Me STAM IETS OCMC UT NL UE TOBA | i ~~ SU MA A ACN RN NIAC END MR) ae ty OBA a NOK A mi rN MU LEN Le: ] TO ae Me) WA AALS, ii | rr AWM et oh UN bt Ne era ) BTCA MON UNM hit TN MM SP UAURCCN MAUNA HUNG ote , : S14 PUN eK CH ATH t SUMAN ACHAT MOAI GLC feta MR fed Ks Ny OVER AMAT ih i } Pi Vey 4) POON NOWRA el det . Ny \ } Y i ‘ Ve Oat | ! BAN i Nae i Lh ANN ate i AN ) , ANAT AS PARI NS Weta, i yh i 4 y iN R AUR at An ; hy sNare t Dee NON NE Me Pah ait WAS AH PEM Ua NA iciatiait ne Mia ; ryan! INARA U RTE SLid heft ted 4 HAS haan ihe AAPOR LRM CURA A Hk OMT NICKS St Sth ; , { NUK NM) 4 OMA wtih) Natt \ " , RAYON CA , RANMA PaniaatiaieaiicNie nee Alt MUN ‘ VVvEN fl A ON, Phill i ) UREA Lid LN i uy \ ‘ Hera ity , hier HH MANNY Na RASA Sat f DO Wt ALN YUU MR RSA MAPA CIN tututntctat cio ik ) at. AAA As Nata’ \ : ‘ ma) 0 bas eRe Mu Wie A ' Ay) \h * te J i j , My ye ma" ~~ w aN, ie) : ua } \ 4 PAG | 7 aia te en Vee Nt) J 1 Aa 1 1 ‘ wi Skt I) Pea aNy Te , we UNTO TITY aH MARANATUSN IH AMR ea OLR MA aN MARIANA i Me Ura ANN WN ye ‘ WA A, f ey i ory hy Wik, MCA hh aaa nat Aaa § y y S , Ae LA DAWA EAD De NG PUM NS CORR \ Mate Thy } Win, f Oh | Yt 4 NR) ANN ONS iN Tae) ATE aA st Phau t mh ‘ a ee yd hh a y ARAN 4 , A if to th Nc tevin COMA Bit, j Ata Ala Te ‘ i 7 WAHT WSiieda ee) a IN Hf RN AME : ; yet f ei R eS FAG h My v. y a 1 Ny i Vala we bel “Eibb rh eh. aN Pe TNT CP CR UA RAAT, Wh TA ay / OY Moa he : ave Muh mt dane AY SAW ASN) j ‘ NAA A » eh " Ai tars aah aN CA, pe tivik } HH Mat sina fat AAS ANG) ati Mea alae ie Md t } ) UR AMTe Tse ere reer t ! ; A ld WM hs i a } H ) My . Fi “he rir \ , "i aie Nines
i ) Nth “be Nh as
re " RANE A TN
sect tey
yy Aad Oa ’ te NAA: i ay mit AOI aM ae a Ria a
Oe ‘
SRK Ni i
HEROIN ADA
Pe aL AL i WR i
RAY ; 4), Sethe
yn GA
Wy
ae RAK iS UNE
ts nh Sian
PUN AD LW
ane Ki Al ei i 4
it
nie ‘ Nee fd i" CNA AGM
ahs | : Ce we y ryi4) Wi MR LUN AY
Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2014
https://archive.org/details/ladieshomejournaY3julwyet
For Reference
Not to be taken from this room 324443
Every person who maliciously cuts, defaces, breaks or injures any book, map, chart, picture, engraving, statue, coin, model, apparatus, or other work of lit- erature, art, mechanics or ob- ject of curiosity, deposited in any public library, gallery, museum or collection is guilty of a misdemeanor.
Penal Code of California, 1915, Section 623.
“LADIES
JULY 1976 sicentennical Celebration issue! “HOME 4
ri ir
AGATHA CHRISTIE'S LAST
(AND BEST) MYSTERY NOVEL New: Miss Marple in “Sleeping Murder”
ZA MINNELLI B! hat happens when father an ee: 1ughter make a movie together 4 |”! 4E CANDIDATES’ WIVES Livi’ raight talk about ERA
id other women's issues HIN WAYNE
new look ata
rprisingly gentle hero MERICAN SUMMER FOODS ‘fei strawberries,
table picnic salads esti .. RUBIN A 'ways to tell if you
ed a psychiatrist PP Tred COND SKIN” ~e ty ‘ek bathing suits * Jcandaretowear MEMBER THE LADIES?” cinating excerpt from important
2ntennial book
innelli —
Jn men, gry hair is distinguished. On me, it’s just plain old. Is a peroxide haircolor my only choice?
Sure, it’s unfair. | have only a few grays. If lwerea man, I'd be growing them gracefully. Instead, I’m plucking them furiously.
| can remind myself that what counts is what's in my head, not on it. And I can rant and rave as loud as the next woman.
But when the fuss is finished, there d still be those nasty grays in my hair. I, for one, don’t want to live with them.
I've thought about hair- coloring, but I’m wary of peroxide. I’ve heard it takes some of the natural color out of your hair.
It's a gray a day now. I have a woman-to-woman talk with my best and beautiful brunette friend. It seems a peroxide haircolor is not my only choice. can use Loving Care® Color-Lotion from Clairol, like she does. (News to me.)
my hair now.
It has no peroxide, just covers your grays without changing your natural hair- color. And it comes in 15 shades, one like mine.
I certainly know how to pick best friends. Loving Care did cover my grays, but didn't change that natural color I'd orown so attached to all these years.
And who'd have expected it to make my hair silkier, softer and easier to manage than before? I really like
» vere 19746
In an important medical study on pain, tedrin worked better than regular aspirin.
Here's why that could be important when u have a headache.
Headache pain is difficult to rneasure. So doctors used research volunteers to compare the effective- ness of regular aspirin tablets and Excedrin on pain that was more readily measured.
The results: Excedrin worked significantly better than regular aspirin. That's important, because it means Excedrin could provide more
effective relief for you. ee
The next time you have a head- ache, get Excedrin, the extra-strength pain reliever. And see if it doesn't work better for you.
The extra-strength pain reliever.
Gc Quee The G interpr Notice pedimer chanting « chairs. Ev
and ve neers, hand- rub
ton Hal
\ae
nN OF
he look of a
hah OA £
cS
fille recalls the age of English elegance inspired by the great cabinetmakers of the 18th cent
white—the three great styles from Choose your heirloom look from: dining room, bedroom, and oc ined in a distinctive and elegant pieces. For the names of Thomasville Carlton Hall dealers near y k’’. The Carlton Hall Collection. toll-free: 800-243-6000 (in Conn., 1-800-882-6500).
licate pierced ==
What an en- C ’ . Write for Thomasville ‘‘Homemaker's Guide''—230 egs of the OQ packed pages, and color illustrations, on how to bi rry solids decorate with fine furniture. Send $3 to Thomasville th rl- - lle, N.C. 27360. a FURNITURE ture, Dept. LH-176, Thomasville,
FR A, rmstrong creators oF Fr THE INDOOR WORLD ®
| |
Thomasville answers:
How do I buy, decorate with,
and care for fine furniture?
The “Homemaker’s Guide to Decorating h Fine Furniture” has the answer. This is packed with 230 colorful, idea-filled es on buying and decorating with fine niture. It provides you with helpful and Mtical advice and dozens of photographs | that are sure to inspire hundreds of creative ideas. Ideas that will set your home apart and make it look like it couldn’t belong to ge else.
here are sections on how to create a mood with color . how to make space-planning work. . . to choose the styles that are just right you... and many, many more exciting informative ways to express yourself. “Homemaker’s Guide” is an adventure ecorating with fine furniture.
ow to put a whole staff of Armstrong Designers to work for you!
The perfect companion to the “Home- er’s Guide” is the new “Indoor World” azine.” “Indoor World” s you 64 graphic pages eative decorating for home... truly useful mation and_ inside on how to beautify, , furnish, and redo oom under your roof. a partial list of its ents includes articles ow to give your kitchen character...
to spark up a spare room... cabinet-
ing pointers... caring for your floors...
1 ... the new natural way to
ate ... and successful room accessoriz-
‘Indoor World” is just loaded with fully
rated step-by-step how-to details on
ncing your home.
To order your copy of either or both the
memaker’s Guide” and/or the ‘Indoor
d Magazine,” simply fill out the coupon.
turning your home into a proud show-— Order your copies today.
Pee eee
mstrong 07 Capri Road ncaster, Pa. 17604
l Please send me __ copies of the )omemaker’s Guide.” | enclose $3 plus 35¢ Wstage and handling for each copy.
i) Please send me copies of the “In- )r World Magazine.” I enclose $1.25 plus > postage and handling for each copy.
i Please send me ____ copies of both the )jomemaker’s Guide” and the “Indoor prid Magazine” at $4.25 plus 35¢ postage Hi handling for each set of both publications.
» me
eet
- |
|
|
|
|
|
|
ae
]
LADIES’ HOME ®
+ | Daniel McNamee,
32-4443
VOL. XCIIl, NO. 7 JULY 1976 i
NEVER UNDERESTIMATE THE POWER OF A WOMANs
oe By ee x bat
ARTICLES & FEATURES
Editor's Diary ....... What's Happening
Gene Shalit 6
Can This Marriage Be Saved? eet aes el Dorothy Cameron Disney 10 SPENnGinenVOUr MONEY. 25. to... acsecst<.deeeeeee Sylvia Porter 18 America’s Unsung Heroines Shas Ralph Nader 22 Remember the Ladies... Linda Grant de Pauw & K. Conover Hunt 30 jheiNext Rinsti Eady se . =<. csec-aescs sic. cu cece Winzola McLendon 34 Mothering ..... en ances sptt, nacisaeaelis ieee tnaak Geraldine Carro 38 MOURRaMUySudealthiy «.-... 0c... sec ee David R. Zimmerman 52 Liza Minnelli’s Life with Father ...................... Kathleen D. Fury 54 Psychiatrist’s Notebook ...................... Theodore |. Rubin, M.D. 64 The Art of Celebration: Ringing in a Joyous Bicentennial ............ 67 Wayne, Westerns and Women ..................... Molly Haskell 76 RetAOUI Maley ne lets ieee) hen Naresh as 2 Gini Kopecky 124 HOWPAMERICAYEIVES ® ager se Ste a ae Pa 40 FICTION
SleepingsMunder) Parte yon. g eee Agatha Christie 78 FOOD & EQUIPMENT
In Love with Strawberries .................0..000..000000-. Sue B. Huffman 72 RichiGusaladSis, cee iets ee ier ne es me re ene: 74 RECIDCRINGEX mee ttar ty ose Pee nm eer ae 94 FASHION & HOME SEWING
Onsthe:Beach:/197 Gi geist i a ee at Trudy Owett 70 HEALTH & BEAUTY
The Real Beauties of America ...............0000.....- Maureen Lynch 40 Beauty Journal ..... Bo SaON ee ayer secamenc aur omr ae acas Meee ee eS | DECORATING & CRAFTS
The Little Mermaid Crewel Kit .................... Ann B. Bradley 61 AmenicaneGlassicseese cere ee 68
Nathan Mandelbaum
Cover photograph of Liza Minnelli by Sheldon Secunda. Page 34: photograph of President and Mrs. Ford—official White House photograph; the Reagans—Elyse Lewin/Transworld: the Carters—Ken Regan/Camera 5; the Udalls and the Wallaces—Doug Bruce/Camera 5; the Churches—Patricia G. Oriol; the Jacksons—Greg Gilbert.
VOL. XCIII, No. 7 © 1976 Downe Publishing, Inc., New York, N.Y. All rights reserved. ‘‘Never underestimate the Power of a Woman’’ is a trademark of Downe Publishing, Inc., registered at the Patent Office. Title ‘‘Ladies’ Home Journal’’ registered in U.S. Patent Office and foreign countries.
Published monthly. Second Class Postage paid at New York, N.Y. and at additional mailing offices. Authorized as Second Class matter at the Post Office Department, Ottawa, Canada, and for payment of postage in cash. All mail
concerning subscriptions should be addressed to: LHJ, One year: U.S. and Possessions, $5.94; all other countries, countries, $15. Downe Communications also publishes Family Home Journal, 641 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. 10022.
Box 1697, Des Moines, Iowa 50306. Subscription prices: 3.94. Two years, U.S. and Possessions, $9, all other Weekly. Editorial and advertising offices: Ladies’
Robert Eldridge, Agency/Client Relations Paul Bode, Los Angeles
De Wayne Hunter, San Francisco
William K. Hughes, Detroit
Patricia Tregellas, Promotion Director Carol Taber, Prime Showcase
Circulation Director
William McDermitt, General Sales Manager
Arthur Cohen, Advertising Manager
Sales Managers:
Robert D. Thomas, Western/Chicago
Ron Valcrio, Eastern
Change of address: Send fuil details with latest mailing label to Ladies’ Home Journal, P.O. Box 1697, Des Moines, lowa 50306. See coupon elsewhere in this issue. Please allow 8 weeks for change. Postmaster: Send form 3579 to same address. All other sub- scription correspondence to P.O. Box 4565, Des Moines, lowa 50306.
Manuscripts must be accompanied by addressed envelopes and return postage. Publisher assumes no responsibility for return
of unsolicited materials,
a
4
By Lenore Hershey A very personal view of the controversiai Equal Rights Amendment
24 QUIET WORDS This month, along with 35 other women’s magazines, the Journal has volunteered to devote space to the subject of the Equal Rights Amendment. Before you react with either enthusiasm or hostility, we dare you to say aloud the 24 quiet words which have set off such thunderbolts of controversy. Are you groping? Here they are: “Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex.” They are vague, dry words, shaped in the manner of most legal principles. And yet, they have become a raging issue, argued more often with emotion than fact, and sometimes obscured by the fanaticism on both sides of the issue. Already, this magazine has been deluged with a write-in campaign urging us to present the negative side along with w hat ever yone would expect from me: a persuasive polemic urging my own views on our 15-million Journal readers. The pro and con debate is fairly well handled by the presidential candidates’ wives on page 34. I decided against making a laundry list of my own. (1 remember once listing the reasons to marry a man who had asked me. Then I met my husband, and decided lists were unnecessary. ) THAT’S HOW I FEEL ABOUT ERA I'm for it on a chiefly instinctual reaction. I grew up as a young woman who wanted to be loved, cherished and protected, who leaned on men and knew that the best way to keep them happy was to feed their sense of superiority. Lots of women still feel the same way, and perhaps even I still act out the role occasionally. But times have moved on. I’ve grown up, and so have women. I have had my eyes opened to the realities of discrimination and to the inevitable truth that, in the end, women must fall back on their own resources and their own sense of being equal both to men and to life. ERA is a legal document and, like the Bill of Rights, it is open-ended. Certainly, it is filled with some possible shake-ups, although the spectre of com: il bathroms or girls fighting in the trenches to me seem like false alarms. On the other hand, I also do not identify with the most strident feminists who translate those 24 quiet words into their own version of revised standards and conduct. (They don’t need ERA to have that freedom, by the way; they have it now. )
a
“OFFICE GIRLS,’’ BY RAPHAEL SOYER, 1936
Painting courtesy of i Whitney Museum of American Art
A PRINCIPLE, STATED To me, the Equal Rights Amendment is simply putting into the Constitution a large group our Founding
Fathers forgot to mention: the women. The Fourteenth Amendment did it for our black population. When ratified by four more states, the ERA will include women of all races, colors and creeds. Many presumptions have been forwarded on how legislators will react to this new guideline, and I must admit I cannot completely foretell where it will all lead us 75 years from now. (I hope not away from home and family and all the solid values that give our country strength. )
I do know that 75 years back, another
editor of the Journal, Edward Bok, stuck his neck out rather embarrassingly. A brilliant, if woman-suspicious Dutchman, he and this magazine came out against women’s suffrage. In his own words, he just felt women weren't ready for the vote. In other words, they couldn't hack it. As the second woman editor in the Journal's history, I just feel that it is too late to turn back to Mr. Bok’s attitude. I am an optimist about both women and men... about women’s aptitude to grow and live multi-personal, achieving lives and about men’s ultimate abilities to live with women who aren’t necessarily slaves. Equality, after all, is not 24 quiet words. Equality is achieved when people have an acceptance of and a respect for each other that transcends sexual stereotypes. That may be a long way away, but meanwhile, I think it’s a good idea to make a beginning. You don’t have to agree with me. That's your right, whatever your convictions. But I do believe that all women should learn more about the amendment, discuss it with their friends, neighbors, husbands. And make up your btwn mind. That’s not just a right. It’s an obligation to yourself, and to your sons and daughters. MEANWHILE, FOR THE BICENTENNIAL I would also like to announce that a new book will be published by the Viking Press in October. It will be called The Journal of the Century, and it will be a beautiful, 352-page volume that takes you back through the whole history of Ladies’ Home Journal, evoking a whole century with the greatest writers, journalists, artists and illustrators of their times. I can only say that every Journal reader will covet a copy. Watch for it!—LeNnoreE HersHEy
he most exposed part of your body is your hair. Don't let summer get to it. Use condition:
“Tanning lotions protect your body from burning sun. Skin creams moistur- ize it against drying wind, salt water, chlorine, air conditioners.
But what about your hair? I’ve never seen a suntan lotion for that. It's ashame because the most beautiful tan can’t make up for hair that’s dried, broken, frizz!ed by summer. What’s more, the damage done in Summer can last all winter long.
The way | see it, you have 2 choices. Either stop doing the things you love all summer, or use condition* at least once a month to help undo the damage.
condition* Beauty Pack Treatment from Clairol has 4 times the protein of any leading conditioner. This intensive
75 CLAIROL, INC,
«99
Lobia Orns
bi cate Fi 30-minute treatmentis so rich and creamy, that instead of dripping off your hair like watery conditioners, it sinks right into the hair shaft, supplying all the deprived hollows with protein.
It helps repair split ends so your hair has a new body and fullness. And a healthy, glossy shine.
condition*costs more than most other conditioners, but then, how much do you value your hair?
This Summer, keep your hair in as good shape as the rest of you.
With condition®”’
condition*
The 30-minute treatment for summer-damaged hair.
Raymond K. Mason Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer
A. Edward Miller President
Fred C. Danneman President,
Downe Publishing, Inc.
LENORE HERSHEY EDITOR
RICHARD KAPLAN EXECUTIVE EDITOR
JOHN R. STEVENS MANAGING EDITOR
DONALD ‘ADAMEC ART DIRECTOR BRUCE DANBROT Design Director
ARTICLES KATHLEEN D. FURY BARBARA MOSS FORTSON DEBORAH PINES KAREN LARSON HELEN NEWTON BOOKS AND FICTION PHYLLIS LEVY DIANE BROWN MARY ELIZABETH GUIMARAES
COPY LYS MARGOLD, writer SUZANNE OPPENHEIMER, editor ANN F. MAGUIRE, assistant
FOOD AND EQUIPMENT SUE B. HUFFMAN RUTH LAUMAN LAURA LEXA MELANIE DAWSON LYNDA S. FOSTER
HEALTH AND BEAUTY MAUREEN LYNCH BEVERLY MCGUIRE
FASHION TRUDY OWETT BONNIE COOPER ELLEN MILLER
INTERIOR DESIGN NATHAN MANDELBAUM ALICE KASTBERG
CRAFTS ANN B. BRADLEY
PUBLIC AFFAIRS MARGARET HICKEY
READER RESEARCH MARY E. POWERS
ART DEPARTMENT MARY FINALBORGO ROBERT J. SILTON
_ CONTRIBLTIN 3 ING EDITORS
- CARRO CAMERON DISNEY RALPH NADER ARNOLD PALMER LETTY COTTiIN POGREBIN
SYLVIA PORTER
LYNDA JOHNSON ROBB THEODORE !SAAC RUBIN. M.D. GENE SHALIT
MARGARET B. YOUN:
DAVID R. ZIMMERMAN
SN I NS
LOUIS E. PORTERFIELD PUBLISHER
a en
Painting courtesy of Whitney Museum of 7% American Art 9
The brightest movie
news
this month is the light- hearted comedy,The Bad News Bears. Ahit!
“TWENTY CENT MOVIE,’’ BY REGINALD MARSH, 1936
By Gene Shalit = What could be happier for sunny summer viewing than a movie starring Walter Matthau in a disreputable but, oh so, appealing role? Here he is in The Bad News Bears, playing a beer-guzzling scrubber of California swimming pools who’s hired by a local politician to manage the Bears, a Little League baseball team. What a conglomeration of kids!—a motley melting pot of backgrounds, a brood of all breeds. They don’t know second base from a salami sandwich. The league teems with tyros: a too-fat catcher, fielders who make 24 errors in a game and uniforms imprinted with the name of their sponsor, Chico’s Bail Bonds. Here they come tagging after Matthau—and mostly missing the tag. But with Tatum O'Neal as a 12-year-old girl with a terrific curve, and a gaggle of stumblers who play their hearts out, they’re suddenly on the move, making you grin, choke and cheer. Into each slice of life some crumbs must fall—and the biggest crumb in this movie is the manager of the other team. Will justice triumph? Will the Bears win the championship? Well, I’m not going to spoil the picture for you by giving away the ending. Just know that The Bad News Bears is a lighthearted jubilation directed by Michael Ritchie and written by Bill Lancaster, who catches the schoolyard vocabulary dropped by today’s elementary schoolers. Caution: Much of the language may seem
out of place in a GP movie, so if the street language of many kids offends you, this is a warning. But if you want a warmhearted comedy that is happily entertaining, run, run, run to The Bad News Bears. It’s a hit.
IT’S ALL STEIGER
There are all sorts of reasons for going to the movies: You've just got to get out of the house because life at home has tured into a vacuum .. . or youre in front of the theater and there’s a sudden downpour . . . or you have an irresistible urge for popcorn . . . or there’s a good actor in the movie. If acting is your reason, have I got a movie for you! It’s W. C. Fields & Me starring Rod Steiger in a challenging role: He portrays that unique personag W. C. Fields, one of the few important comedians in the history of the movies. What makes this so difficult is that W. C. Fields can easily be imitated badly: that nasal speech, those bird-like steps, that insolent stance, those cowardly con-man eyes. But Steiger does not do a night club routine; he delivers a characterization of Fields that is always effective,and often affecting. The Me in W. C. Fields & Me is Carlotta Monti, the mistress of his later life on whose book this film is based. She’s played by Valerie Perrine, who does what she can with this thin and unrevealing script. There are a few skits and some horseplay with John Barrymore and Gene Fowler, who were Fields’ heavy drinking pals in those lush days of Hollywood. But Steiger rises above all of this and gives a terrifically moving performance. Watch him and skip the movie.
