Every Soul Has Its South
May 4, 2018[…] is, worried that the students I counseled and read and philosophized with where I taught should reach for meaning for their lives and find no guts, worried in fact that I should somehow while […]
[…] is, worried that the students I counseled and read and philosophized with where I taught should reach for meaning for their lives and find no guts, worried in fact that I should somehow while […]
<i>Dialogue 5. 3 (Fall 1966): 85–100</i><br> During the years of the Utah Territory, outsiders got appointed to the terrority to serve in various positions. For the most part, these Gentiles weren’t sympathetic towards the […]
<i>Dialogue 1. 3 (Fall 1966): 47–62</i><br>Understanding Mormon history involves appreciating some of the formidable obstacles which confront throse who seek to write it. There is still sensitivity among Mormons to probing that might bring […]
[…] Hold His Seat (4 vols., Washington, 1904-7) , I, 126; see also Cannon and O’Higgins, pp. 34- 6, 115. Homer Durham’s observation that “any purposeful internal direction of the political power inhering in the […]
[…] XXXIII (Fall 1965), 326-350; and “Camp in the Sagebrush: Camp Floyd, Utah, 1858-1861,” UHQ, XXXIV (Winter 1966), 3-21. These articles, part of a series, discuss the social, political, and economic impact of these two […]
[…] present them in the first volume of a contemplated four-volume work on the Prophet. Doctrine and Covenants, 6:25-28. Ibid., 107:37. After the Saints left Missouri, this body was disorganized since it was designed to […]
[…] 316 pp. $5.95. The Mormon Establishment. By Wallace Turner. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1966. 343 pp. $ 6.00. Many readers of this journal will surely agree with Turner that Lee “stood up against almost […]
[…] of particular interest to students of western and especially Mormon history are: “Ordeal by Handcart,” Colliers, July 6, 1956, p. 78; “On the Writing of History,” The American West, Fall, 1965, p. 6; “Born […]
[…] never thrown any votes anywhere; he is only handicapped if his party fails to win a majority over all the other parties put together—like Johnson or Wilson or any other parliamentary executive. Tixier’s doctrine […]
[…] hard-to-get old volumes are on the paperback racks of nearly any drugstore. At the store where I buy my groceries, I can also pick up copies of Fanny Hill or Tropic of Cancer. Whether […]