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Show r ' ' ' i f .-",: . , . , ' J ' , ' i - v , v , , t - - . - V . 5 ' L , ' .-M - f - , i v I ' . - ' i - 1 - - f Ix 4 -' -V i " I ' IT ; f- - t UTAH'S Beiiy Crocker Home-maker Home-maker of Tomorrow is 18-yearold Gertrude Horion of Rowland Hall high school. Salt Lake Ciiy. She will receive a $1,500 scholarship from General Mills for gaining ih highest score in the stale in a written homemaking examination. Holladay Miss Named In Betty Crocker Contest Utah's Betty Crocker Home-maker Home-maker of Tomorrow is 18-year-old Gertrude Horton of Rowland Hall High School. The blonde, blue-eyed daughter of a uranium company geologist received the highest score in a written examination on homemaking homemak-ing knowledge and attitudes administered ad-ministered to 3,437 senior girls in 67 schools throughout Utah, Miss Horton will receive a $1,500 scholarship from General Mills and becomes a candidate with 47 other state winners and the representative represent-ative from District of Columbia for the title of All-American Homemaker of Tomorrow. Each state winner and her school advisor will receive an expense-paid educational tour to Washington, D.C., colonial Williamsburg, Will-iamsburg, Va., and New York City April 27 May 3. Score in the original test and personal observation ob-servation on this tour will be the basis for selection of the All-American All-American Homemaker of Tomor- row, to be announced May 2 at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York. Her scholarship will be increased in-creased to $5,000. Karlynn Hinman of North Farmington, who attends Davis High School in Kaysville, rated second in Utah and will receive a $500 scholarship. Miss Horton, the state winner who lives at 4183 Clover Lane in Salt Lake City, was an American ambassador of goodwill to Norway in the American Field Service program last year. "It was inspiring to know I had opportunity to further our goal of peace in the world," said the young homemaker of tomorrow, who lived for three months with two families in Norway. The Utah Homemaker of Tomorrow, To-morrow, who is 5 feet 8 inches tallt is athletic and is the president of the Rowland Hall Athletic Association. Assoc-iation. "I love sports," she said. She plays forward on the school basketball team, and she favors skiing for outdoor recreation. Her favorite homemaking duty? "Cleaning a room," she declared. She intends to attend one of three colleges Smith, Wellesley or Stanford. Her brother Jack attends at-tends Princeton. While she may major in the sciences in college, her interests also extend to writing. writ-ing. She is on the staff of the school yearbook. Both Miss Horton and Miss Hinman Hin-man are finalists for the Merit Scholarship. The latter distinguished distin-guished herself as a lawyer in a mock trial at Utah Girls State. Her favorite homemaking duty, she explained, is "washing with wringer-type washing machines." The test in this third annual Betty Crocker Search for the Homemaker of Tomorrow was designed de-signed and judged by Science Research Re-search Associates of Chicago. The school of each state Betty Crocker Homemaker of Tomorrow will receive re-ceive a set of the Encyclopeadia Britannica. This year for the first time, girls who rank second, third and fourth in the national finals will receive $4,000, $3,000 and $2,000 scholarships, respectively. |