OCR Text |
Show Page 4 Sugar House. Utah Thursday. November 21, 1957 INDEPENDENT I BUTTERSCOTCH CHOCOLATE PIE At! EXCITING HEW FLAVOR COMBIHATIOH t "T" Miww,.mMww .M.mmmnimr.wwmm piiiij.b h.,i, . mt h.himuij n i ijw nun ',' ; ' A ' - ' ' ' s ,, ; : f - ' ; - (' ..... ; . " A..gfc --ij -- v. rlMnl m y .i tfhiiniimnfaifiiMf rill tmmwi BUTTERSCOTCH PIE pie plate six tt eight servings 350 deg. preheated oven 15 to 20 minutes Baked pie shell J Three - fourths cup firmly pack- - ed light brown sugar ! One-thir- d cup flour One-hal- f tsp salt. One tall can (one and two-thir- d cups) evaporated milk One-hal- f cup water 3 egg yolks, beaten 3 tbs butter 1 tsp vanilla 3 egg whites 6 tbs sugar in saucepan. Mix well. Blend in evaporated milk and water. Cook over medium heat, stirring con-stantly until thick and smooth. Add a small amount of hot mix-ture to beaten egg yolks. Return to mixture in saucepan. Cook stir ring constantly for three minutes longer. Remove from heat, add butter and vanilla. Cool slightly. Pour into baked pie shell. To make meringue, beat egg whites until they begin to stiffen. Add sugar, a tablespoonful at a time and continue to beat until stiff peaks form. Spread over filling. Bake in a 350 deg. preheated oven for 15 minutes or until meringue is light-ly browned. Cool, and chill before serving. Pecan Butterscotch Pie: Add one-fourt- h cup chopped pecans to pie crust dough before rolling out. Bake as usual. Orange Butterscotch Pie: Sprinkle three tablespoons grated orange rind over filling and carefully spread meringue over orange rind. Chocolate Buttrscotch Pie: Grate two oz. semi - sweet chocolate. Sprinkle over filling. Spread mer-ingue carefully over chocolate. Exploring Mexico By Joseph II. Weston Just below the international bor-der, on the south side of Arizona, lies the Mexican state of Sonora, an area about the size of Mis-souri, where profound social and economic changes are taking place. An entire population is lifting itself from a Spanish - type media-velis- m and an Indian --style stone age, directly into a super-moder- n pattern of industrial life. Keystone of the change is a re-volution in basic agricultural prac-tices. But this is also being closely followed by a ng of busi-ness methods on a grand scale and by a far-reachi- ng social ad-vancement program. Agricultural engineers and mod-ern farmers from Arizona, Utah, California, and the former cotton-producin- g states of the Old South Louisiana, Arkansas, Missippi are taking a prominent part in Sonora's rapid agricultural expan-sion. (the state capital, so able to con- - tribute to the great number of professional men and women that are needed to lead Sonora's pop-ulation into the place it is seeking in the modern world. A beautiful Franciscan church more than two centuries old, at Mures, which was taken over by a radical labor union group at the height of the revolution, has re-verted to its original owners, and is once more the scene of fervid devotions, with hundreds of wom-en and children filing through its high-arche- d nave all day, each bending to kiss the forehead or feet of a life-siz-e statue of a saint, lying prone on a bier. However, i the labor group's big sign on the north exterior wall of the chapel can still be faintly distinguished through the one coat of light paint that has so far been applied over the sacrilegious lettering. Several American protest-an- t churches are making rapid growth in Sonora and other states in the northwestern part of Mexi-co. For the most part, converts to Protestantism are made from am- - Western businessmen have not been slow to awake to the almost fantastic opportunities in Sonora, although setting up in business there involves a complicated set of adjustments to Mexican law and business customs. Social advancements include an effective campaign to rid lowland areas of "paludismo," or mala-ria. Backed with United Nations funds and sparked by the Mexi-can federal government, which is aggressively developing all pos-sible means of progress, this anti-malar- ia campaign has two main branches. One is to perform the actual work of eliminating mosquit-o- breeding places, and the oth-er is to educate the people to take care of themselves by using screens and proper medications when attacked by this debilitating disease. Religion is on the march. For many years, about 95 per cent of the people of Mexico were members of the Roman Catholic Church, which exercised a stulti-fying monopoly on nearly all so-cial ideas, due to the fact that it (ong the lower, working classes, and from those who have been to the United States to serve as "branceros," or farm laborers, and who have returned to the homeland with North American ideas. The older, aristocratic fa-milies, which supply the lawyers, doctors and generals, for the most part, are strongly Catholic, and cling tenaciously to the oldest of social traditions. Outstanding among the protest-an- t churches that are growing in Sonora are the Southern Baptists, who have a well - organized net-work of missions and churches in Sinaloa, Sonora, and Baja Calif., with a district headquarters in Hermosillo under the direction of the Rev. H. G. Walworth, a bril-liant minister who has dedicated his entire life to missionary work among Latin-American- s. Missionaries of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Da- y Saints also are making excellent prog-ress, in Sonora, and have an ac-tive congregation at Cuidad Obre-go- n. had no competition to stimulate it into the progressive action that often characterizes the same church in many other areas. When the present social revolution be-gan in Mexico in 1910, the Catho-lic Church came under the con-demnation of the Mexican govern-ment. In recent years, this re-straint has gradually lessened. As a result, the Catholic Church has made a powerful comeback in Mexico, and nowhere is this more evident than in Sonora. For three hundred years of Spa-nish domination, and the Mexican culture that resulted from it, the entire state of Sonora had no in-stitution of higher learning what-ever. During the past . 