Popup thrift store to raise money, possibilities for Wildcat Friends

Wednesday, December 10, 2014
Pop Up thrift store with students

On Friday, Dec. 5, a popup thrift store will open in the MUB. It will be there for two days, offering for sale sweaters and T-shirts and skinny jeans and sundry other articles of clothing collected by 易胜博官网 students in November. 听

Sometime after 5 p.m. Saturday the tables will be taken down, the unsold clothes boxed up for donation, and, the hope is, more than $2,000 will have been raised to help support Friends in Action, a nonprofit group whose offshoot Wildcat Friends gives young adults with disabilities the chance to experience college.听

Here鈥檚 the back story:听

Professor Kate Hanson, co-founder of the community leadership program at the Thompson School, and Heidi Chase, executive director of Friends in Action, came up with the idea for the fundraiser after talking about such a project for years.听

Students in Hanson鈥檚 community leadership class have handled the logistics: promotion and advertising; planning the clothing drive, drumming up volunteers. Sponsoring the event is Eyes Open, an organization started two years ago by then-sophomore Maggie Saliba to foster relationships between 易胜博官网 students and Wildcat Friends participants. Add in the other organizations on campus that helped out, and the Fashion Cats Thrift Store became the definition of collaboration.听

And then there鈥檚 the rest of the story. Like how all that organizing and planning gave听Hanson鈥檚 students a glimpse of the way leadership works in a real-world context. And more importantly, perhaps because it was the root goal from the beginning, the success of the thrift store will serve as a barometer for Chase, who wants to open a community center in Durham that would have a thrift store run, with help, by Wildcat Friends, offering them the work-skill and social engagement piece she has been looking to bring to the program.听

鈥淭he center will allow people with developmental disabilities to have more opportunities to interact and learn from 易胜博官网 students by working with them at the thrift store, by socializing in the community engagement center and by having the 易胜博官网 campus more accessible through new opportunities,鈥 Chase says.听

From Hanson鈥檚 perspective, the project already has been a winner.听

鈥淚n community leadership, the question is, 鈥楬ow can we have students experience something on a deep level so they understand what we鈥檝e been talking about鈥攍eadership, teamwork,鈥欌 Hanson says. 鈥淭his has been a coordinated action toward a shared goal. The whole stakes change when they鈥檙e doing something real.鈥澨

Students have learned just how real organizing such an event is, logging scores of volunteer hours emptying the collection boxes that have been at key spots on campus since the beginning of November (by Veterans Day they had received more than 1,500 items), sorting and pricing the clothing and finally, for the next two days, manning the event itself.听

鈥淭his has been totally different than any of the community service that I鈥檝e done before,鈥 says senior Maggi Hanson (no relation), a teaching assistant in the leadership class. 鈥淲e鈥檝e had to think of everything鈥攇etting the donations, advertising, all the logistics.鈥澨

Junior Caroline Norris adds, 鈥淥ur class has so many different leadership styles. I think that鈥檚 a good thing because that鈥檚 what you鈥檙e going to find in real life, people who come up with things that you didn鈥檛 think about, and you鈥檙e going to have to adjust your thinking.鈥澨

Hanson admits the project has been a lot of work. But, she says, 鈥淚 think it has given the students a sense of satisfaction. It鈥檚 helped them gain confidence. The process of leadership isn鈥檛 just what you鈥檙e doing but how you鈥檙e doing it.鈥澨

In addition to Friends in Action, proceeds from the thrift store will go to the Waysmeet Center and the听Children's Hospital of Dartmouth-Hitchcock.听

The Fashion Cats Thrift Store will welcome shoppers Friday Dec. 5, 10 a.m.-7 p.m. and Saturday, Dec. 6, from 10 a.m.-5 p.m. in the MUB, room 156.听

by journalism major Annah Todd of students involved in the project. 听

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