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Show Page 16~THE HERALD,Provo, Utah Sunday, November 28,1971 Payson Laser Beam Constructs LDS Temple Rites To Unite Couple Groovy Fashion Designs Couple in Mid-December To Wed Sandra R.Pierce will become the bride of Jeff L. Anderson in marriage rites performed sometime in January in the Payson LDS Fourth Ward Church. A wedding partywill be held on the evening of the wedding day. Miss Pierce is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mack V. Reynolds of Payson. She is a graduate of Payson High School. Mr. Anderson is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James L. Anderse=-, of Payson, and has also graduated from Payson High School and completed one year at Utah Technical College. He is a member of the Utsh National Guard. SANDRA R. PIERCE Better Foes Labeling Aids Good Nutrition SCOTTSDALE, Ariz, (UP!)— Better food labeling is essential if we ar2 to upgrade American nutrition, says Jean Mayer, a Harvardnutrition professor and director of the 1969 White House Conference on Food, Nutrition and Health, In a speech and interview, Mayer emphasized the need for more and better information about snacks and other formulated and fabricated foods that are fast replacing traditional meals prepared entirely at home. Mayer was in Scottsdale to address the annual meeting of the Society of Nutrition Education, a professconal organization. “Food labeling is absolutely essential because 50 per cent of our foods no longer are primary ones as they were depicted in old charts,” he said. Taking frozen spinach souffle as an example, he asked: “Do you describe it as a high fat or a low fat food? A high or a low-calorie one? The label doesn’t say.” Mayer added that “nutrition education is not very relevant whenit considers all fruits as equivalent. Watermelon as a source of nutrients is better than apples, which are a symbol of goodness,” He said watermelons provide more vitamins A, B-l, B-2, C and iron then apples, “Apples are useful for other things, Chewing them is good for the gums, for dental hygiene, and they’re easy to carry along for a snack.” Mayer traced meal pattern changes from World War I, when veterans wanted three meals a day, with meat and potatoes at two of them. Vietnam veterans skip breakfast, but buy their food from vending machinesand snackall day, said Mayer. “We're dealing with a generation that itself differently, but there’s no reason it can’t be fed adequately.” More nutrition information is meals away from home and tend to choose a lot more fat foods for these meals. “We must teach them how to use restaurant, hotel andairline meals,” said Mayer. “Wow it’s only a question of whatkind of eggs they’re going to haveif they breakfast in any of these places. “Two myths are foisted on the American people. One says thatbeef offers the best protein and is low in calories. But yeu can get fat on meat because of its fat content. “Americans are convinced that two-thirds of the world is starving. A lot are without an optimal diet, but the average Chinese or Indian is not starving. How do you think they so lean on a_ the California Institute of Technology, and to the dinner preceding it at the faculty club, because she was the suest of honor. The young blonde Cal Tech physicist ustd laser beams to create a swirling multi-colored print for the fabric in a spaceage evening gown being mod- eled as the climax of the show. “I'm anti-fashion,” she said in an interview, “but I've been working with lasers for 10 years, and I'm interested in promoting the idea of laser art. “For one thing, it’s organic. Computer images look artificial, but laser images look Solve Dinner Problem organic and alive.” With Big Breakfast Dr. Garmire had been photographing laser beam abstracts andselling thera as wall hangings, and doinglaser light shows for quite some time. “Then a newswoman interviewd me as one of Cal Tech’s to bed, searing the meat first and then setting the automatic cooker at 150 degrees. Mrs. Goreham’s husbaad, Donald J. Goreham, edits the North Valley World and North Glenn Impressions, two suburban weeklies in Denver, Colo., their homecity. The vivacious native of Ridgefarm, Ill, was in New York in her role as Mrs. U.S. Savings Bonds 1971-72—a title bestowed on her in Lehigh Acres, Fla., when she and her family were finalists in the all America family search-pageant last summer. high carbohydrate diet? “Everybody except dietitians overestimates the (number