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#Indiana Baptist College
wutbju · 1 month
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Two lengthy articles here. One is typical Division of Music information, and the other sounds really odd in retrospect.
BJU Student Rank High On National Tests
Bob Jones University students have gained an enviable record in making unusually high scores each year on the National Teachers Examination and on the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants examination.
Last year the average mean score of the BJU students on the accountants examination was 25 per cent above the national average, and one-third of them scored above the 80th percentile. One student, Kenneth Burch of Fowler, Colo., ranked in the 96th percentile. Mr. Burch has accepted a position as a junior accountant with the New York office of Price, Waterhouse and Co., an international public accounting firm.
Kenneth Eugene Burch is a member of the Class of 1967. He married Jean Anna Hicks, a Home Ec major from the Class of 1968 in the Spring of 1968.
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According to Dean Laurence Lautenbach of the university's School of Business Administration, BJU students have taken the test for the past six years, and each year their scores have been well above the national average. The test is the form E, level II, 2-hour senior accounting examination.
Two BJU seniors ranked in the top one percent of the Nation on the National Teachers Examination last year, according to Dr. Walter G. Fremont, dean of the university's School of Education. Sixteen BJU students ranked in the top 10 per cent of the nation on the test.
Students scoring in the top one percent were Paul A. Loder of Flint, Mich, and Miss Laura J. Hadley of Cherry Creek, N.Y. Both were awarded graduate assistantships at BJU and are presently pursuing graduate degrees.
Paul Allen Loder was a Bible major but was scheduled to teach Math the next year. He married Sandra Gehman in June 1967.
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Loder did teach one year at BJU, and he now is at Indiana Baptist College.
Laura Jane Hadley was a Christian Education graduate in 1967, and she did teach for two years. And I can’t find her after that.
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This is the 17th consecutive year seniors in the School of Education at BJU have made scores higher than the national average on the NTE. The past year's average for the BJU seniors was 632, ranking them in the 60th percentile. The national average score was approximately 612.
Last year 96.6 per cent of the 116 students who took the test made scores sufficiently high for a grade A teaching certificate, according to the scale ot standards adopted by the South Carolina Education Department.
Similarly, on the advanced test in education of the graduate record examinations, BJU seniors majoring in this field consistently make an average score above the national aver-age. Last year the education students ranked above the 73rd percentile with an average score of 473 compared with the national average of approximately 418. Twenty-one students scored in the top 10 per cent in the nation.
In the past eight years, more than 1,000 BJU graduates have been certified and have taught in at least 42 states.
Music Teachers of S. C. Plan Meeting at BJU
The eighth annual convention of the South Carolina Music Teachers' Association and the Southeastern regional convention of the National Association of Teachers of Singing will be held Nov. 24 at Bob Jones University. In conjunction with these events. the South Carolina String Teachers Association will hold its annual meeting and workshop.
David Gibson, chairman of the piano department of Furman University, is president of the Music Teachers' Association; and Virgil Smith, chairman of the music department of Coker College, is first vice president and program chairman for the convention. John McCrae, chairman of the opera department of Converse College is president of the S. C. chapter of the National Association of Teachers of Singing; and Dr. Gail Gingery, chairman of the division of music, Bob Jones University, is program chairman for the meeting of the teachers of singing.
Many distinguished musicians will participate in the three-day events. Bruce Symonds, professor emeritus of Yale University, will serve as piano clinician, and will judge the piano auditions and play a recital in the Concert Center at 8 p. m., Nov. 2. Loren Withers, chairman of the piano department at Duke University, will present a workshop on modern methods in teaching piano technique.
Of special interest to pre-college teachers will be the work shop presented by David Carr Glover of Portsmouth, Va. Mr. Glover is considered one of the most successful composers of piano teaching material in the United States today. He will be assisted by two teachers from the Glover School of Music and Creative Arts in Portsmouth.
Dr. John Boda, professor of composition and theory at Florida State University, will present a theory workshop with emphasis on compositional devices in contemporary piano literature.
The National Association of Teachers of Singing will conduct regional auditions at all levels for the students of members. On Saturdav, Nov. 4, the regional competition for the singer of the year contest will be held. The finals of this contest will be held in Chicago in December. A nationally known vocal authority will be present as workshop consultant for the sessions to be held on Friday and Saturday.
On Friday evening, Nov. 3, the convention banquet will be held in the university's Dixon-McKenzie Dining Common when the speaker will be Dr. Maurice Hinson of Louisville, Ky., president, Southern Division, Music Teachers National Association.
More than 300 are expected to attend this convention, which is considered one of the outstanding events of the musical year in South Carolina and will draw delegates from the surrounding area.
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kemetic-dreams · 11 months
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Dr. Riley Andrew Ransom Sr. (1886-1951)
Dr. Riley Andrew Ransom, Sr., the founder of the first hospital for African Americans in Fort Worth, Texas, was born on March 9, 1886, in Columbus, Kentucky, to parents Allen and Alice Ransom. Ransom briefly attended Lane College in Tennessee then transferred to Southern Illinois State Normal University (now Southern Illinois University at Carbondale) where he earned his undergraduate degree.
Ransom attended Pharmaceutical College in Princeton, Indiana, and Louisville National Medical College in Louisville, Kentucky, from which he graduated in 1908 as valedictorian of his class. He did post-graduate work at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota.
