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News of the Church


"News of the Church," Ensign, Jul 2007,  76-80

Revolutionary War, Other Records to Go Online As Part of New Program

"Revolutionary War, Other Records to Go Online As Part of New Program," Ensign, July 2007,  76

A treasure trove of U.S. Revolutionary War records will soon be at the fingertips of millions of family history researchers, thanks in large part to FamilySearch, a nonprofit genealogical organization sponsored by the Church.

A historic project to digitize and index the pension records of U.S. Revolutionary War veterans will make genealogical information readily available online, including to the millions of Americans who are descended from those soldiers who fought for independence.

According to researchers, the military pension records now being digitized and indexed are incredibly valuable due to the amount of detail and the variety of information they include.

The federal government and some state governments granted pensions to officers, disabled veterans, needy veterans, widows or orphans of veterans, and veterans who served a certain length of time, and access to such information about an ancestor is a researcher's dream.

The Revolutionary War began on April 19, 1775, at Lexington and Concord, Massachusetts, between the local militia and British troops and ended officially with the signing of the Treaty of Paris in 1783. The eight-year military struggle generated a tremendous volume of records on the approximately 250,000 military participants.

When complete, the images and indexes of this vast collection of information will be viewable at the more than 4,500 Church-run family history centers around the world. They will also be available online at the Church Web site FamilySearch.org, as well as through project partner Footnote.com.

Footnote.com is a genealogy Web site working with FamilySearch to preserve digitally, index, and publish the world's records in concert with archives around the world. As part of the agreement, FamilySearch will digitize the images currently held in the National Archives Record and Administration's (NARA) collection in Washington, D.C., and Footnote.com will create the electronic indexes.

The Revolutionary War Pension Records project is the first of many future projects the Church will undertake to expedite access to historical records. The new Records Access program initiated by FamilySearch will result in an increase of online databases around the world, according to FamilySearch officials.

"Records custodians worldwide are experiencing growing pressure to provide access to their records online while maintaining control and ownership," said Wayne Metcalfe, director of Records Services for the Family and Church History Department.

"At the same time, Web sites that provide digitizing and publishing services are struggling with the staggering costs. The new Records Access program takes advantage of FamilySearch's resources and creates an economical and effective forum where records custodians and genealogy Web sites can work together to accomplish their respective objectives."

FamilySearch's new Records Access program provides tools and assistance to records custodians who want to publish their collection using state-of-the-art digital cameras, software, and Web-based applications.

FamilySearch has representatives worldwide who can work with archivists to determine how FamilySearch and affiliates can help them meet their digital preservation and publication needs.

The Church's interest and commitment to records preservation dates back to the 1800s.

[photo] An example of an American Revolutionary War pension record. These records will soon be available through FamilySearch.org and Footnote.com.

New Mission Presidents Now in Place Worldwide

"New Mission Presidents Now in Place Worldwide," Ensign, July 2007,  77-78

Accepting assignments from the First Presidency, 117 new mission presidents began serving on or around July 1, 2007. The missions and their respective new presidents are:

Alabama Birmingham

 

James R. Tate

 

Argentina Buenos Aires North

 

Shane V. Argyle

 

Argentina Buenos Aires South

 

Ronald W. Asay

 

Argentina Cordoba

 

Stephen L. Olsen

 

Arizona Mesa

 

W. Mark Bassett

 

Arizona Tempe

 

Robert C. Craig

 

Armenia Yerevan

 

Ronald J. Dunn

 

Australia Brisbane

 

Grant S. Richards

 

Australia Melbourne East

 

Corey B. Lindley

 

Australia Melbourne West

 

Barry Lee

 

Australia Perth

 

Carl R. Maurer

 

Australia Sydney North

 

H. E. Scruggs Jr.

 

Bolivia La Paz

 

Ismael Mendoza Regino

 

Bolivia Santa Cruz

 

Kevin D. McCracken

 

