January 26, 1987 Page 8 Wedding Supplement anrrmrrrrnrrrirrjxM EXCELLENT-AFFORDABLE ;xv;-:Av:;v::;:;:;fr.-:;-.:;, Wedding Photography BLOMGREN'S 141 S. 9th 435-3553 frill ff ntrinn nunlno o 5JUL2JLS. N O W JULSI Applause Attractions Provides Music to Please Everyone at Your Wedding Applause Attractions of Lincoln can provide you with all types of music for your wedding reception and dance. They offer live bands or disc jockeys that play anything from golden oldies to contemporary to country. Applause Attractions handles such bands as Rockin' Billy and the Red Hots, The Finnsters, Teez, High Street, The Whiskey River Boys and more. They can even provide the music that suits your parents and grandparents. Make Applause Attractions a part of your wedding plans. IK IPX V i k applause Ittractions 421-1471 Ask for Kara or Martha y X 7 : y. ' yy(0x z, ' ?!.-" . pxr ypyy yyyyy-y r . yy y-. . v x y y s y v v yy y y ' ' Diamonds. . . For Ifour Pirecioes Love There are countless ways to say to her " Lore You " roses, candy, a moonlight serenade. . . But there's still only one way to say "I'll always Loe You" Diamonds. Long after flowers ha e wilted and the last notes of a love song have faded away, a diamond's icy brilliance and eternal sparkle will be there to remind her of your undying love. OUR ENTIRE SELECTION OF FINE DIAMOND JEWELRY NOW ON SALE A. Solitaire shown .20 ct. 14k gold B. Brilliant diamond ..7ji.v. 111 n $ C A00 kt. gold. C. Wedding trio. 14 t.w. in 10 kt. gold. D. 20 ct. solitaire pendant shown. 14 kt. gold. E. Solitaire earrings .40t.w. 14 kit. gold A. I) & Y. arc also available in diamond weights other than shown. 650' s325 s189 s379 4 7 i mm X- :5 1 1! w ill i i i a ' r- j i m i ittt iw i i in v m i i i mi L t-i i -J i H i 5 7 ymWm) r y ip- i t i w fy ..l J TT Brian BarberDaily Nebraskan M love instinct Don 't squeeze Charmin; marry her in Reno WTiat can you say about a girl you pieces of music, just a wedding march, just met three hours ago, who seemed ceremonies in four different languages, to be everything your mother warned complimentary child ring bearer. you against, who liked craps, blackjack and Budweiser. Try "will you marry me?" "Yes, how fun." I proposed over $2.99 Prime Rib in Reno across from Harrah's casino. We'd met standing outside the Circus Circus Big Top Lounge, where Andy "A ring," I said aloud. "Got one." "Oh," I said. We decided on a ceremony in a foreign language Spanish because we both understood it. We wanted a little music besides the wedding march. Gibb was playing all week "and then Maybe a little "Lord's Prayer" or "Is going up for a weekend inTahoe, just now to be among us at the calling of our hearts" type stuff. Both of us wanted the cute kid ring bearer. before a whole week at the Jackson, Mississippi Fair and Auto Expo." Charles Lieurance She was drunk and I'd been on the road for 10 hours, suckling a twelve pack of Red, White and Blue beer I'd purchased at some gas groceriesbeer hardware place under the overpass in Ogallala for two bucks and some change. The lemming instinct had taken over and I'd heard a lot about Nevada weddings. Just beyond the endless maze of neon, chrome and green felt tables that made up the citadel of casinos in the hei-t of Reno were small, white houses, turned chapels, bordered with charm ing little white picket fences. Here men and women shell-shocked by mara thon sessions at the gambling tables, escaped into cursory decencies, wedded for company, leaped from the cliff of lonely addictions and combined their neuroses for a sketchy embrace with someone whose silhouette was charged with neon and trick mirrors on the night of their union before God and the state of Nevada (represented by some whorish civil servant). Turned out both Charmin and I had purchased the 45 of Andy Gibb's bighit "Love is Thicker Than Water" when we were 14. You don't run into coincidences like that every day. Not only that but we both preferred blackjack to roulette. Slot nachines were for Gray Line Bus Tours. After this discussion of our values and a few more drinks, we found ourselves in the midst of a row of very unassuming wedding chapels. Waist-high billboards adver tised what you could get for $15, for $50, for $100. One piece of music, two This narrowed things down to two chapels. We dug up $50, some more for the wedding tax (everything in Nevada has a tax or fee) and enough for the licensing fee. We chose the chapel with the baby blue neon around the door. "Lovers Lair" it was called. No apos trophe. Inside, Charmin showed me her ring. It was beautiful. I never thought to ask her where she got it. "Don't lose this." She pushed the ring into my palm. The whorish civil servant met us at the door. He took some money, went through the fast-motion version of the legalities. Some aged crone walked up and handed us a bouquet of flowers. Ve never saw her again. We filled out a form. And we filled out another form. "Here's your choice of music, kids," the owner of "Lovers Lair" said, handing us a list of songs. He was a retired sea captain or something with some power vested in him by God and the State of Nevada. We chose Miss Peggy Lee's "Fever" for the music. I tried to kiss Charmin but it felt ridiculous. The sea captain went to wake up his granddaughter to be our ring bearer. Another couple with their excited friends came into the waiting room. They looked genuinely happy, as if they would have gotten married by their family minister in their hometown were it not for some glitch in circumstance or logistics. The sea captain's granddaughter came out pounding her small coiled fists into her eye sockets to wake herself up. "Angel, this is Charmin and this is Charles. They're the lucky couple." The See RENO on 15