34 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, June 28, 1960 Quick Breads and Muffins HOT ONION BREAD % cup butter basil, tarragon or any favor- ite herb 1% cup gregn onions, finely chopped 1 French loaf Make a spread of butter, herb and green onions. Slice bread and spread each slice with butter mixture and re- arrange loaf. Wrap in foil and heat in 400 deg. oven for 15 min- utes. Make this bread in gener- ous amounts as it goes fast. BANANA MUFFINS 12 cup butter or margarine 1 cup white sugar 1 egg 1 cup or 2 mashed bananas 15 tsp. vanilla L tsp. baking soda dissolved in 1 tbsp. hot water Sift and add to above mixture: 1% cups flour 1 tsp salt f- . ¥% tsp. nutmeg Bake in oven at 400 for 20 min. Mrs. Jean Lyons, Hampton Home and School. Queen May Break With Tradition By Sending Princess to School | - By M. MCINTYRE HOOD ! Special to ! The Oshawa Times LONDON -- As was done in the case of the Prince of Wales, there will be a break with old tradition in the education of Princess Anne, who will be 10 years old on Aug- ust 15. In September, Princess Anne will go to a boarding school to continue her education, which up to the present has been by pri vate tutors. Although the name of the school has not yet been divulged, it is understood that the | Princess Anne. 'has been considered, it has been Queen and Prince Philip have chosen a school in the country for This is the first time that a daughter of the reigning sover- eign has been sent away to school, and thus it represents a considerable break with tradi- tion. Indeed, it is regarded as a reversal of the Queen's previous feelings on the subject of her daughter's education, In the past, when the subject of the education of the princess Eskimo Girl Working in Ottawa Years to Return to the Arctic By KEITH KINCAID Canadian Press Staff Writer HALIFAX (CP)--The sophisti- cated young woman pointed to her home, a dot on a map high in the Arctic, and said: "Living in the south is okay for a while but I belong back up where I was born." Mary Panegoosho, 21, is an Eskimo working in Ottawa as a translator for the welfare divi- sion of the northern affairs de- partment, After six years in southern Canada she knows more about the white man's society than most Eskimos but still looks for- ward to returning to her home at Grise Fjord on Ellesmere Is- land. Her work consists chiefly of translating department publica- tions into Eskimo dialects and editing Eskimo Way, a small magazine distributed among Canada's 10,000 Eskimos. She also does the art work for sev- eral other department publica- tions. But the part of the job she looks forward to most is an an- nual three-month trip through the Eastern Arctic as interpreter for a social worker aboard the government supply ship C. D. Howe. Mary, a petite, cheerful girl whose fine features appear more Oriental than Eskimo, spoke of the Eskimos' future in an inter- view while attending the Cana- dian Conference on Social Work here. She said the handful of Eski- mos living in the south, either going to school or working for the government, have an inher- ent longing to return to the Arctic. Few stayed longer than three or four years in the south. "For this reason it's doubtful whether complete assimilation of the Eskimo into the white man's society will ever come about. « « . Most Eskimos are reluctant to leave the Arctic even for a brief visit, "When I left home to go to school my grandmother held to the old tradition that children shouldn't leave their parents. It isn't opposition to education but , oppgsition to 'having the children | taken away to schools in the south." / SOME MISCONCEPTIONS She said neither whites nor Eskimos have an accurate con- cept of what the life and culture of the other is like. For example, many didn't believe her when she said she has never lived in an igloo. "Most Eskimos nowadays live in wooden houses in settlements of 30 to 40 families close to the coast." Eskimos must sooner or later adopt more of the white men's ways but they should take care to select only what will benefit them, she said. Mary's father is an RCMP spe- cial constable and as a child she travelled with him in the RCMP vessel St. Roche on trips through the Northwest Passage. She learned to speak English at an Anglican Church mission school on Baffin Island and continued her education at junior high well known that her mother favor- ed private tuition, along the lines of that which she and Princess Margaret received, FRIENDS GOING There is more than a suspicion that Princess Anne herself may have had something to do with this change of mind. Up to the present, she has been having her lessons at Buckingham Palace along with two friends, Caroline Hamilton and Susan Babington Smith. These two girls, however, are going to a "real" school in the fall of this year. Naturally, Princess Anne felt that she ought to do likewise. Little Woman Works Far Harder Than Dean Hubby CHICAGO (AP) -- Housewives who greet their breadwinners nightly with a sympathetic, '""Have a hard day at the office, dear?," may change their tune when they hear what one medical expert has to say: The average housewife con- sumes more energy at her daily chores than does her husband in either office or factory job. The husband with a sedentary desk job, reports Dr. Herman K. Hellerstein, uses about 12 times the energy expanded when his body is at rest. -If he moves around a lot, the expenditure may go up, Hellerstein said today. The housewife? In making a bed, she may use up to 3% times her resting energy. The same goes for scrubbing floors, riding herd on children and shopping, said Hellerstein, who is director of the Cleveland area Heart Soci- ety's work classification clinic and professor of medicine at Western Reserve University. Hel- lerstein spoke at a seminar spon- school in Hamilton. 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