Plus: An artist takes inspiration from her Native and African heritage, the future of child care policies and the COLD podcast is back.
Good morning, Utah Today readers! Here’s today’s forecast: 🌤️ 12 – 32° in Logan ⛅ 26 – 39° in Salt Lake City ☀️ 32 – 52° in St. George ⚠️ ⚠️ Hard freeze watch I reached a new level of adulthood this last week: I just made the last payment on my car. Now that dog fur-covered Honda with a cracked mirror because it got sideswiped while I was sitting in church is finally mine. My mom is now asking me if the car company has sent me the “title” yet, and … I don’t know what that is or why I should be receiving it. Is it like a diploma? Do I frame it?
Apparently, I am not alone in being clueless to the world of adulthood. Naomi Schaefer Riley wrote a piece about how adulting is hard, even for adults, and how it’s taking longer for kids to launch these days. She also mentioned the ocean of paperwork we are drowning in — so I don’t feel as silly for not being able to navigate whatever this car title is. Tell me: What “adulting” stories do you have? Also on our minds: An artist takes inspiration from her Native and African heritage, the future of child care policies and the COLD podcast is back. |
| Ukraine refugee effort by Latter-day Saints is expanding. Here’s how many the church has helped this year |
|
| | Over the course of 11 days, Olga Zabrodina crossed the borders of five countries with her aging father, her sister, three sons and two nieces. Although she wanted to stay and help while her husband fought, she felt the spiritual impression that she needed to leave, and now only has her faith on which to rely. The conflict between Ukraine and Russia has displaced 7.8 million Ukrainians. Throughout 2022, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has assisted 1.6 million internally displaced persons and refugees through 100 humanitarian projects. Church leaders also asked members to shelter refugees and show “the gospel in action,” as Elder Jeffrey R. Holland of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles put it. | Sen. Mitt Romney took a back seat in the recent Utah Senate race and neither endorsed Sen. Mike Lee or his challenger Evan McMullin. With the recent election, Former Pres. Trump’s possible announcement of running for president in 2024 and the future of the House race being uncertain, pundits and reporters have speculated whether or not Romney will run again in two years. One Utah political insider said, “Given the election results, voters are looking toward a more positive and effective vision for the GOP and Mitt is well positioned to play a major part in that.” The question is whether he can win a second term. Utah Republican Party Chairman Carson Jorgensen expressed doubts, saying, “There’s enough vitriol there that no matter if Trump is running for president, he will run a candidate against Romney.” Although, after this election, it’s possible that the former president's endorsement might not mean as much as it did in the past. What do you think? Read the full story here, and reply with your thoughts. More in Politics: What happens to family policies like child care, paid leave now? (Deseret News) Perspective: The good, the bad and the ugly in this year’s elections (Deseret News) Perspective: Congress is split down the middle. Is the country as well? (Deseret News) | FROM OUR SPONSOR: THE DIGNITY INDEX Are you ready for a cultural shift in our politics? Raise your Dignity Index score, a scale that rates speech on its power to unite or divide. Ease divisions, solve problems, and prevent violence by tipping the scale towards dignity. Take the pledge. | Culture: ‘Honey’ uses soul and hip-hop to celebrate her Native American heritage (Deseret News) More companies fighting cultural practice to leave religion at home (KSL) Crime: COLD: Podcast uncovers new clues about discovery of missing Utah woman’s car in Las Vegas (Deseret News) Education: Lawmakers and educators still struggle to define how Utah should teach ethnic studies (KUER) Economy and Business: Want to move to a co-op? Have thousands of dollars and iron will (Utah Business) Unaffordable Utah: Keep the holiday magic alive without breaking the bank (KSL) Affordable housing's hard to find, so Utah Muslims build home for their imam (FOX13) Health: ‘He went without it for two weeks and it cost him his life’: Utahns rally for more insulin accessibility (ABC4) Faith: Faith and the media ‘can function together,’ Mexico City workshop emphasizes (Deseret News) Northern Utah: Latter-day Saint church building in Perry closed after vandals cause extensive damage inside (FOX13) Wasatch Front: What are the treasures of the west side? Group asks community to pinpoint important locations (KSL) Southern Utah: SLC canyoneering guide dies in climbing accident at Morning Glory Arch, authorities say (Salt Lake Tribune) Sports: Like father, like son: For BYU tight ends coach Steve Clark and his son Jamison, football is their DNA (Deseret News) On a night of Pac-12 chaos, No. 13 Utah throttles Stanford (Deseret News) Utah State is one win away from bowl eligibility, but Hawaii didn’t make it easy (Deseret News) Tony Finau collects cool $1.5 million with his third PGA Tour win this calendar year (Deseret News) |
That's all for today. Check your inbox tomorrow morning for more news from the Beehive State and beyond! If you have any feedback for us or on Utah Today, reply directly to this email or email newsletters@deseretnews.com. — Kathleen 🐝 |
| Copyright © 2022 Deseret News, All rights reserved. |