r " "0 menial chores nor a dream job, the best pharmaceu internships offer the chance to learn a com- preciated L pany's entire operation-from the bottom pany vice p up. Jonathan Eig of Northwestern worked cause, says in the Washington bureau of the Los An- take sometf geles Times, where he both fetched medical it for comps prescriptions for reporters and wrote na- on major ac tionally syndicated articles. Still, he counts utive took I his summer there as "the most important ing him tod part of my college education. I learned move up in more than I did in class." that in sch So did Dan Lambert, a Northwestern For thos grad student in business-but he says it selves andg wasn't easy. "When you first get there they ships can r really exclude you because they know even if you you're not going to be there for long," says sponsor, at Lambert, who put in 11-hour days with a your aspir Where to Look First tical firm. Not everybody ap- ambert's efforts, and one com- resident rewrote his reports be- Lambert, he "didn't want to hing an intern had done and use any policy." Still, he got to work counts, and one company exec- Lambert under his wing, treat- dinner and advising him how to n the industry. "You don't get ool," Lambert says. e who are able to assert them- get past the gofer tasks, intern- epresent a no-lose proposition: don't get a job offer from your least you get the chance to test ations against reality. In addi- tion, you may absorb enough expertise-or buzzwords-to make you sound like an in- sider in future interviews. An extra round of contacts can never hurt; New Yorker Sean Lane got to meet Mayor Ed Koch and other notables during his stint as a man- agement intern in city government. And who knows, you might make it big enough to start hiring trainees of your own. "[The company] gets a low-price employee, gives the guy a desk and maybe he'll be a super- star," says journalist Eig. "It's not com- pletely one-sided, but the intern gets the better part of the deal." CsHRISTOPHE M.BELLITTOBth SAAH OsOKSN inEantEn, LAnA BJALERT in Boston and EaIs HIMMELaBACs in Berkeley ntern programs come in all shapes and sizes, frQm gra- tisgigstolucrative trainee po- sitions. Most are semester- long and low-paying; students work one or two full days each week for something near thej minimum wage, counting the time in place of a class in their course load. Summer intern- ships, on the other handallow! you to work regular business hours-or longer-for a week- ly or monthly stipend. Not all schools accept every sponsor's program for academic credit; be sure to check with your de- partmenthead. Theinternexplosionhasre- sulted in a number of books and clearinghouses to handle student inquiries. Some asso- ciations maintain offices and directories for individual pro- fessions or industries. The fol- lowing resources are more general, listing programs by field and region, and repre- sent the best place to start your sponsor search. Check the library and career-plan- ning office for more detail. CENTERS: Apprentice Alliance (matches apprentices with "masters"in Bay Area jobs from crafts topublishing). LucilePhillips, coordinator, 151 Portero Ave- nue, San Francisco, Calif. grams and resource papers for faculty seeking to estab- lish experiential education programs on their campuses). Jane C. Kendall, executive di- rector, 122 St. Mary's Street, Raleigh, N.C. 27605. Tel.: (919) 834-7536. The Volunteer Clearinghouse of D.C. (recruits 600 interns for public-service work in the D.C. area). Debbie Cotton, director, 1313 New York Ave- nue N.W., Room 303, Wash- ington, D.C. 20005. Tel.: (202) 638-2664. The Washington Center (match- es 1,100 students and faculty with government and private- sector programs in the D.C. area). Claire Guimond, direc- tor, 1101 14th Street N.W., 12th floor, Washington, D.C. 20005. Tel.: (202) 289-8680. BOOKS: 1986 Internships, lists 35,000 nationwide, edited by Lisa S. Hulse. (F& W Publications, Inc., 9933AllianceRoad, Cin- cinnati, Ohio 45242. $14.95.) The National Directory of Intern- ships, lists 400 nationwide, (NSIEE [see above]. $15.) Directory of Washington In- ternships, 150 programs in D.C. area. (NSIEE [see above]. $9.50.) The Experienced Hand: A Stu- dent Manual for Making the Most of an