Archive for the ‘Missionary’ Category

Volunteering is on the rise–Utah Tops the List

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

From Omaha.com

Any volunteers?

Yes, even in a sour economy, says a federal agency that studies volunteerism.

The number of Americans giving away their time and talent rose last year — defying the typical pattern of a recession — and Nebraska again ranked No. 2 among states, the Corporation for National and Community Service reported this week.

Kelsi Cummings, a 16-year-old junior at Westside High School, didn’t take time to digest that news. She was too busy helping 11 pre-kindergarteners at a summer camp in downtown Omaha’s Children’s Museum.

“We learned the letters L through P and the numbers 5 and 6,” she said.

Cummings is one of about 40 volunteers, from teens to retirees, who work at the museum, doing everything from guiding visitors to setting up the hands-on exhibits, said Jan McKenzie, the staff member who organizes them. With kids out of school and tourists passing through town, “summer is our busiest season,” she said.

The museum is but one in a nationwide web of enterprises — food banks, churches, baseball leagues, art galleries, fire brigades, book clubs — that wouldn’t function without volunteers, that wouldn’t provide what French thinker Alexis de Tocqueville proclaimed the energetic drive of a young America.

Almost a million more people donated their time in 2008 than in 2007, said the Corporation for National and Community Service, which measures volunteerism annually using census data and its own polling. It said:

— In all, 61.8 million people — 27 percent of the U.S. population — volunteered last year, the largest number since 2005.

— In Nebraska, the volunteer rate — the portion of residents who donated time — was just under 39 percent, which ranked the state behind only Utah’s 43.5 percent.

— Iowa’s rate was 37 percent, which moved it to No. 5 among states, up from No. 6 last year.

— Within Nebraska, surburbanites had the highest rate of volunteering, 43 percent, closely followed by rural residents’ 42 percent. Urbanites had a 30 percent rate.

“It is wonderful that Nebraska continues to have one the nation’s highest volunteerism rates. This is one of the many areas where our state stands out,” Gov. Dave Heineman said of the findings.

The stability of Nebraska’s ranking — in second spot four years running — is striking, said Greg Donovan, program officer for ServeNebraska, a state agency that promotes and coordinates volunteer efforts.

“One of the things that has struck me,” Donovan said, is that “in rural areas and small towns, if something is not done by volunteers, it’s not done at all.” Moreover, he said, residents there view this as a fact of life, “not anything special.”

This phenomenon may have helped cement Nebraska’s ranking, he said, because the corporation recently has adjusted its polling to question people more closely about informal help they might not even think of as volunteer work.

“Neighborliness comes through better now,” he said.

As for Utah’s top ranking, Donovan said, “the Mormon Church does a great job” of mobilizing volunteers. It’s dominant influence makes the state “a bit of an outlier” in the statistics.

The corporation’s researchers also broke down the volunteerism figures for 50 large cities and 75 midsize ones, which are detailed on its Web site, www.volunteeringinamerica.gov.

In the latter group, Omaha tied with Toledo, Ohio, at No. 20, with a volunteer rate of 34.8 percent. That was down slightly from Omaha’s No. 18 ranking at 35.8 percent the previous year.

“I think it certainly reflects the spirit of the city,” said Ron Gerard, a spokesman for Mayor Jim Suttle. “… I think we need to get the word out to the rest of the country.”

A volunteer clearinghouse that United Way of the Midlands operates in Omaha, matching would-be helpers with whoever needs them, “has been as busy or busier than ever” recently, said spokeswoman Kathy O’Hara.

“It just seems like people pull together,” she said, suggesting that economic strain has encouraged rather than depressed volunteerism.

Another factor, perhaps, she said: “Some people say that if you’ve got less money to give, you give time.”

In fact, last month first lady Michelle Obama launched an initiative called United We Serve, urgingAmericans to help the nation’s economic recovery by volunteering at schools, hospitals and other community organizations.

Mexico Church Services Cancelled; Missionaries Not Being Sent

Friday, May 1st, 2009

From LocalNews8.com (Idaho):

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Mormon church officials say they’ve canceled church services in Mexico City until further notice because of the swine flu outbreak.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is also delaying sending new missionaries to that country.

In statements issued Thursday spokeswoman Kim Farah says officials are monitoring news, security and medical reports regarding the swine flu.

More than two dozen cases of the flu have been detected in Mexico.

Farah says the church is following recommendations from the Mexican government to suspend public gatherings in its capital city and other affected areas.

She says new missionaries assigned to Mexico are staying stateside at the training center in Provo for now. Mexico-based church missionaries are reported to be safe.

From a mission to the mound

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

From The Daily of the University of Washington:

Adrian Gomez hadn’t pitched in two years.

From September 2006 to September 2008, he was on a church mission in Mexico, practicing his baseball every so often by throwing oranges or chucking rocks at dogs that chased him on the streets of Guadalajara.

And when it came time for the pitcher from Battleground, Wash., to return to the UW baseball team this season, head coach Ken Knutson had to introduce Gomez to the new members of the team.

“Kenny had been talking about me,” said Gomez. “He would tell stories about, ‘You guys are here throwing baseballs, he’s just out there throwing … rocks at dogs.’ That was the introduction.”

Perhaps re-introduction would be a better word.

Now a sophomore, Gomez came to the UW in 2006 and immediately made an impact on the mound as a freshman, but as a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, he left on the church mission he had been eyeing since he was 12 years old.

Now he’s back, trying to readjust and pitch at the level he was recruited for three years ago.

