The Seaforth News, 1962-08-09, Page 2And $ +mt~ Of Oaar Kids
Chink Exam Are Heard".
As the newsreel er'outui to a
close in Parisian movie -theatre;
last reoeth, a picture of a shirt -
sleeved Fen teen .are., his
face buried in a trigonometry
text.„,died on the screen. Sud.
denn the boy reached far a
hitt''
winte pill and the commen-
tator's voice warned: "The use
-of dregs to keep awake while
:studying is fa +lisp The next
scene shorted the boob failing
asleep during his ex -:::t.
This brief ttaieel r, 0 dor,
umentary may have '^a fla3
Anies>.antoursts. l•, ,^e punt
was :not :.s: pn F:e:•c:^.^.her. This
.is the thee :".at tries rte sonls.
minds, and b: dies of F: _.' ch
.-
..
over Francelast :mend- eer. -
ster. are ending :,`il what
is renabidely the 'rd:: _i^est
to r els. ^:e "baccal-
aureet ”
n i' le barhot een-
eretiens of French.
th _
stirs - tea "le hal'..1, "e
exam is a firi id:a le _.. e-
tween :he American c.illege
be -i ;e Secense Inmesi-
tien.Net •enly is the beehlet:e-
qt a er..r'a nee t: F:eneh
universities and civil seeviee. :t
insu-r s ?''`c onsteem-
tien even 'z lush^ jets es .....
way linesmen.
Given the neofessienal, parer:
tai
ren-
ts.. _. r s_ ..e_ t7
pass. It is nce shit- :eine that
se:tr. t
e- _ u&loll. vers ._ Dexe-
dritee, take a each
June A reemle ec:.:c the ::e': -
f:4 _reel exa:::. •t -winch are
us:: taken _. :we sem .
the, first a: ..e end ef .he
1u , -: tee end
of the ...__ year:, dents
be le detent re, nightly fire- and
rix -::aur steelyhee -.
-Every aysllI ask myeedf if
can pessiely reerneriee- all the
necessary feet. a:tee, datee,"moans
Franaiise the le—year—old
daughter if a _ :ren... irxarance
exe et Se, My pareres 'X.•;-_ ,._' t
be` .. led-- - l . -,-.
but len :e ':hey wield. '..
un-
cle:stem.'._:.. _.. eek
just:.e :::ax ce Pa:'se s mal
de mere et pore a -:'re _ a s t
recinth. when
and
other _..._,_n._ .a.e o �.elle ¢. e
What Do You Know
About
SOUTHEAST ASIA?
teen-agerS who were arrested as
QAS terrorists but permitted to
study in- their cells/ gat down
at•wooden tables spaced 2 feet
apart, and for three days would
writs a series of essays on such
subjects as philosophy. math,
Greek, physics, French, and his-
te y. Strme mind,boggl;ng ques-
tions:
"Dix yeti di, aguish between
reason and trteiingence, and if
so, why''"
-•Discuss the expneratian of the
..A.frican continent between 1650
and :914."
Dsa • the exploration c'I the
Afeieen continent between 1650
and 1914.'
"Drs ,::e rr:1.':am of life
i:se3
High Jump; Late last month,
•everyone ex opt :he infirm took•
the somewhat less rigorous plays,.
!cal par:._ the bac: ot. The girls,
for •^e. were required to
m?. cese 1'-^'p.5 necking their
e
fe: ce':.,z heir knees in Mid-
ley-ftepee men the
e' • :e: ?a:_. .. f+.1 seconds,
acid ?:i,gheit._np at least 3 feet.
nein •- :
these tests — written,
Cts,.:. ,ndp::;:si:a — the exam-
iners. v. -in produce a e... _^.rated
weighted average — 0is the
passing .nark: 33 is failing. The
students whose averages tail in
between will be given a seeend
chance :et pa.s, at a lengthy oral
ext-o-a:i, : because as one
teat: er ptit.e st: -Some s:adents
re ::8 nerrees t ' express them-
selves well ern exa" `-talion
daye." Evidently. a rnanietity ex.
prose thee.. -elves we.'. ene'-tgh
beea::se about 00 per cent of the
candi:is:es get through.
TV Announcer Was
Plenty Hungry
After leen years
as a
`.oD and
.site. as a baseball
e.
tt ewter with the vett- York
Yankees, 4= -year-old Phi: Rit-
z.., has .es: -ed a surprising
cenclusien: - much easier to
play denbleheade:s than an-
renencer _ parses Alone
a: the WP XT eke eitiminst a
Yankee-Denreit T: gel game llast
e me:nit _ ;he leve --is ^g
en w:,e_. Mel A___.. _witzhed
ov ra::_C . R: :o ran out
of taped itommereials and pa -
thence — but neve: werdss.
