Sunday, October 24, 2010

Missionary Journal
of Leola Anderson 1967-68


Friends and Companions--

The lost is found! In all our movings-around, I'd lost track of the journal that my Mammy (Leola Seely Anderson) kept during the last year of her life, while Pappy (H Duane Anderson) was mission president in Paris. It surfaced last Wednesday, and I spent an emotional day on Thursday, scanning its 115 pages and reducing them to a PDF file named "LSA Journal 1967-68.pdf"

Below, the first page of actual journal entry. The whole thing runs to 21 MB; you're welcome to download it from

http://commensa.net

Just click on "Parked Files," then on "Family Publications," and then tell it you want to download "LSA Journal 1967-68.pdf".


Back while it was missing, our daughter Cyndi expressed interest in transcribing it into machine-readable text. She's still so inclined, but she's willing to share the opportunity with others who may feel similar motivations. If that's you, please make contact with her at cyndiralston@gmail.com.

Monday, October 4, 2010

Unto us…

This has been a favorite memory for forty-five years now. Last Tuesday, in fact, was its (and therefore Rick's natal) anniversary. Celebrated that very sweetly with Rick and family at his house. And then it just happened to come up at the chronological edge of my personal history.




I believe the class was a mite bigger than this, but I couldn’t now name those who were missing for the photo-shoot. Yes, they were a perfectly darling group of Menlo Park ninth- and tenth-graders who got up very early every school morning and gathered at their ward meeting-house, where we studied the Scriptures and talked of special things.

One anecdote will prepare the next major topic (Rick) and also give you an idea of their sweetness:

They knew, of course, that we were expecting our first child, and they were excited about it, too. On the 28th of September, 1965, even as we convened, things were starting to pop, chez Valerie; I left the group a time or two to call home for an update. No cell phones, in those days: just the pay phone in the hall. That afternoon, Rick made his entrance.

The next morning, I got there ahead of all the students. As each came in, it was “Well? did it happen? what did you get?” with their eyes just shining. I told each to take his seat, that I’d have an announcement, once everybody was on hand.

Now, our routine was such that I normally had Tabernacle Choir music playing, as the students arrived. Today, the 12-inch vinyl disc was spinning on the turntable, but the needle sat, quietly and inertly, in its little holder.

When the last student had taken his seat, I smiled at the class, lifted the needle, and placed it in the groove: “For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given…”

That’s the only standing ovation anybody has ever accorded to yours truly. I can’t remember it with dry eyes.