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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 30, 2001)
sn 7 have ha diny to ha good. 1166 South A • Springfield • 726-6969 • Open 24 Hours (Almost) Campus PREcisioN Qn & TAWtisq 609 E. 13th • Eugene (2 blocks from UO) 484-3143 Hours: M-F 9-8/Sat. 9-7 for franchise information please call 1-877-44PCUTS 011004 When Love Blossoms.*. ...we’re your wedding specialists. Flowers also say It best for pinnings, engagements and other celebrations. FTD EUGENE’S FLOWER HOME The Vniversity Florist 610 E. 13th Ave (at Patterson) 485 3655 or toll free 1 800-478-3655 www.ftd.com/eugenesflowerhome We’ll help you with every detail to make your wedding flowers a beautiful memory you’ll cherish. Small doesn’t mean less ■ Keep it a simple affair by using wedding-planning books or a consultant By Lauretta DeForge For the Emerald For University students thinking of tying the knot, a small wedding may be an excel lent choice. Students can plan a simple wedding with a consultant or just buy a book and plan their own. “I have heard that often, people do not remember much about a large wedding, just a whole lot of hustle and bustle for noth ing,” said Katie Rasmussen, a freshman pre nursing major. “A small wedding is more intimate, more special.” It can also be a handy way to save money. Wendy Richards, a sales clerk at Barnes and Noble, said the store carries a large se lection of books on how to put together al most any kind of wedding. Barnes and Noble has a section called Weddings and Etiquette with five shelves approximately five feet long full of different wedding books and related materials. One that Richards recommended was “Easy Wedding Planning Plus” by Elizabeth and Alex Lluch, priced at $19.95. The different books about how to plan weddings range from $8 to $60 with every thing in between. “My personal idea of a small marriage is eloping,” Richards said, laughing. If eloping is out of the question, but plan ning a wedding using only books seems too time consuming, a wedding consultant may be the answer. Parties To Go provides flexible wedding consultations. “The difference between us and other companies is our wedding showroom,” said Debby Josephson, the Delta Oaks manager. “We also have an in-house florist, plus wed ding consultants who will work with the bride and groom from beginning to end.” “Location with large weddings can be a problem,” added Judy Gregory, a wedding consultant at Parties To Go, “and the logis tics of how to get people from the wedding to the reception can be difficult. ... “Many large weddings are videotaped, and the bridal couple must watch the video to see what their wedding was like,” she said. “The wedding became a blur.” Once Parties To Go consultants have the date and location of the wedding, they can help couples with different options. They rent out nearly everything, including tents, dance floors, glassware, silverware, linens and arches. “We also sell items in paper for those that would like that option,” said wedding con sultant Veneda Bishop. Even with the help of a consultant, tiye couple still have to take care of the bridal wardrobe, music, photography and food. “The benefit of a small wedding is that you can personalize it,” Bishop said. “The bride and groom can mingle more with the guests.” TV Weddings continued from page 3B But television doesn’t stop with situation comedies to make marriage look bad. Arguably, one of the biggest debacles in TV history involved a marriage. “Who Wants to Marry a Multi-Millionaire?” crossed the line of what should be seen on television and what should not. Fifty women attempted to become the bride of Rick Rockwell, and lucky or not, Darva Conger was the new bride. Within weeks, the marriage was annulled when the fact that Rockwell had a restrain ing order from a former girlfriend was un earthed. To make matters worse, Conger lat er informed the nation that she never really intended to be married. “Never in a million years did I think of it as an actual marriage in my heart and before God, and I still don’t. I was not looking to marry anyone,” Conger said in her appear ance on “Good Morning America.” FOX made a grievous mistake with this show. Not only did it not research its candi dates for bride and groom, but producing a live marriage on national television an nounces that marriage is a joke. FOX made the same mistake that comedies have made in the past, and this was not even intended to be a comedy. The show only sums up what television has shown in the past: Marriage is not taken all that seriously. That plays well to the TV audience, and that is what the writers are paid to do. Despite what is shown, matri mony is not something to be taken lightly. Even with all the negativity, televiHon still has room for the occasional tender mo ment. ■v “Marge, you’re my wife, and I love you very much,” Homer said in one episode of the “The Simpsons.”