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a 1 SPRING SUPPER SALAD A vegetable salad-made crisp with refreshing western iceberg lettuce wedges and hearty with hard-cooked eggs, green beans, ripe olives and canned whole beets-is topped with a protein- rich and flavorful Cheddar dressing for a healthful, light spring supper. \'Spring Supper Salad with Cheddar Dressing\ is a salad you can prepare quickly when guests drop in and \don't want you to go to any trouble,\ when dinnertime 'on' Friday or Saturday night catches you and your family members each busily heading his own way, and probably eating later on, too, or when you're just in the mood for a light and refreshing but satisfying meal. Serve this main dish salad with split, buttered and toasted French rolls and a simple dessert-canned cling peach slices over vanilla ice cream, perhaps -for a light and easy meal everyone will savor. %%% 26. lemon MEDINA JOURNAL-REGISTER f FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1972 | To prepare the slim lettuce wedges that give this salad its distinctive appearance, cut each of two heads of western iceberg lettuce lengthwise into halves with a sharp, stainless steel knife. Place the halves cut-sides down and cut each into halves or thirds for 4 to 6 wedges per head. SPRING SUPPER SALAD WITH CHEDDAR DRESSING 2 heads western iceberg lettuce 6 hard-cooked eggs, halved 1 can (1 lb.) whole green beans, drained | 12 pitted whole. ripe olives juice | Caraway seed;l (optional) 1 can (8 oz.) whole beets, drained Cheddar dressing | Core, rinse and drain lettuce; chill in disposable plastic bag. Cut heads lengthwise into narrow wedges; stand upright in salad bowl. Add eggs, bundles of beans and olives to bowl; sprinkle with ............................................... a**\ o_o en ele \a \29 » '''''''''''''''''''''' ale _alefe lef ece ocele _POLLY'S POINTERS Stretch Blue Jeans By Using Pants Creasers By POLLY CRAMER DEAR POLLY-I want to tell Nancy Iknow. to stretch denim blue jeans 6 that the only way would be to use thgse. adjustable pants creasers that are inserted in each leg Extend them to stretch the sible: When a woven fabric has jeans as much as pos- shrunk I do not believe there is a way to PERMANENTLY stretch it so the above would have to be repeated each time they are washed. Nancy might insert in each side seam a strip of colorful braid such as is popular now. Rip each seam open and apply the braid with top stitching. -GLADYS =s: Polly's Problem : # i DEAR POLLY-Our soapstone fireplace hearth 5 has holes made by stepping on it with slender heels. x I hope someone can tell me how to cover them.- W -P. S. L. DEAR POLLY-My Pet Peeve is with plastic pails or buckets with thin, rolled plastic edges that look deceiv- ingly sturdy. In this top edge are two holes for the metal bails to fit in and they should be expected to hold a pailful of water but they wear out in no time and the pail is a total loss. Usually the plastic tears down the side diagonally so the bucket is not useful for anything. -DONNA DEAR - POLLY -When you lose the eye to a hook and eye and have no time to sew it back on, use a - safety 'pin as a substitute. Pin it from the wrong side of the material with only enough showing on the out- side to form an eye. You can also use a safety pin from the wrong side to hold on buttons with shanks.- MRS. J. B. DEAR POLLY-To keep men's pants from wearing out at the cuff sew a small button inside the cuff so it will strike the shoe instead of having the pants cuff rub against it.-DOROTHY (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.) You will receive a dollar if Polly homemaking idea, Pat Peeve, ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo tele: \stole Soto \Lope tn nea \0 \0 \a \0 *s *a\ %o te a \a e %% «2222220250060 629258, .'.‘.'o’~’.'-'.’.'.'.'.°.',“..l.-..:0_o.|:o:Q:o:0:0:I:o‘.'