Upload
others
View
2
Download
0
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
OF THE WORLDWIDE CHURCH OF GOD
VOL. IX, NO . 13 PASADENA, CALIFORNIA JULY 13 ,1981
THANK YOUl THANK YOUl
I CONFESS WRONG-CAN YOU?
City of David 'dig' begins
f orA Cstudents, brethren
Bible . All used the word FROM .One day FROMSunday is Mon day. Fifty days FROM Sunday isMonday.
But finally , after 40 years ,God showed me that EVERYTRANSLATION INTO ENGLISHhad mistranslated that word . Italked to two members of thetransla ti ng committee of theRevised Standard translat ion .Af ter some discussion, the y bothadmitted an er roneous tran slat ion .
Actually it was the Hebrew Eng lish scho lars who t ranslatedthe Bible who made th e mistak e.But. on learning it I co rrected itand th e who le C h u rc h ha saccepted the correction .
When I find I have sinned, Iconfess that ( 0 , GOD, not topeople. But when the re comes tomy attention an un intendedeoo r - a mistake - which hasinvolved people, then I mustadmit that error and correct itbefore the peopl e involved .
That has happened in the caseof my d isfellowshipment lett erto my son. Garner Ted Arm strong .
Can you imagine m y me ntalanguish and tu rmoil at themom en t ? Disfellowshippi ngone's own so n is a MOST SERIOUSresponsibilit y and sore tr ial.
I had prayed desperately. Ihad decided to give him "onemore chance." rose up early inthe mo rni ng and written a lastdesperate letter hoping to avoiddisfellow shipmenl.
But th ea I realized my firstduty. even above that to my sonwhom I love, was to the C hurchand to Je sus C h rist.
Much as I love my son, I loveJes us Christ and God 's Workmore. I tore up the lett er.
Hurried ly I wro te anothe r,the one of disfellowsh ipment . In
(See CONFESS, ..... 3)
human nature. Yel a child ofGod must do it . "- .
True repentance is confessingto SINS- not justifying them,but ad mitting them, havingenou gh godly sorrow over themto TURN FROM THEM and overcome them.
Usually an initial repentancetakes one th rough an internals t ruggle of mind . The SELFdoesn' t want to admit wron g. Ietalone deliberate and in tendedSIN.
I know the struggle I had to gothrough in the sp ring of 1927 .Ye t it is something li ke goinginto the oc ean at a beach or asw im ming pool when the wateris cold. One hates to plunge in,but once in. it isn't so bad andmay even be enjoyable.
When God brought me torepe ntance. it was like that. I sayto others, "Co me on in - thewater's fine!" It has never beenso hard. since, 10' admit wrong. orconfess even sins to God . I havehad to admit error more thanonce .
For 40 years I had led God'sCh urc h into the error of observing th e day of Pent ecost on aMonday . In thisone,ONLY,ofallGod's Sa bbat hs, he te lls us toCOUNT in order to determineourse lves which is the rig ht day .In all others , God tells us whichis the right day .
Back in 1927 I had to COUNTto de ter mine which day was theFeast of Firstfruits . The Biblesaid count FROM the morrowafter th e Sabbath - count FROMa Sunday 50 da ys . I did. Icounted co r rec t ly . I d id notma ke a mistake in that , let a lonecommitting an in tent ional andknow ing SIN.
T he Ki ng James version saidcou nt 50 days FROM a S unday .At that time 1had checke d everytranslation th en pub lished of the
CARDS ANDLETTERS -At left , PaslorGe ne ra lHerbe rtW.Armstrongexamines one of the many card s he reeeived in the past s ixweeks J uly7.
, Above, Mr. Armstrong wnh the cards in the Hall of Administ rationboardroom. [Pho tos by Warren Watson I
geography of the Holy Land. TheC hurch me mber s pa rticipa tedthrough cassette record ings of thelectures,lecture outlines and slides.
One of the purposes of the indepth study was to teac h the students " to apprecia te the limitations,as well as the contri butio ns, of biblical archaeology," Mr. Paige said .
"As Paul Lapp [t he late direc torof the American School of Orie ntalResearch in Jerusalem) once noted.'W hile biblical arc haeology is nolonger in its infancy, it is still verymuch in its childhood.' "
Upon arriving in Israel, the stu dents and Church membe rs beganan extensive tour of the Holy Land,visiting dozens of sites with histo rical significance, he said. Placesvisited included Megiddo , Mt . Carmel. Jericho, Qumran. Tibe r-as. EnGedi . Masada and the Mt. Sinaiarea.
Experimental program
"This year we allowed Church(SM DAVID. ,.. 51
says, " If we [we spirit-led C hris tians] confess 'our sins. he isfaithful andjustto forgive us oursins , and to cleanse us from allunr ighteousness (lJohn 1:9) .
The 10th verse says if weChristians say we have (not didhave before conversion, but havenow) no sin , we are wrong. Buteve n an un intend ed er ro r or mistaken statement s ho uld beack nowledged and be corrected.
It seems almost no one willco nfess it whe n he si ns. le t alo nerepent and tu rn away fro m conti nu ing in the partic ula r s in .Eve n admitting 3;- er ror or anu ninte nded wrong goes agai nst
JERUSALEM - The t9KIsummer "dig" involving 26 Ambassador College students and nineWorldwide Churc h of God members began July 13, reported Richard Paige, coord inato r of th eC hurc h and college volunteershere.
Most of the students and C hurchmember s left the United StatesJune 24, arrivi ng in Israel July tfollowing a tour of At hens, G reece." We stopped there to cap ture someof the experie nce offered by ancientGreece's t reasures and to adjust tothe time change," Mr. Paige said .
The students and members parti cipated in a "fairly intensive educational program," according to thecoordinator . an assistant professorof history on the Pasade na camp usof Ambassado r. (J im Herst , a graduate assista nt in Pasadena, traveledto Israel to assist Mr . Paige.)
Before leaving for Israel, the students received 20 hours of eveningstudy in archaeological methods and
Brethren, I still say C hrist hasmade me the most bles sed mano n earth . A very few havewanted to kill me . but mu ltipletho usand s s how real love forme .
Not only do I thank God in myprayers dai ly for all of -you, butfirst of all because He is GODwho loves us all . for H is TRUTH,UNDERSTA NDING and privilegeof sharing it wit h so ma ny th ousands and millions. with usingme as His servant and inst ru ment. for the many tria ls. tests,t roub les, persecutions (J amesI:2-4, I Peter 1:6-7) and lastlyfor the material blessi ngs to bebriefly enjoyed in this transientand tempora ry life .
How wonde rful and how goodis our God and His Son JesusChrist our Lord!
THANK you !THANK YOU!fort hese ass u ran ces ofyou r love andback ing God's Work!
By Herbert W. Armstrong
PERHAPS THE HARDEST thing fo r any per
son to do is admit it when heis wrong .
It is human to err. Allmake mistakes. Even more,ALL HAVE SINNED - and SINis much worse t ha n m akin g ami st ake .
God says, " to him that knoweth to do good and doeth it not.t ohim it issin" (Ja mes 4:17).Si n isco nscious ly, knowi ng ly. t ransgressi ng God 's law. A m istake isnot nec essarily a sin .
Yet , even of Christians, God
By Ellis LaRa,i.ORR. Minn . - A rousing greet
ing by more than 300 campers welcomed Herbert W. Armst rong tothe Summer Educat ional Programhere June 27. Youths from all ove rthe United States, Canada and Barbados lined both sides of the campentry road to greet Mr . Armstrong.
The G-ll set down on schedule at2 p.m. CDT (Central DaylightTime) at the region al airport here.Emerging from the aircraft , Mr .Armstrong was welcomed by ministers serving in various capacit ies atSEP.
He was promptly escorted to thegymnasi um on the SEP campusoverlooking Pelican Lake for Sabbath services. In add ition to thecampers and staff, approximately150 Ch urch members from Brainerd and Grand Rap ids, Minn .•heard Mr. Armstrong speak .
Mr. Armstro ng addressed theproblems of youths in this society.He noted that the physical accomplishment s of man have been stag gering in the last few decades. Hequeried : " In an age with such greatphysical acco mplishments, whynothi ng but troubl es?"
Mr. Armst rong concentra ted hismessage on the prob lems of manresulting from the decision Adammade when he took of the tree of theknowledge of good and evil rather
(See ORR, ..... 31
Ellis Lakavia is director offa cilitie s managem ent inPasadena .
By Herbert W. Armstrong
I n j u s t the last six weeks
so many cards, p laquesa n d le t t e r s have beenreceived I decided to h a ve
them a ll spread out o n ourla rge conference tab le ;seat i ng 14, with wide-arm
chairs, and photographthem.
A nd thi s is only t he last sixweeks . Hund reds andhundreds more were receivedin t he preceding weeks andmonths .
I'm sure, from the pictures,you can reali ze how impossible itwould be for me to write a personal letter of thanks for eachone . Some most recent oneswe re "Father's Day" cards .Near ly all were expressions oflove and suppo rt , .None wereexpressions of disapproval orhostile in nature.
Several were from localchu rche s in the United States,Germany and elsewhere, withhundreds of signat ures. Somewere in hand -tooled and carvedleather. Several were rare worksof art.
HWAvisitsSEPatOrr,gives talk
2 The WORLDWIDE NEWS Monday, July 13 , 1981
Polish reforms challenge Moscow authority
Overcoming the crutch of anger
ISSfIIOlij4·35 17
m:bt ~orlbl.uibt j}tl.usCIRCl.l.A TOO 5 1,000
rhe Wor/dWlde News IS puDloshed brweeklyescectduJ.ngthe Chul'ch ·s am ual FaNFestIval,by the Worldwide Church 01 God Copyngh le 1981 wooowoe Church 01 God AI ughtsreserved
Editor In chlel; Herbe rt W Armslroog
Managing editor; Dexter H Faulkner
Sen ior editor; sreae Graham, as sociateeditor; Tom Hanson . leatures editor; Nor man Shoal. layout editor; Ronald Grovenews editor: MIChael Snydef , stall writers:Ruel Guerrero. Jen znore . " Loe al ChurchNews" editor: Delores Schroeder . composition; Don Patroek. Betty Foglesong . .>ar.ceRoemer photography; Nathan Faulknet ,ROland gees . SCott Sffi,th. c ir cu lat ion : EileenOe......s production coordinalor: Syd AlIen-
be""""NOnCE; The Wor ldW>de News cannot be-esooosoe IOf!he relurn ot coscec.reo arloelesandpholographs
SUBSCRIPTIONS: Subscnphons are sentautomatlCaly 10 the members 01 the WorldwideChurch 01 God Adaess al corooocetcos toThe W()rldwIdeNews. eo. 1\1 . Pasadena. Ca. '91123 Addohonal maM-.golhces 80. 44, StahonA,Vancovvet .B C .V6C2M2.Canad.a BO.11 1.St Albans. aerts . L2 2EG, England, Bo"- 202.BurJe.ghHeads,Queensland. 4220. Auslra~a . Box2603.Manila 2801,PhIlippInes, Box 2709, Auckland r.N ew Zeataoc
ADDRESS CHANGES; U S changes 01add ress are handled automabcauv WIth PlamTruth cnenqes 01 address secooo-crass postage paId at Pasadena, CalIf PostmasterPlease send Form 3579 fa Ttl(' Worldwl(1t?
out the Polish crisis - even to thepoint of conducting confiden tial anddirect talks with the Kremlinoverthe fut ure of Poland .
Acco rdi ng to usually rel iablesources in the French Cat holic episcopate, John Paul II interve ned personally and through his secretary ofstate. Cardinal Casaroli. to seek todissuade the Soviets from usingtheir armed might to cr ush the Polish reform movement earlier in theyear .
" The pon ti ff ," acco rding toHears t News Se rvice report er Bernard D. Kaplan, in the LosAngeles.Cali f., Herald Examiner. April 26."frequently has made known hisdeep concern over the cris is in hishomeland . However. this is the first
Mr. Kaplan quotes a Catholicsource as saying tha t the Soviets"have made it apparent on manyoccasions that they want the Vat ican's goodwill and cooperation asfar aspossible th roughout those portions of Eastern Europe where theChurch's spiritu al and social rolesarc significant. Bru tal action inPoland would dest roy the improvedrelat ions that have been built updur ing the past decade or so. Thatimprovement has served both sideswell . . . Pope John Paul has beenconvinced for some ti me that theSoviet leadership has a health yrespect for the chur ch 's deep- seat edinfluence : '
" Brutal action" in Poland wouldalso cut short the successful Soviet. ' peace offensive" in West Germanyand the Low Countries and chasenaive Europeans back into the arms ofthe United States ,
indication that he has assumed apersonal role in it. It is also the firstreport that the Vatican and theSoviet governme nt have enteredinto di rect politi cal negotiationswith one anoth er. Informan ts here[in Paris] said there was ' no way ofkn owing ' whether th e po pe ' sinvolvement had infl uenced theRussians' apparent decision not touse force against the independenttrade union movement, Solidar ity . .. What seems clear . neverth eless, is that Pope John Paul decidedto throw the overall psychologicaland political weight of the CatholicChurch into the balance to try topreserve Poland from Soviet invasicn.'
M arv Vingris
BY GENE H. HOGBERG
WeRLDWATCH
LettersTO THE EDITOR
Brethren al homeMy letter (0 The Worldwide News
("Remember Th ose at Home" Aug. 25.1980) . just prior to the 1980 Feast ofTabernacl es, had an overwhel mingresponse from brethre n everywhere. Ireplied to all the very many cards andletters I received . apart from a few whosefull add resses I d id not have - and to allwho wrote so encour agingl y I want tosay: " Thank you. so very. very much!"
Although unable to attend the Feastin person. your loving concern made ittrul y memorable for me. and I felt I wasthe re with you all at your various Feastsites around the world. I st ill hear regularly from you, and I do so look forwardto - and appreciate - your letters. Iknow you will understand . on those occasions when ill health prevent s me fromreplying as promp tly as I would wish .
It was pointed out to me, by a memberof the Church locally in Bradford (We stYorkshire). that there are many of ourbrethr en who are in real need of theencouragement and support of regularcorrespondence with other members.Sometimes circumstances cause them tofeel really " isolated" - eit her because,d ue to their own ill health . or because.having sick relatives at home whom the ycanner leave. they are unable to anendSabbath services.
In some cases. also. they live too faraway for regular visits from other brethren . They feel so often out of touch almost " forgotte n."
If there are any like these inyou r localbranch of God's Church. J know you willwant to write to them. and give them thatsame wonderful feeling of trul y beingpari of His great famil y that you havegiven me with your cari ng, loving leiter s- not o nly durin g the Feast bu tthroug hout the year.
withdrawals in Western Europe orchanges in NATO deployment."
Aging and ailing Soviet PresidentLeonid Brezhn ev cannot last forever.What will his successor(s) do? Eastem Europe ex pert Richard F. Staarwrites in his boo k. The CommunistRegimes of Eastern Europe:
"The future of int rabloc relat ionswill depend prim ari ly upon the newSoviet leade rship after Brezhne vhas been removed or reti res . .. It isnot inconceivable that a new groupof Soviet leaders might decide in thefuture to purchase a West German
exit from N ATO by agreeing to thesame status for East Germany, thatis, withdrawal from the WarsawPact and some form of neutralization . . . these moves [could] material ize dur ing the 19805 as part of anew overall European settlement. "
Papal influence
Out of the present division of theContinent could arise a new Europe ,one released from U.S . dominance.still offering security to the SovietUnion , but essentially standing onits own, finding a source of strengthin its ancient traditions.
Earlier this year , the CatholicWeekly of Australi a reported fromVatican City that " Pope John PaulII , during an audience with morethan "3.000 Yugoslavs, renewed hisca// fo r a unit ed Europe includingthe Western European nations andthe communist bloc countries."
