Image provided by: Texas A&M University
About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 7, 1956)
TKg Battalion College Station ^Brazos County^ Texan PAGE 4 Wednesday, November 7, 1956 Just for Women Popular Spaghetti Dishes Perfect For Winter Menus By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor Try these spaghetti sauces now. Then, if your family likes them, you’ll have them to bank on for economical and quick main dishes all winter long. One of the recipes combines to matoes and clams—a combination that has been favored fare in many coastal towns and cities for years. But now that there are excellent canned minced clams available, this combination is bound to win inland praise. Put this sauce together quickly and let it cook over low heat for about an hour and a half; you can go about other household chores SEE THE . . . A&M MENS SHOP for SLACKS The A&M MENS SHOP for SPORT SHIRTS The A&M MENS SHOP For JACKETS and SPORT COATS <=S3l=l[=s=« THE A&M MENS SHOP Invites 'you to . - . LOOK, SHOP, and SAVE. Student Charge Accounts In vited. A&M MENS SHOP 103 Main North Gate during this time because the sauce will need no more attention than an occasional stir. Again, when you are shopping for the spaghetti to serve with the sauces, remember that you can get the regular or the thin variety. Spaghetti With Clam Sauce Ingredients: 1 can (1 pound) tomatoes, 1 can (6 ounces) tomato paste, % cup chopped onion, Vz cup chopped green pepper, 1 clove garlic (minced), 2 teaspoons salt, 1 teaspoon dried crushed oregano, 1 can (101/2 ounces) minced clams, 3 quarts boiling water, 1 table spoon salt, 8 ounces spaghetti. Method: In a saucepan, thor oughly mix the tomatoes, tomato paste, onions, green pepper, gar lic, 2 teaspoons salt and oregano. Cook over low heat about 1% hours, stirring occasionally. (Use an asbestos pad under the sauce pan if necessary to keep heat low.) Add clams, including liquid in can; heat but do not boil. About 10 minutes before sauce is done, add 1 tablespoon salt to the rapidly boiling water. Gradually add spa ghetti so that water continues to boil. Cook uncovered, stirring oc casionally, until tender. Drain in colander. Serve sauce over spa ghetti. Makes 4 to 6 servings. Campus Vespers To Be Conducted Campus vesper services for all A&M students, regardless of re ligious affilation, will be conducted from 7 to 7:25 p. m. each Monday and Friday throughout the football season at the A&M Methodist Church. After the football season is over, the services will be held each Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday evening and will be conduct ed in the various College Station churches on a rotation basis. Wives Club To Meet Animal Husbandry Wives Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the south solarium of the YM CA. A social hour is planned. looking for a Spot to Begin a Career? The Bell Telephone System offers a wide variety of opportunities for graduates who can qualify. Next Friday, November 9, officials of these five Bell companies will be at the Placement Office to talk to Texas A&M men about a career when they graduate. Western Electric . • • manufacturing unit of the Bell System. Also develops, makes, and services electronic products for the armed forces. » Southwestern Bell • . . builds, main tains, and operates the Southwest’s vast communications system. S’ Beil Laboratories • • • largest indus trial research organization in the world. Electronics and communications research is fascinating. & Sandia Corporation • • • applied research, development, and design on ordnance phases of atomic weapons. :• A.T.&T. Company . . . builds, main tains, and operates the nation’s inter state communications system. H oxr about dropping by the Placement Office and arranging to talk to these officials? CHurches Announce Plans For Mid-Week Programs BETHEL LUTHERAN CHURCH “Christ Is All—All for Christ” is the sermon topic selected by the Rev. William C. Peterson for the 7:45 vesper services this evening. The Lord’s Supper will be celebra ted. The Aggie Walther League Will meet at 7 p. m. in the Memorial Student Center. OUR SAVIOUR’S LUTHERAN CHURCH Meeting time for the Lutheran Student Assn, is 7:30 p. m. today. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION The regular prayer and fellow ship meeting is scheduled for 7:10 p. m. in the Memorial Student Cen ter. A&M PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Choir practice and the mid-week fellowship program will be held at 7 this evening. ST. MARY’S CATHOLIC CHAPEL Mass will be celebrated at 5:15 p. m., and benediction is scheduled for 7:10. The Newman Club will meet at 7:30. Thursday and Fri day Masses will be said at 6:30 a. m. the Brotherhood will meet at 7:30. