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Show t I UINTAH BASIN STANDARD. February 7. 1995- - Page 5 LDS Church calls six mission presidents ROOSEVELT BAPTIST CHURCH 402 HQlcrest Drive Roosevelt, Utah Plume: 0 Interim Paetor Numbers: Stacy Hadlock: 722-34722-354- 43 John Whitlatch: 722-070- 9 The Roosevelt Baptist Chuich would like to invite you to Join us in praise and worship of our Lord a. and Saviour, Jesus Christ Sunday morning begins with Sunday School far adults and children at 9:45 a.m. Worship service is at 11:00 a.m. Sunday evening service is at 7:00 p.m. On the first Sunday of each month we hold Church Visitation at 6:00 p.m. If you or anyone you know would like a visit from the church, please call. On Wednesday afternoon Gwen KeHum holds Actoens at the church at 3:30 p.m.. Acteena is for young ladies ages 12 through high school age. Please join them for a short Bible study and a fun craft. Wednesday evening is Bible Study and Prayer Meeting. This is at 7:00 p.m. Church Business Meeting is held the first Wednesday of each month at 7:00 p.m. . Toby Davis has been called to the Bilbao Spain Mission. His farewell will be February 12 at 2:45 p.m. in the Ballard North Ward. He leaves for the MTC February 15. His parents are Ace and Wendy Davis. ROOSEVELT FAITH LUTHERAN We, at Faith Lutheran, are happy to tell you we now have a pastor for chuich services. Pastor Roger Sterle will be holding worship services every Saturday night at the church at 6:00 p.m. We invite everyone who is interested to come and worship with us, and we know you wifi eryoy Pastor Sterles messages. Amy Johnson has beat called the Philippines Manila Mission. Her farewell is 12:50 at Sunday, February 12, in the Roosevelt West Stake Center. She will be entering the MTC February 15. She is the daughter of Carol Johnson and the late Dr. Randy Johnson. to MYTON COMMUNITY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH As a Shared Ministry in Utah church, we welcome your attendance at our services. The church is located at the corner of Fourth and F streets in Myton. Our pastor is The Rev. Dr. Glenn W. Thomson. Sunday services begin with Sunday School and Adult Bible Study classes at 9:45 a.m. Worship at 11:00 a.m. is followed by a Fellowship Hour at noon. A new children's group will begin meeting Fridays, 4:00 to 5:00 p.m., Febru6 ary 17. Call Pastor Glenn at for more information. Session members recently set Mach 5 as the date for the Annual Four men from Utah and two from Texas have been railed by the First Presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints to serve as mission presidents. The six, with their wives, will begin their new assignments about mid-yeThey are the first of some 85 to be announced ova the next . several weeks, the church leaders said. Their specific assignments will be announced at a lata date. Called to serve: Craig C. and Debora J. Christensen and Lowell J. and Kathiyn W. Robison, Provo; Scott B. and Linda Kay H. Hardy,, BlufTdale; Jeff J. and Martha W. Horn, Tyler, Texas; Lynn J. and Louann H. Packham, West Jordan; and Darryl R. and Jami Lea P. Townsend, Pflugerville, Texas. Craig C. Christensen, 38, native of Salt Lake; automobile dealer; bachelor's degree, Brigham Young University, master's degree, University of Washington; served church as missionary, stake high councilor, youth leader, Sunday School teacher. Debars Bliss Jones Christensen, native, Glendale, California; attended BYU; served church as Relief Society teacher, youth leader, ramp director, childrens auxiliary leader, four children. . Scott B. Hardy, 50, native, Murray; building contractor; graduate, Utah State University; served church as stake presidents counselor, high councilor, bishop, ' missionary in Argentina. Linda Kay HauetaHady, native, Heber, , attended BYU; saved church as leader of womens, youth and childrens auxiliaries, Sunday School teacher; five children.' Jeff J. Horn, 61, native, Palestine, Texas; randier; graduate, Texas AAM; served church as stake regional representative, president, high councilor, bishops counselor. Martha Annis Walker Horn, native, Alexandria, Louisiana; graduate Northwestern State University; served church as leada of womens and childrens auxilia-riefamily history librarian; seven . . e, - 722-919- Meeting. Plan to attend and assist with making plans lor the coming yea. It is expected that our Executive Presbyter, Ken Tracy, will be our guest speaker for the worship service. Please accept our invitation to worship with us next Sunday. CorporationCongregation ST HELENS CATHOLIC CHURCH St Helen's Catholic Church is located at 432 East 200 North, Roosevelt, Utah 84066, with Rev. James Blaine, pastor. 