Mother Goes to Cambridge: A Modern Lament
April 17, 2018[…] “punch up.” An Englishman can be as “drunk as a sack,” “have quite a good read,” or buy something “a bit pricey.” You can take a “march about,” drive across a “fly-over” which is […]
[…] “punch up.” An Englishman can be as “drunk as a sack,” “have quite a good read,” or buy something “a bit pricey.” You can take a “march about,” drive across a “fly-over” which is […]
[…] the night wind. It is loneliness which kills the poplar. The solitary oak stretching its limbs wide over a field is a handsome sight, a refuge for cattle and horses, for girls with tree-climbing […]
[…] employee Brent Metcalfe actually made up a list of areas of Mormon history in which Christensen would buy any documents Hofmann might find, according to Metcalfe. When Brent Ashworth saw letters Joseph Smith wrote […]
[…] Jack Newell step down as editors of DIALOGUE as this issue goes to press, turning the editorship over to Kay and Ross Peterson of Logan, Utah. Following is an interview with them conducted by […]
[…] that home teaching visits be done once a week! Priesthood leadership meetings were not infrequently held at 6:00 A.M. on weekdays, and I found myself agreeing that young men who did not attend with […]
[…] St. Lawrence River the night before? The concierge was uncertain but thought there would be something at 3:00 P.M., the traditional hour of Christ’s death. He confirmed by calling the church for me. Since […]
[…] their book on Friday, October 14. They will be here from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m., speaking at 6:00, and will answer questions and sign books before and after that time. After Joseph Smith and […]
[…] wealth. The fact that the American Mormon economic thinkers he cites “don’t really experience any such tensions” over the idea of wealth accumulation (p. 37) is an indictment of those Mormon thinkers themselves and […]
[…] consequence of his particular distinction between religion and magic, Quinn differs with the defensive Mormon writers only over the timing of Mormon ism’s renunciation of magic, and not with their insistence that their faith […]
[…] resulting from these revelations gave rise to another symposium and panel, held at Brigham Young University on 6 August 1987. This panel convened to explore two questions in relation to the Mark Hofmann forgeries: […]