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Domestic News July 21, 1949

The Journal

Caldwell, Noble County, Ohio

What is this article about?

In Ohio, demand persists for professionals like nurses, teachers, and pharmacists amid a tightening job market and declining industrial openings, per a recent Bureau of Unemployment Compensation survey. Specific jobs listed in cities including Akron, Dayton, and Cincinnati, with salaries up to $3,600/year.

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Jobs Still Open
For Professionals
Demand Exists
For Specialists

In the face of a general tightening up of job opportunities, there continues to be a reasonably stable demand for specialists such as nurses, social workers, pharmacists, teachers, cabinetmakers, secretaries, stenographers and dieticians.

A recent survey by the Bureau of Unemployment Compensation Service division reveals that the demand for these specialists is particularly heavy in the larger communities. In contrast is an obvious decline in the number of openings for industrial workers, skilled and unskilled.

By and large, experience and educational requirements reflect the overall economic situation. In almost all cases, such requirements have become steadily more stringent since the year began.

Social workers are needed in Akron, Cleveland, Youngstown, Lorain and Chillicothe, the openings paying up to $3,600 per year. Additional information on these and other jobs may be obtained at any one of the BUC's local offices.

Both Dayton and Youngstown have openings for cabinet makers, the Youngstown job paying $3 an hour if all requirements are met. Dayton, Cincinnati and Chillicothe report openings for nurses, some of the jobs paying up to $3,000 a year.

Elementary school teachers, in short supply throughout the post war period, are offered $2,200 a year to start in Massillon. Applicants must have graduated from an accredited college of education but no experience is required.

Pharmacists are wanted in Akron, Cincinnati, Chillicothe and Newark. And they are offered as high as $85 a week. Dieticians wanted in Chillicothe and Dayton, are offered as much as $3,000

Openings for secretaries, paying up to $150 a month, are available in Canton. And stenographers, in demand in Cincinnati and Dayton, can get as much as $50 a week depending upon their experience.

What sub-type of article is it?

Economic

What keywords are associated?

Job Demand Specialists Ohio Cities Unemployment Survey Professional Openings

Where did it happen?

Ohio

Domestic News Details

Primary Location

Ohio

Event Details

A survey by the Bureau of Unemployment Compensation Service reveals stable demand for specialists including nurses, social workers, pharmacists, teachers, cabinetmakers, secretaries, stenographers, and dieticians, particularly in larger Ohio communities like Akron, Cleveland, Youngstown, Lorain, Chillicothe, Dayton, Cincinnati, Massillon, Newark, and Canton. Demand for industrial workers is declining, with stricter experience and education requirements. Specific openings include social workers up to $3,600/year, cabinetmakers $3/hour in Youngstown, nurses up to $3,000/year, elementary teachers $2,200/year in Massillon, pharmacists up to $85/week, dieticians up to $3,000, secretaries up to $150/month in Canton, and stenographers up to $50/week.

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