15 years, the state itself has established and expanded a modern university. The Catholic Church has also est-ablished a university in Sonora, and its modern buildings are be-ing now finished at Hermosillo, Theater In the Round Sets Broadway Hit The Playbox Theatre - in - the Round at the University of Utah ihas succeeded in securing the rights to the recent Broadway suc-cess, "The Potting Shed," as its opening attraction of the 1957-5- S theatre season, announced Robert Hyde Wilson, director. This will represent the premier perform-ance of "The Potting Shed" in the intermountain area written by England's brilliant playwright Graham Greene, this absorbing and mystical drama has been de-scribed by Mr. Greene himself as "a psychological detective story." The secret of "The Potting Shed" has to do with a downright super - natural manifestation and the basic conflict in the play is a struggle between religious faith, and atheism. After the New York premier in January of this year, the drama critic, John Chapman, called it a "spiritual and intellectual detec-tive story." Certainly, the Play-bo- x theatre - goer will be wonder-ing what on earth is the secret of "The Potting Shed" (an Eng-lig-h garden - tool and seedling house)? Indeed, the first half of the play is effective just as sheer theatrical suspense. What is the mystery of the potting shed that has made James Callifer a lost and lonely man? Why does this atheistic family keep from him the reason for its horror? Why did the once - devout priest give up his faith and become a cynic and a drunk? These and many other questions about the twisted and uncertain lives of the people in the cast will absorb the interest of the viewer of this unusual three-a- ct play. "The Potting Shed" should be a distinguished event in the Univer-sity Theatre's theatrical season," !Mr. Wilson said. A strong cast of seasoned local players has been in rehearsal for the past three weeks, including: Dr. Frederick Baston, a medico of the old school . . . Ellis Johnson; James Callifer, a neutoric newspaper-man and central figure . . . Boyer Jarvis; Ann Callifer, niece of James . . . Vicki Brimhall; Sara Callifer, the divorced wife of James . . . Wanda Clayton Thom-as; Mrs. Callifer mother of James . . . Lila Eccles Brimhall; John Callifer the Brother of James . . . Joseph Konkel; Dr. Kreuz-e- r, the psychoanalyst . . . Ursel Allred; Father William Callifer, the pries and uncle of James . . . Harold Folland; Coroner . . . Rol-and Ruegg; Mrs. Potter . . . Eud-or- a Zarr; Miss Connolly . . . Em-ma Hemple Tickets for "The Potting Shed" are now on sale daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Kingsbury Hall busi-ness office (Saturdoys from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.), and Monday through Friday at . the Playbox Theatre , office, First South and University Streets, from 11 to 3 p.m. Tickets also can be purchased on the ev-ening of each performance after 7 p.m. at Playbox. Season tickets for the four Playbox productions are $6 and can be purchased thru the University Theatre office in Kingsbury Hall. Individual show tickets are $2. Phone reservations for Playbox productions may be made by dialing DA exten-sion 381. Hold the line for health. Buy Christmas Seals and stop TB at the line of scrimmage. Holladay P.T.A. Unit Remembers Teachers In commemoration of National Education Week, during which ;the 14th was set aside as Teach-ers' Appreciation Day, the Hol-laday Parent - Teacher's Associa-tion presented to the principal and faculty of the Holladay Elemen-tary School a large box of sweets, to show, in a small manner,- - their appreciation of the fine work the (Schools have been doing in educa-ting the "small fry" of this com-- munity. Once considered a hopeless disease, tuberculosis is curable discovered early. SAVE ON PRESCRIPTIONS Lowest prices FREE Delivery ... . S-&- -H Green Stamps SOUTHEAST PHARMACY Max L. Steele, owner 2660 South 20th East IN6-218- 1 SPECIAL WOW! Carel's Beauty Salon & School 1061 East 21st South Dial HU4-BI7- 3 f A HAIRCOLOR CUSTOM-BLENDE- D M (J JUST FOR YOU... Mi :5iS, Now, with' our new : KV ROM T' 1 COLOR 'W-'V- i I we create literal! hundrecfc I VirfuJ of the most thrilling haircolors Jd$ fff ever-a- nd one can be just j I JZ&. iSi for made-to-ord- er for Ph " l yUr faSte' persona,ity' complexion! ' Wake an appointment today for your "personalized" haircolor. '$ I IT'S CREME KINO TO YOUR HAIR ' ... , "V f , v W us Roux Crm Co,or according to " d:rec,Ion, 'r ' ' ' i j?-- ' J Kali--S teh-ik-s shoes for Boys RILEY'S SHOef 3186 Highland Drive ) KARTELL'S dance academy 309 EAST 21st SOUTH Corner of 3rd East) IN 82 Bowling Club Meets, Wed. The Evergreen Jr. High Bowling Club will meet every Wednesday at the Hyland Bowling Alley un-der the direction of Mr. Harold Atkins, and Mr. Larry Miller. At the first meeting of the year, officers were elected. They are: Pres., Lana Fredrickson; Vice Pres., Bob Merrill; Sec. - Treas., Donna Moench; Historian, Edna Tannenbaum. There are 40 members who be-long at present, and there are ten substitutes. The club was divided into ten teams of four members each. These teams are thinking of names for themselves and will go by these names for the year. The x-ra- y, now a major weapon in the fight against tuberculosis, was discovered by Wilhem Kon-ra- d Roentgen, a German physi-cist, in 1895. Streptomycin, the first drug us-ed successfully to treat tubercul-osis, was discovered by Selman Waksman in 1944. |