The pope has also been moreactive than people realize through-
Getting control of anger
It is a responsible . emotionallymature Christ ian who can hold hisor her anger in chec k and ask thesethree quest ions to get a better perspective on whatever is aggravatin g.He acknowledges that he is angry.but he tr ies to manage the emotionso that it does not control him. NOlallowing Satan a toehold!
Anger requires more energy outputthan any other emotion and is therefore totally devastating to the onepracticing it . As maturing Christians.let' s do as James exhorted , " My dearbrothers , take note of this: Everyoneshould be quick to listen. slow tospeak. and slow to become angry . forman' s anger does not bring about therighte ou s life that God desires"(James 1:19, 20, New International
units f rom t he regim ent leve ldown."
Th at leaves Moscow with onlyone alternative, they report: " Permittin g the keystone of its empire toevolve into a Poland that, while notseeking to leave the Warsaw Pact , isbecoming a social democrati c sta tein everyth ing but name. "
Losing Eas~ winning West
Curi ously. the Soviets are losingtheir grip in Eastern Europe at thesame time they are scoring sizablepropaganda successes in WesternEurope. The tide of neutralism inthe LowCo untries and West Ger many coeunues - to rise . A RedArmy move into Poland. now wouldkill the Soviet "peace offensive" inWestern Europe - somethingMoscow certainly does not want .
The Soviet leadership sometimein the future might seethat it is to itsapparent advantage to encouragethis process of gradual coalescing offorces in Eastern and WesternEurope -or "Finlandization."
Not es political affairs analy stWilliam Pfaff: " No fundam ent alchange in the situat ion of Poland. orof the reg ion , is imaginable withou ta realignment of secu rity arrangements in all Europe . If Poland wereto become internally autonomous,albeit communist, its ability toguarantee Russia's security would haveto be underwritten by the otherstates of central and WesternEurope . Even a qualified Soviet military withdrawal from Poland wouldhave to be matched by American
others feeling ?" Not so much howare they feeling about you, but howis this problem making them feel.It's impossible to identify and carefor anoth er 's feelings. and be angryat the same t ime.
Let us suppose, for exampl e. thatyou are to meet your wife at a certai nstore at 5:15 p.m. to select someitems you've been need ing. Th estore closes at 5:30. She arriv es justas it closes and you' re angry.
What do you do? Start screaming:" YouN£VER get any place on time!You 're ALWAYS late!"?
If you do, you' ll probably catcrow. for she may hasten to explainthat a trafficjam hindered her or shegOI a phone call just as she was leaving home.
" He that is soon angry dealethfoolishly: He who is slow to angerhas great understanding, but he whois qu ick - temper ed exalt s folly "( Proverbs 14:29).
Oops. some more of that com monsense from Proverbs again .
Third , ask, "I s there any way Imight have caused the incident tohappen ?" Thi s is being responsible.If we find what caused the problem.identify with the feelings of othersand do our best to be realistic , thenwe can determine whatcontributionwe made to our own aggravation.
How to handle anger
Before anger overcomes us weneed to ask ourselves a few pointedquestions:
Firs t. " W ha t ca used thi s to
occur ?" " What am I overlooking ?"Don't ask: "Why me? Wh y does th ishave to happen to me?" Wh en we dothis we are totall y closed to any better under standing or to a broaderperspect ive. Be realist ic; anger isseldom realisti c.
To illustrate. let' s suppose we aregcing tc Sabbath services or Biblestudy and we are late. We take thefreeway or parkway for a couple ofmiles, but as we come up on theon-ramp we find the freewaycrowded and traffic moving slowly.Soon it's almost at a standstill andwe can 't turn around ; we're stuck!
"O h no!" we exclaim. "We'lI never make it." Then in anger we shoutat one of the children in the backseat: " If you'd ju st get ready when Itell you to! Now we' ll never getthere on time: '
We begin to blame someone elsefor the predicament. We fail to recogni....e that we need to be preparedfor such circumst ances, in thisinstance by getting an earlier start.
And what do we end up doing ?Wejust wait it out whether we likeitor not. We expe rience this almostevery day, but since we don 't like towait , we usually don 't includ e thesepossibilities in our pla~~ in~..
anger by slamming doors or throwing something. These patterns wereoften times picked up from the Iamilies in which we grew up. We feel athome with our own way of reacting,even if wedisIike it in others and areashamed of it in ourselves.
"Since early this year reform minded Polish Co mmunists havebeen holding open elections at everylevel of the party and sweepingmuch of the conserv ative old guardout of office. The heads of 30 out of49 regional party committees havebeen fired ... Of greater consequence . perhaps , is the fact that 80percent of the officials on city committees have been replaced .. .
" In factories. colleges , towns andcities , many party leaders ' officesare now occupied by frank, open ,articulate people eager to discussPoland's critical and economicproblems witb foreign reporters.Dogma is noticeably absent. 'See,we don't even address each other as"Comrade," , says a party memberas he greets an official in Gdansk .Some Western diplomats say thatoffic ials often sound more likeWestern European social democrats than communists."
The Soviets , it is widely believedthroughout Poland , have beenmanipulating the economicmisfortunes in the country. slowly strangli ng the economy, producingshortag es of consumer items in anat tempt to bring the Poles to heel.
But nobody in Poland believesthat the Soviet economic noose willst rangle the revolution. "Sovietbully-boy tactics no longer workhere ," observe Evans and Novak.writ ing from Gdansk. add ing thatan "armed Soviet inte rvent ionwould almost certainly bring abloodbath, from both guerrilla warfare and resistance by Polish army
By Dexter H. Faulkner
IIIIpO!lSihIe _
P!'.SADENA - On July 14, delegates will assemble in Warsaw for theannual co ngress of the Polish UnitedWorkers' Party . official name for thecommunist org anization that runs theco untry . II may prove to be thewatershed in Poland's recent history .
Under pressu re from the Solidarity union movement, delegates tothe congress were selected by secretballot , a process unheard of in thecommunist world. Polish PremierSt an islaw Kania also yielded todemands for the open election ofparty officials and the inclusion ofworkers in the ruling Politburo forthe first time - truly historic concessions.
of working at overcoming, I' m st illin kindergarten. Which brings meto the subject - one of those basichum an emotions that all of us mustlearn to control- being angr y!
Be illig')' in Bible
Man y are surprised th at thewords be angry are in the Bible . " Beangry , and yet do not sin; do not letthe sun go down on your anger, anddo not give the devil an opportunity"(Ephesians 4:26, 27, New Amer ican Standa rd Bible) . Those wordscome only a few verses before thepassage that says, "Be kind to oneanother" (E phesians 4:32) .
Being good to each other meanssharing love and affection . but it alsomeans having the honesty and courage to say. " I'm angr y!"
Th e question is. how is thal angerexpressed.
I'm sure you have noticed howvision seems to narrow to a singlefocal point when we are angry. Allwe see is one thing -c--the immediatehappening we do not like. We losesighto f alJelse, even the factors thatcaused the problem.
M an y per sons retreat int osilence . some scream and swear,
A colleague of mine said. "Faulkner . all you ever write about arepri nc,~ples from the book.of Proverbs.
I guess he's right. Over the yearsI've found so many helpful principles in this book that I come back toit time after lime. r guess once Imaster and apply what is in thi s onelittl e book of the Bible, I'll move onto another book.
However . I have to be honest withmyself; at times I feel after 24 years
" Poland' s democratic revclution, " writes thejourn alistic team of(Rowland] Evans and [Raben]Novak, •' now confronts the Kremlinwith an impossible dilemma: Invadethis troublesome nation, or else permit itsdramatic transformation withinthe Soviet empire. "
For Moscow. the Polish reformmovement has gone from bad toworse. It was badenough to have totoler ate a labor union movementoperating independently of partycontrol. The real danger. to theKremlin , is that the focus for reformhas shifted away from Solidarityand sett led on the Communist Partyitself. Th e central authority of theparty is crumbling fast. DavidBrand , a staff reporter of The WallStreet Journal, writes :
Big Sandyprimes for opening
Oregon member learns
newsstandPT sells itself
him in that. In the emotionof'themomenl I wrote that as it hadbeen reported to me .
LET ME SAY HERE WITHEMPHASIS , I AM ABSOLUT ELYAND POSITIVELY SURE MY SONWAS NOT TRYING TO OBTAINMONEY FALSELY!
He would never do Iha t. Hedid not covet more money.Every time I gave him a raise insalary, he would say, "Oh Dad, Ididn't need that."
Though I was led at themoment to believe that st atement No .3, I know now it wasnOI true, and I apologize.
" and 4) Finally giving the LosAngeles Times (a nd perhapsother med ia) distorted and falseacc usa t ions against your father ,God's apostle."
My son just ified thi s later,saying the Times contacted him,not he them.
Newspapers have tried to con tact me, and I repl y, "No comment:' or refuse to talk.
When he responded andtalked to them for a story bostile10 God's Church, he did tend to" cause di visions and offenses"aga inst th e Church .
Yes, it is truly te rribly hardfor one 10 admit he has beenwrong. I am so rry to say my sonis st ill in great and widespre addisagreement with me, as I am inagree me nt with C hris t.
I do think th at my son thinkshe is right - does not see wherehe is wron g. I pray for him dailyth at God will cause him to"come to himself: ' as PresidentWoodrow Wilson wrote in abook, and reali ze his disagr eement and see in his own mindwh er e he is wrong .
God willcall you someday."He remioded them that they will
be pioneers during the millennialreign of God's government on thisearth. "You will nOI be excludedfrom the world tomorrow." hestated emphatically.
Accompanying Mr. Armstrong 10
Orr were Spanish Department direc tor Leon Walker and his wife Reba,David Hulme (Raben Fabey' s administrat ive assistant) and his wifeRobin , and facilities managemen t director Ellis LaRavia and his wifeGwen .
SEP admini strators Larry Salyerand Kevin Dean noted that the firstsession had gone smoothly , despit e21 stra ight days of rain .
Immediately following Sabbathservices , Mr . Armstrong, his traveling companions and ministers andtheir wives gathered for about anhour for snacks and a personal talkfrom the pastor general.
lContinued from ,..... 1)
than the tree of life.This decision impacted not only
Adam and Eve but all mankind whohave been born since that incident.Man has spent 6,000 years cut offfrom the tree of life, which wouldhave imparted spiritual knowledgeand understanding with God's HolySpir it to Adam and all of mankind.
Mr . Armstrong emphasi zed thatyoung People in God 's Church,however, are nOI Cui off. Rather,youth s whose parents are membersof the Church of God , are sancti fiedor set apart, even if only one parentis a member . He stated Ihal Churchyouths are sci apart ... 10 be converted when they come to the rightage.
He concluded: "You are differentfrom other children, bUI not betterthan other children. II is just that
mail and Ihus divert corporatefunds illegally into your private,personal hands . . ."
I wrote th is on informationgiven me . It wasa TOTAL MISUNDERSTANDING ON MY PART . Iwant now to retract that, thoughJ believed at the time it wastrue.
My son says he was only Irying to receive his own personaland private mail , and I believe
Orr
SEP TRIP - Pastor General Hertlert W. Armstrong pauses to chat withGreg Albrecht, education instructor lor the first session of the SummerEducational Program, his wile Karen and their son Scott, belore Mr.Armstrong's June 27 sermon in Orr, Minn., site 01SEP. [Photo by NathanFaulkner]
Photographers neededfor Feastof Tabernacles
The Work 's publications need new color andblack and white photographs from Festival sitesworldwide. Selected photos will be used in The PlainTruth, Good News, Worldwide News, Youth 81 andin Church presentations. [f you are interested inserving God's Church in this capacity, please send ashort summary of YOUf photographic experience,photo equipment you will be using, the Feast site youplan to attend and your name and address to:
The Worldwide NewsFestival Photographer
300 W. Green St.Pasadena, Calif., 91123
The Work needs 35-mm. and 2% camera formatonly. Filmand mailingexpenses will be provided onlyto those who correspond and are selected as officialphotographers. Please respond no later than Aug.5. Photographers for Jerusalem; Mount Pocono,Pa.; Squaw Valley , Calif.; Lihue, Kauai, Hawaii ;Brno, Czechoslovakia; Praz-sur-Arly , France ; Bonndort, West Germany; and Exloo, Nether[ands, havebeen selected . Near[y 80 sites are left to be covered. Please respond as soon as possible.
Fear-year program?
"Several people have asked mewhether we are planning to developa four-ye ar progr am in Big Sand y,"Mr . Walker repor ted . "To thai I cananswer th at Mr . Ar mstrong makesthose dec isions and he has presentl yinstructed us 10 car ry out a two-yearcoll ege . A nd , we foll ow th oseinst ructions and nothing else."
Big Sand y's student orientationprogr am starts Aug. 20 with classesbeginning Aug . 24.
The WORLDWIDE NEWS
CONFESS
all my trips 10 report to the staffthere .'
lContinued from ,." 1.
it I wrote: "In spite of your continual disagreement with theway the living Jesus Christ hasbeen building and conductingGod's Work through His chosenapostle, I have at all times donemy best to hold up and protectyour name."
That summarized in one overall short sentence the real causeof disfellowshipment. Then ladded four spec ific of-themoment incidents. which at thelast moment decided me .
" 1) You have disobeyed mydirective by going to Orr, Minnesota," Our summer camp wasthere. My statement was trueand correct. I had forbidden himtogo.
Since, I have learned that twoof his young sons were there, andhe is now saying he and his wifewent there to see their sons.
As I now remember,l did nOIrealize his sons were there. Hadhe told me and asked 10 seethem, I'm sure I would have saidgo.
"2) Contacting members youwere forbidden to contact." Thishe had done. It was NOT a falsecharge.
" 3) Contacted the UnitedStales Postal authorities in theunethical and unscrupulouseffort to intercept corporate
ment , Me Walker said, "I don't Ior-.see any problems. About 60 percentof my work in the Sp anish Department deals dir ectly with the Spanish-speaking ministry. with whom Ialready work mostly with by phone,co rres pondence and per sonall ywhen I visit them in the ir respectiveareas."
Th e evangelist stated that thereare no plans to move the Spani shDepartment to Big Sandy, mainlybecause of the magazine produ ctionfaciliti es in Pasaden a for La PuraVerdad (Spanish Plain Truth ).
" I plan to visit Pasadena aboutevery six weeks: ' he added . " Wealso have a direct phone hookupthrough our computer system that Ican pick up at anytime. I will alsohave a Quip [electronic data transmitter} machine in my office thatallows me to transmit or receiveprinted material from Mr . Armstrong or other of our offices."
Mr . Walker plans 10 visit brethren and ministers in Latin Americaduring school breaks . " Ouring theFeasts, between semesters and otherlimes I'll be traveling in Span ish.speak ing areas, and 1plan to swingback through Pasadena at the end of
Managers welcome PTMr . Smythe noted that negative
reaction 10 The Plain Truth is rare ."The vast majority ," he said, "a reimpressed with the high quality andwelcome it - many have alreadyeither seen it or have heard Mr.[Herbert) Armslrongon the broadcast ."
He reported thai the positiveapproach works well - often lateradding additional newsstands, " Bywork ing Ihrough one district manager I was able to place four separa teoutlets in different citi es," he said.
"II must be some kind of record, "commented Pasco pastor GeraldFlurry. " II' s amazing the successMr . Smythe has had ."
Establishing his contacts in lessthan three working days spread overthree months, Mr. Smythe said heplans to work on the project until atleast one newsstand is established ineverv city in the Pasco church area
their stores. Only the managerscould authorize placement of PlainTruth newsstands.
