The By-pass
March 29, 2018[…] up. On our way back to town, Melba asked, “So what’s Reuben up to these days? The world still against him?” When I told her what he’d said about the churchhouse, she told me, […]
[…] up. On our way back to town, Melba asked, “So what’s Reuben up to these days? The world still against him?” When I told her what he’d said about the churchhouse, she told me, […]
[…] been reiterated in such works as Joseph Fielding Smith, The Way to Perfection, Salt Lake City: Deseret News Press, 1958, p. 106 and in John L. Lund, The Church and the Negro, 1967, pp. […]
[…] Elder Luker applies the finishing touch, a light dusting of fragrant talc, Elizabeth says, “They say the world is gonna end on Wednesday according to some ‘Nostra-day-mus’ fella. You think that’s true?” “No,” I […]
[…] framed by an ethical attitude as far as freedom and constraint are concerned. Even in the broad world of mainstream academic theology, one sometimes hears col leagues speak negatively of the way “the academy” […]
[…] within a vision). He was told that this ancient, buried record contained an important message for the world. This is the historical core of the story ascertained by using the criterion of multiple attestation. […]
[…] foot drop squarely on what she considered his other great failing. Grandpa drank. While to the larger world, moderate consumption of alcohol was hardly a crime, to my grandmother the mere uncorking of a […]
[…] but neither the time nor inclination to take it. For example, it was a common practice in World War I to avoid eating before going “over the top” in the belief that a soldier […]
<i>Dialogue 34.4 (Winter 2002): 61–71</i><br>THE WORLD IS RAPIDLY CHANGING as new technologies change the way we think, act, and live. This is particularly true with the many changes biology has wrought in our lives […]
[…] .Strong and able women today fill responsible posts in industry, government, education, and the professions. The whole world looks with respect to the Prime Minister of Britain, a woman of demonstrated ability and great […]
[…] want. The first time Wayne saw the sea—saw its gray meet the clouded horizon—he realized that the world was vast and he was nothing in it. He felt soothed to sense his own smallness […]