Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 16, 1951, edition 1 / Page 4
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1 1 4 - . 1 Uo - i ) r . .ERIDAY.- FEBRUARY. IS, 'f PAGE FGUS THE DAILY ?AR HEEC B5, "S 2 ) i. J .' ites our so (A c PI i ower i 1 f ; i i 1 1 if !i I i i i !l II No Limitation On Exports Is Requested WASHINGTON, Feb. 15 (UP) Defense Secretary George C. Marshall , said today the United States plans to send four more divisions about 100,000 ground tfoof3 to Europe and warned "we'd be in very serious danger" of Invasion if Russia overran the continent. Appealing to Congress not to impose "limitation" on troop ship ments, lie said powerful naval air units alone could not stop Rtmsia and cautioned that Ameri can forces may have to stay in Europe for a decade. The free world, he se id, must) strengthen itself to "deter ag-1 gression if possible and defeat aggression' if . necessary. He s?id the projected '"token' shipment of U. S. troops is of overriding im portance because they will bolster Europe's will to fight. Marshall told a joint session of the Senate Foreign Relations and Armed Services Committees, he disclosed the' troop figures "re luctantly." But he said there was less danger in letting Russia know them than in continuing the great foreign policy debate with its harmful effect on Euro pean morale. In almost so many words, he urged the senators to reject a pending resolution by Sen. Ken neth S. Wherry (R. Neb.), to Withhold reinforcements to Eu ope until Congress sets a "policy" on the issue. He said it would be '"helpful" if Congress indorsed the troop plan. any other LU U lD)llM nnnpnn nn pllt? J LtlJ 13 UJU :l1aLiL58 i HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF SMOKERS, who tried this test, renort in slewed statements that PHILIP MORRIS LESS IRRITATING, DEFINITELY MILDER! . , - v - ; - . i - if, i&tdiA . . light up a Just take a puff don t inhale and s-l-o-w-l-y let the smoke come through your nose. Easy, isn't it? And NOV.T. Other brands merely make claims but Philip Morris invites you to compare, to judge, to decide for yourself. Try this simple test. We believe that you, too, will agree . . . Philip Morris is, indeed, America's FINEST Cigarette! in r rr means MORE SMOKING CALL P FOR b IL Journalism Graduates Rate Above Average NEW YORK, Feb. 15 (UP) Many emp'oyers rate journalism school graduates well above the average in the newspaper,- adver tising, and radio fields, a Survey- 0- W8X v N 1':::--V' ? : I5- - f 5 1 Kir !ji 1 4 W A' CAMPAIGN WORKERS THROUGHOUT the state are intensi fying their efforts this week as the current North Carolina cam paign in, the annual Heart Fund drive goes into high gear. Here Norman" Cordon; former Metropolitan Opera star, now director of Ihe North Carolina Music Foundation, and Mrs. Miles Fiteh. president of the Chapel Hill Junior Service League and chairman of ihe Chapel Hill-Carroro Plastic Hearts Committee, are mapping plans for the Orange country drive of which Cordon is chairman. "North Carolina's goal is $100.000. . leading brand to suggest this test -'aa'.-'V IS DEFINITELY --1 1 - PHILIP MORRIS , . Light Do exactly the same thing DON'T INHALE. Notice lhat bite, that sting? Quite a difference from Philip morris! n 10m b LT showed today. . The report on . the progress qualified journalism schools have made in preparing students for careers in these fields was f e- 4 v 1 X up your present brand PLEASURE! flfnlRnmj Employ ers leased by Alfred H. Kirchhofer, president of the American Coun cil : on Education for Journalism. The report was prepared by Dr. Earl English, associate dean of the Missouri School of Journalism and i a member of the council's Accrediting Committee, which ha placed 39 journalism schools on its approved list. "The study shows that not only have journalism students found ready employment in their re spective fields, but that many employers rate them well above average," said kirchhofer,. who is managing -editor of- the Buffalo (N.Y.) Evening News. ; .' .-imi r 1 ' . l .