive
Whitehouse Station, N.J. 08889-0100
http://www.merck.com
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To provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 attacks: $5,000,000 to be divided among American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.) and the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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MERRILL LYNCH FOUNDATION
c/o Community Relations
2 World Financial Center, Sixth Floor
New York, N.Y. 10281
(212) 614-5277
http://philanthropy.ml.com
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To match employee gifts of up to $1,500 to one of these disaster-relief funds: $10,000,000 to be distributed among New York Police and Fire Widows' & Children's Benefit Fund (New York, N.Y.); New York State Public/Private Initiatives, Twin Towers Fund (New York, N.Y.); and the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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METROPOLITAN LIFE FOUNDATION
1 Madison Avenue
New York, N.Y. 10010-3690
http://www.metlife.com/Companyinfo/Community/Found
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To benefit the families of firefighters, policemen, emergency medical personnel, and other rescue workers who died as a result of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $1,000,000 to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.).
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MICROSOFT CORPORATION
Corporate Contributions
1 Microsoft Way
Redmond, Wash. 98052-6399
(206) 936-8185
http://www.microsoft.com/giving
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To support emergency-assistance organizations and other nonprofit health and human-service groups providing disaster-relief services to victims of the terrorist attacks in New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington: $5,000,000 cash, and software and technical services valued at $5,000,000, respectively, to the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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J.P. MORGAN CHASE & COMPANY
1 Chase Manhattan Plaza, Fifth Floor
New York, N.Y. 10081
http://www.jpmorganchase.com
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To support individuals and organizations affected by the September 11 attacks: $10,000,000 to various nonprofit groups and relief organizations.
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J.P. MORGAN CHASE FOUNDATION
1 Chase Manhattan Plaza, Fifth Floor
New York, N.Y. 10081
(212) 552-1112
http://www.jpmorganchase.com
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For a 1-to-1 match of donations from current and former employees to organizations providing disaster-relief services in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks: $2,700,000.
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MORGAN STANLEY
Morgan Stanley Community Affairs
1221 Avenue of the Americas, 27th Floor
New York, N.Y. 10020
(212) 762-6484
http://www.morganstanley.com
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To establish the Victims Relief Fund, to support emergency-assistance and other nonprofit rescue and relief organizations, and to match all employee gifts to aid victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: at least $10,000,000.
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CHARLES STEWART MOTT FOUNDATION
Office of Proposal Entry
1200 Mott Foundation Building
Flint, Mich. 48502-1851
(810) 238-5651; fax (810) 766-1753
info@mott.org
http://www.mott.org
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To support emergency-assistance organizations and other nonprofit health and human-service groups providing disaster-relief services to victims of the terrorist attacks in New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington: $1,000,000 to the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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In recognition of local fund-raising efforts for national disaster relief related to the September 11 attacks: $300,000 each to American Red Cross–Genesee/Lapeer Chapter (Flint, Mich.) and United Way of Genesee County (Flint, Mich.) and $100,000 to the Salvation Army (Flint, Mich.).
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To make after-school programs available in schools located near "Ground Zero" in lower Manhattan through the end of the 2002-03 school year: $300,000 to the After-School Corporation (New York, N.Y.).
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In recognition of fund-raising efforts conducted by Flint-area firefighters and police officers for emergency personnel involved in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks: $200,000 to Community Foundation of Greater Flint, 100 Club of Flint Endowment (Flint, Mich.).
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To make the transition from a volunteer-based to permanent staff and to expand its educational outreach and cultural programs, particularly in an effort to prevent backlash toward Arab-Americans in the wake of the September 11 attacks: $160,137 over three years to American Arab Heritage Council (Flint, Mich.).
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For educational outreach programs designed to foster public understanding of and respect for Arab-Americans and Muslims living in southeastern Michigan: $100,000 over two years to Arab Community Center for Economic and Social Services (Dearborn, Mich.).
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For the American Dream Disaster Relief Fund, which aids owners of small businesses and micro-entrepreneurs in New York City who were affected by the September 11 attacks: $100,000 to ACCION New York (New York, N.Y.).
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For the Campaign for Freedom, a series of public-service announcements to inform Americans and inspire them to support and actively participate in American society in the wake of the September 11 attacks: $100,000 over two years to Advertising Council (New York, N.Y.).
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For the Campaign for Freedom Fund, a two-year, $3-million program designed to help Americans cope with the threat of terrorism through timely and relevant public-service announcements: $100,000 to Advertising Council (New York, N.Y.).
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For "Transition Within Tradition: Restoring Women's Participation in Afghanistan," a series of public-policy activities promoting women's rights within the context of Afghan and Islamic culture and their involvement in any transitional Afghan government: $40,000 to Harvard U. (Cambridge, Mass.).