TEDIUM A LA INGMAR
There may be a horribly hideous hole in Hades for any critic who dares find any imperfection in a film by Ingmar Bergman. If that’s the case, I’m ready for a hot etemity because the new Bergman is blemished. It’s called Face to Face and it does have a gripping performance by Liv Ullmann, who is a splendid actress. Bergman is undeniably an (continued)
Of all filter kings:
Nobody: lower than
Carlton.
Look at the latest U.S. Government figures for other top brands that call themselves “low” in tar.
tar, nicotine, mg/cig. mg/cig.
Brand D (Filter) 14 1.0 Brand D (Menthol) 13 ar. Brand V (Filter) 8 OW Brand T (Menthol) 11 0.6 Brand V (Menthol) 11 0.7 Brands (Fille it = == (06 Carlton Filter *2 0.2 Carlton Menthol *2 0.2
Carlton 70’s (lowest of all brands)— *1 mg. tar, 0.1 mg. nicotine . “Av. per cigarette by FTC method AX 2 =
ky Cariton mw Menthol
No wonder Carlton is é y 2mg.
fastest growing of the top 25.
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
Filter and Menthol: 2 mg. “tar”, 0.2 mg. nicotine av. per cigarette, by FTC method.
What's happening
continued
artist, but Face to Face is more Scan- dinavian gloom than I care to read through (the film is in Swedish with English subtitles). Face to Face is the profile of a physician (Liv Ullmann), whose husband has deserted her. She has taken a lover but is lured away by a homosexual professor (Erland Joseph- son) and ultimately slides to a swallow of suicide. Cinema scholars can take their tweezers and pick out the symbols, but if you're not a fan of psychology textbooks this may remind you of Te- dium 101. 1 admire Bergman, but this is enough already.
SALVAGE EFFORT
Jeff Bridges is a fine young actor who seems determined to prove that he can save any movie. If he were a cook he would come into the kitchen with the pot bottoms buring and act as if it were a gourmet meal. His newest sal- vage operation is called Stay Hungry, a movie by Bob Rafelson, a director of uneven achievement. He made Five Easy Pieces (cheers), but he also made The King of Marvin Gardens (non- cheers). Stay Hungry is set in Birming- ham, Ala., where Jeff Bridges is a wealthy orphan who’s inherited a grand estate but is adrift in his aimless life. He’s entangled with real estate swindlers who get him involved With a_body- building building they want him to buy. There he meets Arnold Schwarzeneg- ger. Arnold is type cast as a contestant in the Mr. Universe contest, since I’m told he is Mr. Universe. This, he dis- covers as he goes along, is a lot easier than acting. The swindlers’ plan is to cross Bridges when they get to him, but he eventually takes his toll on them in a ridiculous ending featuring all sorts of musclemen jamming downtown Bir- mingham., But by that time I didn’t real- ly care any longer: I'd had my fill of Stay Hungry.
FUTILE EXERCISE
Carlo Ponti, the husband of Sophia Loren, has produced a new movie com- edy called Virility. Its set in sunny Sicily, where a young fellow comes home after a three-year sojourn in Lon- don. He left a boy, he returns a man. At least that’s what everybody assumes, especially his father, the richest man in town since he’s the owner of the local fish canning factory. Pop is a middle- aged womanizer, just divorced and just married outside the church to a (com- pared to the others in this town) young girl. The boy brings home a couple of English pals, including a girl whose hair is so short and whose voice is so deep and whose clothes are so shirt-
8
and-slacked that everyone takes her for a boy. So when he kisses the girl, every- one thinks he is kissing a boy. The whole town laughs, whispers and mocks the father, who’s been boasting about his studability. How can he prove that his son is straight? The girl-who-looks-like- a-boy has left town and things look bleak until the father catches his son in bed with his own young bride. What wonderful news! The whole town re- joices as the head-scratching audience creeps from the theater. Virility has the facility to mix incredibility with imbe- cility, so that Virility ends up as an ex- ercise in futility.
UGLY DOGGEREL
The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea sounds poetic, but the movie is doggerel. I don’t know what sort of tex- ture the original story had: its Japanese author, Yukio Mishima, is famous in his homeland, but in this English setting it is flat. What we have here is Sarah Miles as a widow in a British seacoast town. She’s running an antique shop and liv- ing in an old house with her odd 13- year-old son. The boy goes to school where he has fallen in with a secret claque of kids who call each other by numbers instead of names. One day a wounded tramp steamer is towed into port. Who should be aboard but Kris Kristofferson. And who should fall in love with him but Sarah Miles. This upsets sonny. He has been spying into his mother’s bedroom through a hole in the wall, and now he feels displaced and threatened by the sailor whom he loathes. The film is filled with evil pre- cocity, moody conversation and explicit sexual scenes. She propositions, he pro- poses, they run into a diabolical turn of the plot, and finally sink to a sickening end. Sarah Miles is a good actress, and Kriss Kristofferson certainly appeals to many women, but they cannot save this ugly and pretentious movie.
WATCH THE SUGAR
The only part of Birch Interval that disappointed me was the interval be- tween the beginning and the end. No doubt some parents and children will approve of this gooey newey—especial- ly those who do not have to watch their sugar intake. What is so disappointing is that it was made by Robert Radnitz, who made Sounder. The difference is that Sounder was based on a fine novel. This is a story by Joanna Crawford, which is thoroughly undistinguished. Birch Interval is devoted to a pubescent girl whose mom hops off to gay Paree and parks her daughter with grandpa (Eddie Albert) in a Pennsylvania vil- lage in Amish country. Golly gee whiz, what a family it is. There is Albert, the white-haired grandpa, and his son— Uncle Thomas—who is the local icono- clast or loon, depending on which neigh-
bor you talk to. He is married to a ne who is having an affair with a cop. The are a bunch of sadistic children who t our little heroine to a tree and comm sexual insults but are never heard fro again. It’s as if the script writer change her mind about this sequence but left in anyway. Birch Interval is probab supposed to be concerned with the pa of a little girl growing up, and some | that pain comes from her love for poc old, sick Uncle Thomas—Rip Torn. He in a bad way. He is also in a bad pictur But what can he do about it? Torn pr vides the only shred of professionalis in this yarn. The story is hokum, t] script is hopeless, and if this were novel, the last line would probably b “In the distance, a dog barked.” Er
GENE SHALIT RE-VIEWS
All the President’s Men is quite simply smash. If there were a Pulitzer Prize for me ies Men would win.
Barry Lyndon. A feast for eyes and ears: famine for the mind.
The Dutchess and the Dirtwater Fox sv jects George Segal and Goldie Hawn to cr and unusual punishment. Were audiences form a posse, they’d run Dutchess out town.
Family Plot is the newest Hitchcock, a this time horror is on hiatus. It’s all just { fun, with a Hitchcock wink.
Grey Gardens deals with the recluse au and cousin of Jacqueline Onassis. A wist! tale, but through the ruins comes a love light. = Hustle. A “B” police movie of a sligh' higher caliber because of love affair plot : volving Burt Reynolds, Catherine Deneuw' The Killing of a Chinese Bookie stars.B Gazzara, is directed by John Cassavetes. T plot’s pot-holed with gaps, but it’s the peoy who count. Memorable.
Lipstick is agleam with rotten gloss, one the worst of the year.
Man Friday stars Peter O’Toole in the Re inson Crusoe legend. The Defoe classie-k been diminished to a tiresome political lemic.
The Man Who Would Be King. A roy relief for fans who adore good adventu Sean Connery, Michael Caine and Chris pher Plummer lunge into John Huston’s jc ous film set in Victorian India and rem« points north.
One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. Ja Nicholson gives one of the best perfor ances in years in one of the most grippi movies in years.
Robin and Marian shows two of our favor characters in middle age. Sadly, a treast turned to dross that rarely takes flight. Salut L’Artiste, starring the incomparal Marcello Mastroianni, fis a romantic come with a dash of bitters. Hail, Marcello! Seven Beauties is dn indelible film by 1 extraordinary Italian director, Lina We muller.
Sherlock Holmes’ Smarter Brother. Ge Wilder, Madeline Kahn, Marty Feldman a Dom DeLuise, in a film that lacks M Brooks’ wild abandon, making it often, k not always, merrily mad.
The Story of Adele H, from Francois Tri faut, tells of a woman obsessed by love. The Sunshine Boys. One of the best com dies in years, with Walter Matthau a George Burns as a couple of old vaudev lians. Based on Neil Simon’s Broadway k Taxi Driver is a morbid but well-made filn for adults only—with a brilliant performan by Robert DeNiro.
The Royal Classic Towel. Its a small price to pay for such a rich soft feeling.
Feel The Difference”. Made with Cannon’s exclusive nl tl casas ; cotton, it’s softer and more absorbent than even some. of the most éxpensive. ; towels. It doesn't get soaking wetwhile you're drying off. And Royal Classic doésn’t cost a bundle, either. With lots of rich decorative colors, so beautifully priced, you can even redecorate your - entire linen closet.
Can this marriage be saved?
By Dorothy Cameron Disney
Tom was desolate— maybe he would wake up and find
that his pregnant wife and shotgun marriage were just a bad dream.
This series is based on information from the files of the American Institute of Family Relations of Los Angeles, a nonprofit edu- cational counseling and research organization with a staff of 70 counselors. It is the oldest and largest marriage-counseling center in the world. The true stories reported here are drawn from the counselors’ reports of interviews. Names, geographic locations and other minor details have been altered to conceal identities. The counselor in this month's case was Irving D. Croshier.
Paul Popenoe, Sc. D.
Founder and Chairman of the Board
American Institute of
Family Relations
TRUDY SPEAKS FIRST
“When our baby was born dead 18 months ago, I was sure that Tom would leave me,” said 21-year-old Trudy, a diminutive, curly-haired brunette with brown, sorrowful eyes. “Our little son was a healthy seven pounds, two ounces, but he was strangled by the umbilical cord.
“I was four months pregnant when Tom and I got married, and I’m sure that he wasn’t happy about it. We'd gone steady for nearly two years, and my preg- nancy came as a terrific shock to us both. This sounds awfully naive, I suppose, since we took only rudimentary precautions, but we were just teenage kids and counted on our luck.
“T fell wildly in love with the back of Tom’s neck when we were seniors in high school—it was all any of the girls ever saw of him,” Trudy laughed. “Tom was a transfer student from Hawaii who starred in sports but shunned the popularity that went along with athletics. I was a transfer student myself, but just an average person who had moved to an ultra-sophisticated city school, where people were pretty unfriendly to ordinary outsiders like me. When a ‘Sadie Hawkins’ dance was announced on the bulletin board—a dance where the girls ask the boys—my younger sister Sue dared me to invite Tom. I had no intention of doing it, but that afternoon as Tom dashed along the crowded hall on his way to football practice, Sue gave me a shove.
I landed practically in his arms, figured why not, and invited him to the dance. Tom stared at me, cleared his throat and finally said he would think about it. For a solid week he thought about it and I sank deeper in despair. But then, at the last possible minute, Tom stopped me in chem class and said okay.
“By the time we graduated in June, we were con- sidered a permanent couple. This doesn’t mean we indulged in much giddy dating—or in much sex, either.
10
“ROOM IN NEW YORK,’’ BY EDWARD HOPPER, 1932
Painting courtesy of
the F. M. Hall Collection of University of Nebraska
Art Galleries, Lincoln
To tell the truth, our sex- ual relationship has never been that great. Sex always seems to come last with Tom. Even in high school, sports swallowed up the major part of his ener-
gy and attention.
“That fall the two of us enrolled as freshmen at the community college; Tom had an athletic scholarship that covered his tuition and I earned my way with a part-time job in a lab. On Sundays, we always tried to visit my parents, who were crazy about Tom—my mother in particular.
“Tom’s parents weren't crazy about me. His dad, a big, blond Scandinavian, was polite, but rarely said much. His mother, a native of Hawaii with millions of Island customs and prejudices, said a lot, however—and everything she said showed that she disliked me.
“My mother is an optimistic, psychologically oriented, very modern woman. When we told her I was pregnant that Thanksgiving, she supported me completely, saying the baby would probably draw Tom and me closer. Of course, she adores kids—she was thrilled to pieces by the prospect of a grandchild and she didn’t care who knew it. Anyhow, Mom decided that Tom and I de- served a real, honest-to-goodness church wedding. After a colossal argument with my father—Dad is a problem drinker and was unemployed at the time—Mom got her way, as usual.
“My in-laws refused to come, although Tom’s father did send flowers to the church. It was a deliberate slap in the face, and naturally I was hurt. But I was hurt far worse, actually, by their reaction—their non-reaction, really—to the death of their grandchild. My mother stayed at the hospital all night to stand by Tom and me— even my father came for a while. My in-laws sent no word, no flowers, no nothing. To this day they have never acknowledged that it happened.”
There was a long pause. “Tom and I never really discussed what happened to us that night,” Trudy said slowly. “We haven't talked about our feelings, like the tears pouring down my face when Tom finally came to my bedside—tears he pretended not to see; the way he forgot to kiss me until reminded by the nurse; the little funeral the doctor wouldn't allow me to attend. I doubt that Tom and I will ever have another child. Actually, I doubt I can hold him as a husband.
“He dropped out of college at the end of the spring semester, without saying a thing to me, but naturally, as soon as I found out, I dropped my classes, too. I located a full-time job without difficulty, but poor Tom, a darn good mechanic, spent three months in an un- successful search for the kind of work that suits him.
“With just one paycheck coming in, we had to live with my parents for a while, and I imagine the arrange- ment embarrassed and hurt Tom—although he didn’t complain or talk about it. Anyhow, I took (continued)
6 Clairol Inc.
Frame your face in soft lights with
Quiet Touch hairpainting. ===
.QuietTouch These are the
You know what soft lights can do for a face? Well, brush. Just paint. Wait fifteen minutes. Shampoo. now you can have your own soft lights night and When your hair dries, the hair about your face has day. With Quiet Touch™ hairpainting™ from a gentle glow—and your skin and eyes reflect it. Clairol. All you do is paint the hair outlining your Framing is just one way of throwing soft light on; face. It's very, very easy. Everythingyou needcomes the subject. Quiet Touch lets there be hairlight & in the Quiet Touch hairpainting | kit™ including the in every different way you can possibly think of.
a ENE
a a a Le ee ee Ae eee
Enriched Elbow Macaroni!
Creamier Cheddar Cheese!
Here is real elbow macaroni covered with the tastiest cheddar sauce that ever came out of a package. Golden Grain’s MACARONI AND CHEDDAR— you couldn’t make it more delicious at home!
Mac’n Ceeddar Burge
Brown 2 !b. ground beef in a 10” skil- let; drain off fat. Add 22 cups hot waiter, macaroni from 4 package Golden Grain Macaroni and Cheddar, 2 tsp. salt and Yq, tsp. pepper. Bring to a boil. Cover, lower heat and simmer 19 minutes. Stir in % cup margarine, 1/4 milk and contents of cheese pouch. Makes four 1-cup servings.
Ca thi e "besaved?
continued
out a loan and we moved to our own apartment. I suppose he was probably pleased, but he didn’t tell me so.
“The only time Tom ever seems will- ing to say two words is when his father happens to be home from a sales trip and we visit them. Tom talks sports to his dad, who sometimes responds but more often talks about Tom’s brilliant older brother, Raymond, a recent grad- uate from medical school. My mother- in-law talks steadily about Raymond's two little girls, aged three and ten months, his flourishing medical practice and his pretty wife. Everybody acts as if I’m invisible.”
Trudy sighed. “Six months ago, Tom landed a good job with a wealthy fac- tory owner who operates a fleet of trucks. I had high hopes that we could be happy at last. To spare Tom the ex- tra driving chore, my mother usually takes me to and from my office. After- noons, Mom and I grocery shop, and often we wind up in her kitchen—she is a far better cook than I am—and she prepares enough stew or casseroles for everybody, including Tom and me.
“Tom has no dreary domestic tasks to hinder him, nothing to tie him down. I've done everything in my power to be a good wife, but it’s been weeks and weeks since we've had intercourse. He sleeps on the farthest side of the bed and sometimes just stretches out on the living room sofa by himself. He is un- happy with me, I know. In the evenings, when I come home from Mother’s car- rying a delicious, steaming-hot meal for him, he is usually watching TV. He doesn’t get up or even look up to say hello. Three or four nights a week he doesn’t eat a bite but goes off to some sports event without me.
“Sometimes I come in and find him sitting on the sofa doing nothing, not even watching a program, just sitting there. Last Friday I got home late, thought he was gone and turned on the lights. But there he was, sitting in the dark. Before I could say a word, he turned on the TV. I switched it off. I asked him what was wrong and he didn’t answer until I screamed at him to tell me. Several minutes went by. Tom finally said he was tired of being mar- ried and wanted to take a trip around the world. It was crazy. I told him we couldn't afford for him to take a trip around the world—and he walked out.
“I didn’t know what to do, so even- tually I phoned my mother. She went through the For Rent ads in the news- paper, and the next morning we put a deposit on a furnished efficiency apart-
| ment not far away. Tom can move his
things tomorrow and we can have a trial
| separation for a few months, if that w satisfy him. But I am terribly afraid trial separation may turn out to be pe manent—and I can’t bear to lose him.
TOM’S TURN TO TALK
“I want to bum my way around t! world,” Tom said in a draggy, almc inaudible voice. A blue-eyed towhea he looked even younger than his | years. “I want to be free,” he said dé perately. “I'm trapped in a crampeé airless apartment, a stone’s throw fre all the nagging females in my life. Tru) paid the first month’s rent on the pla¢ and helped me move my things out: didn’t even have the guts to prote She’s always been kind to me, kinc than I deserve, except when she gi mad and yells and screeches like } mother—it scares the pants off me.
“IT wish I loved Trudy, but I don’t often wonder if I ever did love her, sin I have no basis for comparison. She the only girl I’ve ever known, the or girl I ever dated. Most of the guys know who are into sports are real m —they’ve “dated dozens of girls, In dreds, some of them. -
“Those ‘guys would sure get a lau if they knew what I don’t know abc sex. The last time Trudy and I got gether, last March or April as I rec: it was a disaster. I tried something n to us, but Trudy was squeamish, wh turned me off cold—so neither of us ca’ to climax. After that, I more or less | cided I was tired of having sex w Trudy and tired of marriage.
“T didn’t want to marry Trudy or ai one else at nineteen years of age. I with Trudy pregnant, it seemed lik: had no choice. Practically everyone y against me and on the side of marriag my mother, who always mistrusted T dy, was the solitary holdout. Unfor nately, Mom’s opinions don’t regis very high with me. From the time I \ a kid, she tried to keep me in line quoting her endless Hawaiian super tions to prove that sons meet an ¢ fate unless they heed their moth: Dad and Raymond make fun of her perstitions. Since Mom can’t con eit of them, I don’t intend for her to | me, either, even though she really i always wrong. :
“Trudy is dead set against a peri nent separation. How can I be sure won't trap me into going back to her v another pregnancy? I don’t want the sponsibility of a family. I need the portunity to find my own identity.”
Suddenly Tom stood up and wal restlessly around the counselor’s off “When Trudy’s baby was. stillbon tried to feel sorry for her sake, but 7 dy’s pregnancy always seemed unrea me; I couldn't picture myself the fat of a child. When it turned out I wa to be a father after all, I was relieve
(continued on page
rough the World of Beauty Club
e great cosmetic houses invite NU to experiment with their exci oducts...at significant savings!
Over 10,000,000 women have already discovered World of Beauty —the original beauty club. Shouldn't you?
v $27.00 Introductory Beauty Kit
for just $1.
¥ $5.00 Surprise Gift.
{ Nationally advertised prestige cosmetics.
¥ Beauty Guide Magazine at no extra cost. JY No obligation to buy another thing —ever!
¥ Cancel any time after examining your
$1 kit.
leds fr be LL A ce ae ae Sone Tt ;
WHY WE MAKE THIS EXCITING OFFER
gh the World of Beauty, the great
‘tic makers invite you to experiment with yrestige products at significant savings... se they know that once you've tried you'll buy them again at your favorite tics counter. And to prove just how great of Beauty really is, we'll send you.
00 Worth Of Today's Most Exciting
tics to pamper all of you—from
nding names in the beauty world —all
t $1.
Get A...
00 Beauty Kit brimming with cosmetic yns for you to experiment with—especially »d by World of Beauty experts in
ration with the world’s great cosmetics
» A $5.00 Surprise Gift. A beauty gift
sure to love
Beauty Guide Magazine — expert step-by- Jidance that shows you exactly how to
use these prestige cosmetics to make the most of your individual beauty
Just The Beginning Of Your Great $1 Experiment. You'll go on getting different kits of prestige beauty products about every two months, automatically, for as long as you want
plus, occasionally, special deluxe kits such as a Springtime Fragrance Kit and a holiday men’s kit of famous grooming aids, ideal for gift giving—all on approval
Each Kit Is An Extraordinary Value —most worth $20.00 or more—yet you pay only $5.98 per kit plus shipping and handling for those you choose to keep. No obligation to continue. If you don’t find your Introductory Kit or any other Beauty Kit completely irresistible, you may cancel your membership at any time. Yet your $27.00 Beauty Kit and $5.00 Surprise Gift are yours to keep for just $1. Mail your coupon today. World of Beauty Club, 623 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago, II]. 60605
Id of Beauty x Bringing the great cosmetic houses to your house!
| | | |
Se a a a
|
R World of Beauty Club 623 S. Wabash Ave Chicago, Ill. 60605 Please enroll me and send my $32 worth of cosmetics ($27.00 Beauty Kit plus $5.00 Surprise Gift) plus Beauty Guide Magazine —all for only $1.00. | understand that | will receive future kits on approval for only $5.98 plus shipping and handling (and applicable sales tax) as described in this ad. | may cancel at any time after examining my $1 kit
$1.00 enclosed. | save 98¢ shipping and handling on my Introductory Kit.
a Bill me later for $1.00 plus 98¢ shipping and handling on my Introductory Kit
To help you serve my needs personally, | am checking
Age Hair Skin Skin Group Group Tone Type OO 16-19 0) Blonde OD Light 0) Dry () 20-25 L] Brunette 1) Medium OO Oily L) 26-32 LO) Redhead 0) Dark 0 Normal {} 33-39 L] Silver OO 40+ O) Black G274 (1) Mrs Miss. ZT AIZ ZA PLEASE PRINT FIRST NAME LAST NAME Address. Zea Ppt City State 2LWV”=Z
Do you have a telephone? ©) Yes UO No LIMIT: ONE INTRODUCTORY BEAUTY KIT PER HOUSEHOLI Canadians — Mail coupon with $1 in envelope to U_S.A. addr Shipment and service from Canada. Beauty Kits and Gif difter from U.S.A. and value of most kits will be $15.00 or m« plus, $5.00 Introductory Gift © cri core ZEAE ae
fights
Feminine odor, caused by germs that live in your vagina, can be the most undesirable
odor of all!