-111 1 ms iinning. eonusuitis uie j time-worn theory still held in some newspaper offices that the fundamentals of newspaper work cannot be learned in college. The study shows thafmany employers regard the journalism graduates about whom they comment as having exceptional qualifications, well prepared for the work they i have undertaken." , Dr. English said that for the past four years the Accrediting Committee has been gathering da ta on the success of journalism students at the end of their first six months of employment. He said the committee asked employers to rate journalism stu dents they had hired on 20 or more items on a 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 ; point scale, which represents poor, ' below average, average, above av- erage, and excellent. The overall average for 1949, he said, was 3.85. Dr. English's report said 4,937 undergraduate degrees in journa lism were granted for the school year of 1949-50, and that 2,728 were granted by the 39 schools on the council's approved list. Of these 2,278 students, 73 per cent are employed in some phase of mass communications, 25 per cent are women students who got married or men who went into military service and only two per cent are unemployed. Of the 2,003 who have jobs, 983 are in the newspaper field, 112 in radio and 845 in other fields of mass communication. "The demand for graduates re mains high as the actual employ ment records reveal," Dr. English said. "Schools are reporting many more l-equests for help then they are able to fill." Dr. English included in his re port, "To point but the bright side for a change," some com ments from employers who are . i . i . . i . .1 : i : school graduates they hired. H?rc are some of those comments, with the names of the' employes, the j employers and th5 journalism i schools deleted by Dr. English: i " has worked for us onlv j about six months and has been drafted. In that time we found him one of the. best, if not the b.cst, beginner in our experience. His basic training is sound; his mind is alert and versatile; his general knowledge is. excellent. If the question of journalism edu cation rested on , ths answer would be all that could bo asked. CLASSIFSEDS ANNOUNCEMENTS 1 BRIGHT-EYES IT WAS WONDER tul seeing you again in the in innate bookshop yesterday those eyes Mke stars! lhat voice like fioldeii velvet! But did you have to bring Old Growl er along? BULLVBOY (Chg 1x2) FOR RENT " GIRL DESIRES TD SHARE TWO BED room apartment in Glen Lennox wuh graduate or working girl. Telephone 2U419. (lXa42-2) FOR SALE 6B RANCH TYPE TRAILER. 4" ROOMS. 1947 Conway Cruiser, 2" rooms attach ed. Completely furnished. For further information call Mrs. Moffltt F-441, days. 2-6501, nltes. U-C1930-3) 5 ROOM HOUSE. COMPLETELY FUR nished. Carrboru. EASY TERMS. Call (1-C1938-2) 1930 PLYMOUTH SEDAN WITH 42 motor, good body $125.00. Phone 3322. (1-C1841-2) HELP WANTED " OFFICE HELP FOR AUTOMOBILE dealership having had bookeeping course. Experience desirable out not necessary. Apply in own nandwriting; stating salary desired. Address Box 1369 Chapel Hill. (chg. lxl) LOST U.N.C. KING, CLASS 48, WITH RUBY set. Initialed J. C. W. Contact John Y Sponcers Big Hayride A hayride, square dance, and supper will be in the offing Fri day, Feb. 23, for students, the YMCA recreation Committee an nounced yesterday. . Chairman Clint Foust said that efforts are being made for either trucks, trailers, or tractors to pick up couples at about 5 o'clock that afternoon and travel to Camp New Hope where supper, square dancing, and a short vari ety show will be scheduled. Live music provided by a string quartet will accompany the square dancers. Those going should be able to return about 12 p.m. Tickets at $1 per. person will f go. on sale in the Y lobby Mon day.- Class Of "26 Sets Reunion June 2,3,4 . Plans for the 25-year reunion! of the Carolina class of '26 were announced yesterday following a meeting here of the class officers and reunion committee. The reunion is set for June 2, 3,4, as part of the University's Commencement program. More than 700 members, including 302 graduates, will be invited to par ticipate, Lawrence Watt, Reids ville, class president, who pre sided at the meeting, said. Roy Armstrong and Norman Cordon, both of Chapel Hill, were designated to handle local ar rangements. Others attending in cluded J. B. Wahman, Winston Salem, class secretary, Emmett Underwood, Raleigh; A. Paul Routh, Greensboro, and former State Senator James Webb, Hills boro. We hope he'll come back." "In my 29 years of business ex perience, I have met few young men who had such a cheerful willingness to work, a rare quality today. His initiative and his ac ceptance of responsibility were demonstrated daily. We hope to have him back when the Army lets loose of him." "This fellow is one of the finest it has been our pleasure to work with I ran looking for two or fessions financially and spiritual three more like him." i lv. 3. L, .S3 t TV - T&ATHE E O. I NO,SOM, NOBODY ). whAr YiN TH'FIRE O'COURSE " fr'MIGKT BE I I WHILE VO' WAS. tK-r-rr Fr BECUZWECAINJTj i i . I awav-RiiTA YrNv y READ AT ALL. SO, NATCH ERLV 1 v-Jvt H I I 1 Ik lL Mb. - BEIC1 .. 1 I r K . I I ji " U J HIDING ANY TbKECK SJ AS CCPllOT ON THIS ' TUB APMIKAL HOW TO I i WAS K16HT HAPPY TO BEON I O S I'M FEEELANCe 4f NAZAIRE- Vl etiUFFLE, BUT HOW KUINJ TW PACIFIC HANP TD PEOTECT TUP O I .?