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October 19, 1965 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1965-10-19

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PAGE SIX

TIFF MICHIGAN DAILY

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1965

PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY. ACTORER 1W 1~G~

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1

r

k

Across Campus

GRADUATE
ENGINEERS

Talks About
Indonesia
Official

Journalism Schools Criticized
For Lack of Professionalism

CIVIL

SANITARY

For Career Opportunities With
The CITY of PHILADELPHIA
WATER DEPARTMENT
ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
Will Be Conducted On
OCTOBER 16t1'
If Interview is inconvenient
Please Send Your Resume To:
COLLEGE RELATION'S OFFICE
500 Municipal Services Bldg,
Reyburn Plaza

TUESDAY, OCT. 19
4:15 p.m.-Dr. Leslie W. Dun-
bar of the Southern Regional
Council of Atlanta, Ga., will de-
liver the first of the William W.
Cook Lectures in the Rackham
Amphitheatre.
7:15 p.m .-UAC will show two
films on the leading proponent
of moral rearmament, Peter How-
ard. "A Man to Match the Hour"
and "The Revolution That Works"
will be Shown at the 3rd Floor
Conference Rm., Union.
7:30 p.m. - An Art of the
Americas Lecture, "A Focus on
Realism," will be given at the
Rackham Amphitheatre.
8 p.m.-A meeting of Phi Sigma
Iota, romance languages society,
will be held in the E. Conference
Rm., Rackham Bldg.
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 20
9 a.m.-The College of Phar-
macy lectures will be held in the
Rackham Amphitheatre.
10:30 a.m.-The Annual Phar-
macy Lectures begin in the Rack-
ham Amphitheatre. Prof. George
Zografi of the pharmacy college
will speak on "Principles of Su-
stained Release Medication" and
Paul Rettig of the Baltimore
Bureau of the Health Insurance
Social Security Administration
will speak on "Some Aspects of
Medicare and Related Health Care
Legislation."

K

A
Chance
Matui
Professio

Philadelphia, Pa. 19107
An Op
To For Ex
mily Can

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in't Buy

J0001

JOIN THE DAILY STAFF

Noon-Hans Hofmann of the
Center for Study of Personality
and Culture, Inc., Massachusetts,
will speak on "Sex and Students:
A Plea for Honesty," Rm. 2 of the
League.
12:30 p.m.-Dean William Haber
of the literary college will speak
at a pharmacy college luncheon
in the Vandenberg Rm. of the
League.
2 p.m.-A symposium on "Re-
cent Developments in Central Ner-
vous System Pharmacology" will
be held in the Rackham Amphi-
theatre. Julian Villarreal of the
pharmacology department of the
pharmacy college will speak on
"The Contributions of Animal Ex-
perimentation to Psychopharma-
cology" and Prof. Roy D. Hudson
of the pharmacology department
of the pharmacy college will speak
on "Parkinsonism and Anti-
Parkinson Drugs."
3:30 p.m. - Prof. Dan Fink of
the Academy of Arts, Copenhagen,
will s p e a k on "Industrialized
Buildings," Architecture Aud.
4 p.m.-Prince Souvanna Phou-
ma, prime minister of Laos, will
speak in the Clements Library.
4:15 p.m.-Hans Hofmann will
speak on "Religion as a World-
view," in the Multipurpose Rm.
of the UGLI.
7 p.m.-Speakers from the Wil-
low Run Association for Neigh-
borhood Development (WRAND),
Jesse Rutherford, Jesse Hill and
Donald Roberts, will discuss the
War on Poverty as it relates to
WRAND and the WRAND Volun-
teer Day, planned for Saturday.
The meeting will be held in 3529
SAB.
8 p.m.-The Professional The-
atre Program will present the
APA in "You Can't Take It With
You" at the Mendelssohn Theatre.
8 p.m. - Richard L. Beers of
Michigan's Department of Admin-
istration will speak on "The Poli-
tics of Reorganization" in the E.
Conference Rm. of the Rackham
Bldg.
8:30 p.m. - The Cleveland Or-
chestra, conducted by George
Szell, will give the opening con-
cert of the Musical Society's Extra
Series at Hill Aud.
BEST DEALS ON '66
Mustangs-Falcons-Fords
USED CARS-ALL MAKES
SEE OR CALL
JOHN HARRISON
at
Henderson Ford Safes, 662-3261