So, Mr. Smythe took a vacationday off from work. He started inBoardman, Ore.. at 9 a .m . andworted his way back home .
AI first he felt awkward. "I wasthankful I'd worked on my 'S~With Purpose' speech. Managersarevery busy and talk to many salesmen . They don 't have a lot of time towaste," he added.
Mr . Smythe came straight to thepoint : "After introducing myself , Isimply say: ' I represent TIlL Pla inTruth magazine, and we distributefree copies on newsstands we maintain ourselves. We're interested inestablishing an outlel in thisarea,' ..
He then hands three differentcopies of the newsstand Plain Truthto the manager. Small talk , he hasfound, is not effective and distractsthe manager from inspecting sampie copies .
Several have asked, " Is this a religious magazine'?" Mr . Smytheanswers : "Yes. II is publ ished by theWorldwide Church of God. Eachissue contains articles on famil y living, world events and Bible prophecy. We are not proselyting or soliciting funds in any way. II is simplyan educational magazine in the public interest ."
PASAD ENA - Preparat ionsfor the new two-year junior collegein Big Sandy, Tex . , are " gaining inintensity" as the open ing date nears ,sa id evangelist Leon Walker, deputychancellor of the Big Sandy campus .
" Most of the facult y should bemoved on campus by the middle ofJuly," he reported July 3. "All areexcitedly looking forw ard to theopening:'
A handful of students are workingon "various gro unds and maintenancejobs" preparing for the arrivalof the new student body in August.
" We will have our major departments such as business, employment, regi strar and others operatingsmoothly well before school opens,"the evangelist stated .
"Mr. [Herbert) Armslrong hasasked me to continue directing theSpanish Department from the college in Texas, " Mr. Walk.er said . "Jwas very pleased to continue as rlove what I'm doing ,"
Mr . Walker and his wife Rebaplan to arrive on campus July 17.
Tn....ing ...ng..ist
Asked how he would direct thePasadena-based Spanish Depart-
Rex Sexton, a 1977 Big Sandy Ambassador College graduate, is a local church elder inPasco, Wash.
EXTRA EFFORT - MemberDonald Smythe pauses after restocking a newsstand he established in a Heppner, Ore., supermarket. More than 20 newsstandswere established by Mr.Smythe inthree working days. [Photo by RexSe xton l
By Rex Sext.HERMISTON, Ore. - Draw
ingonSpokesman Club experience.member Donald Smythe established more than 20 Plain Truthnewsstandoullets in April, May andJune. And more than 100 waitingrooms now receive The Plain Truththrough the efforts of Mr. Smytbeand his wife Frances.
Monday, July 13, 1981
F_for......
Pasco, Wash., localelder Ed Oettel asked Mr . Smythe to establishPToutlets in northern Oregon.
Mr . and Mrs . Smythe tried towork in the evenings, but found thatstore managers were usually not in
.' .
4 The WORLDWIDE NEWS Monday, July 13 , 1981
cites poor economic conditions
Pastor visits Ugandan brethren,
Member's house spared
after fire starts in attic
alt houg h some people cont inued 10
write for The Plain Truth . Manypeople were afraid to rece ive themagaz ine at that time, but thesepeople are writi ng for it again . ThePlain Truth is much wanted insidethe cou ntry as virtually no mag azines are available to the averag eperso n.
We are planning 10 start abimont hly Bible study soon in Tororo for mem bers and other interested peo ple . We hope for an attendance of about 15 .
We are also planning for the members to come to Kenya for the Feast ofTa bernacles , some thing they havebeen unable to do for the past ' two
years because of the situation insideUganda .
Here comes ano ther problem the currency in Uganda ( the Ugandan shilling) is virtually worth less.Th e Ugandan sh ill ing and theKenyan shilling used to be worth thesame, but now one Kenyan shillingexchanges for abo ut 25 Ugandan
(SM UGANDA, plIQII 101
Many of these people don't alwaysfeel good . I play music they understand, and it makes them feel better."
Debs could well be talkin g abouthimself.
A st roke confined him to a wheel chair in 1979 . It might have silenecdhis acco rd ion, but it did not lessenhis love for music.
Supported by a trust fund fromthe mus icians union , he has beenplaying for groups of people in nursing homes and oth er inst itut ions.
Co nducting the orches tra fromhis whee lchair, Och s is a visibleinsp irati on to the res idents. Many ofthem were in wheelc hairs .
'"A large pan of th e inspirationcomes from Peter becau se he is anonquiner and they sense that theycan be active just like he is," Roblesaid .
Oc hs leaned back in his wheel chai r , obvio usly pleased by th eresponse to th e orches tra's musicand said: " Love is a beautiful thing.One day I'll be playing again , Godwilling. Buttonight l'm goin gto sleepwell, knowing I'v e helped a few people be happy today."
Even at such high prices , goodsare scarce. A bottle of beer, if youcan find one, can sell for S20. Commodi ties such as sugar, soap and saltare un obtain able . Window s inhot els and other buildings dam agedin fighting are boarded up beca useof a lack of glass .
Our members in Uganda havelearned to live with these hardshi psand re main chee rful. T he lack ofpubli c tra nsporta tion - even manyof the bicycle s are off lhe roadsbeca use of a shortage of tubes andti res - is a constan t problem.
Members and their famili es haveto walk if the y want to go anywhere.Mr. O thieno walks 10miles to wor kand 10 miles back five days a week.
But there is hope for God's Workin Uganda . Of course , a 101dependson the future stability within th ecountry, but we have rece ived aflood of requ ests for The PlainTruth from Ugan da . '
In the days of Mr. Am in, all foreign magazines wer e banned,
walk up to residen ts, male andfemale, and ask them if they ca red todanc e.
Frank Krawczyk, 70, said thedance he shared with Ms. Boz wasthe first time he had danced sociallyin a "very long t ime, and it was
. fun."
The brand of music Peter Och sand his orches t ra played Sundayaf ternoon was just what th e doct ororde red .
" T his is worth more than all thepills in the wor ld," said John Roble,special activit y coordinator, as hewatched respon ses to the rend eringsof Och s and his orchest ra.
Och s, 65, has been an active partof the Milwa ukee scene for most ofhis years. He attributed his longe vity to playing what people want tohear . not what the musicians want toplay.
Of the near ly 20 requ ests fromthe elde rly audience, there was notone th e band members did notknow.
" Music is a form of therapy,"Oc hs said. " T here are vibrat ions inmusic that make a person feel good.
Th efo llowing arti cle is abou tMilwaukee. Wi.r.. Chur ch member Peter Ochs. It appeared inthe Milwaukee Sentinel April17 and is reprinted here by permission.
PL AY ING TO PLEASE -Orchestraconducter Peter OChsexchanges greetingswrth sen .or cit izens althe MountCarmel Nursing Home in Milwaukee , Wis., during one of several concert s he has given there. (Photo courtesyM i h••.n:u l lt~O <:",,.,t;.,o /1
repo rted at more than 100 percent .One of the biggest problems for
th e people is the lack of t ranspor tation. Uganda has little fore ignexchange to pay for fuel. Th e resultis that few vehicles are running, andmost of those belong to the securityforces or to government or di plomat ic officials.
Pet rol has been selling on theblack market for up to 5,500 shillings for 20 liters. T hat is an incredible S 150 a gallon based on the official exc hange rate then!
Bear in mind th at th e averageUgan dan worker only earns anywhere between 400 and . 800 shillings a month (S50 toSIOO) .
By OJester SheardPete r Ochs ' music was worth a
thousand pills Sunday.It wasa tonic that lifted the spir its
of 200 residents and guests at theMount Carmel Nursing Home,5700 W. Layton Ave.
It brought Dan Beat ovic. 7 1, tohis feet to trip the light fantastic. Hegallantly ventured onto the d iningroom floor for a solo performanceand it was quite evident Beatovichad been qu ite the hoofer .
"I used to dance a lot even thoughI worked hard as a wreck er: ' hesaid.
II wasn 't long befor e he wastapped on the shoulder and his onesome became a 1wosome .
Gini Boz, 1017 W . Morgan St .,was visiting her mother, Laur a.With quiet dign ity, Ms. Boz would
Member makes music 'therapy'
for residents of nursing homes
and no money to rebuild a home .He phoned Britt on Taylor, pas tor
of the Binghamton and Co rn ing,N.V., churc hes.
"After I reali zed what was goingon , I hu ng up the phone and askedGod to help Mr . Piscit ello," Mr .Taylor said .
Meanwhi le, Mr . Piscitel lo askedfiremen how bad the fire was. "Itstopped burning!" one of the mensaid. "Sure as I'm sitting here ! Tellthem to pass up that chain saw so Ican check inside these beam s."
The firemen cut away the charredbeam s around th e ch im ney, cutaway the ceilin g, cut away th e roofand sure enough , no fire. I t had completel y stopped burning, sta ted Mr .Piscitello . "Well, I know what happened ," he add ed .
The firemen never had to turn ona hose inside the house. They usedonly four or five pails of water th eyhad carried upst airs from the kitch ensink .
To help rebuilt the chimney andrepair the roof, Mr . Tay lor authorized some of the local chu rch 'sem ergen cy fund s to go 10 Mr . Pisc lte llo. A government program provided free labor.
S tate d Mr . Piscitello: " I went toGod for a miracle. I asked Him boldly to stop my house from burningand He did . I believe that with allmy heart. "
Mr . Piscitello att ends the Binghamton church with his wife Beverly and the ir three sons, Don , Joe and" n pt>ln
and expec ta ncy that things mightsoon ret urn to norm al.
But now, two years later, aftertwo inte rim governments, one milita ry coup and one election lead ing toDr . Obote becom ing prime ministerfor the second t ime - most peopleare disillu sioned .
After a brief period of quie t following the elections last December,Kamp ala, the capital of Uganda. isagain a cit y of fear and bloodshed .Co rpses again lie on the st reets. Toqu ote Mr . Othieno, " Goods areexpen sive but life is cheap : '
Fortunately for our three mem ber s, the conditions in the easterntown of Tororo are much calm er.However, another problem has hitmuch of Ugand a: drought and famine.
Last year was a very difficult yearthroughout east Afri ca . Insufficientrains and fail ing crops led to widespr ead drought and even starvationin a number of areas . Th e mostcruelly affected area was Kararnoja,an area to the north ofTororo, wher emultiple thousands d ied.
It was a hard tim e for th e Op ioand Oth ieno fam ilies, and the y survived by living to a large extent on abasic diet of cassava and sorghum.N ow, prospects are much better asthe rains over the past two monthshave been abundant, and there arehopes of a bumper harvest throughout the region .
Mr . Opio and Mr . Othieno arelooking forward to harvesting th issummer, since both have more thanfive acres of land under cultivation.They should then have sufficientfood for some time .
To describe living condit ions inUganda to the average person acc ustomed 10 a Western life -style is a d ifficult task. Shortages are endemic.The black market is e verywhere.Prices are unreal. Inflation is
The f ollowing arti cle waswritte n by Owen Willi s. pastorof the Nairobi. Kenya. church.about a mid-May visi t to brethren scat tered thr ough out ecs rern Af rica.
COVEN T RYVILLE. N .Y. C har les Pisci tello smelled a different kind of smoke Jan . 13, than histwo wood- burning stoves usuallyproduced.
He checked the s toves, butco uld n ' t smell any s moke . ""Ireturned to the living room and realized the smoke was coming from th estairw ell," said Mr . Piscitello, abli nd C hurch member . " So Icrawled into the att ic on the beam sleading to the cinder-block chimneyand put my hand s on the ch imney . Itwas hot!"
He pulled down some insul ationfrom the chimney and discovered afire . " I got out of the att ic as qu ick lyas possible and sent one of my boysac ross the st ree t to a neighbor's," herelated .
Accord ing to Mr. Piscitello, afir em an " just happened" to bevisit ing th e neighbor. " They bothcame over to survey my situ at ion ,"he explained . " They imm ediatelyyelled down : 'Bad one! Call th edepartmen t!' My heart felt likebreaking from my chest cavity.'
Th e fire depart men t a rr ive dquic kly, and firem en converged onthe house with hatchets and firefighting equ ipment. Mr . Piscitellowas told to get his family out of thehouse and to gathe r up any valuables. "This is going up any second ," the y warn ed .
Mr . Piscit ello knew all he coulddo was pray. So he went downstair sinto the bathroom and closed thedoor He had nn bouse insurance
By Owen WillisTORORO, Ugand a - It is hard
to put into words what has happenedin Uganda and what the Ugandanpeople have been thro ugh. Lastweek {May 6] I was able to meetwith our three Ugandan members,Mr. and Mrs. Eldad Opi o and William Othie no. as well as nine ot herinterested people in the area of Tororoin eastern Uganda .
Thi s was our first meeting insideUgan da. In the past we had to meeton the Ken yan side of the borderbecause of securi ty reasons and toavoid our members fallin g und erunn ecessary suspicion.
I am pleased to report that Mr.and Mrs . Opio , who were formerlyin exile in Kenya, and Mr . Othienoare in good health and rem ain positive in spite of the troubled situationin their country. We were able tospend a very enjoyable day in eachother's company.
Uganda, once described as "thepearl of Africa." gained its independence from Britain in 1962 withhigh hopes for prosperity. It is abea uti ful land with fertile soil andgood rainfall. When the first primeminister, Milton Obcte. was oyer·th rown in 1971 in a military couporganized .by Idi Amin , there wasdancing in the streets to celebrateth e end of Dr . Obote's increasinglyunpopular rule .
In 1979, Gen . Am in was over thrown, and there was again dancingin the streets, celebrating the end ofeig ht years of blood, brutality andbarbarity. There was an air of hope
Monday, July 13 , 1981 The WORLDWIDE NEWS 5
CITYOFDAVID EXCAVATION SITE "G"
Ruins o' Israelite house(destroye d inNe b ucf\adnezzar'sattac k on Jerusalem)
\Ancient stru ctu redating from 13th cen tury B.C.(pre--Davidic pe riod )
" Glacis" str ucture(poss ib ly of David icor Solomonic origin)
~/
*=pt.-nt.Xcall.uon.lm~100 200 ~Coliege-.d
: I melerl Worldwide Church or God ,.~t...
<,.50..-
Q~/fENNA (HINNOM)
Tower dating fr omHellen isti c Per iod
Unexcavated ares
DIG DETAILS - One "extraordinary" aspect of the City of David excavations, according to Richard Paige, is thediscovery of an ancient structure of "monumental proportions" at site " G:' Mr. Paige, coordinator of theAmbassador College and Worldwide Church of God volunteers , said the base of the structu re was uncoveredduring the 1980 excavatio n season, and that evidence indicated the edifice may date from David's reign overIsrael. The New Yorl<, N,Y" Times reported that the structure could possibly be part of David 's or Solomon 'spalace, but excavatlon officials believe the possibil ity is remote. Mr, Paige noted that additiona l intormation ishoped for from this summer's efforts . Church and college volunteers are digging at this particular site, he added.[Artworl< by Ron Grove]
American newspaper s pre maturel y ident ified th e struct ure as therem ain s of either Solom on' s o rDavid'sroyal palace, Whil e the possibility is not ruled out. Yigal Sh iloh , direc tor of the excavat ion (th eCity of David Arch aeological Project) . reports that the chances areremote. Mr. Paige said part of theAmbassador group is working onthis st ructure, which may providesome additional exciting discover ies.
Ambassador students working onthe excavat ion are John And rews.Renae Bechtho ld. Sandi Borax.Kathy Brunz, Bob Cau dle . GaryChilders. Br uce Dague. Pe te rEddi ngto n. Wade Fransso n, Rue lGuerrero, Phil Hopwood, SueKcpy, Maria Kosier, Mike McAllister, David Mosby, Sylvia Owen,Cheryl Pierso n, T racy Porter, Jacqueline Ramsey, Lisa Ransdell,Mike Rasmussen, Sharon Sarfert,David Strong. Cathy Taylor, PeggyWarkentin and Cireg Williams.