"I never was that tired afee.r
playing,basetaiL said Rimento
after the Yankees won baseball's
Ices. gate ..seven heuese
in the ltd irminas. 'Y..er you
say e top of the sixteenth vett
stem thinking of elle las:.,.' a you
ae.'
By the seventeer.the seventeenthR z
whit had netheirig t, ea: -iri
dories ^= gall= :e: his hercer
gee ehe be;- oe —-
are.. -.red to the 1.4 _.:Hil a
Chewers his _geesepmeeeseti -::e.:+for
di.-ne:. "Sh -. tail with
Russian ares: _ ` .leak
vee zee u ._ _ c'nee t0,
siri_g bears. eneeee. iseeie pie;
and :sret::. the tithe-
;cent'- he said1.d -be:-
:e: make : a sae erder _ ag-
he Finally. _e _
lse
d:.e
aded, :Re- :cake ::a=e
order of, spazheti and a entitle
Dile: d- . Then._a: lave
base __ : _- n e ended.
'e,p-s.,which had circ:.::lee:c
cannel cite movie. :w: norreitly
ehews. ere reysteey. ane R.'zk"y
re :»def its filmed
a.ame Rizemte re:teemed his
hmel ane !teed He. settled
fie sietzles.
»_ enly rese winners: leeeyi' e
Reese -lees ...e CRS :t.-.ne ef :he
mer-
ee en- a ether
ten am! a_.e.:_
BIG CLUB — J:cfi Netki...a .v rrre• Ire L+ S. Coen r rks
a c. eie'+ hx t tact s b o as :t seems to be rere C::r"era
d .:. r: an ras ei 1crz ed 1n is s driver
ODDS: 22 MILLION-T0-1—Clocks tell the hours that Jock R. Yoder, his wife, Sharon,
end their first child, Todd Alin, were born on the some date Yoder in 1941, Mrs. Yoder
in 1943, and baby Todd in 1962.
ThBLE TALKS
Jane AnG.ttews.
There are almost as many
recipes for hamburger patties- as
there are outdeor necks, for each
proud maker—of—charcoal-fires
seems to haves own special:y,
and he is proud of it-_
If you like to buy lean :neat
and have it ground dor you can
grind it at he -tel,. boneless chuck
or round steak or neck or flank
may be ,;sed. Grc;._^.d beef nee:`s
a little fat to give it jusstrhe
right av' so be sure to add
it,st a little sue:, Kea ground
beef . ^hely wrapped _ .e re-
frigerate: and use it within a
couple of date e,or wrap it anis
freeze Ceelk:heir-els
s nd
slowly aturn caref -v: d_n't
overeeek. Add 1 to Ben salt
a:d a little pea, e: to e eh p un3
of greenedbeef: ze cap e'hopned
on__n and 1 .ah:cspitan W<eezes-
tees:.ire settee a:e geed season -
Once when 1 was srend;-ng £
few days en a :ansa in :he
Rocky :" ns. an outdoor
cools teld 'ate : the high,cold
ad: called far hearty meals. He
'Used quick ea.s as aningredient
for _ __ :ger arid here is
such _ recipe, wri:es s: -
Richey :he Chris-
tian --
OUTDOOR HAMBURGERS
▪ gerunds ground meat
se cup rolled oats — quick or
old-fashioned. uncooked
2 teaspoons salt
teaspoon pepper
tea_apoon onion salt
te-aspoon oregano
1 cup tomato juice
2 eggs. beaten
Yee w_:: need ale: - ..:_s
/e+a: el
tl - lire._
1.h z:de cheese. a-..
.-17a:z-- _
s k
l the
Ira- _erg _ rei_.e . •S nape
int: patties.
Id you Itrcal.
3::..
. I.
irestee in yen:
glace in
reek 4-a thethets item. seneze __
Le?: a_ es.
'Teem ani trail 5 minutes.
• vs teem _i are'
e :Mee » e. :_ eettle. :.en .:
=via. then
ten
elites ... half: cf :men heese.. a �` -"
baeon :•p - _ Bees v ea
- Re:-
• 2-2come .:_.
• yee - e ex:: . er
tom .. -?: s
HOT eiFTTCAN BURGERS
1 pound coarsely ground
hamburger
I small: green pepper. chopped
1 small. onion. cbopped
1 tablespoon chili powder
1 tabiespsoa chili sauce
teaspoon salt
Pinch blade pepper
7eppe.- err:
and
c
_ -
... - .......4. :ter elle..
:l; 4 sM1
a
Tiny meat halls, in frankfurter
.sare a tiejtartaref
patter and re especially _::d
for pa: ze ;arty.:less
ba:.: he -Toad_ with 'ed.
veal. o: larah. Far sine recipes
• n:eat halls a t e g, nd of
the :neat is _-..ate. The veal
t sdes:r.'ret: are served a a
chafing dish with settee. You can,
of course, beak ` €:n its a skil-
let or on an est doer grill.