Laboratory tests show Zonite Douche kills these feminine odor germs better than Massengill® Liquid Douche Concentrate and Summer’s Eve®
Zonite leaves you feeling
Zonite
odor germs the most, where you want them
the least!
Can this marriage
be saved?
continued
“I guess I had the feeling that my marriage, the horrible wedding cere- mony, the weird, unreal months after- wards—the whole bit—would disappear like a bad dream and I would wake up single again, free and independent. But Trudy hung on to me tighter than ever, so tight I damn near smothered. At the same time that Trudy clung to me, she and her mother began telling me how to act, what to wear, what to eat, where to work—until it seemed like I was mar- ried to both of them, with my own mom pulling just as hard in the opposite di- rection. Once or twice I tried to ask my father’s advice, but I got the brush-off. Except for a mild interest in my athletic talents, Dad basically isn’t concerned with my affairs. I originally went out for football in the hope of impressing him, but he seldom showed up at a game. His great pride is my brother, Raymond.
“T have no specific plans for the fu- ture,” Tom said somberly. “But I’m good with my hands and understand ma- chinery, so ’m confident that I can earn my way around the world. Before I’m too old, I think I’m entitled to date more girls and have a few adventures and ex- citing experiences like other guys.”
THE COUNSELOR’S TURN
“Trudy and Tom, at nineteen, were extremely immature for marriage. They needed to loosen their ties to domineer- ing parents on both sides. Even more important, they needed to learn to com- municate and share their inner feelings, fears, desires, goals. At my suggestion, Tom signed a short-term lease and con- tinued living in his bachelor apartment. Also at my advice, Trudy refrained from telephoning him there and dropping in uninvited.
“She and Tom began to see each other and ‘date’ like an unmarried couple— with no outside pressure. With her new independence, Trudy easily mastered a
nearby skiing resort for a short vaca They began going to movies, to beach—in short, they had youthful together.
“During this pleasant interval, t began to learn the art of communicati It was a period of self-discovery them both. Trudy leamed that her sonality reflected the personality of quick-tempered, bossy mother far than she had realized or wished— she gradually began to make chang:
“Tom learned that he was seer afraid of women, his domineering m er-in-law, his manipulative mom y her obnoxious habit of justifying ev thing with an Island superstition. was particularly afraid and mistrus of Trudy, clinging, overdependent, bossy, too—a mixture reminiscent of I her mother and his mother. As Tr changed her ways, she learned to come a person in her own right and relaxed and began to trust her.
“Honest communication taught Ee] and Tom that leveling with each o was not as dangerous as they had fea To his astonishment, Tom discon that Trudy was no more anxious to s a family in the near future than was And they began to share their guilt f) ings about the lost baby.
“Under my direction, they recei elementary instruction on various se3 techniques—information badly nee by both. Tom no longer considers self a failure in bed; in fact, Trudy sures me he is quite adept. After a th month separation, the two moved b together.
“Tom still works as assistant su} visor in the maintenance departmen the trucking firm. He is fairly con) with the job, but doesn’t intend to } it much longer. He and Trudy are say their money as fast as possible, bec next spring they intend to quit their | and travel for a year. They don't ex} to make it around the world, but t do expect to take a trip around the tire U.S.A. Trudy and Tom are now erating as a loving partnership, and t marriage, after an unhappy start, sh
fresh and odor free! Yet Zonite cleans gently. Won't disturb the vagina’s natural pH balance. Has no perfumes or colorings. Zonite brings you freshness
where you want it. |
Zonite ‘
course of driving lessons. One trium- excellent prospects for continued | phant weekend, she drove Tom to a_ cess. |
stops odor germs
better
h. 3 LOVEE
CRUE
“It’s my own recipe for beef stew only instead of beef I used liverwurst.
16
OF All Brands Sold: Lowest tar: 2 mg. “tar,” 0.2 mg. nicotine pice av. per cigarette, FTC Report Nov. 1975. = Kent Golden Lights: 8 mg."tar," see ae 2. ae nicotine av. per cigarette by FTC Method.
Es Sk ats “ es 5 pea
12 ‘Ii.
MG TAR
0.8 mg. nic.
0.7 mg. nic.
ASLOWAS _ YOU CAN GO AND STILL | GET GOOD TASTE.
cal KENT GOLDEN LIGHTS. g
SMOKING SATISFACTION “f 2 WITHONLYSMGTAR, Bt
y Sylvia Porter
ee Thrifty tips for gardeners, camera enthusiasts, mortgage purchasers, etc.
I’m planning to save a lot of money by home canning this year-——and so far our vegetable- fruit garden is more than living up to ex- pectations. But will there be enough can- ning equipment avail- able? Last year, from what | heard, the shortage ef canning equipment forced many people to throw away—or give away——the produce on which they had counted for winter eating.
There should be adequate supplies of jars this year, and there certainly are more metal lids on the market now than in 1975. No major shortages are expected in jars
or in pressure and water bath canners. Since this is July, though, why wait until the last minute to purchase supplies you know you'll need? Plan ahead by shopping now and finding the best buys you can.
Next month, our church holds its semi-annual rummage sale. I always donate many items of clothing that are sold rapidly. How should | handle the tax angles sol can get all the tax benefits to which we may be entitled?
You are entitled to a deduction for clothing you donate to charity—and you should not miss out on this deduction because of ignorance, laziness or failure to take the right steps at the right time. When you make your donation, ask your church for a written appraisal of the clothing’s value. Keep the statements with your other tax records, so you'll have the appropriate proof to back up the deductions you take when you file your next return.
My husband has spent a fortune on expensive cameras and lenses. It’s his greatest hobby. I’m worried whether we could possibly replace this equipment if it was stolen. Is insurance easy
to get? A sound idea?
Yes, to both your questions. Expensive cameras and extra camera gear are easy to steal, easy to hide and easy to re-sell—so your concern is more than justified. Insurance is simple to get and rates are comparatively low. You can insure equipment with an endorsement to your homeowner's policy or take out a separate camera “floater.” If you do insure your equipment, set the amount of the insurance at the equipment’s replacement value; keep your insurance up-to-date (to cover increases in your equipment’s value) ; be sure to keep a list of
all serial and model numbers in a safe place.
is a self-cleaning eiectric oven worth it, considering today’s high electricity rates?
Worth it or not, this type of oven is the most desired in the country today. Other ovens are less expensive, but these demand some work on your part (which probably is what you are trying to reduce through the self-cleaning feature). A typical 30-inch self-cleaning model uses an average of about 89 kilowatt hours per month for cooking and cleaning, says the Consumers Institute of
Painting courtesy of Kennedy Galleries, Inc.
General Electric and Hotpoint. That’s about 10¢ of electricity a day at the current national average rate (3.4¢ per kwh). So the cost of operation should not normally be
a factor.
“PURCHASE OF MANHATTAN ISLAND,’ BY WILLIAM RANNEY
My son has just bought a good used bike at a price so low that I’m sure something must be wrong. What might be the explanation?
The bike probably was stolen—a usually valid explanation for such a bargain in this type of equipment. A used bike in good condition ordinarily costs 75 percent of the price of a new one in its category.
In 1968, my husband gave me an absolutely magnificent, flawless one-carat diamond ring. Now we are being divorced and !| want to sell the ring. What do you think ! should ask for it?
If it is as good a diamond as you suggest, you should get at least $5,000, as against a retail value of less than $2,500 when your husband bought it. Today, a flawless one-carat diamond, with as fine a color as yours must be, will sell for up to $7,000 retail. Get an appraisal
from a recognized appraiser, and don’t resent the moderate commission he will charge you.. Have
the stone certified by the Gemological Institute of America. You can go in person to the GIA’s offices in New York or Los Angeles, or send the stone by registered mail. The GIA’s charge is relatively minor —$30 to authenticate a one-carat diamond.
My boy friend and I are both 18 and plan to be married this summer. Both of us want to live in our own house more than aimost anything in the world, but my parents say that we are too young to get a mortgage. It that true?
Your parents are wrong. At the age of 18, in most states, you change from a minor to an adult—and as an adult, you have (among other rights) the right to enter contractual relationships, such as obtaining credit to buy a house. As a minor, you could only buy and sell personal property, such as a bicycle or a car. Other significant new economic rights you have gained on reaching 18 include: your parents can no longer legally control your earnings and you are no longer required to get a work permit.
My husband and | are arguing about whether to buy a washer and dryer because these are such expensive appliances, and a laundromat offering cheap washer-dryer facilities is located on our street. Is doing your own laundry at home really worth it? That cee on five variables: 1. cost of laundry equipment; 2. how frequently you use it; 3. amount of fuel and w ae: you use; 4. cost of detergents you buy; 5. rates you pay for the utilities.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Agriculture Research Service worked out figures based (continued)
Great color...plus a thicker head of hair.
Who'd have thought a@ poles color rote do all that?
And Clairol” Balsam oe pee a special packette of conditioner you mix ee
First thing you know...the color gets gorgeous and your hair gets fat. Thicker. — Lusher. Feelier. Fatter. gO, ot than before you. colored it. - ites
er hE Te Siete fore a is BGs big fat
ADVERTISEMENT
Do Yeu Look Like Your Mother Too Soon?
When you were younger, it may have pleased you when people mentioned your resemblance to your mother. It was flattering to hear “‘You lucky girl, you have your mother’s hazel eyes” or “Aren't you glad you inherited your mother’s marvelous legs!’’ But lately
Zz
you may have noticed a subtle differ- ence inthe comments. If you’ve heard, even once, “You're beginning to look just like your mother!” it’s time you took notice. Your mother is, after all, a generation older... and ‘“‘You’re be- ginning to look just like your mother!” probably means you’re looking older now than you'd like.
Then the moment has come for you to discover the secret of a remarkable beauty fluid, known to enlightened women in many parts of the world who look their very youngest, no matter what their age. This skin-loving liquid was discovered by beauty connois- seurs and is known inthe United States as Oil of Olay beauty lotion.
Gentle Oil of Olay onto your face and throat. You’ll be astonished how quickly and completely Oi! of Olay pen- etrates. Within moments, you can ac- tually feel your skin grow softer and smoother. And when you look in the mirror you'll notice a radiance and lustre, a look you once had and prob- ably never expected to see again. Oil of Olay works with nature in a mysteri-
ous way to ease away dryness, that unwelcome dry- | ness that accents little lines and wrinkles that can too easily make g you look older than you are. Older than you need to .. a look. Ll ASS Oil of Olay, with its abundance of pure moisture, along with tropical oils and other emollients, works almost like your own natural moisture in fighting aging dryness. And the precious fluid helps keep natural moisture in your skin, to maintain a youthful-looking complexion, a beautiful bonus as the years pass.
For the most quickly-visible results, apply Oil of Olay at least twice each day. In the morning, to provide a moist climate for your complexion or as a superb makeup base. (Oil of Olay never leaves a greasy afterfeel, so it’s mar- velous under cosmetics, letting them stay fresh for hours.) Again at bedtime to let the beauty fluid continue its good work through quiet nocturnal hours. You may, of course, want to use Oil of Olay more frequently, whenever your skin feels dry or taut, or you'd like the moisture level of your skin increased.
Why look like your mother too soon, when Oil of Olay (from your drugstore) can help you look your very youngest. Don’t you wonder who will be the first to notice?
Beauty Secrets
The little lines around your eyes and at the corners of your mouth need spe- cial attention. Extra application of Oil of Olay to these dry areas can help.
Oil of Olay is too precious to waste. When you've smoothed it on your face and throat, use leftover drops on your elbows or any other dry area crying out for attention.
Whenever you can take time for a nap, cleanse your face and apply Oil of Olay® first. You’ll awake both look- ing and feeling refreshed.
Spending your mon
continued
on an automatic washer-dryer boug| on credit for $305 and $299. It sprea the costs over the anticipated lifespa of the equipment. It added 5 percent ¢ the purchase price to cover the cost repairs for a year. The results: thre loads of laundry cost 53¢ per week; for loads cost 46¢. Using cold water cuts 4 off each load. Drying (electric) cos 39¢ for three loads, 34¢ for four load Or, for three complete loads per wee (wash and dry), the cost comes to 98 and for four complete loads, to 80¢. Now compare these totals with wh you spend at the nearby laundromat fi three or four loads per week. Since ye need not use transportation to get to tt public washer-dryer facility, that w: give you and your husband the answe (I'm not including such intangible fa tors as convenience and savings in time
We’re back in the stock market an I'd like to buy what the experts | Wall Street are buying. Any way 1 find out?
The top favorite of all stocks held tod: by the professionals who manage tl nation’s mutual funds is IBM (Inte tional Business Machines). It also w the No. 1 favorite six years ago and | years ago, the dates of other Vieke surveys to find out the top 20 favorit of the mutual funds managers.
Out of the thousands of stocks trade in the U.S., only five other stocks al have been listed among the top 20° the end of 1969 and 1964. They ar Exxon, AT&T, Eastman Kodak, Texa and General Motors. (Incidentally, tl favorite industries of the professioné now are stocks of the electronics a1 electrical companies. )
In considering how much state such as New York, spend for the ca! of the elderly, | think it’s disgrac ful how little attention has bee paid to the fact that so many of tl 65 and older in the United Stat live in New York with no intentic of moving. Can you give the stati tics to bolster my belief?
More than 2,000,000 of those 65 at older live in New York, and anoth 2,000,000-plus live in California. In th instance, the problems of our two mc populous states are similar. Another fi states have more than 1,000,000 elder each: Florida, Texas, Pennsylvania, I] nois and Ohio. As recently as 1970, 1 state had as many as 2,000,000 perso 65 and over. And the number of stat with more than 1,000,000 elderly
three more than at the time of the 19’ census. Er
20
era os
Juance. . ; =—/8 And like a whisper is n exquisitelydelicate ¥¥ ©) | impossible to resist. CW fragrance S| Introducing
vat lasts and last
America ; UNRSUEG heromes
Without fanfare, women have been fighting consumer and environmental battles for years. Now, Ralph Nader cites five who merit special praise.
A largely unrecognized aspect of the consumer and environ- mental movements is the work of unsung women who have added to their roles as housewives, mothers and retired professionals to make major civic contribu- tions. The achievements of these women often go far beyond the communities in which they live. One woman has caused rever- berations within the nuclear power establishment. Another prompted a city to revamp its drinking water system and helped expose a national drinking water crisis. A third has created the most effective movement ever to attack age discrimination.
The five women whose work is described here are mostly unknown to the general public. It is about time they received due credit for their accomplishments.
JUNE ALLEN began learning about the risks of nuclear power when, in the fall of 1972, she read a series of articles in Environmental Action calling for a nuclear moratorium. Ms. Allen, a language arts consultant, who lived in Charlottesville, Va., had never thought about nuclear power before, but the articles made a deep impression on her. A few days later, she read a newspaper story about a forthcoming hearing on the nuclear power plant being built by the Virginia Electric Power Company (VEPCO) on the nearby North Anna River. She also noticed a letter to the editor urging citizens to attend the hearing. Ms. Allen phoned the letter writer, Margaret Dietrich, an artist and organic gardener. Ms. Dietrich was a well-informed opponent of nuclear power.
In January 1973, Ms. Allen, Ms. Dietrich anda few others formed the North Anna Environmental Coalition (P.O. Box 3951, Charlottesville, Va. 22903). They were determined to inform the public about the hidden costs and high risks of nuclear power and, if possible, to stop construction of the North Anna plant.
Ms. Allen went to work full time with the coalition, working out of her home without pay, reading stacks of documents, writing and speaking. Then the coalition began hearing rumors that the North Anna plant was
—
hh Nader reports
“UNVEILING OF THE STATUE OF LIBERTY,’’ BY EDWARD MORAN, 1886
Painting courtesy of Museum of the City of New York
constructed over a geological fault. In July 1973, Ms. Allen called an Atomic Energy Com- mission lawyer, who confirmed the rumors.
In August, “the coalition made public the truth about the earthquake fault,” said Ms. Allen. The embarrassed AEC called a hearing, ordering VEPCO to prove its plant was safe. The coalition continued its investigations and discovered that the fault had been known at least as early as 1970, when three geologists identified it on field trips to the site. Despite AEC efforts to quash the issue (its investigation predictably found that the plant was “safe”), June Allen and the coalition persisted. They appealed the AEC decision that VEPCO could retain its license, and formally charged VEPCO
with making 19 “material false statements” in covering
up evidence of the fault. The Atomic Safety and Licensing Board found the company guilty of 15 of the
false statements and fined VEPCO the maximum
penalty—$60,000.
The geological fault, Ms. Allen emphasizes, is only one of the issues that she and her colleagues are attempting to expose. The danger of nuclear technology is, she believes, “the major issue before us now,” and for her it has become a “constant and total job.”
ARLENE LEHTO grew up on the north shore of Lake Superior. The lake was crystal clear in those days, and you could easily see the huge boulders, 12 to 15 feet below the surface. There’s a cliff on the shore about 15 feet above the water where, as children, Ms. Lehto and her friends used to play—tossing stones into the water, trying to make them land on those gigantic boulders, 20 to 30 feet from shore. One day, eight years ago, Ms. Lehto took her son down to the lake to teach him this childhood game. To her horror, she found that the lake was so filthy that the boulders were no longer visible.
“It was a tremendous shock,” she recalls. “I had always loved that lake.”
The shock prompted Ms. Lehto, in 1969, fo organize
a group of north shore citizens to fight pollution of
Lake Superior: the Save Lake Superior Association (901 E. 7th St., Duluth, Minn. 55805). One of their chief targets was the Reserve Mining Company,
which was dumping 65,000 tons of waste into the lake every day. The SLSA concentrated on (continued)
Left to right: @ June Allen, 4 Arlene Lehto, 4 Jean Farmer, Kay Pachtner, Maggie Kuhn
Coin-operated washers get a real workout. oad after load. 7 days a week.
That's why, last year, so many new apart- nent laundries installed GE Washers. They an take it.
At home, youcan havea washer withessen- ially the same basic design. (And a matching xtra-large capacity dryer.) Without the coin lot, but with these fabulous added features:
The Dispensall System. Load it at the eginning of the wash with pre-wash, letergent, bleach and fabric softener. “he Dispensall System dispenses each
lif GE Washers last through all this,
thing automatically at the proper time in the proper cycle.
The Mini-basket® feature for small or deli- cate loads. It gives you an energy-saving 10- minute Mini-Quick' cycle. Which saves electricity, detergent and water. &
When you buy GE, you get Cus- eeu tomer Care” Service. Our pledge that
wherever you are, or go, in the 48 contiguous states, you'll find a qual- ~ ified GE serviceman nearby. Should = you ever need one.
GENERAL @@ ELECTRIC
SERVICE EVERYWHERE
NU
figures a GE Washer with the Dispensall System
will last through all this.
Americas
unsung heroimes
continued
publicizing the effects of pollution on fish—no one had yet begun talking about the effects on human beings.
Then, in December 1972, Ms. Lehto met Dr. Joseph Mengel, a geology pro- fessor at the University of Wisconsin in Superior. Dr. Mengel mentioned that the Japanese were ingesting cancer- causing asbestos with their rice. He noted that the shape of the asbestos fibers was identical to that of cumming- tonite, a trace element in the waste from Reserve Mining Company.
Later that night, Ms. Lehto and her son looked up in the encyclopedia the items the professor had mentioned. The definitions of asbestos and eummington- ite were identical. Ms. Lehto knew that the city of Duluth did not filter its drink- ing water. If Reserve Mining’s indus- trial waste contained asbestos, then it was likely that the people of Duluth were drinking it.
The next morning, Ms. Lehto was to speak before a U.S.-Canadian organiza- tion concerned with the Great Lakes. She decided to mention the asbestos peril—and the possibility of polluted drinking water. The board of directors of the Save Lake Superior Association rebuked her for making “rash” state- ments—but the result of those rash state- ments was that several scientists sam- pled Duluth’s drinking water—and the Reserve Mining Company’s waste. Six months later, the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency and the National Water Quality Laboratory brought out concur- ring reports: the Reserve Mining Com- pany’ waste products contained asbes- tos tailings, and the Duluth drinking water contained asbestos.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers immediately ordered filters installed in all Duluth schools as well as in fire halls, so that the public could draw filtered water. The city began building a new filtration plant that will be completed in the spring of 1977. Last May, Reserve Mining was fined $1 million for pollut- ing Lake Superior—$837,500 to the state of Minnesota and $200,000 to state and environmental groups that had filed suit against the mining firm.
Battie not over
“But the battle is not over,” says Ms. Lehto. In April, after extensive testing, the government issued a warning that citizens should eat Lake Superior fish no more than once a week because of traces of asbestos found in fish Hesh. The local fishermen are furious and the SLSA is using these new facts'to further their anti-pollution efforts.
24
When JEAN FARMER took on the vending machines in the Bloomington, Ind., schools, she had never taken up a cause before—she’d never even joined the PTA. She was 40 and the full-time mother of four children. One evening, at the urging of a friend, she attended a PTA meeting and heard a parent com- plain -about the vending machines that dispensed high-sugar, no-nutrition snacks in the schools. When she got home, she found one of her children’s uneaten lunches in her garbage can— along with some candy wrappers.
Ms. Farmer wrote her first letter to an editor, asking that the schools get rid of these foods. Nothing happened. So she wrote more letters—to anyone who might do something. No one even answered,
Continuous pressure applied
Baffled by the lack of response, but determined not to give up, Ms. Farmer spoke at a citywide PTA council meet- ing. She urged that if unwholesome snack foods were vended, at least good foods—such as milk, juice and fresh fruits—could be sold, too. As a result, the PTA passed a resolution urging that schools supplement vended items with nutritious foods, but leaving it up to school principals to follow up on the suggestion. It took another year of con- tinuous pressure from Ms. Farmer be- fore the Binford Middle School prin- cipal agreed to poll parents on the vending issue. The result: a resounding vote against the snack items, and a school board decision that all vending machine food must “make a significant contribution to the students’ nutritional needs.” The Bloomington school vend- ing machines remain—but now they contain milk, juices and high-protein snacks.
