Q: What research is necessary before an advertisement?
Q: Did you come across any advertisement that I didn't hear and see?
Q: Did you come across any advertisement that I should have heard and seen?
Q: Where and when did the advertisement appear?
Q: Why didn't it appear online?
Q: Who is involved?
Q: Do we need such centers or institutions?

Q: What is involved in the process of newspaper printing?
Q: What are the materials used in newspaper printing?
Q: From where do you get the paper for newspaper printing?
Q: What are the various sizes of newspapers?
Q: Why don't you manufacture your own printing materials, including paper?
Q: Why don't you recycle the papers?
Q: How is Paper Recycled?
Q: Can all of my recovered paper be recycled?
Q: What happens to the ink once it is removed from the paper?
Q: Do you need resources, partnerships, or guidance in regards to printing your own materials and recycling paper?
Q: What is the latest technology available in newspaper printing?
Q: Do you want to educate people via your print media?
Q: What is a monopoly?
Q: How do you detect a communication block?
Q: How do you detect a complete mail block?
Q: How do you detect a partial postal mail block?
Q: How do you detect a partial email block?
Q: Would you like to print Globe News in your city/district/county?
Q: What type of layout can you print?
If you have any questions, please e-mail me at globe@humanservicesglobe.com admin@qureshiuniversity.com
Q: How do you detect an area specific mail block?
Q: How do you detect a postal mail block?
Q: What role does customs play in postal sabotage?
Q: What is being done to punish such sabotage?
Q: How should those who sabotage be punished?

Globe Magazine

Q: Would you like to print Globe Magazine in your city/district/county?
Q: What type of layout can you print?
Q: What is involved in the process of magazine printing?
Q: What are the various sizes of magazines?
Q: What is the latest technology available in magazine printing?

Magazine Journalist

Q: What is the work like?
Q: What qualifications and experience will employers look for?
Q: How would you describe your role?
Q: What is your daily routine?
Q: What hours do you work?
Q: What's your working environment like?
Q: Who do you work with?
Q: What special skills or qualities do you need for your job?
Q: Why did you choose this type of work?
Q: What training have you done?
Q: Do you use any tools or equipment?
Q: What do you like/dislike about your job?
Q: What are the particular challenges in your work?
Q: How do you see your future?
Q: What further training and development can I do?
Q: Where can I go for more information?
Q: What do you write about?
Q: Do you have a typical day?
Q: Do you use any special equipment?
Q: What was your route into your career as a legal journalist?
Q: How do you get hold of stories?
Q: Why did you choose this type of work?
Q: What training have you had?
Q: What hours do you work?
Q: What do you like best about your career as a legal journalist?
Q: Do you have any dislikes?
Q: What kind of person succeeds in this job?

Globe Broadcasting

Q: Which is better: traditional TV or World wide web/internet TV?
Q: Have you recently missed any of your favorite shows?
Q: Isn't it better to have World wide web/internet TV?
Q: What resources should TV offer to enhance these courses?
Q: How should entertainers be utilized to enhance these courses?
Q: What is the television media's annual budget?
NBC, CNN, ABC, CBC, BBC, Doordarshan, PTV, etc.
Q: What's your annual budget?
Q: What has been the pattern over the last 10 years?
Q: How are programs selected?
Q: Who selects and approves programs?
Q: Who should select and approve programs?
Q: What should be taken into consideration when selecting and approving programs?
Q: Why mislead the viewers?

Q: Do you have an answer?
Q: Do you have a better answer?
Q: Does anyone have a better answer?
Q: Does anyone else have an answer better than the answers I already have, we have?
Q: Are you interested in these industries?
Q: Are you interested in anyone from these industries?
Q: Would you like to engage in a partnership?
Q: What should the terms and conditions of the partnership be?
Q: What are your requirements?
Q: What types of products or services are you looking for?
Q: Can you make me wiser? How?
Q: Can you make us wiser? How?
Q: Would you like to add anything?
Q: Do you have any recommendations?

Statement

How long have you been the Director of Public Works?
What is your background?
How has the profession changed in the last 10 years?
What services do you wish more people knew about?
What is the best part of the job?
What is the most common misperception?
What is the worst part of the job?
Is there a final thought you'd like to share?
What are the duties and responsibilities of the ----?
Where can I find the ----�s daily schedule?
Have you become more socially and politically conscious?
why don't you stand for the elections as an ---- in -?
Where can I find ---- ---- biography?
What is the State Department�s mission?
Where can I find information about former Secretaries of State?
Where can I find copies of the ------- Secretary�s speeches?
Who did you work with last time?
If you and I were to decide to work together, what would the calender for that look like?
How long have you been with the company?
How many people work in this department/ division/ branch?
How many other locations do you have?
Who would you say is your most important customer?
Can I tell you why I ask that question? What I am getting is ----------
Here is what I am hearing ---------
If we are on the same page, and I think we are, what we are looking at is -----------

Media is not only a mirror of the society but also an instrument for social change and progress. It informs and educates the society and acts as an agent of communication between various sections of the society.

What is Mass Communications?

The study of all media - newspapers, magazines, radio, television, motion pictures, computer graphics and electronic publishing.

What is Journalism?

What is Public Relations?

