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Show Page 20 THE HERALD, Provo, Utah Sunday, February 20, 1972 l ificio A. 1 Anr Take His Suggestion And Get Out...Fast .: . DEAR SUSIE I V :? COLLEEN CARTER COLLETTE CARTER Twin Sisters Set Wedding Dates Colleen Carter Will Marry Collette Carter Plans April 7 Gregory Banks on Saturday to Stone Mr. and Mrs. Albert M. Carter announce the engagement and forthcoming marriage of two of their daughters who are twins. Colleen will marry Gregory Banks, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Banks of Oakland, Calif., and Collette will marry Murray Stone, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Stone of Ogdea Colleen will be married on Saturday in the First Christian Church of Christ of San Lorenzo, San Lorenzo, OaliL A reception will follow at the church. She is a graduate of Orem High School and IDS Business College and is currently employed as a secretary in the Civil Service at Alameda, Calif. Mr. Banks graduated from Freemont High School and has attended Laney College and Chabot College. He spent two years with the submarines in the navy. The couple will make their home in Oakland, Calif. Marriage Murray College and is presently employed at the Beauty Salon of J. C. Penney's at the Valley Fair Mall in Granger. Mr. Stone, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carter, are planning the C W. Stone of Ogden, graduated from Bonneville High School in reception to follow. Collette is a graduate of Orem Ogden and is now employed as a High School and Mary's Beauty carpenter in Salt Lake City. Collette Carter, twin sister of Colleen is planning to marry Murray Stone on April 7 at the Orem Reception Centre. Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert M. n . MAC: My husband and I have been' married 37 years all pure hell. He came from Sicily illegally, sent by his parents to get him out d of trouble with a girl over there. After marrying me he became a citizen, then sent for his mother and sister, and that was the end of any happiness for me. The whole family treated me like dirt like I was their slave. But Tm a religious person, and divorce was out of the question. We built up a profitable barber shop, and even expanded, but my husband was such a miser I even hardly eve? saw a penny though I worked Just as hard as he did. Last summer we went back to Sicily to visit. My husband saw his old girlfriend again, and now he wants to sell the shops, move back there, and LTVF! I love' life and people, but to please him I've kept my head down and my mouth shut. Now I'm speaking up to ask for help. DESPERATE DEAR DESPERATE: I'd take his suggestion if I were you. Do get out and LIVE as far away from him as you Mr. and Mrs. Floyd A. Cook, The bride-to-b- is a graduate e Jr. of Orem, announce the forth- of Orem High School and IDS and is presently coming marriage of their Seminary in Pleasant Grove. to Bruno snployed Peggy daughter, Mr. Hunziker graduated from Hunziker, son of Magda Stalker, Orem Iligh and IDS Seminary. Orem, and the late Paul HunHe is now serving in the Marine baby is due any minute now, so I ziker. cani keep it up much longer. He The couple plan a March 10 Corps. doesn't care, though. One marriage in the Provo IDS Attending the bride will be morning he took me to work, and Temple. A reception will be held Linda Cook, Monica Watkins and I didn't see him again for a that evening at the home of the Julie Cook. Jon Eager will serve as best man. week! He ft'A he slept in the car bride. at night We had ap argument, and his mother got into it (as usual), and said I should let him come and get his clothes if we couldnt get along. We went back together after he'd spent a couple of nights at his mother's which was probably her arrangement. He pulled the same trick on me o ... and stayed with her again. She's the type of mother that everything her children do is right, and her sons are too good to work unless it's a job where kte benefits. I don't have any people up here but myself, so I wouldnl have anyone to turn to. I don't want anything to do with his relatives; they all sleep around so much ! can't stand it. I don't know how I got into this family. Boy, am I ever sorry! If I only wasnt pregnant. I've asked my husband to leave, but he wont. I really wish he would, because my life is so unhappy. I don't know what to do. Should PEGGY COOK I just pack my things and go? 1 can get! But you need something to live PREGNANT AND on, so call your lawyer before MISERABLE Sicilian sells DEAR P AND M: your stone-face- d I'd say, if your mother-in-lawyour shops out from under you. so darned anxious to have DEAR SUSIE MAC: her baby by her side, tie a big My problem is my husband. I've been working while he says red bow around his neck and he's looking for a job. I pay for send him home! A husband the rent, the groceries, the who'd rather be with mama is clothes, the car, and all that. My . worse than no husband at all 's Fashion and Beauty Tips talcum powder. Just dust in it out road vigorously. The powder will common from the recovery remove excess oils and tide cold and don't want to risk you over until