Tag Archives: share our strength

Dinner Wrapped Up

In his previous blogpost, Sean Donegan went into detail about the planning for the fundraiser dinner that he and his peers organized for Share Our Strength. Below, Sean describes the night of the event in detail and how he was pleasantly surprised by the support that the student body expressed:

By: Sean Donegan

The night of the Inaugural Share Our Strength Charity Dinner has arrived! At 7 pm the doors opened and a about 300 Cornell students came in to support us. Before the event began, each of the seven Philanthropy Chairs arrived with their chef’s meal so all food could be safely stored and kept at the proper temperature. By having each Chapter’s representative in the same place, we were also able to coordinate transportation easily.

The Charity Dinner itself sold 345 tickets, bringing in roughly 300 attendees to Alpha Gamma Rho on the night of the dinner. Over 50 people bought tickets to support us even though they had an exam, sporting event, or other prior engagement that evening. No President or Philanthropy Chair mandated that any of their members buy a ticket or even attend the event; everyone that came did it on a voluntary basis. We were surprised by the sheer number of students and Greek Chapters who bought tickets simply to support our activities as well as Share Our Strength and its campaign to fight childhood hunger.

To allow people to carpool and park for free, the Brothers of Alpha Gamma Rho cleared our parking lot to make as many spaces available as possible. In addition to this, many students elected to take taxis to and from the event so more parking spaces would be available to the other guests. Everyone immediately sat down to reserve their seat but due to the excitement in the air, many people eventually got up to catch up with friends and socialize. Probably the only delay in the night’s festivities was getting everyone to break away from their shuffling from group to group and taking their seat for dinner. Continue reading

An Evening of Charity

In his previous blogpost, Sean Donegan introduced the charity dinner he and his peers are putting on to fundraise for Share Our Strength. In the blogpost below, Sean goes into detail about the logistics of organizing such an event so that other like-minded college students who wish to do the same will have an idea of where to begin:

By: Sean Donegan

It’s the night of the event so I will be discreetly ducking out of class early to set my Fraternity House up for the Share Our Strength Charity Dinner. We expect to have over three hundred students at the event along with our corporate sponsors setting up their booths. Our chefs are all busy cooking a huge buffet of chicken and salmon with various side orders that meet the dietary needs of all the individuals who generously donate their time and money to support Share Our Strength. The House’s sound system is also being adjusted for the event’s DJ, Greg Monte.

Each Greek House has taken over the responsibility of one seventh of the ticket sales. This entails allowing their Brothers and Sisters to sign up for the event and then billing them at the end of the semester when they are paying for their room and board. With a group of experienced and dedicated Philanthropy Chairs working with me, I am proud to announce we were able to sell out in only two weeks. I was surprised to learn that many people had bought tickets to support their Fraternity/Sorority and the cause even though they may not be able to attend. Currently we have sold 345 tickets with an estimated 303 attending the actual event which has seating for only 300. If we go over, extra chairs are on reserve to be set up. Continue reading

Sharing Our Strength to End Hunger

Today we feature a guest blog post authored by Sean Donegan, a pre-med student at Cornell University and colleague of Seth Hoffman, author of last year’s Student Summer Series. Sean writes about his upcoming philanthropic venture – organizing a fundraising dinner for the DC-based nonprofit Share Our Strength. Although Share Our Strength (who has blogged for End the Neglect in the past) focuses domestically on childhood hunger in America, NTDs and hunger can be comparable in that they are both problems that affect marginalized populations. Furthermore, NTDs and hunger alike disproportionally impact children, delaying their development and adversely affecting their performance in school, which perpetuates the cycle of poverty. Read on to see what Sean and his peers are doing to help break this cycle:

By: Sean Donegan

It’s 6:00am, I’m riding a horse through the forests and farmlands of Western New York. Thirty men and women in britches and blue blazers on horseback are staring me down because my phone just went off informing me about this blogging opportunity. The Fox Hunt will proceed with me one hand typing my first blog post.

Hello, my name is Sean Donegan, I’m a Senior at Cornell University. I’m the Director of Philanthropy at my Fraternity, Alpha Gamma Rho. Through a collaboration with Seth Hoffman (last summer’s blogger), I will be helping to organize a Charity Dinner that will hopefully deliver over $5,000 to Share Our Strength.

Last spring, I hosted my first Charity Dinner through my Brotherhood that raised over $3,200 for the Congo Leadership Initiative. The collaboration was made between my Fraternity and three other Greek Houses. After meeting with Seth Hoffman, Philanthropy Chair of The Sigma Phi Society, we decided to expand the dinner to a total of seven Greek Chapters and to give the proceeds to Share Our Strength. We will be sponsored by three clothing retailers; Vineyard Vines, Southern Tide, and Life Changing Apparel. Continue reading

The Earthquake that Shocked the World – Haiti 6 Months Later

By: Billy Shore, Founder and Executive Director of Share Our Strength

The six month anniversary of the earthquake in Haiti, marked by renewed media coverage over the past few weeks, underscored how even the most riveting catastrophes eventually fade from our consciousness. I went to Port au Prince two weeks after the quake and again two months later. I witnessed the outpouring of generosity from around the world. With more than a million Haitians in desperate tarp and tent camps the need remains enormous. But now most of the volunteer aid workers are gone. Except during occasions like the six month anniversary, so are most reporters.

The burden of infectious diseases on the poorest people in the world is every bit as crushing as the concrete rubble that buried so many in Port au Prince. But it never commands anywhere near the same attention. And even sustaining what little visibility it gets is an enormous on-going challenge.

Continue reading