AMONG THE PROFS Grants, Papers Announced Professor Robert O. Reid, of the Department of Oceanography and Meteorology, attended a confer ence in New Orleans Monday and Tuesday. The conference dealt with a current United States Corps of Engineer’s project on Lake Pon- chartrain. Dr. Harold E. Redmond, profes sor in the Department of Veteri nary Medicine and Surgery, was elected regional faculty advisor for the southern region of the National Intercollegiate Rodeo As sociation Saturday. His election came at the regional meeting held during the Sam Houston State College Rodeo in Huntsvile. Dr. Redmond is currently faculty sponsor of the A&M Rodeo Club. The southern region has about 14 member schools. Guion FRIDAY DESPERATE YOUNG LOVERS ...reaching tor the ecsiacy forbidden by their separate worlds! BURL WES SHELLEY WINTERS .... 19S9Ac*-ltmy Award V.'inwi JAMES DARREN-JEAN SEBERG RICARDO MDNlLBAi ELLA FITZGERALD Screenplay b, ROCfP.T PkESbOl. J>. Ba»eil on u* no*el by WlltARO MOTLEY • Produced by BORIS 0 KAPLAN Duelled by PHILIP LEACOCK • h BORIS 0 KAPLAN PROWCliONS PltUlW A COLUMBIA PICTURES Reltast SSf!rW5?8SCBBKiE2oi. SATURDAY Double Feature MCKWEBB V asT/SGT.JIM MOORE.U.S. Marines.- Tin-: , WESENUD BY I— WARNER BROS. Scieen Play Ly IAM1S ILL BARRUU hU ad Onecled ty JACK W1BB • AMARU Yll UOiiodicDm ELEA KAZAN produchom 4 BWDD SOiULBERS'S if m the a Crowd $ PRESENTED Bt WARNER BROS. STARRINO ANDYGRIFFITH-PaTriGA neal Story and Screen Play by BUDO SCHULBERG • Son|s by TOM GLATER and 6U00 SCHULBERG • Directed by ELIA KAZAN • A NEWTOWN PRODUCTION SATURDAY NIGHT PREVIEW ALSO SUNDAY JOSEPH E. LEVINE presents Desire catches . fire with IMIOBRKIM and Where IheHoi WIND hows Gina Lollobrigida Pierre BRASSEUR Marcello MASTROIANNI Melina MERCOURI Yves MONTAND WHERE THE Hot Wind Blows! Directed by Idles Dassin An M-G-M Release CAMPUS NOW SHOWING NO ONE UNDER 18 WILL BE ADMITTED For Adults Only A WBAIO FtLM Cl ASS/C W glorious mmm COtOR ... made in HOLLYWOOD THE PICTURE ITALIAN OR FRENCH MOVIE SEE A PEEP/US TONS/ DREAM OR N RAVISHING SEAOTY' WATCH FOR OUR GRAND OPENING OF THE NEW CIRCLE DRIVE IN, WEDNESDAY, MAY 3. M, G. Rekoff, assistant professor of electrical engineering, and D. S. Billingsly,- a graduate student in chemical engineering, have just had a highly technical article pub lished in the February issue of IRE Transactions on Automatic Control. The article is “Evaluation of Transient Response Coefficients.” J. E. Redden, assistant professor of journalism, was awarded a $600 grant for the purpose of conduct ing research involving an indi vidual’s suitability for teaching in secondary schools. The announce ment of the grant came from Dr. Wayne C. Hall, dean of the Gradu ate School. Funds for the study came from the College’s Organized Research Fund. Dr. C. D. Holland, a professor in the Department of Chemical Engineering, and S. L. Sullivan, a graduate student in chemical engi neering, authored an article ap pearing in the April edition of Industrial and Engineering Chem- istry. The title of the article is “Double Pipe Heat Exchangers.” It deals with a method for heating a liquid by a condensing vapor. Research on problems concern ing competition of quail and rodent for grain was recently com pleted by J. M. Inglis, an instruc tor in the Department of Wildlife Management. Inglis did most of his work at the Gene Howe Wildlife Manage ment Area in the northeast comer of the Texas Panhandle. He spent four years gathering facts and studying feeding habits of various field rats and mice. ‘Ladies’ Man’ Feud Deadline Tuesday Next Tuesday is the deadline for contestants in the “Ladies’ Man” contest to turn in lists of endorse ments. Winners in the vie that offers a possible date with a beau tiful movie starlet will be released in next Thursday’s Battalion. Also included in the final prize is an all-expense paid trip to Hollywood, courtesy of Jerry Lewis, who is sponsoring the con test in conjunction with his latest release, “Ladies’ Man.” Lewis will head a panel of judges deciding who from among colleges across the nation will be hailed as “Ladies’ Man of Amer ica.” All local campus winners will be submitted to the national con test, with this title hanging en ticingly overhead. Selection will be based on num ber of endorsements obtained by the contestants on the local level; the student bringing the longest list of signatures will have his name and application forwarded to the contest headquarters. On the national level, the final winner will be chosen on his 25- word or less statement written on his application telling why he wants a date with the starlet of his choice. This fortunate male will soon after find himself in