The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 10, 1954, Image 3

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    Tuesday, August 10, 1954
THE BATTALION
Page 3
mly Favorites
by |Vlrs. Charles D. Holland
e: O his is the second of a series by Mrs. Holland
d. H er third, and final, column will appear in a*
K>. ft
)p : of Hawaii, “The Paradise of the Pacific,” is the
hr colorful costumes and traditions,
iomelis very plainly furnished. The hot dishes of
y cooked on a little charcoal stove set next to the
“ f the house cooks the food tha is being prepared at
is covered with matting and you sit on cushions at
is is the way I have eaten with the Japanese in
V
eselfood, you serve individual bowls of steamed
r our Idishes. Both Japanese and Chinese style you
m rile bowl but pick from the dishes on the table,
he pot of hot tea and, for the brave ones, bowls of
i goe^ down very smoothly until it hits you. Then
ily to spend the next day with an ice bag on your
put® ng on your bathing suit and driving out to
/jrideBhe breakers.
dmoiio on, tie up your obi, be sure you leave your
1 letjs sit down to some Japanese food.
Subiyaki Meat
2 tablespoons brown sugar
teaspoon
1 cup shoyou
JX' 6 bigredients and pour over 2 lbs. finely sliced bone-
»^tand for an hour or so and broil. Best cooked over
ET
LOVIN'
Shoyou Chicken
n « r 2 cloves garlic
2 tablespoons wine
V2 teaspoon aginomoto
(monosodium, glutimate)
sugar % teaspoon salt
melt sugar and shoyou over fire. Heat a'frying pan,
oil, ginger and garlic. Fry whole chicken until
.Add Ivine. Cover pan for one minute,
gredients, cover and cook slowly until tender, turning
venly.
[ Shoyou Steak
ijtcaklinto pieces serving size. Slice one small onion
ic. Chop fine 1 tablespoon ginger. Mix onion, garlic
Vs! cup shoyou, 1 tablespoon vinegar and 1 teaspoon
xture over steak and soak for two hours, turning
fry |n hot pan.
ISp Tempura Shrimp
AN OLD! ash 2 lbs. of fresh shrimp. Salt and pepper. Koll
WHEN SUKlour. Beat eggs separately in a bowl, dip shrimp in
SO^e at [a time into hot cooking oil. Cook until brown.
THINGS'' ci 1 • 1 •
Sukiyaki
ion
ed thin
>om sliced
hoot sliced thin
ess cut in
1 cup green onion
1 teaspoon butter
3 teaspoons sugar
V2 epp shoyou
% teaspoon aginomoto (msg)
U^gths
melt butter, and add a few slices of onion and garlic,
prevent burning. Add meat and stir. When meat is
ver Iwith sugar and shoyou. Let it come to a boil
Add bamboo shoots, onions, mushrooms. Add green
last.
-i delicious down to the last morsel of rice. Let’s
theitea house, over the dainty bridge spanning the
... hop in our car, and drive out to the Pali. The road
AtUWKfh tropical growth and the air is cool and sweet.
TELL US HP 111 - y° u step ou t of the car to view the
30.\'g DJjuore you, for the wind is strong. There is a saying that
^np dff the pali and the wind would blow you right
a. But you’d better not try to find out for yourself.
h;m mmm - ——
ppine Officials
Extension Service
»ine school super!n-
V wTe.g country to study
—entice training
d the Engineering
__i ce this week.
. , ,,officials, who have
W0N^L; five months ex P lor -
(ZPfM'k training facilities
^^(JT^^oard states, are en-
/ upply some of the
#i’ds studied here to
iatilns in the Phil
ipps, in charge' of
•entice training for
t the visitors on a
fhl training facilities
• were particularly
le apprentice, super-
" uce [training depart-
service.
u-w.-H^hey have been im-
closc cooperation
N’T'ZAk 1 l a b !, r, management
£ PLAS
(fair Money!
Your Clothes!
MPUS
j^EANERS
and vocational education trainers
in achieving effective training pro
grams in the United States.
The touring educators are A. G.
Apilado, superintendent of the
Northern Luzon School of Arts and
Trades; F. M. Apolinar, superin
tendent of Arts and Trades of the
Vocational Education Division, Bu
reau of Public Schools, the Philip
pines, and A. B. Garcia, superin
tendent of the Central Luzon
School of Arts and Trades.
Wesley Foundation
Sets Swim Party
The Wesley Foundation of the
A&M Methodist church will have
a swimming party Wednesday aft
ernoon.
The members of the foundation
will meet at the church at 6:30
p.m. Wednesday for transportation
to the pool.
Local Men Ask
TTA Certificate
Several College Station persons
will ask the Civil Aeronautics
board to give Trans-Texas airlines
a permanent air carrier certificate,
allowing them to continue opera
tions in this area.
The CAB hearing on TTA’s cer
tificate will start today in Houston.
Trans-Texas, in operation for
seven years; has had a temporary
certificate, like all other “feeder/*
or local airlines.
If the request for a permanent
certificate is granted, it will mean
continuance of government subsidy
for the aii-line, which will enable
them to continue operations in this
area.
AIRLINE HEARING—Civic leaders from Bryan and Col-
lege Station and Trans-Texas Airlines officials meet to
discuss plans for today’s Civil Aeronautics board hearing.
They are (left to right) K. A. (Kubby) Manning, president
of the College Station Chamber of Commerce and Civic
Development association; Winton Hampton, TTA district
sales manager; Jack Springer, Bryan Chamber of Com
merce manager; William Perry, representative of Caudill,
Rowlett, and Scott architects; Ed Drummer, TTA regional
superintendent; and A. P. Boenger, TTA manager.
