Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Carol Wheeler Brumfield, Brazil Missionary 1958-1960

Carol Brumfield

Obituary

1933 - 2012
Carol Beth Wheeler Brumfield died Monday, December 3rd, 2012. Heaven has received a remarkable angel. Carol was born October 31, 1933 to Fred C. and Geraldine Sutton Wheeler in Logan, Utah. She served an LDS mission in Brazil before marrying her sweetheart, Carlie G. Brumfield on January 14, 1967. They were later sealed in the Salt Lake LDS Temple and had three sons.
Carol graduated from BYU as an RN, where she later taught nursing. She dedicated her life to helping others, working as an RN for many years at LDS Hospital in SLC, UT; Women's Hospital in Baton Rouge, LA; and Mountain View Hospital in Payson, UT. She also worked as Community Education Director for Primary Children's Hospital. In her later years, she returned to Brazil on a medical humanitarian mission.
Carol is survived by her three sons Paul (Jennifer) of Spanish Fork; Scott (Jodi) of Santa Clara, UT; Ryan (Sandy) of Ivins, UT; and 12 grandchildren. She is also survived by Brothers Jim (Cathy) Wheeler and Frederick Wheeler of Salt Lake City; and by step-children John (Heidi) Hoop of Broken Arrow, OK; Julie (Greg) Littleton of Tulsa, OK; Lisa (Kevin) Arrington of Cowetta, OK and 12 step-grandchildren. She is preceded in death by her husband and parents.
Funeral services will be held Friday, December 7, 2012 at 11:00 a.m. at the Hawthorne LDS Ward Chapel, 808 East Roosevelt Avenue (1450 South), Salt Lake City. Viewings will be held on Thursday, December 6th from 6pm-8pm at Larkin Mortuary, 260 E. South Temple and on Friday, December 7th from 10am-11am at the Ward. Burial will be in the Salt Lake City Cemetery.

Published in Salt Lake Tribune from December 5 to December 6, 2012 
http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/saltlaketribune/obituary.aspx?n=Carol-Brumfield&pid=161489306#fbLoggedOut

Monday, June 4, 2012

LDS Portuguese-Language Blog.

For your information, Kim and I are both doing Sharing the Gospel Online church-service missions.  Nice to see him after all these years.  Among other things Kim has created facebook pages and googleplaces listings for Brazil Institutes of Religion.  He is now assisting  Richard Robbins, our Sharing the Gospel Online supervisor, launch a Portuguese-language blog.  This is what they do:



"We’ve been working on the new Brazil site on LDS.org .  The main purpose of setting up a blog is to point searches to the Church’s official website for Brazil.  Doing that improves the rankings of the Church’s official site. 

"Getting traffic to the  Portuguese blog is somewhat of a secondary priority.  For those who do visit, we want to have useful and enjoyable content.  Since I [Richard] like to talk about religion and politics, I’ll be writing articles about those subjects as well as others that interest me.  If I put enough blog entries on that site (10-20), it will begin to get some recognition and authority from Google, and I can then pass that authority to the Church’s official sites." 


Richard and Kim's invitation to you Portuguese speakers/writers:
 "You can sign up on this site to blog in Portuguese and help our new Brazil website:

"On your posts, you can link to pages on http://www.lds.org.br.  "


 Click on this link for a sample of a blog entry.

Add your entries, comments, likes, etc.  If you have questions you can contact Richard, sr@ldschurch.org or Kim, kim@therussells.net.

Photos from President Grant Bangerter Era,

Kim Russell sent these photos from our era.

A outra foto é da família Bangerter.  Achei bonitinha a expressão no rosto de Julie! (Não sei o ano)


A foto foi tidada atrás do Jeep da missão (Aug, 1961). 

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Portuguese Immersion Utah Schools Announced

From The Brasulista, 23 May 2012.  Courtesy of Alf Gunn.

New Utah Dual Immersion Program in Portuguese
In view of the importance of Brazil in the global community today and in coming years, Utah School Districts will offer Portuguese dual emersion programs at three elementary schools beginning in the Fall, 2012, . . . IF THEY CAN ENROLL ENOUGH FIRST GRADE STUDENTS IN THE PROGRAM. There is still room for more students in each of the three schools participating.

In the beginning, in 2012, ONLY FIRST GRADERS will be enrolled.  They will progress in coming years.  

