w w w wwww w w w w Nw- NELP: Live in the woods with Thoreau. et. al. By Arona Pearlstein IF YOU'RE looking for a different approach to your education, you might want to consider the New England Literature Program. The six week University program, help at Camp Kehonka outside Wolfeboro, New Hampshire, combines intensive study of New England writers with intensive study of nature. Thirty-six students, two graduate students, and three full professors par- ticipate in the program during Spring term. Along with the other studies, students are expected to keep a journal and share work in daily chores. The atmosphere demands that radios, TVs, and stereos be left behind. "I would say that in addition to 1 meeting requirements of the education, we're also interested in holistic education and in what learning is," said Professor Walter Clark, who co- founded the 11-year-old program along with Professor Alan Howes. "We en- courage students to learn new things. We also encourage them to teach so that students can be both teachers and beginners." Students involved in the program last year spoke enthusiastically about the chance to experiment with new ideas. Said LSA senior Tim Richardson, "I picked up a lot of confidence knowing that the ideas I had were valid. Whereas in Ann Arbor, there is a bigger risk of expressing them (new ideas)." "Out there, ideas came naturally. They weren't attacked." "You're free to try," said LSA senior Marc Bruell. "The level of acceptance was extraordinary. You set your own perimeters." "It's an opportunity to do new things, to go on your own. You're not just going through a program," said LSA senior Mellissa Holub. Cut off from TV, radio, and stereo, students must create their own enter- tainment. Playing musical instrumen- ts is popular, as well as reading aloud to others, and writing. The program also allows students to re-learn hobbies that have long been forgotten. "There was one woman who hadn't played piano in years," said Richar- dson. "She turned out to be a fantastic pianist." , Students can create their own classes in the program. Last year, student- organized classes included lessons on sign language and water safety, as well as informal instruction on a variety of musical instruments and music com- position. The journal students must keep is a central part of the program. It has many different functions, from being a tool used in class to raise questions and complete exercises to making obser- vations about nature. The journal may also be used for creative writing. NELP journals typically run from 150 to 200 pages. "Someone may write about loons on a lake and then read Thoreau's account. One is able to look at him (Thoreau) as a fellow writer, rather than as someone to worship," said Clark. Another key feature of the program is broadening a students' view of literature to encompass daily oc- currences. "When we go on the trail, we take books with us," Clark said. "If we read a Frost poem on junipers, we show people junipers." Relating the environment to the works studied gives people a new understanding of literature, Clark said. Said Bruell, "You read them (New England writers) in their environment. They became real." Hiking and canoeing trips are another important feature of the camp. The camping program encourages in- dependence and knowledge and ap- preciation of nature. Students even do "solos", where each spends 24 hours alone in the woods. "I built confidence by being strong physically through all the hiking," said Melissa Holub. "A lot of the emphasis with Thoreau and Emerson was on the individual," said Richardson. "Going out on the trips, we learned to be more self-suf- ficient. It was similar to Outward Bound." Is NELP for everyone? The brochure for the program explains quite clearly that the ". . . atmosphere is sociable and pleasant, but inappropriate for Ann Arbor style partying." NELP, ex- plained Clark, is a place for growth, and sometimes growth is not always fun. "I'm sure when some people come to NELP, they find it's not for them," he said. "People feel much more ex- tremely on the ups and downs because of the isolation. It's not a place to play." Bruell has no doubts about what the program meant to him. "It was the best thing I did at the University," he said. "It was amazing in a lot of ways.. . It put education in a great perspec- tive." Said Holub, "A lot of the stuff that it offered was not different for me in the way I lead my life. There was an amazing opportunity to take initiative. I was thinking about going back and getting a teaching spot. .. NELP begins May 3 and ends June 19. Acceptance into the program is on a fir- st-come first serve basis. Though the current program is filled for this year, the waiting list is not yet full. If someone is among the first ten on the waiting list, he has a good chance of being included in the program for this year. If he is not included in the program this year, he will get top con- sideration for the following year. Ap- plications may be picked up outside 2635 Haven Hall. Going where most tourists have never gone before By Amy D. Goldstein Everyone has wanted to climb the Himalayas, hike through the Amazon jungle, or hotfoot it across active volcanoes in Costa Rica. But the travel arrangements have always been a little difficult to arrange, at least until the Journeys travel company was created seven years ago. When Will and Joan Weber began their travel company, Journeys, they wanted to "continue the conservation project (Will) started as a Peace Corps volunteer, says Kurt Kutay, Journey's Latin American program director. Today, Journeys offers trips which are opportunities for cross-cultural ex- periences and conservation awareness. Journeys makes available trips to Nepal, Sri Lanka, Latin America, and Africa. The purpose of the trips is to provide an alternate form of tourism. Mike Dively, a three time Journeys veteran, says the trips involve camping out, using public transport, riding elephants or bicycles, or walking. Each tour group is led by a native guide who is proficient in many languages. The most