MSC Dance
Moves Upstairs
The Memorial Student Cen
ter’s weekly informal dance
moves upstairs tonight to big
ger quarters, the ballroom.
The dance begins at 8 p.m.
and lasts until 11:30 p.m. Ad
mission is 25 cents per person.
The Aggieland combo will
Play.
Three Balkan Countries
Form Anti-Russian Pact
BLED, Yugoslavia, Aug. 10—GP)
Yugoslavia, Turkey and Greece
signed a military pact Monday
aimed at welding a Balkan wall
against any aggression by Russia
or her cominform satellites.
The alliance was signed by the
foreign ministers of the three pow
ers—Koca Popovic of Yugoslavia,
Stephan Stephanopoulous of Greece
and Faud Koprulu of Turkey.
The historic move implements
the Balkan friendship treaty Presi
dent Marshal Tito’s government
signed in 1953 with her two neigh
bors who are members of the North
Atlantic Alliance and brings Com
munist Yugoslavia a step closer to
the western orbit.
It also links Yugoslavia indirect
ly with the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization, although she is not
a NATO member.
Cautiously worded, the pact
pledges the three countries alle
giance to the United Nations and
protects Greek and Turkish obliga
tions to NATO without committing
Yugoslavia to a direct part in that
Architect Caudill
Publishes Book
William W. Caudill, Bryan archi
tect nationally recognized for his
work in school design and construc
tion, is the author of a book to be
published this fall by the F. W.
Dodge Corp., titled “Toward Bet
ter School Design.”
The former staff member of the
A&M architecture department has
drawn together and summarized
material previously available only
in scattered sources.
The research was carried on by
Caudill and his associates at the
Engineering Experiment station.
Dr. Stanton Leggett, widely
known education consultant,
praises Caudill’s book for “clarity
of expression, approach to design
problems and insight into the crea
tive architectural process.”
The text includes a series’ of
case studies covering 91 school
buildings throughout the country.
Each case shows the solution in a
school building of a design prob
lem.
Senior
senior ^jrcivorS
(Seniors Only)
A Perfect Gift, Complete With Chain and Guard—$4.25
Without Chain and Guard—$3.00
AT STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE
security program.
At the same time, however, the
new treaty clearly aimed at ar
ranging military collective insur
ance against the threat of comin
form aggression, and was another
step by Yugoslavia to closer col
laboration with the West since its
feud started with Moscow in 1948.
In pooling armed forces of the
three nations that may total more
than 1,000,000 men, the alliance
bolsters ohd of the soft spots in
Western Europe’s defenses.
Turkey has a standing army of
450,000 and Greece has more than
3 25,000 men under arms. There
are no official figures on the size
of Tito’s army, but it has, been
estimated Tito has some 600,000
men under arms.
The defense alliance was to have
been signed several months ago,
but it was delayed—-mainly be
cause of the bitter dispute between
Italy and Yugoslavia over the stra
tegic free territory of Trieste. The
Trieste issue is finally reported
near agreement.
Once this issue is resolved, the
three Balkan partners are expected
to try to get, Italy to join them,
thus extending the defense chain
formally from the easter-n end of
the Mediterranean to the Swiss
Alps.
Greece nnd Turkey, both linked
to Italy by NATO, have expressed
their desire to see their Latin
neighbors join the Balkan entente.
Military observers expect the
alliance to result in a more stra
tegic shifting of the three nations’
armies. Most of them have felt
thfere has been an undue concentra
tion of Tito’s army in Central
Yugoslavia opposite Romania’s
Tarnsylvania, placed there so it
could move north or south. This
left the south exposed.
GO TO
EUROPE
IN THE r ,.
TrjH Give your trip the
WORLD’S send-off it deserves!
Sail in the world’s
largest superliners
Queen Elizabeth or
Queen Mary. “Thrift
Season” fares are in
force after Aug. 1. So
make your Fall book
ing NOW. As Cunard
. says, “Getting there
SUPERLINERS! is half the fun!”
OTHER FINE SHIPS TO ALL WORLD PORTS
T. H. Black, Agent, Cunard Lines
Office
SP Lines Ticket Office
Phones 4-1175 and 2-8470
\
This month...our
1,000,000"'
PASSENGER
boards
PIONEER
fAIR LINES!
Lester R DotUson ol /
Amarillo, Texas steps aboardJ
a Pioneer Air Liner as ouf l i
l,000,000th passenger! ( •a
r
He'll Get There Faster and Fresher.. 3
Wouldn’t YOU Like to Fly Pioneer and
• arrive fresher — ride in clean,
pleasant comfort |
• solve the problem of traveling with
children I
• arrive 3 times faster — aVoid
monotonous, dangerous highway
travel
’• arrive with economy save travel
money with Pioneer’s family fare
plan — or 10% on your return trip
ticket
Flights timed to go wh«n ^
you wgnt to go t 9
DALLAS 1 hr. 27 mins.
Lv 7:05 am, 1:45 pm
HOUSTON 42 minutes
Lv 3:31 pm, 8:56 pm
ABILENE 3hrs.l6min.
call 4-5054
AIR LINES
SERVING 23 KEY CITIES OF THE SOUTHWEST
A Bond in the hand..
means more money
for you!
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Savings Bonds can earn interest
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Treasury Department thanks, for their patriotic
donation, the Advertising Council and
The J