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Show Page A10 THE DAILY HERALD, (www.HarkTheHeraId.com), Provo, Utah, Saturday, April I. 2000 General Conference comes to new building portions of conference proceedings. The conference sessions will be presided over and conducted by President Gordon B. Hinckley, President Thomas S. Monson and far enough for meetings to be held in the building's 21,000-sea- t SALT LAKE CITY The auditorium. 170th General Conference for All general sessions of the The Church of Jesus Christ of conference will be relayed via Latter-daSaints will be satellite to church gatherings today and Sunday. throughout the United General sessions will be ' States, Canada, Europe, the conducted at 10 a.m. and 2 Caribbean and Latin The and America. p.m., today Sunday. General Priesthood Meeting Sessions will also be seen will be at 6 p.m. today. live in the Intermountain , Air sessions will be in the Channel 5, region on new Conference Center locatSalt Lake City. Additionally, ed north of Temple Square. more than 1,500 other radio While not fully completed, and television stations and construction has progressed cable systems will carry all or The Daily Herald y President James E. Faust. The Salt Lake Mormon Tabernacle Choir, under the direction of Craig Jessop, Mack Wilberg and Barlow Bradford, will provide music for the Saturday morning, Sunday morning and Sunday afternoon sessions of conference. Organists will be 325-voic- e KSL-TV- Richard Elliott, Clay Christiansen and John Longhurst. Channel 5, in Salt Lake on J. City, and. A combined choir from BYU will sing during the Saturday afternoon session, with Ronald Staheli and Rosalind Hall directing and Bonnie Goodliffe at the organ. The men of the Tabernacle cho-- , Choir, joined by a special rus of returned missionaries from along the Wasatch Front, will sing at the Priesthood session on Saturday evening. locations on Temple Square including the Tabernacle and the. North Visitors Center and in local stake centers and ward chapels are able to listen to conference proceedings in their own language through interpreters stationed in the lower level of the Tabernacle. Listeners in most locations are provided special headsets to hear conference in their native language. Because of the large number of Spanish-speakinconference visitors who come to Salt Lake City, the audio feed for overflow seating in the Assembly Hall will be in Spanish. tape-delaye- d 170th Annual General Conference of The Church of x - m r t viii i&t ui tLiaiiei-uaSaints general sessions will be conducted at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m., Mountain Standard Time on Saturday and Mountain Uaylight 1 lme on bunday. Ihe General Priesthood Meeting will be conducted Saturday af ut.-s- ; y , 6 p.m. Conference Notes sessions of the confer All ence will be televised to church buildings via the church satellite system. There are more than 3.700 LDS stake centers' and other church buildings throughout the united btates, Canada, Puerto Rico, Haiti, Jamaica and the Dominican Republic equipped with satellite : receivers. In Latin America, 150 stake centers will receive the broadcast live via satellite. The broadcast will be sent to the following countries: Brazil. Columbia, Equador. Venezuela, Paraguay. Uruguay. Bolivia, Peru. Costa Rica. .Guatemala;. Panama and. Mexico: All general sessions will also be carried live on KSL- receiver-equippe- d ' : . . Channel 11, in Provo. 'V In addition, all general sessions will be transmitted via satellite to approximately 1,500 cable television systems plus television and radio stations in the United States and Canada on a public service basis. The Saturday and Sunday morning sessions will be transmitted live to Europe. The Priesthood and the Saturday afternoon sessions will be transmitted on a delayed basis on Sunday and the General Young Women meeting will be transmitted on a delayed basis today. There are more than 240 stake and ward buildings with downlink equipment in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Finland, Germany, France, Netherlands, Belgium, Spain, KBYU-T- -- Portugal, Italy and Switzerland. g Three to five translator-interpreter- s will be on hand -- - ' - - to simultaneously interpret for one or more conference sessions for each of the fol lowing languages: Albanian, Amharic, Armenian, Bulgarian, Cambodian, Cantonese, Cebuano, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Estonian, Fijian, r Finnish, French, German, Translation Greek, Haitian, Hmong, Hungarian, Ilokano, General Conference