The January-February 2008 BYU-Hawaii Alumni eNewsletter contains the following:
The Executive Committee of the Board of Education of the Church Educational System — including Elders Russell M. Nelson, chairman, and M. Russell Ballard of the Quorum of the Twelve, as well as Sister Julie B. Beck, General Relief Society President — held day-long meetings at BYU-Hawaii on February 25. That afternoon they addressed the university ohana or faculty and staff "family"; and some of them also spoke in special fireside meetings for the students and Saints on the previous Sunday evening.
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Elder Russell M. Nelson of the Quorum of the Twelve |
Other Executive Committee members and visiting participants included Elder Earl C. Tingey of the Presidency of the Seventy; CES Commissioner W. Rolfe Kerr, an emeritus member of the First Quorum of the Seventy; BYU President and First Quorum of the Seventy member Elder Cecil O. Samuelson; BYU-Idaho President Kim B. Clark; LDS Business College President Stephen K. Woodhouse; Garry K. Moore, CES Administrator of Religious Education and Elementary and Secondary Education — including the South Pacific Church schools; Roger G. Christensen, Secretary to the Church Board of Education and Board of Trustees; and James E. Tidwell, Director of Finance and Budget in the CES Commissioner's office.
In his remarks, Elder Nelson recalled when he was BYU-Hawaii President Steven C. Wheelwright's stake president 42 years ago that neither of them had any inkling of what they would now be doing. "One thing you can never be sure of, you should never underestimate the worth of those students you are teaching," he told the university ohana.
"We have no inkling of where they're going, but we do know for sure that it will be a great and marvelous experience for them, that the training they get here will stand them in good stead for whatever the Lord will use them for."
Citing Paul's counsel to the Ephesians to be not strangers but fellow citizens, and his explanation that apostles, prophets and other officers are given for the perfecting of the Saints...till we all come in the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God, Elder Nelson continued, "We are grateful for the support we feel from you. As you become united with us in support of President Thomas S. Monson as the new president of the Church, as you sustain and support President Steven C. Wheelwright as the one called by prophecy and revelation to lead this institution, that you'll be good citizens in the Kingdom of God and in the household of BYU-Hawaii."
"I bear my testimony to you that we are engaged in the work of Almighty God. Jesus is the Christ. This is His Church restored in these latter days," he said. "I'm pleased to bear that testimony to you, with our combined expression of deep gratitude to the service you render here."
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Elder M. Russell Ballard of the Quorum of the Twelve |
Elder Ballard first spoke of the remarkable growth of the Church. "We're now in 176 different nations, we're preaching the gospel in how many different languages, we have missionaries — some 53,000 of them — scattered all over the world bearing testimony of the message of the restoration of the gospel."
"We have to be wide awake, as the leaders of the Church, to the need for change. There will need to be changes that we have to make in many different disciplines of the Church," he said, pointing out an example from the implementation of Preach My Gospel in missionary work. "Some of the mission presidents resisted the change, and then their missionaries resisted the change."
"Those that embraced Preach My Gospel and really became part of it, and started to teach their missionaries how to use it, how to teach it, how to be effective in it, how to call down the blessings of heaven so they could teach in their own words," Elder Ballard continued, "their work started to accelerate."
"You're in the process of some changes that are occurring here at the university. You have a new administration, with a new president and a new charge from the First Presidency and the Quorum of the Twelve," he continued. "My counsel to you is try to understand it and embrace it, and make it work; because as you do that, this university is going to take some significant steps forward in accomplishing the purposes that our Heavenly Father has in mind for it."
"I pray the Lord will bless us that we will capture the big vision, and know that we're going to another plateau, that we're going to step higher and step faster," Elder Ballard added. "We've got a great responsibility to reach out and touch the lives of more and more and more of our Heavenly Father's children. You happen to be in a very unique place where you have a chance every day as faculty and the administration of this university to change lives...preparing this wonderful student body to go back into the world and do things in a greater and more powerful way than ever before."
