Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Handmade Gifts--Spoken Word Given By Lloyd D. Newell

Handmade Gifts Delivered By: Lloyd D. Newell

In today’s world of mass production, handmade items are more meaningful than ever. Beyond being well-crafted, original workmanship, they can be manifestations of love, personal evidence of our care and concern.

Think how heartwarming original drawings and less-than-perfect handwriting on a homemade card can be. Smell rolls fresh out of the oven, rather than in packages that preserve their shelf life; feel the warmth of a quilt that’s been pieced together one square at a time, hour after hour, day by day; touch the smooth finish on a handmade toy car—and you feel a connection with the person who made it. In every stitch, in every cut, in every shaping of such handiwork, is a little bit of its creator.

A newly married woman found extra meaning in a handmade wedding gift, a blanket that had been crocheted by her elderly friend. Fingering the loops of yarn, the bride counted 108 blue and white squares and smiled at the thought of her friend resting the blanket across her feeble knees as she crocheted. The blanket was more than a warm covering to the young woman; it was a tangible reminder of her friend’s love.

Whether a hand-sewn blanket or a handwritten note, such homemade items are filled with the human touch. Their mass-produced counterparts, though sometimes just as beautiful, don’t represent the same kind of time, effort, and care. Just as “the heavens declare the glory of God; and the firmament [showeth] his handywork,”1 our creations can tell of our love for those most dear to us. Sometimes, generations later, a family member or friend might still enjoy the work of our hands and think of the person who cared enough to make it.
Program #4124
1 Psalm 19:1

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Typhoon Jangmi--09282008

Taiwan evacuations in advance of typhoon

  • Story Highlights
  • Island evacuates residents in landslide-prone areas
  • Typhoon Jangmi expected to reach Taiwan by Sunday afternoon
  • Capital city Taipei reported quiet in early Sunday hours

TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) -- Authorities evacuated villagers from landslide-prone areas in Taiwan and residents boarded up windows amid torrential rain and wind as Typhoon Jangmi roared toward the island Sunday.

The usually bustling capital of Taipei was eerily quiet with only a few cars on streets buffeted by the stormy weather.

CTI Television showed villagers evacuating the scenic mountain resort of Lushan in central Taiwan, clutching small bags of personal belongings. The area was badly damaged when Typhoon Sinlaku hit two weeks ago, with massive mudslides destroying at least three hotels.

The Disaster Relief Center said authorities were closely monitoring the water levels in rivers, particularly at 19 major bridges that will be closed if necessary.

"The storm's fringes are covering most of Taiwan, and is gaining strength," said Wu Teh-rong, a meteorologist with the Central Weather Bureau.

The bureau said Jangmi was centered about 124 miles southeast of Hualien in eastern Taiwan on Sunday morning. Packing sustained winds of 118 miles per hour, Jangmi will likely make landfall in Hualien in the afternoon, the bureau said.

Jangmi is the fourth typhoon -- and likely the most powerful -- to hit the island this year, the bureau said, warning of "super torrential rains" in several mountainous areas.

Typhoons frequently hit Taiwan between July and October, causing flash floods and deadly landslides. Typhoon Sinlaku killed 12 people and left 10 others missing.

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Where they find God

T.F. man writes book about LDS temples
Living in Utah several years ago, Andrew Weeks started researching for a book about the history of temples of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

He'd been reading about spiritual experiences church members had in the temples, and had heard the growing number of announcements of new temples, including Twin Falls'.

"At the time, I heard about all the temples going up across the world, so I wanted to contribute something to that literature,"Weeks said.

He finished the writing of the book, but it sat unpublished.

Then, a year and a half ago, he took a position at the Times-News, moving to Twin Falls where the temple was under construction.

"I'd never seen members so excited about a temple,"Weeks said. "In Utah they seem to be a dime a dozen."

He picked up on that excitement to push for the book's publication.

"It's really inspiring to know a member felt strongly enough about (the Twin Falls temple) to write a book," said Charles Barnes, bishop in Twin Falls' 10th Ward, where Weeks is a member. "Andy gave us a better understanding of the role that temples have played through the history of mankind."

The book, "Spiritual Temples:Heavenly Experiences in the Houses of God," outlines the history of temples, from Old Testament times through the founding of the LDSchurch - but doesn't address the temples of other faiths. Weeks emphasizes the spiritual experiences people have had in the buildings.

"Members have claimed to see angels, or in some cases, the Lord," he said.

Especially in the early days of the church at the Kirtland, Ohio, temple, many of these experiences were described in personal journals or church records, which have since become public. Weeks drew on these historical sources for many of his descriptions. He believes people continue to have such encounters in temples.

"Even though this book is about spiritual experiences that happened years ago in the church, it's my assumption they happen today," he said. "In talking to people, people are not necessarily apt to share their spiritual experiences, because they are personal."

Weeks also addresses how members can prepare themselves for visits to their temple, and looks to the future of the church's temple construction. "I would hope for members of the church that it would inspire them to make the most of their temple visits,"he said.

"Probably the most inspiring thing," Barnes said, "is that he encourages members to seek a higher plateau, that as LDS people we need to seek greater worthiness."

Weeks expects that the book will interest primarily Mormons, but that anyone else will better understand LDS believers after reading it.

"Especially those who have been on the tour (of the temple), they would get a better idea of why temples are so important to us," Barnes said.

The book is not long - just 73 pages, plus a preface and appendices. "This was not meant to be a tough book, it was not meant to be complicated,"Weeks said.

Ariel Hansen may be reached at 208-735-3376 or ariel.hansen@lee.net.

Get a copy

"Spiritual Temples:Heavenly Experiences in the Houses of God," by Andrew Weeks, is available at major bookstores, and online at Amazon.com and Barnesandnoble.com for $12.95.

Weeks will sign books at the Twin Falls Barnes & Noble, 1239 Pole Line Road, from 1 to 3 p.m. today.

RFB 2:

Weeks' other books

"America in Perspective: LDS Perspectives on America's Past, Present, and Future," 2000.

"Psalms, Proverbs and Parables: Doctrinal and Literary Gems," 2001.

"America Back Then: A compilation of historic, patriotic literature," 2002.

Dedication and Open House Dates Are Announced for the Draper Utah Temple

The First Presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has announced dates for a public open house prior to the dedication of the new Draper Utah Temple.

Following media and dignitary tours, the public will be invited to visit the Draper temple beginning Thursday, 15 January 2009 through Saturday, 14 March 2009. All temple visits exclude Sundays.

After the open house, the Draper temple will be formally dedicated on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, 20-22 March 2009. A total of twelve dedicatory sessions will be conducted over these four days.

The Draper Utah Temple will serve approximately 60,000 members living in the Draper area.

