Letters to the Editor
February 18, 2018[…] is to them. I have seen enough of the world to know that money and influence can buy opportunities for them to develop their talents which are unattainable by any other means. As an […]
[…] is to them. I have seen enough of the world to know that money and influence can buy opportunities for them to develop their talents which are unattainable by any other means. As an […]
[…] those who practice integrity, who seek the highest good. 5. The merciful = the sympathetic, com passionate. 6. The pure in heart = the guileless, selfless. 7. The peacemakers = those who promote love […]
[…] army barracks. Best selling authors are now writing sex books that formerly would have circulated under the counter. Instead of saying, “I love you,” the swain of today with a four-letter word invites his […]
[…] and profits, (4) the stimulative effects of war upon “prosperity,” (5) propaganda, munition manufacture, and war, ( 6) chemistry and war, (7) international non-co-operation and war, (8) diplomats and war, there is no ground […]
[…] have ever achieved.” The Mormons are satirized on only a few points in the novel: excessive enthusiasm over mundane and material matters (immigrants go to Utah on the promise of “Good Times”) and an […]
[…] literature, three volumes of essays which may serve as a chronicle of the issues dominating American life for twenty-five years (1930-1955), hundreds of reviews and articles on an astonishing range of topics, a monthly […]
[…] Rischin spoke of the sophistication with which scholars both within and without the Mormon culture were beginning to examine the Mormon past. He added, “This seems only the beginning. A giant step from church […]
[…] polygamy before 1852. 1971: Gordon C. Thomasson, “The Manifesto Was a Victory!“ Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, Vol 6 No. 1 (1971): 37–45. Thomasson argues that because the church did not give in tohttps://www.dialoguejournal.com/articles/the-manifesto-was-a-victory/ the […]
[…] God Who Weeps (Ensign Peak, 2012), she is the joint author of The Crucible of Doubt: Reflections on the Quest for Faith (Deseret Book, 2014) and The Christ who Heals: How God Restored the Truth that Saves Us (Deseret Book, […]
[…] carry it with me. I hear racist things said in class and often can’t bring myself to counter it with a better argument without feeling angry. I don’t always want to hold the burden […]