The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 30, 1984 - Page 3 MBA hopefuls test the waters By KAMALA WHITE To many students at yesterday's Pre-Business Day a master's program in business administration was several years down the road, but not so far that they weren't plan- , ning. Recruiters from 37 business schools who were gathered at the Michigan League answered questions from a large num- ber of sophomores, juniors, and other students, some of whom planned to work before entering graduate school. STUDENTS are planning early for careers in business, the recruiters said. Many know the high salaries MBA graduates can earn and they know that more and more undergraduates are turning to graduate business programs before settling down in the world of work. "I have seen some impressive planning going on," said Ward Snearly, a representative from Purdue. "I'm im- pressed with the number of sophomores and juniors I've talked to. That in my view shows some excellent planning." And with application fees at $50 and up, students are spen- ding more time assessing schools before they actually apply. "WITH THE COST of each application somewhere in the $50- range, it's very wise for students to find out which schools they are really competitive for, and which schools they really want to become a part of," said Maria Blackburn, director of admissions at Cornell's Graduate School of SManagement. # Students hammered recruiters with such questions as "What GPA should I have? What kind of GMAT (Graduate Management Admission Test) scores do I need? How important is work experience before applying?" The round of questions became so routine that Jeannie Thompson, a recruiter from Northwestern University, sim- ply circled the information relating to grades, test scores, and work experience on the school's admissions profile sheet and methodically handed the sheet to students. AT LEAST ONE recruiter expressed concern that students looking toward a graduate program in business place too much emphasis on the quantitative qualifications and stressed that extra-curricular activities and social skills are equally important. Some recruiters also thought students weren't thinking beyond getting their foot in the door of the business school. "Surprisingly enough, I have not had one person ask me about follow-up job placement," Snearly said. BUT MOST OF the students at yesterday's event said they were only looking for general information. Tom Richardson, an LSA senior, said he "came just to gather information. I plan to work for a while before going on to graduate school, but I wanted to know what was available. I heard about this day, and since it was right here, I decided to come and talk to some people." Tom Dolan, a business junior, said the high salary of an MBA is a lure to go on to graduate school. But he said he didn't know if his friends had similar motives. "I THINK THAT everyone would like to have a lot of money, he said. "It's hard to say whether that's the primary goal of most of my friends in the B-School." But R. Brooks Gekler, a recruiter from New York Univer- sity, warned business students seeking the MBA fast track to big bucks and success: "Business School is not necessarily going to provide all of the financial opportunity some students expect. "Unfortunately, there are no guarantees," he added. "However, there are a great number of possibilities open to a student who has pursued or is pursuing an MBA." Doily Photo by KAREN ROMFH, A representative from Eastern Michigan's business school waits students questions regarding admissions. Drama portrays problems in teen suicides CARMEL, N.Y. (AP) - "I was seeing my son and reliving his death," said Donna Buckley after previewing an upcoming television movie about a fictional teen-ager's suicide. "The film covers everything. The distress signals are in the film. I didn't know my son's signals until after he died," she said. UP TO the time her 15-year-old son Jon hanged himself last May, she was unaware of how badly he was hurting, Mrs. Buckley said. The film, "Silence of the Heart," focuses on the suicide of a 17-year-old high school student whose parents are similarly unaware of his distres. AFTER HER son's death, Mrs. Buckley said, "I began making calls and trying to learn everything I could." Now she can read signals that she couldn't decipher then, she said. p Because too many teen-agers are taking their own lives and too few adults seem to understand why, the producers of the film - scheduled to be broadcast tonight on CBS - hope that the drama of their character, Skip Lewis, will heighten awareness of the problem. THE, FILM'S producer, David Simons, said his interest was sparked when he read about a 9-year-old girl writing her will. Asked why he chose a drama as his vehicle, he said, "I could have done a documentary, but I wanted to reach the average American family and let them know what's happening." The suicide rate for American young adults has climbed 41 percent in 10 years, according to the Nation Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta, which is conducting a study to try to determine why. An estimated 6,000 teen-agers took their lives in 1983 and experts say the number could be as much as four times higher, since many of the deaths are categorized as accidents. Suicide is the second leading cause of death among young people with statistics showing that at least half of all high school students have con- sidered the act to the the point of plan- ning, according to Charlotte Rosse, director