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To connect social work students to on-campus resources and employees at Counseling and Disability Services, the BYU–Hawaii Social Work Student Association (SWSA) hosted a suicide prevention and awareness presentation on Feb. 20 in the Multi-Purpose Center.
Failure is essential, said Dr. Troy L. Cox, while discussing his life lessons from scholarship, during his presentation for the annual Alice Pack Lecture held in the Heber J. Grant Building on March 3.
When they received the call to serve as the new Laie Hawaii Temple Visitors’ Center Director, Elder Steven King, and his wife, Sister Michelle King, from Bountiful, Utah, both agreed it was unexpected but inspired.
A detailed study of earthly elements can help deepen our understanding of heavenly objects, and refine our religious practice, explained Dr. Marcus Martins. He was this year’s McKay Lecturer on Feb. 11 in the Cannon Activities Center, and his address was titled “The Third Century of an Intelligent Religion.”
Tevita O. Ka’ili, BYU–Hawaii dean of the Faculty of Culture, Language and Performing arts, was selected as the 2019 Ko’olauloa Person of the Year on Jan. 5 by the local Facebook page La’ie Voice. Ka’ili shared since he is an anthropologist, it is his duty to advocate for his ancestors’ land.
Marcus Martins requests students seek intelligent ways of practicing faith in upcoming McKay Lecture
The Winter Semester 2020 David O. McKay Lecture will be given by Marcus Martins, a professor of religion and leadership, on Feb. 11 in the Cannon Activities Center. He said he will invite students and faculty to enhance their comprehension of who God is and what He has available for His children if they seek Him intelligently.
Recent research published by the University of Washington shows that technologies with the ability to read another human's thoughts may be in the foreseeable future, causing some BYU–Hawaii students to worry about potential implications.
Marked by the signature yellow vests with the Mormon Helping Hands logo, students from the on-campus Laie YSA 1st Stake met for the second consecutive month to do a Saturday morning service project–this time at the Kahuku Elderly Hauoli Hale–where students cleaned and wiped windows and screens for those in need.
She was the first young woman in her branch to serve a mission in 20 years, the only high school student in all of Utah chosen to participate in a summer academy in Massachusetts, and was most recently selected by LDS Philanthropies as an ambassador. But most know Jami Harvey, sophomore biology major from the Navajo Nation at Montezuma Creek, Utah, for her kind smile and helping hands.
Scenes of a young woman passed out in the midst of empty pill containers, a pleading husband being pushed away by his stunned and heartbroken wife, and many other harrowing visuals recently appeared in a series of videos released by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints called “12 Steps to Change.”
After 18 years of never spending longer than a day apart or an hour angry at each other, Mackenzie and Morgan Casper begin their first semester at BYU–Hawaii with the realization that separation quickly approaches them.
For most students attending BYU–Hawaii, the land and setting they call “home” is thousands of miles away, and frequency of communication between student and family or friends varies along with severity of homesickness.
Whether it's at the library, on the outside tables, or nowhere at all, studying and college are inseparable and each student's version is slightly different from the next.
Landon Gold, a sophomore from California majoring in marine biology said, “My ex-girlfriend’s parents insisted I come to their daughter’s mission homecoming while I was on vacation with my then girlfriend.”
With roots to both Laie and a BYU education ingrained in her repertoire of social work and passion for helping people, Losaline Hafoka completes her first few months as new Academic Advisor for art, English, and music with success and hopes for the future.