Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archiveArchive Home
The Times Herald from Port Huron, Michigan • Page 12
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Times Herald from Port Huron, Michigan • Page 12

Publication:
The Times Heraldi
Location:
Port Huron, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

pr- PAGE SECTION THE TIMES HERALD Sunday, May 28, 1972 k. Wedding Bells Ring gjjtk 4 1 villi iijim, I J4 .1 MRS. RICHARD H. PORRETT Porrett-OHver fci '4 i till 1 MRS CARL Corbat-Rintz Gary L. Porrett, Marysville, brother of the bridegroom, was best man.

Douglas C. Porrett, Port Huron, brother of the bridegroom, and Larry C. Oliver, Lansing, were ushers. A dinner was held in the church parlors following the ceremony. After a southern wedding trip, the couple will live in Auburn Heights.

Jeanette H. Oliver became the bride of Richard H. Por-rett Saturday evening in Rochester Hills Baptist Church. Mr. and Mrs.

Walter C. Oliver, Pontiac, are the bride's parents. Mrs. Norine Porrett, Richmond, is mother of the bridegroom. Mrs.

Dale C. King, Detroit, was matron of honor. Miss Sharon Pelkey, Drayton Plains, was bridesmaid. MARINE CITY United in marriage Friday evening in Holy Cross Catholic Church were Claudia F. Rintz and Carl A.

Corbat. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rintz are the bride's parents. Mr.

and Mrs. Joseph Corbat, Anchorville, are parents of the bridegroom. Miss Patricia Rintz, sister of the bride, was maid of honor. Miss Darlene Corbat, sis- EDWARD A. JONES MRS.

DANIEL J. MARKEL MRS. Markel-Piofrowski Jones Rose Ann Ramage and Edward A. Jones were united in marriage Saturday morning in St. Stephen's Catholic Church.

The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George A. Ramage, Jeddo. The bridegroom is the son of Mr.

and Mrs. Edward W. Jones, Stone Street. The bride was given in marriage by her mother and father. Miss Sharon Clark, Jeddo, was maid of honor.

Miss Dorothy Jones, Miss Barbara Jones 1 (: MRS. RONALD J. KOPACZ Kopaci-Roberts MRS. JOHN T. MAINGUY Mainguy-Kovach Clair, were junior bridesmaids.

Miss Debra Biland, St. Clair, was flowergirl. William Markei, Belleville, was his brother's best man. Daniel Piotrowski, Detroit, brother of the bride, and James Haack, Mt. Clemens, were ushers.

Mark Markei, brother of the bridegroom, and Nick Dietlan, St. Clair, were junior ushers. Michael Fenton, Richmond, was ring bearer. A reception was held in the Knights of Columbus The newlyweds will live in Marine City. A.

BENADE Fraleigh Mrs. James M. Benade, Philadelphia, Pa. Mrs. Lloyd Brown, North Street, sister of the bride, was her matron of honor.

Mrs. Versile E. Fraleigh, Ann Arbor, was bridesmaid. Homer C. Harlan, Chicago, was best man.

Arthur H. Benade, Cleveland, 0., brother of the bridegroom, ushered. A dinner was held following the ceremony. After a wedding trip through the Green Mountains of Vermont and Montreal, the newlyweds will live in SANDUSKY Nuptial vows were exchanged Saturday afternoon in St. Joseph's Catholic Church by Roseann Debra Roberts and Ronald J.

Ko-pacz. Mr. and Mrs. Glen Roberts, Snover, are the bride's parents. Mr.

and Mrs. Julius P. Kopacz, Carsonville, are parents of the bridegroom. Miss Darlene Smith, Snover, was maid of honor. Miss Alice Warczinsky, Palms, and Miss Teresa Kopacz, Carsonville, St.

Joseph's Catholic Church was the scene of the Friday evening ceremony which united in marriage Debra Ann Kovach and John Thomas Mainguy. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Kovach, Huckleberry Lane. Mr.

and Mrs. Thomas J. Mainguy, Taylor Street, are parents of the bridegroom. Miss Susan L. Corry was maid of honor.