By HELEN KRONENBERG

(Continued from Page 1) Journalism in America has
presently been under fire because
coup was that the Indonesian of theyconditions f juralism
Communist party (PKI) had tried sch oanditdepartmeonsmh
to forestall what it regardeddas an orl depa rtment snTh
inevitable attempt by the army to Midwestern and Pacific Coastal
g a i n control after Sukarno's institution, is most often cri-
death. ticized.
Tha PKI lani7 b th +ha+Cn ._.

a ne r i reanzead t nt a Su-
karno, 64, was in bad health, Jones
said, and that it "was no match
for the army in a direct military
clash."
Whether or not it thought the
army was itself preparing to seize
power after Sukarno's death,
Jones continued, the PKI knew
time was running out-and that
"their only chance of success lay
in liquidating the top army com-
mand," six of whom were tortured
and shot to death early Oct. 1.
Coup Crushed
Gen. Abdul Haris Nasution, the
defense minister, however, escaped
assassination, swiftly rallied loyal
troops and crushed the coup by
early evening.
The former ambassador main-
tained that the murder and muti-
lation of the six generals was
"most un-Indonesian."
The six murdered generals, as
well as Nasution, were all trained
in the U.S.

It has been said that a journal-
ism department is not professional
enough, for, after all, professions
such as law and medicine have
separate schools. It has been as-
serted that trade skills can be
learned either in a six-month
period or less given practical ex-
perience.
In a recent Harper's Magazine
article the late David Boroff of
the English department at New
York University presented his
diagnosis of the malady plaguing
journalism.
Journalism education is insep-
arable from the condition of jour-
nalism itself, Boroff declared, and
the condition of journalism is not
good. The number of newspapers
has decreased over the past 40
years while the number of dailies
has only remained constant.
Suburban Papers
Although there has been an in-
crease in suburban papers, these
sheets generally do not dispense

anything more than business and
social news. A decline in news-
paper competition may also be a
factor in the downward trend of
journalism.
The decline in newspaper status
is another symptom of the jour-
nalism' malady. Television news-
men, noted more for their person-
alities than reporting, have taken
away the "theatrical aura" of
newsmen.
Boroff Cites Breakdown
Boroff blamed universities for
breaking down the link between
newspapermen a n d literature.
Would-be writers no longer go to
newspapers for publication of
works; they affiliate with univer-
sities.
A lack of practical application
coupled with poor courses of in-
struction are the main criticisms
of journalism schools.
Prof. William Porter of the
journalism department feels "the
student paper should be totally
separate from the department of
journalism." Porter feels that
journalism concentrates on "more
important things than putting out
a daily paper."
Journalism-A Liberal Art
Prof. Karl Zeisler of the jour-
nalism department has also as-
serted that "we regard ourselves
as a liberal art. We try to get

students to synthesize the discip-
lines that they learn in political
science, psychology, sociology and
other courses when writing cur-
rent events."
Zeisler has pointed out that the
journalism department does get
practicehinputting out a paper,
the Michigan Journalist.
Journalism courses at the Uni-
versity date back quite a while
for the first course in newspaper
writing, called Rapid Writing, was
instituted in the English depart-
ment 75 years ago. In the school
year 1929-30 journalism became
a separate department of instruc-
tion.
Berkeley
The University of California at
Berkeley has taken a positive step
to ameliorate the problem con-
cerning poor courses of instruc-
tion. It is currently reviewing its
total journalism department. A re-
vised journalism program on the
graduate level will go into effect
next fall.
The graduate program has two
separate plans, one for those who
want to teach and the other for
foreign students who want to learn
more about general commupica-
tions.
The undergraduate program at
Berkeley is still in a state of flux.

4

*

-

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DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

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The Collar's
The
eT
First thing you notice about a
shirt is the collar. Is it immaculately
clean? Smoothly, evenly pressed?
Or does it look a little bit tired,
not quite up to seeing the day
through?
When the collar looks superb,
it's a pretty good sign the whole
shirt is expertly done. You know
it's been handled by highly trained
laundresses working skillfully at the
best of scientific equipment. The
kind we have at Kyer. Call us to-
day.
601 E. William St.
1100 Broadway
627 S. Main St.
Phone NO 3-4185
Y
Specialist in
Fabric Care

