MIA. AND N•t$‘5. jOi.1.1Alretti Nitt, TAY.. AS11 D.oisr.n1 f-xtoaxr, 1:4: matriaye ofrv..".,..,erete ,/sit de 1( atz.ina -o. claviciberilara lipschultz Joe( .hey..i., 14,1,1# e.filer AlCISIGN'S 1,711 1,1. • 151,001AYILLD Iturtt he wedding ofJuliana Katzman and David Lipschultz broke all the rules. The invitation was blue. The dress had big bold flowers, and the cake. .. it was as high-caloric yummy mound of Krispy Kreme doughnuts. And the marriage could write the book on how to plan the wedding of blended fam- ilies. Juliana's stepfather, Joel Tauber, walked up L .*,'•• the aisle to her, while her father, Robert „. , .. ,, tzman, walked her traditionally down the . • - ase to the iptta bimah. The extended bridal party included eight parents, three siblings and five step- ‘4 siblings. "Everyone got along incredibly well, said Juliana. Juliana and David met on a chair lift in Aspen where they currently reside, although they will be relocating to Oakland County in the spring. Together they co-produced "The Week in Aspen" television program, which won a Telly Award. They met through mutual friends. "We have so many similari- ties," said Juliana. The couple both moved to Aspen the same week, lived in Spain, both sets of parents separated when Juliana and David were the same age and each has a Sephardic grandparent from Turkey. The ceremony was performed at Temple Beth El on October 12, 2002, followed by a reception for 350 peo- ple at Franklin Hills Country Club. There were no assigned seats and food stations were set up for buf- fet serving. "We never got off the dance floor," added Juliana. According to Shelley Tauber, mother-of-the-bride, "Ile evening was magical." . A . , At V1/4 AT THE JN weddi •