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Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Bronson(Linda K. Kennedy)
Kennedy-BronsonMarriage vows' were exchanged by
Linda Kay Kennedy, daughter of Mr.and Mrs. Robert Kennedy, Min-neapolis, and Richard D. Bronson, sonof Mr. and Mrs. Ben Bronson, also ofMinneapolis, April 2 at Minneapolis'First United Methodist Church.
The Rev. Merlin F. Normanofficiated.
Musicians were Mrs. Louis Cooperand Mrs. Willis Lott, the bridegroom'saunt, both of Minneapolis.' The bride wore an organza chapelgown accented with Venise lace andpink satin ribbon. A beaded and lace-trimmed headpiece held her illusionveil.
Maid of honor: Brehda Gridley, Hut-chinson. Bridesmaids: Elizabeth Wil-son, Hays, and Kern Kennedy, Min-neapolis, sister of the bride.
Best man and groomsmen: JackBronson, the groom's brother, andRick Muller, both of Minneapolis, andLarry Nelson, Hutchinson.
Other attendants: Kevin Kennedy,Lawrence, and Darrell Kennedy, Min-neapolis, brothers of the bride; PaulBronson, Chad and Jona Johnson, all ofMinneapolis, the groom's brother andcousins, and Barb Jiricek, Lawrence,and Denise Hayden, Manhattan.
Assisting at the church reception:Mr. and Mrs. Milt Lott and Mr. andMrs. Lynn Hendrixson, all of Min-neapolis, and aunts and uncles of thegroom. The bride, a graduate of Min-neapolis high school, attended Hutchin-son Community Junior college andworks at Minneapolis' United Bank.
Her husband, also graduated fromMinneapolis High, attended Hutchinsonjuco, and works for Ottawa County Fee-ders, Inc. . . .
They will be at home at 203Vi N.Sheridan, Minneapolis, after a shortwedding trip.
Club calendarFRIDAY
AAUW, Art and Travel, 1:15 pm,Mrs. Clifford Anderson, 1818 Larson.Program: Mrs. C. H. Kenison.
TOPS Kas., 131, 9 am weigh-in; 9:30am meeting, YWCA.
Elks Duplicate Bridge club, 7:15 pm,downtown Elks club.
AARP, Salina Chapter No. 2046,11:30 am, Elmore dining room. Pro-gram: Judee McNally's trip to Spain.
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Swain(Sara L. Coatney)
Coatney-S,wainSara Lynn Coatney, Minneapolis, and
Rick- Swain, Salina, were marriedApril 2 at the Community BibleChurch, Minneapolis, the Rev. DavidBohyer officiating. !
Musicians'were Mr. and Mrs. DennisFoerschler and Mrs. Bill Homenway,Minneapolis.
Parents of the newiyweds are Mr.and Mrs. Harlan Coatney, Minneapolis,and Mrs. Josh Adkins, 621 S. 4th, andthe late Derald D. Swain.
The bride chose a silk; organza overpeau d' soie chapel .'gown featuring re-embroidered lace and seed pearls. Amatching pearl and lace headpieceheld her illusion veil.
Matron of honor: Mrs. BradenBerndt, Glasco, and Howard Coatney,Minneapolis, brother of the bride, at-tended the couple.
Other attendants: Joshua Echo-Hawk, Rolla, Mo., and Rebecca Schur,Minnepolis, the bride's nephew andniece; Steven and Michael Haley, Min-neapolis, and Bill Honse, Wichita.
The bride wqs graduated from Min-neapolis high school and Cloud CountyCommunity Junior college, Concordia.She is a secretary for Eldorado Trans-portion, Inc., Minneapolis.
Her husband, a graduate of ProvisoEast high school, Maywood, 111., attend-ed Triton Junior college, River Forest,III. He works at Brann's Furniture.
After a wedding trip to Los Angeles,they are at home at 152 N. 8th, Apt.109.
Youth diabetesunit affiliates
The Salina Juvenile Diabetes Founda-tion will affiliate with the American Di-abetes Association — Kansas Affiliateeffective April 12.
There will be 2 meetings to get theunit organized. On April 12, the meet-ing will be from 7 to 9:30 pm in Fitz-patrick auditorium at Kansas Wesley-an. Dr. Sallie Peterson, head of thenutrition department at the Manhat-tan, Kas., Memorial hospital will
' speak on "Understanding the DiabeticDiet".
The second meeting is set for 7:30pm May 12 in the Marymount collegeLittle Theater.
Persons wanting more informationcan call Maxine Davis, 825-0404.
Sources of vitamin CAs you know, this Winter's cold
weather destroyed a large part of Flor-ida's oranges and grapefruit crops. So,citrus fruit prices are on the rise.
Unfortunately, citrus fruit is themaun source of vitamin C for manyAmericans. If this is true for you, takeheart, there are some alternatives tokeep costs down.
For example, if you enjoy juice atbreakfast, but can no longer afford or-ange or grapefruit, try tomato juice.Twelve ounces of canned tomato juicewill provide you with all the vitamin Cyou need for a day.
If you usually eat fruit with yourbreakfast but feel grapefruit is over-priced, try a 3-ounce portion of frozenstrawberries. Or, how about a bowl ofprunes? Prunes are especially nutri-tious because they contain iron as wellas vitamin C.
Of course, you can also get your vita-min C at other meals. Remember,vegetables like spinach and raw cau-liflower are good sources of this nutri-ent. And one baked potato contains halfof the amount of this nutrient youneed.
Clean clothes/ clean jobOnly clean cloths can do a clean job
— without smearing dirt around. Whensoiled, shake cloths to remove loosedust and lint before washing. Launderin hot water with other heavily soileditems. Use adequate detergent or soap.Chlorine bleach also aids cleaning.
About Women 11
EstherVilar
MUNICH - Esther Vilar, 42, who isnotoriously unpopular with membersof the women's lib movement as a re-sult of her first 2 books, has publisheda third, "Ende Der Dresseur" (TheEnd of Manipulation), in West Germa-ny with an initial press run of 100,000copies. She says the book describes "ameans to undermine female domin-ancy in our society." She outlines anentirely new socio-economic systemwhich calls for a 5-hour day and a 25-hour work week in which both men andwomen will be fully employed andtherefore financially independent ofone another. Upkeep and rearing ofchildren would be paid from birth bythe state in the form of monthlygrants. Under such a system, she pre-dicts, men would no longer be slaves towomen because women, who wouldthen be financial equals, would no long-er marry men primarily for support.Since the children would be "literallyself-supporting," they would no longerserve the function of economic chains.
EricaJong
NEW YORK — Eria Jong's "How toSave Your Own Life," published byHolt, Rinehart & Winston, is alreadyclimbing the Best Seller lists. It is 6thon the current Publishers Weekly listdespite some scathing reviews. TheNew York Times' chief cultural corre-spondent, John Leonard, observed thatinterviews demand very little from acelebrity and in her new book Erica,who "burst upon us as a sort of MaryPoppins of female sexuality in 1973,has really interviewed herself, whenshe should have been, sentence by sen-tence, writing a book. Sincerity is noexcuse for sloppy craft."
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