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Barnard's Annual Awards Dinner Honoring Martha Stewart and Charles R. Lee of Verizon Communications Raises Record $1.3 Million for College Financial Aid Programs


President Judith Shapiro with 14th Annual Award Dinner Honorees Martha Stewart, Chairman and CEO of Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, Inc., and Charles R.. Lee, Chairman and co-CEO, Verizon Communications
Photo By Joseph Pineiro

NEW YORK, N.Y., March 30, 2001 -- Barnard College's Annual Awards Dinner honoring Martha Stewart, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, Inc. and Charles R. Lee, Chairman and co-Chief Executive Officer of Verizon Communications, raised a record $1.3 million for college financial aid programs.

Dubbed "Barnard's version of the Academy Awards," Thursday's event drew 600 guests to the Grand Ballroom of the Waldorf-Astoria, and was the most successful ever in the dinner's 14-year history, beating last year's record of $1.1 million.

"We are very fortunate to have broad support from the New York City corporate community in honor of Chuck Lee and Martha Stewart," said Gayle Robinson, Chair of Barnard's Board of Trustees. "Corporate sponsorship is vital for building the institution's reputation throughout the United States."

President Judith Shapiro, in thanking the sponsors of the dinner, noted: "Providing a first-rate liberal arts education is a labor-intensive enterprise. Great colleges like Barnard are the creations and achievements of philanthropy. We are here because of you."


Seven Barnard women who believe in a bright future for the College gather at the 14th Annual Awards Dinner at the Waldorf-Astoria: (from left to right) Gayle F. Robinson '75, Chair, Barnard Board of Trustees; Lisa Reimer '02, student speaker and financial aid recipient; President Judith Shapiro; Martha Stewart '63, this year's recipient of the Iphigene Ochs Sulzberger Award; Helene L. Kaplan '53, Chair Emerita of Barnard's Board of Trustees and one of the Dinner Chairmen; Rosa V. Alonso '82, President, Associate Alumnae of Barnard College, and the Dinner's emcee; and Sugeni Perez '01, student speaker and financial aid recipient.
Photo By Joseph Pineiro

Martha Stewart was introduced by Sharon Patrick, President and Chief Operating Officer of Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia Inc., who recalled meeting Stewart in 1993 while climbing Mount Kilimanjaro - and said she has been climbing peaks with her ever since. Patrick said Stewart's flair started early; her high school year book included the line: "she does what she please, and she does it with ease." Juggling multiple assignments also started early, Patrick said, noting that during her college years Stewart worked as a model as well as being housekeeper and cook to a family on Fifth Avenue.

Stewart, a member of Barnard's class of 1963, received a standing ovation as she walked to the stage to receive from President Shapiro the etched-glass Iphigene Ochs Sulzberger Award, named for the alumna and civic leader. She is the first Barnard alumna to receive the award.

Stewart recalled a "rocky" start to the beginning of her Barnard career. On the day of her admissions interview, she mistakenly missed her stop, and got off at 125th and Lenox Avenue, clambering over rock cliffs in her pleated skirt to reach the College's campus on Morningside Heights. "I found out there were cliffs at Barnard College," she quipped. But once on campus, she said, "Barnard was my choice from that moment."

"What I try to do every single day is to learn," Stewart said. "At Barnard, I really learned how to corral my curiosity and direct it in many areas of study. My motto is learn something every day, because you can't teach if you don't learn."

Lee received the Frederick A.P. Barnard Award, named for the tenth president of Columbia University and an early proponent of women's education. Lee assumed his current post in June 2000 after the merger of GTE Corporation and Bell Atlantic, and previously served as chairman and chief executive officer of GTE Corp.

He was introduced by golf partner and friend Philip Laskawy, Chairman and CEO of Ernst & Young LLP and Chairman of Ernst & Young International, who noted that Lee began his business career at the age of 10 by selling vegetables door-to-door that he had grown on his family's 50-acre farm in Pennsylvania. "He is truly what America is all about - an individual who started out on a farm and worked his way to the top of the business world."

Lee noted the charitable and civic contributions of Verizon and its 260,000 employees each year: 10 million volunteer hours and millions of dollars to charity, in addition to the $70 million a year from the Verizon Foundation.

Lee said his special passion was literacy, given that 40 million Americans cannot read or write. Illiteracy, he said, cuts across the three most important issues civic leaders say they face: crime, education, and economic development.

Two Barnard students affirmed the importance of financial aid in their own lives: Sugeni Perez '01, whose family immigrated from the Dominican Republic, said she planned to undertake a master's degree in educational policy with the goal of helping close the educational gap between the affluent and the poor; Lisa Reimer '02 told of her passion for classical languages - and her aim of passing that on to students of her own.

Helene L. Kaplan, an emerita trustee who is of counsel to Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, said the dinner reminded her "how glad I am to be a Barnard alumna" and said the scholarship funds are responsible for "the fact that we continue to enroll the best and the brightest students."

Rosa Alonso '82, chair of the Associate Alumnae of Barnard College, stepped in as master of ceremonies after an illness in the family prevented National Public Radio Special Correspondent Susan Stamberg '59 from being there.

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Contact:
Lucas Held, Barnard College, 212-854-2037
Petra Tuomi, Barnard College, 212-854-7907
Penny Van Amburg, Barnard College, 212-854-2947

 

An independent college for women in New York City affiliated with Columbia University