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Elders Ballard and Nelson present BYUH President Steven C. Wheelwright with a sculpture of President Joseph F. Smith |
During the meeting, Elders Nelson and Ballard presented President Wheelwright with a sculpted bust of Joseph F. Smith [pictured at left], who first served as a missionary in Hawaii in 1854. Elder Ballard is a direct descendant of President Smith, who as a General Authority in the 1880s encouraged the Saints to remain in Laie, and as president of the Church in 1915 dedicated the site of the Laie Hawaii Temple. The two board members delivered the gift President Henry B. Eyring, First Counselor in the First Presidency, mentioned during President Wheelwright's inauguration but wasn't ready at that point.
Also in the same meeting, Sister Beck told the faculty and staff the visit to BYU-Hawaii reminded her of youthful days and the many things she learned at Dixie College in St. George, Utah, with its Latter-day Saint heritage and temple within walking distance. "Those people made a difference in my life and they stretched me as a person," she said. "Today as I listened to some of your students at lunch, I thought the same thing is still going on here."
"You take someone young and inexperienced, and you bring them into this environment — you bring them into a climate of growth. That's what you have here," she continued. "I didn't know I was going to be the Relief Society president of the Church, and neither did the people who were helping me. They just helped me because they were good people."
"I've watched some of you today, and I thought, you are the message. These young people are watching you in your marriages, in your homes, in your interactions, and that message speaks to their hearts," Sister Beck said. "You don't know who you are teaching and training."
BYU President Samuelson shared a similar message: "How grateful we are that you are who you are. I would venture to guess that virtually all of you underestimate the impact you have on our young people," he said. "Your example is particularly important, not only because you interact with young people but because of the stature you have in their eyes through your well earned and, I think, highly deserved accolades for your professional expertise."
"For you to know what you know, and be able to teach what you teach, and then be able to integrate that in the context of gospel living, provides a most powerful example for our young people that I think is not available any other place than one of our Church universities."
Elder Tingey reminded the university ohana that the First Presidency assigned all the members to serve on the executive committee. "I want you to know that we really have your interests at heart, and the interests of the other universities and colleges in Church education. We study these issues, we read the materials," he said, adding that trying to balance the needs of the vast, worldwide Church against the resources to bless the lives of the people is a "significant challenge... We're doing the very best we can."
"I told the young single adults last night, and I repeat that to you, that I have never seen a time when there is more revelation coming down to this Church than today. I think the Lord is flooding this Church with revelation; and I have absolute full confidence that the revelation being received by President Monson, as was received by President Hinckley, will bless this Church, it will help decisions to be made, and it will move this work forward to the goal that the Lord has determined," Elder Tingey said. "That is my witness and that is my testimony."
Earlier in the day, the Executive Committee and party held meetings with the BUYH President's Council, university deans and others to learn more about design team progress, new student employment standards, distance learning plans, faculty teaching initiatives and the new 2009 academic calendar as well as potential classroom, housing and Church building projects in the future.
The committee also heard a panel of six students during a luncheon tell how BYU-Hawaii has helped them get through school, develop their leadership skills and strengthen their testimonies.
Of the former, 'Onita Fineanganofo from Tonga said, "I don't think I have a financial debt, but I have a debt to go home and make the best for our country"; and of the latter, Benson Massey from India said he's impressed that his teachers attend the temple with him.
"I live in a place that's a five-minute walk from the [Laie Hawaii] temple. It's been a wonderful experience for me. Whatever time I have here is precious."
BYU-Hawaii remembers President Hinckley visits:
President Gordon B. Hinckley had many occasions over his years of service as a General Authority to come to Laie in official capacities, but his visits to the campus, Polynesian Cultural Center and community as head of the worldwide Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints since he became its president in 1997 were especially memorable. His recent passing prompted BYU-Hawaii University Advancement to post several online tributes:
BYUH names new VP of Academics:
Dr. Max L. Checketts, BYU-Idaho Academic Vice President, will replace Dr. Keith Roberts as Vice President of Academics at BYU-Hawaii, at the end of Winter Semester. Roberts, a professor of mathematics who came to BYUH in 1991 to establish the office of institutional research, was appointed to the President's Council in 2000. Read more...
Hawaii State BOE honors BYUH School of Education:
The Hawaii State Board of Education recently presented the BYU-Hawaii School of Education with one of its 2007 inaugural partnership awards "for all that you do to support public education." Dr. John L. Bailey ('74, Mathematics), Dean of the School of Education, noted BYUH was "only one of two universities" to receive the state's Partnership in Education Award. Read additional details...