.:n:¢:.:.:d:.:.:.:.:.:.:‘ *e COLORFUL - Twin-printed cottons are combined in this p.m. dress that's splashed with red, orange, and pink flowers. Dotted swiss shapes <the high-waisted bodice above a flowing skirt of cot- ton ~ ~ =~ Aflelier 0. uses your favorite : r :ve, Polly's Problem or solution to a problem. Write Polly in care of this newspaper. Gourmet cook ware u 'NEW YORK (UPI) - Gour- met cookware, once used only - by French chefs, now can be found in many homes. Sales of gourmet cooking utensils are up as much as 25 per cent in some stores this year, despite lagging sales in other depart- ments, according to a survey by Northwestern National Life Insurance Company. Poetic patchwork NEW YORK (UPI) - Patch- work has been described as a needlewoman's poetry. Color and design are important parts of this poetry. They give rhythm and beauty to the patchwork article. Patchwork and patchwork quilting are arts that are bein revived. They give an individu self-expression through color, design and texture. *% % % The sun's ultra-violet rays reach their peak intensity ) tveen 1} a.m. and 2 p.m. © Halve beets and chill in separate container. To serve, add beets to Cheddar salad bowl; Dressing. pass CHEDDAR DRESSING 3, cup dairy sour cream 1 tablespoon 1 teaspoon sugar > teaspoon salt & teaspoon onion - Us teaspoon white 1 cup mellow Cheddar cheese, cubed (about 5 {ounces) 2 tablespoons sliced gren onions Combine sour cream, catsup, sugar, salt, onion powder, and pepper in electric blender con- tainer. Add about % of the cheese and stir until smooth, [Continue whirring, adding | cheese gradually. Mix in green onion. Chill. Yield: 6 servi cups dressing) powder pepper By United Press Inte{national Read the tag NEW YORK (UPI) |- When buying a lined shrink-resistant garment, determine from the hang-tag whether inner-linings and thread also are shrink- resistant. Why you grow old NEW YORK (UPI) |- What influences aging? \Only genetic factors and assaults (by the environfnent,\\ says Ka Halberg, recreation consultant for Indiana State Board of Health. \Aging starts the day you're born and retirement The human body regches its maxiumum degree of éfficien- cy during the early 20s. After this, there is a gradual| loss of speed, strength, enduralce and coordination. Painting shades | NEW YORK (UPI) 4 It isn't difficult to paint {window shades free-hand, to stencil or to spray paint on simple graph- ics with oil, acrylic dr vinyl: paints. Whatever the method, one should always work on a sur- face large enough to Zupport shade until paint is dry. Reassure 'em ROCHESTER (UPI)] - Par- ents of college freshmen can help the students by | letting them know they can stumble - change career plans or get a bad grade - without! losing face, advises Arthur S| Gold- berg, associate dean (bf the ' University of Rochester's Col- lege of Arts and Sciences. _ \Fears of parental an, disappointment are ve according to Goldberg. ents perceive the college exper- ience as a test of their human beings, and fe any stunibling or sign of |indeci- sion suggests they Lo >> worth very much. real,\ 'Law-abiding majority NEW YORK (UPI - than 90 per cent of dri conscientious, law-abiding citi- zens, reports the Consumers Insurance Information I Freezer tips |_ NEW ~§ORK (UPI) |- The main objective in packaging foods for the freezer is th keep them from drying out, fo pre- serve flavor, color and nutritive values. Use only packagi tainers and materials lab appropriate for freezer **Mazamorra\ is a pc dish with Argentiniank. consists of boiled corn, milk and sugar, Argentine Airlines. catsup Money ain't everything, says singer By GUY A. GOODINE TULSA, Okla. (UPI) - If Jeannie Coffman got paid mileage in her job, she'd be rich or, at least, heading in that direction. Miss Coffman is a country music entertainer. She described herself as one of thousands of nightclub and civic center personalities reaching for stardom but finding it a lot harder to reach \than it was for us to get to the moon.\ In the last two years, she has appeared in more than a dozen states and logged a bone-wearying 70,000 miles. At the going rate of 10 cents per mile, that would put her in an enviable earning bracket. \But then, when you consider the expense, I probably don't even rank among average,\ she said. \I have to stay in motels - on nights I do get to sleep - and all my meals and tran- sportation are an outlay, besides the expense of keeping up my costumes and street clothing.