OCR Text |
Show UGION o CI THE DAILY HERALD (www.HufcTheHenld.com) SATURDAY, Heart t' Heart provides PUZZLE PIECES nnn n J AUGUST 18, 2001 f guidance Paul Tripp Editor's note: The " Organizing family history the easy way Tell me I'm wrong. You have collected notes about family history for years. You have them in file folders, loose pages on the desk, in a couple of notebooks. You have mixed up pages. Abercrombie research pages mixed up with Dodge, Haverstraw, Page. A mess. Scraps from family reunions float around, valuable stuff on them, about to be trashed. Notes you wrote on the back of a telephone bill envelope. You've got phod tos of ancestors. Original letters, maybe a family Bible page or two. You could be this crude: Toes all your valuable genealogy papers in a large cardboard paper box. I mean toss. Get everything in one container. Unless it takes two. Fine, then two. Amble on down to Kinko's. There, you put your papers into stacks about an men high. Photocopy legal papers, including the old family group sheets and pedigree charts, reducing them to letter size. Likewise for small scraps, enlarging them to letter size. When your stack gets an inch high, punch the left g edge with Kinko's punch. Toss photos in a vinyl page that holds them. Doll t use "magnetic" ' photo storage pages. Then put a heavy page on the front and back and bind the stack into a book, using their plastic binding comb. Write on the cover. Name your first book using your for me PUT initials, like long-dea- 1 ' r" - LI It Mi v .v v- By KAREN HOAG The Daily Herald UTAH VALLEY i, . i KEVIN LEEThe Daily Herald Week of learning: Ellen and Leon Whiting, far right, make their way across BYU campus at last year's Education Week. Right, atop their motor home at BYU last year, Doug and Diane Hunt, top left, and the two younger generations of their family have attended BYU's Education Week. From lower left are Jennifer Hunt, Tawny Strickland, Autumn Hunt, Diane Hunt and Jeff Hunt, upper right. a Tui- - v' r "5 i religion conference By KAREN HOAG The Daily Herald PROVO The man had only 11 days of formal education. Yet he figured out how to cross the Missouri River, set up roads and organize 350 cities, and he had 21 Brigham Young was a Renaissance man as far as Duane Hiatt is concerned. Hiatt is director of media productions for BYU Campus Education Week. Education Week this year commemorates the 200th anniversary of Young's birth teen-ager- s. presentationsevents that specifically address Young's contributions, said Neil Carlile, director of Education Week. "Nearly all of the more than 1,000 classes offer insights into individual faith and service," he said. One of three cultural offerings in weeklong evening performances is "Here's Brother Brigham," featuring James Arlington. Carlile expects 25,000 students this year. The peak was 36,000 in 1994. That was the year we started broadcasting classes," he said. "The broadcast is a delicious taste of Education Week. When you come to classes you choose from a banquet laid out" This year 12 hours of classes will be back, two close family members died, his child was sexually abused and he found out his wife was all abused as a child within four months. "I wanted to drop out, I didn't want to feel," Wayne said. Pain medication for his back developed into a prescription drug addiction. The pain pills helped me drop out," he said. Wayne found Heart t' three years Heart ago. It's a support group for and by LDS people dealing with addictions, compulsions and obsessions. Marilu, his wife, didn't know what was going on; she was a codependent. "For a long time I couldn't figure out what he was doing wrong," she said. "I was dealing with my own disease of codependency by enabling him, by not confronting him with my feel12-Ste- Brigham Young honored at annual with the theme "Brigham Young: An Example of Faith and Service." I "He was the ultimate continuing education student," , Hiatt said. "He was a tile man if you had a question about anything you just asked Brigham." Direct ties to classes at Education Week are easy to make, he said. "No matter " what your focus, Brigham Young said something about it," Hiatt said. There are 18 different He had problems with his f t comb-bindin- ARCHIVES, VOLUME 1. Next, number every page in the volume. Do it by hand. It takes about five minutes to number a hundred pages. Phew! There you have it, r f i names of the people in recovery have been changed. This is Part il in a series about Heart t' Heart. ings." Wayne was emotionally 1 r t 0 I.. .. . HUBERT jflHNSONTht Daily Herald broadcast during the evening next week and rebroadcast at later dates. The good news is con; struction on campus is way down. Harris Fine Arts Center is open to classes and performances this summer after being year. "We have 34 different classroom settings this year," Carlile said. "Some classes get high demand; there's always room in the Marriott Center." He added that faculty who tend to draw more people are assigned to the Marriott Center, Wilkinson Ballroom and de Jong Concert Hall. Parking is available at LaVell Edwards Stadium with shuttle vans carrying people to class locations. The vans also circulate around campus to take attendees to their next class. More than 450 volunteers play a part in the week's success. Bruce Payne, program administrator, said, earthquake-retrofittedla- st "We couldn't pull it off if it weren't for the hosting volunteers. They help with crowd control and assist the faculty." Carlile nodded and called them "the miracle of Education Week." "With only a couple hours of orientation they perform so well relating to people and directing them to classrooms," he said. More block classes are offered this year. They run two hours and 15 