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     | Arts & Entertainment News |  | 
  
 		| Weyland's 'Charly' on Film in March |  | What may have been the first popular LDS youth 
novel will appear on screens in Utah and Eastern Idaho starting in 
March. "Charly," the 1980 love story by BYU-Idaho physics professor 
Jack Weyland, has sold mor ethan 250,000 copies since its 
publication. It has also been both beloved by many and dismissed by 
critics of popular Mormon culture. |  
  
 		| Father and Son in Joint Book Signings |  | Award-winning author Orson Scott Card and his son 
Geoffrey not only share remarkably similar faces, they share a passion for 
writing. Both Cards will be in Utah this month to sign copies of their lates 
books. Orson Scott Card will sign his latest novel, Rebecca. Geoffrey Card 
will be signing copies of his first published work, God's Army, a 
novelization of the breakthrough independent film. |  
  
 		| Young LDS Film Festival to Begin November 29th |  | Get ready for the First Young LDS Film Festival! With 
over 70 entries, the film festival goes into its first promising 
year. Filmmakers from the United States, Canada, Europe and Asia 
submitted their work, with most entries coming from either Utah or 
California. |  
  
 		| An Heirloom Book of Mormon From Deseret Book |  | In celebration of our 135th anniversary, 
Deseret Book proudly presents an heirloom version of The Book of 
Mormon, being offered in Deseret Book stores nationwide for $79.95, 
regularly $99.95. Featuring paintings by Minerva Kohlhepp Teichert, 
this beautiful book includes pages for listing of family group 
records; places to record dates of births and blessings of children 
and grandchildren, baptisms, ordinations, marriages, and deaths. it 
also includes a brief analysis of and a story on the origin of the 
Book of Mormon |  
  
 		| Before the Restoration -- There Was The Revolution |  | The summer of 1777 was a difficult one for 
General George Washington and his poorly equiped and undisciplined 
Continental Army. With a force just half the size of the British 
Army, Washington could not survive a head-on battle with General 
Howe's readcoats. He could only hover, waiting to pick a favorable 
time and place. |  
 
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