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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (May 11, 1959)
I PAGE TWO HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON .Via fcKiilL'. MONDAY. MAY 11. 1953 "DENNIS THE MENACE" Reporter Gives Summary Of How To Find A Job By WAIll) CANNEL ; Hheir Ideas lo top management. NEA Staff Correspondent Ask the man who hires and he'll te vou he d rather be in tne n - . 1 TOLO THE KIDS HOW GOOD OU WERE AT GlWN' ffUFF A BATHJ' Leaders Eye Pat Brown As Possible Candidate WASHINGTON (AP) - Califor nia's Gov. Edmund G. Pat Tlrnun is hecinnina to eel some close attention as a possible 1M0 Democratic vice presidential can didate. , 's recent indications tnai he is beginning to lake himselt nrimislv in ihis connection have proved disturbing to some ot Ihe more active aspirants lor the par ty's presidential nomination. They would like to annex California's helty convention vote for them elves. If Brown can get divergent California Democratic factions behind him lor a favorite son ocionaiinn he will be nominally in the race for the presidential nomination himselt. 1 As long as he can keep Ihe California delegation behind him. it won't be able to start a swing toward some major candidate for thn ton Drize. In such a case Brown would be in a trading po .if inn thai mieht make him an attractive candidate for second place. With Brown keeping himself in the picture, presidential aspirants NEW YORK 'NEAI Wana job? Another job? A better jod- Well, it s not so mticn wnai you know. More likely it's how fast and sure you can find the sou under belly of that fearfully composed prolessional scrutinizer the per sonnel director. Here's how. To begin with, consider the re sults of Ihe just-completed survey onductcd by the industrial ncia- lions News, a respected voice inai has questioned its long list ot per- onnel department subscribers Ac cording to IHN: The hirer iwhose title can range from Employment Director to In dustrial Relations Supervisor to Vice President in Charge of Per sonnel) has had his job almost 10 years, spends about 50 hours each week at it. and usually manes ue- tween $10,000 and $18,000 per year. If he's a vice president, he prob ably makes more which is a nice thing for him because he very like ly has not had as much formal Oklahoma Tornado Victims Tell Harrowing Expenenc nance department, production, sales or maybe someday if his luck is good in public relations. It should be duck soup for any green kid to con almost every ifSffigai UST 'riAYCt Oixni 6:43 wm like Sens. John F. Kennedy of Massachusetts, Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota and Stuart Syming Ion of Missouri have to he content with trying :c nuin a scco'V choice Klicnyth lor themselves in California. Kennedy is known lo be itching for a chance lo run in the Call lornia primary. He thinks he cou lake any other, out-of-state candi date there handily. But he is not likely to tie into Brown at the polls short of some desperate turn elsewhere in his political loriunes Brown s possible availahility tor second place resls to a great ex tent on what happens to Kennedy Bolh are Koman Catholics and no one expects Ihe Democrats nominate an all-Catholic ticket. If Kennedy fails to make the grade for the top nomination, how ever. Brown may benefit from the spreading beliel that one of his faith has a much better chance of election now than Al Smith had in l!iai. The religious Issue has been ex plored publicly so thoroughly in ihe Insl couple of years that many Democrats now feel they would be inviting charges of bigotry if they didn't pick a Catholic on one end n heir ticket. . This is where Brown comes In. If some other senator should beat Kennedy for the presidential nom ination, the second man is likely lo be a governor lo avoid Ihe un balance of an all-Senate ticket. In that event the selection of Brown, a Catholic governor, would be regarded as solving two prob lems at