Latter-day Saint temples differ from the Church’s meetinghouses or chapels where members meet for Sunday worship services. Temples are considered "houses of the Lord" where Christ's teachings are reaffirmed through marriage, baptism and other ordinances that unite families for eternity. In the temple, Church members learn more about the purpose of life and strengthen their commitment to serve Jesus Christ and their fellowman.

The Draper Utah Temple was announced by President Gordon B. Hinckley, former worldwide leader of the Church, at the Church’s October 2004 General Conference. It will be the 129th operating temple in the world and the 12th in Utah.

Formal temple work will commence at the Draper temple on Monday, 23 March 2009.

---

LDS Newsroom

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

First Presidency Issues Letter on Political Participation

09/23/2008 06:11 PM MDT

The following letter was issued by the First Presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints on September 11, 2008, to be read to Church congregations throughout the United States:

Political Participation, Voting, and the Political Neutrality of the Church

As citizens we have the privilege and duty of electing office holders and influencing public policy. Participation in the political process affects our communities and nation today and in the future.

Latter-day Saints as citizens are to seek out and then uphold leaders who will act with integrity and are wise, good, and honest. Principles compatible with the gospel may be found in various political parties.

Therefore, in this election year, we urge you to register to vote, to study the issues and candidates carefully and prayerfully, and then to vote for and actively support those you believe will most nearly carry out your ideas of good government.

The Church affirms its neutrality regarding political parties, platforms, and candidates. The Church also affirms its constitutional right of expression on political and social issues.

Sincerely yours,

Thomas S. Monson Henry B. Eyring Dieter F. Uchtdorf The First Presidency

---

LDS Newsroom

Matters of the Mind, Latter-day Saint Helps for Mental Health

BYU NewsNet - Book Covers Mental Illness From LDS Perspective
BYU NewsNet

Book Covers Mental Illness From LDS Perspective

By Jorge Torres
23 Sep 2008

Without complex jargon and excessive medical terminology, "Matters of the Mind" serves as a guide for members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to understand mental illnesses.

Marleen S. Williams, Ph.D., and John P. Livingstone, Ed. D., both BYU faculty members, worked together to create a book that helps Latter-day Saints better understand the complexity of mental disorders ranging from anxiety to Alzheimer's disease.

According to "Matters of the Mind, Latter-day Saint Helps for Mental Health," the book's purpose is to give readers a more accurate understanding of mental illnesses. The book examines the causes of mental illnesses, treatments available for patients suffering from mental disorders and also serves as a spiritual guide that will help readers cope with such illnesses.

"This book is a first of its kind," said Williams, clinical professor of counseling psychology. "There are a lot of myths and misconceptions about mental illnesses. People don't seem to understand what mental health is."

Williams said the book combines the expertise of W. Dean Belnap, M.D, specialist in psychiatry, the spiritual perspective of Livingstone, a religion professor, and her years of experience in the field of psychology.

While serving as the president of the Association of Mormon Counselors and Psychotherapists, Livingstone came up with the idea of writing a book for members of the LDS faith struggling with mental disorders.

"Wouldn't it be of service if we could write a book about the brain and its problems?" Livingstone said. "If people have brain problems this may affect their spiritual health."

They wanted to write a book that was easy to read and would help people with mental illnesses and family members to better understand how to cope with the illnesses, Livingstone said. They also wanted to give valuable information on the types of treatments available, he said.

"A lot of people don't understand how complex the brain is," Williams said. "People believe that mental illnesses are character flaws that can be overcome by the patient."

Many myths exist in the LDS faith. Some members of the Church believe that a person can just throw away their medication and be cured, just because they have faith, Williams said. People suffering from these chemical imbalances and illnesses must know about the treatments available and know it is to their advantage to receive help from professionals, she said. This book also contains various articles published in LDS publications such as the "Ensign" and "New Era." LDS people must access spiritual and scientific resources to cope with mental illnesses, Williams said.

"I think the Lord can reveal truth and theory through medical professionals, who have been inspired to create medicines and components to help Heavenly Father's children with brain problems," Livingstone said.

On Thursday and Friday, Williams and Livingstone will be at the BYU Bookstore for a book-signing event organized during Utah Mental Health Week. More information is avaialable on Utah Mental Health Week at www.namiutah.org.



    Copyright ©2008 BYU NewsNet

    Monday, September 22, 2008

    Mormon “Helping Hands” Clean Up After Hurricane Ike

    As Houstonians begin to pick up the pieces of their lives following the devastation caused by Hurricane Ike, members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints have mobilized into volunteer work crews to provide much needed cleanup of debris for their neighbors in southeast Texas.

    The Houston bishops’ storehouse had been preparing for Ike for weeks with food, water, tents, tarps, tools, chainsaws, cots and sleeping bags. Bennie Lilly, Area Welfare Manager for the Southwest Area, said preparation for hurricane season also means having hygiene kits, cleaning kits and food boxes positioned at various locations around the country that might experience the weather disaster.

    The Houston Texas South Stake (a stake is comprised of six to eight smaller congregations) of the Church, located southwest of the Houston metro area, is one of several stakes that have fielded work crews every day following the disaster. Stake president S. Gifford Nielsen said: “Serving our neighbors in need has been an outstanding experience for the members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. There are a lot people who’ve been devastated by Hurricane Ike, and we are seeing an incredible outpouring of love as neighbors help neighbors. We have been taught to love the Lord and love our neighbor and we want to express that love through service.”

    The Church’s volunteers are instantly recognizable in their yellow “Mormon Helping Hands” T-shirts and come equipped with their own food, water and fuel. They arrive in damaged neighborhoods with chainsaws to take down damaged trees and provide tarps to cover leaky roofs – all free of charge.

    On Tuesday, 16 September, 150 Mormon Helping Hands volunteers from Houston and missionaries from the Houston Texas South Mission worked from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Braeswood area. The bishop of the local Mormon congregation, Craig Hanis, has been very active in recovery efforts in his neighborhood and welcomed the additional Mormon Helping Hands volunteers.

    Bishop Hanis explained that members of his congregation have heeded the counsel of Church leaders to be prepared. “Our members are 72 hours into this disaster, and they still have their own emergency supplies. Consequently, we haven’t waited in long lines because we already had water, ice and fuel. We did what we were counseled to do. It works.” As a result, Bishop Hanis’ congregation has been able to respond to the needs of others more quickly.

    Bishop Hanis said most of the efforts have been directed towards people of other faiths. Helen Viola, Bishop Hanis’ neighbor, had trouble leaving her home due to a fallen tree. “Bishop Hanis and his three boys cleared out my yard before they started on their own,” she said. “That is the kind of neighbors they are.”