significant qualifications for a guide are trekking experience, and understanding of natural environments, the villages and people in the area, and the language says Kutay. The groups are usually comprised of two to 15 people, ages 25 to 75. The only qualification for the trips is that one must be in "good physical health, but they do not have to be athletes," accor- ding to Katay. The treks usually last two to four weeks, with the actual hiking lasting from five to 20 days. Katay recalls a 74-year-old Catholic priest who came on a trip to the monasteries on the Mt. Everest region to "build a bridge between Eastern and Western religion. He was exhausted every day," says Katay, "but he loved it." One of the most appealing aspects of the Journys trips is the cross-cultural contact one gets with the native peoples. On the monastery trek, a Bud- dhist monk accompanies the trekkers of their trip. The people sometimes stay with natives in the villages they succee ds in t For th, Jour] ding tl Recen opener Journe compa by Ju availa wider ventur Of c favori to Per lost In the An can ru most p hike ft the Inc lost cii Reci found believ opener be full tourist that's There unesce Accc a spec tereste traditi unique tunity who challer This Ann A Arbor few of enjoye .' L #44p mmmmmmmmm5mmmmni * r * CAc 9T~ CMu d P1RE3$o I DoC (Continued from Page 6.) of the Festival of American Folklife, which features exhibitions and food strands from a different state and one foreign country each summer. Last year's featured state was Alaska and state officials flew in a small iceberg for the primary exhibit. The nightlife in the nation's capital is fun, though perhaps overrated. On weekends, the college-aged crowd clogs the streets of Georgetown on the west side of Washington, wearing their prep- py, New England clothes. Georgetown is home to Georgetown University, charming but very expensive old townhouses, bars which appeal to the young singles, and the best ice cream parlours around. (Steve's Ice Cream is firmly established here, but Bob's Cone E. Island, and Swenson's are popular Traversing treacherous bridges, like this one, is not an unusual oc- too.) Good places to eat include Gepet- to's Pizzeria, the Hamburger Hamlet, and El Torritos (famous for their tasty though virtually non-alcoholic strawberry daiquiris). The trendy crowd parties around Dupont Circle. This is the site of some of the town's best dance bars such as Cagney's. There is also an all-night bookstore which regularly features jazz bands in its back loft. The best means of transportation, especially on busy weekdays, is the subway. But during early morning and late afternoon rush hours, the crowded subway can be more frustrating than convenient. Unless you are immune to claustrophobia, you might choose walking. Drivers are not as kind to pedestrians as they are in Ann Arbor, so be careful. Getting lost is virtually impossible because the streets are con- veninetly marked. Streets running east-west have letter or word names; roads running north-south are num- bered. currence on Journeys tours. visit. "We were exposed to the people in a much different way than in any other trip. We were traveling at a much slower speed, and had an opportunity to see and meet people," Dively says. Journeys has had great success in trying to better the lives of the native peoples in the countries they travel. "We go back to the areas where we've distributed vegetable seeds, and the people have much better diets (because of the vegetables). We can buy back vegetables, which provides a com- plement to our menues, and also a source of income to the people," Kutay said. The trekkers have developed solar water heaters to heat shower water for people on the popular Mt. Everest climbs. As a part of the philosophy of trying to enjoy and preserve nature and the environment Journeys people have also started a hatchery to save the en- dangered sea turtle. Recently, Journeys started a clean-up Mt. Everest program. One of the main objectives of the trip is to pick-up the garbage left behind by the various Everest trips. However, this desire to help the en- vironment is not exclusive to the Jour- neys founders. "We have had trips where people stay along to help Nepalise people plant trees, or help pass out vegetable seeds to the local villages," states Kutay. Kutay, a trek leader, describes the trips as "a growth experience, sharing emotional difficulties and physical har- dships, supporting each other with those hardships." He adds, "It's really exciting to be with people who are fulfilling a lifelong dream. The trips YOUR COMPLETE TRA VEL STORE Quality Equipment Good Advice ih eight, comnpa ctable -inter" enC nal rin gea h&f aging and . travel frame pac *~ cmeL--%Iol itms bicycle travel en aonvaptters voltage cr~~~~- . luggage . . money belts BI UOr 330 S. State/Nickels Arcade - 761-6207 The subway-dubbed "Metro"-will take you to the national zoo, the Capitol and congressionall office buildings, and to an interesting underground shoppingj mall in Crystal City,VA. At 5 p.m. on Friday, downtown Washington metamorphoses into a ghosttown for the weekend. This is a good time to leave the city to see some of the suburbs. Catch a bus to Baltimore, MD. for a baseball game, or to the Shenandoah Mountains for a hiking trip, or to beaches in Delaware and Virginia. Casinos in Atlantic City, N.J. also run bus services from down- town Washington to their gaming houses where drivers refund part of the busfare to be used at poker tables or Qlnt m2PhinPc DeLater is a Daily editor who spent last summer as an intern in Washington. HARRY'S ARMY SURPLUS* WINTER SALE* Trunks - 5 sizes to choose from $23.98 to $94.98 All Frame Packs - 20% OFF .c Nylon or Canvas Duffle Bags-$7.98 to $20.98 * Turtleneck Shirts - starting at $7.98 * SALE ENDS FEB. 23, 1985 * open 7 days a week to serve you. * 201 E. Washington94 5 994-3572 at 4th 4 THE STUD CL neoteric music for the discrimina MON DAY S AT THE NECTARINE BALLROOM( 510 E. Liberty 994-5436 DJ-Gale MON., FEB.11 - THE BLACK PAR 14 Weekend/Friday, February 15, 1985 Weekend/Frid