By Norma McKinney Here are some more Rice recipes I promised you: BAKED RICE 2 cups Rice 3-4 cups Boiling water 14 tsp. salt Roast rice in vegetable oil until color changes and it begins to pop. Put in casserole dish with salt and boiling water. Bake for about one hour at 350 deg. For variety you can add roasted sesame seeds andor Soy Sauce. Serve with several varieties of vegetables and fresh fruit for desert. SPANISH RICE 1 large onion 12 green pepper seeded, minced 14 cup oil (olive, peanut, sesame) 3 cups cooked rice 1 pound can tomatoes 1 cup water 1-12 tsp. salt 1 bay leaf Optional: left over peas, beans Cook onion and green pepper in oil until soft. Add rice and stir. Add tomatoes, water, salt, bay leaf and any left over peas, etc. Cover, bring to a boil, lower heat, cook 20 min. or until all liquid is absorbed. RICE MILAN STYLE 1 medium onion chopped 1 cup brown rice 14 cup oil (olive, peanut, etc.) 14 tsp. saffron 12 tsp. salt 12 cup fresh or canned mushrooms 2 cups vegetable broth (left over potato water, etc.) 12 cup nuts (your choice) Cook the onion and rice slowly in oil until onion is tender and rice glazed. Meanwhile heat the saffron, salt and mushrooms in the vegetable broth. Pour one cup at a time over rice bringing to a boil each time. Cover, lower heat, cook until all liquid is absorbed. Add nuts when rice is cooked, toss lightly and serve. RICE PORRIDGE 1 cup rice 5 cups water 1 onion (slivered) 1 tsp. sesame oil Pinch of salt. Cook onions until soft. Add onions and salt to rice and water. Bring to a boil, lower heat and simmer over night on an asbestos pad. Mix and serve. Garnish with roasted seeds, raisins or chopped nuts. FRIED RICE 2 cups cooked brown rice 4 scallions (chopped) 1 med. onion (chopped) 2 tsp. oil (sesame, peanut, etc.) Chopped noodles Sesame seeds Sunflower seeds Soy Sauce Saute onions, scallions, seeds and noodles adding one at a time. Add rice and mix well and break up all lumps. The rice should not be moist, as this makes the fried rice too soggy. Simmer 5-10 minutes. Add Soy Sauce to taste. To this basic recipe you can add any one of the following to make different dishes. Any kind of shell fish, green peppers, scrambled or slivered boiled egg, fried cornmeal chunks, any kind of cooked bean, fresh cooked corn, cabbage, carrots, almonds, currents, raisins or chopped dried fruit. RICE FLOUR COOKIES 1 cup rice flour 12 cup oil 4 tblsp. honey 12 tsp. vanilla 1 egg 12 cup ground nuts 12 cup chopped raisins or currents Mix all ingredients together. Chill over night or for 3-4 hours. Roll into balls. Place on oiled cookie sheet and press flat. Cook for about 12 minutes at 350 deg. StirmmbeirrMti Stutewuemt QUUN-October 16-29, 1970-9 Columbia revolt viewed By Sam Blazer (FREEP) Any commercial American film, no matter how serious, and especially if it is topical, is made by definition now as always for a majority, for people who have not yet heard the news. If they have heard it, then their functional equilibrium depends on denying what they have heard, on refusing to comprehend its vast implications for their own lives. Those who are adventurers towards change by whatever method are at the periphery of our culture, of any culture. They are the dissonance which our present structures are so desperate to absorb, preferably through business asusual, seldom with creative sensitivity. Those who are trying to invigorate a counter-culture are like every other phenomenon of our howling American extravagance the momentous subject of anyone who is not yet hypnotized by disconnection. The best people working in the mass media are the liaison men busy interpreting the smoke. The Strawberry Statement is a cunningly tender film about our continuing civil war. It presents a unique problem, generally unrecognized, to the media which filter popular culture. What I mean is that for one reason or another those who are in a position to tell us about it, as critics, judges or analysts, are also in no position to understand it or predict its influence. The film is intended for the confused who are too afraid to be able to fear the worst, for the apathetic who elude all but the useless categories. Such an audience has no true spokesman, no true arbiter. Ideally, those who see Strawberry will do so because it astounded someone they know, because it is romantic long enough (and not a frame longer for them to trust it, respond to it, and hopefully to accept the film's abrupt loss of innocence as their own. The Strawberry Statement is trying to reach out to the inert the dazed of the nation whom the radical movement has not yet been gifted or patient or systematic enough to nurture; the new niggers white, black, brown and yellow who have too many debts, too many insurance policies, too many manipulators. It is trying to enlighten all those who venerate, envy and support power because they are blind to its hypocrisy a hypocrisy that is so indirect and complex that it absolves them without outraging them. The film is trying to arouse those who submit to too many hierarchies, too many intangibles. Most fundamentally, The Strawberry Statement is an attempt to reclaim the young before their submission becomes a style, before their detachment takes hold, becomes habitual, ritualized, overwhelming like the blankness of their elders. An experiment was conducted recently, somewhere in America, in which Random Sampling, the son of Man-in-the-Street, was asked how he felt about certain unattributed ideas quoted verbatim from the THE PICK OF Punch ; I I i l 1 lV A-V ' I I I I Jfr millllllr XJ REGISTRAR T I 5 rfr1 mXrRMQES r1 r Jil Bi?rH5fr itri -r1 3Hil EMt CM . "Somehow it no longer seemed like sin we were living in." American Declaration of Independence. Random Sampling, for the most part, considered the assertions extremist, communistic, dangerous, inimical to the principles upon which our great country was founded. If we are to take responsibility for ourselves we must first be made to glimpse what we have conceded by being smugly decent in our limp residue of democracy and by our indulgence of the powerful those leaking mutations who are incapable of feeling just how terrified they are when confronted with the integrity of their children who have been restored to humanity. The Strawberry Statement is adapted from the journal kept by James Simon Kunen as a 19-year-old participant in the student coup d'academie at Columbia University in 1968. A year later, both university and New York City officials were still unprepared to be gracious, so Strawberry had to be shot in San Francisco. It is the first feature to be directed by Stuart Hagmann, age 30, who has made documentaries and films for TV. Some skeletal biography is relevant here. Hagmann is a native of Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin, the son of a doctor. While in graduate school at Northwestern University (Illinois) he made a short film called Goodnight Socrates about the destruction of Chicago's Greek town to make way for an extension campus of the University of Illinois. The film won the Screen Producers' Award. Hagmann came to Hollywood, where he found TV commercials more lucrative than the film and TV scripts "he was offered as a novice. His commercials won several international awards. Last year Hagmann succumbed and directed films for two TV series, Mission Impossible and Mannix. His wife Judy is from Sturgeon Bay, and they've got three daughters. Israel Horovitz, the author of the screenplay, his first, is, at 30, a prolific playwright, increasingly honored. Two of his works have won the Village Voice OBIE (Off-Broadway) award: The Indian Wants the Bronx (1968 while Kunen was occupying Morning-side Heights) and The Honest-to-God-Shnozzola (1969) Horovitz is from Wakefield, Massachusetts, attended Harvard, studied at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (London), and was the first American play-wright-in-residence at the Royal Shakespeare Company (1965). He is listed in the newest edition of Who's Who In America. Horovitz lives in New York City, with his wife, Doris and their three children, is playwright-in-residence at City College and professor of playwriting at New York University. He is a pacifist. 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