once. personnel man into giving him a job." according to William A. Douglass. Douglass should know. He's pres ident of Careers. Inc., which dis-Iributes-job opportunity inlormation Irpe In college men and people. The information is authorized land paid for' by personnel departments of contributing companies. Conse quently, Douglass sees a lot oi hirers. "The best technique," he said, Mic intollippnt niiestinns. You be gin with: 'I read your president's! speech yesterday and I was espe cially interested in his remarks on . . .' "The personnel guy probably hasn't read the speech if he knows there was a speech. So, you've got. him on Ihe defensive, which is a position he's used to in his own company." The second way. Douglass said, is the status technique. You find out how long he s been with the firm and Ihcn you say: 'What impressed you about the company; why did you decide to stay on?' After all. Douglass said, nc doesn't get much chance to talk about himself and his achieve ments. Besides, he's constantly in terviewing people who don't really know what kind of job they warn, unless maybe a spot in the per sonnel department." STONEWALL, Okla. IAP) i Lillian Thompson looked over wreckage on the tornado-scarred hills around her home near here Sunday. At her feet were a few dishes. some clothing and the door of the house where she and her husband lived. The rest of the structure was scattered over the country side. A stray pig wandered in the Thompson farmyard. Mud-covered and weary. Mrs. Thompson talked with friends I had time to get to my shel ter. Then I heard it coming over.' she said, referring to Ihe tornado which had killed 5 of her neigh bors and injured 9 others in Ihe community ot Frisco, "It sounded like a thousand winds blowing in al! directions at ihe sam time. I couldn't keep my Ijmp lighted. I kept trying to keep t.-iat lamp lighted but It would blow out. It isn l so nan light, you know," she explained. Her husband nodded. He was working in nearby Ada. JKia., when the twister hit Saturday night. We were running around hkc crazy everyone yeuing iui Lillian," he said. "Then she came out of that I saw that corrugated tin dcor open and I started laugning .i un was all num. one fine." W. W. Scarbrough. a neighbor of the Thompson's, looked over on i hill a few hundred yards 10 mt southeast. L. Tom Daniel, an oio limer in these parts, had lived there. He was dead, three mem bers of his family hospitalized. . . i .. a were I came m tasi ing toward our -almost took some of us. w about me later," said Scar- running wind didn't know nlace until "Then w. looked out .he door . , j ... hi barn was gone we cumu n.. .... was We went closer. one' ... K-iirin had r. I., mr I null come oui silt the w Mrs. Thompson garnered up some clothing and said "Guess we'll have lo build another hous sometime." She glanced at th$ clouds. "Only now we d belter get this stuff in a truck. It looks like rain." out 'to help Ihe Thompsons . .. .i--.i. "1 was m a car . .u. ....d when we coming irom - - . .. saw ,t dip down he Mid. much did 1' HEMORRHOIDS) was once World't Only fully Automatic Clanr ELECTROLUX TARKEL TWEET 2550 wnrrc Ph. 4-7167 I ""m 'T'J mam '. I M. KIHOLOt bwwm Name Schedule For Blood Bank ETNA Mrs. Donald King, presi ilont of Ihe Scott Valley VFW Aux iliary snonsoring Ihe Scott Valley Blond Bank, announces it will be held on Wednesday. May 13. noon until 7 p.m. al Ihe office of Dr. G. P. Ashcrafl in Etna. In MSB. Scott Valley residents do nated 113 pints of blood and it is hoped that, for ISIS!) donations will exceed mis aiiwtum. PERSONNEL employes of largo companies feel their department is a dead end. education as. let's say.