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  2. Quaker wedding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quaker_wedding

    Quaker weddings are the traditional ceremony of marriage within the Religious Society of Friends. Quaker weddings are conducted in a similar fashion to regular Quaker meetings for worship, primarily in silence and without an officiant or a rigid program of events, and therefore differ greatly from traditional Western weddings.

  3. Programme (booklet) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Programme_(booklet)

    Programme (booklet) A programme or program (see spelling differences) is a booklet available for patrons attending a live event such as theatre performances, concerts, fêtes, sports events, etc. It is a printed leaflet outlining the parts of the event scheduled to take place, principal performers and background information.

  4. Wedding invitation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wedding_invitation

    A wedding invitation is a letter asking the recipient to attend a wedding. It is typically written in the formal, third-person language and mailed five to eight weeks before the wedding date. Like any other invitation, it is the privilege and duty of the host—historically, for younger brides in Western culture, the mother of the bride, on ...

  5. Red Wedding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Wedding

    Synopsis. Red Wedding is the story of a survivor who pits her humanity against an ideology and a system designed to annihilate people like her. Between 1975 and 1979, at least 250,000 Cambodian women were forced into marriages by the Khmer Rouge. Sochan was one of them. At the age of 16, she was forced to marry a soldier who raped her.

  6. Personal wedding website - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_wedding_website

    Personal wedding websites are used for various purposes, including communication with guests, sharing wedding photos and videos with those who could not attend, providing maps, hotel and destination information, bridal party and couple biographies, and profiling vendors. Increasingly, the sites are being used as tools for wedding planning.

  7. Collective wedding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collective_wedding

    A collective wedding or mass wedding is a marriage ceremony in which a small or large number of couples are married at the same time. History [ edit ] In 324 BC Alexander the Great married Stateira II , the eldest daughter of Darius , the king of Persia .

  8. Allison Rosati - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allison_Rosati

    Rosati is of Finnish (paternal) and Italian (maternal) descent and is the child of Robert Rosati and Sharon Nowling. In 1980, she was crowned Minnesota's Junior Miss. In 1981 she represented Minnesota in the America's Junior Miss pageant, receiving a 'Spirit of Junior Miss' award alongside Idaho Junior Miss Kelly Jo Kreisher.

  9. Samuel J. Heyman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_J._Heyman

    Samuel J. Heyman. Samuel J. Heyman (March 1, 1939 – November 7, 2009) was an American businessman and hedge fund manager best known for his longtime chairmanship of the GAF Materials Corporation and International Specialty Products Inc. (ISP).

  10. Pamamanhikan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pamamanhikan

    The pamamanhikan (Hyphenation: pa‧ma‧man‧hi‧kan; IPA: /pamamanˈhikan/, [pɐ.mɐ.mɐŋˈhi.xɐn]) (English: supplication, request) in the Philippines is performed when a woman and man after a long relationship decides to get married. [1] It is where the man formally asks the woman's hand from her parents while he is with his own parents.

  11. Juan Bautista Rael - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juan_Bautista_Rael

    Juan Bautista Rael. Juan Bautista Rael (August 14, 1900 – November 8, 1993) was an American ethnographer, linguist, and folklorist who was a pioneer in the study of the people, stories, and language of Northern New Mexico and southern Colorado in the Southwestern United States. Rael was a professor at Stanford University.