DILL VEAL BALLS
1 pound ground veal
3s cup chopped dill pickle
3 tablespoon grated Parmesan
cheese
1 egg, slightly beaten
se teaspoon salt
Dash pepper
2 tablespoons shortening
1 can Ceee ounces) concentrat-
ed totnato Juice, diluted with
1 can water
1 tablespoon minced parsley
2 teaepcons sugar
4 teaspoon ground oregano
1 clove garlic, minced
4 - 6 frankfurter buns
Cerabir.e fist 6 ingredients;
shape into 1 -inch bas. Brown
in _..erten. ire skillet; pour
off f else. Add tomato juice and
ex' 4 i__ e en:s: stir ca:erai-
ly. Cover and sirrener 25-30 min-
utes. using aro::: 4 meat balls
to a b.rr. Serves ahem! 6.
herrecipe for meat balls
that _lakes 27ei dozen 1 -inch
basis uses cheese and mayon-
naise. Here it Is.
DEVILED MEAT BALLS
ler pound Roquefort Cheese -
1. cup mayonnaise
2 tablespoons Worcestershire
sauce
1 teaspoon prepared mustard
2 cups corn flakes
-v cup tnflk
1 egg. slightly beaten
1 pound ground beef
lee teaspoons salt
y; teaspoon pepper
Creemble ...._ese with a :ark:
bleed in 'nay .:.ase, sauce, and
• Crelsh corn flakes
sle sly: ad :en:ar.ing ingredi-
ente end cheese eix-:::ae and mix
- :o small basis:
--eny done.
.. Y+i N
St)E 1ERTt' XE FLOAT
2 cups- milk
1 eup mashed banana
I piat Vanilla Ice Bream
cup liquid honey
1 cup unsweetened pineapple
.nice chilled
Mix tezethee milk. banana.
`.es}y. -» •e ;:ace, ice
cream. Top with sneers of van-
- `"a a Sere with cook-
ie= arl desired. _lakes 4 servings
Scottish Farmer
Giant Of Science
earliest days imaginative
a're w-.fee:ed at the
r-.areels ef earth as well as
the heavens. mystery of ere-
ti__.inspired _ .efinest
the Bible. The early
-- ded isle
s:.s.tiltijaa's:es and illsivereil :he
3e
the shadow
niatie in an
et -c- discovered :ha :he
ear:_. laye
rts op.-
"---`:.- - --'e.n E-.
,
rt'
sell :t. :L
.r _.. _f :he e
ee ...
ientury nthierr. sthcn-
:_''.' ▪ a .- the study of
F... ._anti Fie:lig::?-ecan:e a
reztgr..zed szience. Men be=au
to use their eyes and to write
down what they saw, tying too
..? :y in
acatriance with real experience,
This :s a r$•^'-ortplace o: s;i-
e..:e t: day. bits at that time it
xa a stimulating release from
a:cepted authority and uncon-
trolled speculation, The new cri-
teF on was what a man could
actually see for himself in the
rocks, minerals and fossils,
rather than what earlier schol-
ars had written about them.
One of the early giants of this
revolution was James Hutton, a
Scottish farmer who in the
course oe his many travels no-
ticed that rocks appeared to be
formed in layers, as though laid
down one on top of the other
over a long period. He inter-
preted these layers correctly as
ancient deposits of sediments
built up from material carried
down by rivers, or broken off
from the seashore by waves,
These sedimentary rocks tell a
story , . , Hutton found places
where such bedded rocks, steep-
ly inclined, were covered by
other rocks sloping more gently
in a different direction and rest-
ing on the worn surface of the
up -ended older rocks,
This type of structure, now
called an unconformity, Hutton
intepreted correctly for the first
time as evidence of a great gap
in the record of earth history —
an interval during which the
earlier rocks were folded, uplift-
ed and worn down. Finally,
when they had subsided beneath
the sea, a new set of rocks was
formed above them.. ,
It was clear to Hutton that in
these small exposures of rock
beside the sea he had found the
key to much of the earth's his-
tory. He marveled at its gran-
deur and at the immense periods
of time which must have been
necessary for such changes to be
accomplished. He was one of the
first to realize that large valleys
had not always been there, but
had been formed through the
ages by the slow downward and
sideways cutting of the streams,
and that they were the result
of a process of wearing away, or
erosion, which could well be a
source of all the bedded sedi-
mentary racks ..
