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News about Mormons, Mormonism, and the LDS Church |
General News |
Church Gets Wide Coverage of Freedman's Bank CD-ROM Release |
The LDS Church got wide coverage for its release yesterday
of a CD-ROM containing financial and family information on about 480,000
depositors in the short-lived Freedman's Bank. The Church held a 13-city
press event at 12:30 yesterday (EST). According to Mormon News correspondent
Christopher Rosche, more than 100 guests attended the event at Washington's
National Press Club, and many others attended events in 12 other cities:
Salt Lake City, Atlanta, Chicago, Los Angeles, New York, Oakland, Denver,
Houston, Dallas, Raleigh, Miami, and St. Louis. |
Local News |
Solomona Sentence Reversed, Family Seeking Bail |
In a surprising turn of events, the
conviction of Peter Solomona for fatally shooting the teenager who
stole a plastic pumpkin from his yard in October 1999 was reversed
Friday by the trial court judge. The reversal left Solomona's family
scrambling to come up with $25,000 to get their father and
grandfather released from jail pending a new trial in April. The
judge ruled that he hadn't adequately instructed the jurors on the
law. |
Sports |
Olympic 'Identity Crisis' in Salt Lake City says Christian Science Monitor |
Today's Christians Science Monitor says that Salt
Lake City is feeling an identity crisis as the 2002 Winter Olympic Games
approaches. While the city has long been more moderate and diverse than the
rest of the state, its religiously-based traditions are "under some attack,"
leading to an identity crisis as it decides "Is this a Mormon town, or a
modern American 'everycity' that is ready to party?" The attacks come
because almost everyone agrees that Salt Lake is more Mormon than "everycity." |
Finally, Burgess Finds Success |
Chris Burgess is reaping success. After
turning down a chance to play at BYU and going to Duke, then leaving
Duke to attend the University of Utah, Chris is overcoming injuries,
self-doubt, and outside pressures to put together a string of solid
performances. |
Politics |
Government's Census Reply Claims Utah Hasn't Suffered Damages |
The federal government has weighed in on the
2000 census issue. The government filed a motion in SLC Distict Court
which, if headed, would deny Utah its attempt to gain another seat in
the House of Representatives. The seat in question was awarded to
North Carolina by a margin of 857. |
Church Tells King County: Rural Limits Unconstitutional |
At the request of Elder Gordon Conger, an Area
Authority Seventy in the Seattle area, the LDS Church asked its
principal outside law firm, Kirton &McConkie, to review the county's
attempt to limit the size of Church buildings in the county's rural
areas, and learned that the attempt is unconstitutional. The review
and its resulting six-page legal analysis came in response to King
County Executive Ron Sims' proposal that nonresidential buildings
outside the county's urban-growth boundary be limited to no more than
10,000 square feet. |
Internet |
Website for 'ex-Mormons' Spawns Conference |
If faithful members of the LDS Church are dismayed that
exmormons.org even exists, they will be more dismayed to know that the
six-year-old website has also spawned an annual conference, now in its fifth
year. The "Recovery from Mormonism" conference led to an article in
yesterday's Las Vegas Sun, which looked at the website and conference and
interviewed Las Vegas ex-Mormon Helena Broadbent. |
People |
Utah Med School Says BYU Grads Sexist |
Complaints of harassment and sexist attitudes among BYU
graduates attending the University of Utah's Medical School have led BYU to
take steps to change the attitudes and worry that the medical school will
accept fewer BYU graduates as a result. The complaints came to BYU's
attention when the medical school's associate dean, Victoria Judd,
complained to BYU officials about the attitudes. This led to an internal
memo from BYU's Dean of Biology and Agriculture, Kent Crookston, sent to the
college's staff and a letter of apology from 24 BYU professors. |
Arts & Entertainment |
Randy Bachman to Tour US with Guess Who |
LDS rock star Randy Bachman's Guess Who collaborator
Burton Cummings told the Canadian Press that the group is planning a US tour
this year that will include shows in 50 cities. He also said that the group
is working on an album of new material, their first since 1970. The tour and
album come just months after the group finished a Canadian tour and a live
album, released last fall. |
Business |
Tribune Wins Round in Ownership Lawsuit |
The ball is now in the court of
MediaNewsGroup Inc. in the last volley of legal actions by U.S.
District Judge, Tena Campbell, who ruled in favor of the Salt Lake
Tribune. The Tribune claims that two of their managers should not
have been removed from their positions in the Newspaper Agency Corp.
which acts as the business arm of the Tribune and its joint operating
agreement (JOA) partner, The Deseret News. |
The End of ZCMI |
The ZCMI name is in the final days of hanging
outside the fourteen stores that once made up the LDS Church-owned
chain. Meier and Frank, the Oregon-based subsidiary of St. Louis' May
Department Stores, announced this week the schedule for changing the
names of the stores to Meier and Frank, and for opening the stores on
Sundays. |
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