    Another neighbor, Tom Herpin, said: “We came back [to the Houston area] yesterday. It looked like a war zone here.” He said that while some companies are charging thousands of dollars to clean up debris, the Mormons are just asking for the opportunity to help out. “That is pretty crazy,” said Herpin. “You don’t get a lot of that.”

    Disasters, as horrible as they are, give Latter-day Saints a chance to serve. Randy Ellis, Houston cannery manager and disaster volunteer, said: “We get involved because that’s who we are. We’re trying to follow the example of the Savior. It feels good to help your neighbor. We don’t do what we do to get people into the Church. We do it just to help people.”

    Deborah Duncan, host of KHOU TV’s Deborah Duncan Show, heard about the Mormon Helping Hands volunteers and decided to do a segment about them on her show. After watching the volunteers in action, she observed: “It is interesting to me because historically if you look at where people go in times of need and in times of a disaster, they go back to the church. And even though we have all of those government programs today and agencies and entities, people still at the end of the day go back to the church. It is nice to see people out here practicing what we preach.”

    Billie Childress’s gratitude is typical of the many thanks the Mormon Helping Hands volunteers received that day. “They have been fantastic,” she said. “They are unbelievable. They are a blessing.” In New Orleans, Louisiana, where Hurricane Gustav hit, the presence of Mormon Helping Hands has had a major presence as well. To date, nearly 3,000 man days have been logged in cleaning up people’s homes and providing delivery of food and water. Between the two hurricanes, more than a thousand Latter-day Saints have helped their neighbors and their communities even when their own homes sustained damage.

    ---

    LDS Newsroom

    Big Dreams on a Small Island--Spoken Word Given By Lloyd D. Newell

    Big Dreams on a Small Island Delivered By: Lloyd D, Newell

    Every great endeavor starts small, sometimes as little more than a dream.

    Lucy Maud Montgomery was raised on Canada’s beautiful Prince Edward Island and loved the sights and sounds of nature. From an early age she had a vivid imagination and a burning desire to be a writer. A biographer said, “She was very much an individual, with strong opinions, even stronger emotions, and a heart full of hopes and dreams that sustained her through a lifetime of disappointments and hardships.”1

    For many years she had tried to publish her poems and stories, receiving one rejection after another. She finally sold a few, saw her name in print, and that kept her going—reading and writing, learning more about writing, and then writing some more.

    Writing was hard work, and rejection was not easy. She said, “People envy me these bits of success and say, ‘It’s well to be you,’ and so on. I smile cynically when I hear them. They do not realize how many disappointments come to one success. They see only the successes and think all must be smooth travelling.”2

    One of Maud’s fondest dreams was to publish a story about an imaginative orphan girl named Anne Shirley. Numerous publishers rejected the manuscript. Discouraged, she packed it into a hatbox and stuffed it in a closet. A year later, Maud was housecleaning when she came across the hatbox and reread her old novel. She decided that it wasn’t bad, after all. So after making some revisions, she sent it out again. This time a publisher accepted it.

    Anne of Green Gables was published more than a hundred years ago and continues to be among the world’s most beloved books. Maud Montgomery would go on to publish scores of novels, stories, and poems. But it all began with her big dream while living on a small island.

    How easy it is to say, “Well, it’s easy for her because she’s so talented.” The truth is that it’s not smooth traveling for any of us. But even small beginnings, after all of the roadblocks and the dead ends, can lead to great things when they ride on the wheels of a dream.
    1 1. Catherine M. Andronik, Kindred Spirit: A Biography of L. M. Montgomery, Creator of Anne of Green Gables (1993), xii.
    2 In Kindred Spirit, 49.
    Program #4123

    Wednesday, September 17, 2008

    Blogger Community Helps LDS Family

    By

    One month ago LDS couple Christian, 29, and Stephanie Neilson, 27, from Phoenix, Ariz. were in a devastating plane crash, leaving them still today in the intensive care burn unit.

    But the remarkable thing about the crash is how it has brought together complete strangers from across the world in a uniting purpose: to show support and love for Neilson family.

    Stephanie Neilson has been blogging about her family for the past three years in her wildly popular blog the NeiNei Dialogues. The mother of four inspires women worldwide with her posts on the celebration of motherhood, keeping her marriage alive, and home décor among other things. To the blogger community, she is seen as a sort of supermom.

    "Stephanie blogged because she wanted to share the message of motherhood,” Stephanie’s sister Courtney told KSL. “And she wanted to share the beauty of her life. The remarkable thing is people are responding to her.”

    Since the accident, tens of thousands of her readers have come together in her family’s support, doing whatever they can to help.The response is overwhelming.

    "We are getting thousands of e-mails from people who say, 'I've never met Stephanie. I've only read her blog. I am so inspired by her and want to be a better wife and mother,'" Courtney said.

    Recently, Nei Nei Day was declared by the writer of the blog Design Mom, and one of the Neilson’s good friends. She encouraged fellow bloggers to host silent auctions on their blogs and to donate the proceeds to the Nei Recovery Fund.

    In a recent post from Design Mom, she writes, “Can I just say, again and again, how delighted/impressed/touched/amazed I am by the response from you, the internet community? At last report, I heard that since Nie Nie Day, over $117,000 has been donated to the Nie Recovery Fund. The vast majority of that from auctions, in smallish increments like $50 to $100, and the remaining from good people that didn't win an auction, but wanted to contribute anyway.”

    Also, her sister Courtney called on readers from her own blog, C Jane Enjoy It, to release helium balloons carrying get-well messages for the couple as an act of inspiration, and people from all over the world joined in. And since the accident one month ago, Stephanie’s blog has jumped from 2,000 hits a day to over 30,000 every day.

    Most of the support has come from people who have never even met Stephanie or her family. So why are they so involved?

    “Like people who deeply identify with characters on television, a character on a blog can help people escape their own anxieties and insecurities,” said Steve G. Hoffman, a visiting assistant professor of sociology at the State University at Buffalo in a New York Times article. “She is a kind of empty vessel within which her readers can fill with their personal hopes, dreams and desires.”

    The readers who have raised money and shown support say they see little difference between a physical friend and their online ones, which is why they are so concerned with their recovery.

    If you would like to get involved, go to neirecovery.com, blog.cjanerun.com for updates, or neineidialogues.blogspot.com to visit Stephanie’s blog.

    ---

    LDS Living

    North American LDS Missionaries Leave Bolivia as Precaution

    Posted: Sep 16, 2008 12:34 PM MDT

    Updated: Sep 16, 2008 03:35 PM MDT

    By Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

    Some 102 North American missionaries of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints serving in Bolivia have been transferred to missions outside the country.

    The transfer was taken in consultation with US government representatives in Bolivia and with the cooperation of Bolivian immigration authorities as a precautionary measure during the present unsettled conditions there.