Knutson might have been apprehensive about allowing one of his new pitchers to go on a mission one year into a college baseball career, but both he and Gomez agreed that, as long as he returned to pitch for the Huskies, Knutson would be OK with it.

“I went into the interview with [Knutson], and the first thing I said was, ‘Look, I’m going to be leaving in a year, and for two years I’m going to be on a mission. What do you feel about that?’” Gomez said. “He didn’t say anything for, like, 10 minutes. I was just sitting there really quiet, and finally, he said that would be OK.”

So after his first year — during which he tossed 28 1/3 innings with a 4.45 ERA and led the Huskies to a 13-inning 5-4 victory over Washington State — he departed for Mexico.

But, being a Mormon missionary, Gomez had a lot of hardship ahead of him — hardship he said made him humble and made him work harder to achieve his goals.

Gomez had to learn Spanish essentially from scratch and woke up at 4 a.m., more than two hours earlier than the rest of his group in the heart of Guadalajara, to study the language.

“Some nights I would just come home crying because I couldn’t understand people, and they couldn’t understand me,” Gomez said. “But, little by little, I got better and better and eventually mastered the language to where I could joke with people and get along on a daily basis.”

That was just the language, only one aspect of his time in Mexico.

Gomez continued his study of the Book of Mormon and spent most of his days doing what missionaries do — helping those in need.

“I would … mow people’s lawns, sweep people’s front porches,” Gomez said. “I washed a lot of houses’ dishes and offer to come in and help them.”

His time in Mexico was exhausting; He started out in Guadalajara, went to Puerto Vallarta and then traveled throughout Mexico. Gomez didn’t skip a beat, doing his missionary work 12 hours a day, seven days a week.

“It was two years of absolute work,” Gomez said. “I lost a lot of weight. I got sick a lot. I walked probably 12 miles a day. And I came home with nothing.”

In fact, the day after he got back to Seattle, he walked to baseball practice with nothing but the shirt and tie that he had on from his mission. It was like a reverse culture shock.

For two long years, he hadn’t seen his teammates, hadn’t seen his coach, hadn’t seen the girl he dated before the mission — Corinne, now his wife.

“It was tough to adjust,” Gomez said. “They gave me new shoes, everything that I have on. It was amazing to be able to get all this stuff when I had nothing.”  (cont.)

Statistics show fast Mormon church growth

Saturday, April 11th, 2009

From KIFI-Idaho Falls:

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - An editor of a yearbook of church demographics says year-to-year membership statistics for the Mormon church place the Utah-based faith among the fastest-growing religious traditions in the U.S. and Canada.

Eileen Lindner, of the Yearbook of American and Canadian Churches, says it’s hard to compare data among faiths because counting methods vary. But annual data provide a good roadmap of growth within an individual church.

Data released Saturday by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints place its worldwide membership at 13.5 million as of Dec. 31, 2008. That’s up from 13.1 million in 2007. Growth is occurring fastest outside of North America.

The yearbook uses figures provided by the church and Lindner says Mormon data are considered reliable because the church employs professional demographers.

LDS church missionaries ‘grow up’ as they serve God

Monday, March 16th, 2009

From The Manteca Bulletin (CA):

Missionaries serving in Manteca, Tracy, Lathrop, and Ripon gather at the Northland Road stake center of The Church of Latter-day Saints.

Elder Matt Connell expected to strengthen his faith in God as well as to help others when he volunteered to serve as a missionary for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

What he didn’t expect was to mature personally.

“I’ve grown up,” the 20-year-old resident of Lake of the Ozarks in Missouri said Thursday at the LDS stake center on Northland Road where the 14 missionaries serving in Manteca, Ripon, Lathrop, and Tracy meet weekly to sharpen their grasp of the Bible and their faith in a group setting. “I’m thinking less of myself and more of other people. I have a lot more patience now.”

Connell is 14 months into a two-year mission. He interrupted his education at Brigham Young University – he plans to become a dentist – to go on the mission. Every year more than 10,000 young Mormons step up to serve. It is a commitment that requires them to put their secular life and relationships on hold for two years. They also must cover their own expenses and follow a regimented schedule 6.5 days a week that starts at 6:30 a.m. with devotion and exercise for two hours before doing missionary work and returning by 9 p.m. each night.

It is a regimen that Mission President James Jardine, who also is a volunteer and oversees 195 missionaries in the greater Sacramento-Stockton area, said serves the  young men and women  by helping them mature, develop focused work habits thanks to the intense study and regimented schedules as well as grow spiritually.

Jardine knows that from first had experience. Jardine, who was raised in Salt Lake City, served as a missionary in Los Angeles.

“I was surprised at how demanding it was,” Jardine recalled when he initially started his service as a missionary as a young man.

He also found that serving in a stateside mission – there are 350 LDS geographical missions worldwide of which Sacramento-Stockton is one – people are more alike than they are different.

“It’s a life changing experience,” said Jardine who is on a leave from his law practice and the Utah State Board of Regents.

Jardine noted missionaries are often called upon by people they encounter to offer a religious context   to life’s trials and tribulations.

“The miracle of all this are 19 to 20 year-old men are being asked what to do by people such as a struggling single mom, someone in an abusive relationship (and such),” Jardine said. “We forget they are 19 to 20 year olds.”

Judging by the “game” conducted Thursday the missionaries take their task seriously. Although they were sharing laughter and making jokes, they were competing in a game that pitted Tracy missionaries against their Manteca counterparts to test not just their knowledge of the Bible but also to place it into context with various day-to-day situations.

Hawaiian resident serving in Manteca

One of the enthusiastic participants in the drill was Elder Robert Kahawaii, 23, who hails from the Island of Oahu in Hawaii. Kahawaii, like Connell, is currently serving in the Manteca area.

