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Show Hemenway-B allantyne rites planned in Provo Temple Leslie Joan Hemenway, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dale E. Hemenway, Orem, will marry Jon Craig Ballan-tyne, Ballan-tyne, son of Mr. and Mrs. VerDon W. Ballantyne, Orem, on November 20 in the Provo Temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. An open house will honor the couple cou-ple on Thursday from 6 to 8 p.m. The bride-elect graduated from Orem High School and LDS Seminary. She has attended Utah Technical College and is employed at Mervyn's in Orem. Her fiance graduated from Mountain Moun-tain View High School and LDS Seminary. He served an LDS mission-to mission-to Rochester, New York. He will be attending Brigham Young University Universi-ty and working in Provo. The couple will make their first home in Orem. As i JON CRAIG BALLANTYNE AND LESLIE JOAN HEMENWAY 1 i r. ( V i i L Sixteen of BYU's finest ballroom dancers will travel to Germany later this month to compete in the World Latin American Dance Championships, a competition considered to be the summit of amateur formation dancing. BYU will compete in ballroom championship Brigham Young University has accepted for the first time an invitation invita-tion to perform in the World Latin American Formation Dance Championships Cham-pionships in Breyman, Germany, beginning Saturday (Nov. 15). Only two teams from any one :ountry are invited to the event, which represents the height of amateur ballroom dance competi-iions, competi-iions, said Tom Murdock, ballroom iance publicity director. The BYU dancers most recently received accolades this summer by winning the prestigious British Formation For-mation Championships in Blackpool, England. "Although Blackpool is considered con-sidered to be a top competition, it is not considered to be the world championship, cham-pionship, so this newest opportunity will place us against the very best amateur dancers," said Murdock. BYU has turned down previous invitations to compete because of time and financial considerations, according ac-cording to Murdock. This year, however, the invitation from Germany Ger-many also included an offer to find sponsors for the BYU performers. "Golf gang Opitz, a head trainer in Germany, saw us in Blackpool this summer and we beat his team," said Murdock. "He especially wanted to compete with us again." Ballroom dance director Lee Wakefield is pleased with the support he received from BYU for the event. "University administrators agreed this was an opportunity BYU should not pass up, so we have been rehearsing early mornings four days a week in addition to regular rehearsals rehear-sals and practice," he said. Murdock Mur-dock believes BYU will be sending "by far the best team we have ever placed in competition. We have the top 16 ballroom dancers at BYU going go-ing on this trip and, in the space of six weeks, have put together a quality Vill;. !ifi:- I Charier Canyon Hospital has programs to treat alcohol, drug, ' and prescription medication depen-i depen-i dency problems. Insurance covers costs in most cases. CALL TCSAY FOR A FREE, CGMFSEDCTIAL EVALUATION CALL 2 TOLL FEES 1-899-358-9555 performance "skill that we spent six months achieving last year." BYU's ascension into the competitive com-petitive world of ballroom dancing began in 1971 when it was the first American team to win in Blackpool, an honor the team has repeated several times since then. BYU teams have placed in national and international interna-tional competitions and are the reigning reign-ing U.S. Formation Champions. Former Korean prime minister will speak Duck-Woo Nam, former prime minister of the Republic of Korea, will speak Friday (Nov. 14) at 10 a.m. in 238 Harold R. Clark Building (the David M. Kennedy Center for International Inter-national Studies) at Brigham Young University. Nam's visit is sponsored by the David M. Kennedy Center as part of its Distinguished Lecture Series. It is free and open to the public. He will discuss "The Future of U.S.