C hurch members participat ing inth e program are Rick Berendt ,Edmonton, Alta.; Roman Borek,Pasaden a; Debbie Bulgher, Houston. Tex.; Julie Costo n. Richardson.Tex.: Jo hn Davies, Cleveland. Ohio;J on Ledy . Saginaw , Mich .; Merr ilyn Mincy , Milwa ukee , Wis.; ScottMurphy. Arlington. Tex. ; and Dennis Turner. Golden. Colo.
DIGGERS VISIT GREECE - Ambassador Colleg e studen ts and Church volunteers , en route to Israel for thearchaeological dig, pause June 26 during a tour of Delphi, Greece , The structu re behind the group is thereconstructed Treasury of the Athen ians. [Photo by SyMa Owen l
Structure uncove redAsked what the group hoped to
find. Mr . Paige reported that theprevious summer's work uncovereda "very interesting structure."Stated Mr. Paige: "The biggest'find' was not so much a ' find ' - butthe way a certain structure wasviewed ."
The bottom of the remai ns of alarge structure was uncove red.reveal ing that it once stood abo utfive stories high . .. It is the largestanci ent structure ever uncovered inIsrael ." he said .
David(Continued from pa gll 11
members to participate as well asAmbassador studen ts ," Mr. Paigereported. "T his is an experiment.We wanted the excavation officialsand others to be able to see Churchmembers in action - sort of a livingphilosophy."
Mr . Paige noted that the Churchmembers were carefully screenedfor compatability with the students."The group will work very closelytogether for several weeks, so wesoug ht Church members of similarbackgrounds to those of the students." He also said four of the nincChurch members either grad uatedfrom or attended Ambassador College .
Being deaf: what members faceSelmer Hegvold , director of
the Church' s deaf program , received the foll owing letter in response to an article published inthe May 4 Worldwide News .
BySelmer Hegvo ldPASADENA - Response to the
article ' 'Church works to reduce barriers facing deafbrethren worldwide. '.in the May 4 Worldwide News is encouraging. TIle following letter. written by Alexandra Richards. a deafmember who attends the Hastings,New Zealand . church. is one of themost enlightening descriptions of theplight most deaf persons face .
If we who hear can gras p th eimportance and impact of what shehas so ably writt en. we can lift thed isturbing spell th at obscures ourre lat ionship with thi s im portan tgroup of persons.
Perh aps thi s letter wi ll pro mptthe hearing me mbe rs of God' sC hurch to be more considerate andawa re of the vital need we a ll have tobe accepted and to enjoy the pleasures of warm. frie ndly fellowship.
Read Mrs. Ric hards' revealingletter. We welcome your response.
Dear Mr . Hegvold .
In rep ly to Mr . Michael Snyder 'sarticle in The Worldw ide News ofMonday , May 4. 1request any infor mation you have abou t a prog ramfor the deaf that might be app licablein New Zealand .
I am adv ised that the deaf in NewZealand are taught lipreading andthe reading of body language insteadof sign language , there by making English their first language and not theirsecond language , in contrast to theUnited State s, asdescribed in the arti cle . It is believed that New Zealand ' smethod decreases the isolation fromthe rest of the community.
I am fortunate that I did notbecome deaf un til my earl y tee ns.thereby having the benefit of mybasic edu cation. to which I havesince added. wher e possible.
The art icle sta ted that " the deafgenerally have a reading comprehens ion level of fourth or fifthgrade ... because English is the irsecond language :'
Th at was the only statement thatI conside red inapp licable to me. andto man y ot her deaf adults of myacq uainta nce. man y of whom havehad the ir basic educ ati on as nor mal.hearing people. and have becomedeaf in later life.
As a deaf member, I find one ofmy greatest problems in communicat ing with other people . the atti tude of some th at the y are supe rior .because they are not handicapped,and that the deaf are ment allydefective . It is impossible to condu ct afriendsh ip with th ose who mistakenly believe they are intellectuallysuperior. to the degree that the y areunable to comm unicate on anadult-to-adult level.
They view themselves as parent.and the handicapped per son aschild , and are prepared to be benevolent. if the child gives them thereaction the y expect.
There are many high ly intelligentminds impri soned in handicappedbodies. It is a rare tr eat to meet somewho know this. and who love enoughto give unde rstand ing, acceptanceand tenderness. the sort.of love thatis so outgoing; it seeks to protect .preserve, defend and comfort.
Th ose witho ut those emot ions,act like mindl ess beast s w hen confronted with a handicapped personw ho fails to respond to them in themanner they ex pect.
I hope that there will be morearticles to help educ ate the able
{See DEAF . paqe 11 '
JERUSALEM EXCAVATIONS - Previously assistin g in the excava tionssurrounding the Temple Mount under Binyamin Mazar, AmbassadorCollege now participates in the on-going City of David excavations directed by Yiga l Shiloh, according to Richard Paige, coordinator of theChurch and college volunteers . Of the several excavatton sites , theAmbass ador College and Worldwide Church of God volunteers primari lyworl< in sites " E" and "G," pictured above , [Artwo rl<by Ron Grovel
~"""..3 ~ - :?~ '$1\.
'~. -;i'~~.,. ,\...;,~"'~ ~ ~4 ~ ~""'; ~'-,'t -s'
.' , ,' :
GREEK CULTURE - Membe rs of the Church and co llege Jerusalemexcavation group listen to a tour guide at a Delphi archaeological site inGreece June 26. The group left Gteece by ship, arriving in Israel JUly 1.' Photo bv Sylvie 0 '}/l?nl
FOCUS ON YOUTH
DEANNA SCHOWBEST ALL·AROUND FOR BLACK AND WHITE
BEST NATURE (COLOR) : DOMINICK M. fUR LANDBEST ALL ·AROUND FOR COLOR
1981 YOUPHOTOGRAPHY CONTEST FINALS
CONTEST JUDGES - Memb ers of he phot ographic. edito rial andgraphi c staffs of the Work 's publi cations ponder subm issions in theannual Yo uth Opportunities United pho to contest July 2. Seated , from left :Roland Rees, Sheila Graham , Nathan Faulkner, Minette Smith and r amHanson . Standing , from left : Scott Smith , Randall Cole and Mike Hale . WNmanaging editor Dexter H. Faulkner also participated. [Photo by MichaelSnyder]
PASAD ENA - Dominick M.Furlano of Par sippan y, N .J .. captured th e best all-around coloraward. and Deann a Schow won thebest all-around black and whiteaward in the Youth OpportunitiesUnited (YOU) photo contes t jud ging here Jul y 2 and 3.
Th e entries, which had to be postmarked June 15 or earlier, wereevaluated by staff members fromth e Work's Photographic ServicesDep artmen t, The WorldwideNews. The Good Ne ws. Youth8 la nd The Plain Truth .
Fort y-three awards were postedby the nine-member judgi ng staff." We had a difficult time dete rm ining which were the best photos,"said WN associate editor Tom Hanson, who previousl y served as a
World wide News photographer.
Composition improves
" T he qu ality of composition wasmuch impr oved over last year ,"added Roland Rees, a photograph erwho shoots man y of th e photosappearing in th e Work 's publications. " T he black and white entrieswere very strong."
Mr. Rees noted that many entriesdid not place becau se they were entered in the wron g categories.
Tbewinners
The first-. second- and th irdplace winners in the 14 categoriesare listed below in the order th eyplaced .
Best human interest (co lor) : Ter ry L.Coo per, 20, Tu cson ; Phil Stea-
gall. 19. Tu cson ; and Barr y S .E.Smith. 12. Geraldt on. Ont. Blackand white: Aldis Strautins, 14,Broomfield, Colo.
Best nature(color): Dominick M .Furlano, 18. Parsippan y. N.J .; Darlene Weppler, 18. Vancouver , B.C. ;and Te rry L. Cooper. Tu cson . Blackand whit e: Dominick M . Furlan o;Parsippany , N.J .; Brad Plumle e . 20 .Topeka , Kan.; and Rhonda Mullins .13. Southfield. Mich .
Most humorous (color) : DavidFrey. 19, Mira Lorna, Calif.; Richard Dove, 19,530 Angel o. Te x.: andDarlene Weppler, Vancouver. B.C.Black and white : Norman Baugher.16, Gladewate r, Te x.; Mike Bed·ford, 19. Butler , N.J. ; and Domi nick M. Furlano, Pars ippany, N .J .
Most unu sual (color) : BryanJohnson, 17, Lincoln , Ne b.: RonHiebert . 17, Winnipeg, Man.: andDomin ick M. Furlano, Parsippan y.N .J. Black and white : Mike Bed·ford , Butler . N.J. ; and Barry J . Stahl,Acme , Pa .
Best portrait (co lor) : Te rry L.Coo per. Tucs on; J'Non Hamilton.18. Lubbock. Tex .: and David Ott o.18, Council Bluffs. Iowa. Black andwhite : Rhonda Mullin s. South field ,Mich .; Aldi s Str au tins, Broomfield .Co lo.: and Ron Hiebert . Winnipeg.Man.
Best act ion (color) : Phi l Steagall.Tucson ; Ric hard Dove. San Angelo.Tex .: and David Frey, Mir a Lorna.Calif. Black and white : Ald is Strautins . Broomfield. Co lo.: Ron Hiebert. Winn ipeg. Man.: and JohnBearse. 18 . Ellingt on . Conn .
Ge neral photograph (co lor) : Terry Coope r. Tu cson; Paul Ja y, 16 ,Grove Hill , Ala.: and J ohn Bearse,Elling ton, Conn. Black and white:Deanna Schow . 17, Port Orchard,Wash.; J 'Non Hamilton. Lubbock.Tex .: and Ron Hiebert , Winnipeg .Man .
BEST PORTRAIT (COLOR) : TERRY L. COOPER
MOST HUMOROUS (B&W) : NORMAN BAUGHER
BEST GENERAL PHOTOGRAPH (B&W):
BEST HUMAN INTEREST lCOLOR): TERRY L. COOPER MIKE BEDFORD
ALDIS STRAUTINS
BEST ACTION (COLORI: PHIL STEAGALL
INTERNATIONALNIGHT - Pictured above are two of the more than 300 bre thren who attended the 'f:/ashington.D.C., church's internat ional night social May 30. (See " Church Act ivit ies, to this page.)
Monday , July 13, 1981
members and their guests enjoyed a buf fet champagne breakfast. Toastmasterwas J im Brandenbu rg . The them e was" From Sea Even Unto Sea. " with boththe tabletopics and speeches highlighting the regional diversity of Canad a. BobNorman, John Emer y. Frank Racicot.Ar nie Busc~ and Ken Armstrong spokeon their respective regions of the country . The meet ing was evaluated by Den nis Wheatcroft. pastor of the Didsbur yand Red Deer . Alt a.• churches. Th eoccasion concluded with a present at ionto pasto r Nei l Ear leand his wife Susan ofsilver ch amp agne glasses and a bott le ofFrench champagne. S . Kitt .
Members of the CHICAGO, III .,WEST and NORTHWrsr Spokesmanclubs met May 31 for a gala dinner andgradu ation ceremo nies. Grad uates included Ralph Hla vin. Joseph Kolodziej .Joseph P. Waitz, Herb Kim mel. BrianGerfin, l uis Ferrer. Charles Latimer,Robe rt Briggs. Joseph Heck and RobertKuhne. Cl ub presidents . Mr. Waitz andMr . Ferrer, presented gifts on behalf oftheir clubs to di rectors Roy Hollada y.Mike Grovek and Lowell Foster . Jos~phP. Wailz .
T he C1JM BERl..AND, Md.• Spokesman C lub had its first ladies ' nigh t May3 I . Wi ves and guests were intr odu ced bysergeant at arms James Athey, and Donna Beitzel gave each a corsage . The topics session was presented by Stuart C uppett . and toastmaste r Ra ndy Beatty prese n ted th e five speakers . CarolynRaiM.J.
ladies' night for the GREENs,..BORO, N.C., Spokesman Club tookplace Jun e I. Following Cocktails andd inner . dir ector Dan Or ban presented agrad uat ion certificate to Fred Wilson .Bob Leag ue spoke briefly on achievi ngmore by allowing God to work in .us.Vicki Han.
Th e HARRISB URG, Pa .•SpokesmanClub had its grad uation meeting andlad ies' breakfast May 3 I . The speakerswere Tom Diemert. Bill Drayton. Carl
(SM CHURCH NEWS. pav- 9)
EVERYONE'S A WINNER - Jamie Leaver (left) finishes firs t in the5O-yard dash at the Audito rium A.M. church picni c on the Ambassa dorCollege ca mpus June 28 . Chr istine Horch ak (r ight) was second. All parti cipants recei ved ribbons. (See "Church Activitie s," th is page.) [Photoby Hal Finch}
The ATH ENS and GAINESVILLE.·Ga.• Ladies ' and Spo kesma n clu bs had agrad uat ion dinner May 31. Mem bersa nd guests d in ed and the n hea rdspeec hes from the new club gradu ates.Grant Redd ig.
The BELLE VERNO N, Pa:, Spokesman Cl ub had an informa l ladies' nigh tJune 10. Af te r tabletopics wen: pre.sented by Gary Lamm. the men and theirguests feasted on pizza, beer and softdrink s. Toastm aste r Don Lam m introduced Mark Hard way, Ti m Nelson.Dave S ta irs. Kerr y Rober ts and BruceJohns ton as speakers. Pastor DaveJoh nson prese nted grad uatio n cenificates to Geo rge S ha rp and Blan eySproul. Ma rk Hard way .
T he com bined CALG ARY, Alta .,NORTH Spokesman clubs enjo yed theirfinal meeting of the season May 24. Club
tional Night attr acted a record att endance of 320 people May 30. Thirtycountries were represented by tab le dec oratio ns and flags. Families sam pledhors d'oe uvres from Mexico and G reecebefore viewing The Work Around theWorld slide presentation. with comments by pasto r Ric hard Frankel. AGree k dinner was served by the YOU .T he grand finale came from Isaac C ummings and the young contestants heinterviewed in the ch ildr en's international costume contest. Ka.hy O'Neal .
Twent y-e ight W ASHI NGTO N,D.C. . breth ren went on the church's second an nual deep-sea fishing tr ip May 30-,The gro up chartered the Captain StaceyI V and traveled 50 mi les off the coast ofMorehead City . N.C. W illiam Tisdalebrough t home 12 fish and Rose Monroe10 fish . All together 118 fish werecaught for a total of 370 pounds . Carrolyn Tho mas .
- CLUBMEETINGS-
FRENCH YOUTHS - A group of Pari s tee nage rs and members pause at the entrance to the German Office inBonn, West Germa ny, during a visit to several German citi es Ma y 28 to 31. (See "Youth Activities: ' page g.)(Phot o by Chris Wilson]
the cabi net was const ructed by LeoPich e . M r. Howland was bor n inEngland and emigrated to Canada in1888 . He and his wife Ag nes live inT hunder Bay . John P. Langis .
Mr . and Mrs. Walter John son wereguests or honor at a po-luck luncheonafte r Sa bbat h serv ices 10 WACO, Tex..Jun e 13. Pastor Harold Rhodes welcomed the John sons, who recentl y t ransferred to Texas from Vancouver . B.C. .where they served God's Worle for 13years . Jo Gail Fry.