“I’ve learned to be more patient and more humble,” said Kahawaii who is in his sixth month as a missionary.

Kahawaii intends to return to Brigham Young University-Hawaii after he is through with his commitment and study to become an architect. Kahawaii, like all missionaries, pays for his own expenses. Usually that means working for a year or so before departing to the Missionary Training Center in Provo, Utah on the BYU campus for immersion in the language and cultural traditions of where they are being assigned plus learning teaching techniques.

“When we teach our faith it is a great privilege,” Kahawaii said.

Elder Wes Michie, 20, from Kaysville, Utah is 10 months into his service as a missionary.

He said the experience has helped him grow closer to his family even though he hasn’t seen them since he departed for Provo.

“It’s made me more certain about what I want out of life,” Michie, who is also serving in Manteca, said. “I definitely have more patience now.”

Jardine said he fully expects that when the missionaries that he is helping oversee return to their homes they will do so with maturity and abilities beyond their years. As a church background piece notes, “often they find themselves able to reach out to others, to successfully manage challenges and to find happiness in their own lives.”

World’s largest full-time volunteer missionary force

The 53,000 missionaries constitute the world’s largest full-time volunteer missionary force.

Missionaries can be single men between the ages of 19 and 25, single women over the age of 21 or retired couples. They work with a companion of the same gender during their mission except, of course, couples, who work with their spouse. Single men serve for two years and single women for 18 months.

They are only sent to parts of the word where the church operates and is accepted by the government.

They are also the highest profile members of the Mormon, especially single young men dressed in white shirts, ties, and dark slacks who often ride bicycles as they go about their calling.

Jardine noticed that since missionaries are viewed as “giving” to a community they are often times protected by troublesome elements. He recalled his son and his companion being warned by gang members at their inner city location to avoid an area well in advance of an anticipated violent encounter between rival gangs.

Contacts with family and friends are limited to letters and an occasional phone call to family at special times during their service. Missionaries avoid entertainment, parties, and other activities common to their age group to allow them to focus entirely on the work of serving and of teaching others the gospel of Jesus Christ.

The impact of their service benefits them in ways that one may not immediately appreciate. Jardine noted a professor he works with said missionaries who have served in another country are much more versatile in the people and customs than a tourist could ever be.

“Tourists visit for a short time and get (a superficial) feel for the country,” Jardine said. “Missionaries immerse themselves in the day-to-day life.”

Elder M. Russell Ballard, one of the church’s Twelve Apostles, is quoted in a church release noting, “They (the missionaries) have spent up to two years helping others, thinking outside of themselves, studying scripture, learning a new language in many cases, finding out about new cultures and have experiences that make them more responsible, more caring, and more thoughtful human beings.”

Utah State’s Gary Wilkinson A Changed Man - On And Off The Basketball Court

Sunday, March 15th, 2009

From UtahStateAggies.com:

LOGAN, Utah - It’s not uncommon for a teenage boy to feel lost at times, to wonder what life has to offer. In rare cases, one will even rebel and choose an alternate path; one that is not socially or morally acceptable. Such was the case with Gary Wilkinson. And for anyone who has had the privilege to meet the out-going redhead, you would never guess that not long ago Gary’s life was spiraling out of control.

Raised in Salt Lake City, Gary’s upbringing was no different than anyone else. His parents, Gary and Kristine Wilkinson, were even members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, though they rarely attended Sunday service. As a youth, Gary never did get baptized and even took measures to avoid any religious gatherings.

As Gary matured and advanced in high school, he never seemed to find his niche athletically or academically. He did try out for the basketball team his sophomore year, but was cut in large part to a bad attitude and lack of desire. The volatile combination finally seized control of his life midway through his senior year at Bingham High School, and Gary simply dropped out of school, three months before graduation.

“I had no desire to go to school,” admits Wilkinson. “I didn’t feel like the things I was learning had a lot of validity to what was required to be successful.”

So there he was, a high-school dropout with no desire and a bad attitude. Not necessarily the best of combinations to find success or make a name for yourself.

Then in November of 2000, one of Gary’s friends took his own life, and that tragic event forced Gary to re-evaluate the prior decisions he had made. Shortly there-after, Gary embarked on a new path in life that included joining the LDS Church and serving a two-year mission in Calgary, Alberta, Canada.

“When the Church came into my life, it provided me with the structure to be successful,” Wilkinson stated. “The Lord had done so much for me. I knew I could never repay Him, but serving a mission seemed like a desirable thing to do.”

Once Gary returned from his mission, he decided he wanted to give basketball another try. So he called Norm Parrish, the head men’s basketball coach at Salt Lake Community College (SLCC), and secured a tryout with the team. Two days later he was offered a scholarship.

And when that scholarship from SLCC was offered, Gary took full advantage of it - both on and off the basketball court. In his two years at the junior college level, Gary thrived in his new surroundings earning junior college All-American honors twice as he averaged 14.6 points and 7.0 rebounds a game as a freshman, and 18.5 points and 8.1 rebounds as a sophomore. Gary also thrived in the classroom, earning a cumulative 3.96 grade-point average and was twice awarded Academic All-America honors.

With a successful stint both athletically and academically at Salt Lake Community College coming to an end, Gary set his sights on a four-year institution and transferred to Utah State University to continue his development as a student-athlete. And even though his demands were more at USU, Gary continued to excel. In his first year with the Aggies, he earned second-team all-Western Athletic Conference honors as he averaged 13.3 points and 7.0 rebounds per game in helping USU win its first-ever WAC regular season championship and finish the year with a 24-11 record. He also earned academic all-WAC honors majoring in sociology.

