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| | Ellen G. White-- Plagiarist |
 | | But they were indeed reprinted under another name, that of Ellen G. White, his wife, a few years after his death in 1881-but under the title The Great Controversy (1884). |
 | | Comparison shows that words, sentences, quotations, thoughts, ideas, structures, paragraphs, and even total pages were taken from James White's book to Ellen's book under a new title-with no blush of shame, no mention of her husband, no thanks to Uriah Smith and J. Andrews, for the hard work and theological insights of anyone. |
 | | Meanwhile, during those same years, the legend grew and grew and was "sold" and accepted that God had given Ellen exclusive and firsthand knowledge of his plans for the future events of the church and the world. |
| www.blessedquietness.com /journal/housechu/plagiarist.htm (7990 words) |
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