Law and Order — A Two Way Street
May 3, 2018[…] 100 in most of those years. Some of the 76 Negroes lynched in the first year after World War I were returning Negro soldiers, lynched while wearing the uniform of their country. To these […]
[…] 100 in most of those years. Some of the 76 Negroes lynched in the first year after World War I were returning Negro soldiers, lynched while wearing the uniform of their country. To these […]
[…] suggested an effort that would make it “the best religious magazine for adults published anywhere in the world.” That boast contrasts with the humble beginnings of an earlier church magazine, The Contributor, published between […]
[…] promise of “getting it all together.” Man is perceived to have pre-existed this life in the spirit world; but since there are experiences which are not available to a pure spirit form (physical pain, […]
[…] time when they were cancelling many other regular programs in order to give more air time to news about the war situation, which was now growing critical. His moving account of what happened after […]
[…] that Adam was the first man and that only with his fall did death enter into the world. At this point Roberts clearly faced a dilemma. To him the evidence for the antiquity of […]
What do the phrases “Mormon novel” and “Mormon novelist” mean? Maybe in the first place we are incautious not to separate novel from novelist. Suppose a “Mormon novelist” in a quite strenuous sense: nominally […]
[…] the circle of home, neighbors, and ward rather than reaching out to the wider community or the world. But one decade was different, infused by an unusual degree of organized activism against poverty and […]
[…] a personal choice, the second a national or even universal choice. Given what has happened in the world since the fifties, we may already have made that choice. By building and deploying and stockpiling […]
[…] two decades has been to bring a measure of objectivity to our perceptions of ourselves and our world. This, of course, is the stuff of serious scholarship everywhere. Lavina: How objective do you think […]
[…] with personally, he would share with you his story of why he decided to run. To the world, it looked like vain ambition. To the many who try to follow promptings in their lives, […]