W -w' -ij,.' -ii- i: I '! h -I v i O UNL grad: two years in Africa rewarding flu ft!n' CSiar-l? olirtn : '':'' !;'. 'H. When Paul Newhouse came back to the United States after spending two years in , Chad, Africa, he said he, was, more .... conaiiiwii in - hin oars crf fhf trhow-away society. ;'s li -ehad ybu ;; don't; i throw pnvthi'nn riwav;';' hn said:! r ' Newhouse, a '1972 UNL grad- ; duate, who majored in i French; j and; economics,, left for Chad in July ; 1972 ; as ,a Pace ( Corps ,,:..; English teachers He taught, j English as a foreign language to I persons from 13 to 20 years old ;; !N Bousso, a town cf about 3,000 for two years. Newhouse re- turned to ,the United States last , . month.' : . v ; '; ;.. . i Chad, Newhouse; said, Is a poor country with no resources. ! Some of its people, mostly those ; living in the capital city, are ; aware of their poverty and have j developed an inferiority complex ; about it. Some, he said, are i bitter, toward the French,' who'r : Uft akWsaift he triedl to convey ' to his students that the world is bigger than Chad. Newhouse said his students were warm ; and interested in riai5tlirnfiS were ' often i f . and Chati.cultures in English, he i ! "PolitidsTwfere not openly ! dis? i ; cussed ,ie': said.; fVSitsi of his ' ; students Iwe're "too ihnocent to U'l be todlcfissatisfiedj with i the i . cdvemmenti IMost frad never i been to the capital. : - ji'AccormnQ to Newhouse, chad studentslexpetatidns are realis tic J Mafiy !-:hobe to 'become primaryi teachers or" ! work in government jobs, this way they ,woujd; salary.- ported Paul Newhouse, 1972 UNL gndja! expeiiences in Chad, Africa. rcvLws his torching Shortages ies ' ' -v.' A, shorago of funds and dwin dling student attendance have combined to spell 'out the closing e. J title for' the-Union WeeKend Him iiG Series. A l-xture ot UNL weekend 'life for more than eleven years, the ft series fell prey last spring to a Tllm lorno Union Proo,rnmming budget 1,11 Vvcuf ai.d sharply reduced admis sions receipts. ."Profit icn't our motive, but wc trid r ot to mo student fees,',' said Art 1 r .-nipson. aor.istant director of nron-vms at the Nebraska Union. "Wc. wanted the films to uraW even ' Tnompson said losses in the past have been absotbed into profits from diher Droarams, but with the advent of the 1974-75 budget, there) wasn't enouah money to permit In s. ' , At' its inception, the Weekend Film Series was shown in the Union Auditor :um whif.h seats approxi mately 100 persons. Outgrowing the Union U e films moved to the Mcniik, I Sail Auditorium, onlv to face competition from newly expanded downtown theatre ccmp lexes. Durina the SDrino 1974 sem ester, the films were cut back to showing only one evening, instead of both Friday and baturday nignts as before. Thumpso.i j.aid he did not feel rtudent b'odv was being deptuod, Gotiirjlv cf cntortain nscnt, 'iiC'' tfifjc- are now fourteen screen, ri the downtown rrea alnn not cour.Tinn the Sheldon Film '1 (ioat r or the in ostabhihmcnts. various drive receive, a gdyernmeni Chclcf is lartgely sup bvi? subsidies from Uleveta gears': agd' Chad's; ?gdvemrtifenti: staged what New ' house called a Vcjjltdral revolu-' : ; - in A rh rpvrihitioh.i he ;said, controlled; the country Until : it nipuriteq j ; 0' a' ! ,! psychological ; was takeni over by "a dictatorship i I ft pfepafanon 'VI 6 remaining if - A roholtinn hu tha i n a rni i"i I'l fttatlc'--. '. Uradit iOnal: 'rites ilrtjtolerancd -oil outside' i religionMlarid tribal. 6yalty ex-; , tendihgl jfrpm one's immediate 'siiperior l td i Chad's president, '$ere stressed, ne salq.; schools :are open ;to: 1 i f they said'thy yvould it; -they naa .; io and secdnda'ryiSchoolsH ' : ,;HiBi'biJt would n't t.:want If :a fipetitive.:; Students are ,i r; ' vpersoh iefued,' to go, .through - id aari 3rin A rebellion bv the northern islamic; tribes ; against ' this government has been going: on for about seven years; he :.said-';v;.!'V;;:.A,:!i ' 'Ik'y- i1' However, most of the, peeple are not political, he said.: , : ' . The people are concerned with "their plot of land the;animals" they ,,ownj - whether' or 'hot the rains come and with paying the ' small tax S the government collects.