Trimm to open Bible programme
empower Christians to spread the gospel.
Dr. Trimm is the CEO of Dominion Ambassadors International in Florida and president of University of Kingdom Living School of Ministry.
UKL will be opened on Monday at New Testament Church of God, at Southside in St. David's.
In a press release, the UKL is described as being designed for local churches to equip and empower members to "facilitate the vision of the house''.
This will help people to discover God's original plan and purpose in their lives.
UKL is accredited with Logos Christian College and Graduate Schools. The course runs from February 22 to March 19 and costs $69.
Registration today is at NTCG Heritage Hall in Hamilton and participants who pay for seven courses today get the eighth for free.
The prerequisite courses are "Order in the House'', and "Understanding the Kingdom'', and deal with the structure and order of local churches.
They will also highlight the "distinguishing qualities and characteristics'' operating in the Kingdom.
Other topics include Spiritual Warfare, the Purpose of the Church, and Prophets and Prophecy.
The courses run on various nights a week and begin at 6.30 to 9.30 p.m.
Since leaving the Island Dr. Trimm has become a lecturer and motivational speaker and has been inducted into the World's Who's Who of Women, and Two Thousand Notable American Women.
She is also a member of the Research Board of Advisors of the American Biographical Institute, and of the Third World Leaders Association.
Dr. Trimm will be bringing the chancellor of UKL and a member of the school's staff.
PATTON DIES OBT Patton dies Francis Landey Patton III, a permanent resident of "Marionfield,'' Harbour Road, Warwick Parish from 1983-1991 died February 7 of Alzheimer's at Copper Ridge Care Center in Sykesville, Maryland. He was 85.
Francis Patton was the first cousin of the late Hon. John M.S. Patton.
From childhood he spent every summer in Bermuda usually at "Carberry Hill,'' Warwick with his grandparents, Dr. and Mrs. Francis Landey Patton. After their deaths, he inherited property on Keith Hall Road.
He graduated from Washington & Lee University in Lexington, Virginia class of 1934, became a member of the Virginia Bar Association and practised law in Leesburg, Virginia. This was interrupted by World War II, when he served in the FBI.
After the war he returned to Leesburg, resumed his law practice and because very active in civic affairs; The Red Cross, The Boy Scouts of America, the Leesburg Presbyterian Church, Rotary International and Historic Preservation of Leesburg. He also founded Cardinal Foods, a large wholesale food distributing business.
A personal encounter with Jesus in the late `50's changed his focus and he became a speaker for Faith at Work, a leader of mission trips to Colombia, South America, a youth director, and a pastor of Loudoun Christian Fellowship that met in his Lessburg home.
He retired in 1983 to his Bermuda home "Marionfield'' in Warwick, the ancestral home of the Pattons. There he attended Christ Presbyterian Church of Scotland, established a fellowship in his home "Marionfield'' and was active in the Full Gospel Businessmen's Fellowship, Bermuda Chapter, and Probus. In 1993 he moved to Fairhaven Retirement Community in Skyesville, Maryland.
In addition to his wife, Louise, he is survived by a daughter, Louise Patton Pearson of Virginia Beach, Virginia, and two sons, Francis Landey Patton, IV of Chicago, Illinois, and Robert Harrison Patton of London, England; 12 grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.