Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Students Plan 'Empty Bowl' Benefit

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Students Plan 'Empty Bowl' Benefit

    STUDENTS PLAN 'EMPTY BOWL' BENEFIT

    BusinessNorth.com
    March 6 2009

    ASHLAND, Wis.- The 2009 Empty Bowl Dinner, sponsored by the Northland
    College Ceramics Program and organized by the Moonbeam Consortium and
    Art League, will be hosted at St. Andrews Episcopal Church on Saturday,
    March 14 beginning at 4 p.m. This year, admission will be $15 or $10
    with a non-perishable food item. The cost covers bread and a hearty
    soup served in a unique, hand-made bowl that can be taken home at the
    end of the evening. All the bowls at the event will have 100% lead-free
    glazes and will be safe to use in dishwashers and microwaves. Funds
    and food raised by the event will go to local food pantries.

    Over the past several years Northland's Empty Bowl events have raised
    a combined total of over $10,000 for the hungry both locally and
    globally. In previous years the fee was simply $10, but organizers are
    hoping that the patron's generosity will match their own ambitions to
    raise more than $3,000 in addition to the non-perishables for charity.

    "This is exemplary of the spirit of volunteerism and social conviction
    that the Northland students feel towards the Ashland community,"
    says Associate Professor of Art Viken Peltekian. "I'd particularly
    like to thank the students who have made and donated the bowls, the
    Daily Bread for their generosity and St. Andrew's Episcopal Church
    for being such a gracious host for this worthwhile event."

    Following the success of the 2008 dinner, this year's event will again
    feature a silent auction of ceramic pieces such as serving bowls and
    vases as well as works of art in other media, the proceeds of which
    will go to the same charities. Northland students will also perform
    live bluegrass and marimba music and a speaker will talk about the
    local hungry and effective ways to help them.

    "Empty Bowl is a great event because it is organized by Northland
    College students, but encompasses the community," says Sarah Bhimani,
    a writing major at Northland who is focused on soup production
    for the event. "We rely on local business generosity in order to
    buy ingredients; student time in making bowls, soup, and bread;
    local artist skills for the silent auction; and local musicians
    for entertainment. The event becomes much more about the people and
    community that we are helping, which is the whole point."

    Northland College and its Sigurd Olson Environmental Institute are
    located in Ashland, Wis., near the shores of Lake Superior. The
    College has been recognized as one of the top colleges in the nation
    for science and mathematics, as a model environmental campus for
    the Lake Superior Basin, and as one of Wisconsin's true liberal arts
    colleges. Founded in 1892, Northland now enrolls 700 students from
    41 states, Puerto Rico, Canada, Sweden, the Czech Republic, Kenya,
    Honduras, Trinidad and Tobago. For more information about Northland
    College and its Institute, visit our website at www.northland.edu.
Working...
X