--'; -: V-.! !!''.:- ;: i'c ;'; l: Many persons do not send: their children to school, because ; , they want to: preserve their, own1 culture. Newnouse, saa. bix -.primary. evervono are . competitive: ;; Students are required to test into them,; ne said.-. ;' ;'-';:" ':.' '''. According to Newhouse, -tha idealism associated with the early Peace Corps no longer exists. People are looking at the Peace Corps more as a job and an alternative to settling down to teaching in an American high school, he said. ' i I ; Most Peace Corps volunteers do not e'xpect to change 'the world, Newhouse said: . f... "The most important reason for..teaching ; English ' is so communication; can be estab lished between the African nations," ' he saidi, Newhouse mentioned that the English texts he used dealt with a Nigerian family ; N igeria Is. an African nation with oil, and a well-developed educational system. Ac cording, to Newhouse,.; Nigeria could possibly be of. help to Chad in the future.'. 1 ';;! '' "i--. The course curriculum in Chad was developed . by the ; Ministry of ftdueation ian.d the Peace Corps American Program staff. inhnnkitionito the mandatory. ; paean rites-fwhich Were often ; : physical lordeals the revolution supported arose from the northern ! islamic tribes and Christians In the cobntry,! The file requires 'a person to spend r.; .seven :-Vek;s i in the WilUerpess, '.i-:i NewhoOe saldi'; lj, 111 i '. u. - -;! ' i n Newhouse Jasked his, students it; they jwouid ; perrorm his: rite; 1 1 vperson 'refused, to go, .tnrougn ; with 'a flte, (he couia pe ;snoi, Newhouse said,'; ' ' :'. ! ' f 4i Newh6usbssald his experience in Chacj was f 'very good for him persQn$'Jy," although he said he , got lonely for Americans. During the time he was there, he was the only American within 200 'miles, r)e;said. I, . i.:: '' i;i Hesaid;he found work .more ; rewarxiing than being a student. .; ; ili'Myl ;friendsiin-; the Peace Corps s were ' doing ij concrete. , worthwhile! things! jiA lot of Li people at Universities iare ifloat ;ino arddnd.1 in the clouds. :Thev don't know what they're going,' Newhouse said,: ; f;i . . . .. Through' leaching;- Newhouse : said , he I hoped to V reach the small percnetage at j the top of the class; who learned well and wantedltb: learn, and who would : eventualjy 64 the leaiders df-the ;;;ccOnfrv.:V:J.ri. ;:v j ;;:(; : . r : ::"'Mi Newhouse isj currently work .vMng "at ja1; calash; , He will be ; ',:ieavipg!vilth the peadelCorps for; ; ''-''Afghanlitan )n rearly l December; : 'hte'plarti to stay therk for a year ' and a half. 5 Vt X U ! ; ' ; i iiifjiiiifiii II f II !! I" Ilf", '! I 1 i r ' i 'UiUUlIU I CO miT 7 1W WifsV; lrti:iU D iJjLiiii 1 h i i if nun if n ilDDi nnn , f CREATING BETJER LIVING FOR UNL STUDENTS.. ... tit I it. id to ten: mj; " vou ; out have notn.nn to ve-sr? Rem-' (1 ili.it drtcidful.' dile-'-nu e.nJ cuiue to the I ).sny , tor the new fantastic fashions of Open wrikriidit;; t! 9 n Sat. 6 run. Sun. 1 ? i lev 1 tit Free two months rent if you rnov?3;in before Novcrrbcr 1. ,1974 (Jilb ricut, complete with pirq-porsg ppd uool td(j!t" Wfc! bat d.!j tircflCf, conversation pit'. Heated pool, lrSr)is court. Baboball and football field. Two fully' equipped playgi oufids. Picnic ground with gas 51 ill - Two Car off fjtrpft parking,, and in p.rk jnty bus syrvic. free storage bhed, table !v, water, sewer and trash' service. ; ' v MORE THAN JUST A PLACE ,10 n ,',!, ay 'fit' 5' 4 dn'ly nbraskan ' 1 1 1 m ' 1 ! I ' SB ' I i I 1 ! I 1 ;j . 1 1 ' , In : thurlsday, September 12, 1974 .!lt i' A i ! 0- i . Ir. l f . ; . i . ; s ; , . i i