wallace carroll started off as a foreign correspondent. he moved to work for "the new york times."e was the news editor under scottie westin in the washington bureau of "the new york times" in the 1950's. he left that behind to become the editor and publisher of the "winston-salem journal" in north carolina. in the 1960's. right when the surgeon general announced that smoking will kill you. right when desegregation was under play and heavily contested in north carolina, he went there because he felt he could change. he could make a difference in the community. how quaint. journalcism a public service. where do you go to use journal toism change your community? i think if we can instill that in some of our students now, i think it will have an effect. i'm not -- i don't come into contact with many students, but the few students that i do come into contact with, i see it. i see that they really are interested in grabbing on to journalism as a profession and what they can do with it. >> thank you. >> i'm chris, jay, jim and mary walk through the the national, the local and the histori