Image provided by: SEIU Local 503; Salem, OR
About The Oregon state employee. (Salem, Oregon.) 1944-195? | View Entire Issue (April 1, 1949)
16 Employment Prospects For Our College Graduates The U.S. -has m ore college students th a n ever bef ^ 9 th ^ B S H H B m e a B l l th e B i t ^ g i g f e m osJ of them w ant. Several professional I B M alread y ja m m e d B ^ a rn e g th e V eterans A dm inistration last week, quoting facts and figures of the B u r- eau of L abor Statistics. One of the fields w here college ployees of m ost of the d epartm ents in tsWgrn. jw B K E c l u d e ’d' oh 29 and a second class of tw en ty -fiv e m em bers- w n s H a r te d on A pril 12. A group of hig h w ay ' em ploy ees conclud - ed a course in algebra at Eugene. T w o ^ classes in accounting practice h a v < g g been in progress in Salem. Film s w e r ^ ^ shown on C orrect Filing, D uties of a Sec re ta r y and four phases of S u p e r vision at Salem. A film on T elephone C ourtesy w as scheduled A pril 26. O f ficial certificates of train in g w ill be aw arded those who have successfully com pleted the training courses. 1 F u tu re train in g plans call for f jf i show ing of a film m o n th ly , courses in close to 50 000 continuous in ||!& ih M g m t r a i n i n g 1 H l b u t the an n u al re p g g e m e n t need is es plan. Plans also are being m ade to ex - tend the training courses, w hich have tim ated at 7,000. Arïothe9 B B m proven successful in the Salem area, w hich enrollm ents continue to m - I Q ^ p B t e n d |^ ^ O j T C ^ ^ ^ ^ 9 t h |QUgh- crease despite the fact th a t m any of out the sta te . la st still not P relim in ary w ork is being done on P1 a pp H i f .h etnis t M f f i d soon be overcrow ded unless the stu the p rep aration of a correspondence m anual containing suggestions for the dent has a grad u ate degree. The field guidance and use of stenographers an(j f i | M i personnel w ork, and some typists in the com position an d t y p i n ^ p secondary education (especially ical education, social science and Eng of letters and other w ritte n com m uni- lish) are also overcrow ded. P ro fes cations. sional fields Where B S j uits a r e . stiU badly needed: medicine, dentistry, WEST COAST PAYS CLAIMS nursing and gr ade- school tea ch in g. On the basis of the survey the sta UNDER OSEA GROUP tisticians had a r e c f m m e n d » n : m ore LIFE INSURANCE students ought to be getting set for the ,The W est Coast L if g M w R t n B Com - I w orkaday w orld M g g e ^ trad es or p â n ^ Ê u n d e rw rite rs of th e O.S.E.A, should be prep ared for a sta rt B clerks G roup Life Insurance I p la n ha ve paid and office w orkers. claims to the beneficiaries of the fol- —F rom Time, Feb. 7, 1949 low ing people : Jam es” Robertson, died A ugust 9, 1948, The Dalles C hapter No. 9. Jennie W inchcomb, I di'e|ij|^ ^K m b £ n ^ A | 1948, In Service Training M arion C hapter No.’ jÎ8. S. M. Z e llé ^ Programs for State dijed N ovem ber 4, 1948, C orvallis C hap Employees Increase ter No. 29. F o rre st Rettenm eyer',; died F e b ru a ry 12, 1949, B r v a llis C hapter Employee train in g activities have No. 29. H elm er S kutley, died F e b r u | b een increasing. In addition to the ih - ary 25, 1949, C orvallis C h apter No. 2 ^ service train in g program s carried on V ictor H ibbard, M ay. 1949, P ortland ■ several of th e departm ents, the M E e 5 N ( » B - kipp’d W. H ill, May CivilM B vlice Commission has cooper 1949, W illamette* C h a p te r No. 21. ated w ith all departm ents in pro v id ing related train in g Q )urses^.SeW raM It is b e tte r to be a young June train in g film s have been show n for th e employees. A class in F iling M eth b u ^ t h a n an old b ird of paradise. — M ark Twain. ods, composed tof abo u t sixty em -