THE BATTALION Thursday, January 18, 1962 College Station, Texas Page 7 [AIK) FOR ACCREDITED BIBLE COURSES FOR AGGIES DURING SECOND SEMESTER SEE YOUR OFFICIAL CLASS SCHEDULES UNDER “RELIGIOUS EDUCATION” U. S. FIRMS OFFER CAREERS ABROAD - ADVENTURE, HARO WORK, GOOD SALARIES | f U.S. International companies have broadened their horizons as they search today for knowledgeable young college graduates to send abroad to manage their foreign bus iness operations. Once they sought men trained in business. Today (al though it may come as a pleasant shock to those who may have felt hesitant about breaking into the world of international commerce), the companies are hiring liberal arts graduates (with varied majors), scientists, engineers, agriculturists, pharmacists, and others as well as graduates in business administration, accounting* economics, and market ing for careers abroad. The appraising eyes of the re cruiting representatives of most U.S. international firms and government agencies see it man as employable if he has the proper attitude for an overseas career, a general aptitude, and, most important, an additional year of practical training in foreign trade techniques, in a spoken for eign language, and in the social, cul tural, and business aspects of the world’s marketing areas. One of the world’s pre-eminent authorities in the culture, economics, and politics of Latin America. Dr. William L. Schurz, director of the jfv' area studies department of the far- famed American Institute for For eign Trade in Phoenix, Arizona (and author of the current, best-selling Brazil, The Infinite Country), ob serves that “the practice of foreign trade is no longer a simple business transaction to be conducted on a ‘main street’ overseas with the good old American ‘hard sell’.” if n hinh-lf'Vf vith pi ’araei upervis Photo 1 beria (in Monrovia); one, a recent graduate who, in three years, has risen to the sales managership of a big U.S. steel company subsidiary in Brazil (with offices in Sao Paulo); another “Thunderbird” (as they are widely known), now managing direc tor of operations in Indonesia for a familiar U.S. firm (with executive offices in Djakarta), who (like many another AIFT alumnus, has spoken pridefully of the school) persuaded a young Indonesian to enroll at the Institute this fall and has just ar ranged with the State Department to send two influential-Indonesian trade executives to visit AIFT. Dr. Schurz went on casually turn ing up cards showing: an alumnus who, after a few significant foreign assignments, has become assistant vice president for overseas person nel of one of the biggest U.S. inter national banks; another, who is pres ident of all Peruvian operations of a huge U.S. department store chain; two alumni who are overseas gen eral managers of two U.S. insurance Companies (one in Santiago, Chile; the other in Bangkok, Thailand); a graduate who heads a U.S. interna tional bank branch in Tokyo; an other, who is Latin American gen eral manager for a large U.S. cos metics company. There are many more of equal and'lesser stature who are actively combatting the Communist econom ic offensive abroad by setting an example with their AIFT - acquired “know - how” of the functioning of I U.S. private enterprise abroad. Senator Barry Goldwater, mem- | ber of the Institute’s board of di- Nor is it a high-level operation t rectors, in a recent speech on the to be master-minded here at home j Senate floor applauded the major by theoreticians,” says Dr. Schurz, role played by the more than 3,000 a former Commerce Department | graduates of this young school in economist, “but an art to be prac- the meteoric rise, of U.S. foreign ticed by professionals preoriented trade. Describing these alumni as and specifically trained in the U.S. | “America’s best - trained and most before being thrust into a career highly - respected body of goodwill with private enterprise abroad.” ambassadors,” he called The Ameri- That means postgraduate satura- can Institute “private industry’s tion in the culture, psychology, cco- j training ground for its thousands of noniics, politics, and social customs j junior and senior executives in 78 of the global marketing areas in foreign nations.” which U.S. companies are interested. ! Graduates