TlJ,eW ASHI NGTON. D.C.. Interna-
The four churches in TAS MAN IAjoined for aco mbined service and familyeven ing May 30 in Launceston. Au str alia.Services consisted ofsplit sermons byministers D'arcy Watso n and Alan Deanon the family and mar riage. followed bythe Young Ambassado rs Feast film .Afte r a potluck dinner. the 233 brethrenenjoyed a half hour of entertainme nt.games for the ch ildre n and a dance. Th efollowing day the YOU had a gettoge ther . Th e day star ted with roller skating. followed by a barbec ue lunchand sports in the afternoon. Mandy Attwood .
C harles Howland , 95, oldest membe rof the TH UNDER BAY, Ont.. churc h,was honored by the brethren there. Pentecost . J une 7. As a trib ute to Mr. Howland's lifelo ng career on the railroad . hewas presented with a cake in the shape ofa t rain engine, made by Polly S itch and awall ca binet ornamented with stainedglass in the form of a steam eng ine. JanLinehan did the stai ned-glass work. and
The WORLDWIDE NEWS
projec t for God 's Work Jun e 14. Member Don S myt he obtain ed a commercialpermit to cu t wood in an area of the BlueMoun tains devasta ted by beetles . Jo hnOaniels and his son Joe. a local elder.bo th expe r ienced woods men , felledmore than 150 trees. Cre ws of chai n-sawoperators sectioned the logs. and cre wsof loaders filled almost 20 tr ucks withwood: A forest ranger was so imp ressedwith the or derly operat ion th at heoffered the members an additional permit for 20 cords at no ext ra cost . Wivesprovided a potluck dinne r. Rex S exton.
The P EORI A. III .• congregation haditss ummerpicnic J une 14at Jub illeCollege State Park . Th e day was packedwith act ivit ies. includ ing a hike for theyouths. games for the younger ch ildren ,volleyball and softball. At noon a potluckmeal was served . Myrna Davison.
Don Lawso n. pasto r of the PITTSBU RGH, Pa.. EAST and W FST ch urches. presented assoc iate pastor Ray lisman and his wife Kath y with a going away presen t May 30. T he occasion wasa box lunc h for bot h chu rches followingcomb ined Sabbath services. Th e Lismanfamily is being t ransferred to the Bethlehem . Pa.•church. Frank Lewand owski.
A group of 20 P l YMO lITH andother sout hwes t Eng land bret hren. ledby pasto r John Jewell. headed for Fran ceMay 24 on the ferry Armortque for aneig ht -da y camping tr ip . The part ycamped overnight at RoscotTafte r a seven-hou r crossing. The following da y thegroup made a journey to Trebe urden onthe Britt any Corniche. the Granite RoseCoas t. where ca mp was set up . Act ivit iesinclu ded volleyball on the beach . s..... immingoa t reasure hun t. c1itTand count rywalks, charades and trip s to differe ntpart s of the surround ing count ry. O n theSab bat h. a morn ing service took place inone of the la rger tents. .... here everyonelistened 10 a taped Bible study of James Ib~ Herber t w. Armstr ong . The grou p.... ;I.~ then d ivided into a ladies' learn and arnen", learn for a quiz of the Bible st udy .COW l Jones,
tia n officiated at morning services. and apotluck was enjo yed at noon . Aft er se rvices the Ellen s invited Mr . and Mrs .Apa rtian and the deac ons and elders totheir home for hambu rgers. trimmingsand wine. Kenneth D. Collinsworth.
The PASADEN A AUDITORIUMA.M. church enjoyed a fun-filled picnicJune 28. Those attending feasted onfried chicke n provided by the Ambassador College St ude nt Center and a varietyof homemad e desser ts made by thewomen.
T he high light of the day was the preteen track and field meet . The pre-teenswere sepa rated into three age gro ups for50-, !OO-and 300-ya rd races and also thelong jump. All parti cipan ts received atleas t one rib bon for their participation .Other act ivit ies inclu ded volleyball.swimming . horseshoes and various other
- garne s. John Wilson.T hirty- five men and tee ns from the
PASCO, Wash.• chur ch cut more than30 cord s of firewood as a fund-rai sing
bined picnic May 3 I at Lewisville l akePark . More than 300 brethren part icipated in horses hoes. volleyball . soft ball.tag football . soccer . dom inoes and cards.A potl uck lunch was served . T he chil dren part icipated in sack races. th reelegged races . broom races. a pape r-airplane contest. football toss and cake walk . An ad ult and a ch ildren 's tu g-ofwar took place. Boati ng and swimm ingwere also enjoyed . Michael Wilh ite .
The DENISO N. Tex.. church mar kedits seventh anniversary May 30 with afestiv e celebration . A fun and talentshow got underway afte r sundown, withFloyd Spea rs as MC. Th e Ladies' C luband YO U cont ributed comic skits. songsand inst rumentals. Spec ial guest perfor ma nces were given by Tony Wh ite on th epiano. and by Mu rdock G ibbs. a pro fessional mu sician and entertainer . T ributewas paidjo Maggi e Brown. who is near ing her 94th birthd ay. Farewell recogni tion was give n to Lee and Louise Alley.who are moving . and to local elde r CarlCarm icha el and his wife Ma ry. who willbemoving to the T yler. Tex .• area . M issBrown. the Alleys and the Carmichaelsreceived girts of apprecia tion from thebrethren . After a short intermi ssion dur ing which cakes baked and dec orated byMr s. Ca rmichael were served . the bre th ren enjoyed a dance . Linda SummersDuncan.
A combined picnic for the EN ID andOKl.A HO MA ' CITY . Okl a.• churchestook place at Rom an Nose St ate ParkMay 31. T he day began with a golf tour nament. followed bv a buffet noon meal.After ward the chiidren played potatoross. catch ball and tug-of-war. while theadults had a raw-egg thr ow. In the evening the brethren enjoyed a hamburge rfry and a sing-along . M any of the chil dren remaine d at the park for a .... eel ofcamp condu cted by pa-te r Arnold Ctauson. Unda stan aoo
Evangelis t Drear .vparu an spoke toabout 400 \ 10 "\ RO[ and .-\LEX.-\"\ DRI.-\. LL brethren on Pentecost. June7. Pastor Briscoe Ellett I I and \ h ...vpar-
CHURCHACTIVITIES
Eig ht men from BELL E VERNO N,Pa.• took part in a work party June 14 toserve Valera Brown. a widow in the:area.Th e men replaced a broken sewer lineand rebuilt a sto ne wall. Afte r the work .Mrs. Brown provided food for everyone.Mark Hard way.
D UCa , Cam.• bret hren bid farewellto th ree of th eir member s after servicesJu ne 13. Rich ard and An ne Ge rchak andMildred Kutzne r moved to Texas. Thatevening pastor Marc Sega ll conductedthe first in a series of marriage semi nars .T he following day, the church enjoyed apotl uck picn ic and played soft ball. TomAlexander , ,
T he DAL LAS. Tex .• NORT H andSOUTH ch urches had their ann ual com-
LOCAL CHURCH NEWS8
WOODCUTTING - Pasco,Wash., members cut and load firewood onto trucks in the Blue Mountains in Oreg onJune 14 as a fund raiser for God 's Work . (See "Church Activities," page 8.)
CLUB GRADUATES - Top photo: Chicago, III., Wast Spokesman Clubgraduates (trom left) Ralph Hlavin . Joseph Kolodziej and Joseph Waitzpose at graduation ceremonies May 31. Pictured below are ChicagoNorthwest graduates Herb Kimmel, Brian Gerfin , Luis Ferrer, CharlesLatimer, Robert Briggs, Joseph Heck and Robert Kuhne . (See " ClubMeetings," page 8.)
9
logne and Duesse ldor f. Wes t Ger many.Wolfgang T homsen . YO U repr esentstive in the German area, organized theact ivities and made lodging arrangemen ts with the Bonn brethren . Sevenoffice staff members took a condensedlanguage course in French to make communication easie r. On the Sabbath Mr.Kneller gave a sermo n in English. wit hsimulta neous trans lat ions into Frenc hand Ge rman. to the comb ined Duesseldorf and Bonn churches. Refreshm entswere served aft er services, and then theFrench and Ge rman YOU took a walkthr ough a Duesseldorf "par k. ElainePatapoff.
T he theme for the FLINT. Mich.,young peoples ' program May 30 was"Come as a Child ." Ron G uizado int roduced the flute, piano and organ solos,violin du els and singing groups . DennisPine entertained as 8 clown. Mr . andMrs .Tom Moody set up the ref reshme nttable. Joann W"itd~ad.
A VQ..U d ist rict tale nt contest tookplace in MONTGOMERY. Ala., May30 . Ci ndy Underw ood captured firstplace in the senior division. and Ti naT hom pson took second place. In the junior division. Mic helle Darrow placedfirst . T he YO U sold refresh ments . Thedist ric t tr ack and field meet took placethe next day at Tr oy State Univers ity .First place went to Hun tsville. Ala ., withBirm ingham. Ala., tak ing second . DonMoss.
NASSAU. Bahamas , YES membe rsenjoyed a part y given by Janice Matherand the ladies of last year's Women'sClub May 31. More than 30 childre nwere feted with goodies. various gar- -sand ca rtoo ns. Piano music was providedby Naom i l ockhar t. Games were super·vised by Betty Robinson . Pat Curlingand Kathy Moss. Ed Robin son andKingsley Mather-were the project or per sonnel. Kathy Moss.
The NORT H PLATTE and GRAN DIS LAND. Neb .• YOU had their secondannual YOU banq uet June 7. YO Ucoordinator Don Hooser presided . andthe program followedaSpokesman Clubformat with th ree speeches . tablet opicsand secretarial and treasur y repo rts . In agag-gift section two graduate YO Umembers from each chur ch gave giftsthat fit th e individuals. Flowers were gi...•en to the graduating YO U and highschool youths. Kale Anderson.
The ROANOK E. Va.•church was wellrepresented at the YO U dis trict weekend in Bristol . Va.• May 30 and 31.Breth ren from five states converged forthe act ivities.which began witAserviceson the Sabbat h. A combined choir performed special music . After a break fordinner. eight YOU teams participat ed ina Bible bowl. Th e Roanoke team . consisting of John Lanum. J ulia Lanum .Jeff Lance and ca ptain Belinda Reed .placed first. A YO U talent show beganafte r the Sabbath . Belinda Reed placedfirst in the senior level. and Juli a Lanumplaced second in the junior level. T heYO U enjoyed a dance afterward.
Th e dist rict 21 t rack and field meettook place the next morn ing. Bluefield.W. Va. , placed first; Lenoir. N.C.. wassecond: and Roanoke third. JeffLance wasnamed the outstanding junior boy in themeet. Benn y Lance. C lyde Lance: JeffLance. Mac Orr . Nira Einhellig. T royWh ite, Karen S haw and Allan Shaw willgo to the regional meet. Others fromRoanoke who took part in the meet
The BIG SANDY and TYLER. Tex..YO U all-spor ts banquet took place May28 in the Ambassador College dininghall. Joh n Th omas and his kitc hen crewprepa red a " Buck' s" ( Buck Hammer)barbec ue. Pastor Don Ward was maste rof ceremonies. YOU President ForrestWorthen gave the opening speec h. PeteKendall. a YOU parent, exp ressed hisfec:Jings of YO U as one big famil y. KeithPayne. coac h of the bas ketba ll A team .presen ted awards to Daniel Warre n,For rest Wor then and Tim S hipman, andWayne Weese. coac h of the B team. pr esented award s to C huck Dickin son.JohnSnyder and Vern on Sc hurte r.
Girl s basketball coach Per ry Worth engave awards to Tonya Kiss inger . MarionFisk and Lorna A. S mith; gi rls volleyba llcoaches Larr y Haworth and Ivime Allenhonored Beck y Allen . Janet Black ~ndRuthie Barrett: cheerlead ing A coac hJolindaJenkin s gave awards to Lisa Roe.Jana W ynn and Cha rlene Dickinson;cheerlead ing B coach Tat Tomes honored JoAnn Rogers. Elizabeth Dickerson and Marion Fisk.
T rack coach J ohn W ar ren ga veawards to Tim Shipman . lisa Roe. Forrest Worthen and Ton ya Kissing er ;bowling coach John War ren honoredJohn Snyder. Toni Meadville. Jesse AI·len and Sarah Worth en. Members of theyear were Forrest Wor then and Cha rlene Dickin son. In closing. C harleneDickin son read a poe m written by AIvahPyle ent itled "On to Amari llo."
BONN, West Ge rma ny. brethre nplayed host to a group of 29 Pari s,Fra nce. teen ager s and membe rs May 28to 31. Unde r the supe r...ision of SamKneller . pastor of the church in Paris.the group spent an extended weekend in
YOUTHACTIVITIES
Forty-seven paren ts and ch ildr en ofthe PASCO, Wash ., chur ch enjoyed afamil y night at a roller ri nk J une 15.Brandt Stein won Ihe limbo contes t, and 'in red Iight-green light Ed Oertel andl ack Elder tied for fErStplace in the:adultdivision. and Sh ilowe Nel son and Derek .Cob b won the youth division . CarolynGemmill . .
Members oftheSYDNEY. Australia,NORTH church enjoyed a morni ng ofroller-skating May 17 at a ri nk bookedexclusively for Church members. More:than 140 skaters of all ages att ended.Pauline Burman .
SPORTS
7 at the: home of pastor Paul Kieffer.Steaks were grilled outdoors . and thenan organizational meeti ng took place .Charles B. Edwards.
MANCHFSfER., Engla nd. UnitedSingles played host to a Bible study forsing les from the Liverpool. Sto ke-onT ren t and Lancaster. Engla nd. churchesMay 30. Min ister David Si lcox spoke onthe history of th e C hurch of God . N inetee n of the group enjoyed a meal at anearby restaurant and concluded theevenin g listenin g to record s at the homeof Pat Brown . Derek Th omas.
The first meeting of the FAYETTEVILLE, N.C.. and FLORENCE, S.C..Singl es ' Acti vity G roup took place Jun e
SINGLESSCENE
The WORLDWIDE NEWS
Th ey were seated at tables decorat edwith autumn leaves and red servieues.and t he mod ified speec h club com menced . The top ics sess ion was followedby the speech session. As one of thespea kers told how fortu nate it 'was tohave elect ric ity , a power failure occ urredin the hall . Af te r a short evaluation bypastor Andr e: van Belku m, the groupenjoyed a buffet supper. Th e eveningconcluded with a film. Stuart Ma~Don
ald .The Young at Heart club of MIAMI.
Fla., met at the home of Mr . and Mr s.Raymond Johnson May 30 for a potlu ckdinn er . followed by a slide presentationof various acti vities of the church duringits ea rly years . Door prizes were given .Sh;r/~yS~gall.
The Golden Age Club of SALEM,Ore:.•had its big event of the year Ju ne 14
_.~oQWacdf"C5UUtnlnt . At·ler ill
cate red prime rib dinner, ta ble gameswere set up and enjoyed by some , whi leothers feJlowsh ipped . Jani u Young.
ner contes t. Berrie Hoes.Th e VICfORIA. B.C.• Spo kesman
Club had its final ladie.s• meeting May24. Topics were led by Mike Jodrell, andboth speakers' cups were won by TedSh aw.Th e Most Helpful Evalu ation wasgiven by Peter Cro mpton. Th e meet ingwas followed by a cocktail hour and ameal . Th e evening ended with dancing .Peter Crompton.
T he Women's Club of WACO, Tex.,met May 26 at the home of Marjori eHill . Each person gavea brie f accou nt ofher back gro und . Aft er the c roup discussed club plans. Joyce Cam eron gave areport about a recen t YOU act ivityweek end .
On J une 16the club met again in Mrs .HiII's home. Future meetings were discussed, and Mrs. Hill reviewed a newspape r column of cur rent inte rest. Jo GailFry .
