Pag# 2 College Station, Texas Thursday, April 13, 1961 THE BATTALION INTERPRETING Bryan, CS Featured In Report CADET SLOUCH by Jim Earle Israel Proclaims Right Bryan and College Station are featured in the 1960 Annual Re port to Stockholders of The Southwestern States Telephone Company. Two pages are devoted to the Bryan-College Station area in the •report. The report has been mailed to approximately 10,000 stockhold ers throughout the U. S. and several foreign countries. Along with the story on Bryan- College Station appears a road map showing 50-mile, 100-mile and 150-mile radiuses from Bry an-College Station, photos of the Central Baptist Church, Brazos County Courthouse, Towmshire shopping center, an attractive home in Bryan, A&M’s Kyle Field and an aerial photo of the main campus of A&M. The report states that Bryan- College Station comprises one of the telephone company’s “princi pal service territories.” The econ omy of the area is described as being based largely on agricul ture, light manufacturing and education. Hydrogen Bomb Tq t 4,/ o/ / Eichmann By Satellite “ ... I can take their sly glances and smiles—it gets to me when they whistle.” The report states that “a bright future of substantial growth and sound economy is an ticipated for Bryan-College Sta tion, based on the trend toward decentralization of industry, the availability of technically trained personnel from their educational institutions and the natural re sources of the area.” Social Calendar The following clubs and or ganizations will meet on campus: Tonight The Amarillo Hometown Club will meet tonight in Room 203 of the Academic Building at 7:30 p.m. The Big Thicket Hometown The population increase in Bryan and College Station is de scribed in the report, as well as the growth of telephone facilities, which has paralleled the popula tion trend. Sub Trouble Stop Urged “The Southwestern States Tele phone Company now serves more than 14,000 telephones in Bryan and College Station compared to 6,200 ten years ago.” The report adds “More long distance tolls are handled at Bry an than any other company-oper ated toll center.” The headquar ters for the South Tepcas Divi sion of the company’s operations are located at Bryan. G. M. Bren nan is Division Manager. By The Associated Press LONDON—A member of Par liament Wednesday urged the British government to put a stop to pacifist demonstrations against the U.S. Polaris submarine base .in Scotland’s Holy Loch. Conservative Frank Burden said in the House of Commons steps should be taken “to discour age any activities damaginb to the security of the base and An glo-American relations.” The civil lord of the admiralty, Charles Orr-Ew r ing, assured Bur den that steps would be taken. Club will hold a meeting tonight in the Lounge of the Memorial Student Center at 7:30 p.m. All members are urged to be present as this is a very important meet ing. The Tyler-Smith County Home town Club will get together in the Gay Room of the YMCA to night at 7:30 p.m. The Texarkana Hometown Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. to night in Room 305 of the Aca demic Building. April 17 The MSC Table Tennis Table Committee will meet in Room 2-C of the MSC at 7:30 p.m. Every one interested in joining this new committee is invited to attend. A tournament for committee members will be held in the near future. By ELTON C. FAY The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The Soviet Union’s man-in-space feat could bring nearer the time when hy drogen bombing by satellite is possible. The landing of the man-carry ing vehicle in what Moscow re fers to as a “prearranged area” is the most recent of a series of demonstrations by both the U.S.S.R. and the United States that objects can be ejected from satellites and brought to earth at designated spots. If this can be done with a five- ton vehicle carrying a man, and with smaller vehicles carrying animals and instruments, why can’t it be done with a thermo nuclear bomb ? Some U.S. military scientists say the use of satellites for de livering nuclear weapons on earth targets is possible. Soviet weap oneers would be expected to have the same interest in that line of thought. Considerable improvement in precision would be needed. An “area” into which a capsule is directed actually can be any where in several hundred square miles. Something nearer pin point aim would be needed even for the massive blast of a, hydro gen bomb. But the fact remains that both j the