President's monthly Q&A meetings continue:
BYU-Hawaii President Steven C. Wheelwright meets monthly to answer questions the students, faculty or staff submit either in person or by email. The latest meeting was held on February 6 at 5:00 p.m., while the others rotate from early morning, mid-day and back to afternoons to accommodate a variety of study and work schedules. His latest session focused on the appointment of a new Vice President of Academics, speaking more English in class and at work, blind grading, changes in the IWES program, on-campus OPTs and more. Read a summary...
Annual McKay Lecture looks at war paradox:
English Professor Dr. Randal Allred looked at the paradox of using militaristic imagery and language in Latter-day Saint discourse during the annual David O. McKay Lecture Series in the Cannon Activities Center on Founder's Day, February 12. In it he explained how such metaphors might refer to the "true war" and, rather than symbols of "destruction and oppression," how we can have more "hope and joy in the atoning sacrifice of Christ."For more on his lecture...
BYUH releases 2007 Concert Choir Asia Tour CD:
BYU-Hawaii Media Production Center students and staff accompanying the Concert Choir's tour of China and Mongolia in May 2007 have compiled the live performances they recorded onto a 23-track CD that can be purchased for $5. For more details...
Coach Wagner surpasses basketball milestone:
Men's head basketball coach and Athletic Director Ken Wagner recently surpassed a milestone when the Seasiders scored his 335th victory for BYU-Hawaii — surpassing the 334-mark earlier set by University of Hawaii men's coach Riley Wallace and UH women's coach Vince Goo. Wagner started his tenure with the BYUH men's team in 1990, and since then has had only one losing season. Read more...
BYUH honors 2008 'Genuine Gold' representatives
The Alumni Association Board of Directors and the BYU-Hawaii President's Council have recently named the following representatives of President David O. McKay's description of CCH/BYU-Hawaii alumni as "Genuine Gold" for 2008:
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The 2008 Genuine Gold representatives were honored at a special assembly and luncheon on February 14. Alumni Association Executive Director Rowena Reid ('76, Social Work) also noted that more information on them will eventually be placed on our Alumni website.
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Alumni leaders meet on campus |
Chapter leaders hold annual training meetings on campus:
About 50 Alumni Chapter leaders came to BYU-Hawaii from February 13-16 to participate in the annual training sessions traditionally held during Homecoming or Founder's Week, which has recently been renamed Student-Alumni Week. As always, it was a wonderful opportunity for the alumni leaders to get together, share ideas and get updates on university programs and initiatives. Read more about their meetings...
CCHers set schedule for July 24-27 'mega-reunion':
The CCHers Network has set the following tentative schedule for their on-campus "mega-reunion" in July:
For more information, contact committee member Dot "Sweetheart" Anderson Uchima ('62).
Four former presidents address alumni in Utah:
The Utah Central Alumni Chapter hosted four former presidents in Laie — Dan W. Andersen, J. Elliot Cameron and Alton H. Wade of BYU-Hawaii; and Les Moore of the Polynesian Cultural Center — during a special fireside presentation on February 2, 2008, in the new Gordon B. Hinckley Alumni building on the BYU campus in Provo, Utah. Read about it... or view video excerpts from the fireside.
Check out the Utah Central Chapter's new web site...
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Alumni and others in Jakarta |
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Alumni at the recent Tokyo Chapter activity |
Canadian alum shares view on entrepreneurial philanthropy:
Dal Zemp ('84), a resident of Cardston, Alberta, Canada, who built his first business selling used Levi's®, shared his experience with current BYUH School of Business students on February 21. He told them he combined his love of special education and his business efforts to become an entrepreneurial philanthropist. Among other charitable efforts, Zemp is a member of the BYUH/Polynesian Cultural Center Presidents' Leadership Council (PLC). Read more...
For online news of Laie:
A recent request from an alum asked if there's anywhere to find news of Laie, so here's to inform you that a number of alumni are doing their best to keep news of Laie (and the surrounding communities) online:
Jakarta, Indonesia Chapter:
Chapter chairman Juswan Tandiman emailed to say Indonesia Mission President Marchant hosted alumni at the mission home in Jakarta on January 18 at a meeting also attended by Associate Dean of Admissions Mike Sudlow and Tom Bloss from that office. "A nice dinner was served and the group enjoyed each other's company and spoke about their experiences at BYU and BYU-Hawaii," he wrote. "It was an evening that was enjoyed by all with hopes of gathering again in the near future."