After receiving his medical license in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, in 1909, Ransom started his medical practice in Brooksville, Oklahoma, where he worked for five years. In 1914 Ransom moved to Gainesville, Texas, where he established the Booker T. Washington Sanitarium. At that time Ransom was one of only 16 black doctors in Texas.
On June 3, 1915, Ransom married schoolteacher and graduate nurse Ethel Blanche Wilson of Gainesville, Texas. To this union one son, Riley Andrew Ransom, Jr., was born on March 12, 1915.
In 1918, Dr. Ransom moved the hospital to Fort Worth and added a Nurses’ Training School. The hospital was the first 20-bed facility for African Americans in Texas. It was also one of only three African-American owned hospitals in the United States accredited by the American Medical Association.
Booker T. Washington Hospital was known for its state-of-the-art medical equipment, fully equipped laboratory, a dining room, onsite food preparation area, and nurses’ quarters. Between 1925 and 1928 the facility was known as the Negro Baptist Hospital. In 1928 the name was changed to the Fort Worth Negro Hospital, and in 1938 Ransom renamed it the Ethel Ransom Memorial Hospital, in memory of his deceased wife.
Dr. Ransom was a member to the Fort Worth Branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the YMCA, Chairman of the Committee on Health and Sanitation, a Chairman of the Social Disease Committee of the Volunteer Health League, First-Aid Instructor for the American Red Cross of Tarrant County, and member of the Lone Star Medical Association. He was also a Mason.
Dr. Riley A. Ransom, Sr. died on January 4, 1951, in Houston, Texas. He was 64. His work in Fort Worth was continued by his son, Dr. Riley A. Ransom, Jr. The Ranson Memorial Hospital continued to serve the Fort Worth African American community until it closed in 1949.
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staghunters · 3 months
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hey hey! 2, 8, 12, 14
hoi hoi!
2. Oldest book you own (as in the one you received earliest in your life)
This one!
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I got it from my grandpa one pakjesavond (sinterklaas/the dutch boxing day) when I must've been around 8 years old? I can recommend it, though it is very much a children's book in that there is a lot of exposition that feels overdone at times. Still, it's got "fairy tales are real but a bit fucked up in this world", fairies with double agenda's, sibling love, a shapeshifter who's definitely queer in some way shape or form!!, and the main character is basically like an Indiana Jones but for fairy tale artefacts (hijinks included) on the background is this large-scale political conflict that makes it all very witcher-y.
You might know this author from Inkheart, btw! This one has also been translated into english.
8. Best cover
A tie between these two!
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I got them both last year on my bday credit at the store and haven't read either of them, but they look very nice. The Bale one is a hardcover that has gold details, but just the whole composition of it all is perfect.
12. Weirdest book you own
Definitely "The making of The African Queen, or, How I went to Africa with Bogart, Bacall, and Huston and almost lost my mind" by Katherine Hepburn.
I couldn't get it anywhere physically except as an second-hand library edition from the states (shoutout to Boston Baptist College Library!) but read it beforehand on internet archive because you can borrow it there for free! It's just a personal account of making a movie, but Katherine Hepburn is hilarious. It really reads like you're sitting with her and she has to vent about this stupid flick she did but wowza. Please let the following passage convince you to check it out. The full thing is only 150~ pages long.
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14. A book you love but wouldn’t really recommend to others
HEX by Thomas Olde Heuvelt! (I don't have the cover below but really like it so ordered it at work just now asjdkfhlsd)
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It was review bombed big time on Goodreads. On some points I could see the validity, but there's something really cool going on in here but that either doesn't translate well cross-culture, or is in general a bit ambiguous. The climax and ending is WILD. Not in a way of "wow some crazy fucked up shit happens here", which it kinda does, but I'm talking fucked up like a Hieronymus Bosch painting, and not like SAW.
I believe Olde Heuvelt did change some things to make it more understandable for american audiences, while sticking close to what he meant in the dutch version. Putting the town in the Hudson Valley as opposed to somewhere near Nijmegen makes sense, but still doesn't cover the typical "dutch small town" feeling from the original, particularly because of how densely populated my country is, making the whole curse that confines you to your super small old town forever till you die thing a lot more frustrating when everything modern and big is within a half hour drive.
Anyways, if you'd still want a rec: A town (name might vary but it's called Black Spring in the american edition) is haunted by the figure of a 17th century witch. the gist of her curse is that anyone who stays in the town for too long or is born there will have to stay till they die, only being able to leave for short amounts of time. Over the years there's been a sort of witch-watch task-force that keeps track of the witch's movements (she otherwise doesn't really do anything). All goes well until some teen boys want to fuck around for a nice video to post online.
Bookish Asks
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globalworship · 2 years
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Global Arts at EMS - Reconciliation: God's Mission through Missions for All
EMS NATIONAL CONFERENCE 
The Evangelical Missiological Society (EMS) will be at Dallas International University on Oct. 7 & 8, focusing on “Reconciliation: God's Mission through Missions for All.” 
Early-bird pricing ends August 31st, so don't wait to register—it gets expensive after that. An online (Zoom) option is available for those who can't join us in Dallas.