your regular hair, using try washing your a dry shampoo or use regular shampoo. A DRY DO When you're on the to some pcwder and brush Fashion Design Spanish-Bor- n There is Also the Spanish Male Fashion Model .AYLOR'S 20fyW. 200 North Makes $400 Per Day By WALTER LOGAN YORK (UPI)-L- uis NEW Idigoras, Spanish-borstudent, n ex-la- w lieutenant, miner and has ended up as much to his surprise as anybody's as top male model, brilliant primitive artist and an aficianado of r. American men's Idigoras was born in Seville, the capital of Andalusia in southern Spain, towards the end of the Spanish Civil War. He had six brothers and sisters An older brother, Manok, who looks like Luis' identical twin, became a soccer player of note in Spain. "My father wanted me to be a lawyer so I studied law at the University of Seville," Idigoras said. "I hated it and studied sculpture at night, just to get away from the law books. The ex-co- ready-to-wea- setting wasn't bad the university was a beautiful onetime tobacco farm that was the setting for the opera 'Carmen. " He became a dropout and joined the Spanish Marines as a lieutenant and when his time was up he went to Germany and tried coal mining, "But I hated that worse than lawbooks." So he returned to sell them, a form of income that had not crossed his mind. The paintings went into a gallery at the Plaza Hotel and later at Henri Bendel's and sold wen. One of the reasons Idigoras wmm has become perhaps the top male model is the fact he can go into any men's wear store and put on a size 40 jacket he calls it a "yacket" in a T:. V ' betrayal of his Andalusian it fits perfectbackground-a- nd iilliiiiiliii VUl' 4 ll ' ly. "It wasn't like that in Spain," he recalls. "We were poor and we got one new suit a year, in the spring. We started thinking about the material all January and February and then our mother would bring some in and we would choose. There were so many fittings we would be tired of our domes before we ever got to wear them." IT r Have Suit Win Travel There was no Spanish then and everything was custom made. Now he a prefers U.S. fact that has made him one of the more popular models at the annual Men's Fashion Association press previews where he works closely with fashion director Ken O'Keefe and his Spain. assistant, Marina Chicca. Broad Experience "American suits are for He exported ceramics to the United States, sold ties and traveling," Idigoras said. "You shirts to tourists in his first arrive somewhere and you put brush with men's wear, studied them on a hanger and they are wear English in England for six all right In Europe you months and headed for New European suits and you have to York and a firm called call the woman to press them." As a model, Idigoras has to Sorrento's where he imported ceramics. Idigoras, now an American citizen, has the lean look of a flamenco dancer or a soccer player in good condition and the haughty look of a Spanish nobleman his family even lived in a small castle when his veterinarian-fathe- r was running the farm for some Jesuit owners. "Everyone thought I was a model or an actor or an Italian movie star or a soccer player like my brother Manolo," he said. Some agency people spotted him and before he knew it he was posing as an escort to a Boston society woman in the Restaurant for Glamor Magazine, his first modeling job. He has now been with an agency called Stewart Men where he gets $60 an hour or $400 a day on assignments to such exotic places as Mozambique, Acapul-cthe Canary Islands and Palm Beach. Dresses Casually, Too "I started painting while sitting around waiting for the phone to ring for a new assignment," he said. On weekends he paints at his farm at Honesdale, Pa., casting off his impeccable clothing for ready-to-we- ready-to-wea- i ar r, have wardrobes for all occasions "always a tuxedo, but you have to have a big selection of shirts, ties and shoes, plus a blazer and a business suit. In the early days I just had to have a tuxedo and a gray flannel suit" Vs? .. OLE! DESIGNER GREGORIANA bows to the bullring in blue on white and white on blue embroidered evening pant dresses heavily encrusted with beading during presentation 129 West Center Street, Provo, Utah' S ..... s M4W life J of her couection in Rome recently. Matching cloth and red epaulettes are the motif of the collection, ( MvpV) Gingerman o, some blue jeans and alpar-zata- s, a Spanish farmer's slipper that laces around the ankle. Claire Taishoff, one of his closest friends and a painter herself, was so impressed by the paintings she suggested he i ions ect Even George would have appreciated these Washington specials ! mO BEA UTIFUL STYLED CO A TSATA SPECIAL PURCHASE PRICE. INJUMOR SIZES The tie updotet today's (oihion cloisicj with super style On a hunly slice of heel in Red, Blue, Ton or Block smooth kid with whi.., $i7. OJVL Y d UtiniMnna i ntti nnun. Suede Cool with Polyetter fur trim. reg. $50.00 lone Bronco Suede Coal with covered buttons reg. $50.00 ff'e alio have a beautiful Tapestry Coal with tame Polyester fur trim for an unbelievably low price of V MISSES SIZES O.VL Y R LADIES $2S.OO READY-TO-WEA- I .sow 32)0 $0 000 |