Reconciliation
April 14, 2018[…] A member of the human race! To think that such a commonplace realization should suddenly seem like news that one holds the winning ticket in a cosmic sweep stake. . . . There is […]
[…] A member of the human race! To think that such a commonplace realization should suddenly seem like news that one holds the winning ticket in a cosmic sweep stake. . . . There is […]
[…] time, pah-haps,” she said. She wiggled away, like a movie queen, turned and laughed, her whole face breaking pixie-like into squeezed-up lines of wrinkle. Her tribute to wantonness—even in sport—brought flickers of embarrassment into […]
[…] shaman of Alaska can speak Tlingit when inspired. East Africans who neither understand nor speak Swahili or English speak these languages when possessed by spirits (May 1956). Virginia Hine, another researcher of speaking in […]
[…] Government are . . . ” is unnecessary, as “corporate” nouns always take the plural in British English, even today. On the plus side, the book is very well manufactured, and its cover is […]
[…] the policy of censorship imposed by the Pentagon and the media itself was viewed as treachery. One news reporter was accused of being a “sympathizer” for the enemy when he covered stories that other […]
[…] are only various stake and mission presidents and regional representatives, each with limited jurisdiction. When a major news story with religious implications breaks, as, for example, the Rushdie affair, the death of a pope, […]
[…] custody, and national publicity was extensive. Page one articles appeared in the Atlanta Constitution, the Dallas Morning News, the New York Times, the Washington Post, and others. Reports in the Arizona Republic and Deseret […]
[…] education and assimilation skills. My own experience has been somewhat different. Since 1982 when, as a Deseret News reporter, I began to research and write about Indian issues in Utah, my world view has been […]
[…] the L.A. County spelling bee, she was interviewed by four reporters and appeared on the local TV news. But the headline the next day read, INDIAN STUDENT WINS SPELLING BEE!! with double exclamation marks, […]
[…] to it, but the republication of Eugene En gland’s “Dawning of a Brighter Day: Mormon Literature after 150 years” as the inaugural essay of Wasatch Review International (vol. 1 , no. 1) calls for a response.