Newspaper Page Text
New Tires Not Safe
At All Speeds
WASHINGTON - Here’s a
note of caution that high
priced tires aren’t necessarily
safe tires at high speeds in the
90 to 125 mile per hour range.
According to the National
Highway Traffic Safety
Administration there have been
a number of accidents and at
least two recent deaths from
tire failures at high speeds
during police pursuits.
The development of radial
tires - which provide superior
performance in many aspects
of vehicle handling and
durability - appears to have led
some tire dealers and buyers to
assume such tires are safe for
Bw
I I
For the next four weeks I will be giving you some well planned
meat replacement recipes. These recipes will come from the
Soybean Cook Book. Check at your book shop. Hope you have
fun.
Yours For Good Health
Bill Ware
Soybean Recipes 70
SOYBEAN CASSEROLE 2
2 tbs. oil
2 cups chopped celery
4 tbs. chopped onion
2 tbs. chopped green pepper
2 cups white sauce
1 tsp. salt
2 cups mashed or chopped cooked soybeans
1 cup whole wheat or soy bread crumbs
Saute celery, onion, and pepper in a small amount of veg
etable oil for 5 minutes. Add white sauce and salt, and
bring to boiling point. Add beans and pour mixture into
an oiled casserole. Cover with crumbs and bake in moder
ate oven 45 minutes or until brown. Serve from casserole.
Serves 6.
SOY NUT LOAF
3 cups cooked soybeans
2 cups mashed potatoes, hot
2 cups chopped walnuts
1 cup milk (soy or dairy)
1 tbs. yeast extract
2 tbs. onion, grated
2 tbs. green pepper, chopped
2 eggs scrambled to golden brown
1 raw egg, beaten slightly
4 tbs. tomato pulp or
Tomato slices
Parsley
Puree or mash soybeans. Add hot mashed potatoes, nuts,
milk, seasonings, scrambled eggs, raw beaten egg, and to
mato pulp or pur6c. Mix lightly. Pour into oiled baking
Meat Replacement Dishes 71
dish and bake slowly 1 hour. Turn baked loaf out onto
platter and garnish with sliced tomatoes and parsley. Serve
with desired sauce or gravy.
SOY VEGETABLE LOAF
2 cups cooked soybeans
54 cup cooked carrots
2 tbs. onion, chopped
54 cup celery
54 cup fresh or canned tomatoes
IV2 tsp. salt
IVi cups dry bread crumbs
Grind soybeans, carrots, onion, and celery in food chop
per. Add tomatoes, salt, and bread crumbs, and mix well.
Pack into greased loaf pan. Bake for 45 minutes in moder
ate oven. May be topped with sliced tomatoes. Serves 4
to 6.
SCALLOPED SOYBEANS
3 ctjrns cooked soybeans
1 c® diced celery
1 small chopped onion
Vi cup tomato sauce
Vi tsp. salt
1 tbs. powdered vegetable broth
1 cup water or liquid from beans
2 tbs. oil
Vi cup whole wheat bread crumbs
Mix all ingredients except crumbs; place in baking dish.
Ccver with crumbs and bake in moderate oven for 1 to
iVi hours. Serves 6 to 8.
high speed users.
Law enforcement agencies,
emergency units and others
having need for high speed
operations should specify on
all purchase orders that they
want special tires which are
manufacturer-certified for the
speeds intended. Specially
designed tires are required
whether the tire is bias ply,
belted bias or radioal in its
construction.
And for the rest of us
law-abiding citizens most
standard grade commercial
tires will do. After all, the
national speed limit is 55 miles
per hour.
Health
0 Diets
.$. Nutrition
By Bill Ware
Christine Thompson: College Grad At
43, Symbol Os Increasing Numbers
Os Black Women
New York, N.Y.-Some
7,000 students will be
graduating from the 41
member colleges of the United
Negro College Fund this month
and among them is a 43-year
old woman who represents a
growing new trend among
Black women.
Mrs. Christine M. Thompson
is a mother of seven, a widow,
a person who has been on
welfare, a mother who has
struggled to give her children
an education ... and now she is
graduating from college herself.
Among white, middle-class
women, the phenomenon of
going back to school, starting
college, at a late age is
well-established. Among Black
women, it is still a more
isolated circumstance and the
obstacles are usually far more
formidable, but it is
happening.
Mrs. Thompson, who lives at
1130 St. Paul St., Richmond,
Va., first had to get her high
school diploma before she
could think of anything else.
She did this by going to
equivalency c 1 asses at night,
while she worked.