-Korea Trade Relations." After stepping down as prime minister in 1983, Nam assumed the directorship of KOTRA (the Korean Traders s Association), where he now serves.. "Dr. Nam has achieved international interna-tional prominence as one of the world's most successful economic planners," said Spencer J. Palmer, associate director of the Kennedy Center. "Anyone who has noted the recent spectacular rise of the South Korean economy must recognize the contributions of Dr. Nam." Nam earned a master's degree in economics at Seoul National University. Univer-sity. He earned another master's and a doctorate in economics at Oklahoma State University in 1960 and 1961. He worked for the Bank of Korea before becoming an associate professor of economics and then dean of economics at Kookmin University. He taught as a professor of economics at Sogang University in Seoul from 1964 to 1969, when Prime Minister Chung Hee Park named him minister of finance. He was one of the youngest and longest-serving ministers of finance in the Republic of Korea, holding the position for five years. In 1974, Park asked Nam to oversee the national economic development program. Nam was appointed prime minister in 1980. In addition to heading KOTRA now, he is a member of the standing committee of the Pacific Economic Cooperation Conference. Con-ference. He also sits on the board of governors of the East-West Center in Honolulu. Money expert tells tips to Women's Club Clinton Combs, financial planner and co-author of "Rich on Any Income" In-come" discussed his book and budget planning at the recent Orem Women's Club meeting at Scera Lounge. The book developed as a result of helping clients work out their financial finan-cial problems and he and his partner, Jim Christensen, feel that any family fami-ly can benefit from its use. "As much as 25 to 50 percent of buying is impulse buying," he stated. " A budget that is simple to use and gives you an immediate look at your finances can prevent this type of buying." The key to the budget is a small wallet size book that can be kept in a wallet or checkbook to allow instant recording of spending, and deduction of the spent amount from budgeted funds. Following the success of the book, the authors are now putting on the market a new one for youngsters, "Rich on Any Allowance," which they hope will teach children early to budget and control money. "Ninty percent of the women in Utah handle the family's income," he stated, so the books have particular value to them." The speaker was introduced by Marilyn Stevens. LuJean Sundberg presented George Dyer, who sang several romantic songs from Broadway Broad-way shows accompanied by Kurt Metzger. Lola Adams reported on the new Orem Water Treatment Plant. "November-A Time for Thanks Giving" Giv-ing" was the litany presented by Dorothy Rasmussen. Melba Kofford played prelude music. Lucile Infanger, president, presided. Dance ensemble to premiere new dance works Nov. 13-14 Dance Ensemble at Brigham Young University will premiere new dance works that will take its audiences au-diences to skiing slopes and through a variety of moods and styles at its annual November concert in creativity. The performances, scheduled for Thursday and Friday (Nov. 13 and 14) at 7:30 p.m. in the Dance Production Studio at 185 Richards Building, will feature 18 advanced-level modern dancers selected through audition at the beginning of the semester. Tickets may be purchased for $1 at the door performance nights. "The intent of Dance Ensemble is to explore feelings by way of movement," move-ment," says Billy Gonzales, publicist for the dancers. "I hope the audience will understand our message as we take them through many dances that are different in mood, style and message." Company director Carolyn Pro-hosky Pro-hosky will premiere her mystical work "Tyi Wara" as the concert's opening number. As she explains the rest of the program, she says, "You will travel from the abstract 'Clay Paintings' and "The Hera Complex,' to sensitive messages about the human condition found in 'Inbalancis' and 'Four Leon Skirts.' '"The Gold and Beyond' should sharpen your appetite for skiing. It's taken from the John Denver song used us-ed for the Olympics." Also planned is "Chagall," a dance that uses light as a major element, ele-ment, "Escape," a number designed for the thrill of dance, and "Illusions, Allusions and Dellusions" performed to "Love is Chemical" from the movie "White Knights." In this satire, a dancer is irt love, not with another person, but with another person's makeup. Dance Ensemble is a performing group that concentrates on choreographing its own dances. Symphonic Band trombone choir fall concert Daniel Bachelder, a member of Brigham Young University's music faculty, will lead both the Symphonic Band and Trombone Choir in a fall concert Tuesday (Nov. 18) at 7:30 p.m. in the de Jong Concert Hall of the Harris Fine Arts Center at BYU. The concert is open to the public at no charge, but tickets must be picked pick-ed up at the music ticket office, which is adjacent to the concert hall. The Symphonic Band will perform