Jean Farmer had spent two years and over $2,000 of her own money, mostly for books, duplicating costs and_ pos- tage. She still spends each morning writing letters, speaks and writes fre- quently for publication and acts as a clearinghouse for other parents who want to do something about the vend- ing machines in their schools. (115 East Wylie St., Bloomington, Ind. 47401)
In 1971 KAY PACHTNER was in her early thirties, had one child and a half-finished master’s degree from the University of California at Berkeley. She couldn’t find a job, so she decided to make one. She, her husband and another couple decided to launch a new, action- oriented consumer organization. As a first step, Ms. Pachtner persuaded a local radio station to refer its consumer calls to her fledgling San Francisco Consum- er Action. She and another volunteer housewife answered the calls in Ms. Pachtner’s livingroom. They were soon flooded with complaints.
From this beginning, Kay Pachtner
and her colleagues built a consume terest group that is the largest in west—and one of the most imagin and successful in the country. San ; cisco Consumer Action (26 7th St., Francisco, Calif. 94103) was among first to publish shoppers’ guides for sumers. The group’s publications clude guides to banks, pharmacies, insurance, food fact sheets, a guid public records, a study of the eye industry and a study of the Califc Department of Consumer Affairs. —
Ms. Pachtner, executive directo Consumer Action, calls her pos; “more akin to referee and earth ma than chieftain.” She demonstrates ff a job can be created with little more | imagination and energy, and in Pachtner’s case, a commitment to bi ing consumer power.
When MAGGIE KUHN was fo to retire at the age of 65, she k better than most what retirement me In her work with the YWCA and United Presbyterian Church S¢ Action Board, she had been heavily volved in getting medical care for aged. She knew, too, about other sc problems that old people face—and | ticularly about their isolation from ciety, an isolation she considered criminatory and wasteful. Having sy most of her life organizing people, decided to organize the minority which she had become a member.
Change not services
In 1970, with five friends also ret or about to retire, Ms. Kuhn gathere nucleus of about 200 retired men women, and began to tackle the is: of age discrimination. Working of a church basement in Philadelp her volunteer older people and ¢ cerned students began to press change—and to get it. One of their e. victories was to persuade a major P} delphia bank to offer free checking other services to older people; ot banks followed. Groups in New Y fought successfully for better pu transportation, reduced fares, bi with ramps for wheelchairs.
Ms. Kuhn and her colleagues war to change the system, not just proy services. When Philadelphia’s trai system ignored.their demand for vamped schedules in non-rush hou during which older people could réduced fares—the group threatenec stand on the trolley tracks in protes|
A New York TV show coined name “Gray Panthers” for the gra Ms. Kuhn and her friends adopted it
Maggie Kuhn was soon criss-cross the country speaking out against ° ism,” a societal illness she considers serious and pervasive as racism and s ism. “Our society scrap-piles old pec like old automobiles,” she says.
(continued on page
n the days when women had no right to smoke, a woman bad t to hide out in the forest’ if shew wanted to sneak a cigarette. In this picture, can you find the eight ladies who have no rights?
VIRGINA
Slimmer than the fat cigarettes men smoke.
VIRGINIA SLIMS
FILTER
g: The Surgeon General Has Determined garette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
|
____ SLIM'S
NVMS SHL 40 13d WNL SHL
} t
Re] svonsont uoprep oogar | (2) wast aes ean ENGSS
: 5
Crafts, Riddles. Puppets, Mobiles,
|= = = = es oo = = S = z ze
0 SNINLHOIT FHL "lL UNV AHOTD
~ So Ce
Pye
rOL
|
Tam)
euup sisiyy pod Ja}sipy,
aia FE
{Contemporary \ (ook, in G ey
\- oF f—_/
AIO}G UNC JH Al won RUG GUL HIWdH 9 ALNVad JO UVAAV
NOOSSVS TVGIAY ATUAAAE AG
[333]
me | eta oen : Bee eine Ioan Ga ILLUSTRATED parcueCes ae
SYLVIA ff PORTER
MONEY f BOOK
How to Earnie, Spcndit, Save lt, Invest It, Borrow ft-
And Use Itto Better Your Li 7 Bay vourmr exe —1 2 Volt
nahn = ina Stil The Alice Crimmins Case (cy von DANIKEN 10,00 a i
= GEMINI CONTENDERS ROBE (0232) I ce Le cS A a ANGELS BILLY GRAHAM G5) z ee Sa Pe) The Killing Gift WOOHEE :
rowan eCallinthe inthe Night wale i
BY editation Diet.
by Bichaad Tyzen. MDwith Jay R Walker
RTS a
g ajsueiy epnuieg oul Beg
r—
AMERICA
6 books for ;
Bogie
“You'll get the best buys on ica’s best sellers when you join Youbleday Book Club. Because yer club can save you more on st Sellers that are sweeping the ry. You'll actually save up to mn your first 6 books—they’re
up to $98.55 in publishers’ edi- but you get them for just 99¢ you join. And you keep saving ore great reading—an average ff publishers’ edition prices.
“Treat your family to their free- f choice with The Doubleday Club’s huge selection of politi- trigue...mysteries...romance enture...how-to...and_ chil-
stories.
“And you'll get these national ellers delivered right to your
be Double
“Start saving now, America, with any 6 books for 99¢ when you oin?’
Here's how our club plan works. You'll get your 6 books for only 99¢ plus shipping and handling, when accepted as a member. If not satisfied, return them within 10 days to cancel your membership and owe nothing. About every 4 weeks (14 times a year) you'll receive our magazine describing our two Club Selections and at Jeast 60 Alternates. The Extra- Value Selection is always just $1.98 (up to 75% off publishers’ edition prices). The Featured Selection and Alternates save you an average of 50% off publishers’ edition prices. Acharge is added for shipping and handling. If you want both Club Selec- tions, do nothing—they will be
The Doubleday Book Club
The best buys on ioe s best sellers.
ER
t 99¢ Book Club.
shipped automatically. If you’d prefer only one Selection, an Alternate or no book at all, indicate this on the order form and return it before the date specified. You’ll have at least 10 days. If you do not have 10 days and receive books you don’t want, return them at our expense.
Once you’ve purchased just 6 books during your first year of mem- bership, you may resign or continue with no further purchase obligation.
The Doubleday Book Club offers its own complete hard-bound editions, sometimes altered in size to fit special presses and save members even more. © Carry your best buys in style. Take our FREE Tote Bag wherever you go when you join now.
69-D310
| Saybody Lise’ halt AIN Sab Bet
HHL NO DNIUG +
uequays auEyy euuY
1287 |i
peis8od 3AO1 SOVAVS LAAMS "lA,
E
TOVNVITTY SMAHION SH
A =i? $ =I ig Oirele ests ¢ 17435] tY COOKERY Mable Hoffman {0828 || & No-Excuse Exercise Guide
NVIAIOM OL
Me ae Ee a ie anda ssaSuvyoAouoyy qT.
EE] seeesnaay | etka |weuno
The Doubleday Book Club Dept. KR063, Garden City, N.Y. 11530
Please accept me as a member and send the six books whose numbers I have marked in the boxes along with my FREE Tote Bag. Bill me just 99¢ plus shipping and handling. I agree to take six books during my first year of membership (for as little as $1.98 each) at regular low Club prices, under the
Club Plan described in this ad.
Mr. Mrs. Miss.
(Please print)
Address Apt.
City & Zip State Code
If under 18,
parent must sign here Members accepted in U.S.A. and Canada only. Canadian members will be serviced from Toronto. Offer slightly differ- ent in Canada.
“Remember the Ladies”
This is the way it was for working women when America was very young. An excerpt from an important, new Bicentennial book.
By Linda Grant de Pauw
and K. Conover Hunt
Remember the Ladies: Women in America, 1750-1815, published in collabo- ration with The Pilgrim Society, shows for the first time what early American life was really like for women in the era of the American Revolution. Diaries, documents, rarely seen artifacts, portraits and en- gravings shown in this book will be part of a major national exhibition, sponsored by Clairol and Philip Morris, that will
tour the U.S. during 1976-77. Sponsors
of the exhibition include Joan Kennedy, Nancy Kissinger, Barbara Howar, Barbara Walters, Fawn Brodie and Katharine Graham. Remember the Ladies is the first book developed by Jacqueline Onassis in her job as consulting editor for The Viking Press.
There was such a great shortage of labor in the pre-industrial age that there was no such thing asa leisure class. Before the Revolution, even wealthy ladies and gentlemen had work to do. Wealthy women did much of their own housework, and the duties of over- seeing a large family, which included numerous servants and slaves, made the mistress of a wealthy home a combination of housekeeper, factory overseer and com- munity midwife. Only after the shortage of labor eased and some families were able to accumulate great fortunes could a leisure class of ladies devoted to ornamental rather than practical occupations develop.
The occupation of most American families from the wealthiest to the poorest was farming. Ordinarily, husbands and wives worked together to assure that the family would be self-sufficient and, it was hoped, make a profit. Women who were widowed, however, or whose husbands were away—as a great many were during the Revolution—ran their farms by themselves. Women would usually have sons or male servants or slaves to do the actual field work. White women did not usually labor in the fields, but those who are desperate to survive cannot be fussy about the work they do, and when necessary, poor farm women would plow and harvest. Women were often quite successful in their independent farming ventures.
The full participation of the farmer’s wife in the family business has been the rule throughout American history into modern times. In the eighteenth century, however, women were productively employed in all of the occupations entered by men, since all occupations centered in the home or a nearby office or workshop, and women and children as well as men worked to make a success of the family enterprise. There was no formal education required for the professions of law and medicine until the end of the eighteenth century, so that women might draft wills and other legal documents. Some appeared in court arguing on their own behalf or as attorney for an absent husband. Women monopolized
DETAIL FROM
“THE FIRST, SECOND AND LAST SCENE OF MORTALITY,”’ BY PRUDENCE PUNDERSON,
1775.
Painting courtesy of The Connecticut Historical Society, Hartford
obstetrical practice tntil the last part of the century, and they were preferred
as medical practitioners by most of the population. Only after schools of law and medicine were established were women driven from the practice of these professions.
All the crafts and trades practiced in early America included at least a few women. Most women worked in an enter- prise controlled by a husband or father, but widows and spinsters often carried on alone. Colonial newspapers carried adver- tisements of women in every business, from those of apothecary and blacksmith to shopwright and undertaker. Widow Mankin of Philadelphia sold to the public “such things as are principally used in the Modern Practice of Physick, being a great variety of Materia Medica, both simple and compound, Cymical and Gallenical.”
Mary Salmon of Boston ran a shop “where all gentlemen may have their Horses shod in the best Manner, as also all sorts of Blacksmith’s Work done with Fidelity and Dispatch.” In New York City, Marguerite Hastier was a silversmith, and a Mrs. Sommer ground glass for spectacles. Jane Massey of Charleston, S.C., was a gunsmith, and Mary Wilson of Norfolk, Va., was a shoemaker. Elizabeth Russell advertised as a shipwright in the South Carolina Gazette, and Lydia Darragh told the readers of the Pennsylvania Gazette that she would “make Grave-Clothes, and lay out the Dead, in the Neatest Manner.” a
In the nineteenth century, as the center of economic activity moved away from the home into factories and offices, most occupations came to be viewed as unsuitable for women or incompatible with their work in the home. The few jobs that remained open to them came to be typed as “women’s” jobs, and most middle-class and upper-class women withdrew from the work force. Those of the middle class who did leave their homes to work were mostly young girls who had no interest in training themselves for skilled jobs since they expected to retire from the labor force when they married. As the American population grew and the labor shortage eased, the economic opportunities for women narrowed even further. They were no longer regarded as skilled workers in all trades and crafts, but were considered easily replaceable unskilled workers. As factories became established, women were grouped in the lowest-paying, least-skilled jobs, and by the early nineteenth century it was accepted practice to pay women much less than men for comparable work.
In the pre-industrial period in America, men and women earned equal pay. Tobacco and corn cost as much when purchased from a woman farmer as when purchased from a man, and it cost as much to have a female blacksmith (continued)
Copyright © 1976 The Pilgrim Society. From the book REMEMBER THE LADIES: WOMEN IN AMERICA, 1750-1815, by Linda Grant de Pauw and K. Conover Hunt,
to be published by The Viking Press, Inc.
30
Nice’n Easy haircolor It sells the most.
Aim reduces cavities with stannous fluoride —and has something else besides. A taste that just might encour- age better brushing habits.
Some mothers tell us chil- dren brush longer —and more willingly with Aim.
We can’t guarantee this will happen in your home, butisn’t it worth a try? Especially since dentists blame so many cavities on bad brushing habits.
Aim has stannous fluoride.
Clinical testing among school- children by the score proves it
Take Aim against cavities!
The best fluoride toothpaste is one that gets used.
reduces cavities —and by a sig-
nificant amount.
But Aim has something the leading fluorides don’t. A taste children prefer. In fact, in tests with more than 1300 children against both leading fluoride brands, children preferred Aim by almost 2 to 1.
A gel that’s low in abrasion. Because Aim is a gel, it has an
unusually fast “dispersal rate.” This means, when your child brushes with Aim, it spreads the good taste faster in the nor- mal brushing time.
Aim is also low in abrasion.
All of this makes Aima true advance.
If you have children in the cavity-prone years, see to it they get good check-ups!
\ |
“Remember the Ladies”
continued
shoe a horse as it cost to have a man dé the work. Women who were printers 0 sextons received remuneration equal té that of males, and servants and slaves 0 both sexes received comparable allo ances of food and clothing. Technicall of course, most women who worked it the eighteenth century, even those wh made the most money, can be said t have worked actually for no more that room and board. For while women go equal wages or made equal profits, th law did not recognize their right to co trol this income. Most men were na mean enough to exploit their rights te their women’s earnings and _ usuall allowed them great freedom and pro vided for them lavishly when they coule afford to do so. But the right of a hus band to all of his wife’s property we exercised frequently enough to make clear that the right was not a dead lette by any means.
Widows and _ spinsters could hol property of their own, but it was diffi cult to make a living outside of a famil business in the eighteenth century, an unmarried women were often impo erished. Some of the early textile fad tories were set up to give employmen to such “deserving poor.” An advertis ment in a Pennsylvania newspaper : 1775 was addressed: “to the SPINNER in this CITY and the SUBURBS. You services are now wanted to promote thi American Manufactury. .. . One di tinguishing characteristic of an acl woman as given by the wisest of men i ‘that she seeked Wool and Flax, an worketh willingly with her hands . . In this time of public distress you hay each of you an opportunity not only ¢ help to sustain your families, but like wise to cast your might into the treasury of the public good.”
Room, board and small wages
Most unattached women, howeve worked as servants. Some might wor for their keep by spinning and doin other household tasks in the home of relative, while others worked for rool and board and possibly a small wag in the home of a stranger. Eighteent century newspapers show that wome were employed as wet nurses, dairy maids, governesses, cooks and evé slave overseers. Servants who accep! ed positions such as these had a ce! tain amount of independence; eve though their wages might be low, the were free to resign the position to tak another or to marry. Many servant however, were bound by contrac’ called indentures, which left them wit little more freedom than slaves. Er
Shout is the heavy-duty stain remover, specially made to get the tough stains out. Even stains like grease and oil in fabrics like polyester and permanent press.
No laundry soil and stain remover gets more stains out of more fabrics than Shout. Want a tough stain out? Shout it out.
5 wr) az 7} S ° 9 4 cy A= 9 os ~% B) = = fo} ”n ey. £ fe] 7) a a S.
Candidates’ wives tackle the tough women’s issues: ERA, abortion and more. A special report. —
*
4
Less than ten years ago, the wives of presidential candidates were, for the most part, ornaments to be seen and not heard—at least not on the impor- tant issues facing the nation. Child- rearing, household management, clothes—those were the acceptable topics. Now, however, with the growth of the women’s movement— and the candor of First Lady Betty Ford—candidates’ wives have begun to emerge as thoughtful, outspoken individuals in their own right.
To find out how they feel about issues crucial to the lives of women, Washington correspondent Winzola McLendon spoke to candidates’ wives and asked each three key questions.
What is your stand on the Equal Rights Amendment?
MRS. CARTER: I support ERA. It means equal rights for women and equal pay for an equal job done. There are so many women in Georgia —as there are everywhere—who are the sole supporters of their families. ERA would help them.
MRS. CHURCH: I was a proponent of equal rights for women long be- fore the ERA bill. In Idaho and in the rest of the West, women and men have pulled equal loads for a long, long time.
MRS. FORD: I support the Equal Rights Amendment because econom- ic and legal restrictions against wom- en cripple women, their families and
society as a whole. Women have
been bound far too long by laws and
social customs that prevent them from full use of their talents and management of their lives. Prevailing attitudes also have seriously under- valued the contributions of women
as wives and mothers. One of the most important results of ratification of ERA would be to give women
34
a
THE
NEXT FIRST LADY
more options and to increase under- standing of the importance of the choice of being a homemaker and a
mother. A constitutional change not
only influences laws, but provides a moral yardstick for measuring behav- ior and customs. As a supporter of equal rights for women, I am as con- cerned about improving attitudes about the capabilities and contribu- tions of women as I am about pro- moting legal changes. Fairness begins in the heart as well as in the law. MRS. JACKSON: Im a supporter of ERA and so is Scoop. In fact, he sup- ported ERA back in 1953, when he first came to the Senate. I didnt have to lobby him about this! He’s long recognized the problems that women have with legal inequalities.
MRS. REAGAN: I'm for the ER-1’m not for the A. For heaven’s sake! ’m for equal rights for everyone, not just for women. Everybody should have equal pay, equal opportunity, equal rights. But I don’t think the best way to go about giving it to people is the amendment process. If you start fool- ing around with the Constitution then youre liable to open up something you might be sorry for. You would be bound legally by it. As it is now, the Constitution does give some rights to women that would be done away with 7f the ERA were ratified. So I think the best way to correct the in- equities is by statute. Were all for the same thing; we just differ on the way to approach it
MRS. UDALL: I’m 100 percent for ERA, even though I personally have never felt discriminated against, and ! worked for years. But I do see griev- ances that should be corrected. There are many.women with a lot of talent who do not have, but should have, equal rights and opportunity. If it takes an ERA to give it to them, then
® Clockwise: Betty & Gerald Ford, Nancy & Ronald Reagan, Rosalynn & Jimmy Carter, Ella & Morris Udall, Helen & Henry Jackson, Cornelia & George Wallace, Bethine and Frank Church.
we should certainly have an ERA. MRS. WALLACE: My husband and I believe in equal pay for equal work, and in equal opportunity for women. But I have never been satisfied with the Equal Rights Amendment be- cause wives and mothers living and working in the home have no protec- tion of equal rights under it. It does not give a woman half of her hus- band’s pay check. It does not give her half of her husband’s property. It does not guarantee her half of his es- tate if he dies. It doesn’t guarantee that he isn’t going to come in, drunk, and beat her up. If she has children, she’s just got to take it. The women who work outside the home have the Civil Rights Amendment that guar- antees equal rights regardless of race, color, creed or sex—and the Equal Opportunity Act, which. prohibits job discrimination. But there is nothing for the woman who has been in the home. Because she doesn’t receive wages, she doesn’t have Social Secu- rity [in her own right]. But she is sacrificing a career in order to stay home and raise her children. She is shaping her children’s values, instill- ing the values of the next generation. And that is very important. y
What is your stand on legalized abortion? %
MRS. CARTER: I, personally, don’t like abortion, but I am not for an amendment to the Constitution to make it illegal. In Georgia, our anti- abortion law was one of the two test- ed before the Supreme Court while Jimmy was governor. It was struck down and we had to write a law legal- izing abortion; we wrote the most conservative one the Supreme Court would allow. But I don’t favor an amendment, because I’ve seen what happens when abortion (continued)
HOW TIMES CHANGE.
You know, better than anyone, how 1 prices have risen. So we think you'll yleasantly surprised when you take a
at Stouffer's prices.
We make 13 main dishes you can e for about a dollar a serving, or less. d many more that cost about the
e as what you might be serving now. And with Stouffer's, you get a lot of
ee a er
Tuna Noodle Casserole. DN eres ao ls) eae
delicious choices. Macaroni and Beef, Chili con Carne, Creamed Chicken, Tuna Noodle Casserole, and more. And there’s no cooking, not even a pan to clean.
At about a dollar a serving you can afford Stouffer's jae any night of the week.
How times change.
STOUFFERS, ANYTIME. =
ROrccrventse MO cose Uereln ae Leas
THE NEXT FIRST LADY continued
is illegal in some states. Abortion mills spring up in those states where it is legal. We should try.to prevent the need for abortion by stressing family planning, sex education and adoption procedures. MRS. CHURCH: Very definitely, the Supreme Court ruling legalizing abor- tion has to be followed. A constitutional amendment making it illegal would pull this country apart. People are passionate about this; they are very much divided. But Frank feels strongly, as I do, that religious hospitals should not be denied funds if they refuse to perform abortions because of religious principles. People do not stop to think that some hospitals will not perform abortions and that they will close their maternity clinics rather than do them.
MRS. FORD: The abortion debate has become so emotional that the dangers of stringent anti-abortion laws are obscured by the use of shorthand phrases like “pro-life” and “abortion on demand.” I believe the 1973 Supreme Court deci- sion was good, because it took abortions out of the backwoods and put them in hospitals. It is important to remember the emotional and medical dangers of illegal abortions. I fear overturning the decision would mean the return of an in-
sidious form of social and economic dis- crimination, Those who suffer most from illegal abortions are the young and the poor. I agree with many others who think that, regardless of one’s personal view of abortion, imposition of a strict anti-abor- tion law is an imposition on the free- dom of the individual.
MRS. JACKSON: Scoop and I have dif- ferent opinions. I'm for abortion but Scoop believes that life begins at con- ception and is opposed to abortion un- less the mother’s life is in jeopardy. MRS. REAGAN: I’m not for abortion on demand. Unless the mother’s life is really endangered. It’s very difficult for me to get beyond the realization that youre taking a human life. I don’t un- derstand women who say they should have control over their own bodies. What about the body they are carrying?
Example cited
I've used this example before and Ill use it again because it’s very graphic: One of our children had a teacher who, when discussing abortion, said, “Picture a pregnant woman who has a window in her tummy so she can watch the child grow within her. I wonder at what point she would say, “Take that child out and kill it?” Unwanted babies should be put up for adoption. There are many people willing to adopt and not enough children to go around. I think abortion is
being done for convenience sake. I do think it should be done.