will be .translated into 49 different languages. church leaders and members from various parts of the world seated in the ; Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Kiribati, Korean, Laotian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Mandarin, Malagasy, Conference Center, in over Portuguese, Romanian, Mongolian, Navajo, Norwegian, Polish, Scott-Auerbac- Russian, Samoan. Spanish, Swahili, Swedish, Tagalog, Tahitian, Thai, Tongan, Ukranian and Vietnamese. Signing Conference proceedings will be conveyed via sign language to a gathering of the hearing-impairein the North Visitors d Center Theater IV. All satellite and TV broadcasts of general conference in North America will be for the hearing-impaireclosed-cap-tio'ne- d 'I am tired; I must have a real good rest." Caroline logged in her record. She left the pen in her journal and returned to the temple for another session or two. As she sat in the temple, she had a nosebleed. Someone went to get a cloth to help her; when they returned to her side, she had died. Language translators and interpreters are virtually all volunteers who donate many hours of their time in preparation for the conference as well as during the conference. She truly .went on to " rest." iiajv iurui iviiun Save iiivp-iioingt- o nexi 10 a. "good ' -- Internet Access Conference information can be obtained from the church's Web site at www.lds.org. Text of talks from General Conference will be available at www.lds.org within the week following ' conference. Conference sessions may be heard live over the Internet in any of 22 languages through LDSWorld. For more information go to www.ldsworld.coni. ; ingei neology on the internet" maceys; V Featuring Paul L. Tripp :'.' ; STANDING iOR n the temple like Caroline 'married. in the temple, at the peril of her fiance's life, attended the temple all her life and died in the temple. Kathy says her kids like to think. "She's looking down and watching us." The family historian is adamant about writing in journals. Kathy says, "If you don't write it down it's not, there to learn from., it's not there to grow from. It's very sad not to write it down. .Anything vou write is sucn a treasure to them (coining generations). If you want to have an influence get your version 344-254- 2 by Gordon B. Hinckley foreword by Mike Wallace hrijihu r tinx- Haidanrr 30 HINCK.Lt attar ii Valued OFT q Seagull Price The Daily Herald is proud to sponsor their genealogy columnist, Paul L. Tripp Tripp is a researcher.of 45 years, writer of family history stories published in some 14 newspapers and on the internet and author Pual L. Tripp of life story books. Tripp will explain how attendees can create an intfanet Herald Columnist community of family members. This community manages its family history & Genealogist data, keeps a linked pedigree on line, communicates news of the family, keeps a calendar of events and more. Ask questions, get direction in the new internet venue. -- impirini: blueprint (it what w all can do ;is uninidiuls :l fiuuilitN, ;is a nation to rediscover tlie values and virtues ili;U haw bound us logether- through the ajjes. Sfcmdiiii; for something is a work for our time, a reflection on one man's long and pnidui'tive life It does not dwell on die values of the past; radier.. it provides a moral and spiritual iiiap toward a n CORDON 8 at $24.00 $16.80 '. m Book of Mormon on CD narrated by Rex Campbell Learn how to use the internet to: Too busy to read the Rwk of Mormon!' Get your Book of Mormon stud; done while you drive, exercise, or work around the house. Listen for IS minutes a (by. and complete the entire Bookot Mormon in under 5 weeks n fwiitl ulition box! 21 CDs 50 orr Valued at Seagull Price $24.99 i Manage family history data Share family history data Make a book of ancestors Make a book of descendants . Manage accuracy of information Hold an electronic family reunion Post manuscripts, photos, documents for all family members to see Create research modules for family volunteers Communicate with family members via email ' Create TO DO lists for the family Create a calendar for the family $49.95 ' Triple Combination on CD narrated by Rex Campbell limit ef IRwmn, Doctrine Mid tin- 1'iwl vf.Omit Vice in 24vreeks for iu.t Is minutes a day' h; In tf'Piw alih'iti ConipVle-th- Omiuink. and W VtUfc 50 Slamu .out." Karen can Hoag reached at khoa" heraldexlra.com. Stand for Something THING s(At I - ' Valued at (if $79.95 Price $39.99 be Gables Against the Sky by Anita Slansfield or- w Jr 1 - ' - In prose as vivid as tlie blue Australian' sky. author fashions a iowwfiil saga Anita Stansfield Oiju-rtof passion, betrayal, forgivyuss, and ultimate redemption. In the end when lives and virtue . true tow perfect perspective and commitment are put into and a happy ending is guaranteed! SoficoTt of f Vtlucd at $14.95 threaleiied, 30 Attendance is limited Book on Cauetu 30 OFF Provo Orem 2250 N. University Pkwy Next to ShtipKo) 5 ot (800)869-775- . 