Th e WHEEUNG, W.Va., S pokesman Club had its final meeting of theclub year at the home of Shorty and Patty Fuessel May 17. The setting was out doors. and the meal included a salad bar ,stea ks and ice-cream sunda e bars andwas planned and prepared by Mr . Fuessel and several others. President BobW illiams, Vice President Ron Kennedy,secretary Jim Kocher and treas urer DonPickenpaugh delivered speeches . Se rgea nt at arms Dave Fish cond uctedta bletopics. and Richard East hom wastoastmaster. Jim Kocher.
SENIORACTIVITIES
Sen ior citizen s in LAKE OF THEOZARKS, Mo., were honored June 6.After the sermon on respecting theelderly. a dinner was served . Pastor JimKissee drew plans for a food sculpture ofa farm scene with a gingerbread farmhouse , a graham.crac ker outhouse, a pas.ture made from potato salad covered~i l h shred~ed wheat . w~i1es or.cli"ickin<lruniSticks:orocromrees"":acarrot fence and many oth er crea tive items.Several ladies worked hard to make thedisplay . Mark Kitchen painted a bac kdrop for the food picture. Mr . Kisseeread br ief anecd otes from the senior citizens'lives, and ch ildhood pictu res were:posted on a "Gu ess W ho" bulletin board .T he room was decor ated with art ifac tsand antiq ues belonging to those honored .Donna Robert s.
JOHANNESBURG. South Africa.senior cit izens enjoyed a senior cit izens'evening May 17 sponsored by the YO U.
Monday, July 13 , 1981
(Continued 'rom page B)Rumbaugh. Don T race and GerryWeac hte r. T hose grad uat ing wereC harles Arm str ong. Mr . Rumbaugh andMr. Weacht er. Tom S eltzer.
The KINGSTON~MITHS FALLS.On t. , S pokesma n Club celebrated itsthird annual gala May 3 1. Th e eveningsta rted with a buffet dinner , followed byta bletop ics . A fter a short br eak .speec hes were give n. Brethren enjoyed adance that was the finale of the evening.Bonni~ Goddard.
The LAUREL. Del. , Women' s andSpokesman clubs had a combi ned meeting following a potl uck din ner May 30 .S pokesm an Cl ub Presi dent Bobby C ulppresided over the first half along withthe tabletopics hostess Barbara C ulpand topicsm aster Mike Larrimor e. JanetFra nk was hostess for the second half.S peeches wer e given by Beth Wall ace.Sharon Figgs. Edward White and Mart yRu tter . Evalua tors were Bobbie Rutter,Patri cia Larrimore . Don Mc Coy andBarr y Frank . Mini ster Arnold Hamptonpresented cert ificates to Jim Melvin andCaro ll Larri more: for the: accomplishments they mad e during the dub year .Ce rt ificates of merit wen t to grad uat ingmember Mar ty Rutter and past graduates Bill Wallace and Mr . Cul p. Barbara Culp.
T he Ambassador Spo kesman Cl ub ofMI AM I. Fla., met May 31 for grad uation exercises. Duri ng the combinedSpokesman a nd l eade rsh ip cl ubs 'ladies ' night d inner meet ing, ce rt ificatesof com pletion were awarded to BobMcC urdy, Maur ice Smith and Rud olphVasquez . Other speakers were Jam esSt ewart , Ron Depico. Allan Jon es andLuciano C herin. ijo th clubs joined inpresen ting minister AI Kersh a with ananswering service mac hine. after whichMr . Kersha concluded the meeting witha lecture on growth and change. LouellaS. Jones. ,
The MONTREAL, Que., EASTLadies' , Spo kesman and Graduate clubsmet for th eir annual end-of-th e-year luncheon May 28. The meal consisted ofsoup, salad...aruLn aL pa rrp cS1D Tjlbl~ .
topics were present ed by Mrs . F. Cel kaand Sal Di-Tr apan i. All the: speakerswere me mbers of the Grad uate Club andincluded Lee: Marcellus, Edwin Wojic:chowski, Alex Evodias and G reg Fishe:r.E.A . Gou .
A kite-flying contes t was sponsoredby the RIOIMOND. Va., Spok esmanClub May 31. Th irt y people at tendedthe activity, which star ted with a nooncoo kout of hot dogs and hamburgers.Each part icipan t rece ived an award forhis kite . Aft erward the chi ldren enjoyedraces and tossing water balloons. ChipBrockmeier,
The ROCHESTER , N .Y., Spokesman Club was host to the Buffalo andSyracuse. N .Y., clu bs May 31 as 165club me mbe rs and guests a tt ended thegr aduat ion nigh t . Direct ors Dave Pack ,C hris Beam and Tom Melear were pre sented gifts for dir ect ing th e act ivit ies ofthe club year. Mr. Pack in trod uced thegraduates: David Byers, Ste ve Estabrook , William Koehn . Conrad S uchars ki , Jake Ha nnold , Ihor Kulbida andHans Susstrunk . Jake Hannold .
The Manasota Women of Tomorrowclub of ST. P ET ERSB URG, Fla.• metJune 16 at the home of S ue Oberm ei r.Jackie Duray is the new presid ent , andMrs. Obermeit is the v ice preside nt . Alunch was served after the businessmeet ing. Each me mber brought severalideas to share in the discu ssion on bein g agood neigh bor . Alia Porterfi eld.
Th e SU RRE Y. B.C .. SpokesmanClub had its final meet ing May 31 witha combined gradua tion and ladies' nightba nquet. To pics mast er was Ge or geScott. Dan Hope, clu b director in theAbbotsford. B.C. . area. cond ucted thefirst half of the meeting. Toast masterRon Bailey int rod uced the grad uati ngspeake rs: Paul Famon . James l udvigson. Bill Wilkie and C harles Speck. Pastor C harles Bryce commented on thefinal porti on of the evening and stressedhow valuable club is to not only the menbut to the whole congregat ion. Mr .Bryce . Mr . Hope and former club direc tor Bill Weed presented the grad uateswith thei r certific ates. James Ludvigson.
The TILB UR G, Ne t h e rla nds .Spo kesman Cl ub had its an nua l lad ies 'nigh t Ju ne 14. Topics were led by DaanVermee r, and Jan Blaauw introducedthe four spea kers. Frans Peeters receivedthe Most Effective Spe ech award. Afte rthe meeting the group ...isited a nearb ycast le. During the din ner. seve ral ladiesoreeented uolirune poems , Th ea de
CHURCH NEWS
ANNOUNCEMENTS10 The WORLDWIDE NEWS Monday, July 13, 1981
ffiRTHANNOUNCEMENT
triple jump and gave Vancou ver fivepoints and the meet.
The Vancou ver-Por tland gi rls' relaylearn won first place o..'erall.lisa Frick y,Linda N ixon . Gene an Stev ens and Genny Wolg hemuth will panicip:uc in tht:nalional meet in Big Sand y. Tex. Anthony Wi//ban ks .
WHEE Lll'iG. W.Va.• youths tookpar t in the YOU dis tr ict 23 .... eekendMa y )0 and) I at Bridgepon and Bellaire, Ohio. Sat urday eveni ng pait orShorty Fucsscl targ eted que stion s toeight learns in a Bible bowl. Wheeling IIsque aked by Wh eeling I 120- 115. Raylisman was Me for the ta lent contest.Finalists incl uded Tammy Tur d in thesenior d ivision and Melanie Fozard inthe junior division . The following morn ing learns participa ted in a track andfield meet. Cha rlesto n. W.Va., won withan overwhelmi ng J 0I7 point lead . Mostvaluable panicipants were Jenni Robens and LC:'Il ie Loew, senior girls: KimDunlap and Laura Disher , junior gir ls;Aubr ey Ba., w n and Eric McBurn ey.senio r boys; and Jerr y Ruddlcsden. j unior boys !Jon Pic~enpaugh and J~ff
p"~iJ rd
TEM PLE, Tex . - Effie Will iams.93 . died April 4 in a nu rsing home .Gravesi de services were conducted atthe W illiams' family private cemeterynear Hempst ead . Tex .• by Ha roldRh odes. pas tor of the Waco. Tex .•church .
TOLEDO. Ohio - Cleo L Fields.71, a mem ber since 1970. died June 8after an exte nded illness. Funeral services were cond ucted by To ledo pastorGeo rge KackQl,.
The widow of Will iam Fields . Mrs.Fields is survived by two daughters,ShiTley Gable and Helen Lock.et. andtwo sons , Donald an.:!Lloyd .
SM ITHS C REEK. Mich . - Brianlee Buntai n. 21.diedunexpccled ly Dec.22. He was involved in a motorcycteaccident two months earlier. Nelson Haas,past or of th e l ansing and Davison ,Mich .•churches. cond ucted funer al services.
Mr. Buntain is survived by his parems, sill.siste rs and two brot hers .
7.-81
pastor of the San Diego church.Mrs. Merhis survived by fourdaugh
ters . Delor is S mith and Romai ne Scottof San Francisco, Cali f.. Ju ne Meneillyof San Diego, and Berth a Stillman ofOceanside.
try. enabli ng t hem to join with theKe nyan b rethren to celebrate theFeast.
In see ing t he t ragedy o f Uganda,it becomes a bu ndantly clear th a t theonly real sol ut ion lies in the comingof Jesus Christ. Ugandans sorelyneed t he message of hope pr~
clai m ed by t his C h urch. A rec e ntA ssoc iat ed Press re po r t e nded withthi s quote f rom a Ugandan : " O nly
. one person can sa ve us ; that person isGod: '
Last name Fa t her's fI rst n am e IMother's firs t name
Mothe, 's mal den ".Ime Cnurch aru or cit)' of resldenc."tate/counl'y
B.by ·s SIUI Ba by's ' irst and mIddle na mes
o Boy DC I,'
Month o t birth Day of m on th Ti me of doilY ~. IW.19htOA.M.Dp.M.
Numbe' of sons you now have- Nu m be r o t daugh ters you now have
bert W. Armsl rong's book Tht' MissingDim t>nsion in Se x was di scu ssed .Refr eshments were served afte rward .Bill Encinosa.
Members of the VANCOUV ER,Was h.• YOU trac k team, under thedirection of coach MikeShuster, part icipated in the districl 82 track meet inSalem . Or e.• May 17. Th e Vancou verPortland. Ore.• team won lhe meet in thepouring rain .
Tee ns from all over the No rlhwes tgalhe red in Pasco. Wash .• May 22 for aYOU weekend . After services a Biblebowl took place. followed by a spaghettifeed and a dance .
Sund ay morning the regiona l meettook place . Wit h the help of GaryBrowning in the relay s and Ken Lewis'first place in the mile run . distr ict 82 Wailied for firs t place with the Seattle.Wash.. dislricl at the qarl of the last::'"CO" ! ' :I ~ r \' \ \ .(:'<' .....~ ., "~q '"'b C',: ;" ' !'o",
MAR IANNA, Pa. - Merle Smith.64 . a longtime member of the Church .died Ap ril 18 after a bout with liver cancer. Funeral serv ices were conducted byDave Johnso n, pastor of the Belle Vernon , Pa., church. Mr. Smit h is surv ivedby his wife Nellie , a daughter. two sonsandseven grandchildren .
Mr . Power had been a member of theC hurch since 1979. Fune ral serviceswere conducted by David She ridan, pastor of the St. John 's church .
Mr . Power is survived by his wifeJud y; three chi ld re n. Sherrie lee.Andrew and All ison; parents. Mr . andMrs . Fred Power; sisters. Janet and linda; and one brother, Chris.
BJRnt ANNOUNCEMENT' THE WClf'U)WID E NIEWS'BOX 111PASADE NA. CAUf•• 91123. U.S .A.
'"I n clud in g newb o'n
We'd like 10lellhe read·ers of The WorldwideNews know about yournew baby as soon as itarrives . J ust fill out thiscoupon and send it to theaddress given as soonas possibl e afte r thebaby is born .
SAN DIEGO. Calif. - C harlotteMeth . 92. died at home in Oceanside,Ca lif.• J une 15. Private graveside services were conducted by No rman S mith.
MO NTV ALE. N.J . - Ellen EmerySt . Jacq ues. 79. d ied Feb. 15 afte r beingco n f ined to a nur sin g home . S heatt ended Sa bbath services twicea monthd urin g the last sill.month s of her life. LesSchmedes. pas tor of the Brook.lynQueens. N.Y., ch urc hes. co nd uctedfuneral services .
M rs. Sl. Jacques is survived by a son,Alfred . and two gra ndchildren.
Uganda(Continued from ~fII 4)
sh ill ings.T he re for e , in orde r fo r the mem·
bers to afford t ravel costs. accommodations a nd food for th e Feast .they would each need to save theim pos sible su m of 10.000 Ugandansh illi ngs o r S1.250 .
So we will make Kenyan shillingsava ilab le to them insid e this co un-
IContinued from P-ve 91included Ma rk Shaw. Belinda Reed.Rebecca Reed . Dale Reed. John Lanumand Pam Hilton . John Bau.
YES studen(s of ST. PETERSBURG. Fla.• had agrad uatio n ceremo nyduring Sabbath services Jun e 6. 1'h irtyselien students from lhree age groupsreceived cert ifica les. Teachers SharonCampbell. Sheila Carell . Jack ie Dur ay.Pat Har r ison, An n liebold. Carol Ru st,Walte r and Wanda Smi lh ,J oe Terry andVickey Zage r received cert ificates ofappreciatio n. Student J ulie Nadeaureceived recognition for perfect attendance during lhe program . The ceremony was conducted by pastor Bob Jonesand Y ES di r-:- -' ~ r SueObermei l. Lavent'L. Vort'i.
TheTA M PA.F1a .• YO Uvi siled Dun ·ed in Beach Ma)' 17 and enjoyed swimming. footba ll and acookoul. On \t ay 201th e w'1ulh, h:1da Bible "Iud\' wher e Her
CHURCH NEWS
CORNER BROO K, NOd. - Anthony Phi lip Power. 33. d ied J une 9 fromhead injuries he received in an automobile accide nt June 7. return ing fromPentecost servkes in St. John 's. Nfld .
Sh.ton Schol'eld, dau'olhler 01 MI and MISThornton Schofield. and Heelot Roybal . son 01 Mrand 1.4•• Jo aep h J Roy ba l.•re happ, 10 .nnoonCeth elf mll' '' ao e July 12 ,n Ihe low llr ga ' de ns ofAm b.s s a d o r Co lle ge , Ge o,g e G e l •. • nAmbassa dOI Co lle oe lac ully memb ... . ofl'icial edIhe ce l llltTlOfl" The bride" 1151... . SlJfl Crow , w. amaId ol honOr. and 11>8 groom '. br ol her , La ....,.Royb.l • • • • bell m.n, Both bod e . nd groom .reAmbassa dor Colt eQf! grad ua te s .nd re side '" LoaAngelea. C.I"
by Vaiden While . pa slor 01 lh. Se dro· Woo le yWa llh ,. chur ch LISaPipp.""er, ai " ... o l lh... bflCle ..... . bflde llmaod. • nd Tony Ma oa l ",a ll be lli ma nThe ClHlp!e ,ellod e in Port Town .end. Wa sh
Mark M,ck e l. on .nd M,c he lle GOOdric h ...e reun,l ed in m.rri.ge June 5 by C.rtlon Green, amin,aletinlhePasaden. Auditorium P,M . churc hThe ...e dding loot< plac e ItI lhe Fine Arta g.rden. re. 0 1 Amb . a sador C o lle g e in Pa lled en.Allend. "" ...el'e K.lhy OuBor!l .nd Don Goodnch.The couple re lOde in PaAdena
Jul , 20 ma rll' 35 y. ... of m. mag. lot P. ....teand Eliza be lh VlllCel1i. o.cs. yOll'we been worlIinghard .1 1he ....... job lor _ 45 ,._. And. Mont._yet i" yo. lile h.aye "cor t.med down a nopportunily 10 help anYOfle .n lIe.d . Heppy"'noiy .....ryl And_" ycor h.y. ",ally_el_.
