w w w w w w w w w w w w 'r T T 'W T T _qw -W lmw 7 Take Sabbatical 101-lecture hall U.S.A. National parks By Tod Woolf Daily photographer Tod Woolf and a friend bought a used van last spring and set off to see the country. They 've been from Boston to Florida and now plan to drive west. They've managed to spend little of their own money by doing everything from working at Disney World to selling advice on New York's Fifth Avenue. Tod sent in the following record of their jour- ney from somewhere in Florida. Whether studying literature or org- anic chemistry students learn at a fast pace in Ann Arbor. The Univer- sity offers a fine academic education, but sometimes learning about life doesn't leave time for living life. For those who cannot go to the bathroom without feeling they're wasting pecio=s study time, start planning a "student sabbatical." Students cannot CRISP for a sabbatical, but they can tell their counselor they will be out of school for a year. With the proper traveling techniques and preparation anyone can take a year off and travel the country without parental financing. Since October I've been living on the road instead of a dormitory and learning on the streets instead of a classroom. I have been traveling with a friend from, of all places Michigan State University. The woman at the American Automobile Association was a little stunned when I requested a MEDICAL SCHOOL IN SANTA, LUCIA, WEST INDIES Now Accepting Students in 3 yr. fully accredited U.S. model M.D. program. For info and application please contact ADMISSIONS OFFICE SPARTAN HEALTH SCIENCES UNIVERSITY P.O. Box 1012 DETROIT, MI 48231 Tel: 313-963-7262 12,000 mile Triptik. A triptik is a series of road maps selected for each in- dividual trip route and bound in a pam- phlet by AAA. I highly recommend one for anyone going a long way. Our trip started in Detroit bound for Boston via Toronto, then down the East Coast to Florida stopping in small towns along the way. We are *now heading across the Southern states to California and will return to Ann Arbor in the spring. We bought a used V.W. microbus and stocked it with a propane stove, first aid kit, many pounds of macaroni and cheese, rice, spaghetti, peanut butter, jelly, an extensive collecton of casset- tes, and an assortment of books. The food was purchased at bulk food store to save money on staples. We built a platform in the van for sleeping and strapped a ladder for win- dow washing and a windsurfer on the top. The van is crucial to a successful trip. With a van you only need a parking lot and curtains to sleep anywhere. We sleep in the parking lots of the most ex- clusive hotels in the United State. But what about career goals? The average life span is about 75 years. That leaves about 40 years for a career. In the scheme of things 39 years instead of 40 will not make or break a brilliant career. Don't worry about your parent's ap- proval either. My traveling companion's parents were ready to die when he first mentioned the trip, but they soon got used to the idea and now enjoy hearing reports of our adventures. The older people we have met on the road have either taken time off to travel or regret that they did not. A trip of this type would seemingly be out of the average student's financial reach. However, we've been on the road for three months and still have the money we started off with because we work along the way. By preparing inexpensive food and sleeping in the van expenses can be kept low. So far we have made money washing windows, working at Walt Disney World, cleaning apartments, painting, selling instant color photos, renting out our windsur- fer, and offering "good advice" on the streets for 25 cents. Even if you make all the spending money on the road it is important to start with some. Cash can be built up in the spring and summer in Ann Arbor, especially with a low-cost sublet. This money will be needed for car insurance, repairs, equipment, and emergencies. When purchasing a van remember that it probably can be sold for nearly the same price after the trip. Our working experiences have been some of the most enjoyable and in- teresting parts of the trip. For example, we went to Disney world a few weeks before Christmas and applied for a seasonal job sweeping the streets. The benefits included free access to the Magic Kingdom and EPCOT Center. The job at Disney World allowed us to see how the corportation applies the concepts taught in introductory Psychology to make its employees the finest hosts in the world. Ingenuity can create other oppor- tunities for income. Particularly suc- cessful was our instant color photo business in which we meet people while making money. We bought Poloroid film and frames in bulk and have sold photos in New York City, Boston and Key West. Perhaps the most outrageous enter- prise was the offering of "good advice" on the streets of New York City. We stood on Fifth Avenue with a poster that read "Good Advice 25t - 2 years college experience." The funny part was that some asked serious questions and we gave earnest (if not good) advice on topics ranging from marketing to personal problems. We also got a couple dates by advising two young women to ask us out for a drink. Such ingenuity is not required, however, because most every city we've been in has help wanted signs. A student sabbatical does not offer the security of lessons planned out by a professor. But traveling offers its own lessons taught by the people you meet. Everybody has a story to tell. We met a reformed alcoholic who now works for the Salvation Army. A retired record producer in Miami Beach said he once told Barbra