of) calories in carbohydrate foods and underestimates the (numberof) calories in meat. “People believe bread and potatoes are fattening but nothingelse is. They’re shocked to hear there’s 12 to 14 per cent protein in bread.” During some 100,000 miles of Mayersaid he’d counter such travel as goodwill ambassador for savings bonds, Mrs. Goreham said her primary function is to thank people for buying bonds and also to thank the half-a-million persons who, as volunteers,sell savings bon \ds— $54 billion of which are outstanding. This means Americans haveinvested thattotal in bonds, a figure that Mrs. Goreham said goes up $1billion a year. A teacheras well as a home misconceptions with a nutrition education program for doctors, nurses and the genera. public. Buthesaid he would teach it in terms of human biology, not the nutrititive value of goods. “Even the people who know 2 lot about nutrition—the vitamines and minerals — don’t know how to apply (their knowledge) to specific foods,” he said, BROILER-FRYERS Housewives will be busy during the coming holiday season, so remind them to stock an ample supply cf economical broilerfryers for quick and easyfixing. Good signwork featuring wholes and chicken parts will do the trick. Brighten up your display needed about prepared foods because about one-third of all with colorful leafy vegetables meals now are eaten away and winterfruits for extra eyeappeal. from home, he continued. like fashion shows. But she had to go to one put on by the Wool Bureau Inc., at One of “Groovy People” NEW YORK (UPI)—The floating dinner hour amounts to an everyday nightmare for the wife of mai y a newspaperman, bus driver, policeman,fireman, factory workers and anyone ‘groovypeople,’ ” she said with who works shifts or odd hours. a laugh, “I showed her what I have Mrs. Jacqueline Goreham, married to an editor, is one of been doing with lasers, and said those wives.She also is a home I thought it could be used for economist who's hit on a printing fabric. She got in touch solution to the problem. The with the Wool Bureau and they solution: make breakfast the got in touch with me about the idea.” big meal, Dr. Garmire projected the In aninterview, Mrs. Goreham said she frequently serves red, green, blue and purple her family a roast, potatoes laser image onto a wall and and other rib-sticking victuals photographed it, Then Andre Dorlet madea silk screen of it at breakfast. “That’s the one time I can be and it was printed on wool sure the family’s together,” she jersey in more muted tones. “T guess they had to do that, said. She puts the roast in an electric skillet before she goes so it wouldn’t be too gaudy,” Adult men are the persons mostlikely to die of nutritionally inadequate causes because they eat more than half their stay PASADENA, Calif. (UPI)— Elsa Garmire doesa't really economist, Mrs. Goreham in , the past taught nutrition for the American Heart Association. She recommends making breakfast the main mealof the day, even if your family is fortunate enough to have working shifts that are in harmony, Dr. Garmire said, with a touch of regret. Scientist-Artist Fashion designer Marion Kopscreated a slinky, spaghet- ti-strap long gown from the fabric. “I'm a scientist and an artist,” Dr. Garmire says. “I don’t like things to be put in boxes—art here, science here. I want to combine them, so anyone can do anything they Charles Townes, who won the Nobel Prize for innovative physics while she was studying under him. Her own field was nonlinear optical effects — experimental Evelyn S. Willoughby, Orem, announces the engagement and forthcoming marriage of her daughter, Alana, to John David Seely, son of Mrs. Dorothy W. Seelyof Salt Lake City, and the late John G. Seely. Miss and theoretical studies of Willoughbyis the daughterof the interactions of intense laser late William L, Willoughby. — light and matter The couple plan to be married Her elder daughter, Lisa, 6, Dec. 17 in the Salt. Lake LDS was born the dayshe finished Temple with a reception to honor her thesis. them that evening at the Orem Now Dr. Garmire is a senior Reception Centre. research’ fellow in integrated Miss Willoughbyis a graduate optics, but she works onlypart- of Orem High School and LDS time, devoting her attention to Seminary. She attended Ricks Lisa and Marla, 3 College where she wasaffiliated A vice president of the Los with Lambda Delta Sigma, and Angeles chapter of the organi- was also a student at Brigham zation, Experiments