Body and Blood
March 18, 2018[…] to her usual spot at the bottom of the stairs that go up to where you can order drinks. It’s a good spot because it’s private, and you can climb two stairs and see […]
[…] to her usual spot at the bottom of the stairs that go up to where you can order drinks. It’s a good spot because it’s private, and you can climb two stairs and see […]
[…] outside an LDS bookstore beside the historical site. Tourists all, they move in a kind of chaotic order, juggling strollers, cameras, shopping bags, and sunburns. Their whiteness—or, more accurately, pinkness—shocks him, so used he […]
[…] Amy has spent a second night at the hospital. The bipap wasn’t giving Barb enough oxygen; in order to get tubes down her, the doctors put her into a coma. “So there’s no need […]
[…] crib, the diapers washed and hung on a jerry-rigged clothesline in the backyard, and some semblance of order restored, Mary said, “I need a favor.” Vanessa regarded her mother over her shoulder. “What?” “I […]
[…] was rejected entirely, while pioneer attitudes toward such things as the Word of Wisdom and the United Order retroactively underwent radical alteration. (Published figures over a period of time from forward-looking sources regarding the […]
[…] foreign language is only part of the larger problem of religious contact across linguistic and cultural b orders. And this entire process of contact hinges largely on arbitrary choices of terminology to characterize doctrines […]
[…] academies were transformed into public high schools or converted into community junior colleges and normal schools. In order to assure the continuation of religious education for its youth, the Church established a Seminary program. […]
[…] many non-Maori overtones, and feel at home in this environment, is certainly an achievement of the first order. . . . In conclusion it appears here as before that diversity of cultural or class […]
[…] I talked about bombing North Viet Nam it was called foolhardy extremism. Now it’s called statesmanship.” In order for Americans to inform themselves adequately, and to vote in their own interests, there need first […]
[…] sit-ins of the 1950’s, and the anti-Vietnam demonstrations of the 1960’s were all disruptive of the established order but they were a traditional, though often extra-legal, part of the legislative process. Civil disobedience is […]