| Student Mission Teams Serve Short-Term
  Over a Long Weekend in California
 FOR TWO SPRING MISSION events, Mission LA and Quest, Seattle Pacific
              University students helped raise their own funds to spend Memorial
  Day weekend volunteering in two of
  California’s poorest districts.
 About 80 women drove to San Francisco’s Tenderloin
    District as part of the third annual Quest trip, organized by the Falconettes,
    SPU’s women’s service club. Meanwhile, about 60 men participated in Mission LA.
    They drove from Seattle for 24 hours straight, arriving in one of the most notorious
    areas of America, in a district of Pasadena, near Los Angeles. The trek is a
    longstanding tradition of the Centurions, the men’s service organization at Seattle
    Pacific. Labeled by the press as “seedy,” “impoverished” and “dangerous,” both
      sites house Christian mission centers that serve their neighborhoods. At the
      San Francisco Rescue Mission, the Quest team helped distribute clothes, serve
      meals and witness to people on the streets at night. “This all started when some
      women students wanted to do something similar to Mission LA,” says Jan Higbee ’85,
      Falconettes advisor. “They make the trip by themselves and do amazing work.”  A
        Pasadena house that was once owned by a drug kingpin has been transformed
              into the Harambee Christian Family Center, which Mission LA has
              returned to for six years in a row. Some students went to work
              painting fences, while others did yardwork. Still others repaired
            missionary homes on the same street.  Benefits of the trip spread
              beyond the Harambee Center, says John Keatley ’02, who photographed
        the journey. “Neighbors saw us coming in, showing them love and taking responsibility,” he
        says. “And it was a good experience for the mission team, too. Students from
        very different groups around campus spent a weekend hanging out and laughing
        together.”
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