Well it was a great game if you are a Utah fan. BYU has always managed to beat Utah in the last few minutes of the game but not on Saturday.
Our family is split. Mom and Dad are Utah graduates but 15 of the 16 kids who attended college all graduated from the "Y". In fact I believe we have 18 or 19 degrees from the "Y" among that group so the feelings are intense. I guess we should cheer them on as well but I just can't.
We were invited guest in the box next to the President's box on the 50 yard line. Seats were going for outrageous sums and scalpers were all over. There were some interesting people there again. Elder Wirthlin was there... the GA's all wore blue blazers and a red tie .. a down the middle approach. Pres. Uchtdorf and his wife were there.. there were two senators from Utah in the President's box. Elder Ballard and his wife were in our box and the Governor showed up as well. Jon H. and his wife were there right after he received a medal of honor from the American Cancer Society for his support of cancer research and treatment. It was an interesting group. Cheryl and Paul have seats in the stadium but they always come up to the box which was fun.
The game was pretty even in the first half with Utah demonstrating the most momentum. In the second half, something happened to the "Y" quarterback who began to throw interceptions.
There were five interceptions and one BYU fumble that added 28 points as the U capitalized on those turnovers. One pass was intercepted by a U player from Orem who looked like he would run it into the endzone but from up high, it looked like he tripped on the 10 yard chalk line. Paul Jr and his friend joined the storm on the field. Paul asked this player how it felt to almost score a touchdown on an interception and he said it was good except he tripped over his feet.
I began to feel a little bad for the Quarterback but not enough to stop jumping for joy as the Utes finally trounced BYU.
Becca had a Y party going on at her house with Emily, Doug, some of Al's kids, some of Cheryl's girls and it was quiet there at the end. I rubbed it in a little with Doug but finally stopped as the pain was palpable over the phone.
Utah received a whole pile of money for the win. There were also these big guys dressed in orange blazers who were up there... scouts from the Orange Bowl.
Well I found that whole thing pretty exciting and what a Saturday.
Alles Gute, Opa
Monday, November 24, 2008
Monday, November 17, 2008
ANOTHER BUSY SUNDAY
Our Sundays are very full. Yesterday was no exception.
I had to visit the 47th Student ward which is in the Taylorsville Institute building at the same time as Paul's ward. I had to carry out some Stake business and after a moment into the second talk in Sacrament meeting, the counselor turned to me and said, "Would you mind speaking a few minutes at the end?" So unprepared, I talked about missionary work which was the theme. I told them about Ke Yang and her conversion and how we visited her in Beijing and how we are so connected through the Gospel.
Then I went to two meetings in Paul's ward and they had the best "mingle" afterwards. The ward clerk had smoked about ten turkeys and they had turkey sandwiches and Tang for the treat. 100% attendance and they actually mingled.
Then I drove home and Mom and I drove to Provo. My brother Ralph is here from Virginia and is suffering from the effects of strokes and is in a beautiful hospital where they try to help chronic patients. It was so sad to see him like this. Laura and their son Alvin with his kids were there.
Then we drove up to Cheryl's. We were invited to dinner and Cheryl did a great job with salmon, chicken and a Pomegranate salad. Little Annabelle was in charge of family night and did a great job on the subject, "Gratitude". Three members of Paul's s student ward were there as well.
Then there was a special fireside for all the University of Utah Stakes.. two married and three single stakes at the University of Utah. Elder Ballard and Huntsman were the speakers and it was held in the Huntsman Center which is the huge basketball arena. This was Jon and his family's contribution to the school. It holds thousands.
We went through the front door and down about 100 steps to where there were reserved seats for family and Paul got us a couple of seats in the third row. Jon gave a great talk. He has accomplished so much. He mentioned his first year at college and the students broke down to the A, B and C students. The A students got to be doctors, the B students engineers and leaders. The C students got buildings named after them. Funny.
Elder Ballard gave a great fireside address. There must have been 10,000 there filling the seats in front of the podium. He admonished the students to give equal time to spiritual matters.
