Most of the mail received from readers is fa vorable. but sometimes there are complaints A recent letter from two women travellers com plained about the lecherous proprietor of an Ita lian penstone that had been recommended by a male researcher One of the changes we've made over the years has been more of a consciousness of women travelling alone.' said Assistant Editor of Let's Go Europe. Chris Billy Other changes revolve around the increased costs of travelling in Europe The Let 's Go staff says that it's still possible for the budget con scious to travel in Europe, despite the fact that travel costs have skyrocketed Europe isn't considered such a ‘bargain basement' anymore, but people shouldn t be going there just because it's cheap.' said McCord "When 1 figure my expenditures. 1 always think of it as a matter of time spent in a place versus the amount of money I'm spending 1 think anyone w-ould prefer to give up a private bathroom if it meant adding another dav to your trip Good planning is the key "Now that Europe isn't so cheap, it's important that people determine their style of travel before going over there.' advises Havertv who spent the summer researching in the more expensive Scandinavian countries and Germany " Camping is still cheap, even free in most parts of Scandinavia, where pensions are expensive But in Italy, penstones are cheaper If you know how- you w-ant to travel, and you're willing to sac rifice some comforts, you can make the trip last longer." She also recommends Mark Twain s Innocents Abroad as pre-departure reading for young travelers Knowing a bit of the language is important, too. says Havertv "On this trip I sensed more impatience with people who made no effort to speak the language You'll probably be able to find someone who speaks English, but always ask first, and never assume The nature of the publication means that there are always problems, particularlv when a country being researched is in a political upheaval The student researcher in Poland last summer had problems travelling, and postal strikes hindered reports getting back to the States in time for pub lication In Rumania, one researcher s report was confiscated at the local post office Researchers head for their assigned countries in mid-May. and in July the first reports filter into the HSA offices The editing and organizing pro cess then begins, and the pace picks up until the frantic week before the publisher s deadline in early September "You should have seen it." said one researcher of last summer's preparations "There were people here around the clock, working, bodies on the floor asleep it was pretty incredible No sooner are the Let s Go 1982 guides on the bookstore shelves than work begins on Let s Go 1983, between term papers and mid-year exams Students sometimes have a hard time juggling schooiwork around their Let s Go schedules, and the HSA office always has at least one person who must leave to write a paper that's due the next day But the researcher s position appears to be the perfect summer job Roundtrip airfare is paid for by HSA, and researchers receive a salary while they’re travelling. Linda Havertv sets the record straight; for all the excitement, there is hard work, frustration, and occasional depression ‘ It’s really a strenuous job! ’ she says We should have had to lift weights to get in shape for it. I went to Italy for a few weeks before coming back after all that travelling, I really needed a vacation'” Carnival in Trinidad BY DEBORAH LEVIN magine a national newspaper whose headlines I read ETHEL, TUN-TUN IN FIGHT TO finish" or "NO ICE FOR CARNIVAL ” Imagine a television station, the only one for an entire country, broadcasting its carnival events live And just in case you've missed any of the day s events, the t> o'clock news is likeh to present highlites of carnival for the enure 30-minute broadcast This is at a ume when El Salvador is on the verge of exploding. Polish workers call for strikes daih and well who knows what else is happening This is Trinidad and this is carnival If anvthing else is going on in the world — who cares'' Trinidad, a nation roughly the size of Dela ware, is located 10 miles off the east coast of Ven ezuela. Sticky hot during the Carnival months, the country looks more like an impoverished South American ghetto than a resort paradise The capi tal city of Port-of-Spain, crowded with people, cars and dogs, is host to the second largest street celebration in the world, surpassed only bv the Brazilian festival in Rio Just about all of Trinidad s million-plus pieople participate, a quar ter of them outfit themselves in brilliant cos tumes. some of which require nearh a vear to design and construct In a country where phones seldom work, roads aren't serviceable, and pieople are accused of being inherentiv lazv Trinidadians suddenly prove the\ are hard working, efficient and productive when it corner to something thev care about It takes enormous effort to make a good carnival, and carnival in Trinidad is as good as it gets No violent incident were repxirtec in 1981. compared to