Students in the program achieve high proficiency in the immersion language and do well in other standardized tests of English and math administered in English. 

Why Portuguese?  With over 220 million speakers, Portuguese is the seventh most widely spoken language in the world. Because of Brazil’s rapidly expanding economy, many American businesses are eager to hire Portuguese speakers. Children who speak Portuguese can generally understand and learn Spanish with little difficulty.

To enroll, parents should contact Lakeview Elementary in the Provo School District, Parkside Elementary in the Murray School District or rocky Mountain Elementary in the Alpine School District.

Parents are asked to commit to long-term participation in the immersion program, including reading with the child in English 20-30 minutes daily and encouraging the use of Portuguese outside of school.  They also will need to provide transportation to the schools offering the program.

Dual Immersion (already offered in Spanish, Chinese and French) offers a rich bilingual experience for young learners at an age when their minds are developmentally best able to acquire a second language. Instruction is divided between two high quality, creative classrooms: one in English and one Portuguese. Subject matters meet the Utah State Core Curriculum. In a short time the students will speak only in Portuguese during Portuguese class.

For more information:  Utah’s Dual Immersion Website

http://www.schools.utah.gov/curr/dualimmersion

Jaime Leite, Portuguese Dual Immersion Coordinator, jamieleite@gmail.com


Friday, April 6, 2012

Brasulista #143, Brazil Missions Reunion Report

Newsletter of the early Brazilian Missions, #143, April 5, 2012, courtesy of Alfred Gunn


REUNION REPORT

Any report of our reunion last Friday will be inadequate, but I will share some of the news as I observed it. Please excuse me for leaving out many names as I am going by memory and there were some 450 persons coming and going during the event.

Both Elder Claudio R. M. Costa and Elder Stanley Ellis of the Seventy shared not only their love for Brazil and the saints of Brazil, but their marvelous vision for the kingdom of God which has been established and is growing in beauty and faith. I wish all could have been there to be uplifted and feel of the power of their messages to us. They spoke with the spirit and power of General Authorities and both inspired and challenged us.  Elder Costa is President of the Brazil Area since August of 2011, and Sister Margareth Costa was with him at the reunion.

“If you ever wonder if your missionaries ever did any good,” said Elder Costa (my paraphrasing), directing his remarks to Sister Catherine Beitler Humphrey, “I am the fruits of your missionaries.”  He named the two sisters who taught him the gospel when he joined the church at age 28, when Sister and President Beitler were presiding in São Paulo. Elder Costa recognized and appreciated Elmo Turner, present at the reunion, as the president of the Missionary Training Center at São Paulo who hired him many years ago.

Both speakers spoke of Brazil as the “second country” in the Church, behind the USA, in the number of stakes and other markers of growth, and shared marvelous actual stories of the faith of the members. Elder Costa, who was the first mission president in Manaus, told of the early faith-filled efforts of the saints there who made 15-day trips to obtain their temple endowments. The new Manaus Temple will be dedicated in June.

I cannot name all who were in attendance at the reunion, but will note some.  Seen at the luncheon—okay, it was a big feijoada feast—were Sister Geri Bangerter and family members, Nelson and Julie Aidukaitis, President Duke  and Sister Alice Cowley, Elder Larry Y. Wilson, David and Diedre Paulsen, President Tom Jensen, Helio da Rocha Camargo, Jr., President David Beck, and President Wilford Cardon. In the afternoon a big group of Sisters, mostly from the Bangerter era met, I understand, and then Elders from that group and the Cardon group.

In the evening I also saw Gary and Rose Neeleman, President Jerry and Sister Patty Twitchell of the Curitiba Mission.  President Lloyd Hicken (who served his first mission before WWII) met with a good group of his missionaries. Elder Darwin Christenson and Sister Sandy Christenson met with a large group of their missionaries from the Brazil SP North Mission. Ralph and Colleen Sorensen Chipman were there on behalf of the Sorensen family.  President Roger Call and his wife Cheryl were there too.

I know there were others of note, but I could not see or visit with them all. A number of the mission presidents we honored by mention were absent so they could attend their own reunions with their younger missionaries. (See the list of mission presidents below.)

We had in attendance a few of the missionaries who served before World War II, including Wayne Johnson, Barlow Briggs and Lloyd Hicken. As part of our chapel meeting, we were able to pay tribute to them and those who served with them and then went into military service during the war. (See a copy of the tribute below.)

