In the Aug. of 2023, the Scroll summer staff created the first magazine forthe student news publication since 2019. I wrote three of the articles, edited each one individually to follow AP style and took photographs. The magazine was designed by my coworker, Hannah Daley, and I assisted the design process.
In Oct. of 2023, the Scroll fall staff successfully distributed and marketed this new magazine. We had newspaper racks in 9 different buildings across campus and distributed them by hand at the inauguration of President Alvin F. Meredith III.
In Sept. of 2023, I personally interviewed President and Sister Meredith as an exclusive addition to our magazine. That interview can be seen here.
I wrote 3 articles for the Meet President Meredith publication, which are linked below:
This article was written for BYU-I’s news organization, Scroll.
On Sept. 6, Isabelle Justice met with President Alvin F. Meredith III and Jennifer Edgin Meredith to discuss the couple’s hopes as the new leaders of BYU-Idaho.
“We know that (BYU-I students) can become disciples (of Jesus Christ) and become experts and scholars in their fields,” said President Meredith. “I am really grateful for that vision of BYU-I — a vision that we are inheriting.
On May 16, President Meredith was announced as BYU-Idaho’s 18th president, succeeding Henry J. Eyring who served for six years. His inauguration is on Oct. 10 in the BYU-Idaho Center.
“It’s just very humbling,” said Sister Meredith. “We know that this stewardship is a very sacred responsibility.”
The Merediths in an interview with Scroll. Photo credit: BYU-Idaho
The Merediths began their stewardship at BYU-I in the summer and are connecting with the Rexburg community.
“BYU-Idaho is famously friendly,” said President Meredith. “That’s the phrase that we’ve heard and we have felt that. You know, we’re from Tennessee and so we know southern hospitality when we see it. We just didn’t expect to see it in Southern Idaho.”
President and Sister Meredith have six children — four boys and two girls — and each served a full-time mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. President Meredith is continuing to serve as a General Authority Seventy while president of BYU-I.
“(Our children) are excited to be here,” President Meredith explained. “When they learned of this assignment, they changed the name of our family group chat from ‘Meredith Family’ to ‘Tater Tots.’”
This article was written for BYU-I’s news organization, Scroll.
On May 16, Alvin F. Meredith III was announced as BYU-Idaho’s 18th president, succeeding Henry J. Eyring who served as president for six years. The announcement was made during Devotional by Elder D. Todd Christofferson of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles.
President Meredith has served in many different Church capacities; he’s been the chairman of the Executive Committee of BYU-Idaho’s Board of Trustees, a General Authority Seventy, president of the Utah Salt Lake City South Mission, a bishop, stake president and Area Seventy in the North America Southeast and Asia Areas.
With his church service aside, who is Alvin F. Meredith III, the new president of BYU-I?
From the Bible Belt
Known as “Trip” by friends and family, President Meredith was born in Chattanooga, Tennessee, on July 22, 1970. His mother, Mary Smartt Meredith, was a convert to the church, according to a Church Newsroom interview.
“We come from good stock, just not pioneer stock,” President Meredith said. “There were no handcarts in our family history, no crossing the Plains.”
President Meredith was an athlete in high school and served full-time in the Utah Salt Lake City mission after graduation.
Studied psychology and business
After his mission, President Meredith earned a bachelor’s degree in psychology at BYU in 1994. He later earned a master of business administration in finance from the University of Chicago in 2001. He met his wife, Jennifer Denise Edgin, during his time in Provo.
“We were set up on a blind date by some mutual friends,” President Meredith said in a BYU-I Devotional. “My wife is the very best person that I know … Over time, the accumulation of small and quiet reassurances made me realize that she was someone that made me think my highest thoughts, aspire to my noblest deeds and made me wish that I was better than I was. And I just really loved her too.”
They were sealed on Feb. 8, 1998, in the Salt Lake Temple. They have been married for 26 years and have six children.
Sister Meredith’s parents are converts to the Church. She served a full-time mission in the Argentina Salta Mission and earned a bachelor’s degree in communication from BYU.
President Meredith has served in many different Church capacities and began his service at BYU-I on Aug. 1.
Lived and served overseas
After graduate school, President Meredith’s job offered a position in Hong Kong, China.
“At the time, our oldest child was ten years old and my wife, Jennifer, was six months pregnant with our sixth child,” President Meredith explained. “It was daunting to know that this decision would affect not only me, (but) the people I love the most — my family.”
President Meredith prayed, studied and counseled with Church leaders to make a decision.
“It became clear that this would be a good move — not an easy move — but a good move for our family,” President Meredith said.
The Merediths lived in Hong Kong from 2010-2011, and upon returning to the U.S., President Meredith was sustained as an Area Seventy in the North American Southeast Area from 2012-2016.
The Merediths returned to Asia once more for work in 2016, and President Meredith was sustained as an Area Seventy in the Asia Area where he served until 2018.
In the last decade, President Meredith completed Church assignments in Utah, Tennessee, Arkansas, Alabama and North Carolina. In Asia, he served in Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Hong Kong, Pakistan, China, Thailand and India.
Mission president and General Authority Seventy
President Meredith was later called as the mission president for a place that he knew well — Salt Lake City, Utah.
“We’ve learned that wherever you go, it’s the Lord’s work and it’s the Lord’s Church regardless of the language or culture they come from,” President Meredith said in a Church Newsroom interview.
After his service as a mission president, President Meredith was sustained as a General Authority Seventy in 2021. He will continue to serve as a General Authority during his time at BYU-I.
When is the inauguration?
Meredith began his duties as president on Aug. 1. His first act as president was leading the first devotional of the summer.
“It’s my first day of school,” President Meredith said to a chuckling crowd, according to a BYU-I Scroll article.
President Meredith’s inauguration is on Oct. 10 at 11:30 a.m. in the BYU-Idaho Center. The event will be available online, BYU-I Radio and YouTube.
“The university invites students, employees and the public to gather to celebrate this milestone in BYU-Idaho history,” said Brett Crandall in a BYU-I news release.