it,--+4-,,-A fwnm V.-- 71

. AvarAPP PCCPntiAI Knnwl of fnraipn f

(Continued from Pera g e ess ent anowi. of orign
tangnage & area helpful. Women must
PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS: Bureau have MA. Age 21-35. U.S. citizen for 5
of Appointments-Seniors & grad stu- yrs. Also positions at various degree
dents, please call 764-7460 for appoint- levels including Psych., Physics, Econ.,
ments with the following: Geog, Math, Forestry, Journ., Lan-
THURS., OCT. 21- guages. Astro., etc.
Standard Oil of Detroit, Detroit - FRI., OCT. 22-
Dec. grads-men. Degrees-in Econ., Gen. Honeywell, Inc., Minneapolis, Minn.
Lib. Arts & Poll. Sci. for positions in -Men & women, degrees in Econ., Math
mgmt. trng., merchandising & territor- & Philos. for positions in territorial
ial sales. Locsated throughout Mich. sales & data processing trainees. Lo-
State Farm Insurance, Marshall, Mich. cations include Detroit, Chicago &
-Majors in Econ., Gen. Lib. Arts, Wellesley, Mass.
Hist., Law, Math, Poli. Sci., Psych.,
Speech. Positions in Elec. Computing, POSITION OPENINGS:
Insurance (Home Office & Claims), & State of Michigan-Various trainee
Mgmt. Trng. Not Sales. positions including Biometrician, Fish-
Eastman Co., N.Y.C.-Men & women eries & Game Biologists, Forester,
for sales trng. program. Bkgd. in radio Geologist, Park Mgr. Degree in appro-
& TV desirable. WTRX, a Flint, Mich., priate field. Men or women. No ex-
radio station is used as trng. center. per. required.
Naval Admin. Office, Wash., D.C. - Thomas M. Lowe, Jr. & Assoc., Inc.,
Men & Women. Degrees in Econ., Atlanta, Ga.-Immed. opening for 2
Arch., Engl.,-Gen. Lib. Arts, Hist., Math, experienced engrs.-1 in air condition-
etc. for positions in elec. computing, ing, 1 in elec. engrg. Also need mech.,
mgmt. trng., personnel, public admin., elect. & civil engrs., recent grads will-
purchasing, statistics, transportation & ing to relocate.
general writing. Federal National Mortgage Assoc.,
Central Intelligence Agency, Wash.,
D.C.-Jr. Officer Trng. Program (JO-
TP), a highly selective program, pro-
vides young officers with key posi-
tions. BA, grad study helpful, B plus

Chicago-Mortgage Intern Trng. Pro-
gram. 12 mos. trng. in tech., admin., &
prof. phases of housing & home fi-
nance. FSEE req for employment. Also
persons with exper. & bgkd. in real
estate, finance, econ. for 1-2 mos. trng.
Mgmt. Consultants, Ill.-Plant Mfg.
Engr. for leading midwest mfr. BSME
pref. Extensive exper, in tool & die
des. Knowl. of metal fabricating. Age
limit 48.
* * *

For further information, please call
764-7460, General Div., Bureau of Ap-
pointments, 3200 SAB.
SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE:
212 SAB-
YWCA, College & University Div. -
Will interview on Oct. 20, Wed., male
& female students in soc. or poll. sci.
Information on overseas projects.
ENGINEERING PLACEMENT INTER-
VIEWS-Seniors & grad students, please
sign schedule posted at 128-H West
Engrg.
MON., OCT. 25-
Corning Glass Works, Sales offices &

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.................. .:..:X "" "::.4:X:1 V:: " . Y "1:.::: . 1".
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... . . . . . . . . . . .. . . .. .. . . . . .

Ill

model aundr

the rryinc.
AND
'kNIB0K N NC
Take great pride in presenting a factory
demonstration of new cameras, lenses,
projectors, enlargers, and photographic
accessories by these world-famous
manufacturers