    The Church used commercial and charter flights to transfer most of the missionaries. Evacuation of the missionaries began last weekend and was completed by Monday night.

    All of the transferred missionaries will serve for the time being in Peru. The Church expects them to return when conditions become more settled.

    The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has good relationships with the Bolivian government, and has a significant humanitarian aid program in the country. Recently, 1,000 wheelchairs were delivered to Bolivia as a part of that humanitarian effort.

    Tuesday, September 16, 2008

    'In their own language' - translating in the LDS Church

    'In their own language' - translating in the LDS Church

    By LDS News Services

    Published: Saturday, Aug. 30, 2008

    More than four and a half million copies of the 2008 adult study course, "Teachings of Presidents of the Church: Joseph Smith," rolled off the presses of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints last year. More than half were published in English and the remaining two million in 64 other languages.

    Translation of that book along with the 25 additional manuals that constitute the annual lesson resources for church members of all ages falls upon a staff of translators located both in Salt Lake City and in 31 area offices and 24 time zones throughout the world.

    And translation of curriculum materials is only a part of the whole process, according to Marty Hill, manager of translation services for the church. "We can have as many as 2,000 translation projects in process at any one time."

    Translators work on scriptures, magazines, administrative documents and handbooks, computer software, conferences and training meetings as well as Internet content posted by the church.

    "Translation is a spiritual yet time-consuming and tedious process," Hill continues. "It takes us about a year to train an effective translator."

    On a 1994 assignment to locate a new translator in the recently established democracy of Albania, Paul Kern, who at the time was an area translation manager in Europe, traveled with a cargo of computers donated by a Dutch bank. Kern's objective then, in the very infant stages of the church in that country, was to find a member of the newly recognized faith, fluent in English, who would assist in translating church materials into the Albanian language.

    Kern discovered a new member of the church, Ledia Kita, trained her in computer usage, and left her with the task of translation. Despite the severe limits to electrical power, Kita pursued the chore, primarily during the "early morning hours for about 30 minutes before the lights and the power left," she said.

    In the ensuing years, Kita translated and assisted with the translation of many church documents into her language, including the first translation of the Book of Mormon into Albanian.

    "Time is another issue in completing an assignment," Hill adds. "Every single page of copy, or about 280 words, requires nearly two hours to translate to get to a publication grade of quality. Translation is much more than writing; it is not a science, it is a revelatory experience that is balanced with good language skills. Pages must be reviewed, reconciled, and differences resolved before they are transferred to the typesetters. That whole process takes a lot of time"

    Translators get a jump-start with a 32-item keyword list, a list generated for every language in which materials are published. Such a list ensures consistency in basic terminology and saves time in the daily task of working on each document. In addition, scriptures, quotations and cultural terms, even jokes, are verified and explained before a translator receives the document.

    Following completion of the translation, a document is often reviewed by three additional people for content, language and cultural fitness.

    Beyond the printed word, translation or interpretation is required for about 120 events each year, events such as general conference, training meetings or youth-focused discussions broadcast over the church satellite system.

    Kern cites an instance of this effort.

    "A group of some 800 members in a remote area of Paraguay, for example, speak only a rare Indian dialect, Nivaclé, and have challenges receiving information. When we have a broadcast, a returned missionary from their tribe, who learned Spanish during his missionary service, receives a Spanish-translated feed and then he interprets to the people in the meetinghouse in Paraguay -- all with only a half-second delay."

    Implementing another method, translators residing in Albania do "real-time translation into the Albanian language and at the same time burn DVDs," according to Paul Clayton, who serves as a volunteer mission president in that country. This satellite access only became available in 2007, providing additional communication access for members there.

    "The first time they saw a church leader speaking live, the members started to cry and took pictures of the transmitted proceedings from the projector screen," Clayton adds.

    With the growth of the church in recent years, the number of languages used in such broadcasts has also increased.

    "In 1995, we used 33 languages in the semiannual general conference broadcast," Kern explains. "In April 2008, we translated into 92 different languages."

    "Such satellite broadcasts help create a sense of community," says Val Dawson, event services manager for the church's satellite network that broadcasts such events. "Whether in Latin America, South Africa, Norway, Delaware or Alaska, the members feel like they are on equal footing when it comes to being able to hear messages on satellite broadcasts."

    The Shoshone Indian language was among those added for last October's general conference meetings. Some 40 members of the church, speaking only that Indian language, gathered to hear a general conference broadcast at a meetinghouse near their homes in Fort Hall, Idaho.

    When asked about the economy of such an effort for only 40 people, Kern expressed the feelings of the local church leader involved: "That's 40 more than we have ever had before."

    Many church members and leaders throughout the world express similar feelings of gratitude for being able to hear and read the messages of the church in their own language.


    MormonTimes.com is produced by the Deseret News in Salt Lake City, Utah.
    It is not an official publication of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

    Copyright © 2008 Deseret News Publishing Company

    Immeasurable Significant--Spoken Word Given by Lloyd D. Newell

    Immeasurably Significant Delivered By: Lloyd D. Newell

    Who doesn’t want to be successful? Who doesn’t want to achieve in their field and find fame, fortune, or power? This kind of success is about achieving measurable results. But there’s another kind of success that is not so measurable—the success of being significant in someone else’s life.

    American swimmer Michael Phelps has won more gold medals than any Olympic athlete in history. By so many measures, he is successful. But his experience with Kristin Koch, a 12-year-old girl with Down syndrome, was in some ways more significant than his victories—both for him and for Kristin.

    Shortly after the 2004 Summer Olympics, Michael spent a day with Kristin and her family. The chance to swim with an Olympic gold medalist was a dream come true for Kristin, but equally significant was the influence Kristin had on him. He later recounted that seeing Kristin swim with so much joy and enthusiasm changed his perspective. Kristin helped him rediscover his love for swimming and reminded him to swim for the love of the sport.

    All of us yearn to make a difference, to live a life measured by more than what we hang on the walls, what we stuff in safe deposit boxes or park in the garage. Think about those who have been significant to you. Perhaps, like Kristin, they exuded a simple love for life when you had lost that spark, or maybe they found the right words to say at just the right moment. Perhaps they were simply at your side when you needed someone.

    Isn’t that what life is all about? There is striving and achieving, yes. But reaching into someone’s life and leaving an imprint on the heart is immeasurably significant.
    Program #4122

    Beautiful Taiwan

    The Church and lush green foliage flourish on island


    September 13, 2008
    Related content:
    Missionary beats language barrier

    By Greg Hill
    Church News staff writer

    TAIPEI, TAIWAN
    When he stepped off a boat in Taiwan on New Year's Day 1959, Elder Gerald H. Walker from Utah was among the earliest missionaries to serve here, just three years after the first had arrived from Hong Kong in the Southern Far East Mission. He didn't know the Chinese language as he went forth to teach the gospel of Jesus Christ in a land dominated by Buddhism and Taoism.



