Page 4 THE BATTALION Tuesday, October 16, 1951 Phone Company Announces Plans Organization changes effecting division manager of The South western States Telephone Company with headquarters in Bryan were recently announced by D. T. Stick- land, general manager of the com pany. E. H. Utzman, who has been division manager for the company since June 1, 1949, is being replaced by G. M. Brennan of Irving. Utz man is being transferred into the company’s general offices as com mercial superintendent. Other 1 Posts During the 19 years Utzman has been connected with The South western State Telephone Company, he has served in the capacity of local manager for the Brownwood Exchange, the Kilgore Exchange, Ridgway Stand Firm on Fight For Talks Site Tokyo, Tuesday, Oct. 16 (yP) — Gen. Ridgway today said the United Nations is standing firm on its demand for a cease-fire line along the Korean battle line. And despite efforts to resume truce talks once again, the su preme Allied commander promised that United Nations forces would continue their' offensive in Koi’ea. Their goal: to take as much ground as possible. “Within our capability we want ground that we can defend,” Ridg way said at one of his rare news conferences. He added: “In principle, we want a cease fire line more or less along the present battle line. “The purpose of the Eighth Ar my is still to repel aggression.” The location of a cease-fire line is the issue that snagged Korean truce talks for weeks before the Reds broke them off Aug. 23. The Allies have won several hun dred square miles of Red Korean territory since the Reds suspended the Armistice talks. The Communists had insisted on a cease-fire line along 38. Ridgway also promised that the Allied correspondents would be given more news of what goes on at truce talks. Ridgway’s comments were made as Allied and Red liaison officers in Koi’ea were conferring for the fifth straight day at Panmunjom on the problem of restarting’ the truce talks. Both sides have agreed on Pan munjom, six miles east of the old conference city of Kaesong, as the new truce talk site. and as Division manager in the company’s Western Oklahoma Div ision and West Texas Division. In Utzman’s capacity as commer cial superintendent he will have charge of the company’s commer cial operations throughout the com pany’s properties in Texas, Okla homa, Arkansas, and Louisiana. Utzman is a member of the Bry an Chamber of Commerce, board of directors of the Bryan-College Station Rotary Club, board of di- dectory for the YMCA, and board of directors of the Knife and Fork Club. Both he and Mrs. Utzman are members of the First Baptist Church of Bryan. North Texas Transfer Brennan, who is being transfer red from the company’s North Tex as Division with headquarters in Irving, has been connected with The Southwestern States Telephone company for a short time. How ever, Brennan has been in the telephone business for 28 years. The new division manager is a native of South Bend, Ind. and was educated in Notre Dame Univer sity. He received an AB in Indus trial Safety Engineering at Vir ginia Military Institute, and is a graduate of Automatic Electric Company School of Dial Equipment at Chicago. During his long association in the telephone business, Brennan has been employed with the AT&T Company, Long Lines Department for 7 years, and 13 years with the Telephone Service Company of Ohio. He was associated with the Lexington Telephone Company at Lexington, Va. for 7 years, serving in the capacity of general plant superintendent and equipment en gineer. Brennan came to the Southwest ern States Telephone Company from the Iowa State Telephone Company at Newton, Iowa, where he served as general plant super intendent for the entire state. New Area Calendar Sales Start Tonight Sales of Aggie Calendars start tonight in the new area dorms, Chairman of the Calendar Sales Committee Van Vandenberg said today. Representatives will be present in each dorm, Vandenberg con tinued. Civilian and day students may buy calendars in the Student Ac tivities office, second floor of Good win Hall, he added, Guy D. King, Jr. is the top sales man in the campaign by the senior class to raise more funds for the class’ gift to the college, the com mittee chairman concluded. USE BATTALION CLASSIFIED ADS TO MJY, SELL, RENT OR TRADE. Rate* .... 3c a word per Insertion with a 16e minimum. Space rate in classified lection .... 