ANNIVERSARIES
Pr...nl . nd 1(MlIMI membera ol ltle O.llea , Te ll.•ch ulc h .re cordi.lly i nyi l e d to Ihe 251h.n_"....,. ce!ebo.tion of Itle Da lla . churche.Aug . I .1 ttle Hratl Aeoeac:Y Hotel '" 0. .R8QVIlIt reeerv.hooIe by -.dIIIg ,..".. . • ddr .phOnoe nurnbel' and flIIlIIboar01 !idlel. deairec:l (at125 a.ch) 10 Sih... Anl\iy.....ry . Bo...1~32.
o.n... T, II.. 152 4 1 . Chedl.lor t1Cl<ela at>ouId bep. y.ble to S ily., Anni yer• .,y . C.II (214)21g-1280 lot .ddiliOl18I) " I(M'n'14I'on
Chrldtlll .!JI. 7 lhro.gh 13 ll'.,wernng 10 Jelr.yIIllal'ld. GIl .• wt\01SQir. lIllorm.alioft.bov! theYouthF••h Yl I c;tlo;r. p6ea.. conl.cI P'lul NowIen .80 _ II. Jenklnav•• S.C .• 2906$
Mr , and Mra . CeclI LMtgaI:OfI ceIoebr.ted their 25ttl...td6ing anniY.-..ry Jlrne2 1 ill their home. ScmAldi.. local ... of the 0Iat1e1l00\. S .C.• ctlurctl .t_d """,_ lo~. ""'.~aton __ hw
oriQltIalal-tacewecSdiftg«-aaltd"".
IMR. AND MRS. P. VlNCELLI
A1'INOUNCEMENTS
Obituaries
Susan K,Plppenqer. d au'olhlltfofNanc,PIP1I~er
01 L,nden. Wu " . and 001' Plpo~er of Sealt~ ,
Wuh . a nd W" lla m K, Sorb,. . s on 01 P auhne Sorb,,,' L"e .. ~ Wa s ... "''''' ' unl•...., ,~ .... , .."0:,,, "~y )1
MR. AND MRS. M. SPENCERLoo. Jane Mc Alpme . d.ughle r 01 Mr. • nd Mra Le oMcAlp ,ne , and MiChae l Rob ert S pe nc et. lion 01W,nn,lred Sp encer. "'er e un'l ed in mlllrllllge M.,.11 '" Kmgslon . Onl M.lron 01 honor .... s N.n cyOs tra nder Mark MI,.Alp,ne ...a abeal mlln
WULF. a " a n and Jo ,ce ($eeQMl. 01 Portia ""' .Ore ,. gilt. Debora Eden. Ma " 29 . 3.55 p .m.• 1povnd. 14 ... oonce• . no . ~ bo,• • I '.luI
Mr. • nd Mrs Robe<t D. GrilIilh of lhe P.rllM-""'g .W V, . ch ulc h er e ple.sed 10 an no unce Ih.eng a ge men l .nd .ppro.chonQ m"ri.g. 01 thell'a ldea t daughler. Donna Joyc• • 10 Fr.d AlienDemenl , son 01 Mt . • nd Mrll. Fre der ic H . Dem....t 01Ihe Richmond, Ind .• ch urch , The .edding I.pl.nned lorOcI 13 in Mariell •. Oh,o
VETSCH. SIe ve a nd Luell a. or G, .nda Pre",e .Alia ,. '.11ft, Janelle lione . June 2, 1:3 1 p,m . 8Pound 1l6 0un c e . , nO'" 1 boya . 3 glfl.
WEDDINGS
ULSETH. Bill an d An;l. (Ande raon), 01 Br.dtord .Ten n,. gorl. Crysla l Len Ole . June 5. 2:5 1 e m., 1pou ndll 12 lHlnces, no", I boy . I gIrl
VENIE, Eugene and Anne (Dra per) . of Palmer.AIIlI " •. 0111, Sandt. Ann, AII'll 17.3 15 pm.• 9pound. 8 ounces . now ~ boya . 2 11"1.
MR. AND MRS. JOE CAVALLO
~__ f
MR. AND MRS. S. HANSHAW
ENGAGEMENTS
Shetl)' Le. Ma ran and Joaeph Ceyallo . ... e uniled'" ...."i.!JI Ju".. I .. . EyanQeli.1 Ditter Aperl .. nper10nned lhe c...~. [M", R_. aialer ofbnde••a. ""Iron of honor .nd n-a. Cey.l&o .brother of 0I00fII. _alhe bnt man . Shany andJoe ......... All...... Calif.
S MALLWO O D, Hank a nd Sar .h (Lui'll. o f,"" lIt".,lIe . Md . gill , Reb e c ca Elizab alh . Jun . 99.380 101 . 1 pound s 130unces.lilll c hild
rROIKE . Ma." and Te rry (TrevIno) . 01 Pa~d.n • .\Wl. K.II, M,netle , June 2 . 10 09 a 101 . 8 plHlnds 15ounceslirsl c" .1d
SCHWARTZ . Tom and K.I ,e (F llhr), 01 P"nc eGeor ge . BC.• '0111'1. Tamer a Kay . lola, II . • :55 pm .8 pounda I o.tIC'. irS! c htld
SlLLS . Ger a ld.nd Donn. (Sm"h) , of Alb.any, Or. ..boy, Forr lls l 'Iorwood. J une 2, 2 P m . 10 pounds.no ... 2 bo yS. I g,,1
RUGGLESS. D.rwln and J ulo. (Cooper ). Alc .dla .C.", . '01111 . Rebecc. Lynn. ApIII 22. 3 :35 • m . 1pounda 1 ollllCe • . now ~ bOys, 2 gll1a
SEAMAN. Key....nd N.d.a (Grz,n, c) , of Melb ou rne .Aulll' ..... boy . Paul Aahle, . Jun e 13, 2:55 p ,m . 1pound. \4 ~ ounClla . no. 2 boys. 1 glfl
ROWE. Hev,l le .n.... Jenn, (Wllc o_l , 01 S ydne y.AUslr. lta ,g,Il .R . ch.ell,."e ,June 9,l l :.1,m,,1pOllnds50uncea.lirslchlld
ROBERT S . G.crge and Barb. ,. (Wy olt) . 0 1Da yton . OhIO. bOy. MICI'l. eI Allen . J une 5. 8:44pm .. 1 pounda I ounc '. fi," ch' ld
RAM SA Y, J am e l and K.'en (M c Gh .... ) . 0 1f' a..den • . boy. Jo shua Gra nl. May 3, \ 1'5 3 p m.•6 poilnd. 5 ounc e ll. 1il'1I1 child
PRI CE . Clyd e . nd Marlha (Harmon) . 0 1B,mllnoham . Ala . boy. Phll'p Ale..nd .... M.,. 5.3 .5p m.. 10 pounds 2 ou nces. tratchild.
RAOEMACHER. W,lhe lm a nd K.eh , (Malo y). 01Han nov... . W. 1l Ger m. ny . gilt , O. nlela SlIzanne,JUII, 10. 6 p ,m.• 8 pou nda 30uncell. tllt c l'lild
LEIPARO. Mich ••l .nd Conni. (O ••ald) . ojColumbia. t.lo .• g.irt. Lell'" u.n.. M.y 24 . 10:01p .m.• 1 pound. g _a. IrIII;IvId
WcCor. Paul ..... rn.r... (RuIIner) . of PitlsbllfVtl .Pa .• !win bop. Matthew $con and Sha_ Brian ,1:4& p.fII•• and 2 :4g p,m .• 5po<1nda I 0lIflC••nd4pound. 1 ouor>cea. ir.1 chtldJ8l1 .
DEAL, Thom...nd Julia (We.wM), 01 Portland.Ore " bo" . Noa h Seth, M.rch 11. 8:38 p.m.. 1po und . 14 lHlnce •• lillll child
DA~. rOlll .nd LI.. (Wolcotll . of Blue....OY.V•• boy. B.... " J...... . Ma" 1. &:21 p ,III.• 1~1~~•• lIrll cr"ld
COKER . D.rrlck and N.lena (Hone•• l , 01p...dena. boy. J.son Jonalh.n. Juna 13. 1~:08
p.m.• 6 pol.Ind' 3ounc.a.1lr1l child
HOllADAV. Chene. .nd Londa (0e4y). 01 R.podCITy. SD.• gorI . ...... """'.J_2. 12:10 p .m.• 5poooroda4 ouneea. __ 2 gifts.
CARTER. Rl7'j'end Alioc. (SWIl'). 01 MI>OCJ\ . c.li'- .bo , • .kI4'onAmbI'o ... u." ~8. 1,.3 e ,m" 6 pound.I-li~•. now 4 bo" • • 3 gll1a
MILLS. Clay .nd Ren.. (Grenlarl. 01 EI P..o.Te _" girl. AuOy Ce roline . ..... y 21 , 1:27 a.m .• 8pounda 10 0WlC ... lrat ehild
KOPPES. Lloyd W. and Jea" (C.maron). ofCoIumbu'1. Ohio . boy, Slepl'Ien J....... Jun a 10,-lI:20 a.m., 8 poundll 7 ounca• • lIral ch ild
OIno. Don a nd A-U. (Kind.tId), 01 Winnabofo.Te _ . lI'l'I . Sh...., L N . ....y la. 3 ;!W • III • 8 pounda2 "0UIlC&• • I".t child
JONES,SI~ and 0I0b0I'1lh(Ha,g«) , of Boone.N.C ,. girl. T r. c~ M. "'88II, J_ &. 8:55 p .III., 1povnd. II; ounc~, ' rlt child
OHHEUUS . Gary .nd C"'dy (~Iley) . 01 L..VI'QI'. Nev .• girl. C.1Ioe A.mbM . May 6 . 1 1 .101 .8pound. 4 ouor>ce'. now I boy. 2 gil'l.
BYRD . Cecil and Vid,," (Bunon). ol Al)II<fne, fa • .•IJItl . Meranda De...., . Feb . 23. 8 :08 em.• II poundsIJounce'ono_3gn', .
OLSON . Robert.nd EYel"n (Lusb"l . 01 Evltf elt,W.Nt ,. gill. L.",en. Me lin. June 13, 1:58 p ,m" 9pounds I ounc., now 2 gill,
BUI,lP , Ba rr y e nd Kar e" (Browns onl. 0 1Leltl brodQe.Al'a .boy, Cof e yBt.ndf ,May 2'l . 2 ISp ,m.• 5 pound. 10 ,," ounc e • . now 2 boy.
PARKHtLL. Thom...nd Iya (ClUlch er ). DentIOl'l.Te .. . bo y. WlIhm C.IYIII. U.tCh 30. 8 ,48 pm.• 7pound. 8 ouncea. now 2 boy a
PAYNE. Ke, lh .nd O,."na (DICh,n.on). 01 B.gS. ndy, Te" ., boy , Keen.n Cha rles. June 8 . 6 :3 1P,fII , 1 poundll 8 ounc ea . ~fll chIld .
8CE ...... . Russ ell,nd Roe. (So8.e), 01 Phibp.burg,Motll . boy . Cllnl on Runel!. Ma.,. 23. 7 pounds,now' boy. 1 girl
KELLER. Willia m (Bill) an d Eil.an (Cov.), 01Hpwnonton. N J .• g;I'I. San." Michelle (SaAdi) ..... , 2" , g:15 p .m.. 1 pounda 12 ouncaa. Int-..
BARNWELL. J.",.. and Brenda, of M,la n, Teftfl .•boy. O.n~ J.....s. Apnl l ". IOPQUllda 11 ounees.no. 3 boy, . 2 g wls
DOUGLAS. Wllh.m e nd Oi.nn (Dan••l . ofN. ,hy,He . Tenn ,. boy. Wilham Everell II, M.y 23,3 ,53 p .m.• 1 pound... .. lHlncea. ~rs l child
FERTIG. De. n .nd Jayne (Allot) . of Ca lPM. Wyo ,.bo, . Derft De.n. May 2&, .. :30 pm . 1 pounds eounc ea. now 3 bo,s . 3 '01111 .
e"CKFISCH, G,lbert and Deb,. (Bllen). 01 CapeOtt , rde ' lI, MO . boy . David leroy. June 10. 8pounde" o ut>ea• . ec .. 2 boy • .
F UR MAN. Ed •• r d . nd L.u re ( SullolI) . 0 1Trucka YIIle. P • .• '01111. Shen M.e, Jun . 6 . II . m.• 8po unds 3 oun<:e •• lir.1 c hold
ANDRESE N. Jo rgerl a nd Glon. (Ne wpo"l. ofA'b,n.,. . Ore .• bo y. N.el, Er.k . Ma rch 16. 4 30p m.•g '~ poun<l• . now" boy s , I 0"1.
HAND. Ma,o and Ma ..,. J .n. (NY'ol.rd). 01Portl.nd.Ora . boy. Wilh, Eugene. June I~ . 4:45 a .m.• 7pound. 8 lHlnce •. now 3 boy•. 2 gltl.
HICKS. Joel .nd Shelly (h dy ). of Bonnongham.AI• • boy . JMemy c.1eb. Ua, 1'01. 1~ :41 pm.• '01po<Ind. ... ounc., IIrsl child
BIRTHS
NORVELL. B,ll .nd Ren . (C urle ..). 01 Denver.Colo .. girl. Abby Nic olle . Jun e 3. 620 a .m.• 7pound ,14ouncea.ti,stctlild
1r.IOORE. GIl" .nd T.....,. (Whe.I). 01 Com.aM.Onl . g;I'I. Aachel Arnbef. .....y 17. &:43 p .m.• 4pouftd,1 " OURQ8l. ,,-' ctlild
HlRD. Sieve and U on ic:a (Runell). aarrie. Onl .•boy . l..ac Be ni'''''''. Apnl 28 . 1:11 p m.• 1 pounda1 ounce. now 2 boy.
CAASON, M erlin end Rhonda (Sendell) , 01OOyli.... l • • boy . Jeremy loy. J_ S. 12:34 I ,m.•8 pound• . now 2 boys -
Tornado: story ofprotectionMonday, July 13, 1981
The following article describing a tornado IMl struck Ca rdington , Ohio, June 13 is a personalaccount by Mary C. Hedr ick, amember of the Mansfi eld. Ohio.church.
By Mary C. HedrickCARDINGTON, Ohio - It's
ironic that Denni s Diehl [pastor ofthe Mansfield. Ohio. church] hadspoken on having faith in God's protecti on that June 13 Sabbath. Littledid I know how vividly that sennonwouldaffect my lifejust a few hourslater .
My sister and I arrived on tbeoutskirts of our village of Cardington about three hours after services,only to find the roadsblockedoff.
The National Guard told us that atornad o had blown off a few roofs inthe downtown area. I told them welived at the end of town and would beall right . So they said to go on.
As we got closer tothe village, thedevast ation was apparent. Homeswere flattened, trailers blown away,huge trees upr ooted . Confus ion andchaos were everywhere . I knew thatour home must have been in the
direc t path of that tornado.As we rounded the curve leading
10 our house. I saw a sig ht I willnever forget. Our home wasa sbambles, the roof thr ee-quarters gone.the garage a complete wreckand ourmoto r home destroyed. Debr is layeverywhere .
I screamed for my husband Roy,
Deaf(Continued from page 5)
bodied becomeaware ofbow societybas shaped their concepts of thehandicapped, and change their attitudes to the way of outgoing concern . The handicapped have muchto offer; their mere existence givesthe fortunate the opportunity todevelop caring aspects in their character .