"Fingers" of granite appeared
to spread into the surrounding
rock from the main mass, sug-
gesting that the granite had once
been a fluid and had penetrated
the rock before solidifying. Since
the granite had been very hot
:o be fluid, Hutton suggested
that it was formed from molten
rock. — From "The Earth:
Rocks, Minerals and Fossils," by
R. B. Harland., New York.
A Dropped Tomato
Might Bruise ! ! !.
U.S. agricultural department
has come up wit.lt an astounding
discovery: If a tomato is drop-
ped on a hard surface it will be
damaged more than if it is drop-
ped en foam rubber.
Furthermore, ,ayes a puss re-
lease announcing the results of
a study on bruising injuries to
:<:::at;'e', "injury was found tri
c ca^ia'.ative . • . that is, when
.,....,:res were dropped Iwo or
more times, the damage. was
.curl to extend to morn and
more internal parts." A tomato
.irclt:'ed often t'netti:h (weenies
This all sounds -rt'usona1,1e.
And the claim is that the in.
,'.......ten is of •scieetiftr value.
•T:-:,' experiment was• conducted
t - fins/ out how tomatoes can
lea;' be packed to arrivo on the
o .....iter': table in the best pose
Ti',siNe snare.
. leash release didn't pro.
vide one trines' - of information
that t t.axp tycr s might be interest-
ed in: What grade tl,,'s a Klett.
tis: have t' read; its ,'ivil s,'r-
vier, before he's ryealitned to
batt e t ttdtocie!
._3i11w:ui t'o d<,urnal
All 'He Needed
Was Confidence
It was in Now. York recently
that °barley 'Metro bad talked
5Naar haul Wilton.
"I've expected every Spring to
Wirt reading stories about bim,".
Bald the latent No, 1 c.otrcli t,f the
Mileage (Chs, "I've always
thought Its" cl break -out of his
shell enure day and he a fine
pitcher,
"1 saw a lot of Wil'un in 1995,
while tnanal'..ine, the Aligner' elub
- iIt the Melly I , ,trite," Charles
continut d. "liar ww; pitehirg in
the 'trod Sox ,,t :',nation with
Montgomery and 1,t really made
that ball hum t;itee hu worked
against us.
"Hc irrtprc:;ru,t utc !o much
that 1 usr'd to ail: rl,:eations
about hint. 1 wut.b•d to get him,
of course, but aiv.<:s told
the sato:. Miles,. 'rlhen he gets a
little more c„ni,dr,r0 r,.' they'd
Fay, `he'll he a Neat p t:(•>u;r.'
"Thal.':, why I'been ]co'kiing.
for hirer to make it big with the
Rod Sox. He c,l..ays ,:sooner( a4
close. All ho'.4 ever needed was
just a little snore confide=nce in
himself -- --the co didereee to
keep firing that feet ball for
strikes,”
Well, Metro must Lavt...aied
to himself as be react at,' It Earl
Wilson's outstanding r•tf.irt a-
gainst the Los Angul• e. Angels,
writes Ed Rumill in the Christian
Science Monitor. Only 31 men
walked to the piele aeairiet taern
and only four r ,.rhes/ bees —
all on walks, Theie r wcre no base -
hits and solidly hit bslh were in
the minority. The ante. wet 2-0.
The big Negro rigtt-harder
just kept firing away, inning
after inning, as the tension
mounted and the crowd began
to feel that perhaps they were
watching the eheping of mound
history.
Perhaps the "spirit" pout into
this game by Wilson and his
mates was hest illustrate by
a Frank Malzor.e catch in the
eighth inning, with the nee -hitter
getting clangerouly clr,se The
veteran third baseman raced to
the edge of the visiting dugout,
gloved a foul fly, then fumbled
into the arms of Los Angeles
players.
Red Sox players have known
the importance of• confidence in
the Wilson story — had felt that
one big game could break him
out of the almost shy shell that
had hampered his career for
several years,
But this could have been the
game — this could have been
the effort that big Ear] has al-
ways needed to help him -make
it big." 01 course, he had been
effective all spring while winning
five and losing only tveo. But
this one: well. this was same -
thing real special — a once-in-a-
lifetime game that all pitchers
hope for and seldom get.
This very well could be the one
to give the boy the push, the
vital incentive he has needed. -
Wilson, who started out in
baseball as a catcher but switch-
ed to the mound because he could
throw hard, was personally con-
gratulated by Tom Y awkey, the
Red Sox owner, and given an
increase in salary — what
amounts to a bonus.
Said Wilson when first ap-
proached by reporters after the
game: "Man, I really hit that
one, didn't I?"
Thus, he was a typical pitzher.
They always talk abeut their
hitting.
P PE THIS Nanev Gibbons,
6 tries ,t stains: node of new-
t\ leo i rmcnted together plot -
ti: /mire and fittings, intended
ft: use in home plun7bin .
19112