seven deaths in Rio de Janeiro It is the music of “Mas' (Carnival) that makes Trimndad s event unique It provides rhvthm and pieople play with the energy and enthusiasm that seems like celebrating a victory Carnival music is planned, rehearsed and labored over Steel bands — whose members number up to 100 — are now among the most successful aspiect of the carnival Vhat started out as banging on garbage pail lids and empty cans has grown into a sophisticated, sensitive sound Some ensembles bolster their songlists with Europiean classical pieces Carnival occurs during the two davs before Lent, but the buildup to Mas starts in Sepxember when early fetes’ (piartiesi begin Bv December calypso music replaces all other forms The first official event planned by the Carnival Develop ment Committee is scheduled by January On anv given night there are dozens of fetes' going on It’s a 24-hour public orgv that take- place dav after day after day and it’s all subsidized by the government’ The Plunt Festival of Sweinheim BY KEITH WALLAH he sightseer looking for a little extra local flavor in the grand tradition of Iron Age 1 Germany would do well not to miss the quaint Plunt Festn al of Sweinheim At the beginning of the festival which comes ten nights after the last potato of the season has been dug, the children of Sweinheim dress up like twigs and rocks, and wake their parents at four in the morning by running into the bedroom with burning brooms held in their mouths After the parents have extinguished the brooms with their Oofils, or asbestos quilts, the Breakfast for Plunt may begin A large pot of Sweetgrunt, or potato pudding, is prepared by the mother while the children stand in the sink balancing firewood on their heads The father is busy at this time making the traditional Schlapp or dung wreath, for the family’s doorway When the sweetgrunt is ready it is dumped in a pile on the floor, and the whole family enjoys fighting for all they' can stuff in their faces, the same way their ancestors did over a thousand years ago When the Sweetgrunt has been finished, the family enters their cellar carrying several gaily decorated Pissaks. or goat bladders, filled with small magnets, old buttons, and bits of string It is the ancient belief that this mystical combination will give free nose jobs to the Ugly of Sweinheim —but only if it is kept in a dark, loud place Thus, the famih lock.-, the cellar doors and stances in the dark while making fessoopoos. or loud, de plorahle noises VChile the famih units are performing the rixx cellar dance, the bachelors and street scrubbers of Sweinheim (all unmarried females over 18 are tradition-bound to be the street scrubbers of Sweinheim ) begin the Ritual of the Folding Chairs The ritual of the Folding Chairs was once celebrated as the Anhschlin. or the beheading of the cleft-palate babies, until more civilized Sweinheimians petitioned to have it changed in 1”99 to the unfolding and arrangement of Sweinheim s impresssive collection of folding metal chairs The tradition-conscious l nmarried Sweinheimians still hold on to the old ways, however and usually manage to behead some symbolic inanimate obtect One vear it was the town's civil defense siren Another time the\ used forty pounds of black powder to blow the spire off a neighboring ullage - cathedral It is now midday, and time for the Reaffirma tion of the Plunt There is a large stone structure in the middle of the village square which mea sures ten meters bv ten meters at the base, is ten meters high, and has no measurement at the top because nobody ever bothered to get a ladder This structure is said to contain the Plunt The entire population of Sweinheim dresses like the person next door and forms a triangle around the stones while chanting the time honored words Gat zipher Schtukinme shun ' Historians have roughly translated this as meaning My trousers seem to have become entangled in mi shin, but this is a maner of heated debate in academic circles VChen the Reaffirmation of the Plunt is com plete. the village runs backward through the streets to a large meadow by the river Oo They then begin pulling up large handfuls of grass for the construction of the Thing, or thing The Tiling is made up entirely of the wet meadow grasses and moulded to resemble Jem Ford 's fix Khali helmet The youth of Sweinheim are put in charge of guarding the Thing and throwing am one who means it harm into the nearbv river Oo The sun is beginning to disappear behind the mountains as the rest of the village leave the youth with the Thing and fill their underclothing with bits of dry tree bark for the Ztupidztunt. or uncomfortable walk, back to the village Once there thev will take their places on the assem bled Folding Metal Chairs and spend the night dancing and sucking Schlingers, or oversize pop sides of ptKato schnapps until thev fall down Summerfest BY BONNY CHRISTINA CELINE t s no secret that Milwaukee. Wisconsin is not 1 considered one of the nation's major music markets, and it isn t — 3“w days each year but for eleven days in earlv summer (twelve in 1982). Milwaukee's