See the draft schedule with presentation titles and a link for registering here: https://www.emsweb.org/conferences/annual/
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Nine of the seminars and panels are related to the use of arts:
Finding the Key: A Cathartic Interactive Art Installation in Houston (Anya Ezhevskaya - Dallas International University)
Breaking Down the Social 'Walls' through Visual Storytelling - Interracial Christian Partnership in Indiana (Kersten Priest)
The Reconciliation Cycle: Lives of Sacrifice and Meaning (Matt Taylor - To Every Tribe)
Creatives and Their Communities: Reconciliation through the Arts (Matt Menger - SIL International)
The Eucharistic Bread: Brokenness to Oneness, Remembrance to Foretaste (Melanie Henderson - Dallas International University)
God and The Meals: Feeding and Reaching the Souls through the Liturgical Arts in A Reformed Chinese Church in Indonesia (Carolien Tantra - Southeast Asia Bible Seminary, Indonesia)
Reconciliation through Remembering: Memorials as Places of Integration and Healing (Lydia Hreniuc - Dallas International University)
Neuroscience and the Arts: How Barriers to Reconciliation can be Addressed through Arts and Trauma Healing (Karen Kornelsen, SIL)
(PANEL) Applying Ethnodoxology to the Ministry of Reconciliation: A Conversation among Theologians, Church Leaders, Missiologists, and Ethnodoxologists - Elsen Portugal-Facilitator (Champion Christian College & Global Ethnodoxology Network), with Dr. Karen Fancher (Multnomah Univ),  Dr. Miguel Lopez (Duncanville First Baptist Church pastor), Dr. Al Tizon (North Park Seminary), and some arts track presenters.
I know eight of the presenters and panelists, and highly recommend their seminars.
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And don’t forget that there’s a “Watch Party” option that’s good for groups watching together. The watch party price is for groups (like schools, classes, or organizations) who want to watch the conference in one room remotely.
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The event features plenary speakers like Dr. Tony Evans, Dr. Karen Fancher, and Dr. Al Tizon.
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lboogie1906 · 2 months
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Rev. Richard Henry Boyd (March 15, 1843 – August 22, 1922) was a minister and businessman who was the founder and head of the National Baptist Publishing Board and a founder of the National Baptist Convention of America, Inc.
He was born into slavery at the B. A. Gray plantation in Noxubee County, Mississippi. He was one of ten children of his mother, Indiana Dixon. He was originally named Dick Gray, having been given the surname of his slave master. He moved twice with his master’s household, to Lowndes County, Mississippi in 1848, and to Claiborne Parish, Louisiana in 1853.
In 1859 he was sold to Benoni W. Gray, who took him to a cotton plantation near Brenham in Washington County, Texas. During the American Civil War, he served Gray as a body servant in the Confederate Army. After Gray and his two eldest sons were killed and a third son was badly wounded in fighting near Chattanooga, he returned to Texas with the surviving son. He took over management of the Gray plantation, successfully producing and selling cotton. Following emancipation, he worked as a cowboy and in a sawmill. In 1867, he changed his name to Richard Henry Boyd; Richard (“Dick”) had been his grandfather’s first name, but there is no record of the reasons for the choice of his new middle name and surname.
He did not learn the alphabet until age 22 and began a process of self-education. He used Webster’s Blue-Backed Speller and McGuffey’s First Reader as texts and hired a white girl to teach him. In about 1869 or 1870 he enrolled in Bishop College. He attended Bishop for two years but did not graduate. He received honorary doctoral degrees from Guadalupe College and Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical State College.
He married Laura Thomas (1868), who died less than a year later. He married Harriett Albertine Moore (1871). #africanhistory365 #africanexcellence
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brookston · 3 months
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Holidays 1.26
Holidays
Australia Day
Bald Eagle Appreciation Day
Bessie Coleman Day
Day of Islam (Poland)
Dental Drill Appreciation Day
Discovery Day (Brazil)
Duarte Day (Dominican Republic)
Dungeons & Dragons Day
Engineer’s and Architect’s Day (Panama)
General Douglas MacArthur Day (Arkansas)
International Customs Day
International Day of Clean Energy
International Environmental Education Day
International Kawasaki Disease Awareness Day
Liberation Day (Uganda)
Lotus 1-2-3 Day
Multicultural Children’s Book Day
National Diane Day
National Ellen Degeneres Day
National Heroes Day (Cayman Islands)
National Ranboo Day
National #24 Day
Renewable Energy Day (Indiana)
Rocky Mountain National Park Day
Rum Rebellion Day (Australia)
Sexual Relations Day
Spouse’s Day
State Audit Service Day (Ukraine)
Television Day
Tinder Polypore Day (French Republic)
Toad Hollow Day of Encouragement
World Day for the Abolition of Meat