in most branches of The art of foreign trade also de- liberal arts, business administratior, mands practical training in the J science, and engineering are sought modus operandi of international annually at AIFT by more than 500 ’’ ' ’ U.S. international businesses and banks. The Institute’s sole place ment problem appears to be its in ability to fill the pressing demand for engineers, accountants, chem ists, arid other technically - trained college graduates with AIFT’s Spe cialized training for overseas oper ations. Cited by U.S. and foreign indus trialists, educators, and government officials as our most effective insti tution for training college graduates for international commerce, AIFT offers a 3-part curriculum empha sizing three general world areas: modern foreign trade practices, spoken languages (Spanish, Portu guese, French), and living cultures of the peoples in Latin and Central America, the Far and Middle East, and Western Europe. About 300 carefully screened men are graduated yearly. The postgrad uate program lasts two semesters, a new class starting both in January and in September. Industry and government officials have been widely quoted as saying that there is no institution of com parable prestige for training in in ternational commerce. Senator Gold- water predicts that most Americans who become business leaders in trade centers around the world in the next few years will have been trained “specifically at The Ameri can Institute for Foreign Trade.” (For more information, write Regis trar, Thunderbird Campus, The American Institute for Foreign Trade, P.O. Box 191, Phoenix, Ari zona; telephone 938-0000.) Commerce and a working knowledge of a foreign language. Recently, leafing through the alumni file of’the 16-year-old Amer ican Institute for Foreign Trade, Dr. Schurz, the “dean of Latin Ameri canists” (who has probably trained more young men for careers abroad | than any other living* American) \ singled xmt a group of typical AIFT w graduates who have already attained executive status (president, vice pres- 1 ident, director, general manager, j! sales manager) with some U.S. inter- , national firm. j From these cards, he selected sev- -^mplc^of the A1F$. “success- rstory : onc^gntauaTer now vice presi dent for all operations of a promi nent U.S. soft drink company in the fiddle East (with his office in Beir ut), started out by working for that company in the Philippines, Aus tria, and Latin America; another, noty general manager of one of the world’s best-known tire and rubber company’s operations in Italy, emi grated some years ago from Italy, was ijiollege-educated in the U.S. and postgrjpduate-trained at The Ameri can Institute for Foreign Trade, and began*is career at the foot of the ladder: still another graduate, now general manager for Western Europe of a larjtj^ American drug firm with extensive 1 foreign outlets (with head quarters in Lisbon), got his start by serving a long, fascinating appren ticeship in the back country of Bra- zil, where he sold medicines and drugs to village apothecaries out of a jeep; another, who is president of the Intematfbnal Trust Co. of Li- FROM THE Sideii ine6 By Larry Smith If you like basketball at its best, the Aggies aren’t the only ones in the area that display fine play. Bryan’s Stephen F. Austin Broncos have a 18-2 record for the season and have a good chance of winning the District 13-AAAA cham pionship. Coach Peck Vass’ boys aren’t tall (Jerry Nevill is the tallest at 6-3), but they perform with speed and balance. Tuesday night in Bryan, the Broncos won their 16th straight contest of the season as they out-shot the Temple Wildcats, 63-41. Probably the secret to the Broncos’ success is team balance. The five starters, Larry Hemenes, Bobby Seale, Thomas Stockton, Neal Thompson and Nevill, all own averages around the 10 point clip. Thompson is the top scorer with 224 points and a 11.5 average. The Broncos have a fine sixth man in 5-11 Joe Frank Stratta, who seems to spark the team when he is in the game. His 4.9 average a game is third place to him as rebounding and feeding off are his main strengths. So if you would like to witness a good, well-balanced high school cage team in action, make a date to see the Broncos this Friday night