The deaf areforced to watch ,listenand leam; this can make them moreaware than those who are not handicapped , but are too busy talking tonotice and be aware of others' lessobvious needs.
Yours faithfully.Mrs . A. Richards
The WORLDWIDE NEWS
unaware that he had gone to a storein a nearby town . God protec ted himtoo. On his way back home he hadseen the double tornado ravagi ngCard ington .
O ur home was badly wrecked ,but our lives were spared. My sisterand I thank almighty God for H isSabbath command. We were at therigh t place at the right lime for theright reason.
We plan torebuildand have appliedfor a disaster loan . President Reaganhas decl ared Cardington a disas terarea .
SUMMER ACADEMICS - Ambassador College guest lecturer KennethC. Hemnann discusses ancient astronomy with senior Gary Foglesongas summer classes bagan June 22, above. Beiow, Gary Antilln lecturesin Acts of the Apostles . [Pbotos by Scott Smith]
Children's Corner
THE THIRD COMMANDMENT"T hou shalt not take the name of the Lord th y God in vain: for the Lord will not
hold him guil tless that taketh His name in vain."
Hidd en below are the words of the Th ird Com mand ment. Can you find tbem ?Beginn ing at START, dr aw as t raight line through eac h word . Make no turn unlessstart ing a new word . Follow the words of the comm andment unti l you reach theEN D square .
__START
rrHOUSHOLHATHOlDHHANSTTHAMNOTHOLIOVUAOAVEAONOVNIMUSTHNKMWILLHAUEGSH 'AI21°F E F 0 HOI NIL MUHAHTNTHRTRWINTAIELANOHAORDLSELNLKEMANENLFNIHHISTFOAYRTHE I LWTHAE LTEKMOEOLATHETAKEHUNTFNIAVORKHHTSELORDTNVNFTAISNSOTHETHODINVTTAHTEANOGYGODINVEMIA
ze
By Vivian Pettijohn
ta ble, " speakin g of names . how aboutsome desse rt, Manl y? And how aboutyou, C hrist- bearer? And what do yousay, Hardw orking Bee? Our desse rt isnamed 'B aked Apples with Raisins.'And gues s what it is? It' s baked appleswith ra isins!" Mother laughed and hereyes twinkled . "Now that 's a fill ingname!"
N ex t mo nth 's sto ry is abou t the FourthCommandment. /fyou haven't a/readymemorized this com mandment, canyo u learn it before then?
God's Commandments
God 's name in a wrong way. Do youknow what I mean ?"
" Well." Mother cont inued whenboth children shook their heads. " if wesay we love God but we don't obe y Him.we're taking His name in vain . In otherwords, we're using God 's name , hutwe're not standi ng in aweof His positionas our Ruler and Boss!"
"T hat' s tru e. children," Dad agreed." We must obey Goo or else we must notsay we love H im or claim to be Hi speople ."
"Now," Mother said, rising from the
A FITTING NAME"Oh, oh!" Mother exclained as she
heard voices at the back door. " Soundslike it' s time for us to start getting din ner "ready for our two hungry menfolks' "
" p addy." Debbie said proudly duringdinner, "T'rn a bee, my name says, "and she made a low buzzing sound ." what does your name and Chris ' namemean?"
" My name - Andre w? It means'manly, ' .. Fa ther answered . " AndC hris' and my middl e name - John means 'God 's grac ious gift.''' Dadturned to C h ris a nd sa id , " N ow,'C hrist-bearer' - tha t's wha t C hris topher mean s."
"B y the way." Dadd y co ntin ued. " wecan even know what God is like by Hisnames!"
" What do you mean. Dadd y?" askedCh ris.
-wsu, for example," Dad ans wered ,"God called Hims elf Elohim - whichmeans one God but more than one person in the God family. And His nameYahveh-Ropheka means He is our healer .He also called Himself El Shaddai ,which mean s almighty God. telling usHe is the source of all power . And thereare other names and title s for God tha ttell us more about Him ."
· ' [' ve heard Tommy say God ·s name .· ·Debbie offered, .. when he stubbed histoe and when his kite got away in thewind . He was really mad. Was he prayin gwhen he said God' s name?"
" No!" Dadd y answered firmly . "Webreak the Third Co mmand ment. takin gGod 's name in vain when we use it likethat ! I'm sure Tommy didn't mean todoit. Hewas probably ju st repeating something he had heard . But it is wrong! Wemust always watch what we say - oreven think - so that we use God' s nameonly with respect and love, remembering how gre at our God is! Let' s be surewe always obey this comm andment thatsays: 'T hou sha lt not take the name ofthe Lord thyGod in vain. forthe Lord willnot hold him guiltle ss that taketh Hisname in vain : ..
"You know . children ." Motheradd ed. " sometimes we break the T hirdCo mmand ment even when we don't use
" Mommy. Mommy! " Debbie calledas she rushed into the house. Whenthe re was no response, she hurriedtoward the sound of the sewingmachine's steady hum .
" Mommy!" Debbie exclaimed againwhen she had her mother's attention," when I was playing with Tamm y nextdoor . she called me a bee! She said myname means a bee. and she asked if I hada stinger! She made me mad!"
"Oh, honey." Mother answered , trying not to laugh . "Don't you rememberthat I have to ld you that your name Deborah - means 'a bee' or 'hardworker' ?"
"Well . uh - .' . Debbi e paused.... thinking. "Yes. I remember now, butthe way Tamm y said it made me mad!Andjust beca use she's a year older thanI am , she t hinks she's so sma rt! Sh e saidnearl y ever ybody's name means something . Is that so? If it is, Mommy. w hatdoes your name mean ?"
" My name - Beth - means 'pl aceor house of God.' And the midd le namethat you andI have - Ann - means'full of grace, merc y and prayer .' "
Mot her put an arm around Deb bie asshe cont inued . "Speakin g of names ,your father and I thought a long timebefore we chose name s for you andC hris. We hoped you'd both like yournames and that they would 'fit' youwhen you got olde r."
"Well." Debbie said , "1 like mine allright . but ... do you know what T ammy's name means? Mayb e I can teaseher !"
" Now , hone y. " Mother scolded ."You must never tease an yone about hisname - or anything else . That isn'tpolite . See how easily you had yourfeelings hun? But we will look up themeaning of Tammy's narne and see if itfits her. Would yo u go get the name sbook, please?" \
"Tamm y - Tammy - " Motherth umb ed thr ough the book of name sthat Debbie hand ed her . " O h, 1 remember now. Tam my is a nickn ame forTh omas ina. And her e's that name. Itmeans ' twin' - the same meanin g as forTh om as, her twin brother. Th ose namesreallyfit them. for they are twins!"
.:.
',0
~,
.:'00o
"-'
""C
I a L.J' t - ::':·1' .. :0';'"1 -r
- -.)
-:
r "C ,)
1: t .,, ,
Monday, July 13, 1981
m:1Jt Uorlb\Uibt j}t\USPasadena, Calif., 91123
eral Herbert W. Armstrong's visitto Bonn in late July, when he willspeak to acombined congregation ofnearly all those attending services inthe German-language area. Members from Holland arc expected toattend, so simultaneous translationsinto the German and Dutch languages are planned.
A four-day ministerial conference with social activities is sched uled in Bonn after Mr. Armstrong'svisit.
In June mail received in the BonnOffice was once again high compared to last year, primarily becauseof "flyer" advertising in Austrianand Swiss magazines and newspapers. Total mail increase for theyear-to-date is 33 percent.
The Klar und Wahr (German Plain Truth) subscription listis now 61,000 - the largest subscriber list since December, 1973.
In the first silt months of the year21,235 new subscribers (a 40 percent increase) have been added .
Jamaica
Caribbean regional director StanBass conducted two public Biblelectures in Kingston. Jamaica. Fifty-seven new people attended on thefirst night and 98 on the secondnight . There are 3,000 Plain Truthsubscribers on the island, so thisrepresents a good response.
The church in Kingston averages135 in attendance each week, and ispastored by Kingsley Mather fromthe Bahamas. with Cha rles Flem ing, assistant pastor resident inKingston.
"We don't expect it to be widespread if it occurs;" he said, "butwe're making contingency plansjust in case." First class mail wouldcontinue to be processed by PostalService supervisors and militarypersonnel, Mr. Shaw added.
Church magazines and the WNwould be delayed, because they are
PASADENA - A threatened mailed second class. The weeklystrike by U.S. postal employees, Pas/or General's Report is mailedwhose contract expires July 20, first class and would be processedcould.. _~ i.s r u pt . delivery -()(- ~T-It# _ ........., re@ularly.~orldwide 1'!t!w~and otherChu~ George McFarland of the Work 'sliterature . saJ.d·EncShaw. supervisor Mail Processing Center said, "If aof the Work s Postal Center . serious situation would occur,
Church members would be notifiedhow to correspond with theChurch."
Canadian brethren are sufferingfrom a nationwide postal strike thatbegan June 29. according to GeorgePatrickson. an assistant to reg ionaldirector Colin Adair . He said theWork now uses a courier service toship material,to the Canadian ministry .
"We have an arrangement to distribute third-tithe checks throughthe ministry should the strike continue," he said.
The Worldwide .News would beshipped in bulk and passed out atservices in Canada if the situationremains unchanged, he reported.
'WN' DISTRIBUTION - Postal Center employee Ruth Salmon works onlabeling The Worldwide News June 30 . Reverse folding the WN cutslabeling time in half. according to supervisor Eric Shaw. [Photo by SCottSmith]
Postal strike threatened;publications face delay
German-speaking Europe
God's Church congregated at fivesites in the German- language areaof Europe for inspiring Pentecostservices. The West German cities ofCelie, Leve rkusen, and Schwetzingen, as well as Switzerland's capital city Zurich, and Salzburg inAustria, were host to services. Artendance increased 1.7 percent from lastyear . Offerings were up 31 percent.
The German-speaking brethrenare eagerly antic ipating Pastor Gen-
Office. The extra copies will boostnewsstand circulation, whichshould in turn increase the current42,200 subscribers.
Good response from reade rs indicates the Work is reaching a qualityreadersh ip throughout the 7,000islands that make up the Philippines.
There are 2.200 brethren in 23congregations in the Philippines.
More than 200 young peopleattended one of five Summer Educational Program camps in thecountry. Two took place on thenorthern island of Luzon, two in theVisayan group of islands and one onMindanao in the south.
PASADENA - Wonder whyyour last two issues of The Worldwide News were folded backwardsand your mailing label appeared onthe back page?
The reverse fold saves the Workboth time and money. according toDexter H . Faulkner, WorldwideNews managing editor.
Labeling time for The WorldwideNews was cut in half last issue, according to Eric Shaw, Postal Centersupervisor, because a more convenient space was designed for labelplacement .
"Under the new layout we areable to run the newspaper throughthe labeling machine the shortdirection making it much easier toset up the machine:' he added.
world events and the Bible for students.
" KBAC will also feature a widevariety of music ," he said, "but wewill strive to reflect the high standards of Ambassador College ."
The WORLDWIDE NEWS
INTERNATICNALDESK~ MAi}~~~~
PAS ADEN A - Preparationsare progressing well for this year'sFeast of Tabernacles, which will beobserved at 84 sites in 45 countries.
A new site ison the historic islandof Malta in the Mediterranean. Itcould be the first Feast there sincethe days of the early apostles, perhaps the first ever.
The island lies between Italy andTunisia. and was formerly one ofBritain's strategic sea gates. Paulwas shipwrecked there on his way toRome as recorded in"Acts 28.
About 160 people from countriesthroughout the Mediterranean area- Greece, Italy and Israel - willassemble in the town of Rabat, withmore than 100 visitors from otherareas of Europe.
Philippines
Income in the Philippinesimproved dramatically in May Witha 43 percent increase over May lastyear . March had been low. but nowthe year-to-date increase is up to20.5 percent.
Plain Truth circulation will .increase from 50,000 to 70,000because of additional financialbacking provided by the Canadian
tor General Herbert W. ArmstrongMay 18, according to faculty adviser Richa rd Ames.
Sophomore James Hargarten,3D,was named by the college administration to head the station underMr. Ames . An experienced broadcaster before coming to Ambassador , Mr. Hargarten said KBAC willfeature a wide variety of programingwhen it resumes fulltime schedulingduring student orientation week.
"We plan to concentrate on news.supplying the college campus with aChurch view of world events," hesaid . While plans for programingare not complete, Mr. Hargartennoted that the station hopes to haveAmbassador College faculty mem bers as regular radio guests to relate
'PLAlN TRUTH' DISPLAY -A new cardboard display (pictured above)for the newsstand Plain Truth is available for dlstnbution , according toBoyd Leeson ,circulation manager for the United States Plain Truth. Morethan 2.000 displays were mailed to church areas, and a large stock isavailable to pastors who request them.
~~;;L~~(JPD A ITEPLACES s .n.EVENTS IN THE WORLDWIDE CHURCH OF GOD
PASADENA - Pastor GeneralHerbert W. Armstrong named evangelist Dean Blackwell pastor of theAuditorium P.M . congregationhere June 26, according to JosephTkach, director of Ministerial Services.
Mr. Tkach, who will continue asthe P.M. congregation's associatepastor with evangelist Ellis LaRavia, announced in June 27 Sabbathservices that the pastor generalreported his decision during an Advisory Council of Elders meeting theprevious day .
Mr. Tkach also said that Mr.Armstrong had named Mr . Blackwell coordinator of the AuditoriumA.M . and Imperial congregations,both on the Ambassador Collegecampus here.
All other ministerial assignmentswill remain the .same. according toMr. Tkach. Robin Webber and JohnBorax will continue - to serve asAuditorium P.M . assistant pastors,while Larry R. Salyer continues aspastor of the Auditorium A.M. congregation with associate pastorsRonald L Howe and Douglas Horchak .
Selmer L. H~old continues asthe Imperial congregation pastor,with associate pastor Curtis May,
Mr. Tkach reported that Mr.Armstrong, who was previouslylisted as the pastor of the Auditorium P.M . congregation, plans tospeak to the P.M. church when he isnot traveling to other church areas.
PASADENA - Ministerial Services here released the following ordinations:
Richard Dunlap was ordained alocal elder on Pentecost by DavidMills, pastor of the Salem. Ore.•church. Also ordained a local elderthat day is William Razor, whoserves the Morehead, Ky., congre-gation. '
Morgan Tovey and Donald Henson Jr"9 were ordained local chu rchelders of the Portland, Ore., Westchurch June 7. Also on Pentecost,Gene Zhome was ordained a localelder by Keith Thomas, pastor of theWaterloo, Iowa, church.
«( «( «(
PASADENA - AmbassadorCollege radio station KBAC willresume full-service broadcastingAug. 18, from the Pasadena campus, following a three-year absence.
Operating with 10 watts of carrier current at 830 kf-lz, KBACbegan broadcasting The WorldTomorrow program featuring Pas-
PASADENA - Calls coming inon the Work' .. Wide Area Telephone Service l WATS] lines haveincreased dramatically since January. according to Richard Rice 9
director of the . Work's Mail Processing Center.
He reported that all calls haveincreased 46 percent since January,and that response to Pastor GeneralHerbert W. Armstrong's new telecasts his increased 243 percent in thesame time period.
Nearly half a million names wereadded to the Work 's literature mailing list by the endof May. reflectinga 140 percent increase over the sameperiod in 1980, he said.
More than 18,000 peoplerequested Mr . Armstrong's bookThe United States and Britain inProphecy . offered by the pasto rgeneral in his semiannual letter toPlain Truth subscribers, Mr. Ricesaid.
Because of an apparent misunderstanding, more than 500 peoplealso requested the nonexisting bookGratis . he added.
«( «( «(
12