World Day of the Fisherman
Food & Drink Celebrations
International Sous Vide Day
National Green Juice Day
National Irish Soda Bread Day
National Peanut Brittle Day
National Pistachio Day
Spike the Punch Day
Stingray IPA Day
4th & Last Friday in January
Big Garden Birdwatch begins (UK) [Last Friday thru Sunday]
Earned Income Tax Credit Awareness Day [Last Friday]
EITC Awareness Day [Last Friday]
Fry Day (Pastafarian; Fritism) [Every Friday]
Great Mental Health Day (London) [Last Friday]
International Fun at Work [Last Friday]
National Activity Professionals Day [4th Friday]
National Big Wig Day [Last Friday]
National Have Fun at Work Day (a.k.a. Fun At Work Day) [Last Friday]
Newman Day (a.k.a. Newman's Day, 24 hours in a day, 24 beers in a case. Coincidence? I think not.) [Bates College] (Friday nearest 1.26) [also 3.30 & 4.24]
Preschool Health and Fitness Day [Last Friday]
Stout & Chowder Festival (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) [Last Friday]
Independence & Related Days
Foundation Day (Australia)
Hong Kong (Proclaimed British Sovereign Territory; 1841)
Michigan Statehood Day (#26; 1837)
NRM Liberation Day (Uganda)
Recognition of the Republic of Latvia (Latvijas Republikas Atzīšana; Latvia)
Republic Day (India)
Suttornland (Declared; 2021) [unrecognized]
Virginia (Readmitted to Union; 1870)
Festivals Beginning January 26, 2024
Ann Arbor Folk Festival (Ann Arbor, Michigan) [thru 1.27]
Aukland Folk Festival (Aukland, New Zealand) [thru 1.29]
Baltimore Restaurant Week (Baltimore, Maryland) [thru 2.4]
Delhi Republic Day Parade (New Delhi, India)
First Taste Oregon (Salem, Oregon) [thru 1.27]
Göteborg Film Festival (Gothenburg, Sweden) [thru 2.4]
Hippologica Berlin (Berlin, Germany) [thru 1.28]
Lakeland Pigfest (Lakeland, Florida) [thru 1.27]
Meltdown Winter Ice Festival (Richmond, Indiana) [thru 1.27]
Mighty Hoopla Big Weekender (Bognor Regis, UK) [thru 1.29]
Mobile Mardi Gras (Mobile, Alabama) [thru 2.13]
Montana Winter Fair (Lewistown, Montana) [thru 1.28]
Naples Winter Wine Festival (Naples, Florida) [thru 1.28]
Sarasota Seafood & Music Festival (Sarasota, Florida) [thru 1.28]
Feast Days
Alberic (Christian; Saint)
Beat the January Blues Day (Starza Pagan Book of Days)
Cernunnos’ Day (Celtic God of the Wild; Master of the Animals; Celtic Book of Days)
Conon (Christian; Saint)
Dévote's Day (Monaco; Saint)
End of the Fifth Quarter of the Ninth Dozen of the Thirteenth Set (Shamanism)
Enki’s Day (Pagan)
Eystein (Christian; Saint)
Founders of Cîteaux (Alberic of Cîteaux, Robert of Molesme, Stephen Harding)
Gabriele Allegra (Christian; Blessed)
Giovanni Lanfranco (Artology)
John the Baptist (Positivist; Saint)
Kees van Dongen (Artology)
Margaret of Hungary (Christian; Virgin)
Paula (Christian; Saint)
Pilar (Muppetism)
Polycarp (Christian; Martyr)
Powamu begins (a.k.a. Bean Dance Ceremony; Hopi) [8 Days; thru 2.3]
Rum Rebellion Day (Pastafarian)
Rupprecht Geiger (Artology)
Sailing of Anubis (Ancient Egypt)
Steve Jackson Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
St. John the Baptist (Positivist; Saint)
String Appreciation Day (Pastafarian)
Timothy and Titus (Christian; Saints)
Titus (Christian; Saint)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Fortunate Day (Pagan) [4 of 53]
Sakimake (先負 Japan) [Bad luck in the morning, good luck in the afternoon.]
Tycho Brahe Lucky Day (Scandinavia) [1 of 4]
Premieres
Bowling (Atari 2600 Video Game; 1979)
Bridge Over Troubled Waters, by Simon & Garfunkel (Album; 1970)
Catch and Release (Film; 2017)
The Clock Watcher (Disney Cartoon; 1945)
Così Fan Tutte, by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (Opera; 1790)
Der Rosenkavalier, by Richard Staruss (Comic Opera; 1911)
Don’t Shoot Me, I’m Only the Piano Player (Album; 1973)
Don’t Stop Me Now, by Queen (Song; 1979)
Eddie the Eagle (Film; 2016)
Edgar Runs Again (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1940)
The Dukes of Hazzard (TV Series; 1979)
Gormenghast, by Mervyn Peake (Novel; 1950) [Gormenghast #2]
Hello, I’m Johnny Cash, by Johnny Cash (Album; 1970)
Jimmy Kimmel Live! (TV Talk Show; 2003)
Maze Runner: The Death Cure (Film; 2018)
Mickey Spillane’s Mike Hammer (TV Series; 1984)
The Mouse Exterminator (Phantasies Cartoon; 1940)
Need You Now, by Lady Antebellum (Album; 2010)
Notes on a Scandal (Film; 2007)
The Phantom of the Opera (Broadway Musical; 1988)
Philip José Farmer (Writerism)
Poker Face (TV Series; 2023)
Pop-Pie a la Mode (Fleischer/Famous Popeye Cartoon; 1945)
Riverdale (TV Series; 2017)
Scrambled Aches (WB LT Cartoon; 1957)
Seal on the Loose (Woody Woodpecker Cartoon; 1970)
Shōgun, by James Clavell (Novel; 1975)
Sugar & Spice (Film; 2001)
The Three Bears (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1934)
Twelve O’Clock High (Film; 1950)
Volver (Film; 2007)
Today’s Name Days
Paula, Timotheus, Titus (Austria)
Bogoljub, Paula, Timotej, Tit, Tonka (Croatia)
Zora (Czech Republic)
Polycarpus (Denmark)
Ulve, Ulvi (Estonia)
Joonatan (Finland)
Paule, Pauline, Timothé (France)
Paula, Timotheus, Titus (Germany)
Xenofon (Greece)
Paula, Vanda (Hungary)
Paola, Timoteo, Tito (Italy)
Agnis, Ansis (Latvia)
Daugis, Eigilė, Justas, Rimantas (Lithuania)
Esten, Øystein (Norway)
Paula, Paulina, Polikarp, Skarbimir, Wanda (Poland)