Entering his senior season, Gary’s list of honors and accomplishments continue to grow. Beginning the year, Gary was named the WAC’s Preseason Player of the Year. He was also named a preseason high-major All-American by CollegeHoops.net, and to the early season watch list for the Naismith Trophy, given annually to college basketball’s player of the year. Furthermore, Gary was also named a finalist for the Lowe’s Senior CLASS Award, which is presented annually to one senior in the country who demonstrates outstanding character and competition, not only on the court and in the classroom, but in the community as well.

Now, with a college degree just months away and a potential professional basketball career on the horizon, Gary Wilkinson has truly come full circle from his days at Bingham High School. Days where his bad attitude and lack of desire kept closed the doors of athletics and academics, the two things that has helped him realize his dreams.

Florida Marlins' LDS closer Lindstrom is armed and dangerous

Thursday, February 19th, 2009

From The Miami Herald:


The folks in tiny Rexburg, Idaho, witnessed their 100-mph legend firsthand, and they rejoiced when Matt Lindstrom got a chance to show the Major League Baseball world as the Florida Marlins’ closer.

The fastest pitcher in the majors comes from one of the slowest towns in America. The schools close in October for the potato harvest, the nearest stand-alone tavern is 30 miles down the road and some locals prefer to leave their cars unlocked and the keys in the ignition.

It’s the place where Marlins reliever Matt Lindstrom grew up as a person and developed as a pitcher, from Little League through college. It’s a town where most everyone in the close-knit community of 17,000 — ”America’s Family Community,” the sign leading into town reads — have long known that Lindstrom could hum it like nobody else around, from Rexburg all the away to Yellowstone across the border in Wyoming.

They didn’t need some fancy radar gun to prove it. Word of mouth did the job. The stories about Lindstrom’s bazooka arm got around.

There was the kid he accidentally nailed in the face with a fastball and another he hit in the helmet with a poorly aimed pickoff throw. Both kids quit baseball, right then and there. And there were the scores of batters he left gawking at blurs that stung the catcher’s mitt — that is, if they didn’t stray wildly over their heads or behind their backs.

Problem was, Lindstrom threw plenty hard in his younger days, just not accurately.

”The way to win a Little League game,” said Ray Lindstrom, Matt’s father, “is to have a hard thrower like Matt hit the first kid, have him start bawling. And then the game’s over. None of the other kids wants to get close to the plate after that.”

Matt Lindstrom said he never tried to hit anyone on purpose. But the mere possibility struck fear in the hitters, who quaked and shivered in his presence.

Big-league hitters don’t frighten like that, but they respect the smoke. They see the three-digit readings — 100 mph — and the scoreboard bulbs seem just a little bit brighter.

”It’s like a carnival effect,” Marlins catcher John Baker said. ‘You look up on the scoreboard and you see 101, and you say, `I’m supposed to hit that thing?’ ”

Last season, nobody in the majors threw it harder than Lindstrom. Not on average.

According to the Bill James Handbook, Lindstrom’s average fastball of 96.9 mph topped the sport. Lindstrom also was one of only three pitchers to throw as many as 10 pitches measured at 100 mph or faster. The Dodgers’ Jonathan Broxton and Tigers’ Joel Zumaya were the others.

Lindstrom’s heat doesn’t surprise anyone in Rexburg.

What does is that, as erratic as he was, he made it to the majors in the first place, and that the Marlins have him primed to be their closer, their man in the ninth. It causes Ray Swanson, who coached Lindstrom in high school and college, to shake his head in mild disbelief.

”Sure, he threw plenty hard,” Swanson recalled. “In high school, he was throwing 90. Around here, we don’t see 90. Around here, people see 75 and they think it’s 90. But he couldn’t throw strikes. He’d win games 8-7 with 15 strikeouts and nine walks. If [hitters] went up there with a Wiffle bat and didn’t swing the thing, they could beat him.”

A MISCHIEF-MAKER

Back then, Lindstrom couldn’t envision where he is now, either. He dominated in Little League, but so do hundreds of kids. And he was busy enjoying life, on the field and off. In school, he was a bit of a mischief-maker. Once, he got in trouble for tying a hook to a string, hanging it from a classroom ceiling and howling with laughter when the dangling contraption caught the teacher’s wig and yanked it off.

When Ray Lindstrom found out, “I drove from Idaho Falls, went to the junior high, and kicked his butt down the hallway, I was so mad. I got calls from the teachers all the time because he was such a pain in the butt.”

Matt Lindstrom interrupts the stories as they’re being told in the family living room, gets up from his seat and walks over to a window, looking out on the back yard.

”See that blue spruce over there?” the younger Lindstrom said, pointing. “In the winter, just like it is now, I’d stand behind that tree, wait for the cars to come down the road, and hit ‘em with snowballs. Then I’d run into the house and wait for the coast to clear.”

Lindstrom’s shenanigans didn’t go over well in a family that adhered to its strict Mormon values. The Lindstroms, like so many families in Rexburg, are members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

”I thought I was going to have to send him to a school for juvenile detention,” said the elder Lindstrom, who supported the family as a beef jerky and sunflower seed salesman.

Eventually, though, Lindstrom calmed down and remained out of trouble. He played all the major sports — football, basketball and baseball. And like most high school students in Rexburg, Lindstrom helped with the potato harvest, the most important time of year in southeastern Idaho. One year, he stacked the potatoes in neat piles. The next, he drove a spud truck back and forth from the fields.