MRS. UDALL: I stand 100 percent
hind legalized abortion. The Supre Court is the highest court in the land; ruled abortion is legal and we ought abide by that ruling. If we did not ha legalized abortion, I strongly belie we d still have butchers performing b alley abortions. And I think that is
more dangerous and detrimental
health—and expensive, for those wo en who can't afford to fly overseas, here and there, to obtain proper care. MRS. WALLACE: George supports #f Pro-Life Amendment making aborti¢ illegal and I don’t go against my hi band’s political stance. But I feel “ the whole issue should not have enter the political arena at all. It’s a medi and moral problem. Doctors and mail ters should work on it. Getting poli cians involved strikes me as wrong.
What has your husband done— during his political life—that has|P been the most help to women? ‘ MRS. CARTER: Even though "7 was in a part of the country that gen ally opposed ERA—in fact, in a st | that did not ratify the amendment—-f) took a strong stand for it. Not beca
it was the political thing to do, but cause he thought it was right. Also,
(continued on page 62)
ay OC eH eee ok Tie
IE thee
\ Ardy
AA A VLA), KE >
The moisturizing soap with cocoa
L&MS Camera Offer.
= otine
LNA) Fe
Picture the Proud Land
1 Kodak’s Hawkeye Tele-Instamatic"Camera.
poor ee
| Please send me of Kodak’s Hawkeye Tele-Instamatic™ Camera(s) at $24.66 each. |enclose$___________ _plus the bottom panels from 2 packs of
L&M. (Please include State and Local Sales Tax where applicable.) Mail with check or
money order payable to L&M Camera Offer, PO. Box 9152, St. Paul, Minnesota 55191.
| NAME a ree z 2 =
ADDRESS ue eS
CITY SASS ZIP
Offer void to persons under 21 years of age. Good in U.S. only except where prohibited, licensed, taxed, or restricted by law. Offer expires December 31, 1976. Allow six weeks for shipment
SUPER KINGS
Now, for the first time ever at this price, you can buy Kodak's Hawkeye Tele- Instamatic™ Camera. A pocket-size cam- era that takes both regular and telephoto pictures. Featuring 2 built-in lenses, a handy flipflash unit, automatic viewfinder, “soft-touch” shutter release and conven- ient film cartridges. Easy to carry, easy to use—at a very easy price.
som Ren eB
be abe tNaw Wek A
aos
MPR Ge WAgeche iy tereape pater ne
SS yrs erent eter)
By Geraldine Carro
News, ideas and infor- mation for parents.
WHO SAYS OUR CHILDREN NEVER HAD IT SO GOOD?
America’s children—sur- rounded by love and provided with the best money can buy, from progressive educations to brand-new bicycles. This is our mental portrait of the youngest generation.
However appealing this pic- ture, it bears scant resemblance to reality, according to psychol- ogist Kenneth Keniston, who heads The Carnegie Founda- tion for Children.
“It’s extraordinary! We Americans say we care about children. But as a country, we do less for them than any other industrialized democracy,” says Keniston.
France, Great Britain, Sweden and other major countries—unlike the U.S., says Keniston, guarantee adequate medical care to their children through national programs. The difference shows up dramatically in our infant mortality rate, twice that of Sweden and higher than in 14 other countries.
European nations recognize a child’s right not to grow up in destitution. They support that right with legisla- tion. In our land of plenty, one out of four children lives in poverty.
Parents Are Having a Hard Time
Along with the lack of child-oriented national policies, another major reason children are having a hard time, says Keniston, is that their parents are too.
“Our country tolerates a high rate of unemployment, says Keniston. This hurts children of single-parent and mi- nority households most, he says.
Another economic trend, the mas- sive entry of mothers into the job mar- ket, often—to make ends meet at home —poses problems. Because of scarce day-care facilities, children return from school to empty homes. The TV set (Keniston calls it the “flickering-blue parent”) serves as babysitter.
“There are six million mothers of preschoolers with jobs and one million day-care spaces,’ Keniston says. He recommends both full-day centers and afternoon care for school children.
Keniston, however, is not mothers working. But, he stresses, there must be someone to care for the children. He thinks flexible work shifts
against
38
“YOUNG MOTHER AND TWO CHILDREN,”
BY MARY CASSATT, 1908
in industry would help. Then at least one parent could be home at a time.
Needed: New Sense of Community
Changes in community life are also making things harder on both parents and children. “Our romantic view of the old-fashioned extended family, where three generations lived under one roof, is mostly myth,” says Kenis- ton. “But it’s true that people lived in more stable communities. Relatives and friends nearby provided backup support for the family. (Today the defi- nition of a good neighbor is someone who minds his business. )”
What changes does Keniston pro- pose to improve life for parents and children?
Not all start with the government. Parents themselves must act to. create a new, child-oriented community.
He suggests parents form commu- nity information centers where families could locate the kinds of help they need. He also advocates parents’ groups to influence government and corporate policies that concern children. As an example, he cites ACT, a Massachu- setts group that lobbies for better chil- dren’s TV.
“So many things that affect children today are out of parents’ control,’ Ken- iston observes. Among them are the quality of air children breathe, the tele- vision programs they watch, the hous- ing they must live in.
Because vast changes are necessary, Keniston says that as parents we must work in the interests of all children— not just our own.
Painting courtesy of The White House Collection
VACATION: TRAVELING BY CAR WITH CHILDREN
You've spent half the night packing, and just as you hit the highway you realize that you for- got the teddy bear without which Susie refuses to sleep.
Vacations may be fun, but get- ting there may be less so. Packing is one problem. So is the fact that small children get bored very quickly in cars.
Apart from pills to ease your headache, there is no magic formula to make the trip a breeze. But good planning can make mat- ters much easier.
Strategy—Keep to normal schedule for meals, naps and bed- time. If you're traveling long dis- tances, plan most of the driving during naps and after bedtime. During the day, stop every two hours to let the kids stretch.
Packing—In addition to the teddy bear, keep an extra change of clothes for each child handy for accidents. (Two diapers on the baby helps.) Also pack pre-mois- tened wipes, plastic bags for wet clothes and garbage, first-aid equipment including adhesive bandage strips, baby aspirin, alco- hol, thermometer, Vaseline and motion sickness pills (if your doc- tor approves). Include a folding stroller if there’s room.
Safety—A government-ap- proved car seat is a must for chil- dren four and under. Over four, they should always use a seat belt. Children should ride in the back seat. They should sleep in their car seats, never lying down on back seat, in a bassinet or on an adult’s lap.
Distractions—For meals, plan car picnics with foods that don't spoil easily. (Also keep a supply of such foods—crackers, fruit, canned juices, etc., for emergency delays.) When good humor be- gins to fail, try songs. Also bring along a bag of toys and games to be dispensed as needed. Play iden- tification games, like counting exit signs, stop signs, red gars, etc. One book we read suggests giving kids a hairbrush to use‘as a make-be- lieve microphone.
Think of the trip from the chil- dren’s point of view as well as your own. You'll be fine after a
good night’s sleep.
MAILBOX Do you have ideas to share with other parents? What top- ics would you like us to cover in this column? Write Moth- ering, LHJ, 641 Lexington Ave., N.Y., N.Y. 10022.
How America Lives: oY | Special Beauty Supplement for the cece
ee
As of America
ene by Maureen Lynch, Health and Beauty Editor Photographs by Evelyn Hofer
_ You won’t find these attractive women parading on the runway at a beauty pageant. You may find them at home eevee Eshet bruised knees and egos. Or making decisions at the office, acquiring college degrees, hiking through the woods or leading an employees’ meeting...
_ They are America’s real beauties—resourceful, dynamic and largely
uncelebrated, except among a knowing circle of family and friends. They are great-looking, yes. And often flattering makeup or a few color highlights in the hair have been added to enhance things. But what makes. these women truly beautiful are their inner resources, which identifies them as symbols of . today’s changing woman. : These are the eight winners of the Journal’s Bicentennial search announced in our February and March issues. They were selected from thousands of women proposed by our readers. Sometimes the women nom- inated themselves; other entries of photographs and descriptive letters were sent in by admiring mothers, daughters, husbands, sisters and friends. Our own editors served as judges.
ears in age from 24 to 84 (half are 30 or under), ae women represent a variety of generations and lifestyles. They are married and they are single. They are mothers, grandmothers or without children by choice. Whether their careers are focused in or outside the home, they are women
eae oe ze in command of their own lives and aware of their personal options. a 4 When we visited them for interviews we found women with clear
40
inions pereels the world. And all but ce ame ee “Giddy” ee Cota nerve
new. What is 1 new are the eee different ways todays women, in their personal 1 image, s Sd their strength and their enthusiasm for life.
i wih 2 ee eS ee ee ee
Niele melee MS etree bere Bebo a wife. For one, she rarely serves tea. She also streaks her ‘own blond hair and is most at home ina F-shirt and floppy |Indian cotton pants. An energetic mother of four boys, she SSE eam sm Carla mos em Coa Ce band Jim’s ministerial assignment. On the walls are the weavings 32-year-old Starr creates. . ' She hopes the weavings will become a eer tee ‘ness, but right now Starr’s professional ambitions are ‘secondary to that of raising her children. “I was trained /my entire life to be a wife and mother. I’m very good at it.
But} she adds, “I can’t be super mommy all the time? _ Two years ago, Starr suddenly realized she’d made
Bum ota Sue eto ou git d tai reo to
expand her own interests. First she took her weavings to shops and galleries. With the money they brought she en- rolled in ballet classes. Today she also coordinates the 200- member parent-volunteer program at her local school.
pe PEN Pee ew Com tier bee m bale Co ay Clie Wo we laa Ce He insures her free time by helping with the house and children. “I think it takes a lot of sharing” says Starr, “to make a go of a marriage?’
“The more active I became, the more I could see the need...”
_ Karyn Farr Freed looks like a pussycat with her softly- coiffed blond hair and large blue-gray eyes. But behind that feminine facade and low-key manner lies a woman with the quiet Te mom emi he (aes
At 30, Karyn is an executive secretary with the Cali- ‘fornia Department of Transportation. She is also the elected head of the Clerical Worker s Council of the Cali- fornia State Employees Association. “The more active I became? explains Karyn, “the more I could see the need. It’s hard to get other people to pick up the standard and viene ri
Tenn eae pean Se rte
She and her husband own their ranch-style home an love to travel. They have no children by choice. “I thinl women should make conscious decisions to be mothers. | think motherhood is really a full time job. I have a sara time job} says Karyn, “and I would not choose to stay home and have children”
eS utCeCnen Gir s ian Cnc hte e otis te Clan Pou ehMe Ch Met CMe CU Coa me newly formed Tierrasanta Junior Women’s Club in Sa Diego. “I felt? she says, “I Ss) do something in m community.’
“She is our soul...our source of loving”
} Her silver hair knotted at the crown, her face lined by ner 84 years, Eva Burns (“Giddy;’ as she is known to those close to her) remains at the center of a family that counts bix children, 11 grandchildren and nine great-grandchil- dren. “She is our soul, our source of comfort, our source of bet d OMe heen bakipic says granddaughter Bar- vie Ward. a | . Born.and raised in upstate New York, Giddy has spent ner life on the farm. Her memories are flooded with winter sleigh a tapping for maple sugar and driving a aes “Did I enjoy it!” she says.
:
on . se
Rs
There were the hard times, too, for Giddy and her late husband, Frank. But Giddy, as her granddaughter puts it, ‘thas .always possessed a never-dying drive to keep going”
Today she lives in her small Ogdensburg, N.Y., cottage surrounded by the furniture she has refinished and her handmade rag rugs and quilts. There is SNES a great- grandchild who: comes by to dip a hand in Giddy’s cookie jar and have her fix a pair of jeans. “Their parents all have sewing machines?’ aes Giddy, “but the children think I can do it better. I can’t. But as: long as sea think
that, a m willing to do it”
“You get a second sense about each child”
_ One demanding toddler going through “the terrible kM ee Beceem avo met meticias (crete Billetsd Paulette McKittrick Imperiale is mother hen to six of them—and she loves it. —
OWN ro Clea etree ay ae at The New York Found- _ ling Hospital, where Paulette is a trained child care worker. Because they often irerCe extrem Cisne oto were neglected or ae her Sr Bias ads Went as OTe bm tiie
Paulette, who has a iS SNES Oe inner calm for her 24 years, tries to give Sa Sabi ts) Sac attention. “You get to
know which cry means ‘I’m lonely’ and which mean AZ be lee hota oi elitd elects em eben) CT he ol get a second sense about each child”
For Paulette, whose tall, slender figure and waif-lik beauty might qualify her for a glamorous model’s caree child care has always been a calling. “All my life I’ve bee Chee MCh tatea te ebeS hee elec seam ones six in a happy family. “I guess I’m anxious to re-create fo it eaiCles mee hee mt me ore mati te
ee tea ROM ma i Bretsiceesslhm cele sect Paulette hopes to have children of her own.
i
{
“It’s fun being a late bloomer”
ai Margery (“Midge”) Stafford Rowbotham comes from i family that landed in America in 1636.
What led her to turn mountain climber at 50 and em- jvark on-a career as a travel lecturer and photographer “jay partly have been her pioneer heritage.
« But there was also the feeling after two marriages (one CSE Ie Bette tom otd taal Cheseme tl ust s Mea om cele bee Comm sues aLt _ Casting around for new activities, Midge, a natural ips joined the Sierra Club. That began the hiking
ips that eventually led to a 24-day trek on Mt. Everest. |
A tournament-ranked tennis player, Midge found pre- paring for serious climbing a bit like training for the Marines. “At times I thought I was going to fold up? But says Midge, “it’s good for middle-aged women to keep challenging themselves. It’s good to keep up a SE 1 adventure, no matter how big or small?’
WIC hae hee ta tC kee tm Cote ett cropped short “so I can wash it in a stream if I have to? started giving travel lectures professionally in and around Bos-_ ton after her Himalayan trip. “I started a little late in life? says Midge. “But it’s fun being a late bloomer’
“I really feel I’ve got control of my own life”
Ree VSO w UChr meee hoe bai ene thy toys and ad clothes. But what they lack in frills, they eae eer hm sets te
_ Their mother, slim, pretty, 28-year-old Evelyn Martin, is a Specialist 4in the Army, a rank equivalent to corporal. She is also the sole support of Eugenia 12; Karan, 10;
on Na 8; and hei Od tun Bit. re ees PEL aC ae
ey BU omy erattity Ts together i in a simple house at Fort
Jackson, S.C., where Evelyn is stationed. The girls help —
with the housework and care of their younger brother.
The day we visited Evelyn, Elaine had just picked! |
VCP Gow A SCR et ems om ob ets led Evelyn, who exudes unselfconscious strength, is waiting for a man to make life easier. She had a bri unsuccessful second marriage. “I understand it’s hard ft a man} she says, “to take on four children who aren’t hi She has come to enjoy being head of her own hous
_ bouquet of wild flowers for her mother. “They're rae kids?’ said Evelyn. “Really deep down good—not pnt ry
hold. “I can provide for myself and for my kids. You |
I really feel I’ve got control of my own life?
|
| te k
j—-=7 1
= > a
‘“‘Women are people, too”
PROCEDURAL ele Com Re Roast le jth the bumper sticker on her car which reads, “Women yre People, Too?’
Dae ware lihete hee rier tne tn Cs cky Ot cs
om tiee tt elec ig ewes caceenes what I aL MD ue tit ian oe ey a is lic sate
; At 47, Louann, who sees herself as “outgrowing the ;)other-homemaker role?’ has become an active defender Tee MUM BCR eo e CCM teraCyy her Norfolk-Virginia Beach branch of the National
Organization of Women and belongs to a consciousness-
raising group.
She also works part-time in her husband’s sales office. The three of the five Van Pelt children that still live at home help their eo with the housework.
Neil Van Pelt is proud of his wife’s feminist activities. “He believes women ECT) as bas more? Louann explains.
wo temo m tC tere eet Store hy rc on her appearance. “I’d put on makeup even if I don’t expect to see anybody. I like to look the best I can for myself?’
“Thirty symbolizes to me ec finally grown up”
Her twenties were pretty hectic, says Jan Enright, ‘looking back on the years when her husband, OB ee ene pte] law school and she was finishing her master’s CoC p roa tH education. At first there was one child, and then two. Jan, whose children are now aged three and five, turns 30 this month. She says she is looking forward to the next stage in her life. “Thirty symbolizes to me I’ve finally ‘grown up,’ she says. “I’m not a kid anymore” Jan now teaches half days at Hillel, a Hebrew day school
in Akron, Ohio, where the Enrights live. Raised a Con-.
gregationalist, she also attends a Catholic church with her
husband and her children. Jan finds no problem being tl
Yiby WH
' : : p : F : ; |
ising e ce
only non-Jewish member of the school staff.