Soviet Union and the United States now have mastered the technique of bringing down pack ages from satellites on command. The Soviet Union has an- THIS WEEK’S SPECIAL Chicken Fried Steak Hamburger Steak Veal Cutlet With Salad, French Fries, Rolls, Butter, Coffee or Tea 75c Triangle Restaurant 3606 S. College Ave. TA 2-1352 THE BATTALION Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the stu dent writers only. The Battalion is a non-tax-supperted, non profit, self-supporting educational enterprise edited and op erated by students as a community newspaper and is under the supervision of the director of Student Publications at Texas A&M College. Members of the Student Publications Board are L. A. Duewall, director of Student Publications, chairman; Allen Schrader, School of Arts and Sciences: Willard I. Truettner, School of Engineering; Otto R. Kunze, School of Agriculture; and Dr. E. D.. McMurry, School of Veterinary Medicine. The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited t# it or not otherwise credited in the paper and local news of spontaneous origin published herein. Rights of republication of all other matter here in are also reserved. The Battalion, a student newspaper at Texas A.&M. is published in College Sta tion, Texas, daily except Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, and holiday periods, Septem ber through May, and once a week during summer school. Entered as second-class Batter at the Post Office fa College Station, Texas, under the Act of Con- fress of March 8, 1870. MEMBER: The Associated Press Texas Press Assn. Represented nationally by ational Advertising National Services, Inc., New York City, Chicago, Los' An geles and San Francisco. News contributions may be made by telephoning VI 6-6618 or VI 6-4910 or at the editorial office, Room 4, yMCA. For advertising or delivery call VI 6-6415. Mail subscriptions are $3.50 per semester; $6 per school year, $6.50 per full year. Advertising rate furnished on request. Address: The Battalion, Room 4, YMCA, College Station, Texas. BILL HICKLIN Joe Callicoatte.... EDITOR Sports Editor News Editors Bob Sloan, Alan Payne, Tommy Holbein Jim Gibson, Bob Roberts Editorial Writers Larry Smith Assistant Sports Editor Bob Mitchell; Ronnie Bookman, Robert Denney, Gerry Brown - Staff Writers Johnny Herrin Photographers Jim Earle Cartoonist Every Day Discount Prices 98c Q-Tips 85c ,50c Nylon Bottle Brush 39c 1.50 Fever Thermometers 98c 1.00 J & J Baby Oil 89c 1.00 Baby Silicare 85c 25c Evenflo nursers comp 19c Enfamil liquid per can 23c Enfamil powder per can 98c Sobee liquid per can 39c Lactum liquid per can 26c 8-Oz. Pepto Bismol .’ 85c 10-Oz. Kaopectate 1.00 S 1 /* lb. Metrecal 5.59 1.57 Paladac Vitamin Syr. 2 bottles for 2.09 1 pt. Homicebrin 3.39 50 c, c. Trivisol 2.75* 50 c. c. Poly Vi-Sol 2.98 50 c. c. Deca Vi-Sol , 3.35 Vi-Daylin Dulcets 100 tablets 3.90 100 Myadec-Parke, Davis Therapeutic formula Vitamins 6.00 100‘Parke, Davis ABDOL with C Vitamin capsules .. 1.80 100 Vitamin C Tablets 250 mg 1.25 100 Vitamin A 50,000 units 2.75 2.00 Perceptin ,, 1.75 Pine rubbing alcohol comp i 39c 60c Desitin ointment :. 49c 5-lb. Green Light Rose Food 81c 1 pt. Green Light Malathion 2.85 Tedral Tablets per dozen 65c If you take maintenance medicine and you feel that your drug bill is too high, bring your prescriptions to us and you will be agreeably surprised. Our low overhead makes the difference at Discount Pharmacy. You pay only for what you get and not for the free service someone else gets. For curb service, use our convenient drive in window. Telephone inquiries invited PHARMACY 32U Texas Avenue * P. O. Box 888 * Phone: TA 2-3307 BRYAN, TEXAS OPEN 8-7 WEEK DAYS 10-6 SUNDAYS nounced three previous recoveries of orbiting vehicles, carrying dogs and other life. The U.S. Air Force Discovery satellite series has produced four successful recoveries of capsules, ejected from satellites into pre arranged areas. One was recov ered from the sea, three have been snatched from the air as they descended by parachute aft er entering the earth’s atmos phere. ' The four recoveries were made from 16 satellites which went in to orbit. On seven of these oc casions, capsules were ejected successfully Horn satellites, but three of them failed to land near enough to the watching teams for recovery. Like other details concerning Soviet programs, the scoreboard for successes and failures of its recovery attempts is not known. There have been rumors that at