OCR Text |
Show r f DIANA LYNN BALLOW AND KIM "L" WILBERG Ballow, Wilberg Marriage Planned in Ogden Temple Mr. and Mrs. Henry D.Ballow, Ogden, announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter Diana Lynn, to Kim "L" Wilberg, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dexter L. Wilberg of Orem. The couple have chosen Saturday, Satur-day, December 17, as their wedding day in the Ogden LDS Temple and a reception will be held in their honor that evening from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. at the Enchanted Evening Reception Center, 1550 East 6060 South Ogden, and an open house will fete the couple Tuesday, December Decem-ber 20 at the home of the bridegroom's bride-groom's parents, 525 East 200 North Orem from 7:30 to 9:30 VA Discourses Mlqh It doesn't pay to drop out of school to join a military service, most recruiters advise. But if you did, and you want to finish high school or prepare for college entry, VA will pay you. At least one out of ten Vietnam-era GI Bill students has receive monthly checks and refresher re-fresher of deficiency courses to qualify them for higher education educa-tion under the GI Bill's "free entitlement" provisions, the Veterans Vet-erans Administration reported today. More than 760,000 persons have taken advantage of the training train-ing opportunities without using any of their basic GI Bill eligibility. eligi-bility. The trainees represent more than 11 percent of the 7 million persons who have trained under the current GI Bill since 1966. Eligible GI Bill students may receive full benefits while train i. if ft. Call Now TOABE-IC3 CS fl 1 J: Yf(( s" )M Village Green 1675 N. 200 W., 2 Minutes Off BYU Diagonal -- J" VI II I AIL Mtvwi 4tt. p.m. Friends and relatives are invited. Miss Ballow is a graudate of Bonneville High School and LDS seminary also Weber State College Coll-ege and LDS institute with aB.S. degree in elementary education. She is currently teaching at the Freemont Elementary School, Sunset, Utah. Mr. Wilberg graduated from Orem High School and LDS seminary. semi-nary. He attended BYU prior to serving a LDS mission in Pennsylvania. He is presently employed in Ogden. Following their marriage the couple will reside in Ogden. School Drc ffVV ing for high school completion. Others who have completed high school but need refresher or remedial re-medial courses for entrance into training, also may take the necessary ne-cessary courses on a free -entitlement basis. This training is not charged to the maximum of 45 months educational assistance assist-ance available to all veterans during the 10 years after release from active duty, but not later than December 31, 1989. A special outreach effort by VA benefits counselors during the past year was credited with a 23 percent increase in free entitlement enrollments. Repeated Repeat-ed contacts are made with veterans vet-erans with less than four years high school in an effort to interest in-terest them in training. VA studies of veterans who use free entitlement show that more than 50 percent continue in other forms of training. Annual The one you've been waiting for! PETITE ILLUSION bv Adollo i $Q95 Selected Styles by Eva Gabor $5$15 OFF WITH TRADE For An Appointment 374 n .J vJCJU U VJJ uuuuque MARIE WATTS AND Marie Watts To Exchange Vows With Lyle Brockbank Mr. and Mrs. Stanley T. Watts of Kedding, California, announce the forthcoming marriage of their daughter Marie Carmel, to Lyle Joseph Brockbank, son of Mr. and Mrs. Vaughn N. Brockbank Lakeview. The couple plan a December 16 wedding and open house to Open Heart Surgery Tests Underway Many open heart surgery patients pati-ents die each year, due not to the surgery itself, but because their hearts cannot assume a full workload once surgery has ended. A University of Utah Medical Center team of specialists is trying to change that fact. They have successfully tested a mechanical mech-anical circulatory system designed de-signed to support the temporarily failing heart of open heart surgery sur-gery patients. The system, known as "trans-apical "trans-apical left ventricular bypass," was developed through the efforts of anesthesiologists, , surgeons and cardiologists at the Medical Center. It allows the surgery-weakened heart to assume its full role gradually, but steadily, even if it takes several weeks, according accord-ing Dr. Jeffrey Peters, one of the developers. Peters, who holds an M.D. degree in addition