Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Melodie and Jenny sing for us!

Monday, April 12th, 2010

Here are three songs that Melodie recorded with her friend Jenny for Jenny’s facebook page. I thought they were really neat, and that the family would enjoy them. Jenny accompanies on her guitar and the duets are very nicely done indeed!

Singing Duets

Melodie and Jenny Sing Duets


Jospeh Smith’s First Prayer

When I am Baptized

Brightly Beams Our Father’s Mercy

Melodie’s Birthday

Monday, April 5th, 2010

Birthday girl

We had much of the family here for Melodie’s birthday celebration. It is hard to believe she is already 26 years old.

Family here to celebrate with Melodie

We love her and are so grateful for her cheerful disposition and for the love she has for children. She will always be one of the favorites of her nieces and nephews because they know how much she loves them! We had a fun evening with everyone and are happy that we were all able to get together for this event. Rosaylnn and Derek were home taking care of Chase but Ethan and Julia were here and had fun with their cousins. We missed Dev and Emily and Robyn and Eric and their families but hope they get an idea of the festive mood when they see this blog page.

A new family member arrived today!

Friday, April 2nd, 2010

Proud big sister and brother hold little brother!

Rosie and Derek welcomed a beautiful baby boy just after midnight at the Orem Community Hospital. Derek told us that he was impressed just how very strong he felt when he was moving around while Derek was holding him. He weighs 8 pounds 6 ounces and is 21 inches tall.

Grandma and new grandson

The family is trying to decide on a name for him among several they like. They will select one soon.

Happy family with new baby in front

These photos were taken that same morning at about 9:30am at the hospital, close to where the kids go to school. They were allowed to go a little late so they could welcome their little brother to their family. They were very excited to tell their friends and teachers about their new little brother when they arrived as school, and could hardly wait for the day to pass while they were thinking about returning to see their parents and the new baby after school. We hope they have a good day. CONGRATULATIONS!

Grandma Hill in 2008 on her 85th Birthday

Monday, March 29th, 2010

Grandma Hill Interview


I didn’t get this uploaded for Grandma’s 87th birthday in February (this was taken two years ago). We didn’t have a big party for her this year because she wasn’t feeling too well at that time, so her daughters living in the area went to her home and prepared a lunch and ate with her for a little celebration. The segment here was recorded on the occasion of her 85th birthday but I had no blog that would support this kind of file at that time. The system now will support this so I wanted to upload it for you. In February I didn’t know where this file was. Now I have found it I wanted to put it up immediately so you could see it. Happy Birthday again Grandma, we love you!

Radicals Have Reversed the Roles

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

Glenn Beck

Glenn Beck is one of those persons who seem to have been able to put the confusing rhetoric we have been hearing about the political situation in the United States into common-sense dialog that shows us [conservatives] what the current establishment is trying to do. Please copy to this link and go to read his commentary for today: http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,589943,00.html
The issues of the day are so important! I hope you will share your feelings with your legislators, and encourage persons to run for office that share your philosophy regarding the size and scope of our government. Be involved and a part of the process in some way!

Happy Birthday Sanja!

Sunday, March 21st, 2010

Birthday girl and her cake.

We celebrated Sanja’s birthday today with the family at our home. It is hard to believe that Sanja is already 11 years old now. She is growing up into a young lady! Her talents include playing the violin (she studies with Aunt Jean) and a love for basketball. She was on a Rec Center team this past fall and had a good time. Favorite foods include pasta and pizza, and she loves to cook and help her mother in the kitchen. Her family has been very supportive, attending most of her games at the high school.

Kristen reading to David and Becca.

Kristen took a little time to read to Becca and David while we were preparing dinner, and I found a nice opportunity for a candid photo of them. They were quite attentive. David has a good time every time he comes to our house.

David and his favorite indoor toy.

His favorite thing to do is go swinging out in the back yard, but we don’t do that on Sunday. So today he enjoyed playing with cars inside and hearing stories from the scriptures and motivational children’s magazines and books. He speaks in sentences and has an excellent vocabulary. What an entertaining, busy boy he is and we are so happy to have him and his sisters in our family! They will have a new family member in the late spring so they are excited about that too. We enjoy seeing them often now they love close to us!

On ObamaCare, just say no!

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

by Star Parker – Syndicated Columnist – OneNewsNow 3/15/2010 8:55:00 AM

When Barack Obama was sworn in as president, he chose the Bible that Abraham Lincoln used on which to take the oath of office.

A little over a year later, as President Obama strong arms House and Senate Democrats to pass a healthcare bill that will nationalize 17 percent of our economic lives — a bill that most Americans don’t want — we ought to recall Lincoln’s famous words at Gettysburg.

