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Courage to buck a system that has served us so well (Please hire us - we went to Princeton!)
The Daily Princetonian (Princeton U.) ^ | 4/24/03 | Katherine Reilly

Posted on 04/25/2003 2:56:59 PM PDT by NorCoGOP

PRINCETON, N.J. -- Arriving as freshmen at Princeton, my classmates and I believed the path to career services was paved with gold. Jobs with $60,000 starting salaries fell into students' laps. College dropouts made millions. Stocks went up. Money grew on trees. We jumped on the bandwagon of college students with the world at their well educated, fast spending fingertips.

Then came the burst of the dot-com bubble. The tax cut. September 11th. Enron. The war in Iraq. The rest, as they say, is history.

Today, applications to graduate schools are up dramatically. The unemployment rate has risen to almost 6 percent. Seniors without jobs are no longer a rarity. Sophomores tell ourselves with certainty only 19-year-olds can muster that the economy will be better when we graduate. We will be fine. We go to Princeton.

Inherent in our talks of jobless friends our frantic quests for internships and contacts is fear. Our generation has never taken risks. We work within the system. We like compromise and committees. We like success. Adding economic pressure to our desire to stay within the lines means that many of us will be paralyzed, stuck on a track chosen simply because it was there.

Introducing a recent panel on careers in international relations, a professor said he'd often seen people fall into I-Banking. Interviewers came to campus. Students got called back. A year later, they had cubicles downtown. Jobs in international relations are not so simple. The panelists, all graduate students, advised students to be open to possibilities and to take advantage of whatever luck might come their way, as though good fortune were something of which Princeton students typically try to steer clear. Though we giggled at jokes about waiting tables and seniors joining the Peace Corps because the market is bad, our laughter was nervous. We wanted to know how to get jobs, who to contact and what to say. We wanted guarantees.

A week later, I was at a second career-oriented event, this time a gathering of Princeton writing alumni. After an hour or so, one student asked the question on all our minds. "I sometimes can't picture myself as a writer because I don't know how to get there," she said. "How do I get into writing and get ahead?" The answers were what one might expect. Be willing to fail. Be persistent. Listen for new opportunities. Don't expect to make money. Only do it because you love it.

Sitting in front of the panel, I realized I was afraid. The notion of trying to write a novel, or even moving to a new city and going day after day to find a job in a market where employment is scarce, terrifies me. Like most Princeton students, my life has been charmed. I grew up in a good neighborhood. People told me if I did well in school, I could go to a good college, and I did. Perhaps it is because the system has served me -- and all of us -- so well that we are hesitant to break with it.

In a recent article in The New York Times, the director of career services at NYU advised students to overcome the job market by thinking outside the box. She told graduates to be willing to take jobs outside their fields and to accept entry-level positions to get in the door. But thinking outside the box is exactly what our generation does poorly. Perhaps the economic downturn will force us all to make different choices, to realize that investment banks and law firms are not the only places offering jobs to freshly minted college graduates. I would like to think that in these tough times we will become more resourceful and less afraid the unknown, but I know myself, and I know that I am more scared now, not less.

College is the time to search for answers to our questions, to ask how to get involved, whom to talk to, where to go. But we have to be prepared for the fact that there may not be answers. Money doesn't grown on trees, and the stock market not only can go down but often does. Every career path is rockier today than it was two years ago, and the professions we thought were uncertain then, the ones that don't have 50 listings on the Alumni Network, are even more so. We should not let our type-A drive for success, money, or power or our fear of ending up outside the realm of "acceptable" Princeton accomplishment dictate what we do with our lives. Some paths are worth forging. The best we can do is to realize that despite the unemployment rate or the starting salary of a corporate analyst, we are young. Now is our chance to make our lives what we want them to be. We should not pass it up.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 04/25/2003 2:56:59 PM PDT by NorCoGOP
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To: NorCoGOP
Get a WAAAAAHHHHHHHHHmbulance there! Stat!
2 posted on 04/25/2003 3:00:27 PM PDT by JennysCool
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To: NorCoGOP
Jobs with $60,000 starting salaries fell into students' laps. Though we giggled at jokes about waiting tables and seniors joining the Peace Corps because the market is bad, our laughter was nervous. We wanted guarantees. She told graduates to be willing to take jobs outside their fields and to accept entry-level positions to get in the door.

Gee, my generation learned all of this from the git-go. I started at the ground level, worked my way up, accepted whatever I could to make ends meet and whaddya know? I'm finally better off than I thought I'd ever be. I'm finally in my dreamjob after 20 years of sweat. I've loved every minute of my life and work. Why? I EARNED it. I WORKED for it.

I suppose I shouldn't be so hard on them though. The hippie/me generation raised them. Figures.

3 posted on 04/25/2003 3:11:34 PM PDT by ProudEagle
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To: ProudEagle
This is my alma mater, and I see they still have some folks there who haven't managed to grow up.