    Esther Tsai, with father, Nathan, and brother John, always wanted to follow in the footsteps of her mother, Rachel, and serve a full-time mission. An accomplished student at the Taiwan University of Art (see Church News, April 26, 2008), she graduated in June and will soon begin serving at the Oakland California Temple visitors center in the California Oakland Mission.

    Photo by Greg Hill
    Few tracts were available in Mandarin Chinese and the Book of Mormon had not been translated into that language. But Elder Walker and his fellow missionaries faithfully labored among a people they grew to love. They saw success and the Church began to grow.
    Elder Walker never dreamed that someday the Church would be strong enough on the Asian island to have its own temple. He shared those thoughts with the Church News on a Sunday afternoon in late August while sitting in his Taipei apartment where he lives while serving as president of the Taipei Taiwan Temple.
    Taiwan public affairs senior missionary Elder James Phillips noted that the island of Taiwan is similar in size to Indiana. Rugged mountains dominate the eastern two-thirds of the island, squeezing a population of about 23 million to the west and north.
    There are 16 stakes in the Church's Asia Area which includes most of the continent and the India subcontinent, but not Japan, Korea, the Philippines, Asiatic Russia or the Middle East. Ten of those stakes are in Taiwan. (There are four in Hong Kong and one each in Thailand and Singapore.)


    Sister Noelle Teh, left, from the United States, and Sister Keshia Lai from Singapore are among the foreign missionaries who are joining forces with native missionaries spreading the gospel throughout the beautiful island of Taiwan. The Church is strong there with nearly 44,000 members in 10 stakes and with a temple in its largest city.

    Photo by Greg Hill
    The few members in Taiwan's five small branches when Elder Walker served his mission had grown to about 4,400 by 1971 when Elder Norman S. Nielson arrived in the Taiwan Mission which only a few months earlier had been formed from the Hong Kong-Taiwan Mission. He said the Church had built two meetinghouses, one in Taipei in the north and one in Kaohsiung in the south. He added that many of the leaders among the members in Taiwan were still relatively new to the Church.
    When he returned in 2006 as president of the Taiwan Taipei Mission, the Church had 10 times as many members. There were also seasoned Church leaders — including Area Seventies, as well as a temple and beautiful new meetinghouses dotting the island.
    By simply spending a few hours on "Temple Square" in Taipei, the vibrancy of the Church can be felt among faithful members and spiritual, diligent missionaries.
    Taipei, sprawling over green-covered hills, is Taiwan's biggest city with a population of about 2.6 million.


    The north coast of Taiwan is surrounded by green-covered mountainous terrain typical of the spectacular scenery of that part of the island. Population centers are further south.

    Photo by Greg Hill
    In the city's center is the temple block. In an area much smaller than Salt Lake City's Temple Square is nestled the Taipei Taiwan Temple, dedicated by President Gordon B. Hinckley in 1984, and the Church Administration Building, dedicated by President Hinckley in 2005. They are separated by a narrow but attractive courtyard with walkways, a fountain and landscaping including palm trees.
    The block was bustling with activity on Saturday, Aug. 30, as it is on most Saturdays. Members were going in and out of the temple, young single adults were decorating for a dance that night in the cultural hall behind the chapel on the first floor of the administration building, and missionaries were giving tours and teaching investigators.
    Among the members were Peng Mei Zhu Hsu and her Primary-age children Yu Wen and Jing Xiang. They joined other members on a temple trip from the Chi An Branch on the narrow east coast of Taiwan, traveling over the rugged mountains. Members do ordinance work; youth 12 and older doing baptisms for the dead. To help those such as Sister Hsu, who had no one at home to care for her children, branch members take turns watching children and doing ordinance work, a common practice on ward, stake and branch temple trips.
    Jun Cheng Lin and his wife, Zi Ya Chen Lin, who brought their baby daughter, Yun Zhen, the 80 miles from Taichung so they could attend the temple, had a different blessing. Their toddler's uncle, Jun Rong Lin, a member in Taipei, met them at the temple and tended their toddler at the administration building while they did temple work.


    Elder Chung-Hung Chen from Kaohsiung, Taiwan, tells a motor scooter rider on a street in Taichung about the Church.

    Photo by Greg Hill
    Presiding over the temple is "just a sweet experience," President Walker said, especially seeing people coming for the first time, receiving their endowments, getting married and being sealed. "We have spiritual experiences every day."
    The members are actively engaged in family history work, President Walker said, and a great number are doing temple work for their own ancestors.
    With the temple active next door, missionary work was going on in the administration building. Missionaries teach many discussions there, including in the two chapels. Elder Greg Levesque from Meridian, Idaho, said the Taipei 2nd Ward alone has had 28 baptisms in 2008.
    Sister Carol Lynn Azure and her companion, Sister Yu-Tong (Sierra) Chien, supervise tours of the administration building, training and scheduling other sister-missionary teams. The tour, as conducted for the Church News by Sister Azure and Sister Chien, begins in the foyer of the administration building, and is led down first and second-floor hallways where paintings give missionaries the chance to introduce and discuss topics such as the Godhead, scriptures, priesthood authority, the plan of salvation, the restoration and the 19th-century pioneer experiences. At a second-floor window framing a beautiful view of the temple, the purpose of temples is taught. Also on the second floor is a room where Church videos, including "Legacy" and "Testaments of One Fold and One Shepherd" can be shown in Mandarin Chinese, English or other languages.
    Many missionary teams include a native of Taiwan and an English-speaking elder or sister. In those cases, they help each other learn the other's language and most teams are sufficiently bilingual. Sister Cassandra Barker from Heber City, Utah, echoed the words of many non-Mandarin Chinese speaking missionaries who found it a challenging language to learn. She said it's a struggle for several weeks, and then seems to click almost overnight.


    Soaring over Taipei's city center is the world's tallest completed and occupied building -- 101-story, 1,671-foot-high Taipei 101.

