MULTIPLE CHOICE Princeton Talks, America Listens 0 0 i CAREERS I i This year, as it celebrates its 10th anniver- sary by donating its tape archives to the Museum of Broadcasting in New York City, "American Focus" claims the biggest audience (2 million-3 million) and widest network (more than 400 stations) of any public-affairs interview-and-discussion se- ries on radio. Its guests have included Sen. William Proxmire (who called it "relevant, timely and provocative"), Walter Cronkite ("a valuable public service") and Art Buch- wald ("everything I said was a lie"). But "American Focus" doesn't originate in Washington or the glossy high-rise studios of New York's Broadcast Row. Its home is an old eating club on the Princeton campus and its volunteer staff consists of about 30 Princeton undergraduates. Originally called "Focus on Youth," the show was started in 1974 by Garth Ancier, a studentsatLawrenceville School near Princeton. When Ancier entered Princeton that fall, he brought the program with him. Shell Oil joined as sole sponsor in 1976, en- suring financial stability, and the program has had no trouble finding distinguished guests or unpaid staff. "A lot of people do it because it's a good extracurricular activity," says executive director Rich Buchband. "And some lean to careers in broadcasting. For them it's a good look into the business." Ancier, thefounder, now worksin program- ming at NBC; the show's third president, Sandy Kenyon, is an entertainment reporter for Cable News Network. (For the record, Buchband and executive producer Jon Mar- golies plan to gotolaw school.) career advice." Penn plans to supplement the FAP soon with an Alumnae Advisory Program specifically for women and a Black Alumni Advisory Program. What frustrates counselors to near mad- ness is this: programs are useless unless students use them, and use them in time. For every student who complains about his counseling and placement service, there are five counselors to complain about the students. "Students are apathetic about the job search," says Glenn Rosenthal, place- ment director at Ball State in Muncie, Ind. "They don't seem to realize the effort they must put in to become an outstanding can- didate for employment." Adds Colby's James McIntyre: "Some students assume that once we look at their resum, we can match them with a job. But our main func- tion is to prepare them to look on their own." True enough, looking for a job can be a scary, exhausting process, but there's no good reason to forgo professional help when it's offered. "We're here," Cornell Career Center director Thomas Devlin says sim- ply. "It's the student's responsibility to come to us." SILL BAROL with SEN SHERWOOD in, Cambridge, Mas.,DOONNA SMITH in Coloado prings, CAROL EISENBERG in waterville, Maine, BARBARA MISLE in Ann Arbor, CLAYTON STROMBERGER in Austin and bureau reports Western Michigan fitness dorm: A residence hail 'for the health of it' A Gym-Dandy Dorm for Fitness Freaks Many schools have theme dorms-for French majors, jocks or hackers-but Western Michigan has come up with a new wrinkle: health dorms. This semester two WMU dorms, Eicher and LeFevre, have become "health-oriented residence halls," offering 400 students such red-blooded advantages as workout equipment, a sauna and an aerobics room, plus fruit-juice vending machines and specialized cafeteria service. The two dorms also feature weight-watching classes and calorie-count signs for the various food items. This com- prehensive emphasis on "wellness" already has a rallying cry: "Eicher-LeFevre, For the Health of It." College officials say they set up the special fitness program in response to vigorous stu- dents who already had their own aerobics and bicycling clubs. But WMU was con- cerned with more than just the well-being of its undergraduates; last year Eicher and Le- Fevre were closed for lack of residents. Says Todd Voss, a residence-hall manager at WMU: "We really have to market things these days to attract the kids." are all those loyal alumni who have been quite frequently jobs come later through through job hunts. Ohio State's Partners in alumni contacts." Patricia Rose, director Education maintains a pool of 900 alumni of Penn's Career Placement service, sug- contacts. The benefits of such a program gests that alumni, too, benefit from the are "enormous," says Stanford placement school's seven-year-old Field Advisory center director Christopher Shinkman. Program. "They feel that they are part of "An informational interview is a lot less the university," Rose says, "and are hon- stressful than a real job interview, and ored to have students come to them for M A Rose Bowl Score For Caltech's Squad Caltech senior Dan Kegel formally sub- mitted his senior project last semester: an "electronic bulletin-board controller." In- formally, Kegel and some friends figured out a way to install it at the Rose Bowl, which is near the Caltech campus in Pasade- na. His final exam came New Year's Day, before 103,000 spectators and an estimated 57 million television viewers. In the fourth quarter, the scoreboard-which a moment before had read: UCLA 38, Illinois 9- suddenly flashed: Caltech 38, MIT 9. Ke- gel's professor said he'd earn an A for his crafty work, and the students were even asked to advise the 1984 Summer Olympics committee on technological security. But the city of Pasadena dropped a penalty flag; misdemeanor charges are now pending against Kegel and another student. In their defense, Caltech's two tricksters might point out that pranks have been an unofficial part of the Caltech curriculum since at least 1940, when a Model T Ford was taken apart, reassembled and left run- ning in an absent student's room. There's even precedent for this year's stunt: in 1961, Tech students stealthily revised instruc- tions for the Washington Huskies flashcard section so that the Rose Bowl display at halftime spelled out Caltech forward and Washington backward. Some say Caltech President Marvin Goldberger actually in- spired this year's effort during commence- ment last spring when he exhorted students not to "rest forever on the laurels of 1961." Goldberger insists that the administration certainly doesn't encourage pranks-but he does describe them as "good clean fun." Doctored scoreboard: The city threw a flag .A procrastinate tastefully I NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/MARCH 1984