of the Suicide Prevention Cen- ter in San Mateo County, Calif., and co- chairperson of the National Committee on Youth Suicide Prevention. She acted as adviser to the film. "KIDS THINK they're all alone and that if they're thinking suicide, they're crazy," she said. "They're not. They are kids who hurt. "Kids learn about suicide the same way they learn about sex, on the street," Ms. Ross said. "And the misin- formation they get is far more dangerous than the accurate infor- mation they can be given." Skip Lewis hurts. Low SAT scores, a failed relationship, an inability to cope. with his weaknesses or recognize his strengths put Skip on the edge and no one, not even his best friend, under- stands. HE QUITS his job, bequeaths his record collection to his kid sister and gives the girl who spurned him a bat- tered volume of the poems of Sylvia Plath, who was herself a suicide. The film's title is taken from her verse. None of his actions are recognized as the distress signals they are - even by the parents who love him. "Jan talked about it to his friends," Mrs. Buckley said, "It was in his school essays, in how he acted. But no one knew enough to know." IN AN effort to help teachers, parents and teen-agers recognize warning signs in themselves and others, pilot teen-age suicide prevention programs are beginning in California and in New York. The New York program was laun- ched here, in Putnam County, one of three suburbs north of New York City, where 11 youths aged 13 to 20 have taken their lives so far this year. Here, as in Houston and in the Dallas suburb of Plano, counseling sessions were held after a "cluster" or rash of young suicides. BUT MS. ROSS and New York's Lt. Gov. Alfred DelBello, her co-chair on the national committee, said the programs should be ongoing and man- dated for all students starting in junior high school. "Kids talk to kids, not adults," said Ms. Ross. "Then you have the double tragedy. The teen who kills himself and the one he told who feels guilty for the rest of his life." Are you considering professional school? HARVARD UNIVERSITY JOHN F. KENNEDY SCHOOL OF GOVERNMENT Is Looking for Future Leaders in Public Affairs. Come Learn About Harvard's Two-Year Master's Program in Public Policy, Leading to Either the Master in Public Policy or City and Regional Planning Degree. MEET WITH: Madeleine Thomas ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR, PUBLIC POLICY PROGRAM DATE: Friday, Nov. 2, 10-11 and 11-12 groups CONTACT: Your Career Placement Office All Students, All Majors, All Years Welcome! Joint Degree Programs Offered with Harvard's Other Professional Schools. Generous Cross-Registration Privileges with Other Schools. HGAPPENINGS Highlight Ernest Boyer speaks about "The Future of American Education & the Role of Liberal Arts" tonight at 7 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. The lecture is sponsored by LSA student government. Films MTF - Halloween, 7 p.m., Halloween II, 9 p.m., Michigan Theatre. Cinema II/AAFC - Shoot the Piano Player, 7 p.m., East Quad Auditorium. Performances Musical Society - IvoaPogorelich, 8:30 p.m., Rackham Auditorium. School of Music - String department recital, 8 p.m., Recital Hall. Center for chinese Studies - Brown bag, Michael Oksenberg, "The Making of Energy Policy in China," noon, Lane Hall Commons. Bioengineering, Wen-Jei Yang, "Prospectives in Biomechanics," 4 p.m., 1042 East Engineering Bldg. Center for Afro-American & African Studies - Jonah Isawa Elaigwu, "African Soldiers as Social Reformers & Economic r4anagers: The Case of Nigeria," 7p.m., CAAS Lounge, Lorch Hall 407. History - Margot Stein, "The Image of the Mother in Developmental Psychology, 1945-1960," noon, West Conference Room, Rackham. Comparative Literature - Stephen Muecke, "The Scribes - Towards an Ethnography of Writing," 4:10 p.m., 411 Mason Hall. Public Health Students' Association - Quentin Young, "The Reagan Ad- ministration's Health Policy," noon, School of Public Health Aud. 2. Aerospace Engineering - Martin Bendsoe, "Sensitivity Analysis of Problems of Elasticity with Unilateral Constraints," 4 pm., Rm. 107, Aerospace Engineering Bldg. Stasheff Lecture - Norman Corwin, "The Golden Age of Radio," 3 p.m., Aud. 3, MLB. Turner/Conoco Lecture - Lisa Tauxe, "Magnetostrativgraphy and Time Resolution in Sediments," 4 p.m., Rm. 4001, C.C. Little. Industrrial and Operations Engineering - Steven Deutsch, "Social and Organizational Factors in Introducing Technological Change," 4 p.m., Rm. 144 Cooley Bldg. Rudolf Steiner Institute - E. Katz, 'The Nature of Meditation," 8 p.m., r 1923 Geddes. Meetings CEW - Job Hunt Club, noon, 350S. Thayer. Ann Arbor Go Club -7 p.m., 1433 Mason Hall. Center for Eating Disorders - Support Group, 7:30 p.m., Human Growth Center, Suite 13, 2002 Hogback. Polish American Student Association - Mass meeting, 7 p.m., Michigan Room, Union. Miscellaneous Computing Center - Chalk Talk: "Examples of Tell-A-Graf Bar Charts, 12:10 p.m., 1011 NUBS; "Tell-A-Graf," 3:30 p.m. Ontel Room, NUBS. Netherlands-American University League - Reading, Peter Ten Hoopen, 8 p.m., International Center. Student Wood and Craft Shop - Introduction to wood working class, 7 p.m., 537 SAB. School of Business Administration, Course, "How to be an Effective Sales Manager," for information call 763-1000. Student Organizational Development Center - Workshop, "If Nobody Knows, Nobody Goes: Publicity How To's," 4 & 7 p.m. For information call 763-5900. HRD - Course. "Effective Business Writing," 9 a.m., Rm. 4051 LSA.