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In a tent festooned with blue and white ribbons and balloons outside
the Science Center yesterday, students dressed up a life-size cardboard
cutout of Paris Hilton to suit different climates in regions of Israel.
The annual event, known as “Israel Fest,” also featured tables
with falafel, beads with Hebrew letters on them for bracelet-making,
and Israel trivia games to win candy bars.
“The aim is to just have fun and celebrate Israel in a venue
that is not focused on the conflict,” said Amy M. Zelcer ’07, president
of Harvard Students for Israel (HSI), which organized the event.
Mark Warner, a former governor of Virginia, who is on campus
all week as an Institute of Politics (IOP) visiting fellow, also
dropped in on the event.
A possible 2008 Democratic presidential candidate, he did some
informal “meeting and greeting” with students, according to Dana A.
Stern ’09, chair of the Visiting Fellows Program at the IOP.
“While many of the events we scheduled for Governor Warner
have been politics-based, coming to Israel Fest gave him the chance to
interact with students in a fun, informal and relaxed setting,” Stern
said.
Matthew R. Greenfield ’08, vice-chair of the Student Affairs
Committee, said he stayed at Israel Fest for half an hour—longer than
he stayed last year.
“Frankly, last year I was just here for the falafel, but this
year was really outstanding, especially with Mark Warner here, and a
really big crowd,” he said. “It was a nice opportunity for someone like
me who isn’t usually as involved to get a chance to see what makes
Israel on campus so great.”
Zelcer said that Warner’s appearance “drew a lot of people who
wouldn’t normally have been particularly interested in an event to
primarily celebrate Israel.”
Stern agreed, saying Warner “was a tremendous hit with the large crowd.”
Zelcer estimated that HSI’s celebration of Israel’s culture
this year drew “a couple of hundred people” through the course of the
day.
Although many of the students attending were Jewish, there was also a number of non-Jewish students, she said.
“I think some people just stopped by ’cause they were curious...we played music very loudly!” she said.
“It’s fun to see the culture and history of a country that’s in
the news a lot but a lot of people don’t necessarily understand,” said
Eric P. Lesser ’07, president of the Harvard Democrats.
—Staff writer Alexandra C. Bell can be reached at acbell@fas.harvard.edu.
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