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Liberal-arts students are hard to place through on-campus programs, largely be- cause the firms they usually want to work for-publishers and advertising agencies, for example-rarely send out recruiters. Virginia Stegath, who coordinates recruit- ing at Michigan, notes that the number of companies interviewing liberal-arts stu- dents in Ann Arbor has dropped sharply in the last two years, while the number of companies interviewing students in science fields has held steady at about 100 a semes- ter. At Ohio State, where placement serv- ices are split into 16 pieces, the quality of placement seems to depend on one's van- tage point. "The placement office has worked well for us for more than 20 years," says Marianne Mueller, head of placement for engineering. But a professor in the liber- al-arts college grumps, "Placement services are pretty lousy here." Like every other element in a college, counseling centers suffer from lack of funds. Nancy Nish of Colorado College complains that a budget crunch has kept her from expanding services to meet student demand: she is the only professional counselor on the staff. Michigan's Career Planning and Placement Office absorbed a 5 percent budget cut this year, and Minneso- ta's Liberal Arts Guidance Office-though it's budgeted as $100,000 a year-recently cut back two of its three part-time counsel- ors from 30 to 20 hours a week. At Emory, where annual budget hikes over the last five years have just about kept pace with inflation, most counselingcomes in group sessions. The sessions challenge students to compete with each other for information, sayscounselingand placement director William Brake: "Theyneedtolearn the 'meet and beat' aspects of life." Students don't always see the benefit in the system. Says Beth Wallace, an Emory graduate, "The whole thing seemed geared around business students, and I was interested in mass communications and psychology." Frustrated, Wallace struck out on her own after two group sessions. Another common economy, the use of student counselors to supplement theprofessionals, often doesnot please the constituency. Cornell employs 30 student counselors to assist the 15 profes- sionals in its Career Center; the result has been to drive many students elsewhere for advice. "I'd go to my faculty adviser first," says junior Diane LaScala. "Both times I used the Career Center I spoke to a student, and I don't think he knew more about my questions than I did." Of all student complaints, however, the most frequent concerns the matter of actu- ally getting an appointment with a company recruiter. On many campuses, the system works like a cattle call. It's not uncommon for students to take a place in line before INEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/MARCH 1984 effective yesterday's students were, in any case. Says Mark Kann, 37, a political-sci- ence professor at the University of Southern California and onetime antiwar protester: "We had a false sense that participation and activism could have any effect." Perhaps a major contrast is that today's studentshave a more modest view of their role. Gary Hau- gen, a junior who is Hart's Harvard coordi- nator, says his campus forces have indeed been helpful. "We're the only thing he's got. He doesn't have big money. He doesn't have big endorsements. But he's got alot of little feet, and that can make the difference." Increasingly, students are making a dif- ference in state and local races, as well. At the University of Texas they're flocking to the U.S. Senate campaign of Austin's Democratic state Sen. Lloyd Doggett. And both sides at the University of North Caroli- na are bracing for what's expected to be an abrasive contest between conservative Re- publican Sen. Jesse Helms and Democratic Gov. James B. Hunt Jr. Kate Head, a Uni- 0 fat-cat standards of many special-interest PAC's-$100,000 by next August. But STAR has already established chapters at 100 schools, and it plans to channel money and, more important, manpower on behalf of beleaguered liberal candidates in con- gressional races. "There's never been such a movement, so this seems like a vast under- taking," says cofounder David Dow, 24. The real goal, he declares, goes even further than electing key liberals: "We want to make the untapped resource of students a powerful voice." n certain issues, the student voice becomes thunderous indeed-as Ohio politicians witnessed last No- vember. Students by the score suddenly registered to vote, eager to cast their ballots against a referendum that would have boosted the state's beer-drinking age from 19 to 21. Seldom had such solidarity been seen; in the four Columbus precincts that are dominated by Ohio State students, the For $1O, youcan have law school all wrapped up. 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'60J Canvassingfor Cranston in New Hampshire: Bundle up and wear twopairs of socks versity of Iowa senior who used to work for Mondale but switched to Tom Harkin, a U.S. congressman who's aiming for the Sen- ate, says such races offer more sustained satisfaction. "Each presidential candidate comes through here and they're almost [promising] to do your dishes," she says. "But there's no accountability. With local candidates there is some. I can contact them after they're elected." In the year's most ambitious political project to date, two Yale law students are even trying to tie local races into a com- puterized national network of liberal sup- port. Called Students Against Reaganism (STAR), the group registered last fall with the Federal Election Commission as an offi- cial Political Action Committee (PAC). STAR's fund-raising goal is modest by the NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/MARCH 1984 vote was 1,152 against to only 125 in fa- vor. The turnout was widely credited-or blamed-for the measure's surprise defeat. The electoral tide also swamped two tax measures that could have posed financial trouble for colleges and required a tuition hike. "It's pretty clear there was much greater interest than in any other issue or candidate since 18-year-olds got the right to vote," says Mike Stinziano, a state repre- sentative whose district includes OSU. Ob- viously, students can muster the energy to change things even in a ho-hum political year. But how many will rally to causes that are deeper than a beer mug? RON GIVENS with JULIA REED in Washington, D.C., AL STAVITSKY in Columbus, Ohio, AMY WALLACE inNe avn Conn,., JOHN SCHWARTZ in Austin, Texas, LEIGHANNWINICKin Evanston, Ill., and bureau reports 23