Register-Guard, Eugene, Ore.
SB Sun., Mar. 21, 1954
Hospital to Get
More Interns
Twice As Many
Granted This Year
Sacred Heart Hospital will have
he services of twice as many in
terns as in the past, starting
July 1.
The hospital staff began Its
teaching program two years ago
and has had four interns each
rear.
Twice as many interns were re
quested thiii year, and granted
according to a letter from the in
ternship council made up of rep
resentativcs of six national medi-
cal and hospital organizations,
The new interns, and the modi
cal schools from which they are
now hcing graduated, arc:
Bernard R. Albright and Don
aid T. Smith. University of Ore
gon; Coral W. Cotterell, Creigh-
ton; Charles H. Finney and Hob
ert I). Lindeman, Kansas; Dale
A. Harding and Gregg M. Snyder,
Jowa; and Victor L. McKinely Jr.,
Louisville.
TEAR'S INTERNSHIP
All will be M.D.'s come July,
but they must takers year s in
ternship at an accredited hos
pital. After that they will be dig-
ibis to take an examination for
licensing.
At Sacred Heart, like all other
hospitals with interns, the staff
doctors nave sec up a teaching
proogram. All interns must make
regular rounds with doctors, ob
serving techniques. An intern's
year is divided among the several
departments of the hospital.
An intern can give treatment
only when directly supervised
by a staff member.
Dr. Willis Shepard, a staff of-
fleer, said that fulfillment of the
request for interns "is a credit
to the teaching facilities at the
hospital."
He said that American hos
pitals had requested a total of
10,726 interns this year, but that
4,678 places were not filled in
dicating that only two out of
three requests were met.
MATCHING SYSTEM
Interns are assigned by s
matching system. The students
put down their preferences for
assignment by number. The hos
pital staff examines the list of
last-year students and their qual
ifications and states its prefer
ence by number. When the num
bers match, students are assign
ed. A total of 13 medical students
gave Sacred Heart as their
choice.
The primary intent of the pro
gram is training. Any benefit the
hospital derives is secondary.
The hospital and the commun
ity are helped by these men who
live at the hospital and can lake
emergency first aid measures
until a specialist arrives.
The doctors in the teaching
program point out, however, that
because the interns must take
part in the daily instruction
schedule, they cannot serve as
"outpatient" physicians 'round
the clock.
ir 1
ADMINISTRATION POSITION CLARIFIED
Ike Supports 'Partnership' Power
I)R. CHARLES J. ARM
STRONG, president of Pa
cific University at Forest
Grove, will be in Eugene
Wednesday, at the Congre
gation Church, 8 p.m., to
speak on "The Function of
a Christian College." The
public is invited.
Astoria Hill
Wins Battle
ASTORIA UV-Aslnrians have
bowed to nature and will not try
to use the West Commercial
street slide area for homes.
The houses will be moved to
solid ground traded to home own-l
ers by the city.
In recent years the sleep over
lay, based on clay, has been slid
ing. Homes built on the overlay
have been going downward, too.
at an accelerated rate when rain
lubricates the hard underlay.
The Red Cross is assisting in
removing homes in the area. Its
cost will be about $40,000 in giv
ing aid to 13 families, including
that already spent to help in
moving houses.
By A. ROBERT SMITH
Reglster-Guard Correspondent
WASHINGTON President Ei-
senhower has given moral and
verbal support to Secretary of
Interior Douglas McKay and those
in and out of the administration
who share the view that the fed
eral government cannot abandon
hydroelectric development entire-,
ly to local utilities.
Eisenhower clarified the ad
ministration's position on the
"partnership" policy of river de
velopment at his press conference
last week. Observers felt his ex
pression came at a significant
time, because of a quiet differ-
ence of opinion that has become
marked between McKay and Bud
get Director Joseph Dodge on the
ower issue.
One senator and congressman
after another many of them
western Republicans have gone
calling on Dodge in recent weeks
n attempt to dissuade him
from his literal interpretation of.
the "partnership" policy. They
report Dodge takes the view that
new power dams must be "part
nership" undertakings exclusive
ly, which means he would have
no new dams started unless gen
erators are to be installed by.
local utilities.
POLITICAL CASE
Two western GOP senators.
tried to spell out to Dodge, a De
troit banker, the political implica
tions of such a strict adherance
to the "partnership" theory. They
are fearful the Republican party
will lose critical western congres
sional seats if voters are per
suaded by Democrats that this
administration is dedicated to
halting river development as it
has become symbolized by Grand
Coulee, Shasta and Hoover dams.
At the moment Dodire has on his
desk McKay's proposal for de
veloping the upper Colorado Itiveri
area a federal plan, not a "pan
ncrship" scheme. This is the first
federal plan by McKay to pass
in review at the policy-making
budget bureau level, and so it is
the initial test of strength between
McKay and Dodge.
At his press conference, the
President was asked by this re
porter for a clarification of
power policy, inasmuch as Dodge
had been conveying the impres
sion privately that no further
federal dams would be built,
From the transcript of the news
conference late released by the
White House, here is how the
President answered the question.
His words are paraphrased by
the transcribing secretary, for di
rect quotation of the President is
not allowed;
GREATER ECONOMY
"Well, it (the power policy)
had never been stated in that
way (in the way Dodge was re
ported to have interpreted it). If
he would go back over every
statement that he had ever made
about this question of public
power, he would find, on the
erection of these multiple-purpose
dams, that wherever it was
feasible, he wanted local parum
pation, because he believed you
would get greater economy and
greater care in the operation and
the building and the use to which
the dam was put
"Now. it was also acknow
ledged in every single statement,
there could be cases where it was
so exclusively to the federal ad
vantage to do this thing, of
course, they would do it then.
But the rule of looking for the
nartnershiD was exactly what he
hoped to follow. But he didn't
preclude the possibility that
these others came. Of course,
they did."
ASSURANCE
This explanation apparently
means the President wants local
utilities to do the job, but in
cases where they won't or where
the administration thinks it more
feasible for government develop
ment, that will be done as in
the unner Colorado area,
The night of the same day
Eisenhower made this statement
a western Republican senator
bumoed into Dodge at a GOP
dinner. As the senator later re
lated it, Dodge volunteered that
he thought a favorable report on
the Colorado project would be
forthcoming very soon.
The McKay-Eisenhower view
apparently will prevail in this
instance, at least, over that of
Dodge.
The Bii
k
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"'"'I MenlliP
1
HENNEN t Vm
rMst8
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TA1PEH, Formosa ro Inde
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