per-form "Fanfare for the Common Man" by Aaron Copland, "Amparito Roca" by Jaime Texidor, "Lohengrin" by Richard Wagner, Allegro and Intermezzo In-termezzo by Claude T. Smith, "Can-tique "Can-tique and Festival" by Jared Spears, Viva Vivaldi by Joseph Jenkins and "Beowulf" by W. Francis McBeth. The middle portion of the program pro-gram will spotlight the BYU Trombone Trom-bone Choir in Anton Bruckner's Adagio from Symphony No.7, Daniel Gawthrop's Sacred Suite and Hector Berlioz' "Damnation of Faust." Orem-Geneva Times Wednesday, November 12, 1986 Blackburn family honors parents on anniversary The children of Ancel V. and Zora Torgerson Blackburn announce the 50th wedding anniversary of their parents. They were honored at a family dinner on Saturday at a local restaurant. A bigger celebration was held in August when their children who live out of the area could attend. The couple were married November 13, 1936 in Loa, Utah. The marriage was later solemnized in the Salt Lake Temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Ancel Blackburn was born in Loa. His younger years were spent farming and herding sheep in southern Utah. In 1945 they moved to Provo where he began employment at Geneva Steel. He retired from Geneva in 1973 after 30 years. His hobbies have included fruit farming and raising beef cattle. He has been active in the Lakeview First Ward where they have lived for 42 years. He has served in the Lakeview Stake name extraction program and as a worker in the Provo Temple. He has served for many years as a home teacher. Zora Torgerson Blackburn was born in Lyman, Utah. She has spent her life as a dedicated homemaker. In addition to raising eight children, she served in the Primary presidency presiden-cy and as a teacher in Primary and Relief Society. She has recently worked in the Lakeview Stake name extraction program and currently serves as a visiting teacher, a r - V J) . --: MR. AND MRS. ANCEL V. BLACKBURN position she has held for many years. Her hobbies of quilting and crocheting have been shared with all of her children and grandchildren as well as many friends. They are the parents of 5 sons and 3 daughters: Sherman, Highland; Mrs. Barry (Linda) Brown, Orem; Robert, Hapeville, Georgia; James, Provo; Eric, Germany; Ger-many; Frank, Provo; Mrs. Steve (Evelyn) Weber, Reno, Nevada; Mrs. Graig (Louise) Westphal, Millington, Tenn. They have 31 grandchildren grand-children and 11 great-grandchildren. Repertory concert tonight Students not majoring in music at Brigham Young University but who don't want to leave their musical training behind will perform in a concert con-cert of Grieg, Bartok, Albinoni and Britten tonight (Nov. 12) at Brigham Young University as members of the Repertory Orchestra. The free concert will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the de Jong Concert Hall of the Harris Fine Arts Center. "These students play for the joy of it and the concert should reflect this," says Dr. Glenn R. Williams, conductor. "Many of them have been coached during the semester by members of the Deseret String Quartet to enhance their playing." The performance will begin with the Holberg Suite, op. 40, by the Norwegian composer Edvard Grieg, a famous work in the string repertoire that calls up the past in a romantic idiom, according to Williams. Bela Bartok's Dances of Transylvania, Tran-sylvania, inspired by the Hungarian composer's treks into his native coun tryside to collect folk songs and rhythms, will continue the concert. The most well-known work, Adagio in G Minor String and Organ by Tomaso Albinoni, will feature Michelle Adams at the organ, and the concluding work, Simple Symphony, op. 4, by Benjamin Britten, is based on his earlier works. Utah Valley BPW invites women to business meet Utah Valley Business and Professional Women will hold a business and planning meeting Thursday, Thur-sday, November 13 at 4: 30 p.m. in the E.F. Hutton Conference Room, 215 West 100 North, Provo. Anyone interested is invited to attend and may obtain additional information in-formation from Kathy Kirtz, president. Since 1953 an3 ae! ! Just Check Our Prices! Printing Copying Binding Letterhead Envelopes Business Cards Carbonless Forms Brochures Resumes Postcards Flyers Technical Manuals Color Copies mumwu conn o mumm pams 1 targe Stock of Announcements WEDDING INVITATIONS Full Color Picture Standard Invitations Picture Wedding Invitations , 3 Part Self Mailers Temple Marriage Designs Thank You Cards & Napkins Best Quality Compare Our Prices! 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