It was hard, dirty work.

”All through high school, we would work on the potato farms all day, and at night, at 9:30, we’d come back down and have football practice,” he said. “That’s how a lot of us in high school made money to buy basketball shoes, or have extra spending money during the school year.”

Lindstrom helped to lead his high school team to a state basketball championship, but baseball always was his first love.

He walked on at the local junior college, which was then known as Ricks College. The most famous athlete to come out of Ricks was Rulon Gardner, who won gold at the 2000 Olympics in Greco-Roman wrestling, super-heavyweight class.

But Lindstrom didn’t receive a scholarship his freshman year because he wasn’t good enough.

”He got a uniform, and that’s pretty much it,” Swanson said. “ He was the 10th or 11th pitcher on an 11-man staff.”

Lindstrom was used for mop-up duty in more ways than one. He and his brother, Rob, remember the winter and early spring months when, using snow blowers and brooms, they would clear the diamond of snow in order to play. Sometimes they played while it was snowing.

”We had some guys who could flat out throw,” Swanson said. ‘Lindstrom was just `there,’ just a local kid.”

GROWTH IN SWEDEN

After his freshman year, Lindstrom, like most of the Mormon-based students at Ricks, left for his two-year mission. Lindstrom served his in Sweden, the country from which his great-grandparents had emigrated in the 1890s, eventually settling in Idaho, homesteading a piece of property and becoming farmers.

Baseball was the last thing on Lindstrom’s mind when he left for Scandinavia.

”I took two gloves and a ball over there, but I only used them twice,” Lindstrom said. “Once I played some catch on a soccer field. The other time I worked out with the Swedish baseball team. They were terrible. I was hitting balls over the fence. I was kind of putting on a show.”

After his two-year hitch was up, Lindstrom returned for his sophomore year at Ricks and tried out for baseball again. Swanson was flabbergasted when he learned the new coach had offered Lindstrom a scholarship.

‘I said, `Why in the world would you do that?’ ” Swanson said. “He said, `Well, he’s a local kid and he’s pretty good.’

‘I said, `He is not very good, and you just spent $1,000 of precious scholarship money on him.’ ”

Swanson said his biggest shock came next, when he quickly discovered that Lindstrom — who was now older (21) and larger (by 15 or 20 pounds) than before leaving on his mission — was vastly improved.

‘When I saw him throw, I’m like, `Holy Cow, this is unbelievable,’ ” Swanson said.

Ray Lindstrom believes the two-year break from baseball enabled the bone and muscle in his son’s arm to mature and strengthen. Swanson doesn’t disagree with that theory.

”It’s tough on hitters when you go a few years without picking up a bat,” Swanson said. “But for pitchers, it can actually be a bonus for them if they’ve been throwing all along. Their arms get a rest.”

Lindstrom didn’t just throw hard anymore. He began to confuse hitters, changing pitch speeds to keep them guessing. More importantly, he started throwing with accuracy.

”Everybody and their dog was in love with him,” Swanson said.

Scouts, radar guns in tow, started showing up to watch whenever and wherever Lindstrom pitched. Idaho. Utah. California. It didn’t matter. The New York Mets took him in the 10th round of the 2002 draft. (cont.)

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Tigers shortstop Cale Iorg back on top after two-year absence

Thursday, February 12th, 2009

From CutoffMan:

He might have been away from the game for two years, but Tigers shortstop Cale Iorg is playing like he hasn’t skipped a beat.

Iorg, who went on a Mormon mission to Portugal while attending the University of Alabama for two years, was recently selected to the Canadian provisional roster for the World Baseball Classic.

Tigers farm director Glenn Ezell tells MLB.com’s Jonathan Mayo that Iorg’s aggressiveness helped with his selection and recent success, but must be controlled at times.

Tigers.com, Feb. 6: “He’s a high-energy guy,” Tigers farm director Glenn Ezell said of the young shortstop, who is on the Canadian provisional roster for the World Baseball Classic. “Sometimes high-energy guys outrun their body. He had to be sure he was able to not back off but also control it. Sometimes that aggressiveness, that athletic ability — the RPMs are running real high and his drive tires are sitting on ice.”

Tigers catcher Max St. Pierre, who signed a Minor League deal with the Tigers before the 2008 season, will also join Iorg on the Canadian provisional roster.

Link to article

When choosing where to play, Mormon recruits face unique issues

Saturday, January 31st, 2009

From Sports Illustrated:

Five-star linebacker Manti Te’o has only considered programs that will permit him to go on a two-year Mormon mission after his freshman season.  (Chris Livingston/Icon SMI)

Manti Te’o refrained from mincing words each time he met a college coach. Te’o, one of the nation’s highest ranked linebacker prospects, told every coach who recruited him that, after his freshman season, he might leave the country for two years.

“I basically told them, ‘This is me,’” said Te’o, from Laie, Hawaii. “I’m LDS. I’m thinking of serving a mission, and I want that to be available to me. If that’s not in the cards for your university, I have to respect that, but I have to consider others.”

Te’o is a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints — more commonly referred to as the Mormon church. When male members of the church turn 19, they are encouraged to embark on a two-year mission to proselytize in parts of the world that may not have been exposed to the 189-year-old faith. Te’o would like to serve that mission, even if it means leaving college for two years. A pronouncement like Te’o’s might end most players’ recruitments, but Rivals.com ranks Te’o as the nation’s No. 12 overall prospect. Because Te’o has so much potential, almost every coach who recruited him consented to the mission.

