Home & Country Newsletters (Stoney Creek, ON), Summer 1963, p. 15

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‘Onal qualifications, and with consideration of 1 a geographic areas from which they come. orth and South; and one member at large. pplications for this Award are made to Dr. Dean of Macdonald Institute, Provincial Scholarships There are two F.W.I.0. provincial scholar~ hips: the Dorothy Futcher Ontario Women‘s nstitute Scholarship and another recently amed the Florence P, Eadie Ontario Women‘s nstitute Scholarship. Each of these represents n investment of $2,000 and yields an award a $60 yearly. which rotates from year to year mong club girls from the Women‘s Institute our geographic regions. Home Economists in he regions concerned send their recommendaa ions to the Supervisor of Junior Home Eco- omics Extension, and the recipients are se« ected by the staff of Home Economics service nd the F.W.I.O. Scholarship Committee. To be eligible for this award a girl must e at least sixteen years of age and must have 1ompleted six or more 4H Homemaking Club I nits. She must be an active club member in he year in which she is selected. The award ill not be given for a course in high school. ince this can usually be taken without the aid 4. a scholarship; nor will it be given to a girl ‘ ho has fullâ€"time employment. A happy feature of this provincial scholar- hip and of those given by County, District or rea Women‘s Institute organizations is that a irl receiving the fund may use it to further er education in any way she wishes. Many irls have applied it on courses at Teachers’ Helen Evens, winner of the South Waterloo W o m e n ‘ 5 Institute award. lnu Beamer, now Mrs. Crowe, Lincoln county, who has the rather exceptional record at completing the whole nineteen Homemaking Club Units, plus another unit while she was under club age. Also, as an incentive to girls who do not like gardening, Ina took a garden unit after she was mar- ried and had just passed the club age limit College. Macdonald Institute. in Nurse's Train- ing, Commercial Courscs. and Courses at Uniâ€" versities. A scholarship has gone to more than one cit-Homemaking Club girl studying Med~ icine. Or the money may be used in studying Music. Drama, Literature or other Arts or in preparing for a vocation such as Hairdressing. subject to the approval of the scholarship committee. District, County and Area Scholarships Not long after the first provincial scholar ships were set up. the Institutes of some Counties and Districts became interested in providing an annual scholarship for a girl of the county or district. In consultation with the provincial executive it was decided that a good uniform plan would be for the Institutes of a county to build up a fund of $3.000. have it invested and give the annual interest as a scholarship each year. The capital fund would be invested by a provincial committee but the County Institute would make its own presenta- tion of the scholarship. Rules governing the award would he the same as for provincial awards and the scholarship would carry the name of the province as well as the county: for example. "York County Ontario Women‘s Institute Scholarship" or where an individual's name had been given. "Grey County Flora Durnin Ontario Women's Institute Scholarâ€" ship." To date the amount of these scholarships varies from $60 to 590 according to the inter- est on the investment. At the last F.W.l.0. Board Meeting a finance committee was named to review the investments with a View to getting a more equitable and the best possible return. Providing scholarships is a popular Women‘s Institute project in Ontario. There are now County Scholarships in Bruce. Dufterin. Elgin. Grey. Huron. Lambton. Middlesex. Northum- berland, Ontario, Oxford. Peel, Simcoe (Simcoe IS

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