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Until he moved to Utah, author Todd Robert Petersen had no idea there
was a whole canon of LDS fiction. He had never been inside a Deseret
Book.
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- + Navy diver's pioneer ancestry inspires Ironman
- + Q&A with Pulitzer winner Laurel T. Ulrich
- + Walking a mile in an immigrant's moccasins
- + Mormon missionaries focus on helping others
- + Evangelical use of Tabernacle sign of openness
- + BYU player fourth National Scholar-Athlete
- + St. Louis Mormon Historical Society to meet
Some athletes are considered pros, and others do Ironman competitions for the challenge.
The 10th annual Mormon Studies Conference at Utah Valley
University had the theme of "Outmigration and the
Mormon Quest for Education."
Fifteen questions for Pulitzer Prize-winner Laurel Thatcher Ulrich, who recently
became the first woman to receive the John F. Kennedy Medal of the Massachusetts Historical
Society.
Ben Reed was once a conservative shock jock in his native Idaho.
But meeting and falling in love with a Mexican national brought about a
change in philosophy.
Forty years ago, BYU and Wyoming met at War
Memorial Stadium in Laramie, Wyo., for a football game that turned out
to be much more than a game.
David Mortimer is 13 months from graduation at BYU, and he knows what he wants to be: a sports journalist.
The 45-year-old Laie Inn, adjacent to BYU-Hawaii and the Polynesian
Cultural Center, closed for business Sunday and will be demolished to
make room for a new development.
In an effort to help Primary presidencies and music leaders worldwide prepare lessons and teach children, the LDS Church has released a "new and improved" outline for sharing time in 2010.