Arcadie, Ioan, Iosif, Maria, Xenofont (Romania)
Tamara (Slovakia)
Paula, Timoteo, Tito (Spain)
Bodil, Boel (Sweden)
Arkad, Arkadiy, May, Maya (Ukraine)
Aubrey, Conan, Coner, Conner, Connor, Conor, Gonzalo, Paola, Paula, Paulette, Paulina, Pauline (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 26 of 2024; 340 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 5 of week 4 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Luis (Rowan) [Day 6 of 28]
Chinese: Month 12 (Yi-Chou), Day 16 (Ji-Chou)
Chinese Year of the: Rabbit 4721 (until February 10, 2024)
Hebrew: 16 Shevat 5784
Islamic: 15 Rajab 1445
J Cal: 26 White; Fryday [26 of 30]
Julian: 13 January 2024
Moon: 99%: Waning Gibbous
Positivist: 26 Moses (1st Month) [St. John the Baptist]
Runic Half Month: Elhaz (Elk) [Day 2 of 15]
Season: Winter (Day 37 of 89)
Zodiac: Capricorn (Day 5 of 28)
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brookstonalmanac · 3 months
Text
Holidays 1.26
Holidays
Australia Day
Bald Eagle Appreciation Day
Bessie Coleman Day
Day of Islam (Poland)
Dental Drill Appreciation Day
Discovery Day (Brazil)
Duarte Day (Dominican Republic)
Dungeons & Dragons Day
Engineer’s and Architect’s Day (Panama)
General Douglas MacArthur Day (Arkansas)
International Customs Day
International Day of Clean Energy
International Environmental Education Day
International Kawasaki Disease Awareness Day
Liberation Day (Uganda)
Lotus 1-2-3 Day
Multicultural Children’s Book Day
National Diane Day
National Ellen Degeneres Day
National Heroes Day (Cayman Islands)
National Ranboo Day
National #24 Day
Renewable Energy Day (Indiana)
Rocky Mountain National Park Day
Rum Rebellion Day (Australia)
Sexual Relations Day
Spouse’s Day
State Audit Service Day (Ukraine)
Television Day
Tinder Polypore Day (French Republic)
Toad Hollow Day of Encouragement
World Day for the Abolition of Meat
World Day of the Fisherman
Food & Drink Celebrations
International Sous Vide Day
National Green Juice Day
National Irish Soda Bread Day
National Peanut Brittle Day
National Pistachio Day
Spike the Punch Day
Stingray IPA Day
4th & Last Friday in January
Big Garden Birdwatch begins (UK) [Last Friday thru Sunday]
Earned Income Tax Credit Awareness Day [Last Friday]
EITC Awareness Day [Last Friday]
Fry Day (Pastafarian; Fritism) [Every Friday]
Great Mental Health Day (London) [Last Friday]
International Fun at Work [Last Friday]
National Activity Professionals Day [4th Friday]
National Big Wig Day [Last Friday]
National Have Fun at Work Day (a.k.a. Fun At Work Day) [Last Friday]
Newman Day (a.k.a. Newman's Day, 24 hours in a day, 24 beers in a case. Coincidence? I think not.) [Bates College] (Friday nearest 1.26) [also 3.30 & 4.24]
Preschool Health and Fitness Day [Last Friday]
Stout & Chowder Festival (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) [Last Friday]
Independence & Related Days
Foundation Day (Australia)
Hong Kong (Proclaimed British Sovereign Territory; 1841)
Michigan Statehood Day (#26; 1837)
NRM Liberation Day (Uganda)
Recognition of the Republic of Latvia (Latvijas Republikas Atzīšana; Latvia)
Republic Day (India)
Suttornland (Declared; 2021) [unrecognized]
Virginia (Readmitted to Union; 1870)
Festivals Beginning January 26, 2024
Ann Arbor Folk Festival (Ann Arbor, Michigan) [thru 1.27]
Aukland Folk Festival (Aukland, New Zealand) [thru 1.29]
Baltimore Restaurant Week (Baltimore, Maryland) [thru 2.4]
Delhi Republic Day Parade (New Delhi, India)
First Taste Oregon (Salem, Oregon) [thru 1.27]
Göteborg Film Festival (Gothenburg, Sweden) [thru 2.4]
Hippologica Berlin (Berlin, Germany) [thru 1.28]
Lakeland Pigfest (Lakeland, Florida) [thru 1.27]
Meltdown Winter Ice Festival (Richmond, Indiana) [thru 1.27]
Mighty Hoopla Big Weekender (Bognor Regis, UK) [thru 1.29]
Mobile Mardi Gras (Mobile, Alabama) [thru 2.13]
Montana Winter Fair (Lewistown, Montana) [thru 1.28]
Naples Winter Wine Festival (Naples, Florida) [thru 1.28]
Sarasota Seafood & Music Festival (Sarasota, Florida) [thru 1.28]
Feast Days
Alberic (Christian; Saint)
Beat the January Blues Day (Starza Pagan Book of Days)
Cernunnos’ Day (Celtic God of the Wild; Master of the Animals; Celtic Book of Days)
Conon (Christian; Saint)
Dévote's Day (Monaco; Saint)
End of the Fifth Quarter of the Ninth Dozen of the Thirteenth Set (Shamanism)
Enki’s Day (Pagan)
Eystein (Christian; Saint)
Founders of Cîteaux (Alberic of Cîteaux, Robert of Molesme, Stephen Harding)
Gabriele Allegra (Christian; Blessed)
Giovanni Lanfranco (Artology)
John the Baptist (Positivist; Saint)
Kees van Dongen (Artology)
Margaret of Hungary (Christian; Virgin)
Paula (Christian; Saint)
Pilar (Muppetism)
Polycarp (Christian; Martyr)
Powamu begins (a.k.a. Bean Dance Ceremony; Hopi) [8 Days; thru 2.3]
Rum Rebellion Day (Pastafarian)
Rupprecht Geiger (Artology)
Sailing of Anubis (Ancient Egypt)
Steve Jackson Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
St. John the Baptist (Positivist; Saint)
String Appreciation Day (Pastafarian)
Timothy and Titus (Christian; Saints)
Titus (Christian; Saint)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Fortunate Day (Pagan) [4 of 53]
Sakimake (先負 Japan) [Bad luck in the morning, good luck in the afternoon.]
