Le Train à Grande Vitesse
October 26, 2018[…] and he forgot about her. But his companion didn’t. After sacrament meeting, Sister R. reminded him to call to see if Kitty wanted to come to the baptism. But when he did she didn’t […]
[…] and he forgot about her. But his companion didn’t. After sacrament meeting, Sister R. reminded him to call to see if Kitty wanted to come to the baptism. But when he did she didn’t […]
[…] would bring many excellent books to the attention of readers, would encourage our best writers who are now published by national presses to use more Mormon materials, and lessen the risk the Eastern publishers […]
[…] be astonished to learn that the music which she dedicated to a fallen soldier of war is now frequently sung to a new song of praise in honor of a modern prophet of peace.” […]
[…] it off to Salt Lake City, adding a covering note which said, in effect, “Look, honey (I call everybody ‘honey’; it’s my Southern upbringing), I know that this is much longer than you asked […]
[…] moved. Two weeks later, she phoned me at home in Salt Lake and asked if I would call her when I got to school the next day. “It’s about what we talked about the […]
[…] her hands. “He was covered with feces.” You nod to Riley: “I’ll wait out here till you call me in.” Riley joins Janet in the old man’s room. “I’m Doctor Martin,” Riley assures him. […]
[…] the proposed chiasms in the Book of Mormon are not deliberate applications of the chiastic form and ascribe their chiastic structure to the ingenuity of the analyst, rather than to the intent of the author.
<i>Dialogue 43.2 (Summer 2010): 1–44</i><br> A discussion of the theology of the body being combined with the spirit for various different reasons.
[…] explore how one of the most open-ended psychological interpretations of Smith’s prophetic leadership and motivation might contribute to better understanding the trajectory of this extraordinarily talented and conflicted individual whose life has so deeply […]
[…] thing for a husband to do: “She took care of me for more than sixty years, so now it’s my turn.” In 1955 the Mauss family returned to California, where Armand began teaching high […]