Battalion Editorials Page 2 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1955 The New Year Summer, 1955, is rapidly drawing to a close. For the students of the local public schools, next Wed nesday is the first day of school. For Aggies, well, they’ve got a couple of weeks left—except for new students who will come in Sept. 9. * As far as education is concerned, this is the new year. So Happy New Year to everybody. Now when New Year’s Day approaches, everybody is supposed to make some resolutions—a rather ridiculous thing to do since no one ever sticks by the rules he sets for him self. But this would be a good time to re-evaluate just where you—student, parent and faculty member—are going in life. Are you going down the easy trail of allowing yourself to fall into set habits, of letting others do all the work toward bettering the school and community? Or are you one of the few—the persons who are inter ested in what is going on around them, the ones who actively support the organizations, school, civic and service, which are valiantly keeping our community the kind of place we like it to be? Many groups need your support, in the form of either financial help or personal participation. Just a few of them can be quickly listed. The Mothers and Dads Clubs at the Consolidated white schools and at Lincoln. The Band Boosters Club at the high school. They’re still trying to pay for the band uniforms. The Whirlpool Fund." This is a fund being headed by J. B. Carrol, 20 Norton St., City, to raise $585 for a Whirl pool Bath for Consolidated School. It would be available to all students of the* school, would be used to facilitate the healing of injuries such as sprains, strains, deep bruises and pulled muscles. So far, the report given on the fund is that it has been pretty slow going. And coming up will be Community Chest, Easter Seal, and more. These serve the community and deserve your support. It was a good summer. Congratulations are due all those who worked on the various recreation committees. But it’s over. Now let’s make it a good fall and winter. CHS ’55 Graduates Tell College Plans This year’s graduates of A&M Consolidated High School will spread out to six different colleges, New Reserve Act To Be Discussed Maj. O. D. Butler, commander of the 343rd Field Artillery Bat talion, Army Reserves, will discuss provisions of the Armed Forces Act of 1955 at the unit’s regular meeting at 7:30 Tuesday night at the AR Training Center! The act will affect hll draft-elig ible men and also all veterans with reserve obligations, and Maj. But ler invites all interested persons to attend the meeting. About 42 per cent of Brazil’s population is under 15 years old- accoi’ding to J. J. Ski’ivanek, prin cipal. Sixteen boys plan to attend A&M. They are Louis E. Barker, Tommy E. Barker, Clifton E. Bat es, Ward P. Casey, Roy G. Cour- im, Travis L. Engelbrecht, Robert L. Frazier, William H. Little, Geo. W. Litton, John E. Mai'tin, Jerome H. Oden, Howell W. Phillips, Joe R. Steen, Donald R. Turner and James M. Williamson. Elizabeth Ann Burchard and Eu genia Rush will go to the Univer sity of Texas, and Jean Adams and Marie Lewis will enroll in North Texas State College. Texas State College for Women will claim Jean Puddy, and Carole Williams will go to Southwest Tex as State Teachers College. Jann Whiting plans to enter the Lilly Jolly School of Nursing. TYPEWRITERS BACK TO SCHOOL with an Olympia—Smith-Corona— Royal—Remington or Underwood Portable TERMS, Trade in Your Old Machine As long as you are in school and need a ribbon bring your machine into our shop, we will blow out the dust and lint with compressed air, lubricate your machine and see that it is working all right, install the ribbon and only chai’ge you for the x'ibbon. Students only—^please. BRYAN BUSINESS MACHINE CO. SALES—SERVICE—RENTALS—TERMS 429 South Main in Bryan Free Parking Air Conditioned The Battalion The Editorial Policy of The Battalion Represents the Views of the Student Editors The Battalion, newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas and the City of College Station, is published by stu dents four times a week during the regular school year. During the summer terms The Battalion is published once a week, and dui'ing examination and vacation periods, once a week. Days of publication are Tuesday through Friday for the regular school year, Thursday during the summer terms, and Thursday during examination and va cation periods. The Battalion is not published on the Wednesday im mediately