to a PhJO. in biomedical physics and physiology, phy-siology, explained the system: Following surgery, physicians insert a catheter into the apex of the heart's left ventricle and circulate the blood through a pump and filter. The blood bypasses by-passes the ventricle, to allow the heart time to recover its function. The blood is detoured to the aorta, the major vessel s plus styling - 6874 3 LYLE BROCKBANK follow from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. at the home of the Bridegroom's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Byron A. Brockbank, Rt, 1 Box 310 A., North Boat HarborDrive, Lakeview. Following their marriage, the couple plans to reside in the Provo area. that circulates blood to the body. "It's a simple, economical system that can be immediately applied in any well-equipped hospital," hos-pital," Peters said. "We maintained one 44-year old man for nine days after open heart surgery last January," he added. This individual had suffered multi-system failure his heart, kidneys and lungs failed and he had liver damage. "By the sixth day of the support sup-port (the longest total support on record), his heart began functioning func-tioning and his lungs and liver had recovered. We were able to disconnect the system on the ninth day." Peters said the patient survived sur-vived for two more weeks, but died due to other medical com- plications. " f "The most significant result of the case is that the heart, when totally supported by our system, recovered fromprofound failure," Peters said. The University-developed system sys-tem has been used in Japan 12 times with six ultimate recoveries, recover-ies, and thoracic surgeons across the country and in some foreign countries are requesting the system sys-tem for their own use. In addition to Peters, an assistant assist-ant professor of surgery and associate research professor of bioengineering, the team consists con-sists of Dr. Hiro Fukamasu, a thoracic surgeon, and Jim McRea, a graduate student in the division of artificial organs. An offshoot of the project, which includes the adaptation of the system for use in infants and young children, is being coordinated by Dr. Peters; Dr. Herbert D. Rutteriberg, pediatric cardiologist; and Dr. JJS. Roger Jones, an anesthesiologist and intensive care specialist at Primary Pri-mary Children's Medical Center. Cen-ter. Satellite Project Set By Veterans The Veterans Administration Communications Technology Satellite (CTS) Project kicked-off kicked-off at 1 p.m. Friday from the Palo Alto VA hospital its first broadcast in a 15 -month experiment experi-ment in biomedical communications. communica-tions. The VACTS experiment involves in-volves 29 VA and eight non-VA non-VA hospitals in the Western United States. The first broadcast featured an introduction of the program by VA Administrator Max Cle-land, Cle-land, and Principal Investigator Bob Shamaskin. The introduction was followed by a discussion of the medical and surgical management of angina pectoris by two VA physicians physi-cians from the Agency's Long Beach, California hospital. This was followed by the VA National Medical Satellite Journal, Jour-nal, which will be a regular feature fea-ture of the broadcasts, and the expanded role of the nurse and the enterostomal nurse specialist special-ist by two registered nurses (RNs) from the Stanford University Uni-versity Medical Center, The first program concluded at 3:30 p.m. The next program, from Miami, Florida, andfromNASA;s Ames Research Center in Mountain Moun-tain View, California, will be broadcast Friday, December 9, beginning at 12:00 p.m. (PST). Expression of Arrjsr Spouses who hit each other hard during fights report less discord in their marriages, according ac-cording to a University of Utah study. But the fights aren't the usual household variety. They are playful "game bouts" in which husbands and wives pummel each other with hand-held pillow clubs. The study designed to probe subverbal communications between be-tween married persons was conducted by Dr.DavidM. Young, now an assistant professor of psychology at Purdue University, Kim M. Korner, former U psychology psy-chology graduate student, Dr. James D. Gill, assistant adjunct professor at the U and director of research at the Salt Lake Mental Health Center, and Dr. Ernst G. Beier, U professor of psychology and well-known "body language" authority. in the experiment, 23 married couples were recruited and informed in-formed that they were to assist in developing new ways of measuring mea-suring "game play" variables using Bataca clubs. Positioned in a six-foot-diameter eame ring, each couple was told to strike each other t- ' Special Group of Sportswear For boys and girls infant to size 6X-7 V2 to Vl off ra, iff LACE 100 Nylon 2 inch wide and over Reg. 25' yd 15'yd. 100 Nylon Narrow . Reg. 5' yd 2 yGS. 5' Lace Bags, approx. 