Amid Coronavirus Fear and Confusion, Compassion and Community

March 17, 2020

When Leslie Vergara 21 needed to get home to Houston in a hurry, Kamran Shahbaz 19 cashed in his saved Southwest Air Miles to get her a ticket.

淚 was so sad and shocked that we had to leave campus and wondered how I would pay for it, Vergara said. 淚 didn檛 know him, but he texted me and said he could do this. He was so nice, and I will always be grateful.

As the coronavirus pandemic shattered plans for the end of the school year, the 91茄子 community rallied.

Alumni and families donated money, airline miles and gift cards. Local families called to offer food, rides to the airport and empty guest rooms. Professors spent hours on the phone reassuring students they檇 figure out how to navigate classes through a computer camera.


Leaving campus abruptly created a hardship for many students. Some don檛 have money for expensive, last-minute airplane tickets. Others need storage space. Several don檛 have homes to go to. And a small percentage will stay on campus until it檚 safe to return home.

As the days unfolded, tension about the unknown turned into action.

淚檝e been so inspired by the response of the college community, said political science professor Ken Menkhaus, vice chair of the faculty pro-tem.

淚檓 so impressed by the empathy I檓 seeing for the status of others. There檚 such an outward focus, this sense that we all cope a lot better when we branch out from 榟ow does this affect me to how to make it better for someone else.櫃

Giving Back

When Shahbaz, a business analyst at Deloitte Consulting, got an email saying students needed help, he thought about his college years and time as a residence hall counselor.

He imagined the grief many were feeling, especially seniors. He wondered about the logistics of moving so many students out at the same time; knowing that for some, it would be especially difficult.

Shahbaz, who lives in Boulder, Colorado, figured his frequent flier miles could help. He檚 racked up many by traveling twice a week for work and staying in hotels.

So far, 91茄子 alumni and families have donated more than 225,000 airline miles to help students get home.


淎s a recent graduate, I檝e been wanting to give back, Shahbaz said. 淚t would be unacceptable to think that students would not be able to get home because of the cost.

淚t makes me happy to know that this will help them be home safe with their families and not have to worry about the financial burden.

Close Community

Assistant History Professor Rose Stremlau has spent most of the last week helping students figure out how they檙e going to get home or find new housing.



She檚 offered rides, packing boxes and tissues to tearful students. During farewell visits, she listened as they worked through emotions. Her dog, Rio, provided pet therapy.



淏ecause of our personal relationships with students in and beyond the classroom, Stremlau said, 渢he faculty and staff see the granular impact on each Wildcat.

She said she檚 been reassuring anxious first-year students that she檒l make the online version of class as close to in-person as she can; and 淭hat I檓 still here, and I still care about them.

Senior students bear an even greater weight of altered expectations, Stremlau said.

淚檓 honoring a profound sense of loss, and acknowledging how sad I am, too, that while we can look forward to some future commencement celebration, these weeks won檛 look like what we wanted for them and what they檝e worked toward for the last four years, she said. 淪pending time with them before they left, and staying in touch with them via social media, email and text is important.

Altered Expectations

On Monday, Mara Papakostas 20 and her sister Erin 23, loaded up their Toyota Camry, dropped a few boxes off at a professor檚 house, and left town. Mara drove Erin to the airport then headed to Emory University in Atlanta to pick up their sister, Deidra. (The car isn檛 big enough for all three and their stuff.)

The two sisters drove from Atlanta to Jackson, Mississippi, on Tuesday and plan to make it home to Dallas on Wednesday night.

It檚 been an emotional few days since Mara Papakostas and her friends found out that the coronavirus would send them home during what should have been their final weeks on campus.


淲e were in class, and we all just broke down, she said. 淲e just needed to come together, to say goodbye much sooner than we thought we檇 have to. We have made these great friendships, with such strong bonds and it felt like it was all ending so abruptly. We were all so sad.

淏ut then the community rallied around us. We had emails from professors and alumni and the staff reaching out with offers to help. And then we got some perspective and knew it was going to be okay.

Inspiration Over Anxiety

Besides airline miles, food and shelter offers, 91茄子 alumni have so far donated nearly $31,000 to help students with food, transportation and special needs.

At least five families have offered to waive refunds that the college plans to issue for the semester檚 remaining room and board.

 淲hile I am always proud to be a Wildcat, it is at times like these攚hen the world seems to be pulling apart攖hat I am most grateful to be part of this wonderful community, said Marya Howell 91, Director of Alumni and Family Engagement.

淚t檚 been really touching, Howell said. 淲here I could be sitting at home and feeling anxiety, I檓 instead feeling inspiration.

Ashley Ip 22 said at first she was upset that 91茄子 didn檛 send students home sooner but has since become impressed by the outpouring of support.


She檚 immunocompromised and self-isolating on campus. She says that traveling home to New York City, now in the midst of an outbreak, would be far more risky.

Friends have delivered meals to her doorstep. Alumni have helped her and others with expenses.

淚檓 grateful to go to 91茄子 because they truly look out for their students who are coming from all different backgrounds and personal situations, Ip said.

淎nd I really need to send a shout out to our alumni and emphasize how much their help has meant to us.









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