Miss Wendy MRS. RICHARD L. HEERING Heering-Thomas A. CORBAT ter of the bridegroom, and Miss Angela Robelli, Anchorville, were bridesmaids. Paul Corbat, brother of the bridegroom, Anchorville, was best man.

Ronald Corbat, brother of the bridegroom, and Daniel Rintz, brother of the bride, were ushers. A reception was held in the Perch Point Conservation Club. The couple will reside in Marine City. Bush and Miss Barbara L. Kovach, sister of the bride, were bridesmaids.

Edward Mainguy, brother of the bridegroom, was best man. Carl Albert James Kovach, brother of the bride, and Pat Metheny were ushers. A reception was held' in the Art and Wedding Center, Military Street. The couple then left on a Michigan wedding trip. Miss Melinda Oswald, sister of the bride, was flowergirl.

Paul Hering was his brother's best man. Richard Faw-cett and Dennis Weston, brother of the were groomsmen. Bryan Oliver, brother of the" bridegroom, and Steve Mackay were ushers. Ruddy Oswald, brother of the bride, was ring bearer. A reception was held in the VFW Hall.

After a wedding trip to Ohio, the newlyweds will live in Port Huron. dustry jobs. You will1 find the addresses in the Yellow Pages of your telephone directory under State Government. Take advantage of your school's placement facilities which often list job opportunities in the area. Look at the advertisements in daily newspapers, but don't overlook any community news publications where neighborhood retailers and services advertise.

that a certain amount of extra ingenuity and super patience will stand you in particularly good stead this summer. Drop in on all the service Jirms you can think of that ca-t to summer visitors: amusement parks, food con-cessions, hotels, motels, camps and boatels. Visit neighborhood stores and officesin case they need part time evening or weekend-re GARFIELD HEIGHTS, 0. Mary Marlene Thomas became the bride of Richard Lee Heering Saturday afternoon in St. Therese Catholic Church.

The bride's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Dale E. Thomas, Garfield Heights. The bridegroom is the son of Mr.

and Mrs. John J. Heering, Port Huron. Mrs. Anita I.

Royer, San Antonio, was her sister's matron of honor. Mrs. Linda Sanderson, St. Thomas, sister of the bridegroom; Mrs. Kay Arnold, Sarnia; Miss Cheryl Son and Mrs.

Janet Smith, Bowling Green, 0., were bridesmaids. Ramage and Miss Marie Jones, sisters of the bridegroom, and Mrs. Mary Parker, Jeddo, were bridesmaids. Allen Nichols was best man. David Ramage, Jeddo, and Richard Ramage, Flint, brothers of the bride, Tim Collinge, Detroit, and Scott Parker, Jeddo, were ushers.

A reception was held in the American Legion Hall, Cros-well. After a Canadian wedding trip, the couple will live in Port Huron. George Ashley, Chicago, was best man. William Murray, Huntsville, Ted Arnold, Sarnia; John Webster, Marquette, and John Clyne, Port Huron, were ushers. A reception was held in the Port-of-Call Inn, Cleveland.

After a Canadian wedding trip, the couple will live in Port Huron. Puppet Show The Auxiliary to the American Legion Post 449 of Marys-ville invited sons to their mother-daughter buffet so they could all view the Port Huron Little Theater Puppets show. Honored guests, Mrs. Rue-ben Merrithew a Gold Star Mother and Mrs. Irvin Os-entoski, a Gold Star Sister were presented yellow corsages.

After the puppets, special prizes were awarded and a game played. Four young members who are graduating from high school were remembered with gifts. They are Christine Goodmen, Tina Jar-v i Robin Pentland and Heather Thorner. Poppy chairman, Mrs. Edwin Maples reported on the public generosity to the Poppy Days sale.