Eventually she hopes to complete her PhD. in eleme Leva motels esac Clas oak yelo i lebT most of her time being a wife and mother. “I’m proud to | Mrs. Tim Enright?’ she says. —
SOB oye emote CBee hero bao a) Eee wash her hair every night and attend education cour twice a week. “I think because I have so many intere: that fulfill me as an individual I’m a better wife ai pe alty ets oi
ama Te aon)
s b SHEFFIELD KITTANNING CHAPEL HILL SWANTON HUGHESTON FOX POINT SOLON LANCASTER CHATTANOOGA VIRGINUA HUNTINGTON FREDERIC SOUTH EUCLID LEMOYNE CLARKSVILLE ALEXANDRIA HURRICANE FRIESLAND STRONGSVILLE UBRARY CLEVELAND AMHERST INSTITUTE GALESVILLE TERRACE PARK MANHEIM. CLIFTON ANNANDALE JANE LEW GLENDALE e eo .@ * TIMBERLAKE MANOR COLUMBIA BEOFORD KINGMONT GRANTSBURG TOLEDO. MANORVILLE COOKEVILLE BLACKSBURG KINGWOOD GREEN BAY e @ owl § Wi TONTOGANY MANSFIELD COVINGTON BLUEFIELD LENS CREEK GREENDALE VERMILION MCDONALD COWAN BRISTOL LEWISBURG GREENFIELD WADSWORTH MEDIA DECATUR CHARLOTTESVILLE | LOCHGELLY HARTFORD e e e e e WALTON HILLS MILLERSBURG DECHERD CHATHAM LOGAN HAYWARD WATERVILLE MT. OLIVER ORESDEN CHESAPEAKE LONDON HAZEL GREEN uo WEST VIEW MUNHALL OUNLAP DANVILLE MAN HUDSON WESTERVILLE NATRONA OYERSBURG OUBLIN MARTINSBURG JANESVILLE e.e WICKLIFFE NEW CASTLE EAST RIDGE OUMFRIES MATEWAN JEFFERSON WILLOUGHBY NORTH EAST ERWIN FAIRFAX MCCONNELL KENOSHA YELLOW SPRINGS OSBORNE ETHRIDGE FALLS CHURCH MILTON KESHENA e aS TOWN PATTON FAYETTEVILLE FALMOUTH MONTGOMERY KOHLER A PERRYOPOLIS FLAT WOODS FARMVILLE MORGANTOWN LAKE GENEVA ADA PHILADELPHIA FRANKLIN FREDERICKSBURG] MT. GAY LAKE MILLS ALTUS PHILIPSBURG GALLATIN FRONT ROYAL NITRO LANCASTER ATOKA PITCAIRN GERMANTOWN FRIES NORTH FORK LOD! BARTLESVILLE PITTSBURGH HARRIMAN HAMPTON OAK HILL LIVINGSTON CLINTON CURRIE HARTSVILLE HARRISONBURG PARKVIEW MADISON AMA AUGUSTA WAUKEGAN CALVERT CITY MONUMENTAL PERHAM WOODBRIDGE CAVALIER DEWEY IDGWAY HIXSON LAKESIDE PEACH CREEK MAPLE BLUFF RTVILLE AUSTELL WESTCHESTER CAMBRIDGE MORNINGSIDE PINE ISLAND WEW MEXICO CROSBY GUTHRIE SCOTT HUMBOLOT LEXINGTON PHILIPPI MARINETTE ISTON BALDWIN WHEATON CARROLLTON MT_ RAINIER PIPESTONE ABIQUIU DEVILS LAKE HYDRO. SEWICKLEY JACKSON LYNCHBURG PINCH MAYVILLE NS BARNESVILLE WHEELING CENTRAL CITY NECKER RANIER AGUA FRIA DICKINSON IDABEL SHARPSVILLE JOHNSON CITY NEWPORT NEWS | PINEVILLE MAZOMANIE JRN RT WHITE HALL CHERRY WOOD NORTH EAST RICHFIELD ANTON CHICO DRAYTON MCALESTER SHENANGO KINGSPORT NORFOLK POCA MCFARLAND ; BUFORD WILMETTE CYNTHIANA NORTH POINT ROBBINSDALE CAPULIN FARGO MIDWEST CITY SHIREMANSTOWN | LA FOLLETTE NORTON PRINCETON MENASHA {AN CALHOUN WINNETKA DANVILLE OAK FOREST ROCHESTER CORDOVA GRAND FORKS NORMAN SOMERSET LAKEWOOD PETERSBURG QUINC Y MERRILL FAX CANTON INDIARA DEVONDALE OVERLEA ROSEVILLE CUNDIYO JAMESTOWN NOWATA STATE COLLEGE LA VERGNE PORTSMOUTH ND MIDDLETON TTE CARTERSVILLE ALGIERS ORUID HILLS PADONIA RUSH CITY EAST PECOS MANDAN OKLAHOMA CITY SWISSVALE LEBANON PULASKI RED JACKET MILTON ENCE CHAMBLEE ANDERSON ELKTON PARADISE SAUK CENTRE GLORIETA MINOT PAWHUSKA THORNBURG LINDEN RADFORD RIPLEY MILWAUKEE AYNE. CLARKDALE BATESVILLE EMINENCE PARKVILLE SCANLON LA PLACITA RIVERDALE PONCA CITY TRAFFORD LIVINGSTON RICHMOND RIVESVILLE MONDOV! \LDINE CORNELIA BEDFORD FAIRMEADE PERRY HALL SILVER BAY PENASCO RUGBY SHAWNEE TURTLE CREEK MANCHESTER ROANOKE ROWLESBURG MONONA 0 COVINGTON BLACK OAK FRANKFORT PIKESVILLE SPRINGFIELD RATON VALLEY CITY STILLWATER UNIONTOWN MARYVILLE ROCKY MOUNT SHREWSBURY MONTICELLO AGAR DECATUR BLOOMFIELO FRANKLIN PINEHURST STAPLES RIO LUCIO WALHALLA TULSA WEST HOMESTEAD | MILAN SPRINGFIELD SISTERSVILLE MOSINEE ; DORAVILLE BRAZIL GLASGOW RALSTON TRUMAN RUIDOSO WILLISTON OREGON WEST MIFFLIN MILLINGTON STAUNTON SPRING HILL MOUNT HOREB TSVILLE DUBLIN CARMEL GRAYMOOR RIDERWOOD VIRGINIA SANTA FE OHIO ASTORIA WHITEHALL MT. PLEASANT SUFFOLK STOLLINGS MUKWONAGO SONVILLE EAST GRIFFIN COALMONT GRAYSON RIGGS ROAD WATERVILLE SENA AMHERST CEDAR HILLS WILKINSBURG NASHVILLE VINTON SUMMERLEE MUSCODA VETTE EASTMAN COLUMBUS GREENSBURG RIVERDALE WAYZATA TAOS AVON CHARLESTON WILLIAMS NEWPORT VIRGINIA BEACH | SUMMERSVILLE NEJLLSVILLE DALE ELBERTON CORYDON HARDINSBURG RIVER NECK WEST CONCORD VADITO AVON LAKE COOS BAY WILMERDING NIOTA WARRENTON SUN VALLEY NEKOOSA GSTON EXPERIMENT CULVER HARRODSBURG ROCKDALE WINDOM VALDEZ BAY VILLAGE COQUILLE WILSON OAK RIDGE WAYNESBORO TERRA ALTA NEOPIT FAIRBURN OALE HAZARD. ROCKLANO WINNEBAGO VALLEY RANCH BEACHWOOD DALLAS WORMLEYSBURG | PARIS WISE THORPE NEW GLARUS FAIRVIEW EDGEWOOD HENDERSON ROCKVILLE WINONA WAGON MOUND BEDFORD EAST SALEM RHODE ISLAND PARSONS WOODBRIDGE TRIADELPHIA NEW HOLSTEIN FITZGERALD ELKHART HICKMAN ROSEDALE MISSISSIPPI NEW YORK BEREA EASTSIDE BARRINGTON PERRYVILLE WYTHEVILLE UNION NEW RICHMOND FORSYTH EVANSVILLE HOPKINSVILLE ROSEMONT BROOKHAVEN ALLEGANY BRECKSVILLE FLORENCE BRISTOL PIKEVILLE YORKTOWN. VIENNA NORTH HUDSON FT. VALLEY FORTVILLE HUSTONVILLE ROSLYN CALHOUN CITY ARDSLEY BROOK PARK FOREST GROVE CRANSTON PORTLAND WASHINGTON WAYNE OCONOMOWOC GAINESVILLE FT. WAYNE IRVINE ROSSVILLE CANTON BATAVIA BROOKLYN GEARHART JOHNSTON RALEIGH ANACORTES WEIRTON OMRO GARDEN LAKES GARY JACKSON RUXTON CLEVELAND BELFAST CANFIELD GOLD BEACH MIDDLETOWN RIDGELY CATHLAMET WELCH OREGON GRIFFIN GREENDALE JETT. SALISBURY COLUMBIA BINGHAMTON CHESAPEAKE HAMMOND NEWPORT RIPLEY CENTRALIA WELLSBURG OSCEOLA HOGANSVILLE GREENSBURG JUNCTION CITY SEABROOK COLUMBUS BRONXVILLE CLEVELAND MCMINNVILLE PAWTUCKET SAVANNAH COULEE DAM WHEATLAND OSHKOSH HOLLY SPRINGS GRIFFITH KINGSLEY. SECURITY COMO BUFFALO COAL GROVE MILL CITY PORTSMOUTH SEWANEE OUVALL WHEELING PARDEEVILLE KENNESAW HAMMOND LA GRANGE SHEPPARD OURANT CANANDAIGUA EASTLAKE NEWPORT PROVIDENCE SHELBYVILLE FORKS WHIPPLE PARK FALLS LAFAYETTE HARMONY LANCER SILVER HILL FOREST CASTILE ELYRIA NORTH BEND SMITHFIELD SMYRNA KALAMA WILCOE PEWAUKEE MANCHESTER HIGHLAND LEBANON SILVER SPRING KOSCIUSKO CELORON EUCLID PENOLETON WARREN SO. BRISTOL KELSO WILLIAMSON PLAIN MARIETTA HUNTINGBURG — | LEXINGTON SMITHSBURG LEXINGTON CHENANGO FINDLAY SALEM WARWICK SPARTA KENT WILLIAMSTOWN PLATTEVILLE MONTEZUMA INDIANAPOLIS LOUISA SNOW HILL LOUISVILLE COBLESKILL GALLIPOLIS SUBLIMITY WOONSOCKET SPRINGFIELD KIRKLAND WINFIELD PORT EOWARDS MONTICELLO JASONVILLE LOUISVILLE STEMMERS RUN MARKS DELHI GATES MILLS SWEET HOME ‘SOUTH CAROLINA TIPTONVILLE LONGVIEW WINIFREDE PORTAGE NEWNAN JASPER LYNCH STONELEIGH MERIDIAN DICKINSON GEORGETOWN TURNER AIKEN TRENTON LYNDEN WISCONSIN POTOSI NORTH CANTON KOKOMO LYNDON. SUITLAND. NEWTON DOBBS FERRY GIRARD WARM SPRINGS BISHOPVILLE UNION CITY MANSON ALBANY POYNETTE OXFORD LAFAYETTE LYNNVIEW TAKOMA PARK PHILADELPHIA ORESDEN GLENDALE WARRENTON CHERAW WAVERLY MONTESANO ALMA RACINE PINE LAKE A PORTE MARTIN TEXAS \UITMAN EAST AURORA HAMILTON PENASYLVARIA CHESTER WAYNESBORO. OAK HARBOR AMERY REEDSBURG PLAINVILLE LOGANSPORT MAYFIELD TIMONIUM 'UPELO EASTCHESTER HARBOR VIEW ARNOLD CHESTERFIELD WINCHESTER PULLMAN ARGYLE RICE LAKE PRINCETON LONG BEACH MAYSVILLE TOWSON UNION ELMIRA HARRISVILLE BALOWIN CLEMSON WOODBINE RAYMOND ASHLAND RIO ROME LYNDHURST MIDDLETOWN TURNER MISSOURI ELMSFORD HASKINS BEDFORD CLINTON WOODBURY VANCOUVER BARABOO RIPON ROSSVILLE MARION. MOCKINGBIRD VILLA NOVA ALBANY FAIRPORT HOLLAND BETHEL OARLINGTON TOUS WOODLAND BEAVER DAM RIVER FALLS SMYRNA MARTINSVILLE MOREHEAD WALTERS BALLWIN FALCONER HUDSON BRACKENRIDGE FORT MILL BRECKENRIDGE WEST VIRGINIA BELLEVILLE ROTHSCHILD STATESBORO MA\ MORGANTOWN WEST GATE BERKELEY GENESEO HURON BRADDOCK HARTSVILLE CENTER ALPHEUS BELOIT SAINT FRANCIS THOMASTON MICHIGAN CITY | MT. STERLING WESTMINSTER BEVIER GLOVERSVILLE INDEPENDENCE BRENTWOOD HONEA PATH CONROE ANMOORE BENTON SHEBOYGAN THOMASVILLE MISHAWAKA MURRAY. WHEATON BOONVILLE GREECE IRONTON BRIOGEVILLE JOHNSTON CROCKETT BECKLEY BERLIN SHELL LAKE VALDOSTA MONTGOMERY NEW CASTLE WILLIAMSPORT BRENTWOOD GREENBURGH JACKSON BRIOGEWATER LANGASTER DENTON BENTON FERRY BLACK EARTH SHOREWOOD WARNER ROBINS | MONTPELIER OWENSBORO WOODBROOK BRIDGETON HAMBURG LAKELINE BROOKVILLE MARION FORT WORTH BENWOOD BLAIR SHULLSBURG WEST POINT MT. VERNON PAINTSVILLE WOODSIDE BROOKFIELD HASTINGS LAKEWOOD BURGETTSTOWN | NINETY SIX GONZALES BETHLEHEM BLUE RIVER SPARTA WINTERVILLE MUNCIE PARIS MASSACHUSETTS CABOOL HIGHLAND USBON CAMP HILL NO. AUGUSTA GREGORY BRIDGEPORT BOSCOBEL SPOONER NEW CARLISLE PIKEVILLE ASHBURNHAM CAMERON HILTON LORAIN. CARLISLE ORANGEBURG GRIFFING PARK BUCKHANNON BRODHEAD SPRING GREEN MAUNALOA Neo eee PRESTONSBURG | ATHOL CAPE GIRARDEAU HONEOYE FALLS LYNDHURST CARNEGIE ROCK HILL INGLESIDE BURKE HOLLOW BROOKLYN STOUGHTON ONVILLE IDAHO NORTH VERNON | RICHLAWN BEVERLY CARTHAGE HOOSICK FALLS MADEIRA CATASAUQUA SENECA IOWA PARK CAMERON BURKE STURGEON BAY 5BORO BONNERS FERRY OLDENBURG RUSSELLVILLE COHASSET CHAFFEE HOPEWELL MARIETTA CHALFON SUMMERVILLE KILLEEN CHARLESTON CALEDONIA SUN PRAIRIE COUNCIL PAOLI ST. MATTHEWS DANVERS CHAMP HUDSON FALLS MAUMEE CHAMBERSBURG SUMTER LAKEVIEW CHESAPEAKE CAMBRIDGE TENNYSON JEROME PRINCETON SCOTTSVILLE HAMILTON CHARLACK JAMESTOWN MAYFIELD CHESTER HILL UNION. LAWRENCE CHESTER CASSVILLE TOMAHAWK KOOTENAI RENSSELAER SHELBYVILLE HINGHAM CHILLICOTHE JOHNSTOWN MCOONALO CHURCHILL WESTMINSTER MARSHALL CLARKSBURG CEDARBURG TREMPEALEAU LEWISTON RICHMOND: SHIVELY HULL CLAYTON KENMORE MEDINA CLARION WINNSBORO MESQUITE CLEARVIEW CLINTON TWO RIVERS MCCALL RUSHVILLE SPRINGFIELD MIODLETON CLINTON LAKEWOOD NEW BOSTON CRAFTON YORK MUENSTER COLFAX COBB WATERLOO MERIDIAN SEYMOUR SPRINGLEE NEWTON COOL VALLEY LARCHMONT NEWARK CUMBERLAND SOUTH DAKOTA ODEM CROSS LANES COLOMA WATERTOWN MONTEPELIER SOUTHPORT STURGIS SALEM CRESTWOOD LEVITTOWN NILES OORMONT ABERDEEN PARIS DAKOTA COLUMBUS WAUNAKEE OROFINO VALPARAISO TAYLORSVILLE SEEKONK CREVE COEUR LEWISTON NORTHFIELD DU BOIS BROOKINGS PEAR RIDGE DIAMOND CUBA CITY WAUSAU PONDERAY VEVAY THEALKA SHARON CRYSTAL CITY LIVONIA OBERLIN EASTON HOSMER PORT ARTHUR DUNBAR DARLINGTON WAUWATOSA PRESTON WABASH VANCEBURG SHREWSBURY OELLWOOD LLOYD ORANGE EBENSBURG HURON PORTLAND ELBERT DE FOREST WEST ALUS SALMON WALKERTON VERSAILLES SUDBURY OES PERES LOCKPORT OREGON FINLEYVILLE MITCHELL SABINE PASS ELKINS. DICKEYVILLE WEST BARABOO SANOPOINT WAYNEDALE WELLINGTON TEMPLETON EDMUNDSON MACEDON ORRVILLE FORD CITY MOBRIDGE SWEETWATER FAIRMONT OURAND WEST BEND SHOSHONE WINAMAC WINCHESTER WINCHESTER ELUSVILLE MAMARONECK OTTAWA HILLS FOREST HILLS VERMILLION TEMPLE FAIRVIEW EAST TROY WEYAUWEGA ILLINOIS ZIONSVILLE LOUISIANA MICHIGAN ELMDALE MEDINA PARKVIEW GREENTREE WATERTOWN TERRELL FAYETTEVILLE EAU CLAIRE WHITEHALL ALSIP OWA HOUMA ADRIAN FENTON MIDDLEPORT PARMA GREENVILLE TENNESSEE TRENT FILBERT EDGAR WILLIAMS BAY AMBOY AMES JONESVILLE ALGONAC FERGUSON MINEOLA PEPPER PIKE HARRISON ALAMO. WELLINGTON GLEN JEAN EDGERTON WINDSOR ASSUMPTION AUDUBON LOCKPORT ANN ARBOR FESTUS. MONTICELLO PERRYSBURG HEIDELBERG ALCOA UTAH GLENVILLE ELKHORN WONEWOC BANNOCKBURN AVOCA RAYVILLE BATTLE CREEK FLORISSANT MOUNT VERNON | PORTSMOUTH HOMESTEAD ARLINGTON HELPER GRAFTON EVANSVILLE WYOMING BECKEMEYER BANCROFT THIBODAUX BAYVIEW FRONTENAC NEW ROCHELLE ROCKY RIVER INDIANA ATHENS VERMONT GRANTSVILLE FALL RIVER LARAMIE MEMPHIS BEDFORD PARK BELMOND. MAINE BENTON HARBOR | GILLIAM NEW YORK CITY ROSSFORD INGRAM BARTLETT BURLINGTON HARRISVILLE FENNIMORE SARATOGA AE BELLEVUE BETTENDORF BAILEYVILLE BIG RAPIDS GLASGOW NEWARK SALEM JEFFERSON BRISTOL DERBY LINE HARVEY FOND DU LAC SINCLAIR BERWYN INE BAR HARBOR BRIGHTON GLENDALE NEWBURGH SHAKER HEIGHTS | KANE BROWNSVILLE ESSEX JUNCTION HENDERSON FOOTVILLE THERMOPOLS BLUE ISLAND BURLINGTON BELFAST BUCHANAN GREENDALE NEWFANE BLUFORD CARLISLE BRADLEY CENTER LINE HANLEY HILLS NIAGARA FALLS BRADLEY CEDAR FALLS BRIOGTON CENTRAL LAKE HANNIBAL NISKAYUNA DOD PARK BRIDGEPORT CEDAR RAPIDS BRUNSWICK CHARLEVOIX HAYTI OGDEN e e -BROOKFIELD CENTERVILLE CARIBOU CHARLOTTE HAZELWOOD OLEAN 9 CALUMET CITY CHARITON FAIRFIELD. CHELSEA HILLHOUSE ONEONTA CALUMET PARK CLARINDA HAMPDEN EAST JORDAN JACKSON OSWEGO CARBONDALE CLINTON JACKMAN EAST LANSING JEFFERSON CITY PALMYRA CASEY CLIVE MADAWASKA ESCANABA JENNINGS PARMATOWN e e CATLIN CORNING MILFORO ESSEXVILLE KENNETT PELHAM UGH CHARLESTON COUNCIL BLUFFS | MILLINOCKET FRANKENMUTH KIRKWOOD PELHAM MANOR CHESTER CRESCO MOUNT DESERT GLADSTONE (A QUE PENFIELD CHICAGO CRESTON NORWAY GRAND HAVEN LAKESHIRE PENN YAN CICERO DAVENPORT OLD TOWN GRAND RAPIDS LAMAR PERINTON coLP DECORAH PITTSFIELD GRANDVILLE LIBERTY PERRY DALTON CITY OES MOINES PRESQUE ISLE HASTINGS MACKENZIE PHELPS DANVILLE EAGLE GROVE RUMFORD HILLSDALE MACON PITTSFORD e DECATUR ELDORA TOPSHAM HOWELL MANCHESTER PLATTSBURGH DEERFIELD EMMETSBURG VASSALBORO JACKSON MARCELINE PORTER e e e DOLTON FAIRFIELO VEAZIE KALAMAZOO MARLBOROUGH POUGHKEEPSIE HICAGO DU _QUOIN GLENWOOD WATERVILLE LANSING MARY RIDGE ROCHESTER EFFINGHAM GREENFIELD WINSLOW LOWELL MARYVILLE ROTTERDAM ELMWOOD PARK HARTLEY MARYLAND LUDINGTON MOLINE ACRES SARANAC LAKE R ENERGY HUMBOLDT ABERDEEN MANISTIQUE NORMANDY SCARSDALE e e@ LOS EUREKA IOWA CITY ADELPHI MARINE CITY OAKLAND SCHENECTADY CISCO EVANSTON JEFFERSON ALTA VISTA MARION OVERLAND SCRIBA YW’ 10 WIS OBISPO | FOREST PARK KEOKUK ANNAPOLIS MARQUETTE PACIFIC SYRACUSE FRANKLIN PARK LAKE VIEW ANNESLIE MARYSVILLE PAGEDALE TONAWANDA GALESBURG LAMONI ARBUTUS MASON PERRYVILLE TUCKAHOE e e.e GLENCOE MANCHESTER ARDWICK MENOMINEE PINE LAWN VESTAL GLENVIEW MARION. AVALON MIDLAND PLATTSBURG WALDEN e HARVEY MONTICELLO. BALTIMORE MILFORD RICHLAND WARSAW HAZELCREST NEWTON BARE HILLS MONROE RIVERVIEW WATERTOWN e HERRIN OSKALOOSA BAYNESVILLE MT. CLEMENS ROCK HILL WEBSTER HIGHLAND PARK =| OTTUMWA BEL AIR MUSKEGON SALISBURY WESTFIELD TER HILLSIDE PERRY BELTSVILLE NEGAUNEE SARCOXIE WHEATFIELD JUNCTION | HODGKINS POSTVILLE BERWYN PARCHMENT SAVANNAH YONKERS YY HOMETOWN RED OAK BLADENSBURG PEARL BEACH SHELBINA NORTH CAROLINA @ JERSEYVILLE SAC CITY BRENTWOOD PETOSKEY SHREWSBURY ABERDEEN KANKAKEE ST. ANSGAR CABIN JOHN PINCONNING SIKESTON ALBEMARLE ri a r ne KENILWORTH SIGOURNEY CARNEY PLAINWELL SLATER BROOKFORD e@ LA GRANGE SIOUX CENTER CATONSVILLE ROCKFORD SUNSET HILLS CARRBORO LA SALLE SIOUX RAPIDS CAVETOWN ROGERS CITY TIMES BEACH CHAPEL HILL LAKE FOREST TIPTON CHESACO PARK SHERIDAN TWIN OAKS CHARLOTTE LANARK URBANDALE CHEVERLY SOUTH HAVEN UNIONVILLE CONCORD LANSING WAUKON CHEVY CHASE SPARTA UPLANDS PARK DALLAS LEBANON WINTERSET COCKEYSVILLE SPRING LAKE VALLEY PARK OUNN LINCOLNWOOD KANSAS COLLEGE PARK STAMBAUGH VERSAILLES DURHAM LYONS ARKANSAS CITY | COLMAR MANOR | TECUMSEH VINITA PARK EAST SPENCER MARION ASHLAND COTTAGE C:TY WEST BRANCH WARSON WOODS EDEN MATTESON BONNER SPRINGS| DUMBARTON WHITE PINE WELLSTON ERWIN MAYWOOD, BURLINGTON DUNDALK WYOMING WILBUR PARK FAYETTEVILLE MCCOOK CHANUTE EASTPORT YALE WINCHESTER GASTONIA MELROSE PARK CLEARWATER EOGEMERE YPSILANTI MONTANA GOLDSBORO BURY MIDLOTHIAN COFFEYVILLE EDMONSTON MINNESOTA BOZEMAN GREENVILLE MOLINE COUNCIL GROVE | ELKRIDGE ALBERT LEA CONRAD HICKORY MORTON GROVE EDWARDSVILLE ESSEX ANOKA MILES CITY HIGH POINT MT. VERNON EL DORADO FAIRTOWN ARLINGTON ROUNDUP LAURINBURG MT. ZION EMPORIA FITZELL ASKOV ST_ IGNATIUS LENOIR MURPHYSBORO EUREKA FOREST GLEN AURORA NEBRASKA LEXINGTON NEWTON FAIRWAY FORESTVILLE BAYPORT COLUMBUS LILLINGTON NILES FT. SCOTT FOUR CORNERS BENSON FAIRBURY LONGHURST NORMAL FREDONIA “FREDERICK BIRD ISLAND NEBRASKA CITY LOWELL FIELO NORTHBROOK HAYS FULLERTON BLAINE SUPERIOR LUMBERTON NORTHFIELD HERINGTON FUNKSTOWN BLOOMINGTON NEVADA MISENHEIMER OAK LAWN INDEPENDENCE | GAITHERSBURG BLUE EARTH OWYHEE MONROE OAK PARK KANSAS CITY GARRETT PARK BUFFALO NEW HAMPSHIRE MORGANTON ORION LA HARPE GLEN ECHO CLOQUET OURHAM MOUNT AIRY PARK FOREST LAWRENCE GLEN MONT CROOKSTON HANOVER NEW BERN PEORIA LYONS GLYNDON CRYSTAL LEBANON NEW LONDON PHOENIX MARION GOLDEN RING DASSEL WEW JERSEY NEWTON PITTSFIELD OLATHE GREENBELT EDGERTON ALLENHURST PINEVILLE POSEN OTTAWA HAGERSTOWN EDINA ATLANTIC CITY RALEIGH TON, D.C.| QUINCY PAOLA HALETHORPE EXCELSIOR BURLINGTON RANLO " ANKIN PARSONS HARBOR VIEW FERGUS FALLS OEAL REIDSVILLE BOUR RIVER FOREST PHILLIPSBURG HARRISTOWN FOLEY £. BRUNSWICK RICHFIELD RIVER GROVE SENECA HEBBVILLE FOREST LAKE EATONTOWN ROCKINGHAM ‘ON RIVERSIDE SHAWNEE HILLENDALE GAYLORD FAIR HAVEN ROCKY MOUNT EACH ROBINSON STAFFORD. HYATTSVILLE HALLOCK FAR HILLS ROXBORO Ss ROCK ISLAND TOPEKA IOLEWILO HOPKINS HIGHLAND PARK RUTH ROSEMONT YATES CENTER INVERNESS HOYT LAKES INTERLAKEN SALISBURY ROSICLARE KENTUCKY KENSINGTON HUTCHINSON UTTLE SILVER SANFORD ST. JOHNS AFLEX KENWOOD LAKEFIELD LONG BRANCH SHELBY SALEM ANCHORAGE LANDOVER UTCHFIELD MICOLETOWN SMITHFIELD SESSER ASHLAND LANHAM MADISON NEPTUNE CITY SPINDALE SKOKIE BARDSTOWN LANSDOWNE MANKATO OCEAN GROVE STATESVILLE SPARTA BARDWELL LARCHMONT MARSHALL OCEANPORT TARBORO STEELVILLE BEATTYVILLE LAUREL MINNEAPOLIS PERTH AMBOY WASHINGTON STONE PARK BELLEWOOD LENOX MONTEVIDEO PRINCETON WILMINGTON SULLIVAN BENTON LINHIGH MOORHEAD RAHWAY WILSON SUMMIT BEREA LOCH RAVEN MORNINGSIDE ROOSEVELT NORTH DAKOTA SUMNER BROAD FIELDS LODGE FOREST MORRIS RUMSON BELCOURT TAYLORVILLE BUECHEL LUTHERVILLE NORTHFIELD SEA BRIGHT BEULAH VALIER BURGIN MIDDLE RIVER OLIVIA TRENTON BISMARCK VERGENNES BURKESVILLE MILFORD ORTONVILLE WHARTON CARRINGTON
“CREST HAS BEEN SHOWN TO BE AN EFFECTIVE DECAY-PREVENTIVE DENTIFRICE THAT CAN BE OF 5 é SIGNIFICANT VALUE WHEN USED IN A CONSCIENTIOUSLY APPLIED PROGRAM OF ORAL HYGIENE AND REGULAR . : r = PROFESSIONAL CARE. COUNCIL ON DENTAL THERAPEUTICS, AMERICAN DENTAL ASSOCIATION * PARTIAL LISTING, LASTEST PUBLISHED HEW DATA. ©1976, THE PROCTER & GAMBLE CO
NO-FUN BURNS
burn is a bum. There are sun- burns, windbums, sandburns and barbecue burns—all adding t and injury to your fair skin. . . : Not to fool with, “broiled lobster”
_can be a bad second degree burn. Even a milder case p layer redness, taut tingling skin, ouch-pain) , mustn’t be lored. Apply a cold wet towel or ice pack (on and off) any ts that flame. Or soak for 20 minutes in a tepid tub laced h a cup of bran, oatmeal or cornstarch. Another home le is a paste of baking soda and water; let dry on skin, be off. Baking soda is endothermic, meaning it absorbs t. Just a feel-better idea: sprinkle baby powder on your ets, reducing friction. If your burn borders on severe, nk liquids to balance any body dehydration. You may ve blisters, swelling, headache and slight fever. If so, take rin, take plenty of fluids and take to bed—yourre sick.
more serious reactions—call a doctor.
to ease the pain, reduce the swelling.
st-aid cream.
