by JOHN DVORAK Nebraskan Staff Writer Edet Inyang, 27, a native of Nigeria who is studying management at the University of Nebraska, doesn't know when his case .vill come up in court. He said that faulty pipes in his former apartment on 28th Street caused him to move after less than a week of resiidenca there. A judge will decide whether his landlord wv m Hi i ' It x I' ' ' ' - V - I r , - A i P encore r j;- eacoRe. BrewmasterS private-recipe been Ole lot. khliu Brwin CK, MitwaudM end Othar grttt (UlM. ' PAGE 10 Housing bugs foreign students must refund the deposit Inyung made on the apartment. The foreign student can't say any more about the case for fear of prejudicing the upcom ing court proceedings. He has moved to a better apartment now, just a block from cam pus. Problems like those Inyang encountered with his former landlord are not rare among foreign students living off campus, according to Ivan ml NORTHWEST RELEASING Prevent NEIL DIAMOND IN CONCERT With Comedian SANDY BARON PERSHING AUDITORIUM Oct. 4, 8:30 P.M. Tickets $5, $4, $3 at Brandl. RktinM. Osriman, MontgvmwY Ward, ami PartMnt Auditorium 1 J Alphonse, one of NU's two foreign student advisors. Another case is pending in court besides Inyang's. A stu dent from India has had severe contractural disagreements with his landlord- "We have a few real pro blems every year," Alphonse said. "The problems with racial discrimination always exist, but our greatest pro blems occur with contracts many students are asked to sign." Apartment contracts are dif ficult enough for American students well-versed in the English language and the wiley ways ' of some apartment landlords. But for a studnet from Ghana, India or Brazil, who has just gotten off a bus or an airplane in Lincoln, the pro blems can cause endless heartache and trouble. "Sometimes the landlords ask foreign students to 'sign on the dotted line and the apart ment is yours, " Alphonse Friday, Oct. 2, 1970 STEAM Recorders of Na, Na, Hty, Hey Kiss Him Goodbye Plus HEAVEN $1.00 Covtr Charge) HIGH CHAPARAL LINCOLN AIR "A MOTION PICTURE THAT IS NOTHING SHORT OF BRILLIANT! An intact film record of a witty, hu manistic and beautifully constructed drama, heightening and intensifying its every quality!" JUDITH CRIST, NBC Today Show Spend a marvelous evenins with eight of the boys. & 3 "A CRISP, BITING MOVIE version of Mart Crowley's brilliant play! The acting is rich, the script seems to have been written with rattle snake venom, and the effect is NASTY, HILARIOUS AND GRATIFYING!" REX RflD, KdliJuy MogatMtt Mart Gowley 'THE EC$ THE NEBRASKAIM said. "The students are anxious to obtain a home, so they sign, . sometimes without thinking." Alphonse told of a case where one of NU's foreign students was shown a lovely, clean apartment, told to sign a con tract, and then found to his dismay he had been rented another, less desirable place. On occasion, foreign students have been asked for exorbitant deposits. People don't realize the pro blems foreign students face in their attempt to line up off campus housing, according to Bachitarr Singh, president of the International Club. Foreign students do not have the money for a townhouse in the Chateau le Fleur of Briarhurt. Often they don't even have a driver's license, so they musi rent within walking distance of the campus. They generally have no friends in the city, so they have no real assistance in finding a place to live. Most have a working knowledge of English, but PARK WEST ... v sometimes that is not enough. Some colleges and universities have community volunteers who help foreign students search out housing. Such arrangements, however, can become too paternalistic, Singh believes. "It smacks too much of 'let me take you by the hand," Alphonse said. "By getting some heard knocks, the foreign student can learn a lot about Lincoln in a hurry." "If he comes to us, we can help him," Alphonse added. "But you can do too much for a foreign student, who is a very intelligent person." The foreign students who live in dormitories have things comparatively more easy than their compatriots off campus. They are within a few blocks of all their classes, they needn't worry about electric bills, broken windows, holes in the ceilings or leaky toilets. Their meals are nutritious and regularly prepared. They can even have their bed linens laundered weekly. Food Is perhaps the greatest problem a foreign student in the dormitory encounters, said Singh, who nsed to live In a dorm. The cooking and taste are different, and some foreign students are vegetarians. . Housing rules are relaxed for foreign students in the dorms. They can move out of the dorm anytime if they have a good reason. They do not put down an advance deposit, since most are overseas until just before the beginning of school. -Freshmen foreign students live off campus if they wish. Other than the dormitories, there are only about a dozen living units on campus available to foreign students. They are In two buildings, one at 1548 It Street, another at 1505 S Street, which have been purchased by the University and made available to foreign students with families. Eventually the buildings will be torn down, according to Housing Officer Wayne L. Blue. For the time being they are rented out for about $35 a month to foreign families. Although the buildings are old, they have been renovated by the University and are well painted, clean and livable. Singh would like to see the University provide more on campus housing for foreign students. He is also a strong advocate of the host family program which he termed "one of the best things the foreign students office does." Under that program, a Lin coln family "adopts" a foreign student who has Just come to Lincoln. The student lives with them for the first few days of his stay, and they are available to help him when he moves into his own house. Singh still speaks glowingly of his rela tionship with his host familv. even though he has been at the university lor more than two years. Singh agreed with Alphonse that spoon feeding is not th answer for a foreign student irymg ro una nousing. ' "Experience is ths best or. pcrience," Singh said. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, .1970