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Show Standanl-Hvnmine- r youth High tech demand auio prufnr ru itnj aUiui VVMJ p 4$ COMMUNITY Taking over 1BEVJ.E.W7 , Ia)1un DAMS COUNTY'S COMMUNITY NEWSPATER OCTOBER 21. 1397 Lives Neighbors lotutmianamtor N$qhot, cart 77G4Q51 Going into (lie mission field affects family, friends, as well as missionaries Introduction The second installment of M tssion Possible. 1 Ws page Exchange of cultures Missionaries from other areas share their heritage. This page General authority a . ElJor Carl Tingey talks about Page 2 missionary safety. Adjusting to change Cider in Cambodia secs the worst. Page 2 Looking back an area challenge, elder recalls. of Page 2 Close calling fathers story Correspondent Dick Walter shares parents concern. Page 3 Church growth since 1830 Year Mombtn Mlitlon MltIonrlot Countries a m Oak Brook, G ar high-crim- church-rclatc- West Point couple love service in Salt Lake. Page 3 A . . . Barber Brothers Pontiac.Olds Coachmen, a coachmen recreational vehicle dealership in Woods Doss, was honored recently by Coachmen RV Company, The dealership received the recognition al coachmens annual dealer seminar 'introduction of new 1998 modds. which took place 1 -- included: 'Honduras Dealership honored ten a 2 year-old Mormon missionary Whats a And toffdono b Al founding. 6 Apfll C f Mimalod d FiqufosgivonhflfosRwaie at year's end total membofsfup at esbmdied 1296 tiananc bunamo examine those secular cfTccts missionary work has on and Utahns, both short-terthrough the years. m The final installment of the scries, which will appear in three months, will examine how missionaries and their friends and family adjust after they return. The first installment, The Calling" ran July 29 and back issues are available. Call the 1 Lakeside Review at to reserve a copy. Or write: Lakeside Review, 2146 N. Main St., Layton, Ut. 776-493- 84040. explore ! Other worlds HERNANDEZ a : kaku Elder greets Brandon Soong as AjLbers and guests of the Roy mem-J- L up for an authentic Hawaiian luau. missionaries for the LDS Church share more than just the gospel while serving .full-tim- e missions. As Brandon, his companion Elder Benjamin Rohrbach and church member .Keoni Camacho worked together to organize a traditional Hawaiian luau, cultures and family traditions were part of the exchange. ;JefT Brewer, a Roy 14th Ward member, offered a blessing on the recent nights activities. In ,the prayer is included these thoughts: Were thankful for the different cultures of the world. (Were thankful for the gospel 'bringing us all together. C Brandon, who comes from Waikapu, on the Hawaiian Island of Maui, has been on his mission fob 18 months, but explained, This will be the first time Ill do a luau in Utah. Ive been wanting to do this since I came on my mission. His companion, a native of Gratis, Ohio, looked forward to the experience too. Brandon had his own reasons for organizing the luau. When I first arrived, most of ; ethe people couldnt understand me when I spoke. This is my first time to the mainland. Its like a foreign mission to me. Even seeing snow for the first time, that was something different. I just wanted to share a part of my culture. Back home we would do this all the time. . Luaus are often held on special occasions in Hawaii, including weddings, graduation parties, or birthdays. In fact, almost any occasion at all is reason enough Graduate accepted . . . Christopher Curzon has recently been accepted as a member of the Kirksville -College of Osteopathic Medicine graduating class of : 14th Ward show T See J.C. Cole announced the appointment. Johnson has been with Kmkos for more than four years and recently came to Layton from the Knoxville, Tenn., branch where he was an assistant branch manager. As branch manager of the Layton store, Johnson will oversee 18 here," said Johnson, who grew up in Salt Lake City, I am happy to be home." Standard Examiner correspondent ' fifth-whe- It is great that my career with Kmkos has brought me i E mini-moto- trailers, trailers, fold down camping trailers and truck campers. . . . Jeremy Johnson was recently appointed branch manager of the Kinkos Layton store. Kinkos regional manager a time to JUNE-LE- III. Don Clark, assistant vice president of sales for Coachmen, presented a $3 million round table award for the 1997 model year to the dealership. The award recognized S3 million worth of Coachmen RVs purchased by the dealership dunng the year. RV sales manager Paul Seely accepted the award on behatl of Barber Brothers PontiacOldsCoachmen. The dealership, which has represented Coachmen since 1991, received a walnut plaque engraved with the dealerships name. Coachmen RV Company, a division of Coachmen Industries, is one of the nations most successful kill line manufacturers of recreational vehicles. The company builds motorhomes. r homes, travel Manager named Mission By 9 DAVIS Sm serving missions elsewhere and foreign missionaries coming to was t.hot last week in the United States. Argentina during an apparent Dan Lawson, of La Verkin, mugging, it touched many came home last week from his Utah families. Latin American mission after Thousands of Utahns curbeing wounded in the face. He rently have family members or will recover. close friends serving missions The missionary was shot at for the LDS Church in other pointbijnk range on a street in Josc-countries and across the UnitPaz, Argentina, after a ed States. The normally two-ye- mugger put a gun to his head period of such missions and fired. Lawson survived becan be a trying time for family cause he turned his head just and friends of men and women as the man pulled the trigger, serving missions in politically and the bullet lodged in his unstable hot spots" or just cheek, his brother told The e areas in big cities. Herald Journal newspaper in In the second installment of Logan. He is the second missionary its Mission Possible scries entitled The Service," the Lake- shot in Argentina this year. Or-i- n side Review looks at the emoVoorhcis, who was shot in tional highs and lows that Buenos Aires last April, refamily, friends and even the mains in a Provo care center, missionaries go through while where he is recovering. Not all the missions are so theyre serving. The separation can be trying, but the experidjngcrous. But through injury, ence can have its rewards unred illness and matlated to the spiritual aspects of ters, a missionarys service can the mission. be cut short This can have a Many missionaries have a tremendous effect on the perchance to share the culture and son serving and those close to traditions of their home with them. those they come in contact Through this series the with. That includes Americans Lakeside Review has tried to u rtrw kadif YOL1G.NO. 193 Mission Possible: p.iytwns lds miioni.. Tlk aru fuumil futurr6 LUAU5 h REACTION: Elders Benjamin Rohrbach (left) and Brandon Soong (left center) enjoy seeing the mission presidents reaction to the photos they took while chasing and killing a pig pnorto a Luau at the Roy 14th Ward Chapel. Below, Keoni Camacho of Roy guts a pig in Hooper for the luau put on by Rohrbach (middle) and Soong (nght). The elders helped catch the pig, clean and bake it and then serve it to members of the ward. 2001. The son of Leland R. and Calliene Curzon of Kaysville, Curzon received his premedical education from the University of Utah. KCOM, the founding college of osteopathic medicine, is located in Missouri. Funeral home receives award . . . Myers Mortuary of Roy and Layton received the Pursuit of Excellence honor at the 116th national Funeral Directors Association Annual Convention and International Exposition held Oct. 6 to 9 in Las Vegas. The Myers mortuaries is , among 138 funeral homes to ; receive the honor. Best Quote I wasnt happy about her making; all that money and living in a homeless shelter. Phil Cave, Lanes, on why he fired Becky Reynolds who made $7 an hour as night manager. BRIAN NICHOLSON Standard-Examin- . manager of Davis 08773 00003 , |