Tokyo Chapter:
Alumni chair Kazuki "Kaz" Omura ('04, Information Systems) reports the Tokyo Chapter "had a wonderful activity on February 23. We had a talent show and an 'exam' to find out who still remembers BYUH, PCC and Hawaii most, and who doesn't. We were so excited to meet old friends, and we all had a great time. For our next activity, we plan to have a gym night.
1950s & 60s
Glenna Lee Couts ('59) wrote: "It was wonderful to read of the recognition given to Ke Alaka'i. As one of its earliest editors, circa 1958, I have always followed the newspaper with great interest."
D. Alan Barcarse ('64, English) thanked his classmates for their recent faith on his behalf: "Thinking about what has transpired leaves me sort of speechless with a sense of humbleness. I just completed a triple bypass open heart surgery on January 3 and was released on 1/9. The wife of a friend went in on the same day, but never survived. One of the Ohumukini's was in the same ward as me and was still in ICU when I was discharged. Why me? My surgeon told me that his brother was coming back from Iraq and the family wanted to have Christmas in San Francisco together. I was concerned, but I told him that I would wait until after New Year's. What a blessing! My wife got on CAN LANAI and what a response was received. Before I knew it our names were placed in the temples throughout the world. Thank you, thank you so much for your thoughts and prayers. After surgery Dr. Louie told me that for some reason some of the blockage had worked itself out during the time he was gone, and although very serious, it really was not that bad. With strict adherance he believes that I will completely recover. With the Lord, and all of you on my side, I feel confident that I will survive. Mahalo."
Helen Kwong Goo ('66), who's serving with her husband, retired Associate Dean of International Students Charlie Goo, as president and matron of the Hong Kong Temple, wrote that they "feel very much at home with so many BYUH alumni here. It is nice to see them serving in various callings of leadership in local wards and stakes. This month alone Charlie performed three live sealings of recent BYUH graduates. We are grateful for the experiences they had serving in student wards while in Laie and we expect that they will be great leaders here in the future. Our second week here was an eye-opener for us as we welcomed 40 Saints from Mongolia. There were 16 fulltime missionaries, six Elders and 10 sisters, who came to take out their endowments. There were another 13 new patrons, among them a 74-year-old sister who traveled on a mail truck for one day to get to the mission home where she met up with the group, and then traveled by train for three days to get to Hong Kong. They brought with them 1,000 family names. We have since hosted groups from Thailand, Cambodia and Singapore. All these faithful Saints made sacrifices to come to the Temple to receive the promised blessings in the House of the Lord. We pray that you will remember to go to the temple regularly and listen to the counsels of our living prophet to replace some of your leisure activities with temple attendance."
Daud Sahim ('67, Education), a counselor at Portland Community College in Oregon, wrote: "I will never forget my experience at CCH. I was blessed to come to a college where I gained an excellent education and experienced a great spiritual uplift. Playing soccer for CCH was an enjoyable experience. The professors and bishops like Nephi Georgi, Wayne Clark, Wylie Swapp and LaMoyne Garside were great examples, who had a vision of what it meant to be a part of a prophetic declaration."
1970s
Shannon Lee Kanekoa ('71, Art Education) and her husband, James "Moose" Kanekoa ('71, Business Management), are relocating from Reno, Nevada, to Lahaina, Maui, after James received a Hawaiian Homestead there. The couple has five sons and are "thrilled...we are HOME!"
1980s
Raymond Jou ('80, Information Systems), Alumni chapter chair in the San Francisco Bay area from 2000-06, is an information technology program/project manager who also runs a real estate brokerage and investment business.
Sam Ezekiela ('81) and his wife, Momi Brown Ezekiela, emailed from Rarotonga: "Kia Orana, and thank you for the BYUH eNewsletter. We have enjoyed the reading, special talks and most especially news of alumni and past classmates. It brings back a lot of fond and precious memories of our time at BYUH. Much aroha."