\ Miss Coffman, who is managed by a Tulsa talent agency Promotion-News Service - indicated of her average gross weekly income, she netted less than $500 afte expenses. , 'Please the public' \\So you see, there has to be some truth to statements that we in the music business love making someone else happy,\ she said. \You certainly couldn't say I do this just for the money. Of course, there are worse ways of making a living and the money isn't all that bad. . \I guess what I'm trying to say is that you must have a sincere desire to entertain and please the public or you soon decide the grinding routine just isn't worth it. ''Now remember, I'm talking about the average entertainer - like me - who has not through luck, design or whatever, been promoted to stardom, if that's the word you like.\ Avoiding specifics - \not because I'm hiding something, it's just I'd rather not discuss exact percentages and things like that'\ - she estimated she made about $2.60 per hour after expenses. __ \'That's figuring a four- hour show and four hours of rehearsal every day, six days a week,\ she said. \Then if I counted the hours I spend on the road - well, I'd rather not. That would be discouraging.\ For one of her numbers, Miss Coffman has reworked a current country song making the rounds of popularity charts, depicting the life of those thousands of less-than- starbound entertainers. *\*Sometimes in her mind, a dream unwinds, \Where she's called to fame; - \The brighter lights shine in her eyes, \While she sings from the Opry stage...\ \I may never make it to the (Grand Ole) Opry (in Nash- ville, Tenn.), but lots of people are going to know I've tried my best,\ she said. \In your world, you might call that something akin to a fringe benefit.\ » Artistic shades NEW YORK (UPI) - Paint- ed window shades have had a long and interesting history. From the late 18th century on, when shades first were develop- ed, artists painted on them, and some shades are real treas- ures, the Window Shade Manu- facturers Association says. As a young man, Renoir made his living painting shades. No goal _ NEW YORK (UPI) - Dr. Blaine R. Porter of Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah, told the annual meeting of the American - Home Economics Association that the women's lib goal of complete indepen- dence is bad for the family. The best family is interdepen- dent, the authority said. Foot lore NEW YORK (UPI) - At birth the foot is almost devoid of bone and is made up prin- cipally of cartilage, according to anatomy experts. The aver- age arch does not become fully developed until a person is about 18 years of age. In each fully developed foot there are 26 bones. . CINDERELLA SCENE STEALERS Multi-colored \satin\ stripes shape this coat and dress ensemble from Cinderella's Sp- ring Collection. 50% polyester-5-% cotton. It is treated with Cinderella's exclusive THE PRESS\ finish-ewhich means no ironing, pop in the washer, spin dry, and it's ready for anything. B o o k s By United Press International One Hand Clapping, by Anthony Burgess (Knopf, $5.95) Another Burgess tour de force. .In this comic novel, ublished here 11 years after it flappened in England, Burgess pits the decay of Old England against the vigor of the Life Force. Needless to say the Life Force wins an equivocal victory. The joy of the book is its obtuse narrator-23-year-old © Janet Shirley, a pretty, lower middle class English housewife who enjoys her job filling the shelves of a supermarket and her evenings eating spaghetti on toast and watching television in her council house. Janet is vaguely sorry that her teachers at the Hawthorne Road Secondary Modern School had taught her nothing, kindly explaining that reading Shakespeare or learning history would only bore their pupils. But she is otherwise content. Her husband, Howard, accumulated a vast store of information because he had a photographic memory but considers this information a travesty of knowledge. It is on Howard's memory and his disgust with it that the story turns. . Howard wins 1,000 pounds on a television - quiz show, parlays this into 79,000 pounds at the race track and sets out with Janet to sample everything that money can buy before her 24th birthday. The denouement is predictable far tout:f fsoon but otherwise great stuff. . for the freezer takes onl Thanks for the Rubies, Now