SUNGLASSES: A SHADY STORY
stly fashion or mainly medical, here are a few
drules for good eye care.
A quick test for quality. Stand under a fluor-
fent fixture, hold glasses with the light reflecting
tthe inside lens. Move slightly. If image is dis-
ted, the lens are faulty; will cause strain.
Government regulations now call for shatter-
istant glass. Check for the sticker.
in bright light, no more than 15-30 percent light
d filter through a good pair of glasses. Gray
Sreen are best. Blue lets in ultraviolet light.
if you can see your eyes clearly, glasses are too
nt for top-notch glare control.
/unglasses are light years away from sunglasses. q you wear contact lenses—they re now available
tb an ultraviolet inhibitor factor (referred to as
y to cut glare.
‘To aid sports fans—lenses come mirrored with a
‘n of stainless steel to block visible glare bounc- off of water, sand, snow.
) ithout really good sunglasses, you'll tire faster,
© some night vision. But sunglasses worn in the ‘k will make eyes more light sensitive.
q } | |
July is a beauty-action month. Here are ways to handle these days with scents and sensibility.
ND: Cool down and moisturize with baby oil, mineral or any aftersun lotion—cut down on drying soaps.
D: Or scuff or brush burns—any scrape when you fall rub the outer layer of skin. Quickly apply a cold dress-
)/RBECUE: If you have grill-contact, forget your old habit slicking the spot with butter, grease or petroleum jelly. ce immediately under or in cold water for a few minutes fool down the heat. Pat dry. After a day, lubricate with
2 sunglasses you casually plunk on your face can reflect ir inner personality: hip aviator cool, motorcycle mirrors dink plastic and rhinestones. But whether your choice is
Q Although I'm average weight for my height (5/7”), I have a real problem with my thighs. Bumps stick out on both sides. Is there an exercise for these bulges? —A.S., Chicago, Ill.
A Try this for gradual help: Stretch out on your side, head resting on one elbow (as shown). For balance, use your other hand as a brace in front of you. Keeping your body in a straight line, raise both legs together and hold to a count of five; lower. Do 3 times, roll over and repeat on other side. Hint: The more limber you become, the higher you'll be able to raise your legs.
ON THE GO
Whether travel means a weekend at the shore or India over- land, be ready with beauty-to-go. All small-sized totables. e Just 4 oz. of Final Net non-aerosol hairspray goes a long way; Clairol, $1.39. ¢ Skinny scenting, Coty’s Sweet Earth Fragrance Sticks with dab-on applicator; choice scent, Patchouli, $2.50. ¢ Perfect for bag or beach, tiny Vaseline Intensive Care Lotion, 1 0z., about 15¢. ¢ Refreshing Touch of Naté (4 mini-size products for bath and body, plus 6 towelettes), by Jean Naté, $3.25. ¢ To slip in your pocket, Cachet perfume in a shiny silvery pot; Prince Matchabelli, ¥% oz., $3.75. @ Tuckable size for travel kits or for on-the- spot outdoor showers, a trim tube of Prell Concentrate shampoo; Procter & Gamble, 1.7 0z., about 79¢. A SETTLE LAS ERODED TDD LE IE ALE LLL 2 EEE TB. RII 0. MELE EE
REFRESH-SCENTS
With Tennyson’s penning, “Nothing in Nature is unbeautiful” in mind, we looked for aromatic yet decorative ways to harness the flora and flotsam of nature. For extra inventive ideas, we turned to Amelia Bassin of Bassinnova, a
fragrance environmentalist who matches room
ag scents to room decor. She has concocted easy, ~ at-home methods to combat any staleness,
advice: work with wonderful, all-natural things such as cutting a curlicue of orange rind (as shown here) and combining with crushed cinnamon sticks, cloves, drops of orange extract, perhaps little dried flowers for show. Other Bassin-ettes: freely mix wood shavings, shells and pebbles with essence of peppermint . . . add a mini-splash of brandy to revive any fading potpourri . . . or toss gravels, grasses, herbs and pine cones with a mingling of lemon and vanilla extract... blend the sense-pleasers together in baskets, Mason jars, big brandy snifters or whatever fits your own environment. Illustrations by Thea Kliros; border by Julia Noonan
Sg. =
}
. CHERBOURG VENETIA
& iG
,
CORONATION PAUL REVERE ol UT EN Ty
Oneida Silversmiths
P.O. Box 1, Oneida, New York 13421
A complete service of Oneida stain-
less makes a perfect gift. Send for a
sample teaspoon and see for yourself.
Just enclose 50¢ for each pattern
checked. Limit of one spoon per pat- tern. Complete services at fine stores
everywhere.
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
5?
[] Cherbourg (_j Louisiana _] Coronation (_] Paul Revere _] Frostfire L] Venetia LJ 076
Name a
(Please Print) Address City as. State Zip
Add sales tax for N.Y. & Calif. Offer valid only
MOIONEIDA
The silver cube. Our silversmiths’ mark of ex
sllence
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
The Brooklyn Museum,
news about lung cancer.
Painting courtesy of
Dick S. Ramsay Fund
Anemia in JUD users. Promising
Flight pre- cautions for cold “ k sufferers. : a “FAMILY GROUP” BY FREDERICK R. SPENCER, 1840
By David R. Zimmerman _ 1UD-induced blood loss. English scientists have measured the menstrual blood loss of 300 women who wear IUDs. The largest IUD, the Lippes Loop D, caused the most bleeding. Average monthly flow was two and two-thirds ounces—the threshold of iron deficiency anemia. In fact, one in four of these women had anemic blood iron levels within a year. The smaller Dalkon Shields | (standard and small sizes) caused slightly less blood loss on the average, but more users—one in every three—had anemic hemoglobin levels. The ! smallest IUD tested, the Copper 7, caused the least blood loss—between one! and one-half and two ounces—and produced the fewest anemic changes. |
Cancer report. There now is a report of unprecedented success in treating } the deadliest kind of lung cancer, oat cell carcinoma, which kills 15,000 Americans annually. Cigarette smoking is widely considered its principal cause; most of its victims are dead within one year. This cancer spreads so implacably that few doctors try to slow its advance, let alone stop it; pain relief for its victims is their principal aim.
The promising new report comes from National Cancer Institute radiologist Ralph Johnson, M.D. To treat oat cell carcinoma, he uses high doses of cancer drugs and potent X-rays, aimed at both the afHlicted lung and the brain, where many of the cancers had spread. He described | these “unparalleled” results to a recent American Cancer Society press briefing: Complete remissions were achieved in 26 of 27 gravely ill men and women, of whom 22 remained alive, and 21 were free of cancer for periods of up to one year. He added: “We're getting the kind of remissions} that have never been achieved before!”
Help for sun-shunners. Summer may be more fun this year for people who suffer from erythropoietic protoporphyria, a rare disorder that makes it impossible for them to stand sunlight. A little sun turns a chemical in their skin into an itchy, burning poison. Researcher Micheline Mathew- Roth, M.D., says most sufferers who she has treated can now stay out-of- doors four or five times longer by taking a new pill that contains the vitamin A precursor B-carotene (Solatene, Roche). The pills, she
stresses, don’t help other sun-sensitive individuals; for them the chemical PABA (para-aminobenzoic acid) is the best sunscreen..
Averting ear injury aloft. Airline pilots and cabin attendants are told not to fly with head colds. One reason is that a cold can stop up the eustachian tubes, which carry air from the throat to the inner side of the ear drums to equalize outside air pressure. If the tubes are blocked by a cold, the rapid rise in air pressure as the plane descends can force the eardrums inward, causing painful earache. An eardrum even may rupture —a permanent injury. Flight crew members can postpone journeys until their head colds clear up. Vacation-bound travelers often cannot. To protect their ears, Pan Am medical director Joseph C. Constantino, M.D., suggests that vacationers with head colds ask their doctors to prescribe medication that will open blocked respiratory passages. Over-the-counter cold sprays and decongestants, he says, also may be helpful. End
Baby Brother Tender Love® from
Mattel. He's here for a very special purpose.
To be a bouncing brother to all the other dolls in your little girl's family.
She's sure to love him, because he’s just about as real as he can be.
He has that natural baby-soft Tender Love skin. Drinks from his own bottle. Weis when he’s full. Slips in and out of
c My oa
OP prepress a sporty blue-and-yellow outfit. And he's built exactly the way little boys come into this world. We think he’s wonderful. And mothers from coast to coast seem to agree. Welcome, baby brother!
Baby Brother TENDER LOVE
Sun Valley's
Glenn Janss glories in the natural wonders of her idaho resort home. But she’s also worked successfully to make it a thriving center for the fine arts.
Glenn Janss is that rare woman who, through choice and circum- stance, has found an immeasurably rare and fulfilling lifestyle in the mountain vastness of Idaho. She has brought art and culture to one of America’s last wilderness areas, while preserving its untamed beauty.
A 43-year-old former Southern California socialite, Glenn is the wife of William Janss, owner of the famed Sun Valley ski and summer resort. As first lady of Sun Valley, Glenn has established a cultural oasis in the Northwest which, perhaps because of its awesome natural wonders, has lagged behind much of the country in the acquisition and appreciation of mankind’s works of art.
With her husband and her five children, Glenn lives in an elegant modern home on the banks of Trail Creek. Towering peaks of the rugged Sawtooth range dominate the terrace view, and inside hang the works of De Kooning, Jackson Pollock and many other artists—a collection wor- thy of a museum. It is here that the Jansses welcome guests from around the world.
Glenn, trained for the role of host- ess from childhood, was born with a silver spoon in her mouth, but her character was shaped of unalloyed steel. She became lady of the house early in her teens when her mother fell ill. She acted as hostess for her father, Walter Candy, Jr. and for her grandfather, P. G. Winnett, who founded the Bullock’s department store chain in California.
Winnett, a brilliant and daring businessman, doted on_ his only granddaughter. He confided business matters to her, frequently seeking Glenn’s opinions, and he infused in her the virtue of self-discipline and the will to succeed in all things.
Glenn responded with straight A’s in school, became president of her high school student body and gradu- ated Phi Beta Kappa from Wellesley College. She is an excellent tennis player, water-skier and skier.
The dark-haired, brown-eyed Glenn returned to California from Wellesley to settle into a comfortable, socially acceptable marriage to lum- ber tycoon William Garritt Cooper. But the affluent life, chic parties and Junior League balls were not enough for her. Glenn soon tured to paint- ing and the study of art history. She became a founding member of the
Piste
Los Angeles County Museum of Art. As a volunteer worker for the Los Angeles school system, she was largely responsible for a program which brought 70,000 children a year to the Museum for their first experi- ence with the arts. “The earlier chil- dren are aware of culture,” Glenn says, “the more they grow to appre- ciate it for the rest of their lives.”
Glenn was working toward her masters degree in art history at UCLA six years ago when, in the wake of her divorce from Cooper, she decided to move to Sun Valley with her children: Brandt, Christin, Kelley, Cameron and Candy, who ranged in age from seven to 14. She chose the Idaho wilderness country because she loved its sparkling air and crystal streams, and because it was a haven from the broken rela- tionships, smog and congestion of Los Angeles.
“IT had skied Sun Valley from the time I was fifteen,” Glenn said. “But I was amazed at the number of things to see and do in Idaho. And we were overwhelmed by the beauty of the mountains in summer. In California we practically lived separate lives, and when we moved to the moun- tains we became a family again—we belonged to one another for the first time in years. We rode horses and bi- cycles and ice skated together. There is tennis and golf, boating and fish- ing—literally dozens of sports for ev- ery family. We had dinner together as a family every night.”
Her youngsters embraced the new life as enthusiastically as Glenn did. There were float trips on the Salmon and Snake Rivers, hiking to Alpine lakes set like sapphires at 10,000-foot
altitudes in the breathtaking Saw- tooths. And, of course, there’s skiing.
Still, Glenn craved the intellectu- al and artistic stimulation she had known in Los Angeles. “Idaho is the lowest of all states in contributions to the arts,” she said. “It provides only $10,000 a year for the State Commis- sion on the Arts. Even the federal government gives more—$200,000 to each state. If I wanted cultural asso- ciations in the area, I would have to form them myself.”
It took a near-crippling accident for Glenn to turn her energies to es- tablishing an art colony in the moun- tains. In 1971 she broke a hip skiing. The enforced physical inactivity pro- vided time for her to organize the Sun Valley Creative Arts Center. Five workshops in painting, weaving and ceramics were a modest beginning that first summer, but by the follow- ing year the number of workshops increased to 15. Her husband do- nated a six-acre tract for the Center and Glenn began a fund drive.
She has gathered a quarter-million dollars in the past three years from grants, foundation and private con- tributions. The newly renamed Sun Valley Center for the Arts and Hu-+ manities now offers scores of semi- nars and workshops in_ painting, photography, theater, music, writing, dance and other fields of creativity.
Just as a ski mishap got Glenn go- ing with her arts center, so did an accident on the slopes bring her and her husband Bill together. In 1973 Glenn and Anne Janss, Bill’s first wife, were skiing with a group of friends when they were caught in an ava- lanche. Glenn saved herself by cling- ing to a tree, but watched, horrified, as Anne was swept to her death.
Glenn’s parents and the Janss fam- ily had been acquainted when Glenn and Bill were children, but until they came to know one another in Sun Valley, they were virtual strangers.
“It seems now that we are really two people leading one life,” Glenn said. “We both love living in the midst of great art, we both share a love for sports and wilderness—and we both feel strongly about preserv- ing the ecological balance of this wonderland. We have the same goals for Sun Valley. To provide the best physical and intellectual stimuli for those who live here, as well as for the thousands who visit America’s moun- tain frontier every year.” End
~The best of both worlds!
in Life longlasting liocolor acts as a beauty treatment
2 Science Of It:
v Skin Life Lasting Color Lip- _keeps your lips soft and
cial “color extenders” keep
r lipstick on. Keep the gloss 00. And like all Skin Life ducts, contain GAM, a bio- iplex that closely resembles latural fluid of your skin cells. 7 the perfect lipstick at last!
» The Beauty Of It:
Our new Skin Life colors are that happy new medium. .. not
== overwhelming, yet not under- =~ played. It’s where fashion is right now. 8 glamorous shades for a wonderful gleaming, exciting, you. Wow!
ry Helena Rubinstein / The Science
P.S.
RICIA, THE FORGOTT EN NIXON
A revealing er at Tricia Nixon Cox’s private, almost solitary, world after the trauma of her father’s fall from power. By Penelope McMillan.
Though the Nixons have long since left the White House, only one of them— Tricia Nixon Cox—has truly left the public eye. Her name rarely heard, her picture rarely seen, she has proved more than any public figure who ever lamented a lack of privacy that, if you really want to, you can make the world go away.
The other Nixons—Richard, Pat and Julie—are not afraid of publicity. Julie Nixon Eisenhower went with her husband to China last year and this year the former president and Mrs. Nixon went. But though Tricia and her husband, Edward F. Cox, also were invited by the Chinese government, they decided not to go. They remained in their luxurious New York City high-rise apartment. “Except for shopping, I don’t think Tricia ever goes out,” says a family friend.
Her only “public” appearance, if it can even be called that, was when she accompanied her mother around New York City a few months ago, and the local press gathered to photograph Mrs. Nixon. When a photographer compli- mented her on her appearance, Tricia made her first public statement in two- years: “You are very kind.”
Tricia, 30, always resented press intrusions even when she lived in the White House. She never liked to be watched, photographed, stared at or even idolized as a president's pretty daughter. But since the Watergate scandal, acquaintances, family friends and Nixon watchers have noted an even deeper reclusiveness in lricia, She always was introverted, they say, and is now more so. One woman who has entertained the Coxes in her home finds the ex-president’s eldest daugh-
ter an “uneasy person,’ who seems to feel that people look at her as “some kind of freak,” because of what’s happened to the Nixons. For someone who never sought attention, fear of that kind of notice has made her withdraw further.
Her once socially active, outgoing husband, who is an associate at the law firm of Cravath, Swaine & Moore, also refuses requests for interviews and avoids no- tice. “We plan to keep our lives private,” he says. Some say (continued on P.S. 6)
Illustration by Roland Des Combes
| |
bummer. jere isn't any good that I ossibly come out of eee month orgy of athing and swimming. our hair, that is. Titi t-eecy telecom eet CB Ce aete | assailant, we'll quickly all the not so glorious ie it does. Sun dries ; eaves it brittle and |Sunlight streaks hair. | ot necessarily in an
tive, natural looking jglaoe yimming. Ocean or ae | sedelmdeCom-t-) (aa et- Lam | and the chlorine that plors, we'd be hard j sed to say which does Wek i@ ethers eee compound ae
IN series of disasters 20 aaa shampoo more ently in summer and
|
} \ \ I }
WC aeetetias Cat te ae Be Tee tha iit eet ett
blow hair dry. But what hair » doesn’t need is more heat. What hair needs is help.
Pantene’s got it— The Heat Solution® It protects hair from direct heat of blow dryers, hot curlers and the sun.
The big plus here is Phytantriol. Forget the name but not what this exclusive Pantene Swiss Conditioner* does. It acts as a protective shield for hair, maintaining its natural moisture balance. —
Four Pantene pro- teins work with it to give hair the body . and manageability that heat takes away.
| At last. Another chance to. pake the life out of your tate
For healthy looking hair, use The Heat Solution after every shampoo.
The Shampoo de ett ete It’s scientifically formulated to do the most good for hair. From its proper biend of Swiss Conditioners to its non-alkaline pH. And it’s got Panthenol, too. Which is actually Pro-vitamin B; to - add pliability and sheen.
More on summer. Baby hens hair. Wear a scarf or hat
* in the sun. Rinse chlo- rine or salt out imme- GRE IRoWacinoom\uiabeeteenbetsa And use Pantene-to give back toyour hair what summer mae
eh ee
Let’s not have your hair poche Riot for your season in the sun.
‘ ee made in U.S.A.
RICIA
continued
it’s so private that they fear for the state of the marriage, but family friends dis- count this. The rumors that Tricia is pregnant pop up from time to time and are an inside joke between her and her husband. Socially, they are “almost non- people,” never seen at New York’s larg- est parties, benefits or major cultural events. They are not known to dine at big-name restaurants in Manhattan, nor in romantic upper East Side bistros.
The Nixon notoriety has aroused con- cern among those fond of Ed Cox. They worry that the young lawyer’s career could be damaged. Five years ago, when he and Tricia were married at a glamorous White House wedding, the opposite seemed true. Cox and his fam- ily enjoyed instant celebrity. Now Ed, 29, avoids such celebrity. He remains conspicuously outside the Nixon orbit. He did not appear publicly with Tricia and her mother when Mrs. Nixon visited New York. The two times Tricia has been to San Clemente since Christmas (once to welcome her parents home from China), she went alone; her hus- band was working. (In Washington circles, Ed Cox, along with David Eisen- hower, is said to be one of the “thinly disguised” sources for Woodward and Bernstein’s latest book, The Final Days, which among other things describes Nixon talking to portraits of former pres- idents hanging on the walls of the White House. )
ADORATION OF HER FATHER
Tricia has had a hard time reconciling what's happened to all their lives with her adoration of her father; she believed he could lick the world with one hand tied behind his back. When she lived in the White House, reporters had to work hard just to find out that she played the radio, answered her mail and didn’t drink alcohol.
But the one thing she made perfectly clear was that she supported her father and his politics wholeheartedly. “He’s a loser like Lincoln and Churchill,” she once flashed at a reporter while the Watergate scandal was unfolding. And Edward Cox is quoted in The Final Days as saying, “I can’t talk to my wife. She is determined that her father shall not resign.”
Once her father went into exile at San Clemente in August, 1974, Tricia seemed to family friends in a “permanent trau- ma.” Last summer, for example, she was reportedly so unwilling to have contact with the world that she insisted that her husband play golf in Westhampton,
P.S. 6
Long Island, late in the day—when the course was cleared of people; she didn’t
- want “to make small talk with anyone.”