1990s
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Petty ('94, in black tank top) in Kenya |
Sorry for the delay, but we recently learned that LeRoy Transfield ('93, Art) won the Polich Tallix Foundry Award for his 17-inch bronze of an African woman, Umoja, in the 2007 National Sculpture Society's annual show in New York City, New York. LeRoy, who is originally from New Zealand, and his wife, Kelly Baker Transfield ('93, Commercial Art), live in Orem, Utah. Visit LeRoy's online gallery...
Shaun Parry ('94), a singer, dancer and actor based in New York City, was recently traveling in India and Kenya on behalf of the nonprofit organization he founded and heads, Promothean Spark. He reported he was very close to some of the violence while in Kenya — in fact, was even robbed, but "the Lord opened doors for me to have a place to go to be safe." In Soweto, he continued, he taught traditional educational topics in the mornings to "boys off the street...and then developing a strong singing/dancing/drumming program in the afternoons. We have 25-30 teens coming to the class every day now. It was a small pocket of peace in a country torn with raging hatred, fear and violence." In Southern India he worked "with the leprosy colonies and the children of the leprosy victims there. Very exciting"; and back in Kenya he was recently appointed a founding member and only non-Kenyan on the board of trustees for the Musical Arts Academy of Nairobi. Promethean Spark, which brings training in the performing arts to impoverished young people, put on a fundraiser performance in Logan, Utah, on February 2.
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The Brown family ('95) |
Douglas Brown ('95, International Business Management) and his wife, Andrea Hiskey Brown ('95, Psychology), are living in Simi Valley, California. He wrote: "The Lord has blessed our family and we remain active in the Church. We are still close friends with Bob ('94, English) and Emily Warne and Todd ('92, Information Systems) and Shauna Palmer Petty ('92, EXS) who graduated from BYU-H. We loved our experience at BYUH and we do not hesitate to let people know how great the school is. I have been working for Countrywide Financial for the last seven years. I am currently working in corporate human resources as a Vice President of Business Operations. I have enjoyed working here and have watched the company grow from 10,000 to over 60,000 employees. The company was recently acquired by Bank of America, so who knows what the future holds."
Eric Proffitt ('99), a former BYUH Concert Choir member, was recently invited to open the United Nations Global Initiative to Fight Human Trafficking Conference in Vienna, Austria on February 13, with music. Eric is now a singer and motivational speaker who lives in Salt Spring Isle, British Columbia, Canada, with his wife, Rebecca McKay Proffitt ('99). To hear the song he sang, go to http://www.ericproffitt.com.
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The Welling family ('04) |
2000s
Won chol "Neal" Noh ('02, Political Science) emailed that he has been working for a small automotive parts trading company in Zurich, "so I had a chance to visit Switzerland and Sweden on business. My wife, Kyunghwa, is a working mom. She teaches third grade and likes kids very much." The Nohs now have two kids of their own.
Michele Bourque ('03, Special Education), who has multiple certifications, is teaching second grade in Fort Stewart, Georgia, and currently working on a master's degree in curriculum and instruction. Her husband, Kenneth, has been serving in Iraq.
F. Paul Welling ('05, IDS) describes his attempts to enroll in dental school since graduation as a "work in progress" but feels he's made a recent break-through. He and his wife, Caddie Jenkins Welling ('04), now live in Wyoming where he's working in his family's auto dealership and rental agency for now. "We really miss Hawaii and the people we grew to love," he wrote.
Lufai Wari ('05, Political Science) reports that after returning to Papua-New Guinea, he ran in the 2007 national general elections for his district, and just "narrowly lost." He is now tending the vanilla bean farm he and other classmates successfully proposed during the university's annual business plan competition. He and his wife, Elicia Hollings Wari ('03, Elementary Education) live in Goroka.
• Rose Aki Young ('58, Business), 75, of Orem, Utah, died November 27, 2007 (no other details were available).
• Dr. Frank K. Kalama Jr. ('64, Accounting), a former Alumni Association president, passed away January 3, 2008. He went on to earn his teaching certificate, master's from UH and Ed.D. from BYU in Provo. Before retiring in 2002, he served as a teacher, coach, and school principal with the Hawaii State Department of Education. He was also a former BYU-Hawaii 12th Ward Bishop and BYU-Hawaii 2nd Stake Counselor and Stake President, as well as a Laie Temple officiator and sealer. In 2003 the Association presented him with the Distinguished Alumni Award. His wife, Gladys Chu Kalama ('61, Elementary Education) and all of his children — Lei Kalama Cummings ('86, Information Systems), Frank Kalama IV ('97, Information Systems), Roxanne Kalama Latu ('89, Business Management) and Keawe Kalama ('97, Psychology) — are also BYU-Hawaii graduates.