--! PI V-PWTV7?-)DAV . kPTA.lM V. o?P THEV rtPT TH I AIKLIFT AND ALI I TAVmvtPi: s I S I ' - A. VtAJOK CANYON f Of- THE 3 WJI HIPALL OVOK. J Or" t VVPhH X POUNP AN EYE OH Ou r A 2 rXX: rcbTTLBBirrr! ti off of vou? f myself heading V ts I fc -f Jlm r-S -z'x. VI V.-fem -S?CS. I. Airier iirai'i'V -8 V Vi'M 4 Jiff : sjS J5 -4 K 5 i CHARLIE BARNET and his orchestra will play a one -night dance stand at Memorial Audi torium in Raleigh next Tues day. Salesmanship is Pointed Up in Pro f s Book ! JJon t indulge m too many pleasantries or delay too long in-getting down to business, is the advice of Dr. C. D. Kirkpat- rick, associate professor of mar- keting in the University of North ! Carolina, to young students of salesmanship and business. ! "Arouse your customer's curi- j osity, be prepared for either nor- I mal or unusual situations, and know about vour piistnmpr in nrl- vance," Dr. Kirkpatrick says in a new textbook, "Salesmanship: Helping Prespects Buy," just published by the South-Western Publishing Company. Dr. Kirkpatrick's text presents salesmanship in its most modern and enlightened form and is directed towards students in com merce schools who, he points out, are being given thorough train ing nowadays in the field of sales manship. His book is in' line, he says, with an attempt among col leges and universities to pro fessionalize selling. An experienced teacher of salesmanship, advertising and marketing. Dr. Kirkpatrick, who came to Chapel Hill five years ago from the University of Mary land, is well qualified to write authoritatively. He presents a wide variety of documented materials from bus iness sources, and he includes numerous quotations from top ranking sales executives and their training manuals. Robert S. Wilson, vice-president of the Goodyear Tire and RuBber Company, in his intro duction to the text, writes that Dr. Kirkpatrick's book is a "sound, thorough presentation of what -it takes to be a success in j one of the most rewarding of pro- "NOTHING SHORT of A SENSATION!" -OSlf r CROWTHEB. N. Y. fimej Oc santis- .. tiSl Of 7th Avnue Circle 7 bHI Doors Open 10 30 A. M SUN MON. l o There is a strong drift or drive today toward power politics, Dr. Edwin G. Nourse, noted economist and author and Chairman (1946 49) of the Council of Economic Advisers to the President, assert- J ed in a lecture here last night. This drift, he said, is evident in "the settlement of market re lations between farmer and con sumer, between worker and em ployer, and between capitalist management and the public. "There is likewise a strong tendency to resort to central gov ernment to plan the pattern of our economic lives and to effec tuate an ileal model created by the subjective judgments of an elite (even though chosen under the forms of democracy) rather than keeping the flexibility of lo cal (and time-changing) choices." Dr. Nourse, who was introduced by Dr. Milton S. Heath of tho j University School of Business Ad ministration, delivered in Hill Hall the last of a series of three Weil Lectures on Citizenship. The series was endowed 37 years ago by the families of Sol and Henry Weil -of Goldsboro. His general subject for the se ries was "Economic Science and Practical Policv." His specific j topic tonight was "Economics and Politics." j i Dr. Nourse said tnese are grave days "not merely in the obvious strains of preparedness and threat to national solvency, but also in the changes subtly being wrought in our institutions, our business and political practices, our men tal attitudes, and our spiritual values." Dr. Nourse was of the opinion that "it is of the nature of the private enterprise system within a structure of free government that political functions and activi ties will always be an important r ami m NEVER TOO LATE- To Advertise in the Wan t-Ad Section cf THE DAILY TAR HEEL . I I k, I part of our social behavior. "The real question is: Will the political process through which we build structures and define functions in our der.-.ocratic sys tem of conducting an economy be based on a nrocrersins knowledge of social science and a willing ness to accept the disciplines of science?" He thought all that is needed is a "sincere desire to follow this social-scientific way of democratic economic, life." Go) N m mil lufe; i c (a ,)i 1 tLLLAjj TO A. YOKUM DOGPATCM N- 1 DON'T WANT TO SET b. THt WORLnOM fiqc- V i uiii WAN r TO START i ii i vn, fNCJ.v 1 rAPTAio , ...A1-! AAN,1 VtU P BETTPi? rare : Wi ' a . t " r .-3 ... 4 1 Ward. 310 Whitehead. (1-1940-2) - - " ii-,r,"T r I I 1
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 16, 1951, edition 1
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