In the early months after the resigna- tion, Tricia often went out to San Cle- mente. She appeared to be the favorite child of the Nixons; her father used to enjoy comparing her personality to his and noting their similarity. Sometimes he embarrassed her when he praised her long blond hair again and again. The first exclusive interview he gave as pres- ident was actually about Tricia, as a way of settling a family argument. Tricia had objected when her mother agreed to give an interview about her to the JourNAL, but found the publicity bearable when her father said he would do it.
TWO DIFFERENT DAUGHTERS
Tricia’s favored status probably ex- plains in part the different behavior of the two Nixon daughters. Julie has al- ways been the more outgoing, the one seeking attention, perhaps as much from her own parents as from the public. It was Julie who staged a ringing public defense of her father in the summer of 1974. Since then she has written a cook- book and has gone on a nationwide tour to publicize it. She edited a Bicentennial book and designed a needlework kit, both of which will go on sale this year. She took the trip to China and helped pave the way for her parents’ visit. This year she hopes to launch her own tele- vision interview show.
While Tricia hides in her singular world, Julie makes an effort to stay in the public eye. The two young women seem almost living symbols of the para- doxical nature of Richard Nixon: Julie, his extroverted side—seeking attention, approval and notice; Tricia, his with- drawn side—the introverted, brooding person, seeking acceptance from the up- per class and then not really enjoying the fruits of that acceptance. Tricia is the first Nixon ever admitted into the Social Register. She attained this new status through her husband. (Ed Cox’s parents, Col. and Mrs. Howard Cox, are listed as members of no fewer than 17 exclusive clubs.) But Tricia doesn’t join her contemporaries at the cultural events or philanthropic activities that she’s au- tomatically invited to because of her social position in New York. Old class- mates from Finch College say they never see her.
Tricia was scarred by her father’s fall from power as surely as the rest of her family, but the scars of political life were there long before Watergate; the scandal only deepened them. Family friends and acquaintances portray Tricia as someone who shrinks from any situ- ation where she might be judged—and this was true before Richard Nixon’s resignation. She was always masterful at public appearances and ready to smile and say the right thing with the
same steely poise her mother was kn for.
But while Tricia could handle | self in a crowd of 500, she was opposite with small groups of six eight. As one perplexed acquainte puts it, she cannot relate on a one one basis: “She can’t handle herself. just clams up.”
NO CAREER
Unlike Julie, Tricia never attemy
a career. It was almost as though expected the public to follow her pounce on every mistake. “Why do | stare so?” she was already asking mother at age 12, when they were se: in a restaurant. People had started : ing almost as soon as she was borr 1946, as Nixon began his very first p ical campaign. Discipline was drillec to her: “Remember Daddy’s positi Tricia instructed Julie when they vy children.
Somehow Julie emerged from all with enough confidence in herself t ahead and try anyway. Tricia didn't. answer to not being judged or watc seems to be to do nothing judgeabl
Consequently, the marriage of Ed Tricia Cox always has been a myster anybody who knew the Cox family— then met Tricia. She is describec someone with “no initiative.” Not | is Ed striving and ambitious, but the women are doers. Ed’s mother once her own fashion design house and for years headed many charity bene His sister, Mazie Cox, who is marrie Brinkley Thorne but continues to us maiden name, is an architect.
Tricia appears to do the cooking cleaning in her 4%-room apartment self. Apparently she does enjoy s| ping, and likes to wander through tique stores on the East Side. Trades in the vicinity of her apartment sc times see her—a small, dainty figure still prefers Princess-style dresses coats to the jeans and T-shirts usv seen on women in her neighborhooi know she loves history and reads a Mazie Cox says. But very few see know exactly how she spends her t “Only she knows the answer to question,” says her sister-in-law.
eee A FEELING FOR PRIVACY
“If you grew up that way, mi you'd have a real feeling about pri too,” Mazie says understandingly. maybe life hasn’t been terribly fa Tricia. She was denied a normal ¢ hood and adolescence because of father’s political life. And now, witl father’s disgrace, she’s been deniec satisfaction that it was a worthwhile rifice. Tricia’s life of silence, comp to her family’s more public lives, im as great if not greater suffering. Bt lence is the only course she knows trusts.
MAY WHIPS UP-
CHCREME_ £
| .
ie
IFT FROSIS§ L “ 3
COLOR
\f known. irritants
you can glow all summer in oft, pure, tender light of ys new softly-frosted Rich- ie Lipcolor—quiet lustre totally new to frosting. It’s mous RichCreme moistur-
_ formula that does it— ts a mistier, softer glisten ordinary frosted lipsticks could. Six long-wearing s of subtly frosted li and matching Frosted Nail el, from Maple to the sea- hottest pink, tothe coolest of super-frost (it glows over pstick you own). All hypo-
enic. No perfumes or known its to spoil the total luscious -
Like everything Almay, j they‘re fash- 2 ion that’s good for — you.
Dy LEADING AUTHOR é a —y ™ A
IN HYPO- ALLERGENIC COSMETICS
Natural Ch
New ways to make the old monocromatic schemes look exciting and different in away that is anything but monotonous.
Just when everybody thought that just about everything possible had been done with the neutrals and the naturals, not to mention the use of plants and rocks, along comes something new under the sun. Just when we all had had it up to here in the beiges, browns and earth colors, it all looks fresh again. One difference in the old tried-and-true is the change of scale: not just a few relatively small stones ran- domly placed on the coffee table or étagére, but really giant- size boulders of quartz or rock crystal; not just some normal garden variety ferns or potted ivies, but great forests of fish- tail palms and huge stands of tropical trees and shrubs, planted in jardinieres, capacious enough to hold Ali Baba and his forty thieves; not just wicker from your grand- mother’s sunporch, but wicker with clout, deep and com- fortable, that makes a bold statement; not just an ordinary sisal or industrial carpet beneath it all, but a great sweep of amethyst. And to make even more differences: the touches of tradition—mural-scale paintings, a marble bust.
ee
nges
TEEl ono nell lessee,
ny ee ER ey SES At rn RO Pn ee eed
i a
Sold.
The tire-kicking is over.
You've beaten down the temptation to put the grocery yney into that two-seater that had just enough room for a lall passenger and an éxtra pair of driving gloves. It went 2 blazes.
Likewise, the four-door blackwalled yawner with the ck heater has been duly considered and rejected.
There is amoment of calm. Of elation, actually. Because you have made your decision. And you are nfronting more car than you ever really thought you'd end
with.
A brand-spanking-new Buick Century.
It handles the pragmatic issues rather nicely for you. anks to its terrific Buick V-6 engine. And its mid-sized, very inageable dimensions. And its manageable price.
Ah, but its also a Buick. Well endowed with comfort, smoothness, and fine touches. And It's a handsome little devil.
You are sold. Your family is sold.
And you and your family are not alone. Because well over 300,000 people have already confronted the same issues this year and come up with the same answer. A 1976 Buick.
Free Spirit, it would appear, is contagious.
es
pirit
Insure yourself first, then sign up the family at a bargain rate.
LIFE INSURANCE POLICY
New York Life's Family-style Policy.
If you’re the family’s major bread- winner, you need life insurance first.
But, like more and more people today, you ‘ may want protection on other family members, too.
Good news.
New York Life’s family-style policy— with a Spouse and Children’s Insurance Rider —lets you insure the the whole family for little more than it costs to insure you alone.
7
2 fi ie
under the same policy And no matter how many
Say you buy a $25,000 New York Life cash children you may haye, there’s no increase in value policy. premium.
Your spouse can get up to $25,000 of A similar Children’s Insurance Rider is avail- decreasing term insurance for less than $26 a able forthe one-parent family atan even lowerrate. year for each $5,000 of coverage at age 25. Family-style. It’s just one of the creative After age 25, the coverage declines —but the approaches to life insurance that your cost is still far less than your spouse would pay New York Life Agent can suggest to for an individual policy of his or her own. assure your family’s financial security.
At no extra cost, each child who qualifies See him or her, soon.
would get up to $5,000 of level term insurance We guarantee tomorrow today.
—
New York Life Insurance Company, 51 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10010. Life, Health, Disability Income, and Group Insurance, Annuities, Pension Plans,
a ts
ore is an cerpt
om The ys of
ine, prob- ‘ly the
st SuMp- jus com- 2hensive lok about ine ever.
Co-authored by Clifton Fadiman, one of our best-known literary fig- ures, and Sam Aaron, one of the world’s great wine experts.
ough New York State is second only California in total wine production, compare them would be like com- ring the Catskills to Yosemite. Cali- nia has some 600,000 acres of vine- ds yielding about 300 million gallons | wine annually—enough to supply sry man, woman and child in our antry with more than six bottles. The 000 acres of vines in New York State yduce only about 15 million gallons ch harvest, or well under half a bottle wine per person in the United States. Size is not the only difference be- 2en our two major winegrowing re- ns. Nature is kinder in California; the urs of bright sunshine are long, and » growing season is seldom shortened a killing frost in autumn. There the is vinifera, with its sensitivity to cold, n reach maturity in almost carefree ‘hion. It is only recently that any vines fe the hardy Vitis labrusca native to | East, could survive the New York ‘te sub-zero temperatures of January 1 February. The Catawbas, Concords 1 Delawares had their vogue, but to- most experts think we pay a price in for American wines made from nerican grapes. Catawba and the other 'ruscas give a heavy taste, an overpow- pg aroma and only simple character their wines—the composite effect hed “foxy.” Those who have grown up +h wines having this combination of vor and aroma like and vigorously de- d it. But it is unfair to judge these ies seriously alongside the fine table nes of California. Just as alchemists tried to turn lead 9 gold, winemakers in the Eastern tes have tried to make their wines re like classic European ones. Cali- nia wineries have had the advantage being able to work easily with the ndard European grapes. In ‘the East, winemakers now have a w friend—a large family of vines ywn as the French-American hybrids. e new strains combine some of the st vinifera traits with a constitution urty enough for the rigors of a New tk State winter. The new vines are de- oped by grape scientists at experi- ntal vineyards in Europe and America ough a painstaking and lengthy proc- of crossing two or more compatible
fright © 1975 by Harry N. Abrams, Inc. From e Joys of Wine’’ by Clifton Fadiman and Sam Aaron
stocks and then atune the new shoot onto disease-resistant American roots. Yet even after the successful birth of hybrid, the eager scientist parent must wait years for an answer to the most im- portant question about the new vine: Does it make good wine? Many of these hybrids we know today do give us good honest wine. But even the ones praised had rough going when they first vied for acceptance in the aristocratic circles of the vinifera.
More recent than the hybrid revolu- tion is a trend that may eventually help Eastern winemakers produce more and even better wines in the European style. Dr. Konstantin Frank, a true pioneer, has jumped the hybrid hurdle and has managed to grow the delicate Vitis vini- fera vines themselves in New York State.
Wine drinkers often refer to “New
NOW
York State” wines. In truth we should perhaps call them “Finger Lakes” wines, since this relatively small, delimited area in the northern counties of the state, between Canada and Pennsylvania, is responsible for most “New York State” wines. Actually, only the shores of two of the lakes, Keuka and Canand: igua, are important wine-growing areas. How- the Chautauqua-Erie grape belt, stretching 60 miles along the Lake Erie shore, also produces vast quantities of wine grapes. Today, as changed, the future of every winery in the Finger Lakes area depends upon the fine French-American hybrid vines planted only in the last three dec- ades. It is well worth a trip to visit the important vineyards: Gold Seal, Western, Taylor, Bully Hill, Boordy and the famed Dr. fera Vineyards. one another,
ever,
tastes have
nearly
Great Widmer’s, Frank’s Vini- They are all fairly and everyone
near is welcome.
At some of the larger producers it is particularly interesting to note the tre- mendous quantities of champagne and other sparkling wines; half of the total United States consumption is supplied by New York State. Fortified wines also play a big part at the spirits stores do not carry a New York State sherry or port. fortified wines are usually blended with neutral wines and brandy from California. End
wineries; few
These
etree vate brabets4 yourusual-and-soda have something a little out of the ordinary. 14% oz. Liquore Galliano* over ice. Fill to the top with Club Soda. Drop in a fresh wedge of lime.
[SIQUORE
CeO
A LIQUEUR © 1976~21” Brands, Inc.
= = = =] BS — Get me) i pu i=) io) < Zz a vs i) ‘= I EA me] i= i] foo
Armour makes a case
for not turning on the oven.
Serving Armour Star Canned Ham doesn’t have to be a big production, unless you want it to be. After all, Armour Star Ham is fully cooked, boneless and ready to slice and eat. And it’s delicious that way.
If you're entertaining this summer, we think you should know there are many ways
to serve Armour Star Ham without using a lot
of energy. Yours or your oven’s. So we consulted the following authorities to help make our case:
WOMAN'S DAY ENCYCLOPEDIA OF COOKERY
Glazed Cold Ham Cover a canned ham with this golden glaze flavored with mustard and cloves.
FANNIE FARMER COOKBOOK
Ham in Aspic Serving slices of fully cooked ham arranged on-aspic in a mold.
GOOD HOUSEKEEPING COOKBOOK
Ham and Egg Sandwich Loaf
A whole loaf of bread sliced lengthwise and filled with a layer of ham-horseradish
filling and one of curry-egg filling.
JAMES BEARD’'S AMERICAN COOKERY Cold Decorated Ham for a Buffet Create your own design with a little imagination and everything from fresh tarragon leaves to hard-cooked eggs,
and carrot strips, red or green peppers, pimiento, sprigs of parsley or dill
GOURMET COOKBOOK
Ham in Cider Buffet Mold Raisins and julienne strips of ham molded in cider and garnished with such things as finely shredded red cabbage, gherkin fans, asparagus tips, radish roses, olives or bunches of watercress. You can even decorate with tinted mayonnaise pressed through a pastry tube.
But if that’s too elaborate, we suggest you explore the whole delicious subject of ham salads,
BETTER HOMES AND GARDENS MEALS IN MINUTES
Ham and Orange Salad Ham and mandarin oranges in a mustard- mayonnaise dressing.
Chef Salad Bowl
Ham, avocado and cheese star in this recipe. THE GOOD HOUSEKEEPING COOKBOOK Ham and Cheese Salad
Ham and cheese with celery, peas and
onions on lettuce.
a ae ‘Anam fe) aml <* .e |
i) ey : z eS : eo Ya al Ne: aay
Look for the Armour Star Suicide Youll find Armour quality inside.
Ham and Chicken Salad Two old favorites together.
SUNSET SALAD BOOK
Pineapple and Ham Salad Diced ham with pineapple chunks, green peppers and sweet pickles.
’ Ham and Turkey Salad
Beautiful combination that includes red- skinned apples, grapes and almonds.
BETTER HOMES AND GARDENS COOKBOOK
Rice and Ham Salad A colorful medley of cauliflower, peas, hat green onions, celery and radishes tossed w rice and served on rings of casaba melon. |
WOMAN'S DAY ENCYCLOPEDIA
Ham Fruit Salad Scrumptious blend of ham, oranges, applé pineapples and bananas.
Ham Salad Boats
- This traditional ham salad piled on hot de
buns is sure to please the kids.
We hope you try a new ham recipe soon.
even send you sorhe of ours free. Write tof
“Magic Can Recipe Booklet; Armour andi
Company, P.O. Box 4354, Dept. L, Chica’ Illinois 60680.
TRIUMPHS OF
THE AMERICAN TABLE
Only the Jenn-Air Grill-Range lets you enjoy them all.
stream of power-driven air. As aresult, the Jenn-Air Power Oven cooks cooler and
he Jenn-Air Char- avored Beefsteak!
‘triumph of the Jenn-Air faster (roasts, turkeys, hams
boktop Grill, it comes sizzling your table. Its crunchy brown jist has the taste of smoke.
hd it splits under the knife to veal a lush pink meat running th juices that bathe your
puth with every bite.
And it’s only one of a whole umphant rangefull of foods Jenn-Air dks in a stream of power- ven air. Jenn-Air’s five /oktop Convertible units with ‘face ventilation let you grill, \ ‘troast, griddle, shish-kebab | dd deep-fry. On the rangetop ‘in the oven, Jenn-Air’s ‘stream cookery cooks cooler, /aner, better... whisks away joke and odors... exhausts jectly to outdoors to keep ‘ur kitchen cleaner, sweeter.
in up to one-third less time)! It
cooks evenly, because the heat is spread evenly throughout the oven. It cooks cleaner, because there’s less spattering, and
ne Jenn-Air Power Oven. 5 two ovens in one! vst, it’s a conventional electric 2n and broiler that lets you dk all your present recipes thout change. But then, just flicking a switch, it becomes entirely new kind of oven that s you cook foods ina
NZ} NZ
cook at a 50° cooler temperature
THE JENN-AIR GRILL-RANCE
A magnificent cooking instrument
smoke and steam are exhausted directly to the outdoors. And it has two oven cleaning controls. It cleans itself continuously during use. If deposits accumulate during
heavy use, you just switch over to “‘acceler- = ated cleaning” and the job is done in half the time.
i { 4 \ \ { 1 \
|
\)
Jenn-Air’s Down-home Yeast Breads.
Hot loaves, fresh from the oven. They fill your kitchen with a basic, down-home fragrance. And they all bake beautifully, dependably nestled in the even heat and double-thick
insulation of the Jenn-Air Power
Oven. How long has it been since the family came home to the smell of fresh baking at your house?
= need
Jenn-Air Open-Spit Roasted Chicken.
Open-spit roasting makes chicken taste chicken-ier. Clear, radiant heat strokes the chicken as it revolves, develops a fuller, richer flavor, probes deep into the meat to make it more richly gelatinous. Meanwhile, smoke, spatters, odors, and steam that could give meat a steamy taste are whisked away by Jenn-Air’s rangetop surface ventilation. And there are no end of good things you can spit-roast — pork, duck, even a bologna
, basted with cherry preserves. The Jenn-Air Grill-Range is available with ceramic smooth- top or conventional surface heating elements. Heating elements slip out in seconds, to be replaced by any of the 5
7
Cooktop Convertible units. Also
note the digital clock and brushed stainless steel top.
For the Jenn-Air dealer nearest you, see the Yellow Pages, call toll free 800-428-1825 or write Jenn-Air Corporation, Indianapolis, Indiana 46446. Also available in Canada.
Nothing, but nothing, lis O » a conflagra- the key to the arrangement, and heights from squat to tion of candlesticks. Bra the flick towering is the secret of good decoration. Here, a group ering flames and turn a dai mer into | int archi in varying shapes from many places shows how to flatte1
tecture. In the interplay of a room and the people in it. Photograph by Dick Sharpe
Pro. 14
se
| your party guests looked this close t your glasses, would you worry about spo
‘ot with Cascade.
You'll feel sure of your glasses, know- makes water rinse off in sheets. Leaves glasses ‘that even up close they have the Cascade _ looking just the way you want them—for your '<...virtually spotless! Cascades sheeting guests, your family, yourself. You can count (on fights water drops that spot. It actually | on Cascade. Try it and see.
Cascade...for virtually spotless dishes.
At home at the most beautiful dinners in Americ
Thematics — stand-Out insernt™ Is a trademark Of Synergistic Marketing, Inc.,477 Madison Ave.,N.Y.,N.Y. 10022
Add the taste of strawberries to your breakfast and save 10¢. Introducing new Eggo’ Brand Strawberry Waffles.
New Strawberry Waffles from Eggo, made with imitation strawberries, are as easy to fix as dropping a slice of bread in your toaster. And they’re as nutritious as they are delicious. So add the delicious taste of strawberries to your next breakfast with new frozen Eggo Brand Strawberry Waffles. And save 10¢.
Golden Punch
2 cups water % cup Nestea* 3 cups orange juice 1 cup lemon juice 1 cup unsweetened pineapple j ice. Y2 cup sugar » ‘4 cup grenadine 1 28-0z. bottle ginger ale, chilled \i bowl, combine water and Nestea® Instant Tea, dissolved. Add orange, lemon and pineapple Wagar and grenadine; stir until sugar dissolves. War tea mixture into 414-5 qt. decorative bowl; add 5 or ice ring. Before serving add ginger ale. ith halved fresh strawbemies and orange slices, Punch cups may be garnished with a whole or orange wedge slipped onto the rim.
ith Lemon may be substituted for Nestea; cup lemon juice.
2 4-02. servings. le Company, Inc.
. / ,
:
ingdale Road nins, NY 10605
cor br
rh ae iv
INTRODUCING A SPRINGTIME, SUMMERTIME, ANY OLD GOOD TIME PUNCH WITH NESTEA
The rich iced tea flavor of Nestea® Instant Tea gives you a delightful, refreshing taste. It’s a delicious blend of Nestea, tangy fruit juices and bubbling ginger ale. Serve it chilled. Or add a fresh fruit garnish. It’s a brand new recipe with Nestea. For 36 other delicious recipes made with this and other Nestea products, get our free booklet, ‘‘Nestea Recipes For All Seasons.”
Ladies Home Journal
SS
' I | 1 1 I 1 I
Thematics” Starid-Out Insert™is a trademark of Synergistic Marketing, Inc.,477 Madison Ave.,N.Y.,N.¥.10022 -
RST TT ate POWDERED
Oi a
_ Tastes like
. noother Oe a Ce drink mix.
La eae Sc mm
RED P eat a
New Hawaiian Punch Powdered Drink Mix. It’s got a taste you can’t get in any other powdered drink mix. And it comes in four delicious pre- sweetened flavors: Red Punch, Grape Punch, Cherry Punch, and Straw- berry Punch. Available in convenient 2-quart envelopes and in resealable 8- and 12-quart cans. Use the coupon to save 25¢ on either one 8- or 12-quart can or on four 2-quart envelopes.
You: $e
c Seas. -
Let Seven Seas® help you turn summertime salads into special treats, with great tasting flavors like zingy _ Viva Italian, sweetly-tart Family Style French, creamy ' Deluxe Thousand Island, and adeliciousnewone... ; Herbs & Spices. That’s just for starters. With
Seven Seas Salad Dressings, you can make salads
a ee eT te) ol a aomsl nota om’ aoe |e oom —
GPS OE LETT TIT TARE Le TY SPT
“THE LITTLE MERMAID” Crewel Kit
ens Christian Andersen’s beloved fairy tale springs to life | sea spray on this enchanted bronze creature, a tribute to the ithis beautiful crewel study of its touching heroine, “The genius