The mission question is just one of a set of issues LDS players face when they look outside the small group of schools that are accustomed to signing Mormons. LDS players also must consider how their faith will mesh with the campus environment at either a secular school or one run by a different faith, and they must prepare for a backlash from some in the LDS community should they choose a school other than Brigham Young, the Provo, Utah, university run by the Mormon church. Te’o and Provo offensive lineman Xavier Su’a Filo (No. 63 by Rivals) each have faced these issues during the past few months, and each will weigh them carefully in the next few days as they decide which school they’ll sign with on Wednesday.

Te’o will sign either with a state university (UCLA), a secular private university (USC) or the nation’s most prominent Catholic university (Notre Dame). While starring at Punahou — President Barack Obama’s alma mater and SI’s No. 1 high school athletic program in 2008 — Te’o piqued dozens of schools’ interests. He had 29 scholarship offers before he stopped counting them. His sideline-to-sideline speed and penchant for gut-rattling hits brought recruiters in droves, and, somewhat to Te’o’s surprise, his request that he be allowed to go on a mission didn’t drive them all away.

Te’o worried especially about USC, which had a reputation for discouraging players from going on missions. He had good reason. DeAnn Longshore, whose son, Nate, just finished his career as a quarterback at Cal, said that when her son was being recruited for the class of 2004, USC coaches told Nate, an LDS member, that they would offer a scholarship only if he promised he wouldn’t leave for a mission. So, in a phone conversation about a year ago, Te’o asked Trojans coach Pete Carroll pointblank if his scholarship would be waiting for him when he returned from his mission. Te’o’s father, Brian, said Carroll explained how his opinion of mission trips has changed in recent years. Brian Te’o said Carroll answered all questions when he said, “Once a Trojan, always a Trojan.”

Su’a Filo, who narrowed his finalists last week to BYU, LSU, UCLA, USC and Utah, also met with less resistance than he anticipated when he brought up the mission. “The coaches have been really good at understanding,” he said. Two of Su’a Filo’s finalists, BYU and Utah, are accustomed to signing future missionaries. BYU encourages the mission trip for all its students, so the coaching staff is adept at juggling scholarships and the depth chart as players depart and return. Ditto for Utah, a state school only a few miles from LDS headquarters in Salt Lake City. Utes coach Kyle Whittingham is an LDS member and BYU alumnus so familiar with the Book of Mormon that he has a standby passage to fire up Utes fans (”And the Lord shall be red in his apparel”). “See,” Whittingham told Yahoo! Sports last month. “It was right there in the Doctrine and Covenants the whole time.”  (cont.)

Link to article

19 Year-old Lodi (CA) Man Makes Miraculous Recovery

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009

From lodinews.com:

Adam Meyers, 19, left UC Davis Medical Center on Jan. 17 after being treated for a month at the hospital. Meyers was hit by a utility truck while riding his bicycle east on Kettleman Lane on Dec. 17 and sustained arm and brain injuries. (Brian Feulner/News-Sentinel)

To look at Adam Meyers, you wouldn’t think he’d just spent a month in a hospital after being hit by a truck while riding his bicycle.

Even though he has to see four therapists to help him make a full recovery from arm and brain injuries, he makes jokes like any other 19-year-old. The Lodi High School graduate is also a bit in awe of the community response to his accident.

“People I don’t even know are asking about me,” he said.

An optimist to the core, Meyers is now back at his Lodi home, where he is once again making plans to go on a Mormon mission. He might even be ready to go by this summer, he said Monday.

Meyers has no memory of the afternoon of Dec. 17, when he went out for a bicycle ride in preparation for a two-year mission during which a bicycle is the mode of transportation.

“I remember my little brother’s birthday party was the night before. That’s all I remember,” Meyers said. He doesn’t remember riding east on Kettleman Lane, past Highway 99. Witnesses told California Highway Patrol officers that a white utility truck hit Meyers. The truck never stopped, and officers haven’t found it.

Meyers had severe enough injuries that paramedics at the scene immediately asked for a helicopter to take him to UC Davis Medical Center in Sacramento.

He spent the next four weeks there, and at first the head injuries were severe enough that doctors didn’t want to operate on his broken arm.

But Meyers began to improve. Though his right eye looked like he’d been in a horrendous fight, due to broken orbital bones, that began to heal. A little more than a month later, it’s barely noticeable.

“He’s a walking miracle. If you saw him a month ago, and the shape he was in,” his father, Nolan Meyers, said before pulling out his cell phone to reveal the “before” pictures.

Doctors put a metal plate in Meyers’ left arm, which also began to heal. He has nerve damage so his fingers are limp and cannot yet move on their own. But just one week ago he couldn’t move his wrist and now he can, so he’s quite sure everything else will soon work, too.

Four therapists — occupational, physical, speech and neurological — come to his Lodi home to help get Meyers back to normal. The other night he was able to make macaroni and cheese, said his mother, Kris Meyers.

For his parents, life might finally be getting back to normal now that Meyers is home. They still haven’t really celebrated Christmas, since they were in the hospital during the holidays.

Both are very grateful for community support; Kris Meyers wants to send thank you notes to everyone who helped, but the list is incredibly long — and some of them are strangers whose names she doesn’t know.

“The response is just overwhelming,” she said. “(We) realize what this community is capable of doing.”

She was told that a fund-raiser at Rick’s Pizza, which often offers fund-raisers for local causes, was perhaps the best-attended ever on a weekday night. A family friend set up a trust fund at Umpqua Bank, and another replaced Meyers’ broken iPod.

As for her son, Kris Meyers credits the doctors among other factors, including his youth, healthy eating and regular exercise.

