Hard at work: Producing two weeks of 'Bloom County' in one marathon session- without sleep who drew "Li'l Abner," and Walt Kelly, the cre- ator of "Pogo." Interestingly, while discussing "Peanuts" at one point, Breathed mistakenly says the name of one of his characters instead of "Char- lie Brown." "Freudian slip," he mutters. Frosty feelings: Of course there's another strip to which "Bloom County" has always been compared. From the first day the comic was syndicated, on Dec. 8,1980, people began to call it a "Doonesbury" clone. Clearly, there were strong resemblances that went beyond a certain wise-ass sensibility: a similar grouping of motley characters, a preoccu- pation with contemporary absurdity,asimilar way of drawing. And Breathed freely admits the influ- ence: "I'm a child of the 'Doonesbury'era. It was the only comic strip I had ever really read." At one point, Trudeau and Breathed exchanged angry letters over the parallels between their two car- toons, and relations between the two cartoonists remain frosty. But today the two strips are very different. Breathed seems more interested in soci- etal trends and values than political events and figures, which he recognizes as Trudeau's fran- chise: "Istillthinkhe'sthetopsatiristofany kindin the country." Politically, says Breathed, "I float around several miles above ev- erything and flip-flop back and forth. When I get letters on the same cartoon accusing me of being a reactionary and accusing me of being a flaming liberal, then I con- sider the cartoon a success." Breathed never set out to be a cartoonist. "I don't read the com- ics page," he says. "I never real- ly have. It never occurs to me." In fact, Breathed had no specific ca- reer ambitions as he grew up. Born Guy Berkeley Breathed in Encino, Calif.-"I haven't been called Guy since I was four"-he was some- what of a loner. An amateur herpe- tologist as a kid, he says, "While everybody wassmoking dope, Iwas out wading up a bayou." When Breathed was 15, his family moved to Houston where "everything was wholesome." Breathed doesn't come from a funny family and he JODY BOYMAN never was a class clown. "Don't," he says, "look for a performer in me." As a student at the University of Texas in Aus- tin, Breathed gravitated to the school newspaper. Then an aspiring photographer-he graduated in 1979 with a bachelor's in photojournalism-he sent his favorite picture to The Daily Texan with a fictitious caption ("I have absolutely no respect for the conventions of journalism") and, to his amaze- ment, it ran. From then on he worked at a variety of jobs, from columnist to editorial cartoonist, at UT publications. Asa lark he started a comic strip, "Academia Waltz," and it ended up running for two years. "Cartoons were the most efficient way of getting a point across and the easiest way to distinguish a style," he remembers. And, even though Breathed was, and is, a news junkie, straight reporting was too confining: "It was al- ways a constant frustration that reality was no- where near as interesting as I could make it." A college friend, Mark McKinnon, who now works as campaign press secretary for Texas Gov. Mark White, remembers that Breathed "wasn't one of the gang. He came and went. He wasn't one who would get on the bus and go to the party." In "Academia Waltz," you can see Breathed's style in the making-strongly drawn characters and a pungent, opinionated sense of humor. The ternships and Experiential Education, about 1 in every 36 college students in- terned as part of their academic training; today that figure is 1 in 5. That growth is due to the fact that internships profit both employer and employed. Students check out the real world while earning money or credit or both; companies can reap energet-Sr ic labor at low cost and scout promising young talent before the competition does. For years undergraduates have latched on to trainee positions through professors with contacts in the field. Increasingly, however, colleges are formalizing these contacts into networks that involve local merchants, corporations and nonprofit in- stitutions. Boston University, for example, lists about 1,200 intern positions in every- thingfrom advertisingtosocial services. Blinding glamour: A semester spent in a professional environment often helps a stu- dent refine career plans. Many are blinded by the alleged glamour of certain jobs; actu- al work in their chosen fields can reveal the grit beneath the gleam. "It means coming Hitting the jackpot: Pulitzer winner Marx down to earth," says Prof. Terri Schultz- Brooks, director of New York University's equalgrant. PepsiCo says that 70 percent of intern committee. "They come out of it still qualified interns have been hired on full in awe, but with much more realistic expec- time after graduation. tations of what they're getting into." Some- Many sponsors do not pay their interns, times they decide to stay away. "You may arguing that the jobs-which may provide get into the office situation and say, 'This is critiques as well as responsibilities-are not for me!' and you may decide to switch," valid learning experiences. Faculty super- says Lynne J. Robbins, director of career visors often help analyze that experi- planning and placement at NYU. "It's easi- ence, holding rap sessions throughout the er to do it when you're a sophomore than semester so students can exchange war sto- when you're a senior." ries. Other programs, like Berkeley's A dazzling array of internships can also SCOPE (Survey of Career Options and Pro- distinguish a student resume and add tech- fessions through Exploration), monitor nical polish to a liberal-arts background. sponsors to make sure interns are doing "There are a lot of people out there with substantive work and not running coffee bachelor's degrees," says Gregg Dedrick, for the boss. national college recruiting manager for Let the intern beware: not all intern- PepsiCo. "It's a matter of what's going to be ships are what they're cracked up to be. the edge for a student." Barbara Nash, who Many sponsors, in fact, treat their interns spent the summer before her senior year at BU working for Salomon Brothers in New York City, can attest to that edge. "I' waspaid$7 an hour, butIwould have paid them to get the job there," says Nash, who was hired after graduation by a New York bank. "In this year's 6 job search I know that the in- ternship helped open the door for interviews." PepsiCo, for one, is so satis- fied with the recruitment bene- fits of internships that it has doubled the number of slots iny the minority program it began in 1983. This summer, 69 stu- dents earned stipends of up to $325 per week; exceptional x work gets rewarded with a $2,000 scholarship-plus the JACQUES M. CHENE' intern's school receives an Making connections:Sean Lane with New York Mayor OCTOBER 1986 as if they were indentured servants. "There's a danger. A lot of companies want to take advantage of free labor and have students answer phones and do photocopy- ing," warns NYU's Schultz-Brooks. "And students are very vulnerable. They want to do well and they don't wish to offend or complain." The key when interviewing, say the experts, is to make it clear you are seeking to gain firsthand knowledge through participation, not observation. Noshooting:Take Berkeley'sSarahNelson as a case in point. When she began a stint as a production assistant for KGO-TV in San Francisco, she expected to work at tape editingandshootingonlocation. "Ihopedto dazzle them once I got in but I made the mistake of saying I had clerical experi- ence,"says Nelson, who did little more than act as a temporary secretary. Brigid Dowdal, a BU communi- cations major, reports that on her first day in the news depart- ment of a local television sta- tion,alltheinterns wereherded intoaroomandtold, "Youwon't be doing much because you're a peon and, by the way, congratu- lations for getting the intern- ship." Prohibited from touch- ing any equipment because she did not belong to the union, Dowdal finally got her shot at glory-and muffed it. Told to feed a script into a TelePromp- Ter, Dowdal didn't know how but was afraid to say so. "The copy just came out ... I mean it just flew out and the top anchor started yelling," remembers -NEWSWEEK Dowdal. "It wasn't much fun." Ed Koch Neither a dreary round of NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS 51