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Show Rose (1/25/83) paEe 30 Mr. K }';r. R Mr. K Mr. R f.:r. K on the forwarO slope of the hill where we were not, or it went ove the top of the hill into the, I wouldn't say, the valley. So, her we were and thev hit thP. rill here, o!' it r,,rent over way down below and we could sit and watch the explosion, you see. I don't exactl~ ~dw w~at to say ... there wasn't anything dramatic about that thing Starting in a different area, we'll have to take a leap, it may br too eifficult .. ~aybe too personal. I'd like to talk to you abou intermarriage. Shoot. Well, most neople feel that it is very difficult; that intermarria creates a strain on relationship or a strain on people's identities or sense of self. You've, I guess, in a number of marriages you'v had have not been married to Jewish women. Excent the last one, and she's converted. I'd just li~e to ask you what ~ind of strain that put on you or has it ~ut any strain on you? I realize it's personal, but I feel I'm dealing with it in so~e way. ~Y first marriage never should have happened, but it did, and it w a horrible experience, in my opinion, for one very fine person, and that was the girl I married. She was very, very engrossed in her rel1g1on •• she was the great granddaughter of Orson Pratt. I don't know if I told you this or not, but he was the guy that determined the location of the crossing of the latitude and longitude lines over here on the southeast corner of Temple Square. I don't know if you knew that, but we do have a crossing of the lines there. ' . . _7 ~ !; -~ c - ' c. A ~~ survey came in, I don't know how many years later, and they deter~ined the intersection of the latitude and longitude lines |