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Courier-Post from Camden, New Jersey • Page 10
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Courier-Post from Camden, New Jersey • Page 10

Publication:
Courier-Posti
Location:
Camden, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

0 COURIER-POST, Camdtn, N. Wdnayr March 19, 1969 Engagements, Weddings Announcements Hold Interest VMnkx lift, 'rC m'lmmm I fer) I fmMSIgW liigaiii Uih44" v- fraV iipiiiiiipils Trenton State College. Mr. Ashman has just recently been released from duty with the U.S. Navy, after a nine-month tour of duty aboard the USS Independence.

Brooklyn College and the University of Bologna, Italy, and now is a student at the University of Guadalajara School of Medicine. Mr. and Mrs. James L. Mitchell of 49 Knox Marlton, announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Barbara Jean Mitchell, to Mr.

Dean C. Ashman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Ashman of 8 Baron that town.

A July wedding is planned. Miss Mitchell is attending The engagement of Miss Heidi Sue Ridner lo Mr. Selwyn W. Greenfeig, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Irving Greenfeig of Maplewood, is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Ridner of 14 Lippincott Haddon Heights. The wedding will take place In November. Miss Ridner will be graduated in June from Temple University, Tyler School of Fine Arts.

Mr. Greenfeig was graduated from Rider College. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Berman of 616 Randolph Camden, announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Merle Lynn Berman, to Mr.

Roger S. Koerner of Neponsit, N.Y. Miss Berman attended Douglass College and plans to complete her studies at the University of Guadalajara, Mexico. Her fiance was graduated from Franklin and Marshall College, Lancaster, Pa. He did graduate work at MISS MARY S.

BUSSIAN bride-elect of Mr. John J. Leon. MISS MERLE LYNN BERMAN fiancee of Mr. Roger S.

Koerner. MISS NANCIE J. BUSSELL engaged to Mr. John S. Polito.

nounced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sol Brown of Mamaroneck, N.Y. An. August wedding is planned.

Miss Brown is a junior at Carnegie Institute of Technology, Pittsburgh, where Mr. Miller is in his senior year. it! 1 vXf J.J A Announcement is made by Mr. and Mrs. Daniel C.

Bussian of 19 Brown Gloucester City, of the engagement of their daughter, Miss Mary Sandra Bussian, to Mr. John Joseph Leon, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Leon of 230 Evergreen Wood-lynne. The engagement of Miss Lorraine Jean Russell to Mr.

Michael Stewart McAleer, son of Mr. Joseph McAleer of 5050 Garfield Pennsauken, and Mrs. Ralph Bartlett of Centerville, is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sage Russell of 453 Beideman Camden.

The wedding will take place in June. Miss Nancie Jane Bussell's engagement to Mr. John Stephen Polito, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Polito of 824 Hilltop Road, Cinnaminson, is announced by her parents, Mr.

and Mrs. Thomas Bussell of 617 Cinnaminson Riverton. The engagement of Miss Judy Ann Ellenbark to Mr. James Francis Hagan, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Edgar B. Quick of 422 Powell Gloucester City, is announced by her MISS HEIDI SUE RIDNER engaged to Mr. Selwyn W. Greenfeig. Mr.

Brooks is stationed on Mare Island, where he and his bride will reside. He an alumnus of Columbia College, Pasco, Wash. The engagement of Miss Pamela Virginia Joyce to Sgt. Edward David Player, USA, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Victor C. Player Jr. of 816 Bell Road, Mount Ephraim, is announced by her mother, Mrs. Francis E. Dreyer of 314 Evergireen Drive, Moorestown.

The wedding will take place in September. making their home for 18 months on Guam, where he is serving aboard the USCG Cutter Mallow. Mr. and Mrs. Walter L.

Hunsberger Jr. of 700 N. 5th National Park, announce the marriage Monday evening of their daughter, Miss Sally Ann Hunsberger, to Mr. Bruce Thomas Brooks, PO I.C., USN, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Earl M. Brooks of Nampa, Idaho. The Rev. Robert Hanor officiated at the 6:30 o'clock ceremony in the First Methodist Church of National Park. The bride was attended by Mrs.

James Little of Mid-dletown, as matron of honor. Mr. Robert Hunsberger, brother of the bride, acted as best man. mother, Mrs. John Ellenbark of 418 Powell Gloucester.

Miss Ellenbark also is the daughter of the late Mr. Ellenbark. A September wedding is planned. Announcement is being made of the marriage on Feb. 5 of Miss Mary Jo Korch, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Thomas P. Korch of 52 Fenton Lane, Bordentown, to Mr. James P. Crane, GM 2.C., USCG, son of Mr.

and Mrs. James F. Crane of 312 Woodlawn Terrace, Col-lingswood. Cmdr. John A.

Wideman, Catholic chaplain, performed the ceremony in the U.S. Naval Station Chapel on Guam, Marianna Islands. Mr. Crane and his bride are I WINDOW SHADE STYLISTS DECORATOR WINDOW SHADES WE MEASURE STYLE INSTALL St our ditplayt ut: nAUlUA THE IT.rLu.nnJ 1. Sgt.