minutes, the same length of time as two regular classes. Block classes help people who can attend only one morning or afternoon, Carlile said. "They can hear the whole presentation of the teacher," he said. Hiatt said the faculty call Education Week the high point of their teaching experience because people come who are "hungry to learn." "Education Week really is about providing educational blessings to people," Carlile said. We have a lot of people coming and seeking an answer to challenges in life and in their fami; abusive to her and their children. "We'd always walk on eggshells," she said. "We didn't go anywhere socially. I played into it really well." As a codependent she assumed everything that transpired was her fault. When Marilu realized what was happening she approached a therapist and said, "I have a problem. My husband is addicted to drugs."' As an abuse victim, Marilu developed an overeating problem. She remembers making a cherry pie in Girl Scouts that she was planning to take home to her family. She said to herself, "111 just eat one cherry." Then she ate one more. "After awhile it wasn't a pie anymore, it was a mess," she said. When she got older she learned to eat all the pie and make another for the family. Eventually she heard of Overeaters Anonymous. "My husband and I were working on our recoveries individually," Marilu said. It's only been the past three years they've worked together. Marilu is friends with author Colleen Harrison, who wrote "He Did Deliver Me From Bondage," the manual written for Heart t' Heart. That's how Marilu heard of the group; she told her husband. Jilly is the mother of a drug addict and the daughter of a prescription-dru- g addict. Her son has done it all, she said: alcohol, marijuana, meth, cocaine, cigarettes. He started with "huffing" gasoline at age 13. Now at 19 he's in jail, soon to be out for work your first permanent bound book of genealogy papers. Continue until your cardBYU CAMPUS board box is empty. At that EDUCATION WEEK point, all your junky notes are nicely converted into five or 50 books, each volTheme: 'Brigham ume numbered, each page numbered. That's power. Young: An Example of The great thing about Faith and Service" PAF, the free computer softWhere: BYU campus ware to handle your family When: history, is that it acts like an Register: 7:30 a.m. to desk 6:30 p.m. all week at with its 25 or 40 cubbyholes. northeast corner of Except PAF is better, Marriott Center because the capacity of each ' Prices vary Tickets: cubbyhole in PAF is without on whether depending limit And you get as many attend Monday, all you cubbyholes as you like. day Tuesday through To go on, using Friday, mornings only, p PAF like a afternoons or evenings desk, it's like each cubbyBroadcasts: The church hole has a surname label. ITT" "5 satellite and KBYU-Tstuff can as With that, you broadcast Education much information into each Week classes from cubbyhole as you have on lies." the document. p.m. Tuesday Lynette Rehrer, of Orem, is means this What you through Friday seeks answers to those can work from the stack of Devotional: Open to the challenges each year. "It's documents you bound into a public, President James awesome, refreshing, a spirbook, regardless of different E. Faust, 11 a.m. itual uplift," said Rehrer, You do families. surname Tuesday, Marriott Center mother to seven. "Educanot have to organize the or Info: tion Week has so much it source documents. That's up www.byu.eduedweek doesn't matter what phase desk. p to the Bonus: Education Week of life you're in: counseling, the first to turn So, you pass gives $2 off ticket document in your first volteaching kids to read, dancKEVIN LEEThe Daily Herald to football BYUTulane from it's a feast letter a s find if ing, plumbing ume, game Aug. 25 Feeding the masses: Crowds line up for lunch choices at cousin Jake about See ED WEEK, C2 See HEART, C2 BYU Campus Education Week last year. Jilkins written in 1972. Fine. You keystroke the essential facts you extract from the letter. RELIGION Where? Into the cubbyhole PAF already has for you. Tn PAF, you find the is speaking on "The World's Lutheran Church has its annual ian motivational speaker, is preJilkins cubbyhole, find or rioEithSy entrench at 7 p.m. Aug. 25 and 11 Greatest Counselor" at 10:45 a.m. congregation camping trip today senting make the record for this outPROVO The for children monthly Crafts a.m. and 26 First at Aug. Sunday. Baptist Sunday at New Beginnings FelGrandpa Jilkins, and enter reach meeting for those leaving or Church, 101 W. 100 North, and a chili cook-of- f are at Tinney Church of the Nazarene, the essential facts into his lowship investigating leaving their reliFlats Campground, Santaquin N. 700 West, Provo. Payson. 150 notes. When you do notes, gion is 7 p.m. Tuesday at First Canyon, today. Worship is 10 a.m. Bayley will be joined by David add your volume and page Sunday school is 9:30 a.m. and Baptist Church, 1144 W. Columat the campground rather midweek in "Voice of the Martyrs" on of Witt number as the source Sunday service is 7 p.m. bia Lane, Provo. than in Provo. Saturday. your entry. inforfor more Call Wednesday. The congregation 3 for more infor5 Call for more Call (435) And, presto! You have mation. other community churches joins mation. information. made yourself into an effec5 p.m. Sunday at Pioneer Park at record tive techie genealogy for praise and prayer. Music and motivation Great counselor keeper! Outdoor worship 1 Call for more PAYSON John Bayley, a Rev. Les Life Bouck 2001 PROVO The Paul of Tree by SANTAQUIN Copyright musical entertainer and Christ Monday-Frida- y roll-to- p now-friend- ly roll-to- V 1 0 378-208- 7 roll-to- Great-grand- pa BRIEFS 374-848- 9 623-033- 489-330- 374-012- Tripp. |