A University’s Dilemma: B.Y.U. and Blacks
April 30, 2018[…] report to Ernest L. Wilkinson, president of B.Y.U., I wrote, among other things, the following: I am writing this letter in the plane back to New York and I am getting, over and over, […]
[…] report to Ernest L. Wilkinson, president of B.Y.U., I wrote, among other things, the following: I am writing this letter in the plane back to New York and I am getting, over and over, […]
[…] and Grant Stake and in 1935 was appointed to the general board. In nearly forty years of service she has been involved in every aspect of the work, from doing research for A Centenary […]
[…] . I like being a woman in the Church. I feel we have untold opportunities to give service and develop abilities and talents. I need to be involved in many things to be really […]
[…] agree that they are necessary nor that their absence constitutes a refutation of the volume. Before we get too disturbed over the lack of Near Eastern archaeological parallels with the New World, we had […]
[…] consistent philosophy of history has not yet been accomplished. I am not now attempting to perform that service for the Church, but rather to explore a few problems that must be resolved by whoever […]
[…] of society. Social obligations and functions are thus carried out more smoothly, especially as the ideal of service replaces force in the effort to gain justice and effective social progress. The gospel in action […]
[…] history to know where these influential leaders stood on the important issues of their time. Reed Smoot’s service as United States Senator from Utah spanned three decades of rapid change. When he entered the […]
[…] after John W. Taylor’s death my brother Raymond made inquiries as to what could be done to get him officially reinstated to Church membership. The reply offered the type of encouragement given by a […]
[…] Marino, California: Huntington Library, 1971. $7.50. Law, Reuben D. The Founding and Early Development of the Church College of Hawaii. St. George, Utah: Dixie College Press, 1972. Author’s address: 456 South 400 East, St. […]
[…] position of mission president in 1888. After devoting nearly six years of his early manhood to missionary service, he returned to Utah to settle down. On July 10, 1890, Spry and his bride, Mary […]