Meyers quietly and quickly interrupted his mother.

“And the prayers,” he said. “I think that’s a lot of what helped me.”

Along with his unshaken faith, Meyers remains a big brother. He’s actually grateful that the accident happened to him, rather than his two younger brothers.

“I’m glad I went through this, and not them,” he said.

Link to article

Mormon witness quietly grows in Jamaica

Monday, January 19th, 2009

From The Gleaner (Jamaica):

Patrick Medley (left), first counsellor in the Mission Presidency and overseer for all financial matters concerning the Mormon Church in Cayman, Jamaica and The Bahamas, and Kevin Brown, executive secretary with responsibility for all Mormon educational services in Jamaica and The Bahamas. - Photos by Colin Hamilton/freelance photographer 

Since it established itself here in Jamaica during the 1980s, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has seen its witness expand across the island. currently, it has 5,000 members and 21 congregations in the nation.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which is also known as the Mormon Church, has congregations in every parish in Jamaica, and there is the prospect that two more congregations will be established by 2010 - one in Port Antonio and the other in Old Harbour.

This year marks a milestone in Mormon witness in Jamaica as the church will play host to top ranking officials of the global church who will be coming to the island later this month for a satellite broadcast from Jamaica, which will be beamed throughout the Caribbean and South and Central America. The two officials are Henry B. Eyring, whose title is first counsellor of the first presidency; and David A. Bednar, who the church describes as a prophet, seer, revelator and a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles - the second-highest presiding body in the world council of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Mormonism is an international religious movement with 13 million members.

The conference is being held January 24-25 at the Spanish Town branch of the church which is located at 3 Newton Drive (off Brunswick Avenue). Earlier this week, The Gleaner spoke with some of the leaders of Mormon movement in Jamaica at its 36 Red Hills Road head office in St Andrew.

David Gingery, an expatriate who heads the Mormon Church in Jamaica, said the broadcast is slated to be viewed by the 150,000 Mormons who reside in the Caribbean.

Asked what his high-profile visitors will talk about, Gingery pleaded ignorance except to say: “They get to choose what they will speak to us about … it is always going to be Christ-centred. Everything that the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints says and does is going to be centred on Jesus Christ and how we can emulate him and be more like him.” On Saturday (January 24) evening at 5, there will be a broadcast for the priesthood - the men of the church. Also during that time, there will be a meeting for the women leaders of the church. This women’s meeting will not be broadcast. The women will be addressed by Sylvia Allred, first counsellor in the general relief society presidency of our church. On Sunday (January 25), there will be the general meeting at 9 a.m. - this is for all men, women and children. And the satellite broadcast will happen at 5 p.m. and this will be for everyone.

The local Mormon leaders are hoping the broadcasts will encourage and energise their members to be more faithful to the standards and creeds of the church and also influence non-Mormons to consider joining their way of life.

Mormonism is a proselytising movement. In perhaps much the same way Muslims are encouraged to make at least one trip to Mecca in Saudi Arabia, Mormons are encouraged to devote up to two years of their lives in missionary work on behalf the church.

The Mormon church in Jamaica has 80 persons serving as missionaries - nearly half of whom are Jamaicans and the rest are drawn mainly from the United States.  (cont.)

Link to article

Who are you? Mormons have the answer

Friday, January 2nd, 2009

From Inquirer.net (Philippines):

MANILA, Philippines—Who am I? Where did I come from?

People plagued by these questions can find the answers at the Family Search archives of the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-Day Saints, which has copies of all civil registries in the Philippines dating to the 16th century.

The records, which are free and open to the public, have helped orphans wanting to trace their birth parents, people looking for blood kin for medical reasons, and historians researching their books.

It has helped people to know and understand their roots, according to the Family Search archivists.

Knowing that one’s ancestor was a hero could be a source of inspiration, they said. Or if he was a cad or a criminal, then one could learn from his mistakes and strive to do better, they added.

“You cannot change history. You can hide it, but the fact is, it’s there,” said Manny Baul, country manager of the Family Search archives.

The Family Search database is also useful for people who want to know their family’s medical history, particularly those at risk for diseases that are passed down through the generations, he said.

If one of your ancestors died of diabetes, then you know that you belong to a high-risk group and therefore, must be careful with your diet, he said.

Baul also he believes that conflicts would be reduced if people only took the time to check out their family histories.

They would realize that they and the people they are in conflict with have more affinities than differences, he said.

“You realize that your enemy is just like you. You become open-hearted,” he said.

Pete Adduru, the Quezon City chapter president of the church, said he has always wondered about his surname. He said his family is from the north and yet his last name sounds Arabic, which would make one suppose that he is from Mindanao.

When Adduru searched the records, he discovered that his ancestors originally came from Syria, traveled to India and settled in the Ilocos region, while still keeping their Arabic name.

That is why, Adduru said, when he first went to Davao he felt an affinity for the Muslims because he believes them to be descended from the Arabs.

(Editor’s Note: Islam was brought to Sulu and Mindanao through Muslim missionaries who came from Arabia between the 14th and 16th centuries and converted the people of Southeast Asia. The Muslims of Mindanao are not descended from the Arabs. They are ethnically the same as their brother Filipinos everywhere.)

Family is central

The Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-Day Saints, also known as the Mormons, is the fourth largest Christian denomination in the United States, headquartered in Salt Lake City, Utah. It is the largest denomination originating from the Latter Day Saint movement founded by Joseph Smith on April 6, 1840.

Family life is central to Mormon belief because it is thought that the family unit will continue to exist beyond mortal life. To the Mormons, the lives of their dead relatives are part of their own lives and futures, hence the intense interest in genealogy.

