Word: campus
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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While the campus stringers report more for Education than any other section of the magazine, they often contribute to such areas as The Nation, Essay, Modern Living and Sport. Their jobs involve hours of extra work. Don Morrison, our stringer at the University of Pennsylvania, is an extremely busy campus editor and honors student who admits that he is sometimes exasperated when students, faculty and administrators-not to mention TIME staffers-pester him at odd hours with queries, requests, suggestions and sometimes complaints about what TIME has said. How ever, his occasional chagrin disappears when a campus source, trying...
OUTRAGED by the disgraceful conduct of his students, a great educator fled his campus in disgust, says the lead paragraph of this week's Essay. The educator was St. Augustine, the year was A.D. 383, the place the campus of Carthage, and the one who called the fact to Essay Writer Marshall Loeb's attention is a 20th century student...
...historical note was unearthed by Henry Muller of Stanford University, one of our many campus stringers-young men and women with whom TIME has a working alliance for news related to colleges. As higher education has become a greater source of news both in the U.S. and abroad, we have placed increasing emphasis on the efforts of student reporters who tell us about campus attitudes and matters of educational interest with a sensitivity and immediacy which an outsider could attain only with great difficulty...
Many of the stringers are editors of student newspapers or are in other ways deeply involved in campus activities. Nearly all of them find that reporting for TIME makes them give more thorough consideration to what is going on, not only on their campuses but also far beyond, bringing local insights into broad perspective. Their TIME credentials usually will help get them in to see the president of the university or into a student protest conference, but the job often does call for some special approaches-particularly with people who happen to disagree with us. Says Gloria Anderson, our girl...
...panic itself. It must not make a crisis out of a problem. Students don't hate it; they're going into the profession more than ever. Robert Galvin, Chairman of the Board of Motorola, made an expensive attempt at bridging the gap last year through a dialogue in campus newspapers across the country. Unfortunately, Galvin made the problem seem much greater than it actually is. What needs to be done is to stop stressing what students think is wrong with business and start emphasizing what is right with business. Business can certainly compete with other occupations in terms of challenge...