Next, Mrs. Thompson
learned of the federal Career
Opportunities Program which
gave help to needy, mature
people wanting to make a late
start at college.
“I was doubtful I could do
that,” Mrs. Thompson recalls,
“but my supervising teacher
and principal in the high school
program encouraged me so 1
decided to try.”
When Mrs. Thompson toiled
her way through Virginia
Union University in Richmond,
a UNCF school, three of her
sons were there with her. They
would meet on campus often
but never had classes together.
All four of the Thompsons
worked part-time, scraped and
borrowed to get the money to
get by. At the s ame time, Mrs.
Thompson had the
responsibility of caring for the
other three who were at home.
Another daughter was away at
college elsewhere.
Among the jobs she did
part-time was as a teacher’s
aide, and that whetted her
appetite for teaching-a career
she now feels die wants to
pursue.
Being a student old enough
to be the mother of most of
her classmates and carrying the
burdens she had did not
prevent Mrs. Thompson from
plunging into campus activities
like everyone else. She went to
football games, other sporting
events, concerts, plays-and
even pledged a sorority, Zeta
Phi Beta.
Like many of the older
Black women who are going to
college now, Mrs. Thompson is
fulfilling an ambition which
seemed only a dream.
“I hoped to go to college
when I was young, wanted to
Karate
Championship
Coming To
Gordon Area
Eighth degree black belt
master Ho Yung Chung will
direct the first annual Tae
Kwon Do-Karate
Championship at the Fort
Gordon Sports Arena on June
7.
The karate master, highest
ranking belt in the United
States, will also demonstrate
his skills during the day’s
events which kick-off with
registrations from 8 to 10 a.m.
First round eliminations
start at 10 a.m. with finals
beginning at 7 p.m.
Entry fees are $8 for either
form or fighting competition
and SI 2 for entrance in both
form and fighting karate.
Fights will be arranged in all
classes and weights between
competitors who will be
arriving from throughout the
southeast.
The public is invited to the
karate championships and can
stay all day for S 2 admission.
For children under 12,
admission is SI.
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go, then had to forget about
it,” she says. Now, “the dream
has come true” and the basic
direction of her life has been
radically changed. Never in her
wildest dreams did she imagine
that she would be standing in
the same class with her 21-year
old son, Wendell, when he
IFWtW 4
TAKING ON ALL COIWERS—Pint-sized Tim Coston,
son of S/Sgt. Jack D. Coston, has his hands full as he
takes on giant sumo wrestler Takamiyama during a recent
sumo exhibition at Camp Zama, Japan. Tim ended up
biting the dust numerous times but he kept coming back
for more as did other Americans during the three hour
exhibition. Some of Takamiyama’s sumo buddies waited
on the sidelines just in case Tim managed to get the
upper hand. (U.S. Army Photo)
Plain facts
about beef
• Shoppers have confidence in beef graded by the U.S. Gov’t.
• The higher the grade the more tender the beef.
• The highest grades are U.S.D.A. Choice and Prime.
• The overwhelming shoppers favorite is U.S.D.A. Choice.
• U.S.D.A. Choice beef is flavorful and Naturally Tender.
• Pantry Pride sells U.S.D.A. Choice beef... exclusively.
• Not all beef is graded by the government.
• Some stores sell beef that is not government graded.
• Some stores add artificial tenderizers to their beef.
• Beef graded U.S.D.A. Choice needs no tenderizers.
• There’s nothing gGgSi&QHB
artificial about
Pantry Pride beef.
We sell only U.S.D.A. .. VfngMl
Choice Naturally / -
Tender JT
beef.
• Discount
Prices,
Too!
a»O7 WASHINOTOW
r. ’A 0 road
,NTKRSTATK
AUGUSTA GIORGIA
graduated from college.
And now that the dream has
been realized, does this mean
the end of the line for
Christine Thompson?
“Oh, my, no!” she says.
“With my children growing up
now, I should have lots more
time to go on for my
master’s.”
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President Gerald Ford, was unable to keep a straight face during the recent Lee
Elder Scholarship Fund benefit golf tournament at the Lake of the Wood Country
Club in Locus Grove, Va. From left to right: Stanley Scott, special assistant to the
President; Lee Elder, director of the tournament; the President and comedian Flip
Wilson. Flip kept the President and his body guards laughing all during the
tournament Chuck Thorpe won the SI,OOO first prize. The President beat Flip, who
uses gold plated clubs, at the final hole and Flip agreed to perform at a fund raiser.
The Augusta News-Review - June 5, 1975 -
Page 7