50 yds. narrow lace Reg. 49' bag , 25 bag hi- CHRISTMAS HOURS: 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Mon. thru Sal. Free Gift Wrapping (Over $5.00) Plus f.lsny Mors Spccids Vital in f,!arrisg3 with the clubs during a 60-second 60-second bout. The researcher monitored electronic impulses from the specially wired clubs indicating the number, frequency and intensity in-tensity of the blows. Following each bout, the couple completed a marital discord questionnaire which measured a spouse's disagreement dis-agreement and unhappiness in relation to ten common marital issues. Spouses who express anger vigorously and openly in a playful, play-ful, game setting, will suffer less alienation, the researchers note. In addition, the study showed that husbands who report less dissatisfaction were paired with wives who hit harder. "Thus, playfid aggressiveness on the part of wives appears to be appreciated by husbands," researchers said. Wives who were married longer displayed less aggression in terms of frequency and intensity inten-sity of blows, the study showed. No such correlation was evident for men. The study also suggested that couples who had low discord rrw " Brings You Santas Money Stretchers (Los? fJlEnate Saujng & Shopping aaalaaaaaaaaaeajBlaaaaja Oi. l. r I v , A Entire Stock of Coats Snovsuits Jackets 1 Reduced finmoffnncr Tnr Infanta Toddlers-4to6X Boys & Girls Group 1 Mostly 6535 poly cotton blends Reg. to $2.49 yd. yd. Orem-Geneva Times Cancer Society Offers Cards For Christmas Giving For the fourth year, the Utah Division of the American Cancer Society is offering Christmas cards which feature a painting by Valoy Eaton, one of Utah's most respected artists. Gracing this year's card is an original oil painting called "Roadside Cottonwoods." The winter scene was painted in Sci-pio, Sci-pio, Utah, and shows a quiet country lane flanked by cotton-woods, cotton-woods, with scattered farmhouses farm-houses in the background. Snow-covered Snow-covered mountains form the backdrop for the lovely rural scene. scores appear to "establish'rules for their games, while couples voicing greater unhappiness play more independently." In general terms, the researchers re-searchers add, "our study appears toconfirmthatacouple's subtle behaviorincluding pillow club fights can be used by spouses to communicate feelings about their marriage." For Your Reduced Special Group Sleepwear Boys and Girls Sizes 2-6X,PJ's and Gowns off reg. Fabric Grcup 2 100 brushed poly perfect for robes and sleepwear, 50 poly 50 cotton stretch knit fabric Reg. to $2.99 yd. 99 yd. 7V Fl tin IJ tU' Jf J 1 17 m i wvmm CENTER UNIVERSITY MALL (801) OREM.UTAH84057 December 15, 1977 Cards are $6 per package of 25, with an extra 50? for mailing. mail-ing. They may be ordered by calling 322-0431, or obtained from the Utah Division offices, 610 East South Temple. Volunteer Volun-teer leaders in each of the Society's So-ciety's forty county units also have a supply. The message inside reads: "May your Holidays be blessed with Health and Happiness that continue throughout the coming year." A s mall notation indicates the card represents a gift to the Cancer Society. FAT IS UGLY. LOSE ITI MON-ADEX MON-ADEX is the most effective weight loss plan sold directly to the public. pub-lic. This tiny tablet helps curb your appetite. Start losing pounds today Change your life. Lose 1020-30 pou nds or yourmoneywill be refunded. refund-ed. MONADEX sells for S3.25 end twice the amount for $5.50. Also try AQUATABS, a "water pill" that works gently to reduce water bloat- $3.00. Both quarante-ed quarante-ed and sold by: SUGGS DIUG CENTtl IS7 U. Stele Mail Orders FiNea1 Long and Short Dresses Selected group of mini-world Fall Styles. Infant to 6X mm Make your own dresses out of skirts sleeves-bodices sleeves-bodices collars belts etc. per piece price Group 3 Designed fabrics, all new styles, great for quilts, curtains, childrens and adult clothing Reg. to $2.99 yd. $1 49 yd. (All sold in full yardage) 0H Q.rro 225 - 57 |