My Fifty Years in Journalism
April 26, 2018[…] judicial lore. As I was cleaning the basement of our home in early May 1952, a telephone call from the Post informed me that the Hughes book had won the Pulitzer Prize for biography. […]
[…] judicial lore. As I was cleaning the basement of our home in early May 1952, a telephone call from the Post informed me that the Hughes book had won the Pulitzer Prize for biography. […]
[…] to be looked at more closely—not simply because of the ERA but also because the Constitution does call for responsible relationships between religious institutions and governmental powers.” This case also, according to Cari Beau […]
[…] of his forthcoming but never realized conversion (“at which I would smile quietly”). Her boarders came to call her “Aunt” Rachel, following the lead of her two nieces who served the table. Shortly after starting […]
<i> Dialogue 16.4 (Winter 1983): 74 – 90</i> <br> This paper attempts to throw some new light on the history of this Mormon connected Egyptiana since 1848 (the close of the Mormon era in […]
[…] uses erbaut consistently. “Reprove” in D&C 84 be comes OG zur Busse . . . rufen (“to call to repentance”) in verse 87 but OG tadeln (“to blame, reprove, reprimand”) in verse 117, while […]
[…] welfare of the Mormon kingdom. After the U.S. War Department on April 10 announced its decision to call for 80,000 men from the militia, war had not only become more imminent, but the possibility […]
[…] not mentioned. A moment of ultimate reconciliation with the universe concludes the book as Clory dies: “And now there is no more time. Already the radiance is trembling on the horizon, the flushed light […]
[…] this text, as it is known in Hebrew, is akeda, or “the binding.” Jews typically do not call this text “the sacrifice of Isaac” or “the near-sacrifice of Isaac” for there is some question […]
[…] in Ashland, Mon tana. Why am I here? It is a question most of us come face to face with. I have heard that Leo Tolstoy, after he had fathered thirteen children, helped Tsar […]
[…] offered to donate money. Grant then rose to speak and said he would not recommend that they call the presidents of seventies to preach, since, he said, “they would Preach the people to sleep […]