5:00 Mass Schedule-Saturd7:00 and St Helens; pan. pjn., Holy Spirit Mission, Duchesne. Sunday: 9:00 a.m. and 11:00 ajn., St Helens. Official Deanery Welcoming for Bishop Niederauer will be Saturday, February 18, in Price. Mass win be at 11:00 ajn. followed by a reception. Sunday, February 12, at 11:00 ajn. there will be a 8panishEng-lis- h ay: Mesa. Farm briefs The new GATT agreement on world trade will likely require U.S. farmers to pay more attention to the quality of the grain they market overseas, an Agriculture Department report says, . USDAs Economic ' Research Service, asked by Congress to examine the sharp decline in, the UJ3. share of world grain exports since the 1970 concluded that "prices have overshadowed the role of quality" on the world market. "This in turn has limited U.S. exporters attention to quality even in the handful of nuurkets where quality is a concern," the ERS report said. "With a GATT agreement that includes reduced export subsidies, the importance offactors such as grain quality will likely increase." The ERS examined .market structure and importing decisionmaking in about 28 countries that impart wheat, com and soybeans. In addition to government and trade association officials, ERS ' analyst! interviewed millers, bakers and processors in each of the countries. Most of the buyers said price was more important than quality, but that "to a relatively email segment of the global grain market (20-3- 0 percent), sensitivity to quality it evident," Stephanie Merrier, a senior economist at USDA, wrote in a synopsis y , of the report in the issue ofAgricultural Outlook. The important factors in wheat quality, for example, are protein and gluten quality, wheat hardness, sprout damage and moisture all of which are detercontent mined by plant breeding and cultivation, die said. Cleanliness of the grain the absence of foreign material - "isn't terribly important" because most buyers have facilities to dean grain. Currently, UJ3. exports ofwheat account far about 35 percent of the global maket share, down from about 45 penult in 1973, Mercia aid. Simila declines have been seen in com and soybean exports, she said. About 60 percent to 70 percent of U8. wheat exporta are subsidized under the Export Enhance- -' ' ment Program. But undu the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, that share ie to be reduced to about 85 percent to 40 percent by the turn of the century, Mercia aid. -- - JanUary-Feb-ruar- - . . Angie Buike, Shannon of Myton, daughter Burke, 'received her Young Womanhood k Award ' Recognition February 1 in Myton First Ward. She is a senior at Union High School fHeac You Can Place An Ad This Size In 3 1 Newspapers Throughout Utah For Only $175 Per Week Stop In Or Call The Cilntah Basin Standard 722-- 5 1 3L orMorjnfojTTon With lowered trade barriers, "will likely force wheat exporter! to seek otha ways to compete" and to be more conscious of importers needs, she said. In addition, GATT ie expected to timulate global trade and as a result nose incomes worldwide. This would increase the number of people who want higher quality goods, and "enhance demand for these products," she said. "Concerns about food wholesomeness" also could boost demand worldwide for higher quality foods, ehe said. Since most U.S. grain production ie consumed . domestically, UJS. suppliers historically have produced to a standard UJ3. quality and have not catered to the export maket. U.8. producers have been mare interested in yield and agronomic feature!, like dieease and drought resistance iff plants, die said. "This way the producer! supply what they view aa a homogeneous maket concerned primarily with price," ehe wrote. "The absence of emphasis on quality in the market has hampered the incentive ofUJS. exporters to meet very stringent quality specifications." GATT children. Lynn J. Packham, 49, native, Wendell Idaho; director of public programs for the church; graduate, Brigham Young University; served church ai stake presidents counselor, high councilor, ward minion leader, member of church writing committee. Louann Haycock Pakc-hanative, Salt Lake; attended American River Jr. College, Sierra College; served church ai teacher knd leada, women's and childrens auxiliaries, missionary; two children. Lowell J. Robison, 50, native, Salt Lake; office,r steel company; served church as stake president's counselor, high councilor, bishop, Sunday School teacher, Scoutmasta, misrionaiy in Mexico. Kathiyn Wakefield Robinson, native, Salt Lake; attended Brigham Young University; served church as leada in womens, youth and childrens auxiliaries, camp director, activities committee chairman; three children. Darryl R. Townsend, 52, native, Glendale, California; businessman, graduate, Brigham Young University, doctorate, University of Texas; served church as regional representative, minion