    Photo by Greg Hill
    President Nielson said the native Taiwan missionaries do very well and many more are needed. But youth of the Church face challenges here that make it difficult. All young men in Taiwan are subject to mandatory military duty at age 20 and some full-time missionaries have been called to the military before their missionary service is completed. Also, the educational system is very competitive and if a slot in a university is earned, it usually will be lost if given up for missionary service.
    Nevertheless, many do serve missions. Often, they are older, finishing their education and, for the elders, their military service before going. Most are called to one of the three missions on the island, the Taiwan Taipei, the Taiwan Taichung on the west-central coast or the Taiwan Kaohsiung in the south.
    A 49-minute trip from Taipei to Taichung on Taiwan's high speed railroad gave the Church News a look at the work in another mission. In contrast to the older, hilly city of Taipei, Taichung is a relatively new, more modern city on the flat land of the western coastal plain. But the missionaries are just as enthused, cheerful and spiritually minded as their counterparts in Taipei. They are a similar mix of foreigners and native Taiwan elders and sisters.
    After a short Church News interview, four elders wanted to demonstrate one of their contacting methods. Elder Chung-Hung Chen of Kaohsiung; Elder Kyle Evans of Tustin, Calif.; Elder Bradford Miklavic of Cape Elizabeth, Maine; and Elder Wen Wei Chen of Tainan took to the streets at an intersection outside the mission office.
    For 10 minutes they approached pedestrians and people on motor scooters stopped at the intersection. Then they reported back with 10 phone numbers and/or addresses of contacts willing to talk to them again. With referrals coming in like that, they have plenty of teaching opportunities and it bodes well for the future growth of the Church on this beautiful sub-tropical island.



    Sister Peng Mei Zhu Hsu of the Chi An Branch on Taiwan's east coast sits by temple with her children Jing-Xiang and Yu-Wen.

    Photo by Greg Hill



    A typical street near the Church's temple in Taipei, a city of about 2.6 million, is alive with activity. Among the private vehicles, taxis and swarms of motor scooters in the city are pedestrians who come across as open and kind.

    Photo by Greg Hill



    Photo by Greg Hill

    E-mail to: ghill@desnews.com

    ====================================================================

    Missionary beats language barrier



    September 13, 2008

    Sister Noelle Teh has Chinese roots. So when she arrived to serve in the Taiwan Taipei Mission, people would set her back by speaking to her in Mandarin Chinese. She told the Church News it was frustrating for her because her Chinese language skills were pretty much limited to what she learned in the Provo Missionary Training Center.
    Her grandparents were all from China, but her father, Guan C. Teh moved from Malaysia to America to attend a university. Her mother, Marion, was born and raised in Canada. Sister Teh is all American, born in American Fork, Utah, and growing up in Georgia before attending BYU and leaving on her mission.
    Now a year into her service, the energetic missionary, whose mother also served a mission in Taiwan nearly 30 years ago, is able to communicate and teach the gospel in fluent Chinese.

    Popovich leaves with 4 Paralympic golds

    By ANITA CHANG, Associated Press Writer Sep 14, 3:18 pm EDT

    BEIJING (AP)—Erin Popovich thinks it might be time to get a job.

    Here’s something for the resume: four gold medals and two silver in swimming at the Paralympics. Even better, she won 10 gold medals in the last two Paralympics, bringing her total to 14. Add to that five silver medals in her three Paralympics.

    Popovich might have gone home with six gold in Beijing, but she had to settle for silver in two weekend races—the 50-meter butterfly on Saturday and the 50 freestyle on Sunday.

    “Four long years of hard work and training paid off,” said Popovich, who trained for the games with the Colorado State swim team. Six days a week, as much as five hours a day, Popovich has been working toward Beijing, particularly after graduating last December.

    “I guess I should find a job sometime soon,” she said, with the swimming competition ending Monday and the Paralympics finishing Wednesday.

    The 23-year-old swimmer has been compared to Michael Phelps, who won eight gold medals at the Beijing Olympics.

    “We have a lot of drive and determination. We’re extremely competitive both in swimming and just in life,” she said. “To even be mentioned in the same sentence … is a tremendous honor for me, to be seen in the same light as that is huge.”

    Popovich has a form of dwarfism and competes against other child-sized athletes and swimmers with other disabilities.

    She churns through the water with thick arms and powerful legs, beating opponents like Huang Min of China by more than 6 seconds in the 200-meter individual medley and nearly 4 seconds in the 100-meter breaststroke.

    But it was also the slender Huang who dashed Popovich’s hopes of pulling off another all-gold performance at the Paralympics, winning the gold in the 50-meter butterfly Saturday.

    “Popovich has won lots of golds, but this one belongs to me,” Huang said. “Everyone who’s truly devoted can be successful.”

    Popovich, selected by teammates as one of four captains of the U.S. squad, smiled and gamely answered questions after Huang ruined her perfect record in Beijing.

    Popovich’s dominance in the pool is testament to her hard work.

    “I’d love to say I could just hop in the water and swim fast,” she said. “Unfortunately that’s not the case.”

    On Sunday, she was upset by American teammate Cortney Jordan in the 50 freestyle. Jordan finished in 33.84 seconds, with Popovich at 33.92. It was Jordan’s first gold in these games to go with two silver—100 freestyle and 400 freestyle—and a bronze in the 200 individual medley.

    “I was so shocked,” Jordan said, still panting five minutes after the race. “I had no idea that was going to happen. Oh, my gosh, I can’t believe I just did that. It was amazing and something I will remember for the rest of my life.”

    Popovich was again a gracious loser.

    “I put my best effort forth,” she said. “Cortney just had a phenomenal swim tonight. She did wonderful, she deserves it.”

    The United States had another four-gold winner in Jessica Long, who fell short in an effort for a fifth gold Sunday and finished fifth in the 50 freestyle. Long won gold in the 100 butterfly, 100 freestyle, 200 individual medley and 400 free. She also won silver in the 100 backstroke and bronze in the 100 breaststroke.

    At Colorado State, Popovich approached the swim team with a simple question: “Any way I can swim?”

    The team agreed to let her try. She’s been with them for five years, doing the same drills and workouts as the able-bodied athletes, though she makes adjustments such as swimming 350 meters instead of 400 to stay with the group.

    Popovich majored in health and exercise science. Like any other athlete in school, keeping on top of a busy scedule was no easy thing.

    “To put school and swimming together and make it work and be successful in both—managing your life to fit both things—that was a challenge,” she said.

    “I’ve looked into going into medical school—that’s definitely in the plans. There’s a lot of different things. I’m not quite sure what to do.”

    But one thing’s definite: swimming.

    “I have no thoughts of retiring,” she said.

    Saturday, September 13, 2008

    Rescuing Ike stalwarts a race against the clock

    By CHRISTOPHER SHERMAN, Associated Press Writer 22 minutes ago

    Rescue crews canvassed neighborhoods inundated by Ike's storm surge early Sunday morning, racing against time to rescue those who faced a second harrowing night trapped amid flattened houses, strewn debris and downed power lines.

    One team of paramedics, rescue dogs and structural engineers fanned out under a full moon on a finger of land in Galveston Bay. Authorities hoped to spare thousands of Texans — 140,000 by some estimates — who ignored mandates to flee Hurricane Ike from another night among the destruction. Some had been rescued, but unknown thousands remained stranded. Only four deaths had been blamed on Ike so far — two in Texas and two in Louisiana — and rescuers hoped to keep that tally from rising.

