LOCAL/S TATE The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 14, 2001-- 5 Muslim students hold meeting to discuss fears, harassment By Jacquelyn Nixon Daily Staff Reporter Reports of verbal harassment and threats of violence moved leaders of the Muslim Student Association to arrange an emergency meeting yesterday evening. Engineering sophomore Irfan Shuttari said the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center Tuesday morning had a direct impact on mem- hers of the MSA. "A guy who graduated from the University was a member of MSA" he said. "He was on the 61st floor of the Trade Center ... When the second plane hit, he collapsed on the floor from the impact." MSA president Asad Tarsin said many mem- AP PHOTO bers of the organization, since they are Ameri- cans but have been associated with these crimes, feel they are dealing with multiple tragedies. "This is doubly charring," he said. "The type of harassment we've received is not from the most rational people. "We have become a support system for one another. ... With such a huge tragedy, this is reassuring to a lot of the Muslims,' Tarsin said. Tarsin said he began feeling campus support beginning at Tuesday night's vigil. "There was a shift in the mood of the crowd," he said. LSA junior Brenda Abdelall, external rela- tions chair of the Arab Student Association, said although many campus groups have shown their support and people are making the distinc- tion between the perpetrators of the crime and Arab-Americans, many Muslim students do not feel comfortable or proud when walking down the street. "As long as that one person is there shouting at us ... there is still negativity, she said. "My biggest fear is that if the men who did this turn out to be Arab or Arab-Muslims, the fire will be ignited again." Tarsin said the visibility of the head scarves is the main.reason why many Muslims women have been targets. At the meeting, some Mus- lim women briefly debated the significance and benefits of potentially removing the scarves, with its religious and cultural connotations. Medical sophomore Sarah Mohiuddin said her brother, a student at Troy High School, reported Muslim girls wearing the scarves at school were harassed by fellow students. "They said 'We're going to kill you and your family,"' Mohiuddin said. Some Muslim students have chosen to stay at home to study, rather than making the trek to the library. Others have walked around in groups for protection. Abdellal said Muslims have created a sense of group security. "We feel isolated, but by getting together, we don't feel so isolated anymore, Abdellal said. In Battle Creek, Harper Creek High School students write messages to the victims of Tuesday's attacks on a sign in the school's cafeteria. Local analysts missing in blasts 1 .1 DETROIT (AP) - Two young ana- lysts from Michigan who worked for an investment management company based in the World Trade Center are missing, the company says. Terence E. Adderley Jr. of Bloom- field Hills, and Brad Hoorn of Richland, worked for Fred Alger Management Inc., which had offices on the 93rd floor of the north tower that toppled Tuesday after a terrorist attack. Hoorn, who graduated from Yale in May, and Adderley had just started with the company, said Hoorn's father, Den- nis Hoorn. "It was just last week that he had told me how happy he was taking that job," he said. Dennis Hoorn said he was not opti- Residents * recount stories of loved ones The Associated Press As word spread that a jet had slammed into the World Trade Center, East Grand Rapids High School grad- uate Kathleen Olin, who lives in New York, feared for her husband; his office was in the building. She was at her Manhattan office 10 blocks away, talking on the telephone to her mother in East Grand Rapids, when through her window she saw a reflection of the second jet smashing into the center's second tower. Then Oher phone went dead, apparently knocked out by the crash. She was unable to call her husband. "I just needed to hear, his voice," Olin told The Grand Rapids Press. Hours would pass before she learned her husband was safe. "I went up to St. Stephen's and I got down on my knees and I gave thanks, and I prayed for those people who l weren't so fortunate." Meredith Lynn Whalen, 23, had landed her dream job as an analyst for a Wall Street company, working in the World Trade Center. Now her half brother Steve Whalen waits in Sault Ste. Marie to learn if she is dead or alive. His sister worked on one of the floors hit by a jet in Tuesday's terrorist attack, he told The Evening News of Sault Ste. Marie. "This was her dream: to get on Wall Street and get involved in the financial markets," Whalen said. He's "hoping for a miracle but expecting the worst." Joe Ganci is mourning the death of his cousin, New York City Fire Chief Peter Ganci. "It's very devastating," Joe Ganci's wife, Mary Ganci, told the Livingston County Daily Press & Argus, of How- ell. When the second building col- lapsed, he was underneath it. Ganci said his death has been espe- cially hard for her sons, who are 13, 11 and 10. She said her husband and their boys recently returned from a visit with their relatives in New York City. "My boys are just distraught," Ganci said. "I just would like people to pray for Joe, Peter and his family." Berneda Fredericks-Brown has mistic about hearing from his son, who he knows went to work Tuesday morn- ing. "If you get down 93 flights of stairs, then you probably should have been able to call by now," Hoorn said. Adderley is the son of Ielly Services Inc. president and chief executive Ter- ence E. Adderley. He was working his first job after graduating from Vander- bilt University in May with a bachelor's degree in economics. The younger Adderley had sent e- mail messages from his office that morning, said Carl Camden, executive vice president and chief operating offi- cer of Kelly, a temporary employment company. Events At LON FRATERNITY een Tappan and E. University) 10:00 p.m., Sunday September 16, 2001 )0 to 7:00 p.m., September 23, 2001 10:00 p.m., Monday, September 24,2001 30 p.m., Thursday, September 27, 2001 or great food and a great time. Call 761-1055 with questions for ., 1