Letters to the Editor
February 18, 2017[…] 5, 1968, with the following remarks: “At this time we express deep sorrow and shock at the news of the passing of a man, Martin Luther King, who dedicated his life to what he […]
[…] 5, 1968, with the following remarks: “At this time we express deep sorrow and shock at the news of the passing of a man, Martin Luther King, who dedicated his life to what he […]
[…] to follow the instructions on a can of floor wax, she said, “I left my glasses home today. Will you read it?” At lunchtime she makes excuses not to sit at the table with […]
[…] a Church. Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, Joseph Fielding Smith, ed (Salt Lake City, Utah: Deseret News Press, 1942), p. 366. Elder Harold B. Lee, Conference Report, April 1966, p. 64. Journal of […]
[…] draw together the events of the early years, Oliver wrote a series of letters to the Church newspaper published in Kirt land, the Messenger and Advocate. The letters began in October 1834 and continued […]
[…] education, yet at Provo, home of Brigham Young University and intellectual center of Mormondom, there is no newsstand in town except for the miscellaneous racks at the supermarkets designed to entertain small-fry while mama […]
[…] of “plebes” was also the first Negro appointed to West Point; so the New York (and other) newspapers featured these facts in sensational articles for several weeks. An interviewing columnist for the New York […]
[…] media attention in Utah and throughout the nation. Cleaver himself, when asked about his decision, told a newspaper reporter, “I am very enthusiastic about what I am learning . . . my spiritual journey in the past […]
[…] They were often horrendous affairs which scared me for years. I don’t recall those characters so stylish today—Laurel and Hardy, W. C. Fields, Charlie Chaplin – but if Louis Hayward, Robert Donat, and Tyrone […]
[…] allusions to South Carolina’s rebellion against the tariff and Nat Turner’s slave rebellion, both then in the news, but as it looks farther ahead the language becomes so broad that it cannot yet be […]
[…] system that was far more dynamic than many of his spiritual descendants recognize. Mormonism is so successful today, not because it remains the religion nineteenth century farmers knew, but because it has easily undergone […]