Review: The History of the Mormons in Argentina
By February 4, 2010
Curbelo, Néstor. The History of the Mormons in Argentina. Translated by Erin Jennings. Salt Lake City: Greg Kofford Books.
By February 4, 2010
Curbelo, Néstor. The History of the Mormons in Argentina. Translated by Erin Jennings. Salt Lake City: Greg Kofford Books.
By February 4, 2010
Sometimes I get bogged down in the details of my job and forget just how much I enjoy what I do. I?ve developed a list to remind myself why I got into this field just in case the tedium of it starts getting to me. Some of these are kind of silly, but others can have a profound impact.
By February 2, 2010
To avoid either dragging out this series inordinately or clogging up The Mormon Archipelago, I’ve broken a seven-part run into three posts with links to sub-pages. The links (to date) are below.
By January 31, 2010
By January 31, 2010
Let’s give a round of applause to my friend Brent Brizzi for taking the time and effort to transcribe the proceedings and make it available here. I have made only a few cursory edits from the version he sent me.
By January 30, 2010
By January 29, 2010
We had a great crowd tonight. Somewhere between 50 and 60 were in attendance. The SLMSSA would like to thank the Mormon Times for putting up a notice about the event beforehand which likely drew a number of attendees. We were pleased to have Steve Harper, professor of religion at BYU presenting on what insights memory studies can shed on the First Vision. Stay tuned to the SLMSSA website for details about future lectures and events.
By January 28, 2010
My first foray into Mormon history was a complete and abysmal failure. I think I?ve destroyed all evidence of that paper because I would probably be fired for my complete stupidity. The school project was to prepare an annotated bibliography on a topic that could become a senior thesis. It sounded fairly easy and because I liked Mormon history and lived within a stone?s throw of a major Mormon site, I chose a Mormon topic. I was working at the time in interlibrary loan so I assumed that on the odd chance my school didn?t have anything, I could find other schools nearby with good sources. At the end of the project, I was under the impression that no one was doing Mormon history
By January 27, 2010
Looking forward to seeing you on Thursday at 7 pm for Steve Harper’s lecture in room 101 of the Carolyn Tanner Irish Humanities Building at the University of Utah. There is a bit of construction in the area, so I’m putting up this map to show where to go to get to the building and parking area. This is the unaltered map. [See the SLMSSA website at this link for a marked map showing where to go]:
By January 25, 2010
About 6% of all buildings in the United States were constructed before 1920.
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