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  • Cornucopia

    “John, you’ve prepared for this your whole life”

    Matt Evans

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    November 26, 2006

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    16 responses

    My brothers, dad and I got together to watch the BYU-Utah game yesterday. With only three seconds left, down by four and needing a touchdown, BYU called a timeout to plan their final play. Not since 2003 had a college football team won on the last play of regulation. Everyone at our party was too excited and anxious to sit down, and we publicly wondered at the intensity the players must be feeling. After the game, BYU quarterback John Beck was asked what he was thinking as he walked on the field after the timeout. “I took a deep breath… Read More

  • Cornucopia

    A cautionary tale

    Marjorie Conder

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    November 25, 2006

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    5 responses

    We had a large garden before we had lawn when we bought our home in the early 1960s. During my “domestic phase” years I felt obligated to preserve—can, freeze, pickle, dry, etc. as much as possible. (We even have a root cellar on our suburban lot.) Read More

  • Cornucopia

    The Happiest Wives

    Julie M. Smith

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    November 25, 2006

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    56 responses

    According to a study done by two sociology profs at the University of Virginia, the following are most closely correlated with happiness of wives: Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Light

    Marjorie Conder

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    November 24, 2006

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    6 responses

    I find light in all its iterations compelling. I often sit crossed legged in front of our bedroom fireplace with a fire and/or just a candle on the hearth. Sometimes I listen to music or beat a drum as I watch the flames. Sometimes I just sit. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Ned Desaules and the United Order – 1 of 2

    Ardis E. Parshall

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    November 24, 2006

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    10 responses

    On a day when TV news programs carry images of 170 million Americans storming shopping malls in a frenzy of consumerism, here’s an account of a different kind of economic system Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Bill Shrives

    Jonathan Green

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    November 23, 2006

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    2 responses

    For forty years, Bill Shrives was a train signal supervisor for Southern Pacific Railroad. Every day, the lives and livelihoods of thousands of people depended on his doing his job conscientiously and correctly. As with nearly everyone who plays an important part in keeping the economy humming, it is safe to say that nearly no one thought about Bill Shrives when their train sailed safely past the signals he inspected. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Count Your Blogging Blessings…

    Russell Arben Fox

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    November 23, 2006

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    3 responses

    …name them one by one. This Thanksgiving, I’m thankful for some great posts from days past here at Times and Seasons. Let me count them. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Holiday Surprises and Flexibility

    Marjorie Conder

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    November 23, 2006

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    5 responses

    We have always been clear that that our married children have two sides to their new families and we have also made it clear that while we may invite them to everything we also don’t want to hog their time or force them into difficult choices. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    I Don’t Know It All, But I Know Some Things

    Ardis E. Parshall

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    November 22, 2006

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    44 responses

    I once spent an uncomfortable few hours wedged in economy class on a flight from Boston to Salt Lake City. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Welcome the Season!

    Marjorie Conder

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    November 21, 2006

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    11 responses

    Since we are entering the holiday season I am thinking about building some of my posts around the holidaies and maybe some of my evolving ideas of a personal liturgical calendar. I seem to have needed this calendar all of my life and over the last ten years or so I have been actively and successfully pursuing it, including a thoroughly Mormon Passover and some beginning stabs at celebrating the Feast of Tabernacles. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    The Muddle

    Marjorie Conder

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    November 21, 2006

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    17 responses

    This last week has again brought into sharp focus one of my more important discoveries of the past decade. It is “The Muddle” and I am surprised and appalled that I was so old before I figured it out. On the off chance some of you have not yet figured it out, here is my take on the subject. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Welcome, Marjorie Conder

    Julie M. Smith

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    November 20, 2006

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    10 responses

    We are very pleased to have Marj Conder guest blogging for us for the next few weeks. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    I am thankful for my appendectomy

    Jonathan Green

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    November 20, 2006

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    13 responses

    One night last March, I went to bed feeling fine but woke up four hours later with abdominal pain that wouldn’t go away. I finished the ensuing day in the hospital recovering from an appendectomy, for which I am very grateful. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Primary Lesson #42 Supplement

    Julie M. Smith

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    November 19, 2006

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    One response

    Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Ellen Briggs Douglas Parker: Where Her Treasure Was