at 7:30 in Bryan. ★ ★ ★ A&M’s spanking new head football coach and athletic director, Hank Foldberg, is on the campus after attending the NCAA Convention in Chicago last week. The former head mentor at the University of Wichita arrived at Easterwood Airport Tuesday morning and immediately started work on A&M’s extensive recruiting program. Foldberg has indicated that spring training wil begin the latter part of February much to the delight of next fall’s Aggie hopefuls. The weather will be cool and practice will be over before the hot, sultry days hit Aggieland. The Aggies will return 28 lettermen from the 4-5-1 1961 team. Sixteen of these lettermen are among the fine ’60 junior class who carried much of the load last fall. One red- shirt, Eddie Van Dyke, figures to be one of the top backs for the Aggies this fall. Van Dyke, a 6-1, 195-pound halfback played well in the 1960 season but was scholastically ineligible last fall. ★ ★ ★ Coach Bob Rogers’ Aggie cagers own a 3-2 record in SWC and a 9-5 season mark going into the semester break. With nine conference games remaining, the Cadets still have a good chance in winning the SWC flag. Of these nine games, four will be away from G. Rollie White Coliseum. The next game for the Aggies will be on Jan. 30 when they travel to Houston to battle the University of Houston Cougafs. The Cadets were victorious in their first meeting this season at Aggieland, 64-49. Jerry Windham, A&M’s outstanding center, continues to startle the opponents and fans with his rebounding. Last Monday in Austin Windham grabbed 15 off the boards to lea'd both teams. His return to the lineup after missing nine non-conference .games, due to a leg injury, has been a tre mendous boost to the Aggies. Jerry’s free throw shooting is still below par, but he quickly makes up the difference with his field goal shooting and rebounding. In short, he is a great asset to A&M’s cause. NCAA Endorses Mouthpieces MIAMI BEACH, Fla. UP)—The NCAA Football Rules Committee recommended Wednesday that all college players wear mouthpieces, but made no rule changes govern ing equipment. Instead, the committee asked that information about all avail able football injury surveys be compiled before equipment chang es are made. Fritz Crisler, former Michigan coach and acting chairman of the committee, said it would be im possible to enforce a rule on wear ing of mouth protectors. “But we are strongly recom mending that all players do wear properly fitted mouthpieces,” he said. The committee was unable to conclude action on player substi tution rules and scheduled a night session on its last matter of busi- ^Learn And Hungry 9 Look For Fry’s SMU Mustangs By HAROLD V. RATLIFF Associated Press Sports Writer At the Baylor football banquet of 1951 Coach George Sauer paid tribute to the forgotten man of a Bear team that won eight, lost one and tied one and went to the Orange Bowl. Hayden Fry, the quarterback who made his contribution while sitting on the bench, was cited. Fry wasn’t the regular quarter back because Larry Isbell was an All-America. But Fry had been the observe^ the fellow' who offered helpful tips to the quarterback—aided the man who beat him out for the job. Sauer said it was a great example of selflessness, of thinking first of the team. Fry had done this for Adrian Burke before Isbell and became known as “the man who made All- America—for somebody else.” Fry, a Presbyterian, today is head coach of Southern Methodist. He took the job held by Bill Meek for five years, a period when the university reached its lowest ebb in football. The 19G0 season was the worst on its history—nine losses and one tie. In 1961 SMU won two games by a combined to tal of three points. “Burke and Isbell were great because they had me to press them,” said Fry is he took over the tremendous task of pulling Southern Methodist back on a win ning ba^is—with the return of paying crowds the inevitable re sult. “They knew if they faltered in the least that I would be taking over. That’s what competition does and that’s the first thing I must create on the SMU football squad.” Fry coached high school foot ball, then became an assistant at Baylor. He asked to handle the defense. Actually, he knew plenty about defense but he- wanted to coach it