60c per column-inch. Send VI classified to STUDENT ACTIVITIES IFFICE. Ail ads must be received in Stu- kent Activities office by 10 a.m. on the lay before publication. • FOR RENT • 2 BEDROOMS, double beds, bath between rooms. See after 3 p.m. Mrs. Paschall, 1208 East 30th. • FOR SALE • FREE: S6.30 worth of RECORDS with the purchase of a $12.95 RCA 45 RPM Record Player. Shaffer’s Book Store, North Gate, Across fom the Post Office. RISE STEVENS In Stock Now “Carmen” Rise Stevens—Jan Peerce Robert Shaw Chorale SHAFFER’S BOOK STORE North Gate, Across from Post Office • WANTED TO BUY USED CLOTHES and shoes, men’s — women’s — and children’s. Curtains, spreads, dishes, cheap furniture. 602 N. Main, Bryan. Texas. USED builder’s transit and tripod. Call 6-3444 after five p.m. • SPECIAL NOTICE • $25 REWARD for person who finds yellow gold Longines ladies’ wrist watch. Phone collect—Winona Franks, Atwood 4003—Houston, Texas. WILL THE FINDER of Jack Edwards’ watch please take it to Room 100, Good win Hall? • LOST • ONE GOLD Jewelled Ballerina ear clip. In or on the grounds of Memorial Stu dent Center. Generous reward. Contact Mrs. A. G. McGill. Phone 2-1626. ROLEX, self-winding watch, silver case and band. Reward. Bernard Lemmons, H-9 Hart, Box 5504. PAIR of bi-focal glasses at OU game. $5 reward. Reese Lockett, Brenham, Texas. Directory of Business Services Saturday Evening Post Article Anna Beaty, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Beaty; ;and Jerry Oden, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Oden were elected freshman favor ites recently at A&M Consolidated High School. Life Committee ALL LINES of Life Insurance. Homer Adams, North Gate. Call 4-1217. Official Notice Second installment, Payable October 1-18: Board to November 21 $44.90 Room Rent to November 21.... 11.35 Laundry to November 21 3.65 Total payable to fiscal dept $59.90 Students wishing to serve as tutors should contact James Y. Alexander in the Registrar’s Office immediately. The procedure for a student to be listed by the Registrar’s Office as a qualified tutor is as follows: (1) The student should contact James Y. Alexander in the Registrar’s Office. (2) There the student will be given neces sary forms to fill out and have ap proved by the department head in which field he wishes to tutor students. (3) The student is then placed on the qual ified list of tutors by the Registrar. This list is made available to students needing tutors. There is currently a shortage of student tutors. Pay for tutoring varies, but gen erally averages about 75 cents an hour, and in some cases the hourly wage paid probably will be higher. CANDIDATES FOR DEGREES Any student who normally expects to complete all the requirements for a degree by the end of the current semester should call by the Registrar’s Office NOW, and make formal application for a degree. November 1st is the deadline for filing an application for a degree to be conferred at the end of the current semester. This deadline applies to both graduate and un dergraduate students. Those who have not already done so, shouuld make formal ap plication in the Registrar’s Office imme diately. A student who is a candidate for a de gree must be registered for the courses necessary to complete the requirements of his curriculum, and must not lack a grade point ratio in excess of 1.50 In his major field, and overall for his work on that semester, in order to meet the grade point requirements for graduation. H. L. HEATON, Registrar. Classes will be suspended on the morn ing of Saturday, October 20th, since this has been designated as a Corps Trip in connection with the TCU game in Fort werth. C. CLEMENT FRENCH, Dean of the College (Continued from Page 1) for activities, is automatically the secretary of the committee without a vote. “Pass’ Or Pass On Action taken by the committee can either be final at the committee level or can be referred to the president of the college for final action, White said. Each case is decided individually. Being a committee of the Aca demic Council, this group, White said, is responsible for the editoi’s of student publications, the enter tainment manager, yell leaders and the Office of Student Activities. Organizationally speaking the Student Life Committee is over the Student Senate; however by precident, the group has not taken this perogative. After this explanation of duties the committee discussed the advis ability of droping the Aggie Ac tivity Appreciation Tickets and the European tour funds. These agenda items were shelved for further study. The question of dropping the two items might be necessitated by a lack of funds White said. A group of the committeemen are investi gating the situation and will de cide on it at the next meeting. Committeemen Student members of the commit tee and their positions are Eric