    But roads blocked by waist-deep water and downed trees kept many rescuers at bay as they struggled through the largest search-and-rescue effort in state history, just a day after the Category 2 storm crashed into Texas with 110 mph winds.

    Five-year-old Jack King escaped serious injury when storm surge sent a rush of water that washed out the first floor of his family's Galveston home just two blocks from the bay.

    "I falled in the attic," Jack told paramedic Stanley Hempstead of his 10-foot tumble onto the garage floor. Jack and his family had taken refuge in the room, loaded with blankets and other supplies. As rescuers arrived, Jack gazed at a TV aglow with "The Simpsons." The only evidence of his fall was a Band-Aid plastered to his closely-cropped hair, covering a gash.

    "We just didn't think it was going to come up like this," said the boy's father, Lee King. "I'm from New Orleans, I know better. I just didn't think it was going to happen."

    Fortunately, Jack only suffered scrapes and bruises in the fall. The Kings had hoped that a family member would pick them up, but a paramedic told him the road inland wouldn't be open for days. Lee King thought they could survive another night, but then their generator died. He ultimately decided the family was ready to leave.

    Hempstead and other team members sailed through flooded streets Saturday, evoking thoughts of another disastrous storm that kept him working for 31 days.

    "This brings back memories of Katrina — a lot of torn up homes and flooded stuff," he said of the infamous hurricane that struck New Orleans just more than three years ago. On one side of the Galveston peninsula, a couple of barges had broken loose and smashed into homes.

    Everything from red vinyl barstools to clay roof tiles littered the landscape. Some homes were "pancaked," the second floor sitting where the first had been before Ike's surge washed it out. Only the stud frames remained below the roofs of many houses, opening a clear view from front yard to back.

    Gov. Rick Perry's office said 940 people had been saved by nightfall Saturday, but that thousands had made distress calls the night before. Another 600 were rescued from Louisiana floods.

    "What's really frustrating is that we can't get to them," Galveston police officer Tommie Mafrei said. "It's jeopardizing our safety when we try to tell them eight hours before to leave. They are naive about it, thinking it's not going to be that bad."

    Some coastal residents waded through chest-deep water with their belongings and children in their arms to get to safety Saturday. Military helicopters loaded others carrying plastic bags and pets in their arms and brought them to dry ground.

    Big-wheeled dump trucks, boats and helicopters were at the ready to continue searching hard-hit Galveston and Orange County at daybreak Sunday.

    The water had reached 3 feet deep in Jeffrey Jordan's Galveston living room by the time police arrived to save him and his family. Like many who were rescued in the hours after the storm, he was escorted to a shelter.

    "They sent a dump truck to get us," Jordan said. "We shouldn't have been there because the water was rising something like a foot every five minutes."

    In downtown Houston, winds shattered the windows of gleaming skyscrapers, sleeting glass onto the streets below. Police used bullhorns to order people back into their homes. Furniture littered the streets, and business documents stamped "classified" had been carried by the wind through shattered office windows.

    The storm weakened to a tropical depression early Sunday morning, but was still packing 35-mph winds as it dumped rain over Arkansas and headed toward Missouri. Tornadoes were also possible Sunday in parts of Louisiana, Arkansas and Missouri as Ike headed toward the north-northeast.

    More than 3 million were without power in Texas at the height of the storm, and it could be weeks before it was fully restored. Utilities made some progress by late Saturday, and lights returned to parts of Houston. Between Ike and Labor Day's Hurricane Gustav, 180,000 homes and businesses in Louisiana were without power.

    Ike was the first major storm to directly hit a major U.S. metropolitan area since Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans in 2005.

    Storm surge that crawled some 30 miles inland in Louisiana flooded tens of thousands of homes. A levee broke and some 13,000 buildings flooded in Terrebonne Parish, 200 miles from Texas. More than 160 people had to be saved from floodwaters near St. Charles.

    Though emergency crews were frustrated by those who stayed behind, weary residents of East Texas' swamplands and Big Piney Woods were beginning to feel that whatever decision they make about a Gulf hurricane is wrong.

    In 2005, they were battered by Hurricane Rita, a powerful September storm that ripped pine trees from their roots, smashed trailer- and wood-frame homes and left them in what has become a perpetual state of disrepair with the trademark FEMA blue tarps still visible over some.

    Wary of another such disaster, they listened when authorities told them to get out of Gustav's way last week. They spent days in north Texas shelters or doled out precious dollars on hotels and gas while their homes received nothing more than a mild shower.

    This time around, thousands ignored the mandatory evacuation order and were sucker-punched by the stronger side of Ike.

    Those who did leave were glad they heeded orders, despite the inconvenience. Retired nurse Ida Mayfield said that because Gustav hit Louisiana and not Beaumont two weeks ago, many decided not to evacuate ahead of Ike. She was warm and dry at a church-turned shelter in Tyler, along with thousands of her neighbors.

    "Two o'clock this morning made a believer out of all of them," said the 52-year-old Mayfield, adding that she spoke to a friend Saturday who was on a roof waiting for help after calling 911. "They're scared now."

    ___

    Associated Press Writers Pauline Arrillaga in Houston, Jay Root and Kelley Shannon in Austin, Doug Simpson in Baton Rouge, April Castro, Mark Williams and Andre Coe in College Station, Allen G. Breed in Surfside Beach, Juan Lozano in Orange, Elizabeth White in San Antonio and Michael Kunzelman contributed to this report.

    Typhoon Sinlaku pounds Taiwan

    Typhoon Sinlaku lashed Taiwan on Saturday with powerful winds and heavy rains, disrupting flights and train services as well as celebrations for a major holiday.

    At least six people were injured and most rail services and hundreds of domestic and international flights were cancelled as the typhoon, packing winds of up to to 173 kilometres (107 miles) per hour, hurtled towards the island, authorities said.

    The typhoon also disrupted power and telephone services in nearly 100,000 households, while some 250 residents in northern mountain villages were evacuated to safety, said the National Fire Agency.

    A 21-year-old motorcyclist was injured when a fence collapsed while another man was hit by a rock in northern Taoyuan county, the agency said.

    Four passengers suffered minor injuries when a bus rammed into a toll gate in southern Taiwan, the TVBS news channel reported.

    The authorities also put more than 100 rivers on flood alert.

    Schools across the island were shut down for the weekend as a precaution and thousands of fishing boats were also sheltering in ports.

    Organisers have cancelled or postponed outdoor celebrations in Taipei and several other cities for the weekend's Mid-Autumn Festival.