Mrs. Wilbur Ross was honored as the top sales lady. Two delegates will be sent to the department convention in Detroit this July. The next unit meeting will be June 27. Shower Honors Bride-Elect PECK Miss Beth Seidl, bride-elect of Mark Williams, was honored at a miscellaneous shower and get-acquainted social hour for relatives and friends of the engaged couple in the home of Mrs.

Jack Williams. Some 40 guests attended from Detroit, Ruth, Sandusky, Peck and Grosse Pointe. Among the gifts received by Miss Seidl was a handmade quilt made by the prospective bridegroom's grandmother, Mrs. Lillian Williams. A shower cake adorned the table where dinner was served.

The couple will be wed July 1. MARINE CITY Wed Saturday morning in Holy Cross Catholic Church were Gail Piotrowski and Daniel J. Markei. Mrs. Jean Zaba, St.

Clair, is the bride's mother. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Markei, Plank Road, are parents of the bridegroom. Mrs.

Garth McGrath, Detroit, was matron of honor. Miss Joyce Lyskawa, Detroit, and Miss Gail Markei, sister of the bridegroom, were bridesmaids. Miss Julie Mark-el, sister of the bridegroom, and Miss Christine Biland, St. MRS. JOHN Benade JEDDO Vows were exchanged Saturday afternoon at Lake Huron Methodist Camp by Carol A.

Fraleigh and John Albert Benade. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Norman F. Fraleigh, North Street, and the late Norman F. Fraleigh.

The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Simons-Brown MARYSVILLE Linda J. Brown and Henry A. Simons were united in marriage May 20 in St. Christopher's Catholic Church.

Stanley N. Brown, Ingersoll, is the bride's father. Henry A. Simons, Gratiot is the bridegroom's father. Miss Barbara Brown, sister of the bride, was her maid of honor.

William Holmes, St. Louis, was best man. A family dinner was held in the Traveler's Inn following the ceremony. A reception was held in the Knight's of Columbus Hall, Tenth Street. After a wedding trip to Kentucky and Virginia, the couple will live in Port Huron.

lief workers or vacation substitutes. You might also want to put yourself in a prospective employer's shoes and examine your appearance critically. Perhaps it may result in that big decision to try a haircut or a beardcut. It might prove a shortcut to that summer job. YMCA Bridge Winners of the YMCA Duplicate Bridge game of the week were: First, Mrs.

Lewis N. Smiley and Mrs. Emily Bradt; second, Mrs. James L. Dwyer and Mrs.

Albert E. Shamaly; third, Al Boelens and Ralph Conzelman; fourth, Mrs. George E. Mann and Mrs. Peter W.

Findley. 'i -i I mil mill 1 1 1 IiIiwiiwit," MRS. ROBERT STRAUSS Strauss-Manley MRS. KURT P. HERING Hering-Wesfon Befty Gives Tips To Sons-ln-Law sister of the bridegroom, were bridesmaids.

Strefling, New Troy, was best man. Richard Boice, Walled Lake; James Sager; Richard Roberts, Westland, and Bruce Roberts, Reese, brothers of the bride, were ushers. A dinner and reception followed the ceremony in St. Joseph's Hall. After a wedding trip to the Upper Peninsula, the couple will reside in Marlette.

j. ter of the bridegroom, was bridesmaid. Miss Noreen Fenner, North Street, was flower-girl. Wayne Darling, Goodells, was best man. Timothy Strauss, brother of the bridegroom, was groomsman.

Har--vey Strauss, brother of the bridegroom, and Elson Fenner, North Street, were usheri A reception was held in the Art and Wedding Center, Military Street. After a wedding trip tq Washington, D.C., the newly weds will reside in Port Huron. agency's program rose from 3.8 per cent to 5.6 per cent. The Newsletter finds even more disturbing the fact that more than three-fourths of all defaults result not from circumstances beyond the borrowers' control but from negligence or a deliberate decision not to pay. The Newsletter cites a number of steps taken by United Student Aid Funds to lower the default rate.

