WEDNESDAY, DECEMBERS, 1954 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN WENSA-DCME 8,m1954 THE1 MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SE111VE mI1 m1 .. .. - . Gargoyle Holds Cultural Exhibit in a Teapot Bard's Plays To Be Enacted In conjunction with the Stratford Shakespearean Festival a four week program is planned for this summer in Stratford. Ontario. British conductor Boyd Neel will conduct the Hart House Orchestra for the festival, and soprano Eliza- beth Schwarzkopf and violinist Isaac Stern will make solo appear- ances. Stratford's third Shakespearean Drama Festival this summer will include "Julius Caesar" and "The Merchant of Venice." Art Schools To Sponsor Consumer Conference Sponsored by the art department of the College of Architecture and Design and the Institute of Con- temporary Art in Boston, the an- nual Ann Arbor Conference' will be held tomorrow and Friday in the Rackham Bldg. Following a dinner at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in the League Ballroom, Joseph Hudnut, dean emeritus of the School of Design, Harvard Uni- versity, will present an address on "The Common Man and Grand Rapids." During the two day conference four sessions are planned. These meetings will concern the problems of defining the consumer, reviewing the present status of consumer re- search and considering a case prob- lem. The present status of consum- er research will also be discussed. Among the many researchers, de- signers and manufacturers to be present at the meeting will be James N. Morgan, assistant direc- tor of the University Research Cen- ter. Students will be admitted free of charge to the four sessions. Fund Starts New Magazine According to the chairman of the board of editors, the first issue of Forest Science, an international journal of research and technical progress of forestry, will appear in 'March, 1955. The quarterly jo'urnal will print any article concerning forestry, but mainly those of interest to re- search, teaching and administra- tive personnel. Special preference will be given to articles discussing the results of original research. A grant of $2,000 from the Hor- ace H. Rackham Fund will make the initial issue possible. NEW EXHIBIT--Gargoyle staffman is shown graph the special exhibit arranged by the Garg Cultural Relations Abroad. The overwhelming vious exhibit of cultural commodities held earli led to a smaller version-an exhibit in a teap Gargoyle culturists. The display occupies one v offices in the Student Publications Bldg. -Daily--Chuck Kelsey -Daily-Chuck Kelsey preparing to photo- FINISHED PRODUCT-The exhibit will appear like this to the goyle Committee for Polish Embassy. Following the previous exhibit, the foreign coun- success of the pre- tries sent back even more cultural commodities in appreciation for the work done to bring the "cultural commodities" of iron-curtain er this semester has countries before the American public. This new exhibit-a sort of ot, so to speak, say pint-sized display-is planned in hopes of the same generous re- Del De Young wants to know: wall of the Gargoyle sponse. Gargoyle authorities say sentation. NEW OPPORTUNITIES: Zeisler Disproves Journalism Myths By MERLE MAYERSTEIN "A myth has grown up that newspapers frown on college grad- uates, pay very poorly, and don't want new talent," Prof. Karl F. Zeisler of the journalism depart- ment remarked. "But it isn't so," he continued. "The myth grew out of the depres- sion, and many high school coun- selors still believe it." According to Prof. Zeisler, col- lege graduates with some basic knowledge of subjects such as po- litical science, medicine, and edu- cation have a real place qn news- paper staffs today, and even hard- boiled editors recognize this fact. More Journalism Graduates He went on to say that the pro- portion of journalism graduates on newspapers has increased in the last 20 years. Before this, practi- cal experience provided the main source of training. Most of the old newspapermen have come up through the school of hard knocks. However, news is not as simple as it used to be. Many communi- ties today have highly technical industries, hospitals, and educa- tional institutions. They are good news sources, and they require re- porters who have some understand- ing of the field involved. Many newspapers also have sci- ence reporters who must interview doctors and research scientists. Broad Knowledge Required "Naturally, these reporters have to be able to ask intelligent ques- tions and to understand their tech- nically-worded answer," Prof. Zei-' sler commented. He went on to explain that the University's journalism department requires students to take courses (Paid Political Adv.) Vote to keep RON RICHARDSON on S.L. (Paid Political Adv.) in social and natural sciences and history, besides journalism courses in order to give them a broader enough education to enter the many new fields which are opening up. Job opportunities, Prof.' Zeisler said, are growing with the rapidly expanding journalistic field. Writ- ers are needed in television and radio, advertising and public rela- tions. Prof. Zeisler pointed to indus- trial journalism as one of the new- est fields of journalism. He also mentioned that there are very few trained writers in this field. Industry Papers "Many big industries have plant papers," he said. "They realize that there is a professional way to put out these papers, and they want trained people." "Newspapers themselves have many employment opportunities," the journalism professor continued. "There is a constant siphoning off of good newspapermen into other journalism fields." He said that news coverage has expanded, partly because of com- petition from radio and television and partly due to new fields such as science reporting. Sports Field Broadens Sports reporting has also expand- ed from stories on baseball, foot- ball, basketball and track to the new outdoor sports. These include fishing, hunting, boating, and wa- ter-skiing. Opportunities for women in jour- nalism have grown since the sec- ond world war when they did ev- erything, from police and crime re- porting to work in the city room. "Some newspapers liked the work women did so well that they went on employing them," Prof. Zeisler said. "However," he con- tinued, "women have the habit of getting married as soon as they get to be good reporters. For this reason, many newspapers'only em- ploy women on the women's page." Women's departments are more concerned with news and good writ- ing. In addition to the strictly so- cial reporting of the past, they now cover fashions, fabrics, child care, home management, and domestic relations. They