w 4 '... -' ,,. # A 4,- Y ----------------- VAL Page~ Fourteen THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, May' 2f>, 1957 Sunday, May 26,1957 THE 'M.ICHIGANm_: DAILY _undy._My.26 195 THE MICHIGAN DAILY JOURNALISM FELLOWS Picked by Its New Director, These Six Works Typify the Present Collection And Their Significance Foreign Students Serve Their Newspaper Internship Here By MICHAEL KRAFT Daily Staff Writer INTERNSHIPS are usually asso- ciated with part of a future doctor's training, but in a unique program at the University, the term has a broader, even interna- tional meaning. Applied to the field of journal- ism, internships can anhonce the training of a future newspaper- man. When part of the training program of foreign students. it can contribute towards promoting a deeper understanding between na- tions. Combining these attributes by bringing 'informal ambassadors" to this country from such wide- spread areas as Egypt, New Zea- land. Germany and Korea, is the task of the Foreign Journalism Feliowship, sponsored by the Uni- versity's journalism department. Through the program, in opera- tion since 1948, two foreign jour- nalists are brought to the United States each year. After a term's study at the University, they spend another year in an internship by working on Michigan papers. A FAMILIAR sight at the Uni- versity, foreign students num- ber 1,300 and give the campus an atmosphere "so cosmopolitan I feel at home," according to one of this year's fellows, Wono Lee, Grad., of Seoul, Korea. But unlike many of the other foreign students, who study pri- marily engineering or the physical sciences, the journalism Fellows they learn about the United States through close contact with American institutions, customs, and people in all walks of life FOREIGN FELLOW-Wono Lee, one of the foreign students studying journalism at the University this year, chats with his counselor, Prof. Karl F. Zeisler of the journalism department. A COOLER YOU in Pari 9ajhon .. . . 4 ..... ..... .... ...< .........m.v...........a ~b '4 4 4 ' . ;;b4x 4. e _ %:. :i c:4~ '4 ; s 44 . 1 ' z' ":.4 * 4 4 :: :t . 'w. : s :- i . ' s :: :: . .. 4..4 \'' .+ . z :_ : : i'4 4 'c) \ : 4 44:a. . 44'f a 4, ~ * ~ .4 : ..: J. is, !4, v i . .,,., / " - '-':::} '? ~zt"::o~i~r~i:wii .....:...:..,.4L ......,Y,.,....... ..,..* .:.: .4. . .a .t.4,a4 -:::,;:.. ,,-:,i-zz:r:::;aT:..r's 4 . r". Kodak reflex camera it Low, low price - but this cc great new Brownie Starflex t color slides as well as Kodac shots. Outfit also includes fia chrome Pan Film, and full in ALLFO ALLF 1116 S. University Ave. -,..... IE Happiness (above) Suzuki Harunobu: A Woman and a Child (left) TRANQUILIZERS TROPICAL WORSTED SUIT WHAT SUPER BUYS at just $3.99 to $4.95! DOZENS OF BRIGHT WHITE STYLES IN GENUINE LEATHER! ALL COMPLETELY FOAM-CUSHIONED for de-luxe comfort! You'll find jumbo buckles, T-straps, thongs too! Flattest wedges! Smooth or foam-crepe soles! (Continued from Page 5) SOME CRITICS of drug therapy maintain that the tranquilizers are effective only because mentally ill people are very suggestible and that they are influenced by being told that the drugs do help. This is extremely unlikely to be the whole explanation for, as Dr. Miller puts it: "Schizophrenics' aren't helped by deception." Tranquilizers are more than a fad. Most doctors agree that the drugs have won a permanent place in the treatment of mental and emotional disorders. As the use of tranquilizers be- comes more widespread, they exert a growing influence on our society. After the first flush of surprise and pleasure at the frequent.effective- ness of the tranquilizers, doctors are beginning to wonder just where all this will lead us. In the next month one out of every 20 Americans will swallow a tranquilizer. Among them will be an Ann Arbor housewife. L AST YEAR she was having trouble with her marriage. Her irritability and jumpiness were apparent to her doctor and, after discussing the situation with her, he prescribed one of the new tranquilizing drugs. Our friend took a pill that afternoon and when he husband came home she popped one into his mouth. That evening everything was fine and dandy for the couple. For two weeks they took the pills and all was well. Then one day the wife became concerned over the large amount of money her husband was spend- ing on hi-firecords. Knowing that if she had too much peace of mind she couldn't give her husband a piece of her mind, she laid off the tranquilizer. That night she told her husband what she thought of his record-buying spree. Next day they returned to the tranquilizer and everything ran smoothly again. A true story? Yes. Amusing? Perhaps. Frightening? Definitely, for here we are faced with a situa- tion similar to that in Aldous Hux- ley's Brave New World where peoples' emotions can be carefully controlled and changed. S MORE and more people take tranquilizers, several other See TRANQUILIZERS, Page 19 $4500 $5500 55% DACRON .. 45% WOOL Cotton Cord Suits ... $24.7. Summer Slacks ... $7.95 to $1 Summer Sport Coo Short Sleeve Sp $2.95 uM "WALK A FEW STEPS AN[ . as seen in Seventeen /I n /alY. 306 SOUTH STATE I