But even with the utmost effort on the part of state and private programs, concludes the report, "the general tone and direction of the guaranteed loan program is bound to be set by Federal attitudes. The Federal Government must make clear that a loan a loan is a loanl In a Saturday evening ceremony in the Washington Avenue United Methodist Church, Patricia J. Weston became the bride of Kurt P. Hering. She is the daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Melvin Oswald, Lomar Drive, and the late Clinton Weston. He is the son of Mrs. Adele Oliver, Oak Street. Miss Clintina L.

Weston, sister of the bride, was her maid of honor. Miss Marcia Finn and Miss Cathy Finn, both of Flint, were bridesmaids. Nuptial vows exchanged Saturday afternoon in All Faith's Chapel united Mary Manley and Robert Strauss in marriage. The bride's parents are Mr. and Mrs.

Raymond Strauss, Alger Road. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Strauss, Range Road, are the bridegroom's parents. Mrs.

Roseann Fenner, North Street, made, her sister's brid-. al gown and those of her attendants. Miss Cindy Manley was her sister's maid of honor. Mrs. Wayne Darling, Goodells, sis Summer Jobs Are Nof Easy To Get Rising Defaults May End Student Loan Programs may be com-1 but livin' won't be easy not for the many work-' ing-age students who will be out combing for jobs and not finding them.

No matter how realistic students may be in their job expectations this summer, they By BETTY CANARY A young friend, a prospective June bridegroom, came to me for advice. "Could you give me some rules," he asked, "on how to get along with my prospective mother-in-law?" I am not a mother-in-law but I hope some day to be one. Therefore I was more than happy to draw up a starter list for him. Perhaps some day my own sons-in-law will want a copy. 1.

Approach a mother-in-law's dining table with enthusiasm. Always say, "This is the best tuna casserole I ever ate! (Be sure that it is a tuna casserole.) 2. Never snore while listening to her family discuss her old boyfriends. Look Interested and alert but not jealous. Don't' make remarks such as, "Sure, I know hlrn! Isn't -he the guy picked up for drunken driving last week?" 3.

If asked about your political leanings, it might be best to simply smile and say, "Give me the middle of the road every time." (Now, some mothers-in-law are going to sniff and say, "That's the trouble with young people today all socialists all wanting us to give them 4. When iri the home of parents-in-law, watch their choice of TV programs. They'll give up a daughter easily. Carol Burnett is another thing entirely. 5.

Never sit down too hard. Almost every mother-in-law has an antique chair or two. Collapsing without looking strains both old furniture and friendly relations. 6. Offer to cut grass or shovel snow, according to the seasons.

It's all right to wait until both are done before making the offer. Gestures can mean as much as deeds. 7. Never scratch an itch. A mother-in-law loathes a scrat-cher.

8. Forget the first seven rules and just be yourself. Chances are the best they'll ever have to say about you is, "Well, he's no Hank Sanderson but EJlie loves him." A sharp rise in the number of student borrowers who fail to meet payments on their guaranteed loans has reached a point that may put the entire billion-dollar student loan program in peril, warns the country's largest private guarantor of student loans. United Student Aid Funds, a nonprofit agency which has guaranteed more than $350 million worth of loans for college students, cites in its current Newsletter a General Accounting Office study that, shows claims on Federally insured loans trebled in eight months, going from 5,220 to 15,427 from Jan. 31 to Sept.

30, 1971. From 1966 through 1971 the percentage of borrowers defaulting under the private are urged to follow the advice of state employment coun- sellors as well as their school advisors and get cracking fast I on snaring that job. As usual, this summer's ar-i ray of jobs for students will un a pretty wide occupational gamut from construction work to waiting on tables in -plush resort hotels. Here are some summer-em-Z' ployment tips for students: Register as early as possible in your State Employment Service Office or Youth Opportunity Center for either government or private in.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Times Herald
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Times Herald Archive

Pages Available:
1,160,267
Years Available:
1872-2024