Dedicating the final resting place for those who fought there, Lincoln appealed that we not let up in the struggle for “government of the people, by the people, and for the people.”

Democrats may soon show, if we let them, that the American ideal of representative government — government of a nation, in Lincoln’s words, “conceived in Liberty” — is lost.

Bending rules into a procedural pretzel, Democrats will attempt to pass one of the largest government takeovers of private American lives in history without a single Republican vote and, against the will of the people, Obama will sign it into law.

Democrat pollsters Pat Caddell and Doug Schoen write in the Washington Post, “…a solid majority of Americans oppose the massive health-care reform plan.”

Pollster.com, which reports an average of all polls, shows that now for the first time disapproval for President Obama exceeds approval — 48.8 percent to 47.5 percent.

According to Gallup, just 21 percent of Americans are satisfied with the direction of the country, down 10 points from spring of last year when the healthcare reform push began.

And, per the latest from the Pew Research Center, only 13 percent of Americans view healthcare as “our most important problem.”

But this isn’t about logic. Mr. Obama and his colleagues on Capitol Hill perceive a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to grasp the holy grail of the left and realize the dream of transforming America into a European style welfare state. Democracy — what the American people actually want — is just not going to stand in the way.

It isn’t just about Republican opposition. Nancy Pelosi must persuade, bribe, and threaten to get 216 House Democrats to support this despite having 253 sitting House Democrats.

Speaking the other day in Missouri, Obama mocked Republicans who want to stop this train and begin the process over.

But Warren Buffett, the legendary investor and one of the nation’s wealthiest men — himself a Democrat — said the same thing in an interview on CNBC.

Buffett said we should “start over.” And he said, correctly, that the main healthcare problem is runaway costs and that the bill that the president is pushing “unfortunately…doesn’t attack the cost situation that much.”

Yet, in his remarks in Missouri, the president said, “…let me tell you, we’ve incorporated almost every serious idea from across the political spectrum about how to contain rising healthcare costs. There’s not an idea out there that we have not worked on, that we have not included in this proposal.”

At the recent White House healthcare summit, Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wisc., challenged with clarity the massive accounting gimmicks and hallucinatory economic assumptions that Democrats have used to present this massive budget busting disaster of a bill as a prudent deficit-cutting measure.

Ryan, speaking for Republicans, showed that the 10-year costs are in reality $2.3 trillion, rather than under a trillion as claimed. It’s all been ignored.

In the one laboratory experiment we have — Massachusetts, which enacted a state plan similar to what Democrats want for the nation — premiums are now the highest in nation, and per capital health expenditures are 27 percent higher than the national average.

Every freedom-loving American patriot that cares about our future should be on the phone today to their senators and congressmen saying “stop.”

[Please read also this article by Thomas Sowell… ‘Fraud has been at the heart of this medical care takeover plan from day one. The succession of wholly arbitrary deadlines for rushing this massive legislation through, before anyone has time to read it all, serves no other purpose than to keep its specifics from being scrutinized– or even recognized– before it becomes a fait accompli and ‘the law of the land.'”]

Orchestra At Temple Square Concerts Mar. 19, 20

Monday, March 15th, 2010

The Orchestra at Temple Square, under the direction of Igor Gruppman, will present An Evening of Russian Music on Friday, March 19, and Saturday, March 20, 2010, at 7:30 p.m. in the Tabernacle. Works include Mikhail Glinka’s Overture to Russian and Ludmilla, followed by excerpts from Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake, which will feature concertmaster Meredith Campbell on the violin, as well as Tamara Oswald on harp and Elizabeth Willey on cello. The second half of the program will be Symphony no. 6 in B minor (Pathetique) by Tchaikovsky. Tickets are required for the concert (I have a few; please call me if you would like to go) but standby persons will be admitted to the hall about 15 minutes before the concert begins.

Healthcare Legislation Update

Saturday, March 13th, 2010

President Obama has said that it is time for discussion to end. He said this in September, in October, in November, in December, in January, in February, and in March. Why did the discussion not end? Because the votes were not there to pass the legislation he wants to pass! The votes are not there today eigher, even with all the Republicans abstaining from the vote, there are STILL not enough votes to pass it. The bill now reportedly contains about 2900 pages of content. It is not only about healthcare, but also has many provisions for Education and other issues. WHY? Let’s work on the other issues as separate issues, not a part of this gigantic unknown entity that our government is trying to ram down our throats, saying pass it first and read it later! Let your representatives know you expect them to vote NO to this, and that if they vote “Yes”, you will vote them out as soon as possible! Thank you for reading.

