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College of Arts & Sciences

CAS Chronicles

Mary Collins and Tess Ippolito deliver donations to Feed-A-Bull Pantry. (Photo courtesy of Tarin Haydt)

Mary Collins and Tess Ippolito deliver donations to Feed-A-Bull Pantry. (Photo courtesy of Tarin Haydt)

Advisors gather more than 1,400 items to fill food pantry shortage

When USF College of Arts and Sciences (CAS) advisors learned that the USF Feed-A-Bull food pantry was low on supplies, they decided it was time to fill a need.  

Mary Collins and Tess Ippolito deliver donations to Feed-A-Bull Pantry. (Photo courtesy of Tarin Haydt)

Tarin Haydt with more donations to the pantry. (Photo courtesy of Tarin Haydt)

Advisors out of the School of Natural Sciences and Mathematics organized an all-Tampa CAS advisor drive in March and made it a friendly competition with their advising counterparts in the School of Social Sciences and School of Humanities.  

The end result: 1,453 new food items to fill the shelves of the Feed-A-Bull food pantry.  

鈥淭arin Haydt, lead biology advisor, was the driving force and MVP of the project,鈥 said Autumn Mueller, director of academic advising.  

The competition began in late February and closed in March, just before spring break to ensure the shelves were stocked again before the break. 

鈥淥ur team is very competitive. We love to come together for a good cause. A little rivalry goes a long way!鈥 Haydt said.  

She coordinated efforts through Microsoft Teams and connected the large group in their efforts.  

鈥淭hat Teams chat was getting a little spicy toward the end of the competition 鈥 let鈥檚 just leave it at that!鈥疘t鈥檚 all in good fun!鈥 

According to Haydt, the CAS sciences advisors conducted a similar drive in December of 2022, and it was so successful that they were looking for an opportunity to expand it to the entire advising team.鈥  

Haydt said that each team came within just nine items of one another, with over 700 items donated by each group.

Mary Collins at the grocery store after colleagues pooled monetary donations. (Photo courtesy of Tarin Haydt)

Mary Collins at the grocery store after colleagues pooled monetary donations. (Photo courtesy of Tarin Haydt)

鈥淚t鈥檚 amazing!鈥 We love being able to make a direct impact on our students鈥 lives 鈥 especially outside of academics, which is usually the core of our interactions,鈥 Haydt said. 鈥淚t helps us reinforce our advising practice as a holistic approach to our students as whole people with a variety of needs and goals.鈥

The Feed-A-Bull food pantry, managed by Student Health Services and , is open to any student in need and aims to address food insecurity so students can focus on their studies.  

鈥淚t鈥檚 really unmeasurable the difference this can make for a student,鈥 Haydt said. 鈥淲e work with students in all life situations. Access to food is just something so basic that impacts everything else in a person鈥檚 life. There is no way to care for a person or serve them if that basic need is not met. We all have needed help and support at one time or another.鈥疧ur team is just so happy that we are in a place to help maintain this amazing resource on our campus.鈥 

Haydt said she looks forward to continuing these drives in the future.  

鈥淥ur love for our students 鈥 and our commitment to serving and supporting them as whole, real people 鈥 not just students in a classroom, is our motivation,鈥 she said.  

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About CAS Chronicles

CAS Chronicles is the monthly newsletter for the 91社区's College of Arts and Sciences, your source for the latest news, research, and events at CAS.