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1999-01-10
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From: "Perry L. Porter" <plporter@xmission.com>
Subject: ---> Are missionaries Adults?
Date: 09 Jan 1999 18:59:50 -0700
LDS Church Cuts E-Mail From Missions
BY PEGGY FLETCHER STACK THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE
LDS missionaries will no longer be allowed to communicate with their
families via e-mail or facsimile service, according to a recent policy.
And that has robbed some Mormon parents of their peace of mind.
``It's a cruel move,'' said Bonnie Carter of Orem.
Carter's son, Andrew Carter, is on a two-year mission for The Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Sweden. For a number of months,
Andrew Carter has been sending his family a weekly e-mail from a nearby
library.
``It's nerve-racking to have a son out there these days,'' Carter said.
``Missionaries have been hurt or killed at an alarming rate this year.''
Beyond that, Carter said, there have been occasions when she and her
husband needed to communicate with their son about urgent matters like
insurance or wiring money.
``By the time he's written us and we've written him, 20 days have
passed,'' she said.
Communication between missionaries and their families has always been
tightly controlled by the church in an effort to focus missionary
energies.
Missionaries are allowed to phone home only twice a year, on Christmas and
Mother's Day, and are not supposed to write more than once a week.
LDS spokesman Don LeFevre said that the new policy, announced to mission
presidents in early December, would allow exceptions in ``areas of the
world where serious postal service problems exist.'' Under certain
conditions, mission presidents, in consultation with the Area Presidency,
``may allow missionaries to communicate with their families once a week
via e-mail or fax,'' LeFevre said.
However, in such cases missionaries ``should avoid imposing on local
members who have computers or fax machines.'' LeFevre said that given the
convenience of e-mail,``some missionaries may be communicating more than
once a week and that would detract from missionary work.''
=A9 Copyright 1999, The Salt Lake Tribune
[I am not sure how communicating with one's own family more than once a
week is contrary to gospel principals.
It doesn't sound like family values to me. There was much dead time
during my mission that was filled with activities designed to kill time
while pretending to do missionary work, such as trackting, where we tried
to make sure that every person in an apartment complex was contacted, yet
the city 20 miles away NEVER had missionaries go there.
If these 19, 20 and 21 year old boys are not mature enough to limit their
time communicating with family and friends on a weekly or daily basis, how
are they mature enough to grown men with their own families how to
communicate with God or their own families?
I will not pay one dime for my children to go on missions unless they can
be treated like adults, not like children! Individuals that misbehave
should be worked with, rather then punishing all missionaries like they
are in Grade school again!]
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: "Perry L. Porter" <plporter@xmission.com>
Subject: ---> Desert search yields no clues
Date: 10 Jan 1999 22:01:19 -0700
Desert search yields no clues
Jeep report no good in hunt for Mesa girl
By Jim Walsh
The Arizona Republic
Jan. 7, 1999
Another frustrating day passed without any luck in the search for an
11-year-old Mesa girl who seems to have vanished without a trace.
About 100 Maricopa County Sheriff's Office deputies and posse members
spent nearly 24 hours searching a lush desert area northeast of Mesa
frequented by Salt River tubers.
But Sgt. Dave Trombi, a sheriff's spokesman, said searchers found no
evidence of Mikelle Biggs, who disappeared Saturday evening while waiting
for an ice cream truck.
The search, near Power and Thomas roads, was prompted by a tip to police
that a copper Jeep CJ had been seen parked on a dirt road nearby, police
Sgt. Earle Lloyd said.
At the time of Mikelle's apparent abduction, a copper-colored Jeep CJ was
seen in her neighborhood, near El Moro Drive and Toltec Street.
With so few leads, police decided to search the area, but all they found
was a stolen vehicle believed unconnected to the case.
Despite the lack of progress, family members managed to keep a positive
attitude, even though police admit the odds of finding Mikelle unharmed
are worsening.
Neighbors along El Moro showed their support for the Biggs family by tying
yellow ribbons to their mailboxes.
"I'm still very hopeful. I'm just more tired than I was on Saturday," said
Michael Darien Biggs, Mikelle's father.
"Everyone I talk to, the first thing they say is keep your chin up," he
said.
His father, Michael Biggs, said, "you think you're in a nightmare, and
then you realize you're awake and its not going to go away."
The Biggs family's travails were compounded further by disclosure that
Darien Biggs had an extramarital affair with a woman whose ex-husband had
made vague threats against him.
"They weren't even threats. They were more like head games," Biggs said.
Biggs said he told police about the affair Saturday night. He disclosed it
to his wife, Tracy, in November.
Lloyd said police do not believe the ex-husband of Biggs' former lover is
involved in Mikelle's disappearance.
Meanwhile, the Nation's Missing Children Organization announced plans for
a non-denominational prayer service at 7 p.m. Friday at Mesa High School's
auditorium.
Drivers also were asked to use their headlights while driving Friday as
symbolic "Search Lights for Missing Children."
[Photo of Mikelle Biggs]
Mikelle Biggs of Mesa vanished Saturday. She was last seen wearing a red
short-sleeve shirt and bell-bottom jeans.
-------------------------
[Maricopa County Sheriff's Posse] Suzanne Starr/The Arizona Republic
Members of the Maricopa County Sheriff's Posse return to base Wednesday to
rest their horses after searching Coon Bluff Recreation Area.
Related article
* Mormon stake responds to call for help (1/7)
* Hunt for missing girl at 'square one' (1/6)
* Kids need 'stranger danger' education (1/6)
* Leibowitz: Sounds mask silence of girl's disappearance (1/6)
* Hunt for Mesa girl continues (1/5)
* Mesa girl, 11, disappears (1/4)
More Information
* If you have any
information about
Mikelle Biggs
disappearance, please
call the Mesa Police
Department at (602)
644-2211.
Perry <plporter@pobox.com> http://pobox.com/~plporter
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