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Turnabout is fair play. After writing “5 Signs He’s Not Serious about You,” many readers requested that I do a similar blog to help the guys out there decode the sometimes subtle and confusing signals of the fairer sex. Well, gentlemen, here they are—five of our favorite strategies for avoiding those suitors we are just not into.
Conference Talk: For more information on this topic read "Strengthen Home and Family," by Mary N. Cook (Ensign, Nov 2007, 11-13).
One delicious step to becoming more self-sufficient is making homemade jams and jellies. There is a difference between jam, jelly, preserves, conserves, and marmalades. Jam is made from chopped or ground whole fruit, whereas jelly uses only the extracted juice of the fruit. Preserves typically contain larger chunks of fruit or even whole fruit, as in strawberry or gooseberry preserves, while conserves are made of fruit mixed with raisins and/or nuts. Marmalades are based on juice and finely-chopped citrus peel.
In this time when our bodies are portrayed as imperfect and unworthy, learn how you can help your daughters find their own real beauty in an unrealistic world.
One hundred years ago, in a building adjacent to Granite High School in Salt Lake City, Utah, USA, Thomas J. Yates served as the teacher of the first seminary class in the Church, a revolutionary undertaking for the time. Today, a century later, much has changed—Granite High School has closed, for instance. But seminary classes are still held at the site where seminary was first offered in 1912—and they are as innovative as their early predecessors. Here Nathan Van De Graaff serves as the coordinator for American Sign Language (ASL) seminary. In this role, he teaches standard seminary curriculum in ASL to classes of up to nine students each—students who are participating from their homes across the United States.
He has a politician’s quick smile and looks like he was born to wear a suit. He has a beautiful wife and picture-perfect children. His ancestor’s name is plastered on buildings all over his family’s hometown. He went to Brigham Young University. He has executive experience in both the private and public sectors. He’s a Mormon, and he’s running for president. But his name is not Mitt Romney. It is Yeah Samaké. He’s the reformist mayor of Ouéléssébougou, a city of some 35,000 residents in the southwest corner of Mali. His anti-corruption policies have made that city a model of civil engagement, and this April Samaké expects to be elected president. If that happens, Yeah Samaké will be the first Mormon head of state in the world.
MR says: Peter Lassig, the mastermind who designed Temple Square's gardens and landscaped other temples, revolutionizing gardening in the process, died last weekend.
Fun
Today. Right now. This very instant. It seems that everyone has a smartphone with a reason locked and loaded, ready to use it. Oh, you have a smartphone too? Then you may agree how wonderful it is that instant gratification has been made a top priority in our era.
Fun
We asked LDS Living readers to submit their best recipes for our recent fudge contest. And though we saw a variety of unique and tasty submissions, it came down to these delicious concoctions. Runners-up were Denise Isaac's Two-Ingredient Fudge and Chantel Despain with Tillie's Peanut Butter Cup Fudge. To find these yummy recipes, check out the November/December 2015 issue of LDS Living Magazine.