Streisand she would never make it. The skill of talking to people of all walks of life may atropy at school, yet it thrives on the road. A year off from school also offers time. Time to visit relatives who live around the country. Time to become more familiar with cities than the stan- dard quick trip would allow. It is also a chance to scout out places for graduate school or a career. There is time to read books that would have remained on the shelf in Ann Arbor. The most striking difference between this year and my year at the University has been the time to enjoy life without the pressures of exams and due dates. A year on the road can enrich an education and a life. A long journey of- fers fresh green grass each week. But my time away from home also makes me appreciate the people and the place I left behind. It'll be nice to be back on the diag. almost make the trip not worth it, and we've all seen so many pictures of the geysers anyhow. The real gems, though, are the high mountain parks - Rocky Mountain, Grand Teton, Olympic, Glacier, and the North Cascades, where you can plunge in glacial lakes (for only a few seconds), scramble through boulder fields, glissade on summer snows, and walk the flowery alpine near the Continental Divide. The parks' interiors have more sur- prises than just the unbelievable views. In Glacier National Park I wore bells on my pack to warn bears of my in- trusion, for they sometimes devour careless hikers, or eat their food, as they did mine (three days' worth) in Rocky Mountain National Park. The Tetons brought me face to face with black bears, moose and their calves, marmots, blizzards, and - from a safer distance - avalanches and rock slides. Like "scenic view" signs, national park signs are deceptive, too, for the parks are only the smallest fraction of scenic, hikeable land and draw thousands of tubby living-room cam- pers that make the land seem less im- pressive. Less crowded but equally beautiful scenery can be found in National Forests, near small ski resorts like Vail, Big Sky, and Alta, and beside little towns sleeping against mountain slopes, like Ooray, Colorado, Lander, Wyoming, and Mt. Shasta City, Califor- nia. Rangers, climbing-store sales persons, and locals take the place national park trail/highway maps to reveal the little-known hot springs and hike-able fourteen thousand foot peaks. One summer found me in the Univer- sity's introductory geology program Wyoming. Students of the program live in tiny aluminum shacks and inten- sively study geology with their hands and hammers on the mountains. The course takes students to geologic features all over Wyoming and also into surrounding states. We collected dinasour remnants in Colorado, hiked in the Tetons, skinny-dipped in the Wind River, and fervently celebrated on cold mountain nights. Though sometimes too heavily laden with rules and struc- ture, the program is a great oppor- tunity for experimental learning and for understanding the science of what makes the West beautiful. Climbing is the West's greatest op- portunity for adventure. As a misty- eyed religious climber and veteran of many western summers and winters, I I~iZ~iiLIL~iI~i~ . I IT (Continued from Page 4) can prescribe no better drug (and believe me, it is an addicting drug) for the bored midwesterner than a good climb to escape from the tyranny of flat land. Climbing zealots like me (I know there are more than a handful out there) can bop from campground to climbing hut, from -the Climber's Ran- ch to Mt. Shasta's Horse Camp Lodge to Yosemite's Camp Four. Boulder, too, overflows with climbers looking for partners. For the uniniated, aspiring, and potential climber, there is a host of climbing schools located in mountain towns across the country. Everyone has heard of %national schools, mainly Out- ward Bound and the National Outdoors Leadership School, which offer trust- worthy but very expensive introductory programs. More budgetable and c equally satisfying are the smaller, local Y schools such as the Tetons' Jackson t Hole Mountain Guides and climbing schools in Boulder and Yosemite. Vir- tually every ski town offers a climbing E guide service in the summer. In ad- 0 dition to being more affordable, these programs offer alternative styles . tailored to your interests, from grueling ° bust-your-ass ascents to mountain photography seminars to basic lear- ning-the-ropes courses. Romping the western outdoors requires some roughing it and biting the bullet, but it's all part of the fun. Simple, meager meals of bread, cheese, and fruit can taste better than the finest gourmet dish. Classic peaks Weine gazes off into the valley in the Tetons. like the Grand Teton, Mount Owen, and Mount Shasta have had me dangling over thousands of feet of empty space, wretching with altitude sickness, and peeling like in the end, summit and of miles, I ki THERE'S A NEW KID ON THE BLOCK STA£6 TRAVEL KERRYTOWN TOURS "FnieiMj weidwide [at oeWuice bm p-opl e wks cai., 663-4400 COMPARABLE E 9 a.VALUES $8 TO $12 izp L -- Come to Kerrytown for all the good things in lif furniture, crafts, knitting and weaving suppli toys, clothing, jewelry, soaps, candles, paper 5 pasta and futons. Kerrytown has everything you want, seven d open until 8 on Friday, noon to 5 Sunday and 10 urday. Parking is abundant in our lot or next Market. And we're just a short walk from main Kerrytown Sh 35 shops and restaurants in a villag N. Fourth and Fifth Avenues, Ann Arbo Nylon Jetbags CarryE Their Weight and More KEEP YOUR TAN or Great traveling companions of rubber, GET TAN NOW nylon, fabric combinations. 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