Brazil Campinas

 

Ildefonso de Castro Deus

 

Brazil Curitiba

 

Paulo M. Araujo

 

Brazil Goiania

 

Vaguiner C. Tobias

 

Brazil Joao Pessoa

 

David G. Fernandes

 

Brazil Londrina

 

Luiz M. Leal

 

Brazil Santa Maria

 

Rodrigo Myrrha

 

California Carlsbad

 

Richard B. Brady

 

California Long Beach

 

Edwin A. Sexton

 

California Los Angeles

 

Spencer (Tim) G. Blackburn

 

California San Bernardino

 

David T. Sanchez

 

Canada Edmonton

 

George F. Rhodes Jr.

 

Canada Montreal

 

Joel H. McKinnon

 

Canada Toronto West

 

Jeffrey T. Simmons

 

Chile Antofagasta

 

Juan A. Urra Gomez

 

Chile Concepcion

 

Oscar W. Chavez Lopez

 

Chile Rancagua

 

Esteban G. Resek

 

Chile Santiago West

 

Paul A. Jones

 

Colombia Barranquilla

 

Robin O. Roundy

 

Colorado Denver South

 

Earl L. Christison III

 

Czech Prague

 

Marvin J. Slovacek Jr.

 

Democratic Republic of Congo Kinshasa

 

Donald H. Livingstone

 

Denmark Copenhagen

 

Douglas J. Olauson Sr.

 

Ecuador Guayaquil South

 

William S. Johns

 

England Leeds

 

Wallace L. Stock

 

Florida Jacksonville

 

Russell A. Newman Jr.

 

Florida Orlando

 

John C. Darrington

 

Florida Tallahassee

 

Lynn L. Summerhays

 

Florida Tampa

 

Kent W. Colton

 

Germany Hamburg

 

Wesley B. Thompson

 

Hawaii Honolulu

 

Stephen N. Peterson

 

Honduras San Pedro Sula

 

Samuel Cruz Velasquez

 

Idaho Boise

 

John W. Yardley

 

Illinois Chicago South

 

Richard B. Roach

 

Illinois Peoria

 

Lynn G. Erickson

 

India Bangalore

 

Melvin R. Nichols

 

Indiana Indianapolis

 

David L. Corey

 

Indonesia Jakarta

 

Ross Hawkins Marchant

 

Iowa Des Moines

 

G. Lyle Talbot

 

Ireland Dublin

 

Gordon W. Creer

 

Italy Catania

 

James A. Toronto

 

Italy Milan

 

J. Scott Dunaway

 

Italy Rome

 

Jeffrey Acerson

 

Japan Nagoya

 

Bruce F. Traveller

 

Kenya Nairobi

 

William H. Taylor

 

Korea Daejeon

 

Alan G. Perriton

 

Korea Seoul West

 

Craig P. Burton

 

Mexico Chihuahua

 

Edgar Flores Prieto

 

Mexico Culiacan

 

Marion R. Johnstun

 

Mexico Guadalajara

 

Robert J. Watkins

 

Mexico Leon

 

Robert T. Cox

 

Mexico Merida

 

Victor M. Cardenas Lopez

 

Mexico Mexico City East

 

Russell G. Bulloch

 

Mexico Mexico City West

 

J. Francisco Fuentes Corpus

 

Mexico Monterrey East

 

Daniel Mendoza Regino

 

Michigan Detroit

 

Michael L. Rawson

 

Missouri St. Louis

 

Milton S. Turley

 

Mongolia Ulaanbaatar

 

D. Allen Andersen

 

New Hampshire Manchester

 

Michael R. Jensen

 

New Jersey Cherry Hill

 

Bruce H. Winegar

 

New Mexico Albuquerque

 

Richard J. Anderson

 

New York Rochester

 

Michael F. Hemingway

 

Nicaragua Managua

 

Romel E. Fraatz

 

Nigeria Port Harcourt

 