plants in U.S.-Any Degree: ChE, CE,
EE, ME. MS: Constru. BS-MS: EM, IE,
Met. BS: E Math, E Physics. R. & D.,
Des., Prod., Sales.
Fisher Governor Co., Marshalltown,
Iowa & Coraopolis, Pa.-BS: ChE, EM,
IE. BS-MS: MS. R. & D., Des., Prod.,
Sales.
Harvard Business School, Boston, Mass.
-BS: AE & Astro., ChE, CE, EE, E
Math, EB, E Physics, IE, Mat'ls., ME,
Meteor. & Ocean., Met., Naval Marine,
Sci. Engrg. MS: Nuclear. Grad Business
Study. Make appointment at, Bureau
of Appointments, 3200 SAB.
The Mead Corp., Entire corporation
-BS: ChE, CE, IE & ME. MS: Sani-
tary & Info. & Controls. R. & D., Des.,
Project & staff engrg.
NASA-Longley Research Center -
Any Degree: AE & Astro., ChE, CE,
EE, EM, Mat'ls., Math & Physics, ME.
Prof.: Applied Mech. MS-PhD: Info. &
Controls, Biochem. & Microbiol., Com-
munic: Sci. BS: E Math, E Physics &
Sci. Engrg. R. & D., Des.
MON.-TUES., OCT. 25-26-
Motorola, Inc., Chicago, Ill. & Phoe-
nix, Ariz.-Any Degree: EE. R. & D.,
Des.
Shell, Throughout the U.S. - BS-
MS: ChE, EE, ME & Met. MS: Con-
struction. R. & D., Des., Prod., Sales.
Sperry-Rand Corp., Univac - Data
Processing Div., Rosevil (Twin Cities)
-BS: E Physics.. BS-MS: EE. Citizens
& non-citizens l6ecominig 11.8 citizen.
R. & D., Des., Prod.
ORGANIZATION
NOTICES
USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN-
NOUNCEMENTS is available to official-
ly recognized and registered student
organizations only. Forms are avail-
able in Roam 1011 SAB.
Bah4'i Student Group, Fireside:
"Man, the Supreme Talisman," Oct.
22, 8 p.m., Room 3545 SAB.
* * 1*
U. of M. Chapter of American, So-
ciety for Public Administration pre-
sents Richard L. Beers, deputy direc-
tor, Budget Division, Department of
Administration, State of Michigan, who
will speak on "Reorganization Issues
and Procedures" at 8 p.m., Wed., Oct.
20, in the East Conference Room of
Rackham Bldg. Coffee Will be served,
all welcome.
Cervantes Club, Meeting, Thurs., Oct.
21, 7 p.m., Room 3B, Michigan Union.
PARTICIPATE
WEEKENDS
AT
YPSILANTI
STATE HOSPITAL
1965: Oct. 22-24
Nov.5-7, 12-14
Dec. 3-5
1966: Jan. 21-23
Feb. 11-13
Mar. 18-20, 25-27
Apr. 8-10
For further information Call
Judy Kempton-665-5681
Newyne Kline-662-8351
Sponsored by The
Ecumenical Campus Council

4

HANS HOFMANN, Th.D.

I

o NIKON
* NIKKOREX
* BRONICA
* MAMIYA
® DURST
* FUJICA
® KOMURA
* ULTIMA

to

THIS WEEK
WED.-THURS.-FRI.
"Sex spells for the student more than glandu-
lar release. It signifies being with a person as
a- person, naked in the psychological sense
more than the physical sense. The gentleman
student of yesteryear may not have needed
such rock-bottom experience and assurance
that it is possible to be human. But today's
student does if he is to stand up to the pres-
sures and demands of his academic life."
-Hans Hofmann, "Sex & Students:
A Plea for Honesty," article
in THE CHURCH REVIEW,
Vol XXII, No. 2/3.
WEDNESDAY NOON LUNCHEON
BOOK DISCUSSION:
Hofmann will discuss the above article.
12:00 Noon, Michigan League, Rm. 2

Writer and Lecturer in Theology and Psy-
chology of Religion; Sometime Professor of
Harvard Divinity School; presently Executive
Director, Center for the Study of Personality
and Culture, Inc., Cambridge, Mass.

ON FRIDAY,OCTOBER 22, 1965
10:30 A.M. to 8:00 P.M.

Booth Newspaper Group
OffrsExceptional
fesCareer Opportunities
In making your choice of a career, why not consider
the newspaper field?
Particularly the nine daily newspapers published in
Bay City, Muskegon, Saginaw, Flint, Grand Rapids,
Jackson, Kalamazoo, Ypsilanti, and Ann Arbor by
Booth,-Newspapers.
You needn't be a journalism major in order to be
successful in the newspaper business. On the busi-
ness side of its nine daily papers, Booth offers fine
career possibilities in accounting, finance and credit,
Tetail, national and classified advertising, and in the
highly important - and challenging - circulation end
of the business.
In addition to competitive salaries, pensions and
other benefits Booth Newspapers offer exceptional
opportunities for security, responsibility and ad-
vancement. Investigate Booth's possibilities before
you decide.

WEDNESDAY EVENING: 8 P.M.
Hofmann will meet on an informal
basis with any and all interested
students at The Canterbury House,
218 North Division St.

MICHAEL TOMKOW
District Sales Manager

JEROME BROWN
Technical Coordinator

SERIES of 4 UNIVERSITY LECTURES:
"Religion-Forward or Backward"
Wed., 4:15 P.M. "Religion as a Worldview"

Mr. Tomkow and Mr. Brown will be in our store
to demonstrate their equipment and assist you
in any way possible.
QUARRY PHOTO
319S_ TATE ON THEF CAMAPUS

Learn Europe from behind the counter.
25000 JOBS

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