least one Soviet man-in-space at tempt failed. By contrast, U.S. efforts in both missile weapons and space vehicle projects have been report ed officially and often in detail. By The Associated Press JERUSALEM — The prose cutor of Adolf Eichmann pro claimed Israel’s right to try him as the killer of millions of Jews, declaring Wednesday: “For this crime there is no atonement, there is no pardon and there can be no forgetting.” Pointing his finger at the bald, former colonel in Hitler’s Gesta po, Atty. Gen. Gideon Hausner cried: ,“It is only possible to be lieve and to hope that the sons will not carry on the crimes of their fathers and will not be called upon to answer for their crimes. But for him who created these crimes, there is no atone ment.” Eichmann scribbled a note on a pad in the prisoner’s dock, a cage of bullet-proof glass. Then, he sat cupping his chin in his right hand. His only display of animation came before the trial’s second day began. He exchanged a few words with his German defense counsel, Robert Servatius, through a private microphone. Servatius is challenging Isra el’s right to try Eichmann—for mer chief of the Jewish affairs section of the Nazi Gestapo—for “crimes against the Jewish peo ple and crimes against humani ty.” The German lawyer claims that Israeli war crimes law is invalid because it was passed in 1950 after the crime was committed. He says Eichmann was only an instrument of his Nazi masters dragged into the crime and, in any event, it was committed in Europe and not Israel. “If we do not try Eichmann,” Hausner retorted in his argument before the three-judge court, “it is quite possible he will not be tried at all, and a crime without precedent would not be punished. ritoriality” and establishing ft right of nations to prosecute for. eign citizens for offenses coin, mitted outside their own borden, Hausner did not complete tis reply to Servatius’ challenge. Es asked for another hour to sunup his plea Friday. Servatius will pi’esent a rebuttal. Chief Justice Moshe Landau, president of the three-judgf court, asked the German lawya to give a “concise answer" aal Servatius said he could do it it r will re half an hour. “Men who are poisonous, who are assassins, may be extermi nated wherever and whenever they are caught.” Thus Hausner defended this country’s right to try the man its agents hunted for 15 years as the master architect behind Nazi Germany’s extermination of an estimated six million Jews. The trial is in recess Thun, day, a new national holiday oi|L. “remembrance of the holocaust and heroism.” Holocaust is ft word Israel uses to character® the Nazi extermination of raorf than half of Europe’s Jews dm. ing World War II. MR D R Like a - all e> tllywood exact! gut you an tell idles’ m to en lion is th Jerr adies’ I grand re ize.” Here 1. Any :off Hausner listed court rulings in Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Switzerland, the United States, France, Czechoslovakia and Bra zil dealing with the “law of ter- oar pices are SeW*| FOLGER S COFFEE SHORTENING «isco GLADIOLA FLOUR CAKE MIXES GLADIOLA Limit One Lb. With Coupon From Thursdays Eagle 3 5 Lb. Can Assorted New Pac Lb. Bag 5 F° r 59 69< 39< too (Conti presents Iministn Coffey v e Colleg thy A<£ "He has assistin s to esta iss Colie ys. “In ren of 1 lletics a r the yo His late > to thi iring the many p il aroun "During gong,” C 111 that i irked fc od and ; relieve ■ Ins of th Prior to Ian, Cof mmercia! itball co; tool in aduate o 1935, liter’s r iuistratio FRESH BREAD ALL POPULAR BRANDS . . 2 Large li/ 2 Lb. Loaves 49c SOUTHERN SUN FROZEN ORANGE JUICE ... 5 - 6-Oz. Cans $1.00 Lite Fluff Biscuits ... 13 Cans $1.00 Libby’s Tomato Juice . . 3 ■ 46-Oz. Cans $1.00 Libby’s Catsup . 5 - 14-Oz. Bottles $1.00 Bumble Bee Tuna . . % Flat Can 29c Skyway Grape Jam . . 18-Oz. Jar 25c Bartlett Pears . . 3 Lg. 2^2 Cans $1.00 Rosedale English Peas . . Golden Brown Breaded Shrimp 6 - 303 Cans $1.00 . 10-Oz. Pkg. 39c No. 1 Red POTATOES 10 lb. bag 39 Fresh Jumbo LETTUCE 2 Heads For 25c Valley Sweet Juice ORANGES .... 5-Lb. Bag 39c No. 1 YELLOW ONIONS Lb. 5c FRYERS Brazos Valley whole lb. 29* LEAN CROWN ROAST b 45< Brisket Stew Meat ....... Lb. 39c Baby Beef Chops Lb. 65c Fresh Ground Meat . . . 3-Lbs, $1.00 Tender Shoulder Steak . , . Lb. 49c Hormel Dairy Sliced Bacon . Lb. 53c SPECIALS GOOD APRIL /3 ■ /4 - J5, 1961 MILLERS SUPER )(. MARKET 3800 TEXAS AVENUE VI 6-6613 PEANUTS By Charles M. Schuh PEANUTS sr Air the th the i