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President’s Scholar finds her rhythm
President’s Scholar finds her rhythm
Katie Kitchell, 2021 President’s Scholar
June 7, 2021
LA GRANDE, Ore. – Spreadsheets sing and formulas strum when Eastern Oregon University graduate Katie Kitchell wakes them up.
Kitchell, named the 2021 President’s Scholar at EOU, said she’s discovered a sense of self-confidence through music.
On the way to her business and accounting degree, Kitchell took a number of music courses. She plays piano, guitar, organ, drums and bass, and she also sings and writes her own songs.
“People in music classes when they find out I’m an accounting major are like, ‘Why!?’” she said. “Music is just math, and people don’t realize it’s all counting and numbers.”
May 5, 2021 |
Tom Perry
Four Marietta College seniors were inducted into the prestigious Phi Beta Kappa society, which was established in 1860 at the College, during a virtual ceremony on Monday, April 26.
The inductees, who graduated on Saturday, May 1 during the College’s in-person Commencement ceremony, are Lauren Eakle (Whipple, Ohio), Katie Kitchen (Marietta, Ohio), Madison McCormick (Hornell, New York) and Sarah McNeer (Liberty Township, Ohio).
Eakle, who completed her degree requirements for a Bachelor of Music in Music Therapy, will be working as an intern for the Four Seasons Hospice starting in October in Flat Rock, North Carolina. The Fort Frye High School graduate will be interning for six months.
May 1, 2021 |
Tom Perry
Considering all of his professional accomplishments, what Mike Salvino ’87 shared should not have come as a surprise to anyone attending Marietta College’s 184
th Commencement ceremony on Saturday, May 1
st.
The President and CEO of DXC Technology shared his keys to a successful career, which included three critical stages. To get things started is the first five years after graduation.
“Your objective should be to learn as much as you can and prove your value,” Salvino said. “This means always going the extra mile, beating deadlines, arriving before (and leaving after) your supervisor, and always being accessible.”