    "Sinlaku is expected to be nearest early Sunday but its impact is likely to last till Monday as it is moving very slowly," a Central Weather Bureau forecaster said.

    The bureau has warned residents across the island, particularly those in coastal and mountain regions, to take precautions against flooding and mudslides as the typhoon is expected to generate rainfall of up to 1,300 millimetres (50 inches).

    Sinlaku evoked painful memories of Typhoon Nari, which hit Taiwan in September 2001, leaving 94 people dead and causing severe flooding.

    Two tropical storms pounded the island in July, leaving at least 22 people dead and causing hundreds of millions of dollars in damage to agriculture.

    Friday, September 12, 2008

    Taiwan battens down for Typhoon Sinlaku

    Typhoon Sinlaku churned towards Taiwan on Friday, threatening to bring heavy downpours, strong winds and disrupt celebrations for a major holiday.

    "Sinlaku is very powerful and it is expected to impact most parts of the island this weekend," a Central Weather Bureau forecaster said.

    The bureau warned residents across the island, particularly those in coastal and mountain regions, to take precautions against flooding and mudslides as the typhoon is likely to generate rainfall of up to 1,300 millimetres (50 inches).

    Organisers have been forced to cancel or postpone outdoor celebrations in Taipei and several other cities for the weekend's Mid-Autumn Festival as Sinlaku gained momentum.

    Railway authorities have also suspended trains bound for the east coast later Friday, while night schools in several northern cities are to be closed.

    At 5:30 pm (0930 GMT) Friday, Sinlaku was 230 kilometres (140 miles) east of Hualien on the east coast, packing winds of up to 184 kilometres an hour, forecasters said.

    Two tropical storms pounded the island in July, leaving at least 22 people dead and causing hundreds of millions of dollars in damage to agriculture.

    Thursday, September 11, 2008

    84th Birthday for President Packer

    President Packer marks 84th birthday

    Published: September 11, 2008
    President Boyd K. Packer, president of the Quorum of the Twelve of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, celebrated his 84th birthday Wednesday.

    He was born Sept. 10, 1924, in Brigham City to Ira Wight and Emma Jensen Packer.

    President Packer was sustained as president of the Twelve on April 5, 2008. He had been set apart as acting president of the Twelve on June 5, 1994, and again on March 12, 1995. He was sustained as an assistant to the Twelve on Sept. 30, 1961; sustained to the Quorum of the Twelve on April 6, 1970; and ordained an apostle on April 9, 1970, at age 45.

    He was a supervisor of seminaries and institutes of religion prior to being called as a general authority. He also served as president of the New England States Mission.

    Okapi--長頸鹿的近親






    The Okapi (Okapia johnstoni) is a mammal native to the Ituri Rainforest, located in the northeast of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, in central Africa. Although the Okapi bears striped markings reminiscent of the zebra, it is most closely related to the giraffe.
    起初我在yahoo看到最下面這張照片時,我還以為是斑馬與長頸鹿所生下的寶寶,原來Okapi是長頸鹿的近親,生活於剛果共和國的雨林中。

    Taiwan braces for Typhoon Sinlaku

    Taiwan's weather bureau warned Thursday of an approaching typhoon which it said was gaining momentum and sweeping toward the island.

    Advising residents to take precautions, it said Typhoon Sinlaku was already posing a danger to shipping and was expected to hit northeast of Taiwan over the weekend.

    At 2:00 pm (0600 GMT) Thursday, its epicentre was 400 kilometres (240 miles) east of the southernmost tip of Taiwan, the bureau said.

    It was packing gusts of 184 kilometres per hour and moving north-northwest, it added.

    Wednesday, September 10, 2008

    Magnitude 7.0 earthquake hits northern Japan

    A magnitude 7.0 earthquake hit northern Japan on Thursday morning, triggering a small tsunami that apparently caused no damage, Japan's Meteorological Agency said. There were no immediate reports of injuries.

    The agency said the quake hit at 9:21 a.m. off the eastern coast Hokkaido, Japan's northernmost island at a depth of about 12.4 miles.

    A 4-inch tsunami rippled at the shore about 35 minutes after the quake.

    A warning had been issued for a tsunami of up to 20 inches along the eastern coast of Hokkaido and the northeastern coast of Japan's main island of Honshu. Authorities ordered people to stay away from beaches.

    National broadcaster NHK showed footage of the coastal area, but there did not appear to be any damage. The report said the force of the quake had not broken windows or knocked items from shelves.

    Copyright © 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.

    Copyright © 2008 Yahoo All rights reserved.Copyright/IP Policy |Terms of Service |Help |Feedback
    NOTICE: We collect personal information on this site. To learn more about how we use your information, see our» Privacy Policy

    Song Sang at the CES Fireside

    I Shall Never Forsake Thee

    For a little while have I forsaken thee, but with great mercies will I gather thee.

    In a little wrath I hid my face from thee for a moment, but with everlasting kindness will I gather thee and with mercy will I take thee beneath my wings.

    For the mountains shall depart and the hills shall be removed, and the valleys shall be lost beneath the sea, but know my child, my kindness shall not depart from thee!

    Though thine afflictions seem at time too great to bear, I know thine every thought and every care.

    And though the very jaws of hell gape after thee, I am with thee, and with everlasting mercy will I succor thee, and with healing will I take thee beneath my wings.

    For the mountains shall depart and the hills shall be removed and the valleys shall be lost beneath the sea. Know my child, my kindness shall not depart from thee!

    How long can rolling waters remain impure? What power shall stay the hand of God?

    The Son of Man hath descended below all things. Are thou greater than He?

    So hold on thy way for I shall be with thee and mine angels shall encircle thee. Doubt not what thou knowest. Fear not man, for he cannot hurt thee, and with everlasting kindness will I succor thee, and with mercy will I take thee beneath my wings.

    For the mountains shall depart and the hills shall be removed, and the valleys shall be lost beneath the sea. But know my child, my kindness shall not depart from thee!

    My kindness shall not depart from thee!

    The complete talk can be watched on http://www.lds.org/move/index.html#lang=english

    About Me

    我是在1996年12月29日受洗加入耶穌基督後期聖徒教會. 我在此留下我對這復興的福音的見證,我知道約瑟斯密確實是神的先知; 藉由約瑟斯密,神復興了耶穌基督的教會即耶穌基督後期聖徒教會; 摩爾門經是耶穌基督的另一部約書,與聖經共同見證耶穌是基督.而我們今日仍有一位活著的先知,多馬孟蓀會長 I joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints on December 29, 1996. I know that Joseph Smith was and is a prophet of God. The Book of Mormon is indeed Another Testament of Jesus Christ. We have a living prophet today, even President Thomas S. Monson.

    Blog Archive