I was raised by two children of the Depression. My mom's family did o.k. because her father had a good steady job as an engineer for Westinghouse Electric, but my father's father died suddenly of a heart attack when he was 10, in 1934. Things got really tough. Dad went to WWII, came back and went to law school on the GI bill (he never finished college).

My dad always said that everybody should learn a trade in addition to a profession, and he made sure we all did. If I'd been unable to land a job, I could have worked as a framing carpenter (dad and mom built our house) or as a cook or seamstress.

I don't know why these girls are afraid to get their hands dirty. It won't kill 'em, and until you have kids and a mortgage it's surprising how little you really need to live on. Just don't get married and start a family until you have your feet firmly on the ladder in your field.

4 posted on 04/25/2003 3:18:53 PM PDT by AnAmericanMother (. . . there is nothing new under the sun.)
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"The tax cut"?????
5 posted on 04/25/2003 3:19:04 PM PDT by Mrs. Obelix
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To: NorCoGOP
Then came the burst of the dot-com bubble. The tax cut. September 11th. Enron. The war in Iraq ...

This maroon equates the (non-existent) tax cut with 9/11. With that type of brain-power, no wonder he can't find a job.

I always thought the Ivy league was over-rated, and I was never impressed with their products. Here is more proof.

6 posted on 04/25/2003 3:42:56 PM PDT by Martin Tell
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To: NorCoGOP
Oh dear. Somebody else wants their diaper changed. I might suggest a spell in the military to put some backbone into the author but I think they are looking for some maturity in their recruits.
7 posted on 04/25/2003 3:55:02 PM PDT by Timocrat
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To: Martin Tell
This maroon equates the (non-existent) tax cut with 9/11.

Ha! Must have read the silly article Chelsea, beelzebubba's daughter, wrote. As she was supposedly rushing toward or away (forgetting the details now, but it appeared in Talk mag) from the burning towers on 9-11, all she could think of was "Bush's tax cuts"!

8 posted on 04/25/2003 3:56:30 PM PDT by texasbluebell
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To: texasbluebell
Try getting a real education at a real university instead of an overrated ivy league college. Try engineering, accounting, law, medicine, or the physical sciences instead of some parasitic investment banker. Stop sniveling and get a profession. Or a trade. either would be preferable to being a wall street pimp.
9 posted on 04/25/2003 4:21:04 PM PDT by xqcguy
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To: NorCoGOP
Ivy League angst. Poor things.
10 posted on 04/25/2003 6:36:28 PM PDT by George W. Bush
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To: NorCoGOP
the director of career services at NYU advised students to overcome the job market by thinking outside the box

Gag me with a 2x4!! Imagine the upper-middle class putzes sitting at the feet of this NYU pinhead, diligently taking notes.

Did these University "directors of career services" ever work in the private sector or own a business? Perhaps these kids should bring their Bull---t Bingo scorecards to these orientations!
11 posted on 04/25/2003 7:52:44 PM PDT by scubadave
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To: scubadave
Eyikes!! Bad HTML on my part, BAD LINKS, 404, URL not found :#)! Should be :
http://www.qs9000.com/level2/Bingo.html

Now you can play BS Bingo with Earl (and his evil twin URL)...

12 posted on 04/25/2003 7:57:36 PM PDT by scubadave
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To: NorCoGOP
It sounds as though they studied a very narrow slice of history during grade school, high school and university -- a slice that covered the entire 1990s.

Evidently they read nothing about the economic and political ups and downs during the previous 2,000 years. Amazing.
13 posted on 04/25/2003 8:45:08 PM PDT by WaterDragon (Only America has the moral authority and the resolve to lead the world in the 21st Century.)
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To: NorCoGOP
This article betrays a very barren, almost narcissistic, vew of the world. These are exactly the people I went to law school with, and worked in law firms with for years, before I quit.

They aren't nearly as impressive as their hype. Frankly, they should look at this as a maturing experience. What lessons they learn from this is for them to decide.
14 posted on 04/25/2003 8:51:46 PM PDT by HitmanLV
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To: AnAmericanMother
I don't know why these girls are afraid to get their hands dirty. It won't kill 'em, and until you have kids and a mortgage it's surprising how little you really need to live on.

You echo my point exactly. Your dad was right, he instilled a good work ethic in you as did mine. Nobody hands you anything in life, there are no guarantees, and your success is the result of your life experiences and attitude.

When I screen for eligible candidates it is a shame to see what the school systems churn out these days. Kids with degrees who can't spell, apply mathematics without an electronic aid, display zero dexterity skills, you name it. But the one thing that will end an interview in a split second with me is...attitude. If they display the attitude described in this article they are out the door, off to learn a little lesson in humble pie. Qualified or not. Get a clue youngster, there are no guarantees in life.

15 posted on 04/26/2003 9:23:22 AM PDT by ProudEagle
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To: Martin Tell
"This maroon equates the (non-existent) tax cut with 9/11. With that type of brain-power, no wonder he can't find a job."

Yep. Notice he places the whole thing on events of that "evil" Republican in the White House.
16 posted on 04/26/2003 9:35:44 AM PDT by PatrioticAmerican ("hatemonger")
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