Behrend Beacon March 19, 2010 www.thebehrendbeacon.com Alternative Spring Break club puts partying on back-burner CONNOR SATTELY er litor-in-chiet 40 students, faculty, and staff from Penn State Behrend hopped on a plane during Spring Break to head to the gulf coast. Unlike many other south seekers, though, they went for a different reason than party ing. The trip was this year's Alter native Spring Break, which sent a total of 67 students, fac ulty, and staff - including 18 from Penn State Dußois, and nine from York. Those who were willing to give up their Spring Break for service saw first-hand how much work still needed to be done in areas deeply affected by Hurricane Katrina. “It was eye-opening,” said Behrend freshman Sarah Ce vallos, a biology major. “It's a once-in-a-lifetime experience. You see not only the destruc tion that went through the city, but a lot of the rebuilding and recovery efforts as well.” Cevallos and the rest of the group had the opportunity to be a part of those efforts, each in Meals in Erie Hall JEFF KRAMER copy editor After the recent fire, Dobbins has started serving students a similar menu to what they used to serve in a new location at Erie Hall. In order to prepare the food, Behrend mobile kitchen, the price of which couldn’t be disclosed. In order to compensate for the inconvenience, the univer sity deposited $5O of meal points into each student's meal plan account. Randy Geering, Director of Housing And Food Services, said that the fire did not reach far beyond the Gazebo. It en tered the dining area and melted the TV in the corner, but it didn’t proceed. All of the plas tic casings that house the fluo rescent lights melted as well. The university may be mak ing improvements to Dobbins while cleaning the water dam age to the kitchen areas. “That’s what’s being dis cussed now.” said Geering. Dobbins relocation to Erie Hall will displace several kine siology courses to the Junker Center. Get Make a P*i ck up a (__am paign packet m the Off |CC of Student /Activities and turn in by April 2n flections held Ap r| l I their own small way. “Our group had a project that was only about three weeks old,” said Cevallos. “Our home owner was a woman who had gotten a divorce a few months before Katrina, and then her house was destroyed during the storm.” That homeowner, Cevallos said, was moved to Philadel phia for about two years, then returned home only to be a vic tim of contractor fraud, a com mon occurrence in the post-Katrina Gulf Coast. The homeowner has been living in her FEMA trailer for two years. Students on the trip spent roughly six to eight hours a day at their work sites. Cevallos said that her job mainly con sisted of sanding walls and in stalling joint componds. After their day of work, many students on the trip had the op portunity to head into New Or leans to experience the city’s culture for themselves. That's what Behrend senior Molly Eberly will take with her as one of her favorite parts of the trip. “The culture in the French Quarter was amazing,” said ASB We Are Penn State chant breaks out A chance encounter over Spring Break allowed 40 Behrend students, faculty, and staff to realize how invested Penn State truly is in community service. “There were about forty of us standing outside of Cafe du Monde, getting ready to go in,” recalls Matt Haubach, a senior eco nomics major from Penn State Behrend. “The next thing we heard was from inside the cafe, a big group of people yelling WE ARE!' So, of course, we replied in kind.” After heading inside, the Behrend group discovered that a 16-person strong group of University Park students, also in New Orleans for Alternative Spring Break, was sitting down enjoying coffee and dough Lawrence Hall evacuated after A construction worker hit a gas main at the Dobbins con struction project Thursday, prompting Behrend officials to evacuate Lawrence Hall. The gas leak, described by Housing and Food Services Di rector Randy Geering as “sub stantial,” leaked gas for roughly 20 minutes before it was turned off. “There was a heavy smell Student (government ved... rivo Dif ere nee! (Contact M o CONNOR SATTELY editor-in-cheif CONNOR SATTELY editor-in-cheif Thomas at mbt^Ol 2@psu.edu with any questions! Alternative Spring Break member Erika Glover scans the house that she is about to help rebuild. Eberly, a mechanical engineer ing major. “Seeing Cafe du Monde was fun, and the food down there was incredible.” For Cevallos, other sights in the city caught her eye as well. “We drove through areas where there used to be houses, but they are all gone,” she said. “There are projects there that tore down the remnants and nuts in the popular cafe. “It was just a random event,” Haubach said, “but it led to one of the coolest Penn State experiences I’ve had. It made me proud to be a Penn State student, to realize how strong the Penn State body is.” Brad Stamm, a senior meteorology major from Penn State University Park, said that the meeting wasn't too much of a surprise. “For people that don't go to Penn State, these encounters might be kind of strange,” said Stamm, who was on his first Alternative Spring Break trip. “To Penn State students, it's really the norm. When we got down here, we just ran into another service group from Penn State staying at the same hotel at us, and then we saw the Behrend group at th«£cafe. Penn State students are everywhere doing serv- into the surrounding areas,” he said. “The gas was not harmful unless in the case of prolonged exposure.” Geering said that Behrend Police and Safety was called, and made the decision to pull the fire alarm in Lawrence Hall as a safety precaution, largely due to a strong westerly wind. After fifteen or twenty minutes, the students were let back into their rooms. Police and Safety had noti fied Residence Life prior to SGA have started new houses, but a lot of them don't have anyone living in them.” In that way, the trip provided students a chance to learn the details on why the city was af fected so much by the storm. “I never knew much about the floods, or the levees break ing,” said Cevallos. “Our advi sor [Financial Aid employee] evacuating the building, but it still served as a surprise for many students in the building. It provided a hint of frustra tion for freshman Sam Cramer. “We cant live somewhere that always has something wrong and gets evacuated,” he said. Freshman James Boorman- Padgett, also a resident of Lawrence Hall, wasn’t too sur prised. “I started to smell gas in the room, so I wasn't too very sur- ections/Ve in f*rogress! Giselle [Hudson] was from New Orleans, so she got to tell us childhood stories, teach us about the city, and also show us what happened to the levees during Katrina.” All of those aspects together made for a whirlwind of expe riences that left Cevallos ex hausted after a 13-hour trip back to Erie. Stamm's trip was very similar to the Behrend group's, though his individual group didn't perform quite the work he was expecting. “Rather than doing construction, we ac tually planted Cyprus trees all week,” he said. “At first, we were kind of surprised, because we planned to build houses.” Cyprus trees, Stamm explained, were torn up by the hundreds of thousands dur ing Hurricane Katrina, and provide a strong barrier of resistance against hurri cane force winds. Replanting those trees, he says, will help protect from future storms. '“The first day, you could plant a tree any where,” he said. “By the lime we left, it was hard to find an open space.” gas main leak prised when the fire alarm went off,” he said. Geering says that the worker was part of Perry Construction, the group working on the Dob bins renovation project. The ac cident will not cause any significant delay or damage to the renovation. “It feels kind of major, be cause of the safety precautions, but it's not that big of a deal,” said Geering. “This has hap pened a few times in the past on construction projects.". Weekly M cc tings at on Wednesday in F\ee d I 14 Open P ositions: f*resident/V'ee president (Jniversity T acuity Senate News Fire ruled accidental continued from front page thought we could, so that gives him more time to complete the reconstruction,” Geering said. “The main dining area and serving area should be ready by August 2010, but we still may choose options to rebuild the Gazebo that will take a longer time to be completed. If we de cide to make the rebuilding process for the Gazebo area longer we provide an alternate dining area in addition to the main dining area of Dobbins.” "Our insurance company, Factory Mutual, is in the process of evaluating what the value is of everything that has been lost and damaged." "We are not in a position to even ask contractors how much it will cost to replace all of our losses." According to Geering, there will be no raises in tuition as a result of the renovations be cause Housing and Food Serv ices are a separate entity from the University. Secretary Senators