The next super reunion is planned for the Thursday before October General Conference in 2015—3 ½ years from now—so presidents, if possible, we hope you will be able to make arrangements and join with us on that evening.

I want to express my thanks to all who came to the reunion and even more so to all who made it possible. The setting at the Bountiful Central Stake Center was perfect, thanks to Denis Hawkins and Alan Hill who headed the organizing committee and did so much work before, during and after. Sister Lola Gygi Timmins was a source of so much of the tableware and table decorations and opened up her company’s large kitchen for the cooking of the feijoada.  Sister Cleonice Hermansen organized a fine group of sisters and brothers who prepared the big pots of feijoada and farofa and all the fixin’s, including Fatima Silva and “Bete” Concha, Socorro Pragana, Osvaldo and Marcia Junot.  Sister Ana Maria and Bishop Oswaldo Bueno de Moura and his mother and daughter were there early to decorate the tables and set up a large map of Brazil.  Kim and Marlene Russell manned the check-in tables.  In the afternoon Brother Roberto Viveiros showed and narrated a DVD with the history of the Church in Brazil; Tom Williams played Bossa Nova songs; and Kim Russell showed many interesting slides of Brazil and missionary activities there.  Special thanks to Alan Hill for acquiring bastante guaraná for the luncheon.  Other committee members included Larry Seamons, Mauricio Junot, Ray Taylor, and Dave Prows.

Thanks to organist Denis Hawkins, pianist Lex de Azevedo and conductor Karla Toland Rosenlund for help with the music at the evening session, and to Luiz Meneghin for a vocal number. We got to sing six hymns in Portuguese during the meeting, and it was good, loud and joyful. 

Finally, I will say that “a good time was had by all who came.”  We ate, we sang, we visited and there were lots of abraços all around. . . .

You are aware that Sister Julie Bangerter Beck was released as general president of the Relief Society. I am sure that you share with Sister Gunn and me a profound admiration, respect and love for Sister Beck, who has been a wonderful leader.  We count her as one of our finest alumni of the Brazilian missions. Did you know that when meeting with saints in Latin America and Brazil she gives her talks in Spanish or Portuguese?  See a nice interview of her in LDS Living magazine, “Sister Julie B. Beck, Continuing the Legacy” online at

http://ldsliving.com/story/68005-lds-living-interview-with-general-relief-society-president-julie-b-beck

Elder Stanley G. Ellis was sustained as a member of the First Quorum of the Seventy, moving from the Second Quorum. Read about the newly called and newly released Brazilian Area Seventies at

http://www.mormonnewsroom.org/article/mormon-leadership-changes-april-2012-general-conferences

Brazilian Mission Presidents, 1935 to 1987 period

President Rulon Stanley Howells and Sister Mary Pierce Howells 35-38 and 49-53

President John Alden Bowers and Sister Amelia Pettit Wright Bowers 38-42

President William W. Seegmiller and Sister Ada Pratt Seegmeiller 42-45

President Harold Morgan Rex and Sister Diania Rex 45-49

President Asael T. Sorensen and Ida Lorene Mason Sorensen BM 53-58 and BSM 59-61

President Wm. Grant Bangerter and Sister Geraldine “Geri” Bangerter 58-63

President Wayne M. Beck and Sister Evelyn Beck  63-66

President Lloyd R. Hicken and Sister Alice Hicken 66-69

 Brazil North Mission Presidents

President Hal R. Johnson and Sister Virginia Johnson 68-71

President George Oakes and Sister Jeannette Oakes 71-74

President Gustav Salik and Sister Ida Salik 74-75

 Brazil Central Mission/South Central Mission/Brazil Sao Paulo South 72-87

President Sherman Hibbert and Sister JoAnn Hibbert 69-72

President David A. and Sister Pat Christensen July-October 1972

President Nelson Baker and Sister Lucille Baker 72-75

President Roger Beitler and Sister Catherine Beitler 75-78

President Wilford Cardon and Sister Phyllis Cardon 78-81

President John H. Hawkins and Sister Rebecca Hawkins 81-84

President Roger Call and the late Sister Janet Call 84-87

Brazil North Central Mission/Brazil São Paulo North 1979-1987

President Leroy Drechsel and Sister Ruth Drechsel 72-75

  (and President of the Brazil Recife Mission, 1986-1987)

