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  • Cornucopia

    Cyril’s tie

    Wilfried Decoo

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    August 18, 2005

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    11 responses

    Cyril doesn’t know how to dress, except for his tie. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Gossip is Good

    Gordon Smith

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    August 17, 2005

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    22 responses

    So says the New York Times. Read More

  • Admin, Church History, Cornucopia, Latter-day Saint Thought, Life in the Church, Missionary, Mormon Studies

    David O. McKay and the Rise of Modern Mormonism

    Greg Prince

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    August 16, 2005

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    78 responses

    David O. McKay presented a dramatic contrast to his predecessors: an athletic, movie-star-handsome, clean-shaven figure who often wore a white double-breasted suit; contrasted to the dark-suited, bearded polygamists (or, in the case of George Albert Smith, son of a polygamist) who preceded him as Church President ever since Joseph Smith. In an age prior to professional image-makers, he instinctively grasped the importance of appearance, and coupled it to the substance of a professional educator to become an icon of Mormonism whose persona did much to change the negative image of the Church in much of the world. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Welcome Gregory Prince

    Julie M. Smith

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    August 16, 2005

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    12 responses

    We are excited to welcome Gregory Prince, coauthor of David O. McKay and the Rise of Modern Mormonism (published March 2005 and already in its third printing; reviewed here). Welcome, Greg! Read More

  • Cornucopia

    So I Married an Intellectual

    Carrie Lundell

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    August 15, 2005

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    42 responses

    I didn’t really know it at the time. When we met, he was well disguised as a dirtbike racing, country music fan that was six months off his mission. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Complicity and Consequences

    Nate Oman

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    August 15, 2005

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    52 responses

    I know some people who assiduously avoid buying Nike shoes. The moral logic of this position, however, is tricky. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Thank you, Sister Murdoch

    Gordon Smith

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    August 15, 2005

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    4 responses

    Sister Murdoch did not want to go on a mission, but she went anyway. Read More

  • Book Reviews, Cornucopia, Mormon Arts

    Book Review: The Book: A History of the Bible

    Julie M. Smith

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    August 14, 2005

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    10 responses

    I should warn potential readers: there’s a real danger that you will drool on the pages of Christopher de Hamel’s new book. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    DC Get Together Tomorrow

    Nate Oman

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    August 12, 2005

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    2 responses

    If you are interested, email [email protected]. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    What Not to Wear Part 2

    Carrie Lundell

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    August 11, 2005

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    77 responses

    Back by popular demand, here is the second installment of the Sacrament Meeting Edition of “What Not to Wear” – Women’s Edition. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    An Open Letter to the Dialogue Board

    Nate Oman

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    August 11, 2005

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    178 responses

    August 11, 2005 To Whom It May Concern: I hope that you will not find an unsolicited letter presumptuous, but I wanted to give you my thoughts on what I see as Dialogue’s problems and some things it could do to improve. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    The dog

    Wilfried Decoo

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    August 11, 2005

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    25 responses

    It happened in the back of the former living room we called our chapel. The church itself was an insignificant Flemish rowhouse. Thirty-six chairs crammed the room. Six rows of six. When half of them got filled, we boasted on the Church’s growth in our city. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    DC Get Together Reminder

    Nate Oman

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    August 10, 2005

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    4 responses

    This Saturday at 5pm in Springfield, Virginia. If you are interested in coming, please email me at [email protected]. I will send details and directions via email. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Dating, Jane Austen, and the Virtues of Chastity

    Nate Oman

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    August 10, 2005

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    78 responses

    Like most rugged and red-blooded American men I have long enjoyed the work of Jane Austen. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Breaking my back just to know your name

    Kaimi Wenger

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    August 9, 2005

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    107 responses

    Those of us who live a peripatetic (peripathetic?) life come to know the Elders’ Quorum Moving Company pretty well. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Leaving Jonesboro

    Russell Arben Fox

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    August 9, 2005

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    10 responses

    This past Sunday was our last in the Jonesboro ward. We’re moving to Illinois on Saturday, and while we’ll have a chance to say goodbye at greater length to some of our closer friends over the next few days (to say nothing of when the elder’s quorum shows up to help pack the truck!), for the most part our partings on Sunday were final. (At least in the short term, that is; in the long term, who knows? We may well find ourselves visiting or even living in Jonesboro again someday, a prospect which I wouldn’t mind one bit.) Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Thank You, Kirsten