-a manager or supervisor. Only directors make more than vice presidents. It's an even bet that he's the son nf an executive or of an un skilled laborer. It's two-to-one he has at least one college degree It's anybody's guess what he ma jored in; but odds are against per sonnel or industrial relations. But enough of the armor-plate and on to the Achilles heel. The fellow wno evaluates you and how you'll fit into the com pany probably doesn't like the way he tits into tne company, espe cially if the firm has 6,000 or mor emnloves. At that size, IK.n reports, in personnel department seems like dead end lo its chiei. unless ne leaves, ho feels, he will never get ahead into the more important jobs. ' The way he looks at it. tne Busi ness of evaluating you and your fu ture is pretty far down on the prestige ladder. In the largest com panies, 1UN says, the hirer feels lost. In the smaller lirms, person nel is a stepping stone to bigger things. No matter what the company size, personnel people have learned lo picture themselves as 'necessary-evils;" unrecognized for their efforts; unable to measure their effectiveness; always having to sell FIRST-OF-THE-WEEK From Holland a wonderful chocolate drink flavor Yanks Asked To Join Bank Now Open Daily A 7:00 P.M. ENDS TONIGHT ! ONE COMPLETE SHOW ONLY AT 7:40 P.M. CgWWiMilfcWl PECK'SIMMONS'BAKERHESTON'IVES ACADEMY AWAPn WINNER M'RI. IVES BEST SlIrroRTINO ACTOR GREGORY JEAN CARROLL CHARLTON BURL WIIUAM WYlfRS FEATURE AT 8:23 ONLY TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY FRtCH MARIA REMARQUE'S s-Mihi MtuiM i ii a ni ii wrn Hi"lJUnlN bttVIIN ' LILU rULVCrv mum JOCK MAH0NEY-D0N DtFORE-KEENAN WYNN WASHINGTON (AP)-President I Kisenhnwer asked Congress today lo approve U.o. participation in establishment of an intcr-Amen can development bank. For Ihe United Mates to join. Eisenhower said "will be a mosl significant step in the history of our economic relations with our Latin-American neighbors. Establishment of the billion-dol lar bank was recommended by representatives of Ihe 21 Amen can republics alter a three-month conference here starting last Jan 8. The participating nations would provide the capital. The United Stales would invest 4.i0 million dollars. The Latin American republics would put up the resl. The President said he is strong ly of the opinion the United Slales should support creation or Ihe bank because nf this country s special relationship with Latin America, and because of "the pressing economic and social problems in the area." YUL NOW! Ts JOANNE . MARGARET Brynner Woodward Leighton i mV.U3'' BllSTCING j I AS fi I T sum of o ri--..-.5'.J'''".. - f jl SounfeFurjr JERRY WALO Eddie Buys Home For Bride-To-Be LAS VEGAS, New IAP-K.ddie Fisher has bought a SH8.000 house here for his bride-to-be, Elizabeth Taylor. Fisher said he had been lookinc for a house ever since he came! here six weeks ago for a hotel engagement and lo establish six- week residency so he could obtain divorce from Debbie Reynolds.1 Miss Reynolds had gollen a di vorce In California but it will not be final for a year. Fisher winds up his show to night and plans to file and obtain his divorce Tuesday. II all goes according to plan, he and Miss Taylor will be married in the afternoon. KFA I1KI.EGATES ETNA-Kussel Smith and Roy Collins were elected to attend the Future Farmers or America state wide convention at San Luis Obis no from May 5 lo May . The two boys pre members of a com milter lo decide Ihe rcouirrmcnls thai all outstanding chapters must I lultill for tne coming year. K COFFEE 29 a; blue detergent Fresh Stalk Jl y 59c fftlpMf C(1 KARO g PEAS ' ea U SYRUP No. 303 Cf'l0 wuy i: 3 L Ashland IJ? e A Rhubarb -a-IJI Niblets CORN Vacuum Pack 12-01. SC for $100 J for $ Good Luck Margarine lbs. 85c HORMEL'S Vienna Sausage Vis 25c Reynold's Aluminum Foil Borden's new Instant Dutch Only drink of its kind with extra vitamins B,, B,, D, Ironl 25 fr 33c Wyandotte Ripe OLIVES Medium 7-oi. 25c Lindsay Ripe OLIVES Large No. Tin 33C DUTCH 1 ! CHOCOLATE 'i FLAVORED MIX ft Skippy DOG FOOD for $ No. 1 1 Tall Tins I I 1 Nalley's Banquet DILLS 24 41c TREND Liquid Detergent 22 Borden's new Instant Dutch is the most delicious summer drink ever. 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