Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 01, 1943, Page 6, Image 6

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    Jeff Kitchen Awarded
Public Affairs Training
Jeff Kitchen, business mana
ge: of the Oregana and senior in
political science, has been award
ed a fellowship by the National
Institute of Public Affairs for
training and internship in various
go ernmental departments at
Washington, i>. C., Dr. William C,
Jones, head of the political sci
ence department, said Thursday.
Kitchen is one of 40 outstand
ing seniors selected from United
States colleges and universities
o?i a competitive basis by this
Rockefeller - endowed institute.
Only one other student has pre
viously been selected from Ore
go a.
Two hundred students chosen
from 450 applications are inter
viewed personally by the presi
dent and the educational direc
tor of the institute. Forty are se
lected from this group to take
the training. Kitchen was inter
vie red in Portland along with
students from the University of
Washington, University of Idaho,
and Whitman college.
Tiasou Training
Ke will take his training in
the war and state departments
with special emphasis on the war
department.
‘The army needs trained ad
ministrators,” Kitchen said.
“There is an excellent opportun
ity to do liason work between the
state and war department in the
field-—such work as rebuilding in
occupied areas.”
The students work with chief
IT
HI MOMS!
It is nice to see you,
Mothers. Drop i, n
and make your an
nual junior Week
end visit.
‘ ® Banana Splits
, ® Sundaes
| ® Malted Milks
i ® Jumbo Cones
| JOHNSON'S
5/e 1‘doek W est of the
i\lel )onald 'Theatre
Phone 3801
TWO HITS’
'Great
Gildersleeve'
with Harold Peary
also
After Midnight'
with Boston Blackie
THE ACE COMEDIAN!
BOB HOPE
DOROTHY LAMOUR
'They Got Me
Covered'
also
Donald Duck
‘Der Fuehrer’s Face’
administrators m governmental
offices and if they wish can take
graduate work at Georgetown
university or George Washington
university. Meetings are held
twice a week at which various
government executives speak and
answer questions. Heads of the
various departments, ambassa
dors, and other government offi
cials speak before these seminars
held at the Brookings Institute,
Student Choice
Besides working in the ten
presidential departments, the stu
dents visit corporations and com
missions, independent govern
ment agencies, meetings of the
senate and house of representa
tives, and committee meetings of
the senate and the house. At the
end of the first four or five weeks
the student writes a brief con
cerning the department he likes
best. This is checked by the edu
cational director of the institute.
He then goes into the department
of his choice and can study the
department either through re
search work or by working from
desk to desk.
At the end of seven months,
neither the student or the gov
ernment is under any obligation
but 99 per cent of the students
take non-competitive exams when
they finish their training and go
into government administrative
work,
mrecr Training
The institute has a regular
staff in Washington, D. C. to
conduct the work. The purpose
of this organization is to get
well-trained students into govern
ment offices instead of having
them enter business offices. In
this way they hope to get better
and more efficient men.
Kitchen plans to leave Oregon
the last week in June and go to
New York before he goes to
Washington, D. C.
Kitchen Was co-chairman of
the Frosh Glee, assistant mana
ger of the educational activities
office in 1940, vice-president of
Sigma Delta Chi, one of the foun
ders of Druids, junior men’s serv
ice honorary, member of Friars,
senior men's service honorary,
and is listed ill Who's Who in
American Colleges and Univer
sities.
Dr. Cahill Receives
Second ‘Looey’ Rating
Dr. Fred V. Cahill, instructor ill
political science at the University
in 1911-42, has been given a second
lieutenant's commission at offi
cer's candidate school in Fort
Washington, Maryland. He was
inducted in the army as a private
in June, 1942, and went to Fort
Leavenworth, Kansas, then Shep
pard field. Texas, and Chanute
field, Illinois, for meteorology
training.
HonorGroups
To Arrange
Co-Initiation
Dr. A. Ft. Moore, research pro
fessor of physiology in the Uni
versity of Oregon, has been se
lected as the speaker at the joint
meeting of the University chap
ters of Phi Beta Kappa, national
honorary scholastic society, and
Sigma Xi, national science hon
orary, on the occasion of their
spring initiation of new members
Saturday, May 15.
Announcement of the neo
phytes of Sigma Xi is expected
early next week. Dr. Fred N.
Miller, president of the local
thapter, said Friday. The Ore
gon Alpha chapter of Phi Beta
Kappa elected 28 members at its
meeting Thursday afternoon.
Dr. Moore’s address, which is
sponsored by the museum of
natural history on the campus
as well as by the two honoraries,
is to be open to the public. Fur
ther details regarding the ad
dress, details of the initiations
and of the joint dinner, are to
be announced by the program
committees of the organizations
within a few days.
mi rsetes
Following' is the complete list
of the members chosen Thursday
by the Alpha chapter of Phi Beta
Kappa:
Clinton Paine, business admin
istration ; Mary Vincent, English:
Paul Lee, business administra
tion; Stanley Robinson, biology;
Arthur Berg, medical school;
Frances Montag, business admin
istration,
Mary Earl, English; Paul Cal
lahan, classics; Eathel S. Barger,
business administration; Clara
Hering, general science; Armin
H. Gropp, chemistry; Abbie Jane
White, Romance languages:
Jeanne Parker, Romance lan
guages; William Maltman, busi
ness administration; Ella Anita
Simons, economics1; Mildred Wil
son, journalism; Leone LaDuke,
music.
Mary Alderson, physical edu
cation; Lila Furchner, English;
Dorothy Oshanic, business admin
istration; Dora Jane Huston,
English; John Busterud, econom
ics; Merlin Nelson, political sci
ence; Kathryn Yount, psychol
ogy; Helen Moore, business ad
ministration; Francis P. King,
sociology; Tyra Hutchens; and
Hugh Muir, business administra
tion.
Art Magazines Given
To School Collection
Back issues of 12 art and ar
chitecture magazines were pre
sented to the school of architec
Welcome Mothebl
it has been our pleasure to serve your sons and
daughters during' the past years . . . and we
pledge to you continued efficient service in
' the future.
EUGENE BRANCH
or the
UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK
OF PORTLAND
(Member—Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation)
Photo by Ted Bush
SOUTHERN NEIGHBOR . . .
. . . Charles Politz exemplifies the South American way.
ture and allied arts as a gift by
John V. Bennes, retired Portland
architecture.
Some are to be catalogued and
included in the art library’s book
collection. Others will fill gaps
in the bound volumes of the re
spective magazines.
The magazines are American
Architecture and Building News,
Architect’s and Builders’ maga
zine, Architecture, Architectural
Record, Architectural Review,
Brickbuilder and Architectural
Monthly, Inland Architect and
News Record, The Craftsman,
International Studio, New York
Architect, Theater Arts Monthly,
and Western Architect.
r
Infirmary Prisoners
Miss Prom; Still Happy
Despite Junior weekend activ
ities, some people wanting to get
away from it all have kept the
infirmary quite busy. On Friday
LeRoy Groshong and Robert Sa
bin were admitted to join the
gang at the pill palace. The oth
er patients are Hollis Johnston,
Shirley Hicks, Herb Grant, Wil
liam Maltman, Jack Crocker,
Glenn Lay, Bill Northcroft, Rob
ert Partridge, Jim Elgin, Bettv
Ann Stevens, and Wallace Lee.'*
Rodger Tetlow, Connie Grabb,
and Robert Campbell were dis
charged the same day.
ELCOME TO THE
EBFOOTS COLLEGE
We're glod to have a part in helping
to make your son's or daughter's life
at college an enjoyable one.
Shelton-T urnbull-Fuller Co. *’
32 East 11 th
Phone 1663