Business school grads face uncertain future By Christine Tatum College Press Exchange CHICAGO (CPX) - Students walk ing out of business school these days are learning the hard way that what goes up must come down, including fat-cat salaries, signing bonuses and any expectations of getting them. In the past few years, newly minted MBAs have had it good. Make that really good. Starting salaries for 1997 graduates of the top 50 business schools as ranked by U.S. News & World Report averaged $64,550, with graduates of the most elite schools getting offers of more than $BO,OOO. And that was just the beginning. Many new graduates doubled their salaries by negotiating a signing bo nus, a guaranteed bonus after one year of service, reimbursement for tuition and a company car. It’s a gravy train that many b-school students and administrators say is chugging at less than full steam. De spite reports from firms insisting that hiring levels will remain about the same as last year, recent financial cri sis in world markets, layoffs at big name businesses like Merrill Lynch and dramatic fluctuations in the Dow have combined to make this year’s job prospects for MBAs less bountiful and bright. Certainly not helping mat ters are predictions that corporate America will continue in 1999 to dis card workers at a rate not seen in the last five years. “We’ve had a reality check in the global financial markets," said Glenn Sykes, director of MBA career ser vices for the University of Chicago’s graduate school of business. "The market is still very strong but it has created uncertainty. We won’t see the growth we did from ’97 to '98." Michigan student, 20, dies By Peggy Walsh-Sarnecki Knight-Ridder Newspapers DETROIT- For the fourth time in four months, a young person has died af ter drinking alcohol near a Michigan college campus. Adriane Allen, a 20-year-old Ferris State University sophomore from Williainston, Mich., fell from her third-floor apartment around midnight Thursday and died Friday. Big Rapids police said Allen had been drinking. Police said they are investigating the accident and how Allen obtained the alcohol. She was under the legal drinking age of 21. Allen was alone in her bedroom in a downtown Big Rapids apartment building that is popular with students. Around midnight, a person in another room heard crashing glass, ran into Allen’s bedroom and discovered that she had fallen to the sidewalk, police said. Allen was taken to Spectrum Health Downtown Campus in Grand Rapids, where she was found to have severe head and internal injuries. Her parents arrived at the hospital before she died at 3:05 p.m. Friday, but she never regained consciousness, said Tim Bulson, hospital spokesman. The cause of death, as well as her blood-alcohol level, are pending the results of an autopsy today, Bulson said. “We are very saddened by the Quiz-show addict goes to head of class College Press Exchange LONDON (CPX)- The things some people will do to get on television. Hoping for a chance to appear on a popular game show called “Univer sity Challenge,” Lance Haward, a 62- year-old self-described quiz-show addict, recently enrolled in Open Uni versity, a nonresidential college in England for adult students of all ages. Haward said a love for learning also Though companies are still showing up on campuses, it's no secret that many, particularly those specializing in investment banking and many types of consulting, are granting fewer in terviews. As a result, many students are quick to accept offers, rather than holding out for a few. “There’s been a boon in the market that has been sustained for a pretty long time,” said Daniel Nagy, assistant dean of Duke University’s Fuqua School of Busi ness. “Companies have been hiring so many people for so long that eventu ally they were going to have to start scaling back.” “There is still a very good job mar ket out there for MBAs,” he added. "But it has changed in terms of who is and is not hiring. Like everything else in life, people are going to have to adjust and adapt.” The manufactur ing, information technology and phar maceutical industries are hiring like mad, but if the depression that’s hit ting banking and consulting contin ues or worsens, competition is ex pected to stiffen there, too. “There’s definitely going to be a ripple effect to contend with," Nagy said. And that’s all the more reason for b-school candidates to avidly pursue getting into the nation’s top programs, Sykes said. “Where you go will have a tre mendous impact on the value you have in the work place,” he said. For students at top-tier schools, worries aren’t so much about unem ployment as salaries and perks. For example, the general mood among students at the University of Chicago is that they will be hired, but perhaps not by their first pick and not with the lavish signing bonus they had hoped tor, said one recent MBA grad who wished to remain anonymous. "It could be trouble for people in schools in 3-story fall situation and are investigating it,” said Ferris State President William Sederburg. "Though it didn't occur on campus, we remain extremely con cerned, and the entire campus com munity extends its sympathy to her family. Michigan campuses have reeled from a string of deaths this school year: On Oct. 16, Courtney Cantor, 18, died after she fell from the win dow of her.sixth-floor dormitory room at the University of Michigan. Police said she had been drinking at a frater nity party the evening before. Her blood alcohol level was 0.059. A blood-alcohol level of 0.10 percent is considered intoxicated for adults. Cantor was found to have traces of the alcohol-enhancing drug known as GHB in her body, but police and pros ecutors cannot determine how it got On Nov. 5, Michigan State Univer sity student Bradley McCue died of alcohol poisoning after drinking 24 shots to celebrate his 21st birthday. His blood alcohol level was 0.4. On Dec. 12, Allan Hewer, 24, died of al cohol poisoning. His blood alcohol level was 0.40. Although Hewer was not a Ferris State student at the time, he died following a party at the Delta Zeta sorority house there. He had been drinking before he arrived at the party. Spurred by increasing concern motivated