The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 04, 1961, Image 6

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    Page 8
Tollege Station, Texas
Thursday, May 4, 19G1
THE BATTALION
Prosecution Evidence
Directly Links Eichmann
By The Associated Press
JERUSALEM—The prosecution
Wednesday introduced evidence in
the trial of Adolf Eichmann di
rectly linking him to the tragic
chain of events that led to the
doomed Warshaw ghetto uprising
against the Nazis in 1943.
Prosecutor Gideon Hausner held
-back his evidence until the end of
a day of moving testimony from
RODEO
(Continued from Page 1)
tional championships to be held
some time in August at Sacra
mento, Calif.
Aggie hopes in the team com
petition will be carried by A&M’s
six-man team consisting of Eddie
Rosenberger, Joe Neff, Jerry An-
dis, Jay Jones, Everett Farthing
and John Baker. A number of
other Aggies are registered to
compete independently for indi
vidual honors.
Rosenberger is the top Aggie
performer in the standing for a
regional championship in the indi
vidual events. He won first place
in bareback bronc riding at Sam
Houston State’s April rodeo and
is presently ranked 2nd for the
regional honor.
Other schools to be represented
in this year’s meet other than
A&M, Sam Houston and South
west Texas Junior College are
Texas A&I, Blinn Junior College,
Texas University, Texas Christian
University, McNeese State College,
thej University of Houston, Ste
phen F. Austin College, South-
weslt Texas State College, East
Texlas State College and Pan
Amnrican Junior College.
witnesses who took part in the
desperate Jewish rebellion against
numerically superior and better
armed German troops in the con
quered Polish capital.
Hausner introduced a copy of
the minutes of a meeting Eich
mann attended with Nazi Foreign
Ministry officials in April 1942.
The minutes showed that Eich
mann asked Foreign Ministry rep
resentatives to consent “or to say
there is no objection to extending
all security police measures which
may be necessary in the interest
of preserving public order in the
Warsaw ghetto to all inmates.”
Agreement of the ministry was
required, Hausner said, because
Jews of foreign nationality had
been trapped in the ghetto when
the Nazis sealed it off shortly aft
er the 1939 invasion of Poland.
Some Nazi diplomats were con
cerned about these nationals, other
documents introduced by Hausner
showed. Hausner also submitted
documents in which Eichmann re
ported foreign nationals would be
evacuated from the ghetto.
The prosecutor implied that
Eichmann’s request for Foreign
Ministry approval of maximum se
curity measures was, in effect, a
method of ' clearing obstacles to
permit a Gestapo clampdown on
the ghetto, where half a million
Jews lived as virtual prisoners.
An eyewitness told the story to
a packed court of what then hap
pened.
Mrs. Zivia Lubotkin, who took
part in the struggle in the ghetto,
said the Nazi clampdown began in
July 1942.
“The Nazis announced then that
all Jews who could not earn a
livelihood in the ghetto would be
taken to the East ‘where they
were needed for work and where
conditions were better,’ ” she testi
fied.
She said about 100,000 Jews
were seized in the first major
roundup.
“Later, we learned the Jews who
were taken went to Treblinka,”
Mrs. Lubotkin said in a quiet
voice. Treblinka was a major Nazi
center for extermination of Jews.
Eichmann is charged with com
plicity in the murders of an esti
mated six million Jews in Treb
linka, Auschwitz, Chelmno and
other Nazi death camps.
The savage climax came at mid
night, April 18, 1943.
“At midnight, on April 18, 1943,
rumors swept the Ghetto that the
Nazis were preparing to liquidate
all its inmates,” Mrs. Lubotkin
said.
“The Jewish underground was
in a state of readinefes to fight.
We had waited a long time for the
opportunity to shoot Germans. The
moment had come. I was in an
attic and I saw thousands of Ger
mans armed with machine guns
enter the Ghetto. We had some
home-made bombs. Many of you
will not believe that when the Ger
mans marched by our post and we
threw those bombs and we saw
German blood flowing over the
streets of Warsaw after watching
so much Jewish blood on the
streets, we rejoiced.”
Mrs. Lubotkin and other wit
nesses detailed the battle which
went on for another month until
the Nazis razed the ghetto.
NATIONWIDE 'f'i ft * SAFETY SERVICE
MORE THAN JUST
BRAKE SERVICE!
Align
\ Front End
Repack Front
Wheel Bearings
Adjust
i
Brakes
Inspect
Cooling System ■
Inspect
Exhaust System
Avoid Accidents Caused By Neglecting
Your Car. Let Us Bring Your Brakes
and Front-End Back to "New Car" Safety
AM tAid
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for
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BONUS
■ ■
I Any American
B A Made Car
■ m HHnB PAYDAY
TERMS
Repiacement-Parts, If Needed, Not Included
k WHEEL BALANCE CAM 4 Wheels)
Jr with Every ^12.05 Safety Service Job
where your dollar buys MILES more
Geo. Shelton, Sue.
College Ave. at 33rd TA 2-0139 - TA 2-0130
FREE PARKING
State-Wide
Judging School
begins Sunday
Cattle from throughout a wide
area of Texas will be used in the
Santa Gertrudis Judging School
at A&M Sunday and Monday, ac
cording to Santa Gertrudis Breed
ers Inteimafional Executive Sec
retary R. P. Marshall of Kings
ville.
The judging school is being
sponsored by the SGBI in coop
eration with the A&M Department
of Animal Husbandry. It will
serve as a refresher course for
current judges of Santa Gertrudis,
as a means of selecting new judg
es and a a review of the “Stand
ard of Excellence” for Santa Ger
trudis breeders, managers and
herdsmen.
