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Salt Lake City: Signature Books. pp. 329– 364. ISBN 1560851546. (An article by Anderson about her fellow September Six excommunicant and friend D. Michael Quinn) Patterson, Sara M. (2023). "September 23". The September Six and the Struggle for the Soul of Mormonism. Salt Lake City: Signature Books. pp. 237– 258. ISBN 9781560854661.
A successor to Utah Magazine (1868), [2] The Salt Lake Tribune was founded as the Mormon Tribune by a group of businessmen led by former members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) William Godbe, Elias L.T. Harrison and Edward Tullidge, who disagreed with the church's economic and political positions.
The Salt Lake Tribune described it as emphasizing women's role in, "strengthening testimonies of Jesus Christ, seeking inspiration from the Holy Ghost, rededicating themselves to home and family, performing community service, sustaining the faith's all-male priesthood and worshiping in the church's temples."
In September 2018, Kirby was suspended from the Salt Lake Tribune for three months without pay, following an internal investigation into a social media allegations by Courtney Kendrick, a Provo-based blogger (and occasional columnist at the Tribune's rival, the LDS Church-owned Deseret News) of inappropriate behavior toward her at a Mormon ...
[4] [5] He authored a textbook, and he was an art critic for The Salt Lake Tribune for four nearly forty years. Dibble was also a painter in his own right, and he won a prize at the Utah State Fair as early as 1935. [6] He became known as a Cubist watercolorist. [4] [5] Dibble died of cancer on June 2, 1992, in Salt Lake City, at age 88. [4] [5]
He lived in Salt Lake City, Utah for a short time in 1910. [2] He was working as a railroad clerk when Thomas Kearns, former U.S. Senator from Utah (1901–05), mining, banking, railroad and newspaper magnate, bought The Salt Lake Tribune in 1901, founded the Salt Lake Telegram and hired Fitzpatrick as his personal secretary in 1913. [3] [4]
October 1906, Ray purchased a house in Salt Lake City at 627 S. 700 E. [47] [48] In 1907, Ray Knight married school teacher Charlotte Maud Heninger of Raymond, Alberta, and had five children: Owen, Wayne, Jesse, Charlotte, and Mary. 1920, furnished rodeo stock to the Browning Stampede and place second in the day money for the calf roping event ...
James "Jim" Z. Davis was born in 1943 in Salt Lake City, Utah. He attended college at the University of Utah, graduating with a Bachelor of Science degree in Political Science. He was a member of Phi Beta Kappa. He received his law degree from the University of Utah College of Law in 1968. [2]