Please Pass the Moon, by Jill Schary (Dial, $7.95) Jill Schary's first novel is 'subtitled \A Memoir of the First Lady of the World\ -a beautiful, wealthy heiress whose first husband, the President of the United States was assassinated and whose second was a billionaire ship ing magnate. Sound famifiar. The characters may seem familiar but the plot is literally out of this world-the second husband buys the moon for his wife, who rules there as Queen. . ._ Miss Schary is a very gifted yo writer with a splendid fla‘l‘rngor satire-and satire fills her novel, witchy, funny and at times devastating. She tackles - wealth, beauty, government, war-nothing escapes . her scathing pen-but if the satire is biting, it is also great fun for the reader. Her characters are splendid-from the heroine, Leonora Lafayette Glendower Osiris who-stocks the White House bomb shelter with \fine - wines, a piano and several at- home costumes,\ to the last U.S. president, the 29-year-old son of a former president who had planned to campaign by “reatllng his father's speeches but then it was discovered he could not read.\ Miss Schary's novel is unique, antic-and thoroughly delightful. 7 _- Patricia E. Davis (UPI) Good packaging of foods a few seconds longer than a slipshod job, so why take a chance on spoiling good food. Collegian grandma gives students 'A' MANHATTAN, Kan. (UPI) - At the age of 60, Pauline Snodgrass has crossed: over to the other side of the generation gap. Six children, seven grandchildren, and 35 years after she first enrolled as a freshman, Mrs. Snodgrass is about to achieve a college degree in an educational system which she found little changed in more than three decades. \It's strange that. .so few changes have been made. We still have the same, silly grading system and finals,\ she said. \I can't say enough for (young) students,\ she said, \and it's very hard for me to accept my friends who can't accept kids because of their long hair.\ Mrs. Snodgrass, who will graduate May 12, entered Kansas State Teachers College at Emporia 35 years ago as a music major. Two years ago, she was operating a nursery school in glay Center, when her husband, director of in- strumental music in - local schools, died unexpectedly. \I couldn't just sit around and feel sorry for myself all day,\ Mrs. Snodgrass said, \so I decided to do something with my life.\ She found the (answer, Kansas State University, 40 miles away, within driving distance. Enrolling in the family and child development rogram of the College of ome - Economics, Mrs. Snodgrass decided to con- centrate on early ' childhood education. Rough at first I She found the going rough, but not too rough. \I strongly advise people to go back to school,\ she said. \It's really not that hard.\ \I even got an F on my first economics test, but I figured I was paying tuition and they (the faculty) were going to teach it to me.\ Required courses, the target of younger students who complain about \relevancy gave Mrs. Snodgrass some bad times but \have added a great deal to my understanding of the world around me,\ she said. * ''The highlight of my college career was biology. Why, I even had everybody in Clay Center working to get me through that course, especially one of the town doctors.\ __ Although Mrs. Snodgrass knows of \no better solution,\ she has felt the pressures of school, including the grading system. \I never felt that I'd be telrlllFted to cheat, but I cer- tainly have felt the urge. I never did, though.\ She faces an early decision on whether to return to her nursery school in Clay Center or search for a job elsewhere but said she . worrying about a job yet.\ \I've got to worry about my grades first. But I'll never be out of touch with the academic world again.\ \STOP As a parent, just how much can you do -- right at home -- to help your child reach his scholastic potentials? tos The answer to that ques- tion - according to a govern- ment-financed study on education - is a whole lot! | Comparing various teach- ing methods, researchers learned that students did their best in flexible \learning climates,\ where they were encouraged to seek knowl- edge - not simply absorb it. Here, then, are some effec-. tive ways to create a \learn- ing climate\ in your own home - to better help your child in school : 1. Use games to help him learn. Word games are not only, fun for the 'entire family, they also help a. young,. student improve his vocabulary and spelling. Scientific kits, games and toys also make great gifts - to foster ereativity and learn- ing initiative. + . 