to leai’n it all. Hayden played his football in the two-platoon days and was used only on offense but he stud ied all angles of defense, too. “A quarterback must know all about the defense to do his job,” he ex plained. “If he doesn’t know about defense how can he know what plays will work best? He has to pick the flaws in the defense in order to make the offense go.” Then, when Fry went to Arkan sas he asked to be given the of fense. He did so well head coach Frank Broyles recommended him to Southern Methodist. Broyles found Fry to be a smart cookie in all phases of football. So, when Fry was selected as head coach of Southern Methodist he could take over with a thor ough knowledge of how to operate and with some excellent ideas on how to handle the personnel and get the most out of the players. The first thing he did was to determine why the team hadn’t been winning. He found one big reason was the lack of speed. It couldn’t move fast enough to get an even break with the opposition. “The linemen had no idea of how to run—they ran with their toes out, they raised up in coming out of the line instead of driving out in a crouch. My first job wili be to teach them how to run because my offense is going to be built around speed.” Hayden also will try to take off some of the excess from those fat boys who can’t move. “I want them lean and hungry,” he com ments. Another flaw appeared to be lack of proper condition. He found there would be 27 re turning lettermen, which sounds imposing. But he also found that not more than half of those fel lows played enough last fall to warrant a letter and give an indi cation of ability. Some coaches letter the entire varsity squad but Fry doesn’t go for this. He thinks a boy should earn his letter by actual play. There has been much ta’k the past several years about SMU not getting as many good prospects as the other schools because of tougher entrance requirements. Fry admits he may lose some good prospects because of this but he is philosophical. He says there are s'd many good football players in Texas from which to choose he thinks he can get enough to com pete with the rest of the South west Conference. And besides, the higher requirements may work to his advantage at times. “Most boys go to college for an education as well as athletics,” he declares. “Why shouldn’t the opportunity of a good education be as attractive as a chance to play football?” LEGAL HOLIDAY Friday, January 19, 1962 being a Legal Holiday, in ob servance of Robert E. Lee’s Birthday, the undersigned will observe that date as a Legal Holiday and not be open for business. City National Bank First National Bank College Station State Bank First State Bank & Trust Company Bryan Building & Loan Association Community Savings & Loan Association iMSgafirii' 7!F0n your food Mils! -GROCERIES- Libbys—303 Cans Cut Green Beans. ...... 2 For 39c Libbys—303 Cans Garden Sweet Peas .... 2 For 39c Libbys—303 Cans, Whole Kernel or Cream Style Corn 2 For 39c Libbys—14-Oz. Bottles CATSUP 2 For 39c Libbys—303 Cans SAUERKRAUT .... 2 For 29c Libbys—'/z s Vienna Sausage .... V 3 For 59c Libbys—46-Oz. Cans Tomato Juice 4 Cans $1.00 Libbys—ISVz-Oz. 'Cans Beef Stew 2 For 69c Folgers—I nstant COFFEE 6-Oz. Jar 79c Folgers COFFEE 1-lb. Can 69c SPRY Shortening .... 3-lb. Can 69c Austex—No. 300 Cans TAMALES 3 Cans 59c O’Sage—No. 2 , /2 Cans Elberta Peaches 4 Cans $1.00 Hunts—No. 2Vz Cans Whole Spiced Peaches 4 For $1.00 i. Texsun—46-Oz. Cans Orange Juice . 2 For 59c -FROZEN FOODS- 6-Oz. Cans—Sunshine State Orange Juice 6 Cans 99c Stillwells—10-Oz. Sliced Strawberries 2 For 39c Libbys—10-Oz. CAULIFLOWER 3 For 59c Libbys—10-Oz. Garden Sweet Peas 3 For 59c Bordens MILK Gallon Jug 85c Bordens Biscuits . 3 For 25c -MARKET- Deckers—Tall Korn Sliced Bacon ... 1-lb. 49c Deckers—lowana Ranch Style Bacon .... 2-lbs. $1.09 Wisconsin—Medium Aged Cheddar Cheese 1-lb. 59c PEN FED BABY BEEF Loin Steak CUTS 1-lb. 79c T-Bone Steak 1-Ib. 79c Pin Bone Loin Steak ... ... 1-lb. 59c Rib Chops 1-lb. 69c -PRODUCE- California Potatoes 10-lb. Bag 45c Celery 2 Stalks 25c Avocados ..- Each 10c Ruby Red Grapefruit 5-lb. bag 31c SPECIALS GOOD THURSDAY AFTERNOON, FRIDAY, AND SATURDAY, JANUARY 18-19-20 CHARLIE'S ' OOD NORTH GATE —WE DELIVER— MARKET COLLEGE STATION