Tycho Brahe Lucky Day (Scandinavia) [1 of 4]
Premieres
Bowling (Atari 2600 Video Game; 1979)
Bridge Over Troubled Waters, by Simon & Garfunkel (Album; 1970)
Catch and Release (Film; 2017)
The Clock Watcher (Disney Cartoon; 1945)
Così Fan Tutte, by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (Opera; 1790)
Der Rosenkavalier, by Richard Staruss (Comic Opera; 1911)
Don’t Shoot Me, I’m Only the Piano Player (Album; 1973)
Don’t Stop Me Now, by Queen (Song; 1979)
Eddie the Eagle (Film; 2016)
Edgar Runs Again (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1940)
The Dukes of Hazzard (TV Series; 1979)
Gormenghast, by Mervyn Peake (Novel; 1950) [Gormenghast #2]
Hello, I’m Johnny Cash, by Johnny Cash (Album; 1970)
Jimmy Kimmel Live! (TV Talk Show; 2003)
Maze Runner: The Death Cure (Film; 2018)
Mickey Spillane’s Mike Hammer (TV Series; 1984)
The Mouse Exterminator (Phantasies Cartoon; 1940)
Need You Now, by Lady Antebellum (Album; 2010)
Notes on a Scandal (Film; 2007)
The Phantom of the Opera (Broadway Musical; 1988)
Philip José Farmer (Writerism)
Poker Face (TV Series; 2023)
Pop-Pie a la Mode (Fleischer/Famous Popeye Cartoon; 1945)
Riverdale (TV Series; 2017)
Scrambled Aches (WB LT Cartoon; 1957)
Seal on the Loose (Woody Woodpecker Cartoon; 1970)
Shōgun, by James Clavell (Novel; 1975)
Sugar & Spice (Film; 2001)
The Three Bears (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1934)
Twelve O’Clock High (Film; 1950)
Volver (Film; 2007)
Today’s Name Days
Paula, Timotheus, Titus (Austria)
Bogoljub, Paula, Timotej, Tit, Tonka (Croatia)
Zora (Czech Republic)
Polycarpus (Denmark)
Ulve, Ulvi (Estonia)
Joonatan (Finland)
Paule, Pauline, Timothé (France)
Paula, Timotheus, Titus (Germany)
Xenofon (Greece)
Paula, Vanda (Hungary)
Paola, Timoteo, Tito (Italy)
Agnis, Ansis (Latvia)
Daugis, Eigilė, Justas, Rimantas (Lithuania)
Esten, Øystein (Norway)
Paula, Paulina, Polikarp, Skarbimir, Wanda (Poland)
Arcadie, Ioan, Iosif, Maria, Xenofont (Romania)
Tamara (Slovakia)
Paula, Timoteo, Tito (Spain)
Bodil, Boel (Sweden)
Arkad, Arkadiy, May, Maya (Ukraine)
Aubrey, Conan, Coner, Conner, Connor, Conor, Gonzalo, Paola, Paula, Paulette, Paulina, Pauline (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 26 of 2024; 340 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 5 of week 4 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Luis (Rowan) [Day 6 of 28]
Chinese: Month 12 (Yi-Chou), Day 16 (Ji-Chou)
Chinese Year of the: Rabbit 4721 (until February 10, 2024)
Hebrew: 16 Shevat 5784
Islamic: 15 Rajab 1445
J Cal: 26 White; Fryday [26 of 30]
Julian: 13 January 2024
Moon: 99%: Waning Gibbous
Positivist: 26 Moses (1st Month) [St. John the Baptist]
Runic Half Month: Elhaz (Elk) [Day 2 of 15]
Season: Winter (Day 37 of 89)
Zodiac: Capricorn (Day 5 of 28)
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faithnfrivolity · 5 months
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gl-cult-archives · 8 months
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Fundamentalist Organizations and Fundamentalist Leaders
I've never seen someone piece together all the influences and interacting organizations in fundamentalism. I'm honored to have discovered it and archived it on this blog. (Original Post) Text from post pasted below.
Today we are continuing on in our quest to understand, as far as possible, the isolated and puzzling world of the IFB. It is my contention that fundamentalism/legalism is on the rise in many denominations and independent churches. I contend that this is due to a group of Calvinistas who have gained some prominence in the neo-evangelical world. For example, Al Mohler, president of SBTS, the flagship seminary of the SBC, is part of this movement. He is currently dedicated to establishing Young Earth Creationism as the only theologically viable Christian position.
