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Show THE SAN JUAN RECORD Wednesday June 10, 1987 - Page 4 land, Hanksville, Hite, Natural Bndges, the Goosenecks, Monument Valley, Moab and the Arches in five days. A photographer for Life magazine was among the first passengers. Forty years ago this week, an urgent need for a number of water projects in southeastern Utah was presented to the Utah Water and Power Board by J.E. Rogers and Charles Redd. Twenty-fiv- e Corporation paid $25 million for the Uranium Reduction Company at a Moab and the Steen week, Rogers asked for money to complete the Blanding water tunnel begun in 1922. Redd asked for a dam at Rattlesnake Canyon on the south side of the Mi-Vid- mine. Clyde Barton's mare, Goldie, gave birth to healthy twin colts pictured on the front of the LaSal Mountains. Record. The C.R. Montgomery wild animal circus was in Monti-cell- Janet Sipe was crowned o Blanding Frontier Days Queen. Attendants were Sharon Shum-waand Jeanne Palmer from Blanding, and Anna Marie Ketchum and Barbara Jan with 250 animals. Twelve San Juan youths attended the Intermountain Fat Stock Show in Junior Salt Lake City, the largest junior show in the world. There were 1000 exhibitors. Showing y 4-- H Kuipers, principal at Bluff Elementary School, and Alvin Reiner (right) sixth grade advisor, hold certificate awarded to the school publication. Al teacher and Twin Rock Times Kathy Carson photo Bluff Elementary newspaper places in national contest The students in Alvin Reiners sixth grade class at Bluff Elementary School published a town newspaper entitled the Twin Rock Times. It was not intended to be a kiddies newspaper as the articles were informative and carried news and features about the Bluff-Todahaidika- ni area which would have gone unpublished. The Twin Rock Times was not supported financially by any grants or school funding. Subscriptions, single copy sales and advertising paid for the production of the paper. The from the 200 entries by newspapers from around the country. The Twin Rock Times was one of the three runners-up- . The judges said what they like about the Twin Rock Times is . . . the dual role of the paper as it serves the school and commun- ity of Bluff-Todahaidikan- scope of the education experiences this paper provides to the students; quality of the photography; interviews that are taped and later transcribed. Reiner and the Twin Rock Times are scheduled in an the i; October 1987 issue of the Mini Page. Atlas years ago this Morris from White Mesa. Harold Allen spent the weekend visiting his sister, Mrs. calves were Louise Nielson, Bill Halls, Larry Bailey, Fletcher Nielson, Hardy Redd, Eugene Bounds, Gary Jo Redd, Bobby Redd, Bobby Saunders, Jimmie Sitton, Larry Hoagland, and Kendall Young. Hetherington, in Pur-locCalifornia. Senator Wallace F. Bennett asked the Appropriations Committee for $247,000 for grading at Bullfrog Basin and a boat launching ramp and marina at Canyon. Lifeguards at the Monticello Doyle Stewart C. Campbell was the first person to be granted permission to operate a scenic bus line from Salt Lake City to southeast Utah. The bus was scheduled to tour Richfield, Capitol Reef, Wayne Wonder k, Hite-Whit- e Pool were Ked Somerville, Ruth Randall and Stephen Houston. Instructors were Ellie Thompson and Carolyn Warren. WO MINUTES m um R. BY CORNELIUS BEREAN BIBLE CHICAGO, bible SIAM PRES. SOCIETY ILLINOIS 6063S 1984 CAPRICE A FORGIVENESS THAT CANNOT ESTATE WAGON Centuries before Christ, the Psalmist said: "If Thou, Lord, shouldest mark iniq-utie- s . . . who shall stand ? But there is forgiveness with paper received widespread recognition, including letters and phone calls from the offices of tribal, state and national politicians. Reiner entered the Twin Rock Times in a national contest for elementary school newspapers sponsored by the Mini Page of the Universal Press Syndicate. The Mini Page appears in about 450 newspapers in the U.S. and is devoted to articles and puzzles for youngsters. One first place award and awards were three runners-ugiven in the contest, selected Thee. (Psa. 130:3,4). It is doubtful whether . . the Psalmist understood the basis upon which a just God, through the ages, has so graciously forgiven sins, NADA BOOK VALUE $6, 000-lo- w $7,1 00-hi- but this has since been re- vealed in the Epistles of gh Paul. YOURS FOR ONLY There we read: "God for Christs sake hath forgiven you (Eph. 4:32). But this is only part of the truth, for God forgives sinners, not merely because Christ p sires this, but because offer ends June 20, 1987 Christ paid for their sins and purchased their cars in stock COME IN OR CALL FOR DETAILS R SALES SERVICE we 22H3BI1 'PHK FINANCING! Advertising Pays A have redemption, through His blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of His grace. And thus Paul could proclaim to his hearers in the synagogue at Pisidian Antioch: "Be it known unto you, therefore, men and brethren, that through this Man ! A re- demption. Thus Ephesians 1:7 declares: "In Christ We have other low milage used de- 1 BE REVOKED is preached unto you the forgiveness of sins: And by Him all that believe are justified from all things, from which ye could not be justified by the Law of Moses (Acts 13:38,39). Obviously such forgiveness can never be rescinded or revoked, for it is based upon the full and complete payment of our whole debt ofsin by "the precious blood of Christ. Sad to say, many people do not feel they need forgiveness, for they have not seen themselves as they truly are in the sight of a holy God, but those who are conscious of their sins and are willing to say with the prodigal son: 'T have sinned, may experience the peace and joy of sins forgiven by faith in Christ who paid sins penalty for us. Here is forgiveness that can never be revoked because it is based on the "one offering of Christ at by which our Lord "hath perfected forever them that are sanctified i.e., set apart as His own (Heb. Cal-ver- y 10:14). |