preceding Easter or Thanksgiving. Subscription rates are $3.50 per semester, $6.00 per school year, $6.50 per full year, or $1.00 per month. Advertising x’ates furnished on request. Entered as second-class matter at Post Office at College Station, Texas, under the Act of Con gress of March 3, 1870. Member of The Associated Press Represented nationally by National Advertising Services. Inc., a t New York City. Chicago. Eos Angeles, and San Fran cisco. The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republi cation of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in the paper and local news of spontaneous origin published herein. Rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. News contributions may be made by telephone (4-5444 or 4-7604) or at the editorial office room, 202 Goodwin Hall. Classified ads may be placed by telephone (4-5324) or at the Student Publication Office, Room 207 Goodwin Hall. Bill Fullerton Editor Kerstin Ekfelt Woman’s Editor Stanley Holcomb ..Advertising Salesman Russell Reed Circulation Manager i F. W. Young Circulation Staff ' ^^ciniifij < ZJf-ciuorite5 By Mrs. David R. Fitch This week’s guest editor, Doris Fitch, is a native of Oklahoma. She and her husband, David R. Fitch of the Business Administra tion Department, have two children, both girls, ages four and six. BENGETTI This can be made up the day before and cooked the next day. And it is almost as good heated over. 1 No. 2 can peas (optional) , x /z lb. cheese Tabasco sauce (optional) Worchestershire sauce (optional) 114 lbs. twice ground veal Wz lbs. twice ground beef 2 good-sized onions 1 can cream of tomato soup 1 can cream of mushroom soup 1 pkg. (8 oz.) medium noodles Bi’own ground meat with onions, and add tomato and mushroom soups. Cook noodles, and wash with hot water. Drain the can of peas and save the juice, in case it is needed. Then make a layer of noodles, peas and meat in a shallow baking pan. Add juice if it seems to dry (it may be, especially if you made it up the day befoi’e). Slice thin the cheese and put the slices on top. Bake in oven at 325 degi-ees until cheese melts down (about 14 hour). SEVEN-BOY CURRY Cook and dice a 3-lb. stewer (or shrimp, lobster, cx - ab or lamb). Saute one cup chopped onion (about 114 onions) in chicken fat to gold en brown. Use wooden spoon. Add to onion 214 or 3 T. curry powder, 2 t. salt, 3 T. flour, 1/8 t. cinnamon and 14 t. ginger and blend. Add chicken with 4 cups chicken stock and cook. Add one cup chopped apple and 14 to 14 cup seedless raisins and heat. (Omit the raisins for lobster or ci’ab.) Add 14 cup cream and reheat. Use as condiments for the top Major Gray’s chutney, sieved egg white, sieved egg yolk, peanuts (chopped fine), grated onion, toasted coconut, or fried bacon (chopped fine). Serve with x-ice. If you want to use canned chicken, it works fine. Also if this is made the day before, wait to add the raisins, as they swell. By Mrs. John S. McCannon ESCALLOPED CORN As the Southei’ners love their hominy, okra and black-eyed peas, so the people of the northern states love their corn. Since evei'yone knows how to fix corn on the cob, I shall enclose my escalloped corn dish. I make it strictly the way it was handed down to me, by pinch of this and that. 2 cups cream style corn Salt and pepper 1 egg % cup ci'acker crumbs 4 T. melted butter % cup hot milk Mix all together and pour into a buttei'ed baking dish. Bake for thii’ty minutes in a modei’ate oven. Serves six. I have sometimes added a little onion and green pepper for valuation. TWO HOUR BUNS Put into a large bowl or pan three cakes of compressed yeast, 14 cup sugar or less, two whole eggs and two cups warm water. Beat until foamy. Then add three tablespoons shortening, a bit of salt, seven cups of flour. Knead just enough to mix well. Let x-ise till double in bulk. Make into buns, coffee cake, cinnamon rolls, or what ever you wish. Let rise once more, then bake 15 or 20 minutes. FROSTED CREAMS This is a very old recipe, handed down from generations on, and no wonder—they are so good with coffee. 