" .. .TaY- A R d. - Crab-grass buster: OSUsenior Jeff Felton RESUME Watch the Grass Grow Try turf management So you don't like working in an office? You want fresh air? Have we got major for you! It's called turf-grass management, and you can join students at schools like Oklahoma State, Penn State, Kansas State and Nebraska to prepare for a future as big as, well, all outdoors. With- out turf-grass managers, America might be overrun by crab grass. Who else can keep golf courses green, reseed playing fields and prevent roadside erosion? Oklahoma State offers an especially ex- tensive program. At the university's seven- acre research center, students cover every- thing from horticulture to herbicides to landscape design. Many aspire to become golf-course superintendents, a field in which top professionals can command salaries of more than $55,000. OSU offers internships with golf-course superintend- ents around the state, where students can examine such esoteric phenomena as creeping bent grass, the variety found on putting greens. Because the 1988 PGA tournament will be held in nearby Ed- mond, OSU students will this year get the special opportunity to learn how a club- house gears up for a grand-slam event. While dreaming of managing the course at California's Pebble Beach, turf-grass majors will probably start out with salaries below $22,000, working for parks depart- ments or lawn-care companies. But for true grass groupies, the greatest job satisfaction comes from working outdoors. Bill Bird, superintendent at The Greens Country Club in Oklahoma City, says, "Instead of sitting behind a desk all day and wearing a coat and tie, I get to do something I enjoy." After all, how many jobs give you a chance to sit around and watch the grass grow? ZIVA HOBSON in Stillwater What About ... raduation's only a few months away, and you're still fishing around for the Perfect Profession. Problem is, noth- ing really strikes your fancy. Wall Street's taken a nose dive, law schools are churning out a glut of attorneys and med school takes forever. Maybe it's time to broaden your horizons. How about a career in direct-mail marketing? Or convention-center manage- ment? Or maybe dental anthropology? These are just three of the "101 best opportunities of tomorrow" described in "The New York Times Career Planner" (Times Books. $9.95) by Elizabeth Fowler, the Times's careers columnist since 1976. Fowler predicts "a worrisome time ahead" for the soon-to-be graduates: as aging baby boomers cling to middle-management jobs and corporate streamlining continues, suc- cessful career planning will require more creativity. In the "Career Planner," Fowler outlines the basic how-to's of pick- ing and pursuing a career: how to choose your college courses, how to plan summer jobs, how to make the most of career-coun- seling services. What sets this guide apart, principally, are Fowler's provocative two- to three-page job profiles, covering the spectrum from accounting to zoology. Surveying job de- mand, salary ranges and necessary train- ing, Fowler covers the old standbys-law, investment banking, journalism-as well as such newly growing occupations as di- rect-mail marketing, grievance handling and productivity expertise. Biotechnology, she predicts, will be one of the nation's fastest-growing industries, and she fore- sees rising demand for robotics engineers as industrial robots appear on more assembly lines. For those with a flair for the exotic, Fowler profiles a number of tantalizingly offbeat careers, such as thoroughbred-rac- ing management and nautical archeology. And don't forget dental anthropology, which is, of course, the study of oral hygiene and dental habits in different societies. STEPHEN WEST Q. What does your job entail? A. Right now, I'm working for a developer, dealing with property owners and city councilors to get a development off the ground. During the legislative sessions, I represent various interests. Q. How did you become a lobbyist? A. When I was at the University of Nevada, Reno, during my first two and a half years of college, I was an intern in the legislature. From there I worked in the U.S. Senate as an aide for three years. Then I ran for office myself and was the youngest woman ever elected to the state Assembly. Two years after that, I won a seat in the state Senate. In 1986 I ran for a seat in Congress and lost in the primary by 1,000 votes. After the election, several people asked me to represent them as a lobbyist. Q. How does what you do in Carson City differ from what a lobbyist might do in Washington, D.C.? A. The goal for any lobbyist is the same. But since most Nevada legislators do not have a staff, the lobbyist may be the only per- son supplying the legislator with information. Q. What do you like best about your job? A. The ability to bring change. I also get paid a lot better. Q. What advice would you give to college students who would like to become lobbyists? A. It's very fashionable to be business-oriented, and you have to have that knowledge. But you'have to be able to communi- cate with people orally and have good writing skills. You have to testify, draft legislation and write a lot of letters and statements. I urge students to focus also on the social sciences and communications. Name: Helen A. Foley Age: 34 Occupation: Lobbyist/ Consultant Education: B.A. in political science, University of Ne- vada, Las Vegas I 32 NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS MARCH 1988