PROVO He may need a cane, a hearing aid and a pacemaker, but at 97, the sense of humor of the oldest man to serve as president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints shows no signs of aging.
President Gordon B. Hinckley cracked prepared jokes and scored laughs with witty ad-libs during a short, tender, televised birthday party Saturday at Brigham Young University as he and his son opened an enormous birthday present bought by 70,000 of his closest friends.
President Hinckley spoke "Now," he joked when he mentioned the hearing aid and pacemaker, "as I creep into old age..." and Elder Richard G. Hinckley of the Quorum of the Seventy said the prayer dedicating the new Gordon B. Hinckley Alumni and Visitors Center to "the (BYU) alumni who have gone over the world and brought honor to this church."
"To the thousands of BY grads around the world," President Hinckley later added, "this will be their port of call when they return to their alma mater, their dear mother, to visit the campus that nurtured them."
The three-story, $35 million building was paid for entirely by more than 70,000 donors.
"I extend my sincere thanks," President Hinckley said. "I'm deeply grateful for your generosity."
BYU President Cecil Samuelson thanked President Hinckley for what, next April, would be 50 years of service as a General Authority of the church.
"As you have changed the skyline of the church around the world," Samuelson said, "so has this building changed the skyline of this campus."
The Hinckley Center was designed as a new "front gate" to the campus, just up the winding hill from the landmark BYU sign that reads, "Enter to Learn, Go Forth to Serve."
President Hinckley donated one of his hammers branded with the initials G.H. like all of his many, well-used tools, he said for a time capsule placed in a cornerstone of the building. When he held the little hammer aloft, it drew a tender "aaaaw" from many of the women in the crowd of about 500 in the building's main hall.
Another 400 gathered in other rooms and on the patio of the new building. More than 1,000 more watched in the Joseph Smith Building and the Varsity Theater. The ceremony was broadcast on television and radio around the world.
President Hinckley asked Samuelson if he would be here in 50 years when the time capsule will be opened.
"That's up to you," Samuelson said, joking with his boss.
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