The school will begin at 7 p.m.,
Sunday, with a seminar session
in the Memorial Student Center.
Here the “Standard of Excellence”
for the breed will be thoroughly
discussed and various character
istics of the breed will be illus
trated with slide films.
Actual judging of cattle will be
held at 8:30 a.m., Monday, in the
Animal Husbandry Pavilion. Fol
lowing the judging, the official
placings and explanations will be
given.
NEVER CLOSE TO THE COW
New Cottonseed Material
Proposed To Replace Milk
When oil mill operators took a
coffee break during the 29th an
nual short course last weekend,
the “creamed” their java with a
product that never came close to
a cow.
The “cream” was made mainly
from cottonseed protein and vege
table fat, another research devel
opment by the Cottonseed Products
Research Laboratory of the Texas
Engineering Experiment Station
here.
A. Cecil Wamble, research engi
neer with the laboratory, told the
oil mill operators that the sub
stance is still in research stages
and has no name. It is light yel
low in color, has a taste some
thing similar to cow’s cream and
packs about half the calories found
in half-and-half coffee cream.
Discussing food uses of cotton-,
seed protein, Wamble said prod
ucts are coming on the market to
replace coffee and whipping cream
which ai'e advertised as not being
dairy products, although some of
them contain enzyme-modified ca
sein as a protein source.
“There is reason to believe that
cottonseed protein may be better
to use than the modified casein or
other vegetable proteins, such as
soybean protein,” he said.
The speaker explained that cot
tonseed flour is being used in lim
ited quantities in the United
States today.
Wamble cited tests, made in
Central America, where cotton
seed flour has won out over other
vegetable proteins as a desirable
mixture for supplementary feed
ing of children.
Initial acceptability tests con
ducted by a group of physicians
in Florida have shown the product
to be acceptable for institutional
feeding and for consumption by
elderly persons on reduced in
comes, he said.
The short course is held each
year to discuss the latest develop
ments and problems of the oil mill
industry. Sponsors are the De
partment of Chemical Engineering,
Texas Cottonseed Crushers’ Assn,
and the International Oil Mill
Superintendents’ Assn. J. D.
Lindsay, Head of the Department
of Chemical Engineering, heads
the short course committee.
Lanier H. Forgason and Bob
Carter of the J. D. Hudgins Ranch
at Hungerford, and J. T. Lawhon
of the Cottonseed Products Lab
oratory, described an economic
study on the cottonseed process^
operation on t(ie Hudgins Rancli,
They said the findings showed
that the cost to produce whole-
pressed cake to be $4.26 less pet
ton than the cost to provide and
store a ton of comparable feed
from regular cottonseed meal,
bulls and grain. The economit
advantage in favor of the whole-
pressed cake increased as the size
of crush increased.
“It should be pointed out, how
ever, that the cost to procure seed
can be the determining factor as
to which of these alternatives for
providing a feed supply is tie
most economical,” they said. “la
this evaluation, the actual seed
costs for the past three years
were averaged and used as a basis
for determining the cost to pro
duce cake.”
S. P. Clark, associate researek
engineer with the Cottonseed
Products Research Laboratory,
discussed the degree of improve
ment which can be made in linters
by use of a cleaner, the best loca
tion for the ARS cleaner in tie
flow of seed and the effect of
foreign matter in seed on tie
location of the cleaner.
T
* f
FOOD BUYS M SPOT
IMPERIAL SUGAR
Limit One
5 LB. BAG 4 5
Velveeta Cheese Spread ? lb box 79<
Feathercrest Eggs Grade a Med-2 doz. 79<
PEPSI-COLA Ptus Deposit - 12 BOTTLES 49<
Best Washing Powder^r A ""^x.49<
Garth Fig Preserves 18-Oz. Jar 29c
Libby’s Green Lima Beans.. 4 - 303 Cans $1.00
Lite-Fluff Biscuits 13 Cans $1.00
Libby’s Tomato Catsup 5 - 14-Oz. Bottles $1.00
Flour Light Crust 5-lb. Box 39c
Sugary Sam Yams 4 Lg. 2 1 / 3 Cans $1.00
Star Fire Luncheon Meats 3 - 12-Oz. Cans $1.00
Swift’s Allsweet Oleo 4-lbs. $1.00
Gladiola Cake Mixes New Pac Assorted Flavors 4 Boxes $1.00
Southern Sun Frozen Orange Juice 5 - 6-Oz. Cans $1.00
Banquet Meat Pies Beef, Chicken or Turkey 5 - 8-Oz. Pies $1.00
Mrs. Baird’s or Butter Krust Bread 2 Large Round Top Loaves 49c
Swift Premium Fancy
FRYERS
Crown
ROAST
Whole — LB. 2^ jFC
LB. 39«i
Veal Shoulder Steak Pound 49c
Brisket Stew Pound 35c
Fresh Ground Meat ....3 Pounds $1.00
Lean Tender Veal Chops Lb. 59c Hormel Dairy Sliced Bacon
Lb. 55c
GRAPEFRUIT ruby red
5
LB. BAG
25
Green Beans Fresh Tender' 2 Lbs. 25c
Green Onions Home Grown 2 Bun. 15c
Fresh Valley Cucumbers 2 Lbs. 25c
Potatoes Russett or Red 10-Lbs. 49c
SPECIALS GOOD MAY 4 - 5 - 6, 796/
MILLER'S
3800 TEXAS AVENUE
SUPER ^
MARKET ^
VI 6-6613