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The Campus Remembers and Responds

campus memorial service

The crowd for the campus memorial service covered Memorial Glade, north of Doe Library, and filled windows and balconies of adjacent campus buildings. Peg Skorpinski photo

The Campus Memorial Service
On September 17, more than 12,000 members of the campus community joined to mourn and reflect on the terror of September 11. Some brought flowers, others raised flags and signs of peace—all sought the solace of a community devoted to reason and tolerance. Chancellor Robert M. Berdahl told the crowd, "Let those of us who hold the candle of learning in our hands, hold firm in the vigil for freedom and reasoned discourse." Photos and coverage of the memorial service


A joint special issue of the Berkeleyan and the Daily Californian

Mark Bingham Memorial Service

Campus honors alum Mark Bingham, one of passengers aboard hijacked flight brought down over Pennsylvania
(Berkeleyan, 26 Sept.)

Chancellor Berdahl's remarks at the Mark Bingham memorial service

On the Berkeley Campus

International & Area Studies: Berkeley responds with reasoned discourse

Bill Clinton: education, economic development key to building a peaceful, global village

Spring semester courses related to events of issues of Sept. 11

Coping with trauma: The Tang Center provides resources and advice on when and how to seek help

Scholarly community mobilizes to do what it does best — educate its students and the public

Students, scholars, clergy explore alternatives to violent response

Cal athletes honor September 11 victims

Related News

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Better pay for airport screeners improves job performance, reduces turnover, say UC Berkeley researchers

Positive emotions, including laughter are important paths out of trauma, according to UC Berkeley psychologist

Web site created by Berkeley professor, students helped public learn if loved ones were safe following Sept. 11 attacks.