President Saul Messias de Oliveira and Sister Elvira Oliveira 75-78

President Harry E. Maxwell and Sister Carol Maxwell 78-81

President Darwin Christenson and Sister Sandy Christenson 81-84

President Robert R. Steuer and Sister Margaret Black Steuer 84-87

Brazil Rio de Janeiro Mission 1975-1987

President Helio da Rocha Camargo and Sister Nair Camargo 75-78

President Max Leroy Shirts and Sister Nell Shirts 78-81

President Danilo Talanskas and Sister Marina Talanskas 81-84

President Cory Bangerter and Sister Gayle Bangerter 84-87

Brazil South and Porto Alegre Missions 1961 to 1970

President Asael T. Sorensen and Sister Ida Sorensen BM 53-58 and BSM 59-61

President Finn B. Paulsen and Sister Sarah Broadbent Paulsen 61-64

President C. Elmo Turner and Sister Lois Turner 64-67

President Thomas F. Jensen and Sister Sherma Jensen 67-70

Brazil South/Porto Alegre Missions 70-85

President Orson Pratt “Bud” Arnold and Sister Colleen Joy Arnold 70-73

President Lynn A. Sorensen and Sister Janet W. Sorensen 73-76

President Jason Garcia Souza and Sister Lindamir Souza 76-79

President Walter Guedes de Queiroz and Sister Neide Satico Queiroz 79-82

President Osiris Cabral and Sister Ivani Riveira Cabral 82-85

Brazil Recife Mission

President Harry Klein and Sister Maria Moreira Klein 79-82

President Paulo Puerta and Sister Rita Cundari Puerta 82-85

Curitiba Mission

President Duke Cowley and Sister Alice Cowley 80-83

President Jerry F. Twitchell and Sister Patty Lynne Twitchell 83-86






Brazilian Missionaria Gathering, Brazil Missions Reunion

The former Brazilian Missionaria group gathered informally with Sister Geri Bangerter prior to the Bangerter Reunion at 4 p.m.  As bright as ever,  Sister Bangerter shared with us news of the Bangerter family.  The family is continuing their work on editing the two volume biography of President Bangerter.

Those sisters attending:
Maureen Daines Hodgson (we missed her mother, Sarah Daines who passed away last month in her 100th year), Beverly Sanders,  Arlene Tolson and her sister; Phyllis Merrell Miller and Esther Miller, her daughter; Glen and Marilyn Stanley Humphreys, Ross and Adalaide Gonzales Andra, LeeAnn Bangerter Lorenzon, and Mary Etta Watson Parkinson.  There was one more sister and her husband that came as we were transitioning to our meetings.  We've sent postcards and e-mailed invitations to our reunions and this was their first time, . . . and I've forgotten her name! My apologies.  Please remind me. 



As 4 p.m. approached our missionary elders, some with their spouses, began arriving:
Elder Rodriguez, one of our Brazilian missionaries visiting from Araraquara, his first name really is Elder.
Roger Eberhard
Marvin Rose and his wife.
Craig Shiner
Vern Christopherson and his wife.
Wilford Cardon and his wife.
Chuck Carlston
Duke Cowley and his wife.
Rodney Tolman and his wife.
Jerry Judd and his wife.
Mac Bills
(There may have been more that I missed.)

Daryl Hobson and his wife.  They both spoke to us about their continued connection with Cabo Verde and the progress there.

Carlos and Jan Lister.  They shared their recent mission experiences in  Brazil assigned to the seminaries and MTC as well as the Recife Temple where they finished their mission.   Fred Williams was the temple president.

M. B. Cox and his wife shared their recent mission experiences in Mozambique and Brazil.  They are hoping for one more mission and awaiting their call.

It was delightful to hear more from Sister Geri Bangerter of President Bangerter as a patriarch and Julie and her five years as our General Relief Society President which has now come to a close.


Kim Russell assisted by Marlene, gives great leadership to our Bangerter reunions.  He recently acquired Dell Ludwig's collection of mission memorabilia which is being donated to the Church History Library for their Brazil mission project.  If you are willing to contribute or loan for digitizing your mission memorabilia please contact Scott R. Christensen, ph.: 801-240-5922 or christensensr@ldschurch.org.