Public Relations (PR) is the art of managing communication between an organization and its public to build and sustain positive images, messages and relationships. Helping public figures, celebrities, politicians, athletes, entertainers, non-profit organizations and corporations develop and deliver critical information to their audiences is the job of the public relations professional. Also known as the communications specialist, today�s public relations practitioners are skilled in all areas of written, spoken, visual and technological communications.

What is Advertising Communication?

Advertising communication is the way organizations and businesses reach the public through the media that touch all our lives - radio, television, magazines, newspapers and electronic publishing

Q) What kind of career will a Mass Communication major prepare me for?

What advice would you give to anyone wishing to be a journalist?

What Do Newspaper Journalists Do?

A newspaper journalist, or reporter, provides the general public with information about events, people and ideas. Newspaper journalists can work for a local newspaper or a __________ publication.

Educational Requirements to Become a Newspaper Journalist:

Most newspaper journalists enter the field with a bachelor's degree in journalism or communications. Along with a formal education, it is helpful for aspiring newspaper journalists to have relevant work experience. Many employers prefer to hire those who have worked at some type of publication such as a college newspaper or magazine since those individuals are better prepared to handle the stress of the position such as meeting deadlines and working with other journalists.

What type of work do people do in photojournalism?

"Most photojournalists work for newspapers and magazines or freelance, but there are also some who work for related fields such as Web or commercial photography. The emphasis is on telling stories through photography."

What kind of background is important?

"You need to understand both the business and the technical requirements. Therefore, you will have to learn the rules of storytelling, both written and visual, the market and the profession, the technical requirements of a camera and the way to link this knowledge into a story as you approach people."

What other qualities and skills are valuable?

"Anyone can pick up a camera, look through a viewfinder, push a shutter-button and take a decent picture. Taking a picture that prompts the viewer to react emotionally, whether his heart breaks from sadness or his side splits from laughter, separates an amateur from a skilled photojournalist. Painters use brushes to link reality with creative imagination; photojournalists use cameras. They recognize decisive life moments in the form of honest human emotion and interaction (or lack thereof). In all instances, they are also masters of light, able to work long hours and conditioned to place themselves in uncomfortable positions, both socially and physically. Photojournalists are open-minded, yet critical, thinkers who work hard to tell stories without words. In so doing, they allow people to see the objective world from a fresh, subjective perspective."

What kind of jobs are graduates getting with a photojournalism emphasis?

"After graduating, most of the students first get internships with newspapers. Later, they move to work as staff photographers or picture editors. They might also work for commercial magazines or Web."

What are the salaries and working environment like in this field?

How would you describe your role?

It's a varied mix of broadcasting and production. I get most of my materials from meeting people and sharing their stories.

What are your main responsibilities?

What hours do you work?

I work 10.00am to 6.00pm when I'm in the office, and 8.00am to 4.00pm when I'm out on the road broadcasting. Sometimes I have to work weekends, but get a Monday or Friday off in lieu. I get time off for any extra hours worked.

Who do you work with?

I work with a colleague who does exactly the same job as me, an editor and an assistant, and the daytime programme teams into whose programmes I broadcast.

What special skills or qualities do you need for your job?

Excellent interpersonal skills, adaptability, prioritisation and organisational abilities, diplomacy, the ability to be calm in a crisis, a nose for a good story and a sense of humour.

Why did you choose this type of work?

Simply because I thought I'd be good at it. I am very good at talking to anyone whatever their walk of life, and I capitalise on all my strengths in this job.

What training do you receive/have you done?

I decided I wanted to go into radio when I was about 13 and set about getting all the experience, working as much as I was allowed in local radio while still at school. I got unpaid work at radio studios, cable television, newspapers, hospital and charity radio. I researched which degree to do, and chose a recognised practical and theory course. I also have done a post-graduate degree in

Broadcast Journalism.
Do you use any tools or equipment?

All manner of recording devices, most of which are digital nowadays, and a computer.

What do you like/dislike about your job?

I love the variety of my work and meeting all different people, although I don't think I'll ever get used to having to do outside broadcasts when it's very cold!

What are the particular challenges in your work?

How do you see your future?

In what way do you consider any of the above activities relevant to the work of a journalist?

What were the chief influences in choosing journalism as a career?

What do you feel are your main strengths/aptitudes for it?

What steps have you been able to take to prepare yourself for it?

What do you believe to be the role of a newspaper?
How would you pay for the tuition fees and other costs of the course?
Where did you hear about this course?

Q) What is the concentration option?

Q) Do any courses outside the department count toward the major?

Q) Am I required to be on newspaper, TV, Films or radio staff for my major?

Q) What are the admission requirements for this program?

Q) What kind of jobs can I expect to get when I graduate?

Q) Where do I go if I have questions?

Q) What type of work do people in newspaper journalism?

Q) What kind of background is important?

Q) What type of hands-on experience might I get while I'm in school?

Q) How do you benefit from learning from faculty who have had practical experience in the field?

Q) Where do Journalism students get internships?

Q) What kind of jobs are graduates getting with a newspaper journalism emphasis?

Q) What are the salaries and working environment like in this field?

Q) Do I have to have a background in journalism?

Q) How long are the assignments?

Q) How do I become a Journalist?

Q) Which emphasis should I select?

Q) What Is Multi-Media Journalism?

Q) What is Broadcast Journalism?

Q) What is Print Journalism?

Q) How Long Does It Take To Become A Journalist?

Q) What other qualities and skills are valuable?

Q) What type of hands-on experience might I get while I'm in school?