    Julie M. Smith

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    August 8, 2005

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    13 responses

    It’s time to say goodbye to Kirsten and thank her for being an oustanding guest blogger. I appreciate the way that she formulated potentially-explosive and oft-discussed topics in a fresh, creative way that led to great discussions. Thanks, Kirsten, and we hope you’ll continue to stop by and comment. Read More

  • Book of Mormon

    Kim Clark and the Book of Mormon

    Frank McIntyre

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    August 8, 2005

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    35 responses

    A couple quick thoughts on recent prophetic moves. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Mormon T-shirt Kitsch

    Carrie Lundell

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    August 8, 2005

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    36 responses

    I am sure most of you are familiar with the types of “Mormon t-shirts” like these, these, these and these. To me, they are beyond kitschy and have entered the realm of horribly tacky. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Searching the Scriptures

    Gordon Smith

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    August 7, 2005

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    22 responses

    Several weeks back, I posted a short thing on Conglomerate and Blogcritics about my search for Harry Potter & The Half-blood Prince. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Manners, Race, and Respect

    Nate Oman

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    August 6, 2005

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    34 responses

    I have always thought that one of the most telling and subtlety vicious aspect of segregation was the fact that a white person regardless of age or economic status could always call a black person, regardless of age or economic status, “boy” or “girl.” Read More

  • Church History, Comparative religion, Cornucopia

    Visions–Medieval and Modern

    Kirsten M. Christensen

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    August 6, 2005

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    31 responses

    I had just completed the oral defense of my admission-to-PhD-candidacy exams, which emphasized the writings of medieval visionaries and mystics. My advisor extended his hand, and with his typical wry smile, said: “Congratulations. You passed. Now, go home and have a vision!” We all had a good laugh, but for different reasons. They all laughed because they don’t believe visions are possible. I laughed because I knew how much it would unsettle them to know that I do. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Hiroshima

    Wilfried Decoo

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    August 6, 2005

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    32 responses

    It happened. From pictures and testimonies we can grasp somehow what happened. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    From the Archives: Mormon Lawyers

    Nate Oman

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    August 5, 2005

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    Despite Brigham’s frequent attacks on the profession, there are a lot of Mormon lawyers. Some LDS thinkers have posited all sorts of troubling reasons why this is so. Nibley sees it as a symptom of moral decline, and I have repeatedly seen it used as evidence of excessive Mormon materialism or anti-intellectualism. However, today I realized that it might be about something else entirely: book binding. (more…) Read More

  • Cornucopia

    “Costly Apparel” or Just Good Economics

    Carrie Lundell

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    August 4, 2005

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    131 responses

    Being in the fashion industry, I have always been bothered by the constant references to “costly apparel” in the BOM and its link to pride and the downfall of nations. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    No more foreigners

    Wilfried Decoo

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    August 4, 2005

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    48 responses

    Our worldwide missionary effort is plurilingual. The Church has always been involved in outreach efforts to other tongues, now translating material into 185 languages. There are wards and branches, led in the local idiom, in 165 countries. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Lincoln on Blood Atonement

    Nate Oman

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    August 4, 2005

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    8 responses

    Today on my way to work, I passed by the Lincoln Memorial where the great man’s sermon on blood atonement is inscribed in marble. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    What Not To Wear Part 1

    Carrie Lundell

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    August 3, 2005

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    288 responses

    By popular demand, here is the first installment of the Sacrament Meeting-Men’s edition of “What Not to Wear” Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Using our Mormon Brains

    Kirsten M. Christensen

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    August 3, 2005

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    19 responses

    This post has two main parts — both involve being Mormon and engaging one’s brain. I think they’re still two distinct issues, but I’ll bring them up together, nonetheless, not least because my guest-blogging days are quickly drawing to a close. (Thank goodness — I feel as if I’ve been sucked into some fascinating and time-swallowing vortex that could be impossible to get out of if I didn’t soon…. How I admire [I think… :-)]all of you permanent bloggers.) Read More

  • Cornucopia

    DC Get Together

    Nate Oman

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    August 3, 2005

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    16 responses

    Bloggernaclites! For those in the Washington, D.C. area there is going to be a get together at Casa Oman (sans, alas, Heather and Jacob, the more interesting Omans) on Saturday, August 13th beginning at about 5pm-ish. It will be a bring your own food kind of BBQ. I will provide watermelon, drinks, and fresh salsa from the Oman garden. If you are interested in attending, please email me at [email protected]. I will send out an email with directions. UPDATE: I have changed the email address to a functional account. Sorry to anyone who tried to send an email to the… Read More

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