Hollywood on a date with her. Because of this necessary state ment, there is good reason for Aggie contestants to be somewhat encouraged about winning; many I Twine I I CLASSIFIED I II I ” T 1 jj “Sports Car Center” Dealers for Renault-Peugeot • & British Motor Cara Sales—Parts—Service ““We Service All Foreign Cars” 1416 Texas Ave. TA 2-4517 Thursday and Friday “THE MARRIAGE-GO- ROUND” with Susan Hayward plus “WILD RIVER” with Montgomery Clift PALACE Brtfan 2'8$79 NOW SHOWING The Great Entertainment Show! NOW AT POPULAR PRICES! CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCES! -V- ■ QUEEN NOW SHOWING “101 DALMAXIONS” of the statements turned in to The Battalion sounded of winning quality. After all, movie starlets deserve to have dates with Aggies at least once! Interviews Set For Town Hall Interviews are on tap tonight for junior posts on next year’s Town Hall staff. They will be conducted in the Corps Conference Room in Dorm 2 by Gary Ander son, next year’s student entertain ment manager. All present sophomores with grade point ratios of at least 1.25 are eligible for the 7:30-9:30 inter views. There will he approximately 20 vacancies available. Chess Club Meets Again A second meeting of the newly- formed Campus Chess Club is is scheduled tomorrow night at 7:30 in the Brooks Room of the YMCA Building. The organization met for the first time last week and reported a good attendance and show of interest. Gary Simms, a sophomore from Amarillo, is coordinating the pres ent set of meetings. THE BATTALION Thursday, April 27, 1961 College Station, Texas Page 3 Eichmann Shown In Contrasting Roles By The Associated Press JERUSALEM—Adolf Eichmann was portrayed in court Wednes day as a man who once helped Jews before he became a relentless Nazi executioner hunting for new ways to exterminate them. A surprised stir swept the court where Eichmann is on trial for his life when Dr. Franz - Mayer, former Zionist leader in Berlin, said he frequently sought and ob tained aid from the Gestapo offi cer. In 1937, Mayer said, he won help from Eichmann for certain emissaries from Palestine who came to Germany in connection with the Jewish emigration move ment. “At that time, I considered him a quiet man, behaving in a very normal way—a correct person,” Mayer said. Mayer said he was stunned at the other side of Eichmann’s character when he met him only a year later in Vienna. At this meeting Mayer said Eichmann “looked like a ruler in whose hands are death and life. He would not let us come near his desk. He spoke brutally.” Descriptions of Eichmann by former Gestapo cronies introduced into evidence earlier in the day pictured Eichmann as obsessed with a desire to get rid of the Jews. Prosecutor Gideon Hausner read from notes made by former Ausch witz death camp commander Ru dolph Hoess—hanged by the Poles in 1947. “Eichmann was always full of plans, always on the lookout for innovations and improvements. He knew no rest. He was taken up with the Jewish question and its final solution. It was part of his life.” The “final solution” was Hitler’s term for the Nazi plan to exter minate all Jews in Nazi-occupied countries. The Hoess memoirs put Eich- mahn on the scene of the Ausch witz mass extermination. Hoess said Eichmann came to Auschwitz as early as 1941, short ly before it had been designed as the No. 1 Nazi extermination center. “We discussed ways of killing the Jews,” the statement said. COME ON IN THE SHOPPING'S FINE AT.. These prices, good Bryan only, thru Saturday, April 29. We reserve right to limit quantity. W 990/ 60 YEARS YOUNG-n-COIN' UKE "60' 996/ rt GET THE LIOK5 SHARe Vt CENTRAL AMERICAN GOLDEN RIPE LB. NICE STALKS FRESH Pascal Celery . 2 for 25c Tomatoes . . . • lb* 25c U. s. NO. 1 FRESH CALIFORNIA Cucumbers . . 2 lbs. 25c Calif. Potatoes . 5 lbs. 39c GIANT RINSO J.W. COFFEE CHICKEN-O-SEA GOLDEN AGE FOR A WHITER WASH NET WEINGARTEN’S OWN SPECIAL BLEND LB. PKG. FOOD CLUB NO. 1/7 CHUNK TUNA CAN*" ASSORTED FLAVORS GAL. 65c 49c 25c 29c CANNED NO. 303—GOLDEN CREAM STYLE Del Monte CORN . . 22-OZ—TOPCO PKG. OF—WHITE. PINK OR YELLOW 80-LB.—BONNIE LASS Peat Moss . 10-OZ.—TOP FROST NO. 303—GREEN GIANT—CUT Green Beans. 10-OZ—TOP FROST Whole Kernel Corn ^ HENS SP lb. 29c PICNICS ““ 3 can $]_79 2 cans 35c TENDER-AGED BEEF Square Cut Shoulder Shoulder Roast.... . lb. 49c . can 39c Veal T-Bone Steak . . . . lb. 89c 4 rolls 45c SUGER CURED SHANK PORTION Smoked Ham lb. 43c bag $1.79 RUMP OR PIKES PEAK Veal Roast .... lb. 69c . 2 pkg. 39c LB. CELLO—ALL MEAT Oscar Mayer Franks . . . . pkg. 59c 5 cans $1.00 10-OZ.—FOOD CLUB—YOUR CHOICE Assorted Cheese . stick 49c 2 pkg. 39c WISCONSIN LONGHORN HALF MOON Cheddar Cheese . . lb. 69c