We left through the tunnel.. we got a chance to greet the speakers.. then home.
I slept ten hours that night.
Love, Opa
I had to visit the 47th Student ward which is in the Taylorsville Institute building at the same time as Paul's ward. I had to carry out some Stake business and after a moment into the second talk in Sacrament meeting, the counselor turned to me and said, "Would you mind speaking a few minutes at the end?" So unprepared, I talked about missionary work which was the theme. I told them about Ke Yang and her conversion and how we visited her in Beijing and how we are so connected through the Gospel.
Then I went to two meetings in Paul's ward and they had the best "mingle" afterwards. The ward clerk had smoked about ten turkeys and they had turkey sandwiches and Tang for the treat. 100% attendance and they actually mingled.
Then I drove home and Mom and I drove to Provo. My brother Ralph is here from Virginia and is suffering from the effects of strokes and is in a beautiful hospital where they try to help chronic patients. It was so sad to see him like this. Laura and their son Alvin with his kids were there.
Then we drove up to Cheryl's. We were invited to dinner and Cheryl did a great job with salmon, chicken and a Pomegranate salad. Little Annabelle was in charge of family night and did a great job on the subject, "Gratitude". Three members of Paul's s student ward were there as well.
Then there was a special fireside for all the University of Utah Stakes.. two married and three single stakes at the University of Utah. Elder Ballard and Huntsman were the speakers and it was held in the Huntsman Center which is the huge basketball arena. This was Jon and his family's contribution to the school. It holds thousands.
We went through the front door and down about 100 steps to where there were reserved seats for family and Paul got us a couple of seats in the third row. Jon gave a great talk. He has accomplished so much. He mentioned his first year at college and the students broke down to the A, B and C students. The A students got to be doctors, the B students engineers and leaders. The C students got buildings named after them. Funny.
Elder Ballard gave a great fireside address. There must have been 10,000 there filling the seats in front of the podium. He admonished the students to give equal time to spiritual matters.
We left through the tunnel.. we got a chance to greet the speakers.. then home.
I slept ten hours that night.
Love, Opa
FARM DAY WESTERN STYLE
We do not have a real farm out here in the west as we did in Michigan, but we do have a place in St. Charles Idaho that is farmed. We have, as you know, eleven acres on Rt. 89 on the edge of Bear Lake.
The acreage is farmed and the hay is cut and bailed and cows graze the fields after the hay harvest so it seems like a farm.
We used to have farm days in Michigan and it seems that the patterns are are deep still ongoing but shifted in space and time, down a generation.
Here is a picture of Opa giving the kids a ride around the place as we pick up fallen branches and timber.
Doug and Mike came to help close the place for the winter. They each brought five of their kids so we had 10 kids including teenagers in addition to four adults. It was a blast.
We drove up Friday night, started a fire in the potbelly stove and of course settled in for a little DVD watching. Mr Bean is always a favorite but they watched something else. I can't say when they went to bed as the Moms might object but even going to bed, there was conversation past midnight. Here are the kids watching a DVD/
In the morning, Opa cooked a huge breakfast for everyone and 3 1/2 dozen scrambled eggs, many pancakes, toast, juice and bacon laid the foundation of another work day at the farm.
Doug and Mike were full of energy and started on the projects. Take the rack and tire off the roof of the Rock climber (the Induna) and fit it into the garage. Start up all the motors and bring the equipment to the yard.
We then picked up many trailer loads of branches and sticks everywhere. Cottonwood trees shed branches. Then we had a huge fire.
Here are the guys at the dump.. almost a ritual for farm days.
Then it was to winterize the place, clean it up and load the gear. Mom did a huge job of cleaning and as it got close to leaving, getting the kids out of the house for the final clean. They found places high in the Cottonwood trees to climb.
The equipment is loaded and off to Salt Lake. Doug and Mike did a great job and the kids all helped on a memorable farm day in Idaho.