beautiful lakefront becomes Sum merfest And Summerfest offers more music, food and fun than any other single place from east coast to west Summerfest began in 196~ as a summer (estival designed to cool off the hot scene of urban dis order that disrupted most large cities in the Six ties But in the fifteen years that followed. Sum merfest has become a not for-profit civic sponsored organization and Wisconsin s major summer tourist attraction The reason for its con tinuing popularity is simple it offers eight stages of musical talent (plus a children s stagej for twelve hours every' day of the event, all going consecutively It also offers food served up by some of Milwaukees finer restaurants (not mere fair food), as well as Mr Summerfest, weight lifting contests, fishing contests, a children s art contest, and enough non-musical activities to amuse everyone, from children through senior citizens. Most Milwaukeeans consider Summerfeo to be the most important event of their suinmei season (800,000 people passed through its gates during its run in 1981) For one thing, it is amazingly in expensive The I5! pale admission fee entitles the fairgoer to enter the manicured grounds and eng" a choice of musical entertainment with no additional charge (Of course, food and ocher concessions are not included ) The Summerfest grounds arc more like a gar den than a fairground — minimal cement, maximum greeners A cool evening breeze drifts off Lake Michigan You may decide to start the evening with some quieter acoustic music, so you head for the TV-6 sponsored Folk Stage, and spend some time listening to national acts like Tom Paxton Robin & Linda Williams or Gamble Rogers or perhaps Milwaukee based talent like Bill Camplin. Gil Plotkin or the Earh Sisters Sudden h vou're hungrv a stop at Monreal s perhaps, for Mexican food, and dessert at Shorewood Village Bakers Perhaps |ust a wine cooler with a slice of lemon- You pass b\ Pabst sponsored International stage and catch a few v mgs from someone like Chuhbv Checker or Rick Nelson dt the Stone Cam on Band There is little sound cam over from the other stages Light different music presentations on SO acres of lakefront land would seem to be exces sive. but the engineers who designed the sound systems planned for that and sound leakage is not a problem At the Dance Pavilhon, mam couples dance to swing music under the cheers vellow and white tent The bartenders serving at the w ine counter are wearing old fashioned white shirts and arm garters The Tommv Dorses Band is placing One of the nicest things about Summerfest ts that it ts not for young people onh It is tfie intention of Entertainment Director Bob Babisch to provide qualm musical entertainment for all ages On the Schlitz Country Stage -you mac be treated to Roseanne Cash and her excellent Nashville band Time to drink some beer (or wine coolers, if you prefer) and tlien walk over to the Comedc Variety Stage and check out com edians like Pat Paulsen and Joe Piscopo tor liear the space rock tunes of Milwaukee s own Snopek) Be now vou want rock tk roll The Rock Stage is at one end of the grounds and the Main stage (tonight featuring the Marsnall Tucker Band) ls opposite Can you see Bills Squier on the Rock Stage and still catch some of the Tucker Bands set- Sure Just hop on the Skv Glider and get whisked above the grounds from end to end. for |USI $1 It s pretre crowded at die- T ucker show — die Mam Stage has a seating capacitv of 18,000 — but you manage to squeeze in and catch the encores Over at the Miller Jazz Stage, artists like Pai Methenv cast a low kec spell General Manger Kris Martinsek feels that the high quality of entertainment, food and vendors will keep Summerfest several qualm steps above its imitators Were verc luckc to have this lake front.' she says, and we want the Festival to re main in keeping with the original intent But we will continue to offer safety and heaurc. too " Ms Martinsek turns to the community for their help — for example when die Dance Pavilion was built in 1981 the Festival asked students at the Milwaukee Trade and Technical Institute to hand-forge the graceful wrought iron archway crowning its entrance In 1982, Summerfest will run from June 24 through Julv 5 (one extra day because of the July 4th holiday ! The entertainment line up is not confirmed until the beginning of June so dial the Festival can get the pick of the current-on-the road music crop 'There is nothing like Summerfest,' says Festi val President Rod Lanser Milwaukee is very proud of it And you have to admit chat the price is right For about 35< per listening hour, there is no finer entertainment bargain anywhere There is a mailing list for brochures at SUM MERFEST, 200 N. Harbor Drive, Milwaukee, Wis consin 53202 (414/273-2680) Tickets can be pur chased in advance for only $4, and are 15 per day at the gate once die festival opens Housing and camping information can Lie oh tained by writing the Greater Milwaukee Visitors & Convention Center. 756 N Milwaukee Street, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53202 (414/273-722)