Quantcast The Orion
College Media Network

Paid Advertisements

Fraternity finds funds for furry animals

By: Kelly O'Connor

Issue date: 11/12/08 Section: News
  • Print
  • Email
  • Page 1 of 1
Phi Delta Theta pledges and fraternity members hold their first bake sale Saturday near Siskiyou Hall to raise money for pandas. Junior pledge Grayson Scogin said they chose pandas in order to target women, who make up more than half the student body.
Media Credit: Kelly O'Connor
Phi Delta Theta pledges and fraternity members hold their first bake sale Saturday near Siskiyou Hall to raise money for pandas. Junior pledge Grayson Scogin said they chose pandas in order to target women, who make up more than half the student body.
[Click to enlarge]
Media Credit: Kelly O'Connor
[Click to enlarge]
Sugar, chalk and a stuffed toy brought seven Phi Delta Theta pledges together for the first on-campus panda bake sale Thursday in front of Siskiyou Hall.

The pledges planned on raising more than $250 to donate to the World Wildlife Fund, which would use the money to help save pandas, junior Tony Gorelick said.

"Pandas are a cuddly animal we can help," Gorelick said. "There are a lot of cancer fundraisers, but we wanted to bring up something different."

Freshman Talia Kemp stopped to buy a chocolate chip cookie from the table, which was covered in pictures of giant pandas, after a pledge with a stuffed toy panda asked her if she wanted to personally affect the life of a panda.

"He is pretty persuasive," Kemp said. "I'm not a frequent bake-saler, but it's for a good cause."

WWF spends 83 percent of its proceeds on worldwide conservation activities, according to its Web site.

There are approximately 1,600 giant pandas in the wild, and conservation of habitat is the main priority to help save them.

Junior pledge Grayson Scogin thought of the panda fundraiser as an effort to show how hard he can work for his brotherhood, he said.

"It's a crazy idea I came up with," he said of the notion of targeting women, who make up more than half the students on campus. "I figured, 'Why not aim for the bigger market?'"

The panda-themed fundraiser, aimed at women, deterred some male students, such as senior Chase Chevallier.

"It's a lost cause," Chevallier said. "This is just an excuse to waste time between partying and whatever else they do."

The fraternity volunteered at the Jesus Center earlier this month for its first organized event, Gorelick said.

Pledges are admitted to Phi Delta Theta based on dedication and effort, Gorelick said. The fundraising and volunteering won't stop until they get admitted.

"Today it's pandas, tomorrow we could even do tigers," he said.

Kelly O'Connor can be reached at
koconnor@theorion.com
Page 1 of 1

Article Tools

Viewing Comments 1 - 1 of 1

Grayson Scogin

posted 11/12/08 @ 1:53 PM PST

There were 8 of us pledges, not 7 :)

Post a Comment

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Issue Summary

Online Exclusive

News

Opinion

Sports

Entertainment

Features

Paid Advertisements

Advertisement

Paid Advertisements

Advertisement

Poll
What are you doing over winter break?
Submit Vote

View Results

The Orion's front page


Click for PDF

Other Sections: