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Virgina Tech
A Plus For Greeks!
Six different fraternities participated in the clean up, in an effort to improve relations with their neighbors By Katie Harris Staff Writer The residents of Roanoke Street were greeted Sunday morning by the buzzing of lawnmowers and a street full of young men equipped with rakes and brooms, ready to tackle the mess accumulated over past weeks. The fraternities of Roanoke Street held a clean-up day that started at 11 a.m. The clean-up consisted of raking, picking up trash, sweeping and mowing lawns up and down the street. The fraternities, including Delta Kappa Epsilon, Zeta Psi, Lambda Chi Alpha, Phi Kappa Sigma, Sigma Alpha Epsilon and Kappa Alpha, came together for the event in an effort to show appreciation to Roanoke Street and to the community. "We're going to try to make this an annual event because the fraternities and the town seem to think it is a really positive thing," said Peter Cosier, Zeta Psi's public relations chair and a freshman political science and history double major. "A few select people have hurt the reputation of fraternities as a whole. We're here to show people that we really can do something good and not just cause problems." Kroger donated bagels and donuts to the fraternities to kick off the occasion with breakfast, and the Student Government Association donated rakes and gloves, which were used for this semester's "The Big Event." The fraternity members wanted to improve relations with their neighbors, who have had to deal with the issues that come along with sharing a street with six fraternities. "We have a different responsibility than the on-campus fraternities do," said Jim Scanlon, a Delta Kappa Epsilon member and junior marketing major. "We live near and deal with community members and it's really important that we get along with them. Neighbors are a lot more willing to work with you when you help them out too." Mary Freeman, a resident of Roanoke Street, appreciated the time these fraternities donated to the clean up. "This is great," she said. "I've lived here since 1971 and I have seen how the fraternity houses have added a lot of traffic to the street. Since I've had a lot of health problems that have made me unable to do the yard work I might have ordinarily done, this is a real spring clean-up for me." Not only did the clean-up event work to improve ties with the community, it also brought the separate fraternities closer together. "I think it's great that the different Greeks can unite to have a sense of community beyond our individual frats," said Rich Kelly, a member of Zeta Psi and sophomore university studies major. "We all live on the same street, but something like this really helps to bring us together." The clean-up brought the fraternities together and helped make the job easier and more effective. "We used to do small clean-ups on a rotating basis, more of a trash pickup," said Marc Dalessio, a Sigma Alpha Epsilon member and senior finance major. "This is the first time that all six fraternities have put on something of this scale. It helps out a lot when you have this many guys working on it." Is This The Way It is Supposed To Be?????????:cool: |
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