Loveday I. Nwankpa

 

Nigeria Uyo

 

Joseph W. Sitati

 

Ohio Cincinnati

 

Gregory V. Robbins

 

Oklahoma Oklahoma City

 

James R. Gee

 

Panama Panama City

 

Manuel Madrigal Romero

 

Paraguay Asuncion North

 

Terry L. Wade

 

Pennsylvania Philadelphia

 

Michael R. Murray

 

Peru Arequipa

 

David J. Davis

 

Peru Lima North

 

Carlos A. Perez Basso

 

Peru Trujillo

 

Alejandro Mora Arauco

 

Philippines Cagayan de Oro

 

Remegio E. Meim Jr.

 

Philippines Cauayan

 

Raul S. Villanueva

 

Philippines Naga

 

Mark A. Ferrin

 

Philippines Quezon City

 

Beaver T. Ho Ching

 

Poland Warsaw

 

Torben Engbjerg

 

Puerto Rico San Juan East

 

Ralph L. Dewsnup

 

Puerto Rico San Juan West

 

J. Stanley Martineau

 

Russia Moscow

 

Charles D. Cranney

 

Russia Novosibirsk

 

Hal E. Mickelsen

 

Russia Samara

 

Randall K. Bennett

 

Russia Vladivostok

 

Stanley E. Everett

 

Russia Yekaterinburg

 

Stephen J. Allen

 

Sierra Leone Freetown

 

Phillip L. Squires

 

South Africa Durban

 

Steven H. Mann

 

Spain Malaga

 

Robert L. Mellor

 

Switzerland Zurich

 

Dietmar G. Matern

 

Taiwan Taichung

 

Michael A. Hoer

 

Texas Fort Worth

 

Wright Jenkins Thurston

 

Texas McAllen

 

Gary F. Miller

 

Texas San Antonio

 

Charles L. Cutler

 

Tonga Nuku'alofa

 

Lynn C. McMurray

 

Ukraine Dnepropetrovsk

 

Leonard M. Abraham

 

Uruguay Montevideo West

 

Steven K. Peterson

 

Utah Salt Lake City

 

W. Blake Sonne

 

Utah Salt Lake City South

 

G. Steven Laney

 

Virginia Richmond

 

Mark B. Millburn

 

Washington D.C. North

 

L. Alma Mansell

 

Washington Everett

 

Donald L. Showalter III

 

Washington Kennewick

 

Paul M. Belnap

 

Washington Seattle

 

Craig M. Moffat

 

Wisconsin Milwaukee

 

William A. Barrett

 

Church Teaching Life-Saving Techniques to Health Professionals around World

"Church Teaching Life-Saving Techniques to Health Professionals around World," Ensign, July 2007,  78-79

Dr. Bulane, a staff physician at the Makoanyane Military Hospital in Maseru, Lesotho, deals daily with a shortage of trained medical personnel and supplies. The people of Lesotho, a landlocked country in southern Africa, suffer from an HIV/AIDS infection rate of nearly 30 percent, a 34.4-year life expectancy, recurring drought, poverty, and a high infant mortality rate.

Because of his concern for infant mortality, Dr. Bulane registered for a training program in neonatal resuscitation conducted in his community by the Humanitarian Services Division of the Church.

This program, an attempt to reduce infant deaths from birth asphyxia (a lack of oxygen at birth), is conducted in many parts of the world as an ongoing humanitarian initiative of the Church and as a response to the World Health Organization's concern for infant deaths.

Soon after participating in the June 2006 training session, Dr. Bulane saved a newborn baby boy by implementing his new techniques. "The mother had excess water, and a cesarean section was performed," he explained. "Her baby was born blue. Through neonatal resuscitation techniques, the baby was saved. He is doing great now. I used the time line I had been taught. Without it, there might have been complications. It was very exciting; the training puts everything else in perspective. As far as I am concerned, it instills confidence. I now know exactly what to do. There is no panic."