226-383- 3 Seminar held at Starting March 30 060 North Main .'(Next to Macey'i) - 79&0401 or (800)425-030- 9 .' 765-470- 6 - .. Training Center 709 S. State St. Suite 9 Orem 7:00 pm Seminar repeated for four consecutive Thursdays PC-Olo- gy Spanish Fork 79 South State (Next to Smith's) 6 RSVP Valued at $19.95 Seagull Price $13.97 Sports online ; an Seagull Prjce $10.47 The latest in BYU '. s j off list! 10-5- 0 LUs unurcn president "Gp.ftinv started Spanish Fork Store Grand Openin In her journal. Caroline writes. "I hope my grandchil- dren and 6,721 LDS Items on Sale Everyday! ; ... ' I . ; www. heraldextra.com Continued from A9 h Provo High PROVO School walked off with the Samuel French Award for gathering the most points in the 2nd annual drama and interpretation speech festival. David Smith, age 7, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph F. Smith, is a happy youngster today after outspellihg the other Mickey Mouse clubbers to wjn a new bicycle. David is in the second grade and won on the ' word "sewing." The Spelldown competition is sponsored by , the Salt Lake Tribune, Salt ; Lake Telegram, KALL and the Utah Theater. George Albert Smith will cele-- ' brate his 80th birth anniver- According to the state and sary this week. He's the leader county road commissioners "of over 1 ,000,000'memfeers bids for the construction of a worldwide. He will celebrate concrete highway beginning on just as he does every year! N6rth University Ave. and engrossed in the affairs relatextending to Provo Canyon ' ed to the yearly Conference. will be advertised in a month. "Eighty years young rather With the recent completion of than 50 years old," he said. the Timpanogos Scenic Loop the number of tourists is 25 Years Ago expected to increase. PROVO Justice Department offi-- . Harold Goff, cials declined to confirm or editor in chief of Deseret deny if Rex E. Lee, the current New, addressed students of BYU on the history of Utah ... dean of BYU's law school, is being considered for appointnewspapers and periodicals ment as an assistant attorney today. "Utah has been the cradle general. PROVO and in many instances the City officials the cost of hold to for are working grave literally thousands of newspapers and magaa sewer plant expansion projzines," he said. Goff traced the ect to $10 million to avoid a multimillion dollar bond issue history of newspapers, for the to the present. and ensuing a rate boost to late 1850s-60He also spoke on the success pay off bonds. The city was of the Salt Lake Tribune, forrequired to expand the sewer plant's capacity and effectivemally known as the Mormon Tribune. He paid tribute to ness to meet tough state and federal cleanLwater standards; the editors on the fairminded Three men were charged ethics and taking a wholewith livestock theft in connec-- ' hearted liberal attitude toward the Mormon people? tion with the disappearance P. PROVO of a calf belonging to Robert , Joseph of Palmyra. Richard K. Utah Banks the Welch, county agriculRoss and Billie Halladay of ; tural agent for the past seven Provo, and Bliss Burrows of years, tendered resignation to U. A. C. extension officials. , Springville were arraigned in ; Professor William Peterson, court with no bail. director of the extension servicDefendants were free on their own recognizance pending the es, made the announcement in an effort to reconcile differences hearing. Ross is also charged between the farming bureau wjth cultivating marijuana. Visit us online GENEOLOGY 50 Years Ago A fire today in the Progress building on Main Street damaged around $35,000; approximately $10,000 was to the building itself. It's estimated that the majority of the damage was due to water and not . the fire itself. This is the the fire since largest building burned in of 1897. February This afternoon a young boy named Stone was hit in the side with a baseball during a game and was quite severely injured. Dr. Forbes was called " and attended to the boy and found no broken bones He is said to recover soon. 75 Years Ago flow TV, executives and Welch. 100 Years Ago SALT LAKE CITY GENERAL CONFERENCE FACTS The Daily Herald FLASHBACKS Sponsored by TffiffitiS, |