page 4 The Fourth Wall Emily Cowdrick College students have plenty of things to worry about -- grades, work, rela- tionships, finances -- and worrying about operating a wheelchair on their college campus should not be one of them. The worry is legiti- mate at Penn State Mont Al- to. The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) Standards for Accessible Design were updated as re- cently as 2010, and Penn State Mont Alto is held to them. While it may be that Penn State Mont Alto is le- gally ADA compliant, the campus is a disaster zone for a wheelchair user. While there is wheelchair access to every public build- ing on campus, there is a lack of wheelchair access between buildings on the campus. To the casual eye this may not appear so, but the only sound between- building wheelchair access on this campus is between Studies Building and the Science and Technology Building, though only a few yards apart, are not practi- cally accessible to each oth- er. They are separated by a hill steep enough to cause struggle to a wheelchair us- er. The passage through the Science and Technology Building double-door is sep- arated down the middle by a bar, making a wheelchair difficult to maneuver through. The extreme is the hill between the Wiestling Student Center and the Mul- tipurpose Activities Center; it is dangerous downhill and Everest uphill. There is no practical on- campus housing option for wheelchair users. Mont Al- to Hall is closest to the main buildings on campus, and it sits at the highest point on campus accessible only by hills. The Penn Gate com- plexes are significantly away from the main build- ings on campus, separated by two public roads and a large hill. Because of dis- tance, Mont Alto Hall can be considered the lesser of the evils. Dormitories are classified as “Transient Lodging Guest Rooms” by the ADA, and there are re- quirements for Guest Rooms with Mobility Fea- tures. Based on the total number of rooms provided, there is a required number of rooms with mobility fea- tures, and within those num- bers are requirements for roll-in bathrooms and show- ers. Because of the age of Mont Alto Hall, it may le- gally get away with not hav- ing roll-in showers. Stu- dents in Mont Alto Hall must resort to wheeling into the main area of the commu- nal bathroom and crawling from their wheelchairs to the bathroom stalls and show- ers. Behind technicalities only someone familiar with the code would know, Penn State Mont Alto could be entirely ADA compliant, therefore manageable to a wheelchair user. The school might even offer transporta- tion to classes for the stu- dent. Manageable, right? Imagine you are a resi- dent of Mont Alto Hall, and you use a wheelchair. It is nine o’clock at night, and your friends want to go to The Mill for a quick snack before it closes. Social and hungry as you are, you want to go too. To do this, you might: exit the doors of Mont Alto Hall, get out of your wheelchair, drag it down the three stairs to the sidewalk, wheel over to the hill, wheel down the hill via the grass, wheel into The Mill, get food, exit The Mill, wheel up the hill without stopping so that you do not get stuck partway, get out of the wheel- chair at the stair- | = a case | The Penn State Mont Alto hill, drag : oo oles | Alumnl Soclety case of | gynports Mont Alto students stairs on : : : : Fs 4a : And your future includes membership in knees, an alumni network of 169,000 members! wheel to ead a . . the build- | —» Ylglt ma.psu.edu/ alumni ing, drag the wheelchair up the three stairs into the building, and wheel into the building you go. Manageable, right? A student’s success should never be hindered by a disa- bility of any kind. If you are in need of an accommoda- tion, please contact Disabil- ity Liason Kendra Wolgast in the Academic Support Center. the bookstore and The Mill. Even the General Protests (continued from pg. 2) The protests in the Middle East have presented Presi- dent Obama with a new for- eign policy crisis, which was created less than two months before re-election. New information says that Obama has vowed to bring forth those responsible for the Benghazi attack to jus- tice, and has sent warships to Libya to prevent and give backup for any future situa- tions. However, the U.S. embassy is still in the cross- fire of the situation. In Tu- nis, the ruling party of Egypt, the Muslim Brother- hood, is going to keep pro- testing and organizing marches and mobs in front of Mosques, however, no activity like this is rising outside the U.S. embassy in Cairo, Egypt. Egypt disa- grees with most of the pro- tests, saying that the U.S. should not be blamed. Egypt is, however, demanding that the U.S. take legal action against the offensive film’s creator. After interviews with the Italian leaders in Rome, President Mohammad Morsi is making a determined ef- fort to protect foreign diplo- mats while in his countries. He also made it very clear in stating that the film that was made was unaccepta- ble. Four arrests have also been made in Libya to keep up the investigation on the attack that killed the U.S. ambassador Christopher Stevens. U.S. officials be- lieve it was possible that it was planned, by an al- Qaeda-linked group. Ac- cording to the Aljazeera news reporting. The video Muslims, but will the U.S. act against the films crea- tors? Ultimately it is our right to free speech that will be protected amongst all. However, the question re- mains, as U.S. troops pre- pare to leave the Middle East, what will happen to