Monday, February 15, 1954 Page 10 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem. Oregon Industry Soon to Haunt Campuses for Engineers By SAM DAWSON NEW YORK W) Technically The government already drains trained college graduates can ig-1 the supply to get men to handle nor the current Gig Debate be- i such tilings as guided missiles, jet tween the "prophets of gloom and j planes and foreign economic aid doom" and the apostles of "it's and development. The council going to turn out all right in time." : adds: "Atomic power and the Corporation scouts, college; utilization of solar energy loom placement offices predict, will j on the horizons." soon be haunting campuses re-1 The Scientific Manpower Com cruiting the grads for industry. mission is uniting with the coun The Big Debate hasn't changed t cji jn a drive for more and bet- Industry s need for engineering I ter science teachers in high NEW CITIZENS skill. It finds the crop of trained youth still in short supply. However liberal art grads may fare, the American Chemical So ciety predicts, engineering com panies will get only two-thirds as many graduates as they need this year. The atomic age will only in crease the need for engineers, ac cording to the Engineers Joint Council, which represents 170,000 schools to induce youth to enter engineering courses And retired Gen Leslie R Groves, who headed the Manhat tan atomic bomb project during the war, contends that a principal reason for the current lack of students studying to be engineers is that too many high school stud ents aren't taught the funda mentals of arithmetic 3 Compete In Oratory mnmhrs nf Pidht eneineerine so- . lemons uMid.iy . given 1.11 cieties worried about the student j le shortage.- The big increase in .k..fT.. demand for technicians in the shortage. . h,i., ,,., ,rM. .i, crop of depression babies, now at college age; and the Korean War and draft which claimed students as they came from high school This year there will he 1.300 fewer graduates in chemistry than last spring the American Chem ical Society notes sadly. After a survey of college cam puses and of industrial companies, it reports the need for chemists, engineers and physicists is nine per cent higher than a vear aco. Talk of recession hasn't changed that picture, it holds. But it docs find the increase in the demand for scientific grad- uaies is levelling off. Last year's demand for grads was put at 25 per ceni nigner man in 1052. Colleges report vigorous recruit ing campaigns by corporations to get graduates to sign up for work wilh them. The chemical society says that this year the starting pay for chemistry graduates will average five per cent higher than last spring. At the regular Caital Post Amer ican Legion meeting at 8 o'clock Monday night Dr. Edgar Fortner, Jr., will conduct the annual elim ination oratorical contest. The. winner will go to the district elimination contest. The winner in 'the district contest will compete for the state championship, whose winnep will compete for the na tional championship against the winners from each of the 48 slates and Hawaii. In competition Monday evening will be: Louis O'Connor, senior from Stayton high school; Katherine Ru berg, junior from Salem high school, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Ruberg. 249 North 15th, Sa lem; Mac Baker, senior from Salem high school, son of Dr. and Mrs. P. D. Baker, 925 North 15th. Dr. Fortner states that the judges are outstanding Orcgonians whose names arc not made public until after the contest. This National high school orator ical contest is one phase of the American Legion's youth program. The subject to be used for the pre pared orations in the 1954 contest must be on some phase of the Constitution of the United States which will emphasize duties and obligations of a citizen to the gov ernment. The same subject and oration used in the department contest must be used in the na tional contest. A a3? (ff$sA Representing 17 countries, these saluting youngsters are part of 51 children sworn in as citizens of the United States at naturalization ceremonies in Nc York. The kids, who range in age from three to 17 years, were adopted from foreign coun tries by American couples, or else were born abroad but have one parent who is a U. S. citizen. The ceremony was the first one in which only children were naturalized. (UP Tclephoto) Dahlia Culture Keizer Subject KEIZER Mrs. Kenneth Hutchins ! was hostess to the Home Econom ics club on Thursday, Feb. 11. Keizer Grange will sponsor a card party Friday