Gaining confidence to respond in the critical seconds after birth is the stated goal of neonatal resuscitation, according to Deb Whipple, a nurse in the newborn intensive care unit at LDS Hospital in Salt Lake City and a frequent participant in the worldwide training initiative. "I know the procedures work," Sister Whipple acknowledged. "I've seen them save lives within those first valuable 30 to 60 seconds."

Sister Whipple uses her skills daily in the hospital delivery room but also shares her expertise internationally with other medical professionals. "The neonatal resuscitation course is taught to 50 students who ... return to their clinics, hospitals, and neighborhoods to teach other birthing attendants," she said.

Participating countries are selected based on infant mortality rates, according to Dean Walker of Humanitarian Services, manager of the newborn resuscitation initiative. Teaching clinics are scheduled through local ministries of health in the participating countries, and training kits-including practice mannequins, training manuals, and resuscitation equipment-are donated by the Church. In 2006, training courses were offered in 23 countries.

Physicians, nurses, respiratory therapists, and other medical professionals volunteer their time to staff the resuscitation trainings.

For Dr. Ted Kimball, an emergency room physician at the University of Utah Hospital in Salt Lake City and chair of the Humanitarian Services advisory committee, the role as a facilitator in addressing health issues in developing countries brings multiple rewards.

"These people live simple lives," Dr. Kimball noted. "They don't need flat-screen TVs or computers. They have three basic needs: a chance for education, a chance for health, and an opportunity for peace or freedom from political strife. Neonatal resuscitation plays a critical role in two of these needs: education and health. Our training makes a contribution."

The minister of health in Uganda, a recent participant in neonatal resuscitation training, told Dr. Kimball that each infant death in his country creates an estimated U.S. $100,000 deficit to his country's economy. "In these areas where grinding poverty exists," Dr. Kimball said, "they need a healthy, educated workforce to carry the people out of poverty. A healthy, self-reliant community is the key. Without loss of life at birth, there's another back to carry the economic load of the country-another person leading the way out of poverty."

The neonatal resuscitation training concerns in Ghana mirror those of Lesotho and Uganda. Dr. David Gourley, a Salt Lake City physician and member of the Humanitarian Services advisory committee, reported that "a simplified course designed for rural midwives and community nurses will provide basic resuscitation skills and equipment necessary to lower Ghana's infant mortality rate."

Dr. Gourley related the following account from a recently trained midwife: "Dora attended a breech delivery. She thought the baby was dead because he was floppy and not breathing. Dora went through the initial steps of resuscitation. She needed only to correctly position the baby's airway and suction with a bulb syringe before the baby began breathing and tone improved. Today the baby is thriving."

Based on local evaluations, Dr. Gourley noted that in the six months following the May 2006 Ghana training, 646 infants were successfully resuscitated using the basic equipment donated by the Church.

The equipment and the training contribute to the neonatal resuscitation program's long-term goal that a qualified birth attendant be present at every delivery.

For Sister Whipple, a mother herself, the goal is broader. "I want all those babies to have a healthy body to experience life," the nurse concluded. "Mothers have the same emotions worldwide-they all have the hope that their child will be healthy and have the opportunity to be happy, to be a part of a family."

[photo] An Egyptian doctor trains nurses on how to resuscitate an infant.

New Triple Combinations Available in Three Languages

"New Triple Combinations Available in Three Languages," Ensign, July 2007,  79

For the first time, Tongan-, Haitian-, and Cambodian-speaking members of the Church will have a triple combination in their own language.

The triple combinations consist of complete editions of the Book of Mormon, the Doctrine and Covenants, the Pearl of Great Price, and the Guide to the Scriptures. Maps and photographs are also included.

The Book of Mormon in Tongan has been available since 1946, and the Doctrine and Covenants and Pearl of Great Price since 1959, but the publication of the triple combination marks the first time that all three books have been bound together into one volume.