C?arlson, colonel of the corps; J. W. Dalston, senior class president; James McGee, junior class presi dent: and John Whitmore editor of The Battalion. From the Student Senate are Harold Chandler, Ralph Ellis, Jack Mergele, and Ken Wiggins. John Davis, Jim Martin, and Max Word are the non-military elected mem bers of the committee. Faculty members are Dr. R. W. Steen, chairman, C. G. “Spike” White, secretary, Dr. W. W. Armi- stead, Lt. Col. M. P. Bowden, Gordon Gay, Barlow Irvin, C. W. Landis, R. G. Perryman, Dr. Dan Russell, and J. H. Sorrels. Blair Cherry Tells Why He Quit Coaching in M agazine New York, Oct. 16—(A 3 ) — Ex cessive pressure of big’-time college football plus poor health and an attractive offer to get into the oil business brought about the resig nation of Blair Cherry as head coach of the University of Texad last year. His story, ‘Why I Quit Coach ing,” is published in the current issue of the Saturday Evening Post and tells why Cherry thinks unrea soning football fans, alumni and sports writers as well as sofe ed ucators are harming the game. “Football coaching nowadays is an around-the-clock, around- the-calendar business,” Cherry said. “While much is made of the fact that most coaches are paid more than most history teachers, the financial reward in itself is insufficient attraction when the hazards are considered. “Yoq never heard of a history teacher, even in the South, getting fired because Lee didn’t win at Appomattox,” Cherry said persons who claim “overemphasis on winning” is causing the game to go bad are incorrect. “What’s wrong with wanting to win?” “Overemphasis on victory at any cost—that’s closer, but still not quite it,” he said. “Actually, what football coaches hope for, rather forlornly, is a bet ter informed public that — either on its own initiative or through the guidance of capable observers — will establish a more accurate set of values.” He s a i d whatever way it should be phrased, “the pressure for winning teams creates ter rific competition for material. If a coach is to be judged Solely on his won-and-lost record, he has to try to protect himself by ac cumulating the players who can make him a great coach. . . . It has become as much of a problem to land a star athlete as to elect a congressman, you have to devote more time to re cruiting than coaching. “. . . The endless necessity of getting along with the alumni, who are interested in but usually not qualified to judge football beef on the hoof, is one of the heaviest of all coaching burdens. . . . The head coach of a modern college is essentially a lonely figure. He knows most of his friends are with Truman Asks Soviet Russia To Agree on Disarmament Winston-Salem, N.C., Oct. 16 — (A 1 )—President Truman pointedly called upon Soviet Russia yester day to agree upon disarmament terms which would “free the world from the scourge of atomic war fare.” He again offered to “sit down with the Soviet Union” and other nations to work out agreements to relieve mankind of “the horror of another world war” and provide the basis for “a durable peace.” Speaks at Ground Breaking Mr. Truman, speaking at ground breaking ceremonies of multi-mil lion dollar buildings of a new and expanded Wake Forest College here steered clear of past controv ersies with Southern Democrats What’s Cooking AGGIELAND MODEL RAIL ROAD CLUB: Tuesday, 7:30 p. m., basement Guion Hall. AGRONOMY SOCIETY: Tues day, 7:30 p. m., Room 3-D MSC. AMARILLO CLUB: Tuesday af ter yell practice, 105 Acd. Bldg. Election of officers. BEAUMONT A&M CLUB: Tues day after yell practice, Room 3-B MSC. Emergency meeting, every one please make an effort to at tend. CAMPUS STUDY CLUB: Tues day, 3:00 p. m., YMCA. The Aggie Debating team will review world problems. DALLAS A&M CLUB: Tuesday after yell practice, YMCA Chapel. UCLA film will be shown. EASTLAND-STEPHEN COUN TY CLUB: Tuesday after yell prac tice, Room 307 Acd. Bldg. FOODS GROUP of the A&M Women’s Social Club: Friday, 1:15 p. m., A&M Christian Church. A barbecue luncheon will be fea tured. HILL COUNTY A&M CLUB: Tuesday, 7:30 p. m., YMCA Read- Kiwanis (Continled from Page 1) Bert Avers entertained the audience with ballets and folk songs. The last number he se lected was “On Top of Old Smoky.” Otis Miller portrayed a young animal husbandry stu dent who wrote a winning theme entitled “This Ain’t No Bull.” The Consolidated chorus closed the program with two selections “Night and Day” and “Shortnin’ Bread.” Proceeds from the show will be used for the development of youth in the community, ac cording to A. C. MaGee, president of the College Station Kiwanis Club. ing