evening, Feb ruary 19, at the Grange hall. Felix Ricdcl has finished his du plex, and Mrs. Beatrice James, i employed at the Cupboard Drive In I has one apartment, while Mr. and ! Mrs. Ray Boucher, proprietors of the Boucher Jewelry store of Keizer have the other apartment. The Keizer Garden club will meet February 16 at the fire hall. The speaker for the evening will be Dick McCarty of Swan Island Dahlia Farm of Canby. "Dahlia Culture" will be his topic. Anyone having flowers in bloom in their gardens are asked to bring them. The Keizer Ladies' Sewing cluh will niA't at the home of Mrs. M. O. Nicholas, 1955 N. 24th St.. Feb ruary 18. Third Damage Suit Result Collision ALBANY Steve D. Hodge, logging truck operator, who was indirectly involved in a collision on State Highway 28 between Sweet Home and Brownsville De cember 26. 1953 now has a total of three damage claims filed against him amounting to $97,955 when the third complaint was filed SatUiJay in circuit court. In this complaint $25,000 is asked. Plaintiff in this third suit is Minnie Johnson, who alleges she was a pesonger in a car driven by Helen I. Wisdom, which col lided with a pickup truck driven by Roland Hodge, son of the de fendant. Helen W'sdom had previously filed a claim for $31,300 and Cool idge A. Mitchell, also a passenger i- asking $41,655. According to allegations of the three complaintants Hodge's truck had been stalled on the road, out of gas, and a pick-up truck drivel by the son was on its way bearing gasoline to re plenish the logging truck's tanks. The Wisdom car, it is alleged, was passing the truck when the pick-up, coming from the oppo site direction, collided with the car head-on, inflicting injuries upon the car driver and passengers. List Three PTA Meetings In East Salem Community EAST SALEM Three parent teachers meetings are scheduled for week. Swegle Parent Teachers associa tion February meeting will be at a guest speaker and special music by school pupils. Merry-go-round club meets on Thursday, Feb. 18, at 7:30 in the home of Mrs. Harold Holler, 4080 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 16, in the Sunnyview avenue. school house Robert H. Fowler from the Ore gon State hospital will be guest speaker, showing a film and con ducting a discussion period on "The Shy Child. Mr. Byron will show movies to the children. Fifth grade room mothers. Mrs. Earl Givens and Mrs. Bruce Quarry win serve refreshments. Ralph AIs man will ask for numbers for a tal ent show in April. Auburn Parents club will have a covered dish supper followed by a business meeting and program on Thursday, Feb. 18, at the school house. Washington Mothers club meets Thursday, Feb. 18, at 1 p.m. in the multi-purpose room. There will be Hearings Due on Bill For Wool Subsidies WASHINGTON (A - The Senate Agriculture Committee plans to begin hearings this week on an administration bill proposing sub sidy payments to wool growers. specifically designed to encour age the domestic production of 300 million pounds of wool a year, the j bill provides for the payment of a ! subsidy to growers equal to the i amount by which the national av-1 crage market price may fall short j of the established support price. ! The payments would come from i tariff revenues on imported wool. President Eisenhower proposed the plan in his message to Con gress outlining his agricultural program. Edina Lane home extension unit meets Thursday at 1 p.m. in the home of Mrs. John French, 210 E. Rural St. An extension agent will discuss keeping up to date with textiles. Garden Road Neighborhood club meets at 1 p.m. Friday, Feb. 19, in the home of Mrs. Earl Wood, 1575 N. 19th St. New residents of Hollywood Dr. are Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Wall and two children who have bought the former Ernest Crum home. Valentine parties were held by the teachers and pupils in their own class rooms Friday at all East Sa lem school. Members of Swegle Woman's club will meet Tuesday in the home of Mrs. E. E. Brandt for a special work day beginning at 10 a.m. A covered dish dinner at noon. Advertising Agency Expands Operations Albert W. Krebs of 1250 How ard street, who has operated a sign advertising agency for the past seven years, is branching out through the medium of the Krebs-Burns, Inc. outdoor ad vertising concern. While Krebs will continue the operation of the business he has established, he will have as an associate in the new venture, Winston Burris, who will do much of the field work. 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