Page Fourteen
THE MIC'Hl(;AN DAII Y
C. . A-%, AA-, 14 t nC 7
PaeFute I- tyKA I- ni(vAKw i /-% I L.vIunduy, ivtay L,, 1951
r
4
JOURNALISM FELLOWS
Foreign Students Serve Their Newspaper Internship Here
By MICHAEL KRAFTabu II AS te
Daily Staff Writer they learn ab u the Unitedu ta e through
I NTERNSHIPS are usually asso-
dated with part of a future close contact with American insttu ins,
doctoras training, hut in a unique
program at the University, the customs, and people in all wal1ks of life
term habroader, even interna-
tional meaning.rn
Apphied to the fiteid of jiii ial-
ism, inteinhips can unt-once the
tratinngof a ft-toe cc ispapet-
n-ar..'When part of th e trinting
pro{;vaniof foen tents. it ran4
rontribute towards promuotitg a
deepct undertandttein"gOciteonta
tiontA
Comobinin tin-sc altri butts by'
brttngisg totrmsl- 1tutuiss''itto
to theistutry 'ftom uits ti e
s ;, iii sa E-ytimeNcwti Zt
1 <-u GerntE 'td Hoteats the
ti-ic olthe lotre'ign ttsut i istis,
IF"ihu.s hi1)pnsi-oredl 1stthe ft -
Itionilue n 158to is ot es t11Jur-
States e't s-rAfic ter atsn
studty i o it li'- intitte pn y -
X - 'itItt All i sihtat the Uitch
b it 1 Iam its -i'Cii- n tuten tsotitsin
atm-osphtt'ee-"so eosmotpolit-an I feet
at hotec atccotrdiing to one of
this year's ftltots,\Vonto L
Grad.t of ScoutKotes.
Butt tnlike issany of thse otthet
fotreisn student', iswio study ilii.
issit~ eni-teriig t ue ihi it t ItVI(;N SIELLOW-Wtone Lee, onei of the foreign students studsyit, journalism at the University
sctiee ,the ijouialism Fellois this Stear, chat swith his counsehor, Protf.hKarI F./teislertof the jornalisms departmet.
CO LERYOUin 'f i a4ii
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3 °q 99
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sill be in a peculialy expessive
position and more easily able to
relate their views on America
wihen they returnnlon-e
Having worked closely iwith the
Foegn Fellow rfist Wesley
Maureichairtman of the jounal-
is depaittment desribes the
prog'ram as "giing the foreign
journalists an oppotunity to estA
ibout tise United Sttes without
iterfereethiotighsclosicoitact
with itstitutionss tf Atmettcn so-
ciiety st-teliteisitseote iiall
!i wttks of life
Ini aigood matte ways oirnal-
isis c-itsbeirega-itedeeasitrov iting
the wid uesssibiec iinmdtto if,T
on-c tst ookstitt ots sitlIetclsof
people and as ind s ocievets
PetrIttiltflit this eaion- Ptof,
Mautrcr ccists iat Peatuse of teit'
expieriiees ii 0in h l roi ,to
the Utniverity a'nd ini ele TCh -itt-
"'its etiuenits inic tilii thev
storkthe journaistse",'ists i-c
turniungto ter lieu'-tis ti-c
eqipe tiitstto Ireliort-Iantd -t-,- ii
thi'Uiit ed Sit itt iefr in;
~TI-TEFELtOV Stlc'tisi'res oti-
ipiasizethi-i'opporiiitil5to
-kntowieAm-ericans
"Its reportingis ounitry" Woo
saidsle aunig fot'r dfrotishi
-chirl in E-st Quadraistle, "you
Shate to know the Jot-n Doesu. These
are the people sho are realyim-
porant"
A reflective man, whom a mem-
bee of the jounrtism dneprtmet
has described ast "deep, vety deep,"
-Wonuosetveil s an-interpreter o r
A ierican - troops i ts K orea ' an,
wtcs assistan-f to Presidet Sigman
Rhiee's iptess secetIary beore on-s
its" to use Untied Siates to finilt
his stuidies
Hop-itng to sork for a tforeati
ostie setire the Oriitnres, as
itiecounitry's fitt Wahuisiftsi ce-
itespon-centWoo iroshsiedthis'-
I'lbe ast-te plotide backeround,
Isitisti mnitaitstoties of 'special
inteest to Koesnistitch Amsei-
ian situ setvices c-tn-i-ot supply
"@IE leain-wsit ihianpensitt-en,
9beitwesiceildom kow ish. I
thisntk I ciii io a ot it-oe setsviee-
to n-iscou-tyby styig'heie a
i longeritti antdn-otidig this
intrpretaitin-
"n-it it'll be quite ahaletige
liescud, beakings into a tianit
Ssn-ile.
Comingis"to Ameria its til5S"like
so mn-sithlers fitedwstilisa de-"
sitre to learni but broke," Won-a
enrioled w ith a shotrship in
Willamreette University in- Wilab
incteOtregon His Korean studie
gave him a status of a junior and
white earn-no his HA, he heard of
Michigana Felowship
"When I finished my under,'
irduate work I couldn't uie
decide whether to stay or go back
home," he recalled, leaning back
in his chair,.
"Fin-ally, I thought I'd see more
of America and began collecting
college catalogues, Michigan's Fel-
lowship was the bet offered and
the only one with an inershi
program"
T HE AWARDS grant over $4,000-
for each Fellow for the two-
year period, Since the fund wers
established, the University and o-
operating newspapers have ex-
pended approximately $75,000 fdr
the Fellowships,
To date, 18 journalists hae
already taken part in the program,
Finishing his studies this June
along with Wono is Mohamnitd
Ahar All Khan, Grad., a tall, out-
going .Fakistani,
In- addition to their journalisti
courses, the Foreign Fellows also
take classes in political science and
thre other social sciences,
Ahar described it as "a good
broadening program that alo
tea ches the mechanics of new
paper woik.."
THE BACKGROUNDS of the
Fellows has varied consider-
See JOURSNALISM, P'age1I
$ 3 9 9 - SN 9'
if 51
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