Room. INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION CLUB: Tuesday after yell practice, M. E. Shop Bldg. Film of 1941 Cotton Bowl game—A&M vs Ford- ham will be shown; coffee and donuts. PRE-MEDICAL ..PRE-DENTAL SOCIETY: Tuesday, 7:30 p. m., Room 107 Biology Bldg. Films: Medical Effects of A- Bomb; club business. PORT ARTHUR CLUB, 7:15 p. m. or immediately after yell prac tice in Room 306, Goodwin Hall. Purpose of meeting is to elect of ficers. VET’S WIVES BRIDGE CLUB: Wednesday, 7:30 p. m., Assembly room MSC. DEL RIO CLUB: Thursday, 7:15 p. m., YMCA Lobby. Will discuss plans for a party. over civil rights and other “fair deal legislation.” He pitched his address on foreign policy as the aftermath of his re cent announcement of Russia’s ex plosion of a second atomic bomb. The President spoke on the cam pus of the Baptist College that will be moved here from Wake Forest, N.C. The enthusiastic crowd was estimated at 20,000 per sons. American foreign policy the President declared, is “based upon the hope that it will be possible to live, without a war, in the same world as the Soviet Union—it; the free nations have adequate defen ses.” The President returned to Wash ington after his speech. Policy Talk In his first major foreign policy talk since Russia’s explosion of a Wives Bridge Club To Play Tomorrow The Veterans Wives Bridge Club will meet tomorrow at 7:30'p.m. in the Assembly Room of the MSC. Usually meeting on Thursday evenings in Room 2A and 2B, the club will ,meet'a day earlier this week due .to a conflict in arrang ing for the regular meeting rooms. Hostesses will be Mary Parker and Dorothy Grey. Local bridge experts will come to instruct be ginners. Newman Club Schedules Meeting f or Wednesday The Newman Club will hold a special meeting Wednesday, after the 7:15 p. m. benediction in the YMCA chapel, announced Harold Gant, president. The dance after the Baylor-A&M tilt and the SMU-Aggie game will be discussed at this shoi’t meeting, Gant said. FREE DINNER Watch for Your Name in This Space Each Week, The . . Dr. F. P. Jaggi Veterinary Hospital 12th MAN INN Will give away a free dinner to the person whose name appears. • WATCH FOR YOUR NAME • Bring This By - - - - It’s Yours Free ASME Meet (Continued from Page 1) held in small groups rather than in large lectures. From 8:15 p.m. to 9:30 the mem bers will be in small sessions dis cussing the six main topics. Pan els have been set up to talk about Power, under the chairmanship of Wilson J. Pais, assistant Gulf Coast manager of the Foster Wheeler Corporation. Dr. Lich tenstein wil speak at this meeting on the new cooling tower code. Prof. T. McLean Jasper, direc tor of research of the A. O. Smith Corporation, will speak on the con struction of multilayer construc tion of pressure vessels. Other topics on the agenda in clude Oil Field Equipment, Ma chine design, process industries, and metallurgy. Honored guests, who will be seat ed at the main table during the banquet will be Dr. M. T. Harring ton, president of the college; Dean Howard W. Barlow, school of en gineering; ;Dr. A. W. Melloh, vice director of the Texas Engineering Experiment Station; and Dr. A. A. Jakkula, director of the A&M Research Foundation. An estimated 150 persons will register for the session and 100 will stay for the banquet, George H. Thompson, professor of me chanical engineering estimates. Ten students from the Univer sity of Texas and Rice, along with A&M students have been invited to attend the meeting at £ reduced rate. However, Thompson added, the meeting is open to the general public. WeVe a wonderful collection of handsome keychains all fea turing school crest. Useful as well as attractive; they keep keys accessible for immediate use. Perfect for gifts, perfect for you I The Exchange Store “Serving Texas Aggies” second atomic bomb Mr. Truman renewed his suggestion that con trol of atomic energy be placed un der control of a united nations com mission with authority to keep tab on all nations. “We are ready now as we have always been to sit down with the Soviet Union and all the nations concerned in the United Nations and work together for lifting the burden of armament securing the peace,” he declared. “We are determined to leave no stone unturned in this search not only for relief from the horror of another world war, but also as the basis of a durable peace.” ■Charles H. Babcock, son-in-law of the late R. J. Reynolds, foun der of the Reynolds Tobacco for tune, formally presented the cam pus to the Baptist college imme diately preceding the address of the president, himself a Baptist. After his talk, the President turned the first