TTze H'LZZ'top, December 10, 1976, Page Seven 7^ collegi^^® ns in Gener^^ wn Presid®^ Educati®^^ tt, Govef 55-1973; DeveloP^^, s Barga^*’ Educati^ nr degr®"" LI be h® L, Chi® 7. ^arcMullinax:Around the World Inexpensive Hash Lures Young To Afghanistan tor’s' Note: Mara MullinaXt a senior history major f^om Raleighy is traveling around the by air and bus September 9— ^oember 13. In addition to keeping his ^ journaly Mara is sending str^ents Mars Hill a record of his travelsy ^ping that more of them will see the Waiting possibilities for gaining ’^edit through independent study pro- ^^ts and travel. If you like uncivilized excitement, living, and entertainment, Afghanistan ts the place for you. This is a poor ^ountry lacking in luxury and hygiene, full of fun and happy people.Theirs is a life unfettered by civilization ruinous poverty, but a simple and 'Carefree life whose only worry is the ^tops in the fields. Herat was the itst stop and as it turned out the ®st place to buy Afghan goods. Sheep- ®kin/fleece coats, leather goods made order, shirts, carpets, carpetbags, '^amei hair socks and gloves...the list such seems endless. Changing money a big hassle. Only one bank in *®rat serves the whole place and it °ok me ninety minutes to get $20.00 '^hanged to Afghanis. Herat is a main JPot for the young travelers for dope ® both cheap and illegal only in writ es. So there are a lot of young Euro- ^®3ns as well as Americans walking a- in. a daze—the most pathetic ^ht in all Afghanistan. On the road f Kandahar are many, many tribes of '^hi nomads—the proudest people in ® country—who make up a large minor- 7 of the population. Their life con- ^sts of traveling from the Hindu Kush Hoi 'hntains in the north in sinnmer to the ®sert in the south for winter with ^eir sheep, goats,and camels that pro- them food.Under their black tents. th, ^ world'^s best carpets are made, tak- ‘8 two or more years per carpet. They . them to a buyer and by stages the ice goes up—from $100 in the begin- to $1000 should it reach the ^tes. I was able to spend a half-hour one tribe, sharing some fresh l^^ked nan Cbread) the woman had just ^'^ed. Kandahar is another drug haven. Was saving my jeans to trade in ^l for Afghani crafts but they would ^ly give me $2.00 maximum for them as .*^Posed to $20.00 for bell-bottomed ®^ls in Herat. Though disappointing in j®Pping, Kabul was not disappointing ^ its food and sights.The world’s best alettes are made here, along with bazaar 'is extremely colorful and crowd ed, where the local people buy anything they need for garments and house. From Kabul I went to the heart of the Hindu Kush to an old Hindu monastery called Bamyan. Two Buddhas, one 125 feet tall and the other 175 feet tall, were hewn out of a cliffside by Buddhist monks in 300 and 800 A.D. When the Moslems in vaded, their custom of not having grav en images of anyone was carried through and orders were given to deface the Buddhas. So today one can see perfectly shaped Buddhas with the face, from chin to forehead, gone. I was able to clifnb to the top of the head of the 125 foot one where I got a wonderful view of the valley ringed with snow capped moun tains. The poplar trees were a bright kebobs and rice dishes. The local tiful sight in Afghanistan. The first is ten miles away—a deserted Red City/ Fort high on the mountain side, carved out of rust-colored rock. It used to be a veritable fortress, until it raised Genghis Khan’s ire. In 1220, his favor ite nephew was murdered here while vis iting. Khan promised to return the fol lowing spring and kill everything in the valley—men, women, children, dogs, trees and flowers.And he did just that. The drive to Pakistan was also through Khan territory—the Kabul Gorge and the Khyber Pass. Peshawar, at the end of the Pass, has the most extremes that I’ve ever seen in a city.The worst pollution, poverty and hygenic condi tions and their opposites can be found here. Twenty miles from Peshawar is a tribal area that the government does not control and is a haven for smug glers and other types of shady charac ters, This place yDorru is where Khyber rifles are made as well as James Bond type pen guns, cane guns and umbrella guns. Also in Darra •was a hashish fac tory where I saw twenty kilos of the stuff, stamped and ready for smuggling. Definitely a different place. Murree, fifty miles north of Rawalpindi,used to be the "R&R” place for British officers in the Paki-Afghani wars in the Khyber Pass. Now a tourist resort, it is the only place in Pakistan where one can buy Kashmiri type goods—shawls, jewel ry, carpets, and paper mache boxes. Lahore is another city of extremes. There are many students here—the first place where it is a status symbol to be a student. For the first time on the trip, I saw people with leisure time playing tennis, cricket, and having picnics in the huge,beautiful parks and gardens with parakeets flying wild. The intellectual Pakistanis are the only ones that are nice and helpful—the o- thers seem to have only one thing on their minds—SEX. My premature opinion for the millions of people here is that all the peasant men run around with this on their minds. India-Yox the first time, we had a hassle at the Indian side of the border. Six hours we spent there while luggage and bus were ripped apart. We got lec tured on the horrors of hashish and car' rying in Indian money bought outside of India. In Kabul, I had bought $66.00 worth of Indian Rupees at better than the official rate on the Black Market. Running the risk of confiscation, I had them in my shoe, but I was declared "clean". India’s people are the friendliest yet. Their Hindu religion makes them more passive than Moslems. Literally five seconds after I got off the bus in Amritsar, an Indian rode up on his bi cycle and shook my hand, saying-welcome and that I was the guest of all India. Similar experiences have occurred since. I am now in the disputed state of Kashmir in northwest corner of India, the foothills of the Himalayas. Sixteen thousand foot mountains surround my houseboat on the Del Lake, where for three dollars a day, I live in a luxu rious houseboat with my own cook-ser vant and have three meals a day. These are meals like roast mutton,lamb curry, and roast duck. Salesmen' in cloth, shawls, paper mache boxes, jewelry,gro ceries, and fruit paddle by my front door selling their wares. This is fan tastic living. I've two more weeks in India—the country of countries. Its exoticness has really made me fall in love with it after three days.