Our neighbors, already in their half of the duplex, will be Rev. Randy and Mary Jane James, the new ANU chaplain and his wife.
Since we returned to the States, workmen have begun working on an addition to our home. Each morning the men working on our house and on the new student center arrive on flatbed trucks from off campus. The work on our house is relatively short term, but some of the workmen involved in the student center process build small wooden cabins where they live until the project is completed. Their lives are not easy, but we were told in February that ANU pays above the going local rate, and because jobs are scarce, anyone who is employed feels lucky. Even so, we'll be praying for these men and the extended families their wages support.
The material they use for all the buildings on campus is grayish-red rock dug out of a nearby quarry. When we were there I asked more than once about what kind of rock it was, but people didn't seem to have a special term (granite, limestone, etc) for it. As the grandson of an Indian stonecutter, I'll want to investigate further after we arrive! The rock comes to the site in large chunks where the workmen chisel it by hand into building blocks.
These are the first pictures we have had of the remodeling, so we're excited to see (and try to guess exactly) what is being done. It LOOKS like an additional room on a lower level. We didn't know there was a basement when we were there, but our time on campus was short. Stay tuned!
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