spade of ground for the new campus buildings. him only for the duration of a win ning streak.” Cherry said newspapers criti cized him for losing ball games and alumni football fans called him out of bed at all hours of the night to criticize. After Oklahoma beat Texas last fall, 14-13, Cherry said: “Terrific criticism — most for the Texas coach—followed that defeat. All the pent-up resent ment over one-point losses was released by irate alumni who Wrote, wired and telephoned at all hours during the next two weeks.” College administrators, he de clared, “bask in reflected glory and warm their hands at the red- hot turnstiles” as long as the coach can win. . If college football is get ting out of hand—and I am afraid that it is—only the colleges them selves can save it. Most coaches I know would prefer to work hard on the field, do their best to get Scheduled Newcomers Card Party The highlight of this week’s social activities of the A&M New comers Club will be a bridge and Canasta party in the South Solar ium of the YMCA, Wednesday at 8 p. m. Mrs. Cecil M. MacGregor, chair man of the bridge and Canasta committee, says refreshments will be served, and all club members are invited. A series of Neighborhood Cof fees, arranged by Mrs. Jack Steele, are being given in the Bryan-Col- lege Station area, under the aus pices of the club. Planned to intro duce Newcomers into- the commun ity, the neighborhood socials in clude each new member in at learn one party monthly. Hostesses for last week’s Neigh borhood Coffees were Mrs. Steele in West Park, and Mrs. Marion Findlay in The Woodlands. This week’s parties will be giv en by Hrs. Clinton Walker, West Park; Mrs. James Griffith, Mid way; and Mrs. Armstrong Price, Oakwood and College Park. Mrs. Val Ridgeway will entertain in Bryan; Mrs. Frank Potter and Mrs. A. D. Folweiler, College Hills; and Mrs. Horace Blank, Garden Acres. the maximum from their material, win some and lose some, and go home and sleep soundly at night, instead of joining in the grand rat race that now goes on twelve months a year.” ' -Tr-’-™ -7™- New Daily Pioneer Flights I T O for information and reservations, phone 4-5054 AUSTIN 63 MINUTES Fly Pioneer’s new mid - day flight to TEMPLE and AUS TIN. ‘Leave Easterwood Field at 11:33 a.m. and be in Austin at 12:36 p.m. — - Conveni ent daily return flights leave Austin at 1:00 p.m. This new mid-day flight now gives you 3 flights daily — morning, noon and early evening to Houston. Baylor Watches—Official Timepiece for Pioneer I I HEY, NON-REGS! Here is the picture schedule for all you non-military students for The Aggieland, your yearbook: Oct. 3- 6—All students whose names begin with A-C ” 8-10—All students whose names begin with D-F ” 11-13—All students whose names begin with G-K ” 15-17—All students whose names begin with L-M ” 18-20—All students whose names begin with N-Q ” 22-24—All students whose names begin with R-U ” 25-27—All students whose names begin with Y-Z (Wear Coat, Tie, White Shirt) Make-ups will be made October 29, 30 and 31. All pictures will be taken at the ... AGGIELAND STUDIO NORTH GATE Pet. Engineers Hear Thompson A. W. Thompson, president of the American Association of Oilwell Drilling Contrac tors, will be guest speaker at the Wednesday night meeting of the A&M Petroleum Engineers Club. The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the Petroleum Building ♦ Lecture Room. President and general manager of Thompson-Carr Inc. of Hous ton, Thompson has been active in * the oil industry since 1919. He now is national vice-chairman of the rotary drilling-equipment com mittee of the American Petroleum Institute, director of the Ameri can Association of Oilwell Drilling Contractors; and chairman of the latter association’s educational and research committee. Onl/RCAVtao^ wuld bring you complete Ajl-Star liCif RISE STEVENS (Carmen) LICIA MBANESE • JAN PEERCE (Micaela) (Don JosQ ROBERT MERRILL • FRITZ REINER [(Escamillo) (Conductor) Never before in recording history such a cast of operatic "greats” . . . so real, so magnificent in clarity and color, you’re truly "at the opera”. Ring up the curtain . . . summon the stars . .. hear "Carmen” tonight and any night on this hreath-taking new RCA Victor recording! Withcom- plete, illustrated libretto and Deems Taylor’s fascinating "Carmen” com mentary. "45” (16 recA»d«} "JS’/j” (3 records) Other opera ' by rcaVictob See Rise Stevens at Guion Hall. Hear and Enjoy Her on RCA Victor Records. From Shaffer's Book Store North Gate Across from Postoffice Prices include Federal Excise Tax. Add local tax. Subject to government price ceiling regulations.