1 cup lai-d 1 t. cinnamon 1 cup white sugar 1 t. ginger 1 cup molasses 1 t. soda 2 eggs 4 scant cups flour Let the laid, sugar and molasses come to a boil. Take off and cool. Add % cup warm water. Add beaten eggs, then the dry in gredients slowly. Spread into tins about 14 inch thick. Bake in a moderate oven. Frost and cut into squares. Cotton Conference Opens At A&M Next Wednesday “Mechanization—Cost and Qual ity” is the theme of the ninth an nual Beltwide Cotton Machaniza- tion Conference which will be held at A&M Sept. 7-9. Advance registration indicates that approximately 500 persons will attend the conference spon sored by the Cotton Council in co operation with the A&M System, Farm Equipment Institute, United States Department of Agriculture and Cotton Belt land grant col leges. Sessions on Wednesday and Thursday, Sept. 7-8, will be held in the Memorial Student Center, with a tour of A&M’s principal Seven cases of strept throat in College Station were reported to the Bryan-Brazos County Health Unit during the week ending Aug. 27. Also reported were two cases of diarrhea and one of gonorrhea. In Bryan were 12 cases of strept throat, eight each of gonorrhea and diarrhea, four syphilis, three of influenza and one of mumps. In a Sweat?? There’s no need to be if you bring your clothes to . . . CAMPUS CLEANERS • Fast Service • Expert Workmanship • Use our Sub-station FOR CONVENIENCE cotton research facilities and a demonstration of experimental cot ton production equipment sche duled to begin at 2:30 p.m. Thurs day afternoon. Friday the group will tour the blackland area, and will see a demonstration of me chanical harvesting at the Temple Experimental Station. R. Flake Shaw, Raleigh execu tive vice-president, North Carolina Farm Bureau Federation, is chair man of the mechanization steering committe and general chairman of the conference. Other presiding officers are Dr. J. E. Adams, dean of A&M's School of Agriculture; Dr. C. R. Sayre, Scott, Miss., president, Delta & Pine Land Company; G. G. Gibson, director, Texas Agricultural Ex tension Service; and Burris C. Jack- son, Hillsboro, chairman. State wide Cotton Committee of Texas. ! Students Attend YMCA Meeting Three students represented the A&M YMCA recently at the cen tennial anniversary of the World’s Alliance of the YMCA held in Paris, France. They were Garrett W. Maxwell of San Antonio, who was president of the A&M YMCA last year; Richard H. McGlaun, Cincinnati, Ohio, who will be program chair man for the coming school term; and Edward B. McGowan, Bryan. In addition to the Paris meeting, the three students made extensive tours over the European continent before and after the centennial. Letters to J. Gordon Gay, general secretary of the YMCA, said 10,000 delegates at Paris represented 72 countries and that the meeting was an outstanding experience which made a deep impression on the three A&M delegates. Topping for broiled tomatoes: fresh bread crumbs mixed with ol ive oil and grated Parmesan cheese. Consolidated (Continued ’from Page 1) ents of the schools’ pupils are em ployed by the college. In the past, this figure was much larger, fall ing off to its present percentage because of the growth of the city. Pai’ents not employed by the col lege are, for the most part, engag ed in local business establishments primarily dependent upon the col lege enrollment. The Consolidated schools are ac credited by the Southern Associa tion of Secondai-y Schools. JACK AND JILL Kindergarten and Nursery PRE-SCHOOL TRAINING Dancing—Music—Games Play Ground Equipment Also will take children all day for working mother. PHONE: 4-7403 Address: 909 Enfield Bryan Want those stuffed eggs you’re taking along to the picnic to taste extra good ? Mash the yolks with deviled ham, mayonnaise and a bit of grated onion. Of course the eggs must be hard-boiled and cut in half before you start this devil ing process. It takes TWO to fill the bill . ... or fashion a Christian home TWO by TWO The class for Aggie Couples First Baptist Church College Station THESE VALUES GOOD TODAY THRU SATURDAY AT OUR BRYAN STORE 1010 South College at Pease OUR STORE CLOSED SEPT. 5TH — LABOR DAY B AKERITE SHORTENING SPEC1AL coffll lb. can 59 Per Pound c RATH LUNCH MEAT So quick and easy to fix 29c oz. can r— FRYERS Fully Dress feet on lb. 39c Farmer Brown Grade "A" Fryers, feet off lb. 45c Sparer! b Pork, Lean lb. 49c U. S. No. 1—Washington Italian FRESH PRUNES >» 8c 4 lb. 29c - . - BU. Basket *2.39c SEEDLESS GRAPES Thompson *2* lbs. 23c FRANKS. Swiff Premium lb. 37c ^ Swift Premium—Pickle & Pi- tY** if a* inento Loaf, Olive Loaf, Liver ncjl iLli CIS Loaf, Security Loaf, Big Bo- P logna. lb. Cervelat, Mowhawk lb. 53c Swiss Cheese, 8 oz. pkg. 29c Sliced Cheese, 8 oz. Pkg. 29e Potato Salad, Fresh . lb. 29c AMBROSIA Drug Special PALMOLIVE Soft Shampoo 89c Value. Now only 49c Layer Lake - 53c 2 PKGS. FOR Hamburger Buns .... 35c 2 PKGS. FOR Hot Hog Buns 35c an ij 'll lore picnic -3lent 3 llo Pi ooJe 'om M