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Show HOMEMAKER OF TOMORROW TO BE CHOSEN Utah's Homemaker of Tomorrow Tomor-row will be selected from 1366 girls in 38 of the state's high schools. That is the official number of participants who were enrolled in the national search for the Ail-American Ail-American Homemaker of Tomorrow Tomor-row when entries closed this month. A total of 189,530 women in 8090 schools across the land will take part in the program which is open to senior girls in graduating graduat-ing classes of public, private and parochial high schools. A Homemaker of Tomorrow will be named for each participating school, each state and the nation. A 50-minute written examination which will test the individual aptitude ap-titude for homemaking will be the basis for naming the winners of the $75,000 in scholarships, travel trav-el oppportunities and other educational educa-tional prizes offered by General Mills, sponsor of this search designed de-signed to glorify homemaking as a career. 1 The examination prepared by Science Research Associates of Chicago will be given simultaneously simultane-ously in all schools Jan 12. A chart which evaluates factors in home and family living has been sent to the schools for use in classroom class-room discussions. A guide book which analyzes various phases of homemaking will also be distributed. distrib-uted. The girl receiving the highest test score in each school will be entered in state competition where the winner will receive a $1500 scholarship and a trip with her school advisor to Washington, D. C, colonial Williamsburg, Va., and Philadelphia. Her school will receive re-ceive a set of the Encyclopedia Britannica. The state winner who is named |