What are the colleges of the IFB? Link
Arlington Baptist College (Arlington, Texas)
Biblical Institute for Theological Preparation (Amman, Jordan)
Baptist Bible College (Springfield, Missouri)
Boston Baptist College (Boston, Massachusetts)
Chesapeake Baptist College (Severn, Maryland)
Crown College (Powell, Tennessee)
Detroit Baptist Theological Seminary (Allen Park, Michigan)
Faith Baptist Bible College (Ankeny, Iowa)
Golden State Baptist College (Santa Clara, California)
Heartland Baptist Bible College (Oklahoma City, Oklahoma)
Hyles-Anderson College (Lake County, Indiana)
International Baptist College (Tempe, Arizona)
International Bible College (Stony Brook, New York)
Louisiana Baptist University (Shreveport, Louisiana)
Maranatha Baptist Bible College (Watertown, Wisconsin)
Midwestern Baptist College (Pontiac, Michigan)
Mountain States Baptist College (Great Falls, Montana)
Northland Baptist Bible College (Dunbar, Wisconsin)
Pacific Baptist College (Pomona, California)[1]
Pensacola Christian College (Pensacola, Florida)
Piedmont Baptist College (Winston-Salem, North Carolina)
Pillsbury Baptist Bible College (Owatonna, Minnesota)
Tabernacle Baptist College (Greenville, South Carolina)
Tennessee Temple University (Chattanooga, Tennessee)
Texas Baptist College (Longview, Texas)
Trinity Baptist College (Jacksonville, Florida)
Trinity Valley Baptist Seminary and College (Kennedale, Texas)
West Coast Baptist College (Lancaster, California)
Why does it matter?
One of our readers, Tikatu provided the following insightful comment.
"True, they don’t belong to a “convention” and send messengers to a meeting each year. And they don’t make up a “denomination” that has oversight beyond the churches themselves. What they do have is a loose network, usually centered around the universities that teach the preachers.
Each of these networks has a slightly different “flavor”. Within the networks they share mission boards, camps, school associations, and quite often each faction is at odds with the others. For example, Bob Jones University people look down on Hyles-Anderson graduates, and Pensacola Christian preachers think poorly of Northland grads. Which is why those who are upset by the 20/20 exposé are accusing it of “painting with a wide brush”. I say that you need a wide brush to hit all the various different factions found in the IFB movement. They wouldn’t lump themselves all together, but looking in from the outside, there’s little difference to be seen."
There is a blog dedicated to exposing issues the IFB and other legalistic venues called Fallen From Grace. Link. Please note the dig at the SBC. Said blogger understands that things are hardly pristine in the SBC and gives testimony to my contention that fundamentalism/legalism is a pox that runs through many denominations. Sadly, this blogger, who was a pastor in this group of churches, is now an atheist
“… there is a behind the scenes connection between IFB Churches. While there is no such thing as an IFB denomination, churches do fellowship and unite around a particular college and groups like Bill Gothard, the Sword of the Lord, the Baptist Bible Fellowship, Independent Baptist Fellowship, and the Southwide Baptist Fellowship. (to name a few) They even have their own discussion forum, The Fighting Fundamentalist Forum.
Pastors support the college they attended and they tend to support missionaries and ministries associated with their alma mater and whatever particular fellowship group they are a part of. These associations are every bit as denominational as churches associated with the Southern Baptist Convention. (another group that is rife with abuse )
If a pastor gets crossways with the college he attended or fellow pastors he fellowships with, he can find himself ostracized and, in some cases, unable to find a church to pastor. (which is one reason IFB pastors start new churches).”
What is The Sword of the Lord?
This is a publishing house within the IFB. It publishes a newspaper, books and pamphlets. Dr Shelton Smith and two men who were fortunate to marry Smith’s two daughters currently run it. Link.
What is the Fighting Fundamentalist Forum? Link
This is an interesting discussion board. There are separate chat rooms for each college, which may indicate that each college has it own distinctives. There is a chat room for men only that appears to concentrate on gun ownership and one for women that had a rip-roaring discussion going on the best chicken spaghetti recipes.
Let’s take a look at two groups to understand how these affiliations between churches develop. There are a number of other such groups but I chose these two to demonstrate the points that Tikatu and others are making. Although these quotes are from Wikipedia, one can confirm this history on many IFB sites
What is Bible Baptist Fellowship? Link
“The Baptist Bible Fellowship International (BBFI) is a fellowship of Baptist pastors formed in 1950 by members who separated from the World Baptist Fellowship. BBFI Headquarters are in Springfield, Missouri. In 2004, BBFI reported 4,500 congregations and 1.2 million members in North America, with over 10,000 churches worldwide.[1]
Approximately 100 pastors and missionaries were led of God to begin this new Baptist movement that would emphasize a worldwide church planting ministry. They chose Springfield as their headquarters and started the Baptist Bible College, the Baptist Bible Tribune, a clearinghouse for missionary support, and this fellowship of like-minded churches and individuals."
What is the World Baptist Fellowship? Link
“The Fundamentals was a series of twelve articles defending the 'fundamentals' of the faith, such as the inerrancy of the Bible, the virgin birth of Christ and the literal return of Christ. In 1920 Curtis Lee Laws, a Baptist editor of The Watchman-Examiner, coined the term 'fundamentalist' and defined a fundamentalist as one "ready to do battle royal for the Fundamentals of the faith." J. Frank Norris became a combatant in the fundamentalist/modernist controversy. He edited a paper entitled The Fundamentalist. Both the Southern Baptist Convention and the Baptist General Convention of Texas expelled Norris because of his controversial behavior.