While we were at the farm, Bryan was hunting in Michigan and was in my Taj Mahal blind on my favorite spot and bagged this monster Michigan buck.
Ah well ......it was fun at the farm.
Love, OPA
The acreage is farmed and the hay is cut and bailed and cows graze the fields after the hay harvest so it seems like a farm.
We used to have farm days in Michigan and it seems that the patterns are are deep still ongoing but shifted in space and time, down a generation.
Here is a picture of Opa giving the kids a ride around the place as we pick up fallen branches and timber.
Doug and Mike came to help close the place for the winter. They each brought five of their kids so we had 10 kids including teenagers in addition to four adults. It was a blast.
We drove up Friday night, started a fire in the potbelly stove and of course settled in for a little DVD watching. Mr Bean is always a favorite but they watched something else. I can't say when they went to bed as the Moms might object but even going to bed, there was conversation past midnight. Here are the kids watching a DVD/
In the morning, Opa cooked a huge breakfast for everyone and 3 1/2 dozen scrambled eggs, many pancakes, toast, juice and bacon laid the foundation of another work day at the farm.
Doug and Mike were full of energy and started on the projects. Take the rack and tire off the roof of the Rock climber (the Induna) and fit it into the garage. Start up all the motors and bring the equipment to the yard.
We then picked up many trailer loads of branches and sticks everywhere. Cottonwood trees shed branches. Then we had a huge fire.
Here is Nate tending the fire. Doug found a huge pile of buried fencing and we pulled that out of the brush. Everyone went around and picked up loose scrap metal and we filled the trailer for a dump run.
No farm day was ever complete, even in Michigan, without the dump run. The dump is in Montpelier and has a nice view. It is so great to get rid of junk fouling up the place.Here are the guys at the dump.. almost a ritual for farm days.
Then it was to winterize the place, clean it up and load the gear. Mom did a huge job of cleaning and as it got close to leaving, getting the kids out of the house for the final clean. They found places high in the Cottonwood trees to climb.
The equipment is loaded and off to Salt Lake. Doug and Mike did a great job and the kids all helped on a memorable farm day in Idaho.
While we were at the farm, Bryan was hunting in Michigan and was in my Taj Mahal blind on my favorite spot and bagged this monster Michigan buck.
Ah well ......it was fun at the farm.
Love, OPA
Friday, November 7, 2008
UTAH WINS FOOTBALL GAME
We are guests in a box at University of Utah football games and it is always a blast. You go there early and they serve food which is pretty good. You meet all sorts of friends and church leaders who come to the President's Box next door. We ran into Elder Nelson, Scott, Ballard and Zwick last evening. We chatted about old times in Germany with Elder Zwick. Relatives are there and it is just a great event.
And oh yes, there is a game too! This time they played TCU. This game was advertised as a Blackout. I think Underarmour company supplied new uniforms to the team and they were black with red stripes. Everyone wore black of course except for me who had not heard about the "blackout". It was cold so I came with my Austrian jacket, hat and Loden cape (Wetterflecke) that German hunters wear. Well at least I was different but did not blend in.
When you looked at the crowd from the box, it was like watching a huge nest of black ants. Even the cheerleaders wore black. Usually the crowd is red which has been the traditional color of Utah's teams since the days my Dad played football for the U (82 years ago). By the way, my Dad, your grandfather, was the first member of the family to play college football and was on the UofU team that won their first conference championship. There used to be a football in the Union building on display with my Dad's name on it. Dad always wore his red letter sweater when working on the farm in the cold. Dad was a tight end and a very fast sprinter.
Well the game was closely fought with the score TCU 10 and Utah 6 right up to the last two minutes of the game.
We did what we always do and decided to leave two minutes early to beat the huge traffic jam (Stau) As we left, there was a roar as TCU missed a field goal. We turned on the car radio to hear Utah win the game in the last two minutes. Paul F. thinks it is sacrilegious to leave a football game early and we learned our lesson.
Now on for BYU.
Alles Liebe, Opa
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