Although the Book of Mormon in Haitian has been available since 1999, the Doctrine and Covenants and Pearl of Great Price were not available until the release of the triple combination.

In August 1982, Book of Mormon Selections was printed in Cambodian; then in November 2001 a version of the Book of Mormon without footnotes was printed.

Teams of translators, reviewers, and ecclesiastical leaders work together to translate the scriptures into a chosen language. The length of time it takes to complete the process varies.

The First Presidency has encouraged members to acquire their own scriptures to be used for regular study, Church meetings, and assignments.

[photo] The triple combination, containing complete editions of the Book of Mormon, the Doctrine and Covenants, the Pearl of Great Price, and other study aids, is now available in Cambodian, Haitian, and Tongan.

New DVD Released for Children

"New DVD Released for Children," Ensign, July 2007,  80

A new Home and Family Collection DVD has recently been released. Old Testament Stories for Children contains the still images and narration from the Old Testament Stories book.

The DVD includes English subtitles to aid new or beginning readers. The 48 stories contained on the DVD help introduce the teachings of the Old Testament. It can be used to supplement or reinforce Primary lessons, teach those with mental disabilities, and teach children at home, either as part of a lesson or for independent use by children.

Sold individually for U.S. $4.50 (item number 00350) or U.S. $75.00 for a case of 50 DVDs, the product is available at distribution centers.

[photo] The Old Testament Stories book is now available on DVD for children.

Comment

"Comment," Ensign, July 2007,  80

Examples of Missionary Work

Thank you so much for the brief stories about missionary work (March 2007 Latter-day Saint Voices). Reading experiences that testify of Heavenly Father's tender mercies as we share the gospel brings me greater hope and encourages me to be sensitive to the Spirit.
Sister Shannon Miller, New York Utica Mission

Teaching Children about General Conference

About two years ago a pre-conference issue of the Ensign contained an article by a single mother telling how she prepares conference baskets for her children when they spend general conference weekends at their father's house. (See "Random Sampler," Ensign, Oct. 2005, 70-71.) One of her suggestions to help small children focus on conference was to provide simple illustrations of the conference pulpit so that the child could draw each speaker, write the speaker's name and topic, and write his or her own feelings during the talk.

As a Relief Society secretary, I shared this idea in our branch Relief Society the month before each general conference. Now as a Primary teacher, I make a similar sheet for the CTR 5 children. Several mothers commented to me that they were going to make extra copies of the sheets for their older children as well.

Thank you for providing a forum for sharing such practical ideas to help teach children the gospel.
Tena L. Cook, Nebraska

General Conference and Family Home Evening

Thank you for converting general conference talks to materials for family home evening lessons. I was awaiting my Ensign to try and make up lessons when I received an e-mail telling me about the General Conference and Family Home Evening page (available at www.lds.org/gospellibrary on the General Conference and Family Home Evening Page). How wonderful to have this resource available to use without all the work! It's also nice to have this so soon after conference so we can start reinforcing the wonderful talks and lessons given. Thank you.
Cherlynn Bell, Missouri

A Note on Descendancy Research

I am writing concerning George Durrant's article, "Branching Out on Your Family Tree" (April 2007). I have been doing descendancy research for 30 years and am very careful to defer to living relatives. However, Brother Durrant failed to mention the factor that impels me most. I find that many relatives died having never had children or having had their children die before reaching adulthood, leaving no descendant. Descendancy research is the only way their temple work will be done.
Catherine H. Ellis, Arizona

Clarifications

The April 2007 issue listed information for Church pageants in 2007. The phone numbers given for information on the Oakland Temple Pageant were incorrect. The correct phone numbers are 510-531-0704 or 510-531-1475.

Also in that issue, the Ensign reported that Elder Parley P. Pratt died and was buried in Van Buren, Arkansas. The location of his grave is actually in nearby Alma, Arkansas, where Church members regularly care for the site.

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