Demonization of healthcare industry is unfair

Friday, March 12th, 2010

by James L. Lambert – Guest Columnist – 3/10/2010 from OneNewsNow.

Unlike Nancy Pelosi, I am thankful for the healthcare industry. In fact, I’ve benefited greatly because of the status quo of that industry.

Several years ago, needing to lower my monthly healthcare costs, I shopped around to secure a new healthcare provider for my family, as the monthly premiums were increasing.

Thank God for good old competition between the different providers. Besides saving money each month, I found a new healthcare plan for myself. And when I did have to use that coverage to pay for an expensive operation, I figured my healthcare provider saved me in excess of $80,000. It was an enormous blessing.

Enter Democrats Nancy Pelosi and President Barack Obama. In their rush to impose their version of socialized medicine on all of America, they and their ilk have been viciously demonizing the healthcare insurance industry with exaggerations and innuendo. Robert Gibbs, the president’s press secretary, has even confirmed that the White House is recklessly determined on passing the healthcare legislation sometime during the next two weeks. According to insiders, the push to get the bill passed before the upcoming recess (March 29-April 11) is intentional. Why? If it doesn’t pass before then, it is expected that members of Congress will “get an earful” from their constituents during the congressional break — which would doom the bill’s passage.

Meanwhile Democratic leaders Pelosi and Obama are blaming the insurance industry for “carpet-bombing” their attempts to pass socialized medicine. The dirty little secret here is that this bill, if passed, will cost American taxpayers hundreds of billions of dollars. It will also deny billions of dollars of Medicare funds to seniors in addition to transferring over $31-billion in expenses to the states, some of which are almost bankrupt. Even Obama admitted that we “can’t cover another 46 million for free…we’re going to have to find the money somewhere.”

Now the president is attacking the healthcare industry insurers by saying that insurers are not to be trusted. “They’re filing the airways with deceptive and dishonest ads,” he reports. And the country is being “held hostage” by the insurance companies, according to the president.

My, that’s interesting. It seems like the federal government has all the power these days. They can legislate companies out of business, print money out of thin air (creating inflation), waste billions of dollars on frivolous government programs, and put trillions of dollars of debt on the back of future generations.

Speaker Pelosi’s attacks on insurers are even more vicious. She emphatically states that the health insurers “are the villains in this. They have been a part of the problem in a big way”….”It’s almost immoral what they are doing”….”Of course they have been immoral all along.”

Dr. Mark Perry, professor of economics in the School of Management at the University of Michigan, has a different take on healthcare insurers. He has studied profitability margins of the 100 most profitable industries in America. He ranks healthcare plan insurers as the 86th most profitable industry in the country. This equates to a profit margin of 3.3 percent (see chart). Measured by profitability, 85 industries outrank healthcare. But you won’t hear that from the President of the United States or the Speaker of the House of Representatives.

Here are the facts: health insurers take tremendous risks in providing insurance to their customers. Like any prudent business, they try to keep their costs down with healthcare providers/hospitals and doctors. They also realistically deny coverage to very high-risk patients — in the same way that banks turn down a car loan to someone who has a terrible credit history.

Secondly, I don’t believe that healthcare insurance is “a right.” Contrary to what Speaker Pelosi preaches, not everything in this country is a right – not by a long shot. Many things in life come through hard work and determination. The concept of personal responsibility is essential to our society. Even so, the federal government provides emergency ward care to anyone, especially if it’s absolutely needed.

Finally, the government needs to understand that taxpayers can no longer be called on to pay for the healthcare of the 12 million people who are in the U.S. illegally, the 7 million people who don’t want healthcare insurance, or the millions of part-time workers who are not covered by insurance from their employers. No one is forcing them to work for these particular companies.

Here’s my take: If you want health insurance, you most likely can get it. You might not always like the coverage you get, but you get what you pay for. You can even obtain catastrophic insurance (which is even cheaper). It’s like anything you buy in the free marketplace, where people spend money on wide-screen televisions, fancy cars, expensive cell phones, and computers. If they wish to make their health a priority, most people can afford to buy some type of health protection. Believe me, it will be a lot cheaper than what our tax rates will be if this socialized medicine bill is passed.

So, Ms. Pelosi and Mr. Obama, back off! The free enterprise system does a much better job of providing healthcare than the federal government could ever dream of.

And here’s my advice: If you don’t want the government to take over the healthcare industry, which represents 1/6th of our economy, I urge you to call your representatives on Capitol Hill and voice your opinion — today!