*Thinking about shipping your kid off to Princeton to become a high-salary I-banker? Think again: "As Pipeline to Wall Street Narrows, Princeton Students Adjust Sights," details the struggle two Princetonian princesses are having trying to find work out of college. The problem is no less dire here at UChicago, I suspect. But before the Econ-majors all have an existential crisis (perhaps decide to pick up philosophy?) I think they should consider putting what will still be an extremely useful degree good use in the public sector. I wrote a short piece on finding internships with non-profit organizations for the University Community Service Center Newsletter a couple weeks ago. Also, check back next week for my co-worker Mutisya Leonard's piece on finding grants and fellowships for summer/post-graduate work.
*"Twilight Zone"—this Washington Post article addresses one of the very problems my midterm on U.S.-Mexico Borderlands is about. The author, a self-described border rat, details the changing climate of the third country that is "20 miles long and 2,000 miles wide." He says:
"Nowhere does the change in border dynamics appear more striking than in Ciudad Juárez, a city of about 1.5 million across the Rio Grande from El Paso. Juárez, which in recent years has seen a string of unsolved sexual assaults and murders of young women, was once the swingin'-est town on the entire frontier. Here, at the crossroads of NAFTA, terrific literature, quality artisan crafts, foreign-owned assembly plants and dance halls galore, the erosion of border life as it existed for generations is almost complete. Juárez awoke one day last December to learn that four policemen had been killed within a half-hour, one of them decapitated. It was the worst carnage of that week, but it numbed rather than outraged. Juárez experienced more than 1,500 homicides last year, which, along with daylight carjackings, occasional kidnappings, random street robberies and plain vanilla extortion, made for a population fearful of the new year."
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