2. Give a thought to tak- ing anadult education course or two. Millions of adults are going backito school, learning everything from French cook- ing to symbolic logic. Stu- dents' grades often improve dramatically when they see that. their parents regard for- mal education as a worth- while activity - and not a . chore. 3. Encourage. him to use \ his school, knowledge. Allow your child to double-check grocery tapes and keep gas, mileage and expense records when you travel. Truly help- ful activities like these bring 'real world\ reélevence to what he learns in schodl - and makes his curriculum a lot more meaningful. ‘ 4. Provide him with the basic equipment for scholas- tic success. School-age chil- dren should have a good dictionary, encyclopedia and typewriter to work with.;T.he encyclopedia is not only valu- able as a reference aid for the classroom, but it is also a sup- plement to life-long interests. A- trouble-free 44-key port- able typewriter like the Hermes 3000 will also stand your child in good stead before - and long after - graduation. Since the Hermes 3000 has many features of the larger office machines, he won't have to learn new touch (or even \hunt & peck\) typing systems in the future. More practically, the 3000 is built to last. It is made of space age material that can't scratch or dent. -_5. Show him you value books and learning. Praise your child when he achieves - and encourage him when he fails at something new. dust a little support can go &a long, long way. Creating a \\learning climate\ in your own home - is the best way to help Junior . . . make his mark. . Diving - for - Sunken - Treasure,. by Jacques-Yves and Philippe Cousteau (Doubleday, $8.95) Jacques | Cousteau An underwater explorer, a scientific observer, an en- vironmentalist with a unique portfolio, even a television personality, he has been publishing 'a series of books alaqut life under the sea, and - his latest is as captivating as the others. _. . - In a sense, they geé-hardly books at all. They are more diaries by Cousteau and his crew, detailing their en- counters in the watery world they know so well. © The reportage, along with the beautiful color photographs, evoke the wonder and drama of diving beneath the sea as nothing but the real thing can. This book traces the discovery of the treasure ship Nuestra Dona de La Con- cefiicion but, more than that, it tells of another world and man's - determination conquer it. to Schools take to air NEW YORK (UPI) - Nearly 1,100 U.S. high schools now offer courses in aviation as a formal part of their credit curriculum, according to a report from Cessna Aircraft Co. The courses are particular- ly popular in California, Penn- sylvania, Kansas, Ilinois, Minn- esota, Ohio, Nebraska, New is a remarkable man of our times. BEST SELLERS a (Compiled by Publishers' Weekly) Fiction THE WINDS OF WAR - Joan Hanauer (UPI) -E L E Herman Wouk WHEELS - Arthur - Haile THE - DAY - OF THE JACKAL - Frederick Forsyth Updike , THE EXORCIST - William P. Blatty MESS A G E FROM MALAGA - Helen MacInnes. OUR GANG - Phili THE BETSY - Robbins BEAR _ ISLAND - AMistair MacLean . NEMESIS - Agatha Christie - Nonfiction A N O R A N D FRANKLIN - Joseph P. Lash o TRACY AND HEP.- BURN - Garson - Kanin Roth arold BURY MY HEART AND WOUNDED - KNEE - ___ Dee Brown . JENNIE: VOL. 2 - Ralph G. Martin | HONOR THY FATHER - Gay Talese THE _ LAST WHOLE EARTH CATALOG - _ * Edited by Steward Brand THE DEFENSE NEVER RESTS -F. Lee Bailey with Harvey Aronson WUNNERFUL* Welk BEYOND FREEDOM AND DIGNITY - B.F. Skinner BRIAN - PICCOLO - Jean York and Washington state, in | that order. 5, t wom * © e © 10 % +o moan o WUN- NERFUL! - Lawrence - SUNSHINE LOOK-The cool and comfortable feel of cotton is a natural for spring and summer. Catalina opts print in fresh orange and white for for a dot-shot cotton this smart shirt and shorts ensemble. % & RABBIT REDUX - John