OCR Text |
Show f i . .. .. . i MARIANNE REES 1972 Homemaker Marianne Rees Is Betty Crocker Homemaker in PG Marianne Rees, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Rees, has been named Pleasant Grove High School's Betty Crocker Homemaker of Tomorrow for 1972. She was chosen on the basis of her score in a written knowledge and attitude examination exam-ination taken by senior girls on Dec. 7, and will receive a specially spec-ially designed award charm from General Mills, sponsor of the annual educational program. pro-gram. Additionally, she is now eligible for state and national honors. The State Homemaker of Tomorrow, To-morrow, to be selected from all school winners in the state in judging which will center on performance in the Dec. 7 test, will be awarded a $1,500 college scholarship. Her school will receive re-ceive a complete set of Encyclopaedia Ency-clopaedia Britannica and a scholarship of $500 will go to the second-ranking girl in the state. This April, the 51 Betty Crocker Croc-ker Homemakers of Tomorrow, representing every state and the District of Columbia, each accompanied by a faculty adviser, ad-viser, will be given an expense paid educational tour of Colonial Colon-ial Williamsburg, Va., and Washington, D.C. Personal observation ob-servation and interviews during the tour, added to the earlier judging results will culminate in the announcement of the 1972 Betty Crocker Ail-American Homemaker of Tomorrow, at the conclusion of the tour. Her scholarship will be increased to $5,000 with those of three runnersup raised to $4,000, $3,000 and $2,000. In addition to the awards for school, state and national Homemakers of Tomorrow, a special $1,000 Nutrition Scholarship Schol-arship has been added to the Betty Crocker Search program this year. To earn this award, a girl must be planning a college, coll-ege, major in nutrition or a related re-lated field, rank among the highest in her state in the overall over-all Search examination. During the 18 years since the program's inception, enrollment enroll-ment has totaled over eight and one-quarter million, and with this year's grants, scholarships awarded will reach almost $2 million. |