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Relying on the Lord in Times of Need

June 17, 2003 12:00 AM
BYU-Hawaii head basketball coach Ken Wagner, emphasized the need to rely on the Lord by sharing various life experiences in his June 12 devotional address to students and faculty.

"No matter what trials or help I have needed, I have always felt I could turn to the Lord," Wagner said. "We need prayer to help us get through lives experiences."

Wagner explained that he had really started to examine his life and how he had learned about prayer after one of his daughters had experienced her own struggles with praying and receiving answers. He started to reflect on some on the events that helped strengthen his confidence in the Lord.

"My whole life had been filled with beautiful examples of prayer-personally, in my family, and in our community," he said.

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Hawaiian Studies Program Puts Iosepa Through Sea Trials

By Mike Foley June 05, 2003 12:00 AM
Hawaiian Studies professors and students from BYU-Hawaii, as well as several others in surrounding communities launched the university's traditional twin-hulled sailing canoe, the Iosepa, from Hukilau Beach in Laie on June 3 for a short series of sea trials. Read Full Story

BYU-Hawaii Choir Director Encourages all to

May 30, 2003 12:00 AM
BYU-Hawaii men's and women's chorus director Merrilee Webb, shared with the university family the importance of recognizing and understanding the many miracles that occur daily in our lives in a devotional speech on May 29.

"You and I are involved in miracles everyday but the problem is that we are not seeing them," she said.

Webb explained that often, two people who see the exact same event can have completely different experiences depending on that person's perspective in life. It is through that perspective that we either recognize or ignore the impact of the daily miracles we experience in our lives.

"We do not describe the world we see, we see the world we describe," Webb said, quoting the author Joseph Jaworski.

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BYU-Hawaii Student Leaders Help Train Kahuku High Counterparts

May 28, 2003 12:00 AM
Several BYU-Hawaii student body officers recently provided leadership training for their younger counterparts from nearby Kahuku High School as part of the university's recruiting efforts. Asai Gilman, director of admissions and recruitment, international and Hawaii, explained, "The University wanted to have the leaders of Kahuku High School on our campus to listen to BYU-Hawaii student leaders and take part in our delegating and team building workshops. It worked great." Gilman, who previously conducted similar programs for high school leaders at Dixie State College and Southern Utah University, said, "We invited all the student leaders of surrounding high schools while I was working at those institutions. I thought it would be a good idea to do the same thing here." Sunday Mariteragi, a 1970 BYU-Hawaii alumna who has been Student Activities Coordinator for the past 18 years at Kahuku High and oversees their student body officers, agreed. "It was valuable training. I think this is the first time we have had something like this from BYU-Hawaii." Current BYU-Hawaii student body president Jannifer Lesuma, who conducted the delegation portion of the workshop along with vice president Nelson Fotu, also agreed. "It was a great opportunity for BYU-Hawaii and the Kahuku student leaders to get together, because we come from the same community. We often use the same resources," she said. Lesuma added both she and Fotu, who attended Kahuku High, believe delegation "or the ability to empower others, is one of the most important skills of a leader. We were pleased to be able to share with the Kahuku leaders." Mariteragi said both the outgoing and incoming senior Kahuku student officers who participated already do planning and follow up by delegating, "but these workshops really helped formalize our procedures. In fact, since we trained at BYU-Hawaii, our student body officers have given their own version of a leadership workshop at Kaaawa Elementary School." "Our intention is to do more leadership training orientation programs like these," said Gilman, who sees the program as a form of indirect recruitment. "We also hope when some of these students are on our campus that they will recognize there are opportunities for not only academic but also leadership growth here. It's a subtle 'here's an opportunity' event that suggests, 'you are a leader at your high school. You can also be a leader here.'" Gilman said he would like to do at least two more similar programs next school year; One on Oahu, and the other on a neighbor island. "Our students make this kind of leadership training successful," he said. "Without them, it would be quite challenging to pull off, because high school students listen to peers much more easily than other adults." Gilman added, "This was a good beginning in creating the high school student motivation that BYU-Hawaii exists. I hope we can continue with this program, with the help of the BYU-Hawaii Student Association officers." Read Full Story

Couple Designs Business to Help BYU-Hawaii Alumni in the Philippines

By Mike Foley May 22, 2003 12:00 AM
A young BYU-Hawaii alumnus from the Philippines married to a Laie girl recently returned to his home where the couple has set up a retail Internet business designed to help other economically challenged alumni in the area. Read Full Story