The Brazil Mission Bangerter group will be meeting next in April 2013, the Thursday evening before General Conference.  Watch for details from Kim Russell http://therussells.net/brazil/index.html


In all of the above the details are lacking.  There's just no way to share the pleasure and joy of seeing friends from our years in Brazil.  Come join with us in April 2013.  Save the day!

Friday, March 30, 2012

The Early Brazilian Missions Reunion 2012


From the Brasulista, March 30, 2012

 (Find your mission president on the list below)

The big reunion is today, Friday, and I hope you are planning to be there.  Come early or come late; come when you can, but come. Don’t stay away. Especially you folks who live within 50 miles of Bountiful! Come and meet new folks who share the Brazil mission experience. We also invite and hope to see many Brazilians. (Find your mission president on the list below)

We are honored to have Elder Claudio R. M. Costa of the Seventy and currently President of the Brazil Area, and Elder Stanley G. Ellis of the Seventy, speak at our evening chapel session. THAT EVENING SESSION STARTS AT 6 PM. Come as soon as you can and visit some before the chapel session.

Location:  Bountiful Central Stake Center at 640 South 750 East, Bountiful, UT 84010.

We will begin gathering at noon and some wonderful Brazilian sisters are preparing big pots of feijoada completa to be served beginning at 1 pm.  If you are able to come at that time and enjoy the festivities, and you live in the area, please bring a potluck dish if you are able.

Last name beginning A-H salads; I-Q desserts;  R-Z casserole dishes.  Or whatever. (These do not have to be Brazilian dishes.) Thank you. 

For out-of-towners flying to the reunion, in lieu of a potluck dish, throw some money into the jar.

For the hours between the lunch and the 6 pm chapel session the main activities will be mingling and visiting, but classical guitarist Tom Williams (BSM 68-70) will also be playing Bossa Nova and other Brazilian music for your pleasure, and in another location DVD presentations with photos of Brazil will be showing.   

I have been asked about what to wear.  For the chapel session, chapel worthy clothes.  For the food and festivities in the cultural hall, just dress like it was a wedding reception.  We do not have a room designated for changing wardrobes.

Find your mission president below.  (This is your last chance to find errors in my list and suggest corrections . . . please!)

Brazilian Mission Presidents, 1935 to 1987 period

Brazilian Mission 1935-1969
President Rulon Stanley Howells and Sister Mary Pierce Howells 35-38 and 49-53
President John Alden Bowers and Sister Amelia Pettit Wright Bowers 38-42 
President William W. Seegmiller and Sister Ada Pratt Seegmeiller 42-45
President Harold Morgan Rex and Sister Diania Rex 45-49
President Asael T. Sorensen and Ida Lorene Mason Sorensen BM 53-58 and BSM 59-61
President Wm. Grant Bangerter and Sister Geraldine “Geri” Bangerter 58-63
President Wayne M. Beck and Sister Evelyn Beck  63-66
President Lloyd R. Hicken and Sister Alice Hicken 66-69

Brazil North Mission
President Hal R. Johnson and Sister Virginia Johnson 68-71
President George Oakes and Sister Jeannette Oakes 71-74
President Gustav Salik and Sister Ida Salik 74-75

Brazil Central Mission/South Central Mission/Brazil Sao Paulo South 72-87
President Sherman Hibbert and Sister JoAnn Hibbert 69-72
President David A. and Sister Pat Christensen July-October 1972
President Nelson Baker and Sister Lucille Baker 72-75
President Roger Beitler and Sister Catherine Beitler 75-78
President Wilford Cardon and Sister Phyllis Cardon 78-81
President John H. Hawkins and Sister Rebecca Hawkins 81-84
President Roger Call and the late Sister Janet Call 84-87

Brazil North Central Mission/Brazil São Paulo North 1979-1987
President Leroy Drechsel and Sister Ruth Drechsel 72-75
  (and President of the Brazil Recife Mission, 1986-1987)
President Saul Messias de Oliveira and Sister Elvira Oliveira 75-78
President Harry E. Maxwell and Sister Carol Maxwell 78-81
President Darwin Christenson and Sister Sandy Christenson 81-84
President Robert R. Steuer and Sister Margaret Black Steuer 84-87

Brazil Rio de Janeiro Mission 1975-1987
President Helio da Rocha Camargo and Sister Nair Camargo 75-78
President Max Leroy Shirts and Sister Nell Shirts 78-81
President Danilo Talanskas and Sister Marina Talanskas 81-84 
President Cory Bangerter and Sister Gayle Bangerter 84-87

