About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 48. Chapters: People from Logan, Utah, Reed C. Durham, Rocky Anderson, James B. Allen, Merlin Olsen, Chris Buttars, Reuben D. Law, Joseph F. Merrill, Chris Cooley, Gary Wilkinson, John William Woolf, Dave Downs, Thomas G. Alexander, Kent James, Robert M. Kimmitt, Marriner W. Merrill, Quentin L. Cook, L. Tom Perry, David Eccles, Richard F. Daines, Chauncy Harris, Stephen L Richards, Thomas Levi Whittle, Kevin Dyson, Morris R. Jeppson, Thomas C. Stanford, Craig Jessop, Parley P. Christensen, Marin Poole, Preston Nibley, Dean L. Larsen, Harold I. Hansen, Charles Ora Card, Ron Carlson, William Jasper Kerr, Melvin J. Ballard, Harvey Hancock, Martin B. Hickman, Joseph M. Tanner, N. Randy Smith, Lula Greene Richards, Chase N. Peterson, James R. Kearl, Albert E. Bowen, L. Edward Brown, Chase Nielsen, Ivan J. Barrett, James G. Willie, Larry Winborg, Casey Robinson, Joseph Howell, Joel Ricks, Carl Christian Amussen, Michael Ballam, Paul V. Johnson, Alma Sonne, Andre Dyson, Ariel S. Ballif, Lenore Romney, Conway Sonne, LaFarr Stuart, Jean Sullivan, Hans Henry Petersen, F. Burton Howard, Lyle W. Hillyard, Jake Kuresa, Herschel Bullen, William Williams Henderson, Flora Benson, Evelyn Wood, Lucybeth Rampton, Lee Bickmore, Reed Bullen, Alan K. Parrish, Charles Bullen, Don Campora, Ammar Ramzi, Allen Jaggi, Clay Brown, Steven von Niederhausern. Excerpt: Reed Connell Durham, Jr. (born 1930) is a historian of the Latter Day Saint movement and former director of the Institute of Religion in Salt Lake City, Utah for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Durham is remembered for a controversial speech given in 1974 about Freemasonry and the Latter Day Saint movement. Durham was born in Long Beach, California. He was one of the four children of Reed C. Durham, Sr. and Violet E. Cottrell. His father was a professor at Utah State...