Just days before the start of World War II, Americans, many of them Utahns, escaped from Nazi Germany. They were Latter-day Saint missionaries serving in that country. Now a filmmaker is telling their story.
(CNN) — An Idaho inmate and the accomplice who helped him escape from a hospital visit on Wednesday by shooting at state corrections officers were captured Thursday, ending a 36-hour manhunt, Boise Police Chief Ron Winegar said during a news conference. The inmate, Skylar Meade, and the alleged shooter, Nicholas Umphenour, were captured around 2 […]
An Ogden man on parole is back in jail charged with seven felonies after he beat up a woman, threatened to kill a neighbor, and kept the woman in their shared apartment when he dragged her inside multiple times, including by her mouth, according to police.
After a workplace shooting Sunday afternoon, the CEO of Varex Imaging, an international X-ray business, told KSL the aftermath has been sad but is focused on how to move forward.
Salt Lake City police say a 24-year-old man was taken into custody early Saturday morning after attempting to flee the scene of a auto-pedestrian accident.
Towering 288 feet above the skyline in Maryland, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saint Washington DC temple has been a landmark in the nation’s capital for nearly 50 years.
For two nights a week over four months out of the year, the Stang Aquatic Center in Hyrum, Utah, is home to one of the best high school water polo teams in the state: The Cache Valley Kraken.
During the pandemic, leaders from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints requested a new vision for the foyers or entryways of Church meetinghouses – the art to reflect a deeper reverence for the Lord Jesus Christ.
During the pandemic, Latter-day Saint Church leaders asked the foyers of every Church meetinghouse throughout the world to have imagery of Jesus Christ. Art and Religion Specialist Carole Mikita gives us a look at her upcoming General Conference Special titled "Sacred Images."
Toward Understanding is a documentary created with the hope of improving awareness and building bridges of understanding. It is a personal look at the reality of racism and how it impacts our community, our churches, and our homes.
It’s the unspoken truth that true “foodies” have always known: the real power of a good recipe goes beyond its ingredients. Food can serve, heal, connect, bind, and uplift human hearts.
Latter-Day Saints throughout the world share how they navigate through the trials of the coronavirus pandemic while heeding the counsel of Church President Russel M. Nelson.
Since members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints sustained President Russell M. Nelson as the Church’s 17th president he has logged well over 115,000 miles — traveling to six continents, 32 nations and territories and 49 cities.