Brazil South and Porto Alegre Missions 1961 to 1970
President Asael T. Sorensen and Sister Ida Sorensen BM 53-58 and BSM 59-61
President Finn B. Paulsen and Sister Sarah Broadbent Paulsen 61-64
President C. Elmo Turner and Sister Lois Turner 64-67
President Thomas F. Jensen and Sister Sherma Jensen 67-70

Brazil South/Porto Alegre Missions 70-85
President Orson Pratt “Bud” Arnold and Sister Colleen Joy Arnold 70-73
President Lynn A. Sorensen and Sister Janet W. Sorensen 73-76
President Jason Garcia Souza and Sister Lindamir Souza 76-79
President Walter Guedes de Queiroz and Sister Neide Satico Queiroz 79-82
President Osiris Cabral and Sister Ivani Riveira Cabral 82-85

Brazil Recife Mission
President Harry Klein and Sister Maria Moreira Klein 79-82
President Paulo Puerta and Sister Rita Cundari Puerta 82-85

Curitiba Mission
President Duke Cowley and Sister Alice Cowley 80-83
President Jerry F. Twitchell and Sister Patty Lynne Twitchell 83-86




Monday, February 20, 2012

*CORRECTION - Early Brazilian Missions Reunion 2012



Brazil Missions Reunion 2012

Friday, March 30, 2012
(General Conference Weekend)
Bountiful Central Stake Center, 640 South 750 East, Bountiful, UT 

Mingling and visiting at noon.

Lunch at 1 p.m.

*Pre-1965 Sister Missionaries at 3 p.m.
*Bangerter Group  at 4 p.m.
(These two gatherings will be in the same room, to be announced.)

Chapel evening meeting at 6 p.m.
Speakers:
Elder Claudio R. M. Costa of the Seventy, President of the Brazil Area
Elder Stanley G. Ellis of the Seventy

"All missionaries who served in whatever mission in Brazil before 1985 are invited, as well as their mission presidents and Brazilian members from that era.  One of these super reunions is held every three years or so, hoping not to interfere with other mission reunions.

"Lunch includes some real Brazilian food, wonderful meals kindly prepared by Brazilian members, augmented by potluck items from you folks who live in the area, please accept the following potluck assignments:  Last name beginning A-H salads; I-Q desserts;  R-Z casserole dishes.  (These do not have to be Brazilian dishes.) Muito obrigado."


General questions or to volunteer call:  Denis Hawkins (BSM 64-66), 801-296-0400 

Questions regarding pre-1965 Sister Missionaries,  3 p.m. gathering, contact: 
Phyllis Merrill Miller, 801-295-8426, pmmiller@q.com  or 
Mary Etta Parkinson, 801-566-7563, mewparkinson@comcast.net

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Early Brazilian Missions Reunion 2012

Brazil Missions Reunion 2012

Friday, March 30, 2012
(General Conference Weekend)
Bountiful Central Stake Center, 640 South 750 East, Bountiful, UT 

Mingling and visiting at noon.

Lunch at 1 p.m.

Pre-1965 Sister Missionaries at 3 p.m., Primary room.

Chapel Evening meeting at 6 p.m.
Speakers:
Elder Claudio R. M. Costa of the Seventy, President of the Brazil Area
 Elder Stanley G. Ellis of the Seventy

Break-out sessions with mission presidency groups following the chapel meeting.



"All missionaries who served in whatever mission in Brazil before 1985 are invited, as well as their mission presidents and Brazilian members from that era.  One of these super reunions is held every three years or so, hoping not to interfere with other mission reunions.

"Lunch includes some real Brazilian food, wonderful meals kindly prepared by Brazilian members, augmented by potluck items from you folks who live in the area, please accept the following potluck assignments:  Last name beginning A-H salads; I-Q desserts;  R-Z casserole dishes.  (These do not have to be Brazilian dishes.) Muito obrigado."



General questions or to volunteer call:  Denis Hawkins (BSM 64-66), 801-296-0400 

Questions regarding pre-1965 Sister Missionaries,  3 p.m. gathering, contact: 
Phyllis Merrill Miller, 801-295-8426, pmmiller@q.com  or 
Mary Etta Parkinson, 801-566-7563, mewparkinson@comcast.net