For more than 40 years, Dollars & Sense has been publishing the very best of Baruch College’s student journalism. Our student journalists meet every week to workshop ideas on how to tell New York stories in new and compelling ways. Being New Yorkers, our aim is to always report stories from our home and keep honest representation as the cornerstone of what we deliver. This year, the 100th anniversary of the Harlem Renaissance gave us an opportunity to focus on New York’s history as well as its future.
We began in October 2019 when we met with archivists at The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture to gather research and ideas. As a National Historic Landmark devoted to the preservation of materials that tell the story of the African-American experience and the African Diaspora, the center provided a rich trove of documents and photographs. When we initially met with Maira Liriano, Associate Chief Librarian, Jean Blackwell Hutson Research and Reference Division, and her colleagues, Cheryl Beredo, Curator – Manuscripts, Archives and Rare Books Division, Tammi Lawson, Curator – Art & Artifacts Division Shola Lynch, Curator – Moving Image and Recorded Sound Division and Michael Mery, Acting Curator – Photographs and Prints Division, we were greeted warmly and introduced to a generous display of photographs, archival prints, manuscripts and literature. With the enthusiastic support of the Schomburg Center, we began.

Over the next few months, our team of student journalists, some of whom have never set foot in Harlem before, attended events marking the 100th anniversary of the Harlem Renaissance, visited its cultural institutions and churches, knocked on doors, and tirelessly worked on building connections in, and knowledge about, the neighborhood.
We did a documentary on the i, Too Arts Collective, a non-profit organization, about its struggle to maintain its location in The Langston Hughes House.
We reported on musicians, music educators and performance artists who believe in the sounds of Harlem. We wrote about The Harlem Writers Guild, a legendary staple of the multigenerational Harlem literary community.
We also set out to examine how Harlem is being affected by New York’s rapidly changing economy and demographics. With the spread of gentrification, we thought it would be important to tell the story of one long-time Harlemite’s fight against foreclosure, as well as a group of individuals who worry that “their” Harlem is slipping away.
This package was conceived and developed by student journalists out of a love for both journalism and New York City, and as part of a mission to tell the Harlem story.
*During the editing process in mid-March 2020, New York City was hit severely by COVID-19. Dollars & Sense, along with Baruch College, shut down physical meetings. Over the next several weeks, we communicated virtually, edited and published this package from our respective homes.

Acknowledgements
This package would not have been possible without the help of Maira Liriano and her many colleagues at the Schomburg Center who welcomed us so warmly and provided the foundation for our stories.
We also want to thank:
–Mo Beasly for serving as a guide to some of our student journalists.
–Kendolyn Walker of the i, Too Arts Collective for trusting our student journalists with telling their story, and for inviting us to An Ode to Langston.
–Profs. Andrea Gabor, Vera Haller and Emily Johnson for their help and advice in the planning and editing of these stories.
Most importantly, we would like to give a sincere thank you to the people of Harlem for giving us their time, their stories and for allowing us to be an extension of their voices.
Kenneth Sousie, Editor-in-Chief of Dollars & Sense.