page 10 daily nebraskan friday; October 9, 1981 Careers in economics varied By Charles Flowerday Students tend to put too much emphasis on a major, said Roger Riefler, chief adviser of the UNL Department of Economics. "The fact of the matter is, 90 percent of VS. corpora tions hire people and they go right into a training pro gram," Riefler said. Riefler explained that he is in an awkward position with regard to his advisees, economics majors in the Col lege of Arts and Sciences. He said economics majors face a relatively good job market in relation to other arts and sciences majors, but that it also is the least career-oriented major in the business school. He contrasted it the more theoretical nature of the discipline with accounting, which he said provided good job opportunities upon graduation. Economics provides a more general business back ground, Riefler said. Students graduating with an eco nomics degree would face the same period of training as a history or English major, Riefler said. He said students often face their senior year with the question "What am I being trained for?" They frequently have visions of being hired, put behind a desk and told to perform, he said. Nice selection History majors, for example, who put a nice selection of courses together-a good intellectual package, he said are people corporations will train. Riefler said the economics department is the only department in the College of Business Administration building requiring students to take an arts and sciences curriculum. This serves to create a well-rounded student, Riefler explained. He said students today are getting career-oriented too early. "I like the arts and sciences approach of distribution requirements early. It worries me what students come into introductory courses expecting: 'Does it make me money? n he said. Riefler said that if the only reason for studying eco nomics was to able to amass great wealth, there would be no economics professors. He said he encouraged students interested in the discipline to take a selection of intro ductory courses so they know what the field is about, then begin thinking about a major. According to a departmental brochure, economics majors are prepared to pursue careers in local, state or federal government, to work for regulatory agencies such as the Interstate Commerce Commission, or the Federal Reserve System, or to take the more traditional business routes of banking, insurance, retailing or trans portation. Societal issues Department majors gain training in data collection, forecasting, public and governmental relations, business and governmental consulting, policy analysis and negoti ations, the brochure said. It also said the strength of the discipline is that it pro vides a logical, Ordered way of looking at problems and issues. Economics draws upon history, philosophy and mathematics to confront topics ranging from individ-' ual and business economics to societal issues such as in flation, unemployment and pollution, the leaflet said. "Career orientation is a progressive narrowing of inter ests," Riefler said. "I hate to see a student as a freshman say 4I want to be an economist.' I hate to see a senior come in and say, 'What am I going to do with my life?' " Riefler said the first step was to get into the right college. "If you want to go into engineering, learn that first, then study economics." He encourages students to visit the career placement office and go through some interviews. He said many students may be surprised to find that they learn as much as their interviewers in the process. Long lasting inabilities, linked to noisy settings An airplane taking off, the sound of a jackhammer tearing up the street, a car with no muffler - surround ing noise abuses ears. But more than hearing is at stake. Recent research with children has revealed broad consequences of environmental noise. University of n rl- -11 ... uregon psycnoiogisi, aneiuon ionen, ana his col leagues studied children whose schools were in the air corridor of the Los Angeles International Airport and compared them to matched children whose schools were in a quiet zone. They found that children from noisy schools: - have higher blood pressure - do not develop the ability to ignore noise and to concentrate on their work - are more likely to fail on a task requiring thought - are more likely to give up before completing their work - show relatively long-lasting effects from noise: Noise abatement procedures in the classroom, such as sound insulation, do not immediately reverse the con sequences of continuing exposure to environmental noise. Cohen said, "Over 70 million Americans live in neighborhoods with surrounding noise levels sufficient to interfere with communication and cause annoyance and dissatisfaction," He proposes that it may take more to solve the ef fects of noise on children than just insulating only cer tain places in the environment, such as schools. The problem for society, says Cohen, may be to decrease noise levels in general. Dr. Cohen summarized his findings recentlv in the Journal of Personality and Psychology and the Ameri can Psychologist Jacketed Red nylon fK ik$ ,( i I t N fQ I P flannel-lined jacket Black nylon i V lA I J - 'v 1 J V S to XL. $35.95 flanl-lined jacket L. V ,P I Or m M f , S to XL. $35.95 2-si:J f Nylon tiannel-lined J y f r ; W J " I mJr SJ jacket in red or black . , '"')LY 1 -t l Cfs to XL. $27.95 V"4- S ' ? 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