presidents counselor, stake president, high councilor, bishop, misrionaiy in Central America. Jami Lea Powell Townsend, native, Helene, Oregon; attended University of Texas graduate, Brigham Young University; served church as seminary teacher, leada of womens, youth, childrens auxiliaries, Cub Scout leada, music director; sixchiidren. Tangee Thomas Amber Park er, Two earn medallion . On the evening of January 24, two young women from the Ward received their Young Womens medallions. The medallions were presented to Amber Dawn Park and Tangee Thomas. The young women received the medallions after completing 14 requirements for certain LDS Young Women values and four projects. Park, daughter of Robert L. and Renee Park, earned certification to be a nurses aide at the Uintah Basin Applied Technology Center, was a youth counselor at the Duchesne Stake Young Womens Camp and organized the Tabiona High school Homecoming Queen Bunny Special." Park is a senior at THS and is involved in many activities including seminary council cheerleading and volleyball. She ie also the drill team mistress, yearbook editor and English Staling Schola at THS. Thomas, daughter of Craig and Rosalyn Thomas, also earned ha certification to be a nurses aide at UBATC after school. She also perfected a gymnastics routine the 1995 THS Homecoming Queen Contest in which she won the talent competition and was crowned queen. During the summer, she also took care of ha family while ha mother traveled to Italy. Thomas is a senior at THS and Contest She also prepared and at is involved in cheerleading, yea-bootaught workshops on drill team and volleyball. called, Tm Some- Ta-bio- fa self-estee- m ' k, Con-A-Mo- re Womens voices, womens roles are topic of series Louisa May Alcott This book ie a portrait of Victorian family life which raieee questions about womens roles, through the voices of the four daughters. What do "sugar and spice and all things nice," the nagging mother-in-laa sex kitten and the wicked old witch have in common? These are folk images of women. In addition to these, there are the traditional images of women as wives, mothers and daughters. Sometimes, however, women experience and deal with growing up, love, marriage and making a living in non traditional ways. The roles of women, both traditional and unique, are the subject of an upcoming reading and discussion series at the Roosevelt Co. Library. This series, "Womens Voices, Womens Roles," begins at 7:00 p.m., February 21, and continues monthly on Tuesdays for four sessions, through May 16. Each program 'will be highlighted by a local scholar, one of the areas specialists on the topic. This program ie provided by The Book Group, a project of Human Pursuits of Salt Lake, a prqject funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities. The first meeting will feature Elaine Bad of USU who will introduce the theme and lead the discussion on Little Women by . Subsequent books and discussions will be: March 21, Rich in Love by Josephine Humphreys; April 18, Woman Warrior: Memorise of a Girlhood Among Ghoeteby Maxine Hong Kingston: May 16. The Women ofBrewster Place by Gloria Naylor. These books provide a base thought and discussions on the issues raised by this theme. fa The programs are free and open to the public. People interested in attending are encouraged to preregister and pick up their first book at the library, 70 West Lagoon. For more information, call Lorie Evans, 722-444- 1. Love! Hate! Suicide! Murder! Passion! Benefits available Foma workers of Linmar Petroleum engaged in employment related to servicing oil wells in Roosevelt have been certified as eligible for Federal Trade Act benefits, according to Tom Nordstrom, manager of the Roosevelt Job Service office. According to information obtained from the employer, 25 people have been laid off from tiie company. The benefit! are available to Linmar Petroleum workers laid off after August 19, 1993, and i before January 10, 1997. These benefits include Trade Act unemployment insurance payments, job each and relocation allowances and payment of approved training. Trade affected workers filing for weekly Trade Act unemployment insurance payments must be enrolled in training or have waiver of the training enrollment requirement in order to receive the payments. Mr. Nordstrom advisee waken separated from this firm within the dates mentioned above to report to the Roosevelt Job Service to apply for these benefits. a Borneo & Juliet Roosevelt - February 15, 16, 7 & Duchesne - February 25 1 18 Vernal - March 3 & 4 Tickets - $5 Adult, $4 Student wID $4 Senior Citizen; $20 Groups of Six Available At Gale's Office Supply, IGA & The Uintah Basin Standard This event is partially financed by a grant from the Utah Arts Council |