Internship, 10 steps to- ward a successful internship, by Timothy Stanton and Ka- mil Ali. (Carroll Press, P.O. Box 8113, Cranston, R.I. 02920. $6.95.) DOW CHEMICAL Testing your aspirations against reality: Intern at Dow Chemical 94103. Tel.: (415) 863-8661. Chicago Metropolitan Center (urban work-study program). Ellen Van Someren, intern- ship coordinator, 407 South Dearborn, Suite 515, Chicago, 111.60610. Tel.: (312) 922-3243. Financial Women's Association of New York. Pamela McCann, chairman, Intern Committee, 1221 Avenue of the Americas, New York, N.Y. 10020. Tel.: (212) 764-6476. Great Lakes College Association Philadelphia Urban Term (150 ur- ban positions). Steve Brooks, executive director, 1227 Wal- nut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 19107. Tel.: (215) 574-9490. National Commission for Cooper- ative Education (organizes pro- grams at 900 colleges). Ralph C. Porter, president, P.O. Box 775, Boston, Mass. 02115. Tel.: (617) 437-3778. National Society for intern- ships and Experiential Education (NSIEE; publishes directories of opportunities, handbooks for students on finding pro- lovable characters out of line drawings that end up two inches tall. And these days, the 29-year-old Breathed is at the height of his cartooning abili- ties, infusing "Bloom County" with a captivating blend of charm and sass. His confidence shows in the remarkable variety of his subjects-can you imagine Jim Davis giving Garfield a nose job?- and the visual style he's worked hard to perfect. And, in fact, Breathed says he's only become com- fortable with the strip in the past couple of years. Well-rounded cast: The key to the success of "Bloom County" is its population. Breathed has created an incredible variety of personalities, from the charm- ingly naive Opus to the utterly sleazy Steve Dallas to the anarchic Bill the Cat. "Berke's developed a really rounded cast of characters," says Bill Phil- lips, who edits Breathed's cartoon books at Little, Brown. "He'sgiven them distinctive personalities. To the reader, they're old and dear friends. When people pick up the strip, they aren't just looking for a joke, they're seeing how Opus is doing and what Bill the Cat is up to." In fact, identification with his cartoon crowd is so strong that half of the strip's mailcomesaddressedtothem. The varied nature of the "Bloom County" crew enables Breathed to paint a variety ofemotions and to comment on a number of topics. He created Oliver Wendell Jones, the black technological whiz kid, so he could treat, or mistreat, computers and scientists. "If Ineed an asshole," he points out, "I'll bring in Steve Dallas." In some cases, Breathed says, he gets to live vicariously through his charac- ters, and "some of them have definitely been cre- ated to explore certain portions of my head." Ob- serves his wife, Jody Boyman, "The fine points of Berke's personality-his sensitive qualities-are like Opus." (At one point, in a moment of panic, Breathed utters the quintessential Bill the Cat word: "Ack!") Sometimes a new character is added to juice up the strip-and Breathed's interest. That's true for a brand-new one: Rosebud the basse- lope. This creature-inspired by the joke-postcard animal, the jackalope, and modeled after the Breatheds' pet basset hound, Sophie-is a basset with antlers. In at least one significant way, "Bloom County" seems to be evolving into a "Peanuts" for the '80s. Rather than focusing directly on the events and trends of the day, Breathed filters them through his characters. When, for example, Opus takes personal ads at the Bloom County Beacon-an old woman describing herself as "Tall, brunette ... nice gams and just as slinky and sexy as all-git- out"-the strip comments obliquely on how des- perate modern romance can be. The humor of "Bloom County" comes from personal responses to modern circumstances, not from gags or jokes. Like Charles Schulz in "Peanuts," Breathed keeps- the focus personal at all times. And he says he's developed a deep respect for Schulz and Al Capp, Really flying: 'm deathly afraid of boring myself 'says the cartoonist of his love for planes, motorcycles and speedboats 52 NEWSWEEK ON CAOMPUSE OCTOBER 1986 OCTOBER 1986 NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS 13