in Art and Young University. She is Technology. Dr. Garmire was a presently enrolled at Utah consulting engineer on light in Tecunica! College whereshewill the pavilion at Expo '70, and graduate in December with a made two trips to Japan to major in business, oversee the light designs and Mr. Seely graduated from safety measures. Hillcrest High School in Salt “It's my secret dream to Lake City wherehe lettered in make laser art as popular as football and baseball. He has Peter Max designs,” she says. fulfilled an LDS mission to Southern Germany and is Household Hints presently attending the PyUnited Press International University of Utah wherehe is a Under-the-bed storage chest majoring in German. and boxes might be the answer junior Following a honeymoonto San for seamstresses who find Francisco, the couple plan to patterns and fabrics cluttering make their home in Salt Lake a small house. City. Betty Canary The Parental JoyofLiving in Zoo's Who I am not a nervoustype, but I dislike taking a bath while a bird watches me. There is just something about having a parakeetsitting on the edge of the tub, clenching his feet and staring at you with his beadylittle eyes. Not that I was surprised at having abird in the bathWhy ed mydaughter, ‘WI room today. I merely parakeet in the upst athroom, dear?" And she gi mea logical answer. Because I needed the hamster cage for my new mice.” “Don’t tell me,” I smiled serenely. “Let me guess! The hams pr is in the bird cage. “No, the hamster is in the cardboard box in the n as I sell the baby mice, I'm buying him garage. / a new cage.” “O.K.,” I whimpered, “Whereare the gerbils?” ‘T could hardly leave them in the box. I neededit for the hamster! “Where!” I screamed “In theutility tub—I used the ra the top.”” ks from thegrill over “I don’t meanto beselfisn,” I said sternly, “but you promised I could havetheutility tubs back just as soon as you found a place for the turtles “That reminds me," she said. “If everybody will coope ind not use the downstairs bathtub for a day or two, I'll have something figured out for the guppies.” The turtles are inthe “I understand,” 1 said aquarium.” I am not a nervous type. I am calm. I amserene, I don’t even mindliving in Zoo's Who. life is one empty bathroom. All I want out of Well, there is re other thing | want. I'd like a bird cage without a boa constrictor living in it Rene ant. The tall, slender native of Hinsdale, Ill. met her husband, Gordon, a physics professor and expert on cosmic x-rays, when she was studying physics at Radcliffe and he at Harvard. “Tm a very unliberated woman,” she says. “T got married on the day I graduated from college, and I’m just lucky I picked someone still get along with so well. Studies Optics The couple got PhDs at MIT, where she worked with Dr. Club Notes DUP A special Christmas program is planned by the Center Utah County DUP to be held in the Sunset Third Ward, 1000 S. 110 W., on Dee. 3 at 2 p.m. Officers are requested to meet earlier at lpm. Select Groups Of New Fall And Holiday Dresses And Coats Murked Down NowFor Xmas Selling. Buy That New Xmas Dress Or Coat At These Reduced Priced 0%. 99%. 25% OFF REG . PRICES An Excellent Selection Of Styles, Sizes And Colors THOMAS’ 240 No. University Open Monday And Friday ‘Vill 9 P.M. “AND VISIONS OF SUGAR PL For > VANCED IN THEIR HEADS” y sleeping on that special “NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMA: “or the night afterward, (Left) Is a 100% Nylon PJ with ing quiltedrobe and slipper seuff in Autumn gold— Peacock iT hristmas red. Sizes 610 14 dre: Robes $11.00, P.J. $6.00, or Scuffs $8.00. (Center) a Luscious brus te and nylon blend. In Gown, PJ. or Long quilted Gown. In Blue Frost or Pink Ice, Robe $16,00 Gown $8.50 or J., $8.00 sizes 10 13 (Right) is lush and lovely nightgown comes in 100% Nylon with embroidered midriff. lt come sin pre-teensizes S,M, & L, In Christmas Red or Royal Blueat the price of $6.00 (alsoin P.J.°s) CHILDREN’S ACTIVITIES Andparents, sugar plums can d n your children’s tobring them in to T r’s to Santa's Headquarters, Hours 4 P.M. to 8:00 P.M y & All day on Sat. We Will ha a Playroomstartin arting Dee. 6 to entert n the children while busy Mon Dads shop. Dec Children’s tree trim party — make an orn atand bring into Taylor's Sat at 11:00 A.M. Prizes will begiven, (Childrenupto 12) Shopevery night till 9:00 P.M, (Except Dee. Ist 6:00 P.M.) Plenty of Free Spacious Parking. Use our convenient lay-a-way. 200 W. 200 N. Provo |