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Show At Utah Tech Orem-Geneva Times -February 17, 1977 Carrol Roid Homed Assistant Dean Of Students x CAROL ANN BLAKE AND MA7.!'!' DYE. Marty Dye to Marry Provo Woman in Temple v 1 A A- f , Ui f I V- Carol Ann Blake will become the bride of Marty B. Dye on Thursday, February 17 in the Provo LDS Temple and will also be honored at a reception that evening in the Vineyard Ward Chapel, Geneva Road, from 8 until 10 p.m. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Rex B. Blake of Provo and Mr. and Mrs. Norman D. Dye of Orem. Miss Blake is a 1974 graduate gradu-ate of Orem High School and will graduate from Brigham Young University in August in Elementary Education. While in high school she was FHA Club president, a member of National Honors Society and the home-making home-making Sterling Scholar nominee. nomi-nee. Last summer she participated partici-pated in the Hill Cumorah Pageant. Pag-eant. Mr. Dye is also a graduate of Orem High School and is presently pre-sently a junior in accounting at BYU. While in high school he was affiliated with the Key Club and the Honors Society. He is presently also working at a clothing manufacturer's in Provo. He has also fulfilled a two-year LDS mission in Korea. Bridesmaids for the eventwill be Mrs. Lyle J. Barnes, Carolyn Barnes, Mrs. Lyndon Callister and Danielle Holdaway. Duties of bestman will be performed by Jeffrey Lynn Dye; Gregory Dean Dye and Kim Harking Roper will serve as ushers. Flower girls will include Cheryl Blake and Donna Blake. Pre-nuptial showers have been given by Danielle Holdaway, Mrs. Barbara Holdaway and Nancy f i 1 T TAT 1 Johnson; Linda Merrill and Pat- UreHl UOUDie 10 W && and Tammy Primavera. The couple will make their first home in North Orem. TERRY BACKUS AND SHANNON JORDAN March 4 in SL Temple Benson f.tekes 4.0 lienor Roll List Randy Benson has been named to the President's Honor List for academic excellence at Eastern East-ern Arizona College for the fall semester. Benson was listed on the prestigious pre-stigious list as a result of earning earn-ing a perfect 4.0 grade point average while carrying more than 12 hours during the fall semester. Benson, son of Earl and Mary Benson, is a 1972 graduate of Orem High School. Some 106 studentswere recognized recog-nized on either the President's or Dean's Honor List for the fall semester at Eastern Arizona College Arison's oldest com-, munity College. Mr. and Mrs. K. Paul Jordan announce the forthcoming marriage mar-riage of their daughter Shannon Lee, to Terry Dee Backus, son of Mr. and Mrs. D.O. Backus, all of Orem. The couple will be married March 4 in the Salt Lake LDS Temple and will also be honored at a reception that evening from 8 until 10 p.m. in the Orem Utah Stake Center, 81 East Center Cen-ter Street. Miss Jordan is presently attending at-tending Orem High School and will graduate in the spring. She will also be an LDS graduate at that time, Mr. Backus graduated from Orem High School and LDS Seminary Semi-nary and has attended Utah Technical Tech-nical College at Provo. He fulfilled ful-filled a n LDS mission to the Georgia-Atlanta Mission. Maid of honor for the event will be Patricia Kirkwood and bridesmaids will include Kathy Long and Terri Healy. Duties of best man will be .performed byTracy Backus, bro-. ther of the groom. pnnmn rpti a few 7 sfrss mi mnsv vnurics kS$fe&ii- We now have a store in OREM at the GRAND CENTRAL SHOPPING CENTER and invite you to visit us and save between 3Q-80 SS2 Bring this cd in with you for a 10 discount Offer good until February 28, 1977 LATEST FASIIKKh 60" printed polyester interlocks reg $4.98... $198 Fab Supersuede reg. $5.98 M 88 yd. Krinkle Cloth reg i es $l59yd Printed polyester crepe reg. $3.98 n.49 yd. Embossed prints reg. $2.69 .....M59yd. 60" rugby stripes $239yd Corduroy Suiting. $3 98 $ 1 79 yd Flannel 99$yd. 108" brushed nylon. 65$ y 108" nylon tricot M4V Printed brushed nylon 49$ yd Coming soon some more 96" wide Polyester bonded baf ting on rolls SOME GOOD BUYS: Fake furs M49. Wide lace remnants $298ib 108" nylon tricot sheers 99$ yd Vinyl M20 ib. PLUS MANY, fwlAMY CLQSEOUTS 250 W. Center Provo 375-4818 CONTINENTAL PLAZA MIKI-MALL 10-6 Daily 1 300 S. 374 E. Orem 225-3123 GRAND CENTRAL SHOPPING AREA 10-9 Daily Heather and Lara Jordan, sisters sis-ters of the bride, will act as junior bridesmaids and Shawn and Chris Jordan, brothers of the bride, will act as ushers. Codi Larsen and Maggie Reed will be flower girls. Following their marriage the couple will reside in Provo. Child Cere Benefit Credits Extended Taxpayers who work or attend school and pay someone to care for their children or for disabled dependents can take advantage of a new child care credit on their 1976 Federal income tax return, the Internal Revenue Service said. Undor the new law, eligible taxpayers can claim a credit oi 20 percent of their child care expenses, up to a maxium credit of $400 for one child and $800 for two or more. The IRS pointed out mat. the credit is : subtracted directly from the tax' liability. The credit can be taken by couples even it one or both spouses works only part-time. But, in these situations the eligible eli-gible expenses are limited to the amount of earnings of the spouse earning the smaller amount, or in the case of a single person, to his or her earnings. Separated, Sep-arated, divorced, or widowed parents with custody of children are also eligible, according to the IRS. The credit is also avaliable to married couples where one spouse works full-time and the other is a full-time student. Other features of the liberalized libera-lized child care law are that relatives who ars not dependents can now be paid for child care so long as Social Security taxes are withheld from their pay; there is no longer a distinction between child care performed inside