his decision to study clas sical Greek. “Let’s just say I was killing two birds with one stone,” he told the Associ- ated Press, Haward, an education law consultant, has appeared on about a dozen game shows, including “Mastermind” and “Sale of the Century.” “I like to avoid the more vulgar game shows, and ‘University Chal lenge’ was about the only one left I National Cam that aren t in the top 20,” the gradu ate said. “The top firms are pulling back, so people are taking lower of fers. That of course is going to feed down. If you weren’t the pick of the litter before and the people who were are taking the jobs you wanted, well, that’s not good news.” Indeed, students aiming to walk out of school and into an office at one of the big-gun firms on Wall Street are increasingly disappointed this year, said Roxanne Hory, director of career management at Northwestern University’s Kellogg Graduate School of Management. "Some of those folks have been forced to re think their professional priorities and lifestyle,” she said. “They’re having to set their sights lower.” Many new MBAs have said they and their friends have been glad to do just that. “A lot of people are looking for a strategy position that doesn’t travel and is in a city they like,” said Troy Ihlanfeldt, who graduated from Kellogg last year. "People are not so attracted to a firm’s brand name as they used to be. I think they are very interested in hearing what else is out there.” Just what else is out there remains uncertain. The real hiring picture won’t be clear until the recruiting pro cess winds down later this month. Many biz-school applicants are hing ing on the results before committing their time and money to pursue a graduate degree. “I can’t help but be nervous,” said Wendy Peterson, a graduate of Cali fornia Polytechnic Slate University at San Luis Obispo who is now consid ering heading back to school for an MBA. "Where am I going to be in three years? A hundred grand in debt and unemployed ? I hope not.” about underage and binge drinking, the presidents of Michigan's 15 pub lic universities are holding a confer ence on campus drinking Feb. 2 in Lansing. The conference was planned before Allen’s death. “This is well beyond the talking stage,” said Glen Stevens, executive director of the Presidents' Council, State Universi ties of Michigan. “We are very much at the action level and very much en couraged by the campus response.” The council maintains that the so lution extends beyond campuses. As pects to be addressed include the re sponse of surrounding communities, the role of parents and the drinking habits students develop before com ing to college. "As a result of the recent tragedies, I think the university community has faced these issues much more directly than in the past,” Mevens said. Ferris State will be even more ag gressive about making students aware of the alcohol counseling and educa tion programs available on campus, said Ted Halm, news services man ager. The programs include a manda tory class for new students that cov ers alcohol issues, as well as sexual assault and HIV/AIDS. The univer sity also sponsors alcohol awareness events and alcohol-free activities. really wanted to go on, especially as I had missed out on it when I was a student,” said Haward, who graduated in 1957, five years before the show went on the air. Haward handily made the Open University team, which, with his help, recently defeated Lancaster Univer sity. Haward and his teammates are scheduled to match wits with Oxford University next. us News Princeton President wants to end Nude Olympics By Christine Tatum College Press Exchange PRINCETON, N.J. (CPX) - The “Nude Olympics,” a long-standing tradition at Princeton University in which students run naked through the semester’s first snowfall, should stop before someone gets killed, the university’s president says. In a letter printed in the student newspaper. President Harold Shapiro said the university is considering ban ning the event after six students were hospitalized with severe alcohol poi- soning and four more were treated at the university’s student health center following the latest raucous running on Jan. 8. “This past weekend’s ex perience provided a grave reminder of the serious risks that the Nude Olympics pose to our students’ health and safety, largely because of the ex cessive and indiscriminate use of al cohol,” Shapiro wrote. “Moreover, several of the college masters report behavior that was truly disgraceful and unacceptable.” The decades-old tradition is one of Princeton’s most notorious. At mid night, hundreds of students gather to watch the sophomore class run naked through a central, ice-covered court yard while music blares from adjacent dormitory windows. About 350 stu dents bared all, and hundreds more clamored to watch on Friday, but what started out as tun and exhilarating Court says VMI successful in assimilation of female students College Press Exchange LEXINGTON, Va. (CPX) - The Vir ginia Military Institute is off the hook for now. A federal appeals court ruled Jan. 15 that the nation's oldest state supported military college has suc cessfully assimilated women into its student body. U.S. District Court Judge Jackson L. Kiser dismissed a 9-year-old law suit against VMl’s males-only admis sions policy. Kiser ruled that the state New GI Bill would pay College Press Exchange WASHINGTON (CPX) - A congres sional commission is proposing a new GI Bill that would pay full tuition and all book costs at any college for four years if the recipient agrees to spend the same amount of time in the mili tary. The Commission on service mem bers and Veterans Transition Assis tance said the new plan would replace the existing program, which covers only 36 months of educational costs - capped at $528 a month - for military personnel who have served three LSU Assistant Professor claims Associate Dean spanked her College Press Exchange BATON ROUGE, La. (CPX) - An assistant professor at Louisiana State University has filed suit against the school, charging that an associate dean pulled her onto his lap and spanked her while chanting, “You’re a bad girl.” Another associate dean, Ronald Garay, confirmed the accusa