From Deseret News archives:

Changes in church leadership

Published: Saturday, March 31, 2007 7:02 p.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
Five new general authorities were called to full-time service and other changes among Area Authority Seventies were announced Saturday during the 177th Annual General Conference of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Called to serve in the First Quorum of the Seventy are: Elder Enrique R. Falabella, Santa Catarina Pinula, Guatemala; Elder Erich W. Kopischke, Usingen, Germany; Elder Michael J. Teh, Angono, Rizal, Philippines; Elder Octaviano Tenorio, Cuautitlan Izcalli, Mexico; and Elder Claudio D. Zivic, Haedo, Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Elder Falabella, 56, has served as an Area Seventy in the Central America Area and as a member of the Fourth Quorum of the Seventy, where he served as president of the Central America Area. He has also served the church as a regional representative, stake president, bishop and stake mission president. He earned a degree in agronomy from the University of San Carols in Guatemala and worked in the pharmaceutical industry prior to his call to full-time church service. He married Blanca Lidia Sanchez, and they are the parents of five children.

Story continues below
Elder Kopischke, 50, has served as second counselor in the Europe Central Area Presidency and as a bishop's counselor, branch president, high councilor, district president, stake president and president of the Germany Berlin Mission. He worked in the insurance industry and as an area director for the Church Educational System in Frankfurt, Germany. He married Christiane Gluck, and they are the parents of seven children.

Elder Teh, 41, was serving as second counselor in the Philippines Area Presidency. He has also served the church as a bishop's counselor, bishop, stake president's counselor, high councilor and mission president's counselor. He earned a bachelor's degree in business administration at De La Salle University and was employed as the recorder of the Manila Philippines Temple. He married Grace May Weedon, and they are the parents of three children.

Elder Tenorio, 64, served as second counselor in the Mexico South Area Presidency and has also served as a stake mission president, stake president's counselor, stake president, regional representative and president of the Mexico Tuxtla Gutierrez Mission. He earned a certificate in accounting and business from the Academia Practica de Comercio and worked in the petroleum and publishing industries before his employment in a number of management assignments for the church. He is married to Ross Elva Valenzuela Gonzalez, and they are the parents of five children.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

previousnext

Latest comments

Krauthammer, a note. A date was not set for the Taliban. It is for the...

Workers Comp may pay $15M

Well done brother mine!!!!

Oden hurt, done for season?

Unfortunate for the Blazers, he showed signs of being really good.

Smart folks. Why bother with all the pretending going on when real life has...

I have to agree with John K. How can you pull out 4-pieces of a 2100 page...

Utah's Wynn healing up

Losing 24 seniors is not rebuilding. The only rebuilding you had was with a...

the price on these ugly antique contraptions. No word on that in this...

I'm telling you, poor USU fans really have a complex when it comes to BYU....

Letters: Illegal and law abiding?

It's really not that difficult to understand unless you're being deliberately...

Could not agree more with Todd and his rants on Sloan. This team seems to...

Advertisements