President Shumway Delivers First Devotional of Spring Term

May 19, 2003 12:00 AM
BYU-Hawaii President Eric B. Shumway focused on the parable of the sheep and the goats found in Matthew 25 during his devotional last week in the Cannon Activities Center. He illustrated the Savior’s poignant reminder that we must internalize righteousness and holiness to the point they become unconscious and natural in our actions and lives. President Shumway explained that Christ’s parable, in which the sheep are separated from the goats at His second coming, “focuses on six or seven basic human needs without which a happy existence is impossible: Food, water, general health, the need to belong and feel accepted, warmth and protection, comfort and freedom. Those who will be on the right hand of God constantly help to fulfill these needs within a suffering humanity.” “Of course, most people around us, for example, are not literally hungry and thirsty, but some may be spiritually starved, even emaciated,” he said. “Most people are not physically sick, but many hack and cough and are barely breathing spiritually. Many of the things we value in our religion will not be enough to save us.” “Personal testimony is not enough, a temple recommend won’t do it, visions and ministering of angels, personal healings, a brilliant grasp of the gospel, a righteous lineage; all of the ordinances put together will not do it. Each of these is necessary, but without reaching out to the ‘least of these, my brethren,’ they don’t qualify us,” President Shumway said. He added, “In this parable the Lord seems to say, ‘whatever good you do or don’t do to someone else, you do it or don’t do it to me.’ Thus, we bless and nourish and sustain Christ in the act of blessing, nourishing, and sustaining even the least of human kind. Or we ignore Him, neglect and despise Him, as we ignore, neglect or despise even the least of mankind.” The parable indicates that the righteous seem to be surprised they’ve done anything good to Christ personally. “This constitutes a private, personal ministry that flows out spontaneously and naturally, often in unrecorded, unacknowledged, even unremembered acts of kindness,” President Shumway said. “Serving a mission for the Church puts us in a concentrated learning mode for persistent daily selfless service, where your own ministry becomes the Lord’s ministry.” “After missionary service it’s also possible for impediments and distractions to gradually harden our hearts or dull our sensibilities to the needs of the ‘least of these, my brethren,’” he said. President Shumway said returned missionaries sometimes “cease to pray the way we did in the mission field. Some of us no longer specifically ask with the same fervor for opportunities to help others. In the mission field we didn’t just say prayers, we lived and breathed your prayers. The language of our prayers was constantly filled with the names of others, their challenges, and their predicaments.” “We must not let our prayers become shallow and self-centered, filled again with clichés and thoughtless phrases,” he continued. “Remember especially that even eloquent and specific prayers must be connected to righteous service.” “I believe that righteous prayers will deploy angels to the spot where we cannot go ourselves. I believe that it is in our prayers that our own souls are shaped and tutored, again when they are linked to personal action where we are able,” he said. President Shumway also cited several other impediments, including subtle cynicism and mockery of those who do try to do good the best way they know how, judging others, incorrectly thinking we don’t have anything to offer others, or addiction to amusement. “Surely personal worthiness, total and complete chastity, and all of the personal qualities of holiness are important. But in the end, all goodness must be translated into the manner of how we treat each other, and especially, how we treat those who have for whatever reason been damaged by the vicissitudes of this world,” President Shumway stressed. President Shumway told the story of a distraught father whose son was discouraged and miserable just after arriving in a foreign mission, and wanted to come home. In a reception, the father mentioned his son’s struggle in passing to President Hinckley. He said the young man stayed to complete his mission after receiving and being inspired from a letter of encouragement written by the Prophet himself. “Think of it! President Hinckley, in spite of his age, is such a public figure, revered for his extensive speeches, books, and his general leadership in the Church,” President Shumway said. “Yet, he conducts a private, silent ministry as well to bless others individually. Can you imagine how that single unselfish act of a Prophet will be treasured not only in this young man’s life but in his posterity?” President Shumway added, “In the end, the art of nourishing even ‘the least of these, my brethren,’ begins at the heart, to see as Christ sees, and feel as Christ feels toward those who carry burdens that we cannot see or appreciate, or comprehend if we did see.” “This unconscious flow of righteousness outward must begin in and be nourished by the home, and then in the wonderful ward assignments we have, home teaching and visiting teaching in the true sense of being caretakers of souls,” he said. “Our love for Christ is best measured by our love and caring for the ‘least of these.’” Read Full Story

BYU-Hawaii Family Greets New BYU President

May 16, 2003 12:00 AM
The BYU-Hawaii 'ohana filled the McKay Auditorium this week, to meet Elder Cecil Samuelson, a member of the First Quorum of the Seventy for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and the newly named president of Brigham Young University. Read Full Story

BYU-Hawaii Tennis Teams Make History Repeating as Champs

May 14, 2003 12:00 AM
The BYU-Hawaii Seasiders made a triumphant return to Hawaii on May 13, after becoming the first NCAA II school, and only the second in all of college sports, to register back-to-back National Championship titles in both men's and women's tennis in the same years.

The top-ranked BYU-Hawaii women's tennis team won their second consecutive NCAA II National Championship, and fourth in the last five years, by defeating Barry in the finals, 5-3 on May 12.

The lady Seasiders won the top two doubles positions by identical 8-5 scores to take a 2-1 lead on the Buccaneers. Adrienn Hegedus expanded the lead to 3-1 with a 6-1, 6-0 blitzing at the number one singles spot and Gurianna Korinihona followed with a 6-1, 6-4 win at number six singles to give BYU-Hawaii a 4-1 lead.

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Kiwi Couple Recalls Decision to Return Home

By Mike Foley May 09, 2003 12:00 AM
A 1982 BYU-Hawaii graduate and his wife recently came back to campus on their 25th wedding anniversary and shared insights into their decision to return to New Zealand after being away for more than a decade. Read Full Story

Senior Chemistry Professor Announces Retirement

May 06, 2003 12:00 AM
Chemistry professor Dale Hammond has announced that he will retire on July 1, 2003, after teaching at BYU-Hawaii for a total of 36 years. Hammond’s association with the university began in 1959 when he and his wife, Carol, came to Hawaii for their honeymoon. At that time, the campus was just four years old and called the Church College of Hawaii. “Everything was sugar cane all around the community then. The old school and mission home were still up,” Hammond said. “At CCH we had the McKay building, what's now the General Classroom Building and what is now the School of Business.”
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