tion Sunday, The Chronicle of Higher Education reported. Dianne H. Piper, an assistant pro fessor of mass communication, claims the Jan. 12 incident happened while she was talking to Richard Nelson, an associate dean of the university’s Manship School of Mass Communi cations, about a chance for her to lec ture for a year at Indiana University. Piper, 43, said the conversation took quickly got out of hand, many stu dents said. Anna Levy-Warren, 19, said she ran with her friends wearing nothing but shoes, socks, a hat, body glitter and a tiger, the school’s mascot, painted on her back. While making her way through the courtyard, she said she saw a man peeing on a woman, an other man masturbating, a couple hav ing sex, men groping women, drunk students drifting in and out of con sciousness and several people slip ping on the ice and snow. “I was in a nudist mosh-pit grabbing desperately at arms and shoulders to keep myself from being trampled," she wrote to the student newspaper, the Daily Princetonian. Some students said Friday's run was emotionally painful as well. “Was it class unity when a guy in one of my classes was hurt after a spectator yelled out obnoxious comments about his physique, and a woman cried and pledged to lose weight because two of her male friends told her that she had put on too many pounds since freshman year?” Jen Jennings, presi dent of the class of 2000 wrote to the newspaper. "A combination of mob culture and a couple of inches of snow apparently give us the license to nor malize behavior that we would other wise not tolerate: sexual harassment, rape and threats to our lives with blood-alcohol levels over .25, just so we can loosen up enough to take off our clothes.” and institute have “successfully for mulated, adopted and implemented a plan" that gives women equal access and treatment as guaranteed by the 14th Amendment. Kiser said the Jus tice Department, which brought the suit against the school, has filed no objections to the measures VMI has taken to incorporate women into its Corps of Cadets. The department has 30 days to respond to the ruling. In June 1996, the U.S. Supreme Court ordered VMI to accept women years on active duty. Service mem bers must pay $1,200 to take advan tage of the current system, but under the new plan they wouldn’t have to pay any initial fees. In addition to full tuition and books, recipients also would get a monthly stipend of $4OO. An estimated 70 percent of all ac tive personnel meeting the new proposal’s requirements would take advantage of it, compared with the 33.7 percent who participate in the existing program, a spokesman for the commission said. The new plan likely would increase the number of people who leave the military and seek higher a turn for the worse as she tried to defend the length of time she would be gone from her LSU post. Piper’s lawsuit alleges that Nelson spanked her while Garay “sat idly by, watching and laughing.” Garay told the Chronicle that was "not at all the case.” He said he witnessed the inci dent, which “was something that hap pened so fast that no one could have reacted to it.” “I think I reacted as anyone would have, just in total shock,” Garay said. “The incident did happen.” Nelson, who has agreed to step down from his position while the charges are being investigated, has said he is “totally innocent of any sexual or racial harassment" and un der strict orders from the university not to discuss the case. But according to news reports, his wife, Valoie, University officials at the scene said they, too, were shocked and dismayed by the display. "I can’t go back to the Nude Olympics after this," College Master David Carrasco told the Princetonian. “I felt a sense of shame. I think many people there felt ashamed." Nevertheless, many stu- dents want the event to continue, claiming that it is an important oppor tunity to bond and soak up the col lege experience with classmates. "1 look like an idiot trying to de fend people’s right to run around na ked, but if students see this as a tradi tion, the administration needs to do anything possible to make it safe,” said student body president-elect Spencer Merriweather. University officials have tried to regulate the event in the past few years by working with student organizers and barring photographers and tele vision cameras. The university also added security, extra lighting and emergency personnel to make the run safer for students. As far as Shapiro is concerned, the efforts have tailed. He has asked the university’s dean of students and a group of faculty, students and staff to study the event over the next several weeks and come up with options for preventing this tragedy before it hap pens.” Shapiro said he wants to re solve the issue with university trust ees early in the spring semester. or give up its state funding. The next year, the institute admitted 31 female cadets. Of those women accepted, 2.3 made it through their first year. Now, 48 women. 26 freshmen and 2? sophomores, are among the institute’s 1,250 students. “We’ll continue to monitor this situ ation,” said Col. Michael Strickler, VMl’s public relations director. “It’s not just a year-and-a-half process.” full tuition education and the number of high school graduates who recognize the service as a means to getting a col lege diploma. The new plan would also make it possible for more mili tary personnel to attend private schools, which can be very expensive. The new program would cost about $483 million to run the first year. That cost is projected to rise to $l.B bil lion by the fifth year. The House Com mittee on Veterans Affairs has sched uled a hearing on Feb. 23 to examine the proposal. called the Chronicle and the Associ ated Press to say the charges against her husband are “totally false.” Valoie Nelson also said her husband was try ing only to pat Piper on the back when she “fell on him.” Piper’s suit alleges that Nelson had made several sexual comments and advances toward her and that he once told her the only reason LSU hired her was because she is black. The suit, filed against both the university and Nelson, seeks unspecified damages. University officials said they would not discuss pending litigation.