and outside the home; and persons who use the standard deduction can also claim their child care expenses but must file a Form 1040. Formerly, child care was treated as a deduction rather than a credit, there was an income limitation, full-time employment was required, and relatives could not be paid for child care, the IRS said. Additional information on the child care credit can be found in the tax instructions that came with the tax package, the IRS said. Taxpayers can also use the handy order blank in the package to obtain a free copy of IRS Publication 503, 'Child Care and Disabled Dependent Care. La maze Childbirth Method Film To Be Present Tonight "Shared Beginning, a film illustrating il-lustrating the Lanuze method of prepared childbirth, will be shown at a special meeting tonight, to-night, February 17, at the Provo City Library. The presentation will begin at 7 p.m. Immediately following the film showing, a question and answer period will be conducted by Maria Webster, a registered nurse who teaches the Lamaze method in her home. The meeting, sponsored each month by local Lamaze instructors, instruc-tors, will be held in the downstairs down-stairs auditorium of the library, located at 13 North 100 East. Admission to the showing is free. Seating, however, is limited and must be reserved in advance by calling Mrs. Webster at 377-1934. Mrs. Carrol Reid has a change of title at Utah Technical College at Provo. She has been dean of women she is now assistant dean of students. stu-dents. Formal reason for the change, according to Utah Tech President Wilson W. Sorensen, istocomply fully with the Title Nine federal regulations concerning the avoidance of discrimination because be-cause of sex. But the change will give Mrs. Reid a broader field in which to work, he pointed out, although women's interests at the college col-lege will remain a primary concern. con-cern. In her new po.sl she will be LaLeche Meeting Set For Tonight Orem LaLeche League members mem-bers will meet in the home of Mrs. Larry Hill, 737 East 910 North, Orem, tonight at 8 p.m. The topic under discussion will be 'The Art of Breastfeeding ajid Overcoming Difficulties. All women and their babies are welcome to attend the discussion. discus-sion. For further information or assistance with specific problems pro-blems call Mrs. Paul Clark at 225-2952 or Mrs. C. Richard Evans at 377-6518. i 1 N CARROL REID assistant to Dr. Wayne 0. Kearney, Kear-ney, dean of students. Mrs. Reid was a counselor at the college before she became dean of women. She continued her counseling work in the latter lat-ter post and will do so in her new position. She is also Title Nine coordinator co-ordinator for the college, works with the institution's Career Development Center and has various administrate duties. She has been on the staff of Utah Technical College for eight years. Children's Fund Ccmpdcjn Stcrts Doctors were puzzled when Melinda, a full-term baby, weighed only 3 14 pounds at birth. She was, apparently, a normal baby, if rather tiny. At six days she developed spinal meningitis and almost lost her life to the disease. She developed deve-loped hydrocephalus and it was necessary to surgically place a shunt in her head to drain the fluid from her brain. At the age of three, Melinda began to seizure. From seizures sei-zures and problems that followed, she became paralyzed on the right side. Melinda lived in one of the southern states with her parents. A relative living in Salt Lake City, told Melinda's parents a-bout a-bout Primary Children's Medical Center. Because Melinda's condition con-dition had worsened her parents decided to leave their home and drive to Salt Lake City in an effort to find help for their daughter. In a family council, it had been decided to take up residence in Utah until Melinda improved. She had begun to lapse into comas. It was found that Melinda needed shunt revision. A new brace was made for Melinda's paralyzed leg which has made it much easier for her 'to walk. Her parents feel that for the first time Melinda is being treated as a total person with physicians and therapists work ing together to give their daughter daugh-ter a new hope for the future. The Birth Defects Clinic at Primary Children's Medical Center sees many children such as Melinda. The Clinic had its inception in 1963 and provides care for infants and children with multiple problems. The purpose of the clinic is to offer families a center for comperhensive medical care, as well as support in coping with a situation that has changed the course of their lives. They derive benefits from a new dimension dim-ension in treatment where multiple mul-tiple disciplines are gathered together to-gether in a cooperative effort to treat the myraid and complicated com-plicated problems which these children possess. The Children's Fund Campaign, Camp-aign, 'Pennies by the Inch, will help provide care for these children child-ren and many more whose parents par-ents are unable to pay the medical med-ical bills. The campaign begins on February Feb-ruary 1 and runs through February Feb-ruary 18. Volunteers will call on a door to door basis. You can re-use and re-record on an old tape. Most tape recorders re-corders will ;rase as they record. But the Electronic Industries In-dustries Association suggests you don't allow the tape to move forward accidentally while your machine is not in a recording mode, or it will retain the'original recording. OPEN DAILY - EON. thru Fill. 10 All. to 9 P.f.l. SAT. 10 to 6 KINGS. QUEENS f L s r . TWIN & FULL i 11 ( n f fi MATTRESS SETS iJJ: ; ! CONVERTIBLE f a ' SOFAS CORNER GROUPS U U U V every size mattress set you want. Convertible sofas and j-T"--y """"" corner groups too. Get yours J- -""l-"""""" """'"""" f i now. We have sliced prices " ( i drastically. 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