In the spring of 1958, in the waning days of her teaching year at Smith College, Sylvia Plath wrote in her journal on Sunday, 13 April:
Back in Northampton - still slightly out of focus, eager, in spite of vestigial fatigue, to hear from poems sent out, from innumerable contests entered with great gullibility - the dole pineapple & heinz ketchup contests close this week, but the French's mustard, fruit-blended oatmeal & slenderella & Libby-tomato juice contests don't close till the end of May. We stand to win five cars, two weeks in Paris, a year's free food, and innumerable iceboxes & refrigerators and all our debts paid. Glory glory. I suppose nobody intelligent or poor ever wins. I suppose people named Ponter Hughes never win. (365)
Here are two adverts from the Boston Globe about the "fruit-blended oatmeal" contest and the "slenderella & Libby-tomato juice" contests.
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