    Ardis E. Parshall

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    November 17, 2006

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    11 responses

    Nauvoo, June 12, 1842 Dear father and mother, I am at a loss what I can say to you. I feel so thankful for what the Lord has done for me and my family, for truly all things have worked together for our good. … Read More

  • Cornucopia

    A Milestone

    Julie M. Smith

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    November 16, 2006

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    16 responses

    Today is the first time I’ve seen advertising directed at Mormons that didn’t scream ‘priestcraft.’ Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Kolob

    Kaimi Wenger

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    November 15, 2006

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    97 responses

    Some fellow who has clearly never talked to a Mormon gives a nice (mis)summation of LDS beliefs in a local paper. (Hat tip: Voldemort). Like many such, he has things to say about Kolob — a lot more, really, than I’ve ever heard at church. Is Kolob even really part of LDS doctrine any more? Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Words and Music

    Kaimi Wenger

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    November 15, 2006

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    24 responses

    Here’s a short quiz, for fun: For each of the following, name the modern-day green-book hymn whose tune was originally associated with these lyrics. 1. To Anacreon in Heav’n, where he sat in full glee, a few Sons of Harmony sent a petition, Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Maggie’s Argument Against Atheism

    Nate Oman

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    November 15, 2006

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    50 responses

    Oddly enough, I have never really struggled with belief in God. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Slovakia!

    Jonathan Green

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    November 14, 2006

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    9 responses

    The government of Slovakia granted the Church official recognition on October 18. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Two ladies

    Wilfried Decoo

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    November 14, 2006

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    17 responses

    As soon as my friend said I was a Mormon, the two ladies wanted to know more. Read More

  • Cornucopia, Lesson Aids

    Sunday School Lesson #43

    Jim F.

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    November 12, 2006

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    31 responses

    Lesson 43: Ezekiel 18, 34, and 37 Read More

  • Cornucopia, Lesson Aids

    Sunday School Lesson #42

    Jim F.

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    November 12, 2006

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    5 responses

    Lesson 42: Jeremiah 16, 23, 29, 31 Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Johanna Tippett Porter: In Active Service to the End

    Ardis E. Parshall

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    November 11, 2006

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    11 responses

    LDS missionaries working on the Isle of Wight, off the coast of England, found the Tippett family in 1859. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    St. Martin’s Day

    Jonathan Green

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    November 10, 2006

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    33 responses

    Or, Notes from a modern theocracy Continuing the periodic series on Holiday Envy, November 11 is St. Martin’s Day. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Welcome Aboard, Ardis!

    Russell Arben Fox

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    November 10, 2006

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    18 responses

    In case it may have escaped your notice, Ardis Parshall has been posting and commenting a great deal lately. Actually, she’s so quickly made herself at home here at Times and Seasons, with her superb series of historical posts, as well as her reflections on everything from running a business to doing archival research, all from her own unique yet thoroughly Mormon perspective, that it almost escaped our notice as well. But not quite! So allow this to be a somewhat delayed official introduction of Ardis to the Bloggernacle as T&S’s newest permablogger. Welcome, Ardis! (We’ll be getting you your… Read More

  • Cornucopia

    “For this [blog] was dead, and is alive again; he was lost, and is found.”

    Kaimi Wenger

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    November 10, 2006

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    4 responses

    It appears that the reported demise of the Millennial Star blog may have been premature. The blog appears to be alive once more. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    What If The Woman Taken In Adultery . . . Wasn’t?

    Julie M. Smith

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    November 10, 2006

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    48 responses

    In the abstract, there are three possibilities: she was guilty, she was innocent, or she was raped. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    To accompany Kaimi’s post

    Margaret Young

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    November 9, 2006

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    31 responses

    How about lyrics which folks (especially children) often mis-hear? My mother was terribly ashamed of her parents when she saw that cherries were included for Sunday lunch, since they had just sung, “Cherries hurt you, cherries hurt you…” (Cherish virtue…) Read More

  • Cornucopia, Social Sciences and Economics

    Fixing the Minimum Wage

    Frank McIntyre

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    November 9, 2006

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    153 responses

    It seems pretty clear that we are heading for a hike in the minimum wage. For the many of us who care about poverty reduction, which would be basically all of us, this could be a big deal. The problems with the minimum wage are that it: Read More

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