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There is now a CONTENT FREEZE for Mercury while we switch to a new platform. It began on Friday, March 10 at 6pm and will end on Wednesday, March 15 at noon. No new content can be created during this time, but all material in the system as of the beginning of the freeze will be migrated to the new platform, including users and groups. Functionally the new site is identical to the old one. webteam@gatech.edu
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Atlanta, GA | Posted: March 13, 2018
From service trips in Mexico to performances in Cyprus, Georgia Tech students will be all across the globe during Spring Break.
Find out where just some of the Georgia Tech community is headed next week.
Students representing all Georgia Tech Collegiate Panhellenic Council (CPC) sororities will travel to Senegal to build a school for women. Georgia Tech’s CPC is partnering with Circle of Sisterhood, a philanthropy founded by sorority women dedicated to supporting women’s education globally, particularly in nations where they face legal oppression and extreme poverty.
“We are excited to be doing our part to help fight for women and their right to an education,” said Ana Jafarinia, former director of philanthropy for Georgia Tech’s CPC, “particularly since sorority women at Tech are strongly dedicated to their own education.”
In the past, Georgia Tech’s CPC has raised money for Circle of Sisterhood, but this is the first time students will be making the trip.
The Georgia Tech Chamber Choir has been invited by the U.S. Embassy in Cyprus to perform its first international tour. An ensemble of 24 singers will travel to the island to perform and work with area schools to facilitate a cross-cultural dialogue on higher education in the U.S.
“The embassy chose to sponsor us for this opportunity because of the unique ability of the Georgia Tech Chamber Choir members to perform extremely high-caliber music at a level usually only music majors get to do,” said Elianna Paljug, the group’s external vice president and a biomedical engineering major. “This ability to flourish in the arts and in STEM while in college is an opportunity we have enjoyed at Tech, so the embassy will be using us as an example of what American education can offer to potential Cypriot students.”
Students and staff from the Christian Campus Fellowship (CCF) will travel to Juarez, Mexico, to work with the organization Casas por Cristo to build a home for people in need. This is the CCF’s 25th year traveling to Juarez.
The Baptist Collegiate Ministry (BCM) has a group traveling to Cleveland, Georgia, to do construction and repair projects in the area, as well as relationship-building through activities such as Vacation Bible School.
Samantha Stewart, a biology major who traveled with BCM last year, will participate again this year.
“I love the opportunity that we have to go to our communities in Georgia and serve there,” she said.
A team from Engineers Without Borders will be traveling to Uganda to implement a portion of an ongoing project. Their goals for this trip include installing a piping system and expanding infrastructure in the community.
A group of international students, scholars, and students interns from the Office of International Education will travel to Washington, D.C. The trip will include sightseeing, volunteering at the Capital Area Food Bank, and meeting with Georgia Tech graduate and U.S. Senator David Perdue (R-GA).
The Alternative Service Breaks (ASB) group has seven different trips this spring break, both domestic and international. Places Tech students will serve with ASB this year include:
Kate Vacko, marketing chair for Alternative Service Breaks, said that the trips “are a great way to meet other Tech students, and they provide an opportunity to explore new cities and cultures. I always look forward to returning to an ASB to remind myself what is really important and why I have always valued service in the first place.”