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For its programs that place professional artists in classrooms in order to teach young children about art and the creative process, and for special programs that address children's concerns and fears about the events of September 11: $30,000 to Studio in a School Association (New York, N.Y.).
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NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE PLAYERS ASSOCIATION
2021 L Street, N.W., Suite 600
Washington, D.C. 20036
(202) 463-2200 or (800) 372-2000
http://www.nflpa.org
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To establish this disaster-relief fund for victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks jointly with the National Football League: at least $5,000,000 to NFL-NFLPA Disaster Relief Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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NATIONWIDE FOUNDATION
1 Nationwide Plaza 1-22-05
Columbus, Ohio 43215-2220
(614) 249-5095
http://www.nationwide.com/about_us/involve/fndatn.htm
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To assist victims of disasters worldwide, and to provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $500,000 and $500,000 over five years, respectively, to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.).
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NEC CORPORATION
NEC USA
8 Corporate Center Drive
Melville, N.Y. 11747
http://www.nec.com
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To support emergency-assistance organizations and other nonprofit health and human-service groups providing disaster-relief services to victims of the terrorist attacks in New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington: $700,000 to the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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NEC FOUNDATION OF AMERICA
8 Corporate Center Drive
Melville, N.Y. 11747
(516) 753-7021; fax (516) 753-7096
foundation@necfoundation.org
http://www.necfoundation.org
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For the Families of Freedom Scholarship Fund to provide undergraduate scholarships for the spouses and children of people injured or killed as a result of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $300,000 to Citizens' Scholarship Foundation of America (St. Peter, Minn.).
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NEW YORK COMMUNITY TRUST
2 Park Avenue
New York, N.Y. 10016-9385
(212) 686-0010
http://www.nycommunitytrust.org
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For the September 11th Fund, a program the trust started in collaboration with the United Way of New York City in order to provide disaster-relief services to victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks: $2,000,000.
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NEW YORK LIFE FOUNDATION
51 Madison Avenue
New York, N.Y. 10010-1655
(212) 576-7341
http://www.newyorklife.com/foundation
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To support emergency-assistance organizations and other nonprofit health and human-service groups providing disaster-relief services to victims of the terrorist attacks in New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington: $3,000,000 to the September 11th Fund (New York, N.Y.).
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To match employee gifts to the American Red Cross for relief efforts in response to the September 11 terrorist attacks in New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington: at least $1,000,000 to American Red Cross, Liberty Fund (Washington, D.C.).
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NEW YORK WOMEN'S FOUNDATION
34 West 22nd Street
New York, N.Y. 10010
(212) 414-4342; fax (212) 414-5708
info@nywf.org
http://www.nywf.org
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For emergency financial assistance and to hire two women to provide workshops and counseling on childhood trauma to help parents and others deal with how the September 11 attacks, as well as to cover financial losses the group incurred because of the disruptions caused by the attacks: $15,000 to Maura Clarke-Ita Ford Center (Brooklyn, N.Y.).
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For its 911 Media Training and Technical Assistance Program, designed to raise the visibility in the the news media of women, Muslims, Arab-Americans, immigrants, and minorities, as well as advocates of peace, in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks: $15,000 to We Interrupt This Message (Harlem, N.Y.).
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To assist Latina, Afro-Caribbean, and Eastern-European immigrants who were affected by the attacks on the World Trade Center: $15,000 to National Mobilization Against Sweatshops (Brooklyn, N.Y.).
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To carry out an emergency-response plan that will take into account the needs of Chinatown residents affected by the September 11 attacks: $15,000 to Chinese Staff and Workers Association (New York, N.Y.).
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To conduct interviews with 40 women experiencing domestic violence to better understand the impact of the September 11 attacks on their lives and their survival strategies; and to analyze changes in the Weapon Related Injury Surveillance Survey data, as well as child-abuse reports and calls to the police and domestic-violence hotlines after September 11: $15,000 to Urban Justice Center, Family Violence Project (New York, N.Y.).
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To develop emergency guidelines for staff members and to help women with HIV/AIDS and their families who are experiencing increased emotional stress after the September 11 attacks: $15,000 to Iris House (Harlem, N.Y.).
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To enable it to continue its weekly performance-arts workshops at three community facilities affected by September 11 attacks: $15,000 to Creative Alternatives of New York (New York, N.Y.).
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To engage young people in intercultural dialogues, to train them in conflict resolution, and to show them how to encourage the news media to raise awareness about the effects of the September 11 attacks; and to continue counseling services at high schools and its community center: $15,000 to South Asian Youth Action/Peace & Unity Project (Queens, N.Y.).
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To hire a temporary staff member to respond to increased requests for information about Arab-Americans, news-media interviews, and translation and interpretation services; to assist with interfaith collaborations; and to meet increased demands from families in need of information, counseling, and assistance in bias incidents after the September 11 attacks: $15,000 to A
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