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH This evening’s activities include the workers’ supper, 6 p. m.; teachers’ meeting, 6:30; choir practice, 6:50; prayer meeting, 7:30. CHURCH OF CHRIST At 7:15 this evening the mid week service will be held. The Ladies Bible Class will meet at 9:30 a. m. Thursday. WESLEY FOUNDATION The foundation will meet at 7 p. m. today to hear a talk by the Rev. Curran L. Spottswood, Metho dist missionary to the Philippines. A&M CHRISTIAN CHURCH Old Highway 6 south of Kyle Field Aggie Religious Study Group will hold its regular meeting at 7 tonight in the YMCA. B’NAI B’RITH HILLEL FOUNDATION Dr. A. A. Price of the A&M School of Veterinary Science will speak on “Religion in College Life” at the 7:15 meeting tonight. WELCOME AGGIES T O Dallas’ Finest Supper Club! The Chalet Presents a Party Package Cover Charge • Choice of Dinner Set-Ups • Tips to Waitress Full Evening of Dining & Dancing CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY This evening’s service will be conducted at 8 p. m. ST. THOMAS EPISCOPAL CHAPEL Service of evening prayer starts at 7:15, followed by a meeting of the Canterbury Club. Featured will be a discussion on “How to Adjust to a Chi’istian Way of Life at A&M.” FAITH EVANGELICAL AND REFORMED CHURCH Practices of the junior and senior choirs are set for 7 and 8 p. m., respectively. Thursday evening To LEONARD OHLSONS BAND All For $4.95 Per Person — Plus Tax MAKE UP A PARTY TODAY & CALL TAYLOR 4-4501 tk e 6400 Gaston Dallas I—I ..I .1. I I I- i. II. ■■ —I. —^.l—lll ■ ATTENTION AGGIES! Have you lost any buttons on your shirt? Come to Leon B. Weiss Store, one door from Campus Theatre and get 10 buttons free of charge. It will be our pleasure to give these to you. LEON B. WEISS Home of Branded Clothes and Western Clothes NEW! REMINGTON QsxjtefcA&e/ts The only Portable with Miracle Tab and Super-Strength frame construc tion. Has 33 other outstanding fea tures. Free! Touch Method Instruction Book. Carrying Case. Budget Terms. Test type and compare it today at Bryan Office Phone TAylor 2-3620 NO DOWN PAYMENT! $1.00 A WEEK First Payment Starts February 1, 1957 Equipment 3222 Texas Avenue Bryan, Texas FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE, THESE NEW TYPEWRITERS MAY ALSO BE PURCHASED AT THE — A&M PHOTO SHOP — North Gate JULIE ANDREWS says: Pertly, a Professor Tggins among magazines!" Julie Andrews, twenty-one-year-old British girl, plays Eliza Doolittle in the sensational Broadway success “My Fair Lady** —a musical adaptation of George Bernard Shaw's “Pygmalion.*• Q- Miss Andrews, had you ever been away from your family before you arrived in this country two years ago? A. Never, and I still become dreadfully homesick. But I do talk with them several times a week, Q. By phone? A. No—by phonograph. We talk into recording machines, and airmail the records. They are so clear I can even hear my brothers arguing in the back ground about whose turn is next. It is as if we were all in one room, Q- You never exchange the usual kind of letter? A. Very seldom. I’m afraid. But we post back and forth bits of particular interest—like newspaper reviews, and favorite articles from The Reader’s Digest. Q- Just the Digest? A. Oh, no, there are others sometimes—but the Digest is our magazine: Mummy and Daddy have always read it, and I began when I was twelve, playing music halls. I had to miss school, and my teaching governess went through every issue with me on the run. It was part of my lessons, Q. Do you still read it on the run? A. Oh, yes—waiting for assignments, waiting for buses, even waiting far curtain cues. I hope I never have to be without it. When I wish to be amused, the Digest amuses me; and when I need to be scolded or instructed* I can always find an article that talks to me like— Q. Like a Dutch uncle? A- No, much more delightfully—more like Professor ’Iggvns in “My Fair Lady” showing a new world to Eliza Doolittle. . In November Reader’s Digest don’t miss: CONDENSATION FROM FORTHCOMING BOOK: "THE ONE THAT GOT AWAY." The all but incredible story of Nazi fighter pilot Franz von Werra—how he broke out of a British prison camp, auda ciously attempted to steal a plane . . j and finally did escape. REBELLION AT POZNAN. Here are eye witness accounts of the June uprisings that may be a preview of the eventual end of the Communist empire. TWO-EDGED DAGGER OF YUSOF HUSSEIN. Eerie experiences of a British officer in the Red-infested jungles of Malaya. THE ANDREA DORIA’S UNTOID STORY. Heart-rending drama of Dr. Peterson’s futile 5-hour struggle to save his wife —pinned under wreckage in their state room — as the giant liner slowly sank. ARE YOU A BORE? I. A. R. Wylie shows ways we unwittingly bore others, and how to make yourself more interesting. WHY THERE CANNOT BE ANOTHER WAIL Pulitzer Prize-winner William L. Lau rence tells why, in the awesome light of an exploding H-bomb, one thing stands clear: thermonuclear war means cer tain suicide to the aggressor.