Six weeks later, with 70% of its staff homeless, the
23,000-student university is starting to work again--in tents
or in buildings loaned by other towns. The
underground particle-physics
laboratory at Gran Sasso, which remained undamaged 15
kilometers from L'Aquila, resumed work on 4 May, even though
90% of its staff are homeless.
The L'Aquila physics faculty found a relatively easy solution by moving into the above-ground facilities of the Gran Sasso laboratories, where many homeless staff also sleep. "Of course there will be crowding -- and it will be for some years," says Gran Sasso director Eugenio Coccia. "But we are glad to be able to have such a role.
It has not been easy to find the mental energy to think about science in the circumstances, admits Gran Sasso physicist Francesco Arneodo. "With so many homeless it is hard to focus your full attention on research," he says, the strain clear on his face. "But now it is OK—we are back!"
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