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- <text id=91TT1082>
- <title>
- May 20, 1991: What Do We Do Now?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- May 20, 1991 Five Who Could Be Vice President
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 46
- What Do We Do Now?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Facing a dismal job market, the class of '91 tries interview
- rehearsals, internships, even--yikes!--living at home
- </p>
- <p>By SOPHFRONIA SCOTT--Reported by Deborah Edler Brown/Los Angeles
- and David M. Gross/Boston
- </p>
- <p> They're supposed to have the world at their feet,
- America's new college graduates. With shining faces,
- well-polished phrases and crisply pressed suits, they go in
- search of that first job and, at least in the past several
- years, have usually clinched it in short order. But not this
- time. The math is cruel and inescapable: About 1.4 million
- people will graduate from college and graduate schools this
- year, and the U.S. has lost 2 million jobs in the recession.
- </p>
- <p> U.S. companies are feeling the pinch of hard times and are
- cutting down on campus recruiting. A Michigan State University
- survey on recruiting trends recently reported that job openings
- for college graduates have dipped 10% in the 1990-91 academic
- year after dropping 13% the year before,adding up to the
- largest decline since the 1982-83 school year. Result: a flood
- of rejection letters. "You never think about what you'll do
- after college, and then we find there are no jobs for us," says
- Virginia Kwong, a senior at the University of California at
- Irvine. "Everyone is going through interview after interview."
- </p>
- <p> Not without practice. "Students can read the headlines,
- and they know it's a tough market," says Bob Thirsk, director
- of the University of Washington's placement center. Since
- competing in that market requires far more than the perfect
- resume, schools now offer workshops and seminars on job-search
- skills, including videotaped mock interviews. Students are
- flocking to the guidance sessions, but it's hard to find a job
- that isn't there. The University of Chicago Graduate Business
- School lets students bid for interviews through a computer, but
- according to William Mankivsky, 26, the screen has little to
- offer. Says he: "Every time we'd go to sign on, it would flash
- that another company had canceled some or all of its interviews
- due to restructuring or cutbacks."
- </p>
- <p> The field isn't much better for law school grads.
- Third-year students at Harvard Law received a memo last October
- alerting them to the dry prospects. "They're getting two or
- three offers rather than the usual dozen," says Sarah Wald, dean
- of students. "We're telling them to decide quickly [on a job]
- and sit out the market for a few years." One student received
- a rejection letter that read simply: "You have an outstanding
- record--and I can do nothing more than congratulate you on
- it."
- </p>
- <p> Even those with offers are being surprised. This month
- Webster & Sheffield, a prestigious New York corporate law firm,
- notified students whom it had already hired that the jobs were
- not available after all. Another corporate firm, Jackson &
- Walker of Dallas, received more acceptances than it expected and
- tried to entice hires to wait a year before coming to work by
- offering them $21,000 to do so.
- </p>
- <p> Experts such as L. Patrick Scheetz, Michigan State's
- assistant director of career development, believe this crop of
- graduates should find jobs in six months to a year as the
- recession cools. Students who have already been on the hunt for
- months are beginning to lower their expectations. "I don't know
- anyone entering career positions," says Todd McGowan, 21, a
- Southwest Missouri State graduate. Young job seekers are
- increasingly settling for low- or no-pay internships just to get
- a foot in the door, becoming cheap labor for companies that
- can't or won't hire regular staff.
- </p>
- <p> Some grads target a territory. Atlanta, home of the 1996
- Olympics, has become known as Hotlanta in younger circles. "If
- I had talked about how great Atlanta was two years ago, people
- would have laughed at me," says Beth Reimels, 21, a graduating
- senior at Boston University who will head there in September
- even though she has no job. "Now everyone is excited about
- Hotlanta." Silicon Valley is still looking for engineers, and
- the Northwest probably has the healthiest economy of any U.S.
- region.
- </p>
- <p> Other grads, resigned to earning little or nothing for a
- while, are heading for graduate school or such programs as the
- Peace Corps and Teach for America, where they can at least do
- meaningful work. The Peace Corps has received 51,500 inquiries
- so far this year, 7,000 more than last year, and Teach for
- America applications have risen from 2,500 to 3,100.
- </p>
- <p> Then there's the last-ditch option: going back home to Mom
- and Dad. This generation hasn't been afraid to do so--Census
- reports show 75% of males 18 to 24 years old still live at home.
- But people mostly want to be on their own around that age. "All
- year long I swore that whatever I did, I wouldn't be living at
- home," says Natasha Pustilnik, 21, a Vassar College senior.
- Guess where she'll be this summer. "It's enormously
- disappointing," says the jobless Russian major.
- </p>
- <p> No one thinks the Class of '91 faces long-term job
- troubles. Their plight is purely a result of recession, and they
- should easily survive a few months waiting tables or typing
- memos until other employers start hiring again. Still, as they
- fling their commencement caps skyward, the graduates will surely
- be silently urging the economy to follow as fast as possible.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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