Janryll Fernandez, assistant director for public affairs, said finding one’s roots and respect for the departed is a fundamental tenet of the church, one that even non-church members are familiar with.

“Families can be together forever. Family relations can last forever. We perform sacraments—ordinances—for them to be able to be with them in the next life,” he said.

“The church is a family-centered church. Everything we do boils down to that,” he said.

Surprise lurks

Baul said a surprise, pleasant or otherwise, almost always lurks in one’s family tree and records.

Take Quezon City Mayor Feliciano “Sonny” Belmonte who, according to Fernandez, has been unwittingly celebrating his birthday on the wrong date.

Instead of Oct. 2, Belmonte’s birth date is actually Oct. 1, said Baul. Church researchers discovered it in his birth records.

Belmonte also learned that his family was originally from the Ilocos region and not Nueva Ecija province, where he was born, and that his surname was not originally spelled with a “B.”

“They probably migrated to Nueva Ecija,” said Baul.

Belmonte took the news of his supposedly real birth date in stride.

“He was really surprised. But it was there on the records,” Baul said.

The mayor said, “if I know who my ancestors are, then I know more about myself.”

FVR, FM distant cousins

The Family Search archivists also determined the exact relationship between former President Fidel V. Ramos and the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos.

According to Baul, the two men had the same great-great grandfather and therefore, are distant cousins.

The archivists also tried tracing former President Corazon Aquino’s family tree.

Baul said their search showed that Cojuangco—Aquino’s maiden name—was the name of the family patriarch who came from China to the Philippines.

“His name was Co Juan Co. It was combined into one name,” Baul said.

They tried mapping the Aquino branch of the family, but it was too dense, said Baul.

“It has too many branches. It’s like the name De la Cruz,” he said.

The Mormon archivists offered to map the family tree of Presidents Joseph Estrada and Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, but they both declined the offer, Baul said.

Since 1500s

So far, Mormon archivists have copied 90 percent of the country’s civil registries and 80 percent of the Catholic Church records—containing baptismal certificates, among others—since the archival work started in 1972.

Fernandez said the group has volunteers, armed with cameras, who scour dusty record rooms of all municipalities in the country and photograph the documents. The volunteers who do the dirty work are trained to read Spanish and the anachronistic handwriting.

Oldest document

The microfilms are stored in The Church of Latter-Day Saints’ main temple in Greenmeadows subdivision, Quezon City. Baul said there are 80,000 microfilms stored in their temple.

The oldest document was a baptismal record signed in 1542, just two decades after Ferdinand Magellan landed in the Philippines, which was found in a municipality of Batangas.

Link to article

Home cookin': Ex-Oak Ridge star shines for BYU

Tuesday, December 23rd, 2008

From The Sacramento Bee:

Name: Austin Collie

Local ties: Oak Ridge High School

The skinny: Collie sizzled in warm weather and cold, the regular season, the biggest games and right on into the bowl season. The junior receiver for BYU set school records with 106 receptions for 1,538 yards and 15 touchdowns in earning second-team All-America honors. His receptions and yards led the country this season . He had 11 consecutive 100-yard games, including pulling in 11 passes for 119 yards in a 31-21 loss to Arizona in the Las Vegas Bowl on Saturday.

Hard to please: Collie was not pleased with the bowl outcome, telling reporters afterward, “Some guys played to the best, some guys didn’t, and I was one who didn’t.”

Prep flashback: Collie was a Prep All-American at Oak Ridge in 2003 and was named The Bee’s Player of the Year. He had 24 total touchdowns as a senior in garnering Northern California Player of the Year accolades. He then embarked on a church mission in Buenos Aires.

What now?: Collie would surely generate some draft interest with his combination of speed, hands and technique. Collie said after the bowl loss, “I’m not thinking about that right now. I’m thinking about the loss. We had a good season, not a great season. We had the potential to have a great season.”

Link to article

MORMON MISSIONARIES LEAN TOWARD BIGFOOT BELIEF!!!

Monday, December 15th, 2008

From The San Francisco Sentinel:

Two missionaries with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints received a scare on the night of Dec. 2 when they saw what they think was a set of sasquatch footprints outside of their Burns Lake home.

Tyler Beck and Brad Blazzard are in B.C. for two years, rotating in different communities throughout the Smithers and Burns Lake area for the past seven months.

“The first thing we thought was that someone was playing a trick on us,” Beck said.

“But we don’t know anyone our age who would do that and our house in on the southside, so pretty much in the middle of nowhere.”

The footprints, which Beck said was about 20 inches long is right in front of Beck’s porch, leading to the path where the pair keep their wood shed.

Beck said prior to finding the footprint at 9:30 p.m. on the night of Dec. 2, he didn’t really believe in the possibility of bigfoot.

“I still don’t know what to think,” he said.

“I have heard some pretty ridiculous things about bigfoot but now I am leaning toward the edge of thinking it may be possible.”

The house sits in front of a lake and Beck said in the four-and-a-half months he has been there, he has seen all manner of coyotes and wolves. This is the first time he has seen any sign of the fabled creature.

In addition to a rash of sightings in the Bulkley Valley in the summer and fall, Larry Sommerfield, a self-proclaimed sasquatch hunter from Terrace had a cast that he claimed was a sasquatch print.

Sommerfield was reluctant to tell The Terrace Standard how he came into possession of the 16-inch long cast, except to say that it was made in mid-August from a footprint found in a gravel pit just east of the Kitselas First Nation’s subdivision east of Terrace on Highway 16.  (cont.)

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