interview interna- tional figures, politicians, store ex- ecutives, and buyers. More empha- sis is put on competence and edu- cation on the part of the women reporter. Part of the myth concerning jour- nalism, remuneration, can be dis- proved by the fact that salaries go up regularly. Beginning salary for college graduates on newspa- pers now is between $50 and $65 per week. Within a year there is a substantial pay -raise. On metropolitan papers, a five year reporter earns approximately $128, copyreaders $138, and editor- ial writers $158 a week. The higher salary brackets in journalism include advertising, public relations, radio and televi- sion and to some extent, industrial reporting. Lipset Talks On GOP Split The now open split between Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis ) and President Dwight D. Eisenhower was termed "inevitable" by Prof. Seymour Lipset of Columbia Uni- versity. Prof. Lipset, of Columbia's soci- ology department, spoke on "The Radical Right-A Problem for De- mocracy." He said moderate con- servatives, represented by the President, compete for the same constituency that the McCarthy group seeks to win. The contest was compared by Prof. Lipset to earlier ones between Communists and socialists for left- wing support. He expressed the view that the "radical right" can- not hope to win the current contest. there is no attempt at mis-repre- Students Fill Engineering, Acting Spots United States Army engineers have estimated that dredging Great Lakes channels for handling ocean vessels from the St. Law- rence Seaway would cost $108,- 027,000. Army Corps of Engineers, study- ing under orders from Congress, made their official report yester- day, according to an AP release. To accomodate ocean vessels on the Great Lakes, channels must be deepened in the Detroit River, Lake St. Clair, the Ste. Clair River, the Straits of Mackinac and St. Mary's River. Most recent estimate is believed to be $20,000,000 more than that made by Army witnesses in Sea- way House hearings last year. The engineer's study is a re- sult of resolutions given Con- gress last year by Rep. Thaddeus M. Machrowicz (D-Mich.) and Sen. Alexander Wiley (R-Wis.). When the 84th Congress as- sembles in January, a study will be made into an appropriations request. Channel deepenings would com- plete a Great Lakes link with the seaway. They would permit ocean ships to go all the way to Duluth at the head of the lakes. The engineers' report was said to include a recommendation that all channels be lowered to a depth of 27 feet, identical with the sea- way. Downbound channels from Du- luth are now 25 feet, upbound 21 feet. At low lake levels ships are limited to drafts of 22.3 feet downbound and 18 feet upbound. Anticipated transportation sav- ings, to Great Lakes commerce, the report continued, "ecomoni- cally justify the cost of this plan of improvement." Deeper channels would also mean an added $200,000 a year in maintenance cost of access waters between the lakes, according to the report. What sort of work is involved in technical sales at Du Pont? Delbert N. De Young received a B.S.in Chem. Eng. from the University of Wisconsin last June. Now he is working for an M.S. degree. By asking questions, he's learned that many excellent industrial opportunities are passed'over because they're not understood by the average undergraduate. Clarence "Ding"Bell answers: _s.-' Well, if I said "All sorts," it might sound a bit vague to you, Del, but it would be very close to the truth. That's because technical sales work at Du Pont-bearing in mind the great diversity of products we have-is broader in scope than a lot of other technical assignments, and requires additional talents. Let's suppose that one of Du Pont's customers is having technical difficulties--needs help in adapting "Teflon" to a specific gasketing application, for'exam- ple. When our sales representative calls, he naturally must carry with him the engineering knowledge that's the basis for sound technical advice-data on flexural fatigue, chemical passivity, and deformation under load. The customer is receptive. He wants to make a better product, increase his sales, reduce costs-or do all three. Naturally, he's looking for reliable technical advice and intelligent actions that apply to his specific conditions. With the cooperation of the customer and help from our own research people, when necessary, the problem will sooner or later be "licked." We have found, though, that if a technical service AGU.S PAT OfC BETTER THINGS FOR BETTER LIVING ...THROUGH CHEMISTRY WATCH "CAVALCADE OF AMERICA" ON TELEVISION Clarence D. Bell, 3.S., Chem. Eng., Univ. of Pitts. (1937), joined DuPont as a chemical engineer immediately after graduation. He began in the re- search group of the Ammonia Department, pro- gressed steadily through assignments on nylon and a number of other products. Today he is an Assistant Director of Sales in the Polychemicals Department. man is going to be truly effective in such a situation, he must possess certain human qualities in addition to his technical ability. That is, he must really like people and be sincerely interested in helping them solve their prob- lems. He must-in every sense of the word-be an "ambassador" who can handle human relationships smoothly and effectively. Take the depth suggested by this simple example; Del, and multiply it by a breadth representing all the challenging problems you'll run into with Du Pont's diversity of products. If your slide rule isn't too far out of alignment, the resulting area should give you some idea of what I meant by "all sorts" of work. Let me emphasize one more point. The importance of effective sales work is fully understood and appreciated at Du Pont! In the past, sales work has been one of the active roads to top management jobs. There is every reason to believe that this will continue in the future. Are you inclined toward sales work? There are four main types of sales activity in the Du Pont Company-tech- nical sales service, sales development, market research and direct selling. Information on sales, and many other facts about working with Du Pont, are given in "The Du Pont Company and the College Graduate." Write for your copy of this free 36-page booklet to E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. (Inc.), 2521 Nemours Building, Wilming- ton, Delaware. For those k .Don't Find Yourself in This Spot! y 4S% TODAY is the final day to buy your '55 Ensian at $6. 00... REAT gift idea! Budweiser, the world's most distinguished beer, in bright new Holiday Cartons of six or twelve cans. ND, when friends come to call during the friendly Holiday