• Gustave "Gus" Forsythe ('64, Industrial Education), 69, passed away on November 24, 2007. Gus, who had been living in Hilo, Hawaii, was a retired radio announcer and a Civil Air Patrol pilot.
• Ellen Cook, 93, wife of CCH President Owen Cook, passed away on February 2 in Grand Terrace, California, almost one week after suffering a fall in her home. Daughter Alice Cook Enos ('88, Elementary Education), a teacher at Kahuku Elementary School, said prior to that she was active and healthy. "She was a wonderful mother and grandmother, and loved the Lord," Enos said. "She and my dad, who passed away two-and-a-half years ago, served two missions after leaving Laie: A proselyting one in Caracas, Venezuela, and a temple mission in New Zealand. When they were at CCH, her main role was to always support my dad. She also served in many callings in Church and was active in the Daughters of the Utah Pioneers organization." Sister Cook had four children, 16 grandchildren and 27 great-grandchildren.
• Shirley Glaus ('67), 78, wife of former Polynesian Cultural Center General Manager F. Wayne Glaus, died February 1 in Salt Lake City, Utah. Shirley eventually went on to earn a bachelor's degree from the University of Utah at age 61. She and her husband served a mission at the Cove Fort, Utah, historical site; and she was also a volunteer at This is the Place Heritage Park in Salt Lake City, and a missionary-guide at the Church Office Building.
• Sione Tuitupou ('77, Music Education) passed away in November 2007 in Salt Lake City, Utah (no other details were available).
• Dr. Raymond Preston of American Fork, Utah, who taught behavioral sciences at CCH in the late 60s/early 70s, died on February 21. After leaving Laie, Dr. Preston went on to work for 20 years at the Utah State Hospital in Provo.
• Dr. Don Sorensen, a professor in the BYU-Hawaii Department of Religious Education until he retired in 1980, died December 15, 2007, at his home in Holden, Utah. Prior to working in the Religion Department, he worked in Student Services.
• Shirley Mae Brooks Goodman ('89) of St. George, Orem and West Jordan, Utah, passed away in St. George on December 21, 2007. An obituary noted she loved to do family history work and also wrote screenplays, poetry and news articles.
• Heather Dawn Heath Trivett ('90, Social Work) passed away last September in Salt Lake City, Utah. Following her graduation from BYUH, she went on to earn a master's in social work. She had been living in Oakley, Utah.
• Miliama "Milly" Scott Peters ('94, Political Science) died surrounded by her children and some of her grandchildren on January 14 after battling brain tumor effects for several years. Milly, a Laie girl who danced at the Polynesian Cultural Center and the old Hukilau, returned to school years later to complete her degree.
Editor's Note: At the faculty-staff ohana session during the February 25 Board of Education Executive Committee meetings at BYU-Hawaii, Elder Russell M. Nelson made the comment that it seemed like General Conference, partially because once again a group of General Authorities and officers of the Church were on campus together. I think back to how often — during our school years and other times — we have been blessed with such visits. They are inspiring, and a wonderful part of the BYU-Hawaii experience for all of us.
— Mike Foley ('70, TESL), Editor
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The BYU-Hawaii Alumni eNewsletter is published by the University Advancement office, under the direction of Napua Baker ['59-61 and '70-72], Vice President; Dr. Duane Roberts, Director of Communications & Public Relations; and Rowena Reid ['76, Social Work], Alumni Relations Executive Director. Brigham Young University Hawaii is a four-year comprehensive undergraduate institution sponsored by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. About 2,400 students from over 70 nations are currently enrolled.
You have received this e-newsletter because you are an affiliate of BYU-Hawaii. If necessary, please update your alumni profile. If you have received this e-mail inadvertently, or wish to unsubscribe, please send a message with NEWSLETTER UNSUBSCRIBE in the Subject line and your e-mail address in the body to alumni@byuh.edu. If you are aware of other BYU-Hawaii alumni who have not received this newsletter, please forward a copy and encourage them to update their profiles. Mahalo.
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