Player is stationed at 4 REGO CARPET Burlington, N. J. BEST TILE Brooklown, N. CREATIVE W5 STYLISTS Phlla. Ft.

Lee, Va. Shop-At-Hom Servlca I MISS JUDY A. ELLENBARK fiancee of Mr. James F. Hagan.

MISS LORRAINE J. RUSSELL engaged to Mr. Michael S. McAleer. MISS BARBARA J.

MITCHELL to be wed to Mr. Dean C. Ashman. Miss Fannie G. Brown's engagement to Mr.

Stuart Marc Miller, son of Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Miller of 354 S. 27th Camden, is an- NO OBLIGATION 0 234-0348 124 hrt.l I PRE-EASTER SALE Time Marriage Russian-Style Takes A nflVO AMI FRI. 1 UHIO UI1LI The problem with the lim SAT.

SUN. ousines seems to be peculiarly March 20, 21, 22, 23 capitalistic. "We have enough vehicles 99 DOTTED SWISS DACRON COTTON for the ordinary situation," says Yevdokia Voroshilova, director of one of the shut Double Knit Dacron 60-65" wide 4 YD. down municipal palaces, "but. 995! 9951 the motor pool couldn't pos sibly have enough for the rush DACRON VOILE (Printed Plain) IRISH LINEN (Printed A Plain) days.

They'd be idle the rest- nf thp timp and aftar ell iinrln 90 yd economic reform they have to ties. "When my wife and I came in, there was a grim-looking old biddy behind the counter who growled, 'What'll it be, comrades? Death, birth or Today's wedding palace ceremonies are hardly lavish by American standards, but there is a bit of to-do. Couples queue up in the lobby, and when their turn comes they are swept into a red-carpeted, 30-by-15-foot chamber on the wings of recorded Tschaikov-sky or Verdi. Inside, the clerk exhorts the. bride and groom to respect and share a mutual obligation for each other and "not to forget your parents, relatives and friends." Then, the couple must affirm that they are getting married of their own free will, and they are thereupon pronounced man and wife.

Going out by a different door, the couple can drink champagne in the refreshment make a profit, too." Newsweek Feature Service CUSTOM MADE DRAPES SLIPCOVERS ANTIQUE SATIN Special Sale Stretch Slipcover raged People's Control Committee has discovered in an investigation that all the wedding facilities in the capital are critically short of personnel to issue licenses and perform weddings. And that's not all, the committee complains. Shops that specialize in wedding dresses and veils are unable to meet the demand, and there is an insufficient supply and choice of wedding rings. What may be worse, state photographers who take wedding pictures for a fee are delivering their prints late and out of focus. But it is the shutdown of the marriage palaces that really hurts.

Only about 300 couples mostly elderly had church weddings in Moscow last year, but 80,000 flocked to the opulent municipal palaces. On holidays, each of them handled as many as 1,000 happy couples. The palaces were introduced by Nikita Khrushchev to put a little pomp and circumstance back into a ceremony that had been totally bleached by Stalin. "Some of those old registries looked like police stations, and you were treated that way," recalls a man in his late thir By JOHN DORNBERG Special to the Courier-Post MOSCOW According to "Krokodil," the Soviet humor magazine, a matronly clerk at the registry office looked over the young couple arriving to get married and asked politely, "Are you really ready to take this important step in your life?" "Of course we are," said the future bridegroom. "We have ten litres of vodka, 30 litres of wine and five litres of cognac." The trouble is that the boozy couple will probably drink it all up before they reach the front of the line.

Because of a series of classic Russian bureaucratic foulups, marriage Russian-style now involves a wait of at least two months and sometimes as much as six months. At one point this winter, both of the huge, ornate municipal wedding palaces in Moscow were closed for renovations simultaneously, as were three of the city's 17 district registry offices. One of these wedding palaces has now re-opened, but an out Do your slipcovers need to be replaced? Consider the ad vantages of stretch nylon cov-5 FABRIC CENTER 8000 RT. 130 PENNSAUKEN, N.J. Mcrou Irem vyifont inn) 663-2121 ers tnat come in a great variety of custom-tailored styles and sizes to fit practically all kinds of chairs and sofas.

They are machine-washable, quick- 1 i OPEN DAILY 9-9; SAT. 9-6; SUN. 11-5 uijuuj, anu iieea no ironing. V.V.V.VW.SWAWlW.SV.VVWM en hall while waiting for a rented limousine to take them off to the wedding feast. Sometimes, it's a long wait.

The People's Control Committee complains that there aren't enough limousines to handle the flow on busy days, and that the drivers are often surly. in" ii a CAMDEN, 2502 FEDERAL ST. 966.2577 GLOUCESTER, 114 S. BROADWAY 456-4000 MAPLE SHADE, 1 17 E. MAIN ST.

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Pages Available:
1,868,401
Years Available:
1876-2024