Norris, C. P. Staley and others formed the Premillennial Missionary Baptist Fellowship in 1933 at Fort Worth, Texas. In 1938, the name was changed to World Fundamental Baptist Missionary Fellowship and then to World Baptist Fellowship (WBF) after the schism that created the Baptist Bible Fellowship International in 1950. The WBF was again divided in 1984, when a group led by Raymond W. Barber established the Independent Baptist Fellowship International and the Norris Bible Baptist Institute.”
Note the following characteristics of these two groups:
Both groups established their own colleges.
Both have churches affiliated with each group.
Both believe that God called them to start these groups even though it involved disunity. One of the groups has experienced a second “schism.”
Here are some observations of the IFB.
Most believe in KJVO Bible.
Most share similar views of societal standards such as rules for interpersonal relationships, dress, etc.
Most practice extreme separatism.
So, what’s the difference. I believe that Tikatu’s comment is most incisive. These groups center around personalities such as preachers, which, by default, implies the colleges that these pastors attended. In other words, their differences are not based on Biblical standards, per se. In fact, this sort of affiliation is not unlike basketball in NC. One supports only one of the following: The Duke Blue Devils, UNC Tarheels, or the NC State Wolfpack.
The IFB has churches that affiliate with one another but there does not seem to be much functional difference in the day to day life of these groups and their churches. The most telling testimony to the similarities of all these churches, regardless of affiliation, are in the IFB survivors groups. In TWW’s opinion, survivor’s groups on the internet have done the faithful a great service. Instead of hiding abuse in a dark corner, they shout the pain and the light shines.
We highly recommend that you visit the following Facebook group called “Independent Fundamental Baptist (IFB) Cult Survivors (and their Supporters).” Link.
The first page included the following information. I did not include all of the examples which can be found at the site. “If you grew up indoctrinated under the aberrant religious teachings of Bob Jones University, Pensacola Christian College, Hyles Anderson College, or ATI (Bill Gothard) and are no longer "one of them," you understand the need for this group.”
“You're familiar with most if not all of the following:
King James Onlyism
The Bible says, 'Touch Not God's Anointed' and that means ME!"
“Let me tell you something big boy, you rebel against your parents and you go down across town to that Southern Baptist Church and let me tell you something, you've stepped out of the will of God! You hear me? You just want to hear that mamby, pamby preaching from those preachers who water down the gospel of Jesus Christ and that is nothing more than your rebellious heart crying out in your SIN!"
“Billy Graham has done more damage to the cause of Christ than any other man alive! He's a heretic!"
"I don't care if she says she was beaten and molested. She's just BITTER!"
"Well, good, godly men get accused falsely of molestation all the time now-a-days by people who hate what they stand for."
"I don't care if she was 15 and he was 50, she was well known for wearing provocative clothing. And how do we really know who is telling the truth"?
"Black people have the 'mark of Cain'."
"Any counseling by a professional psychologist is of the devil! I don't care if they claim to be a Christian. If they are licensed and not a part of our group, they are not godly counselors. They are secular humanists ready and waiting to accuse every good man of doing something wrong. They want to see the destruction of the true church!"
Your parents inscripted Bible verses in the wooden "rod" they used to beat you with.
"Santa is really Satan in disguise!"
You were a guy/girl beaten mercilessly in an unlicensed group home.
You ran away from one of these group homes.
You were one of the girls sent to a group home for "rebellion," but all you really wanted was to simply wear a pair of pants.
No mixed swimming.
Culottes
Chick Tracts
You may also fit into the group well if you once attended or were reared/trained under materials available through:
Bob Jones University (Greenville, SC)
Pensacola Christian College (Pensacola, FL)
Hyles-Anderson College (Hammond, IN)
Advanced Training Institute-Bill Gothard
Quiverfull
Vision Forum
Above Rubies
Creation Research Institute
The Wilds Christian Camp
The Bill Rice Ranch
The Roloff Homes
No Greater Joy
Your spiritual gurus at one time in your life were most likely:
Bob Jones Jr.
John R. Rice
Jack Hyles
Jack Schaap
Bill Gothard
Doug Phillips
Kent Hovind
Michael Pearl
Ron Comfort
Jim Bob and Michelle Duggar
Fred Phelps (Westboro Baptist Church)
Or any other man who received a phony doctorate from one of the "colleges/universities" in the IFB.”
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Without leaving the campus sparks from the Asbury Revival are spreading like wildfire across the nation. The Holy Spirit is crossing state borders and national boundaries as He crosses denominational lines. A growing list of schools, churches, ministries and nations impacted by the outpouring of the Holy Spirit includes but is not limited to: GROUND ZERO — Asbury University (Wilmore, Kentucky); ✓Man of War Church (Lexington, Kentucky); ✓Arise Assembly of God Church (Brandon, Florida); ✓University of Cumberland (Williamsburg, Kentucky); ✓Samford University (Homewood, Alabama); ✓Pulse Evangelistic Ministry (Minneapolis, Minnesota); ✓Lee University (Cleveland, Tennessee); ✓Bethel Church (Redding, California); ✓Cedarville University (Cedarville, Ohio); ✓Fruitland Baptist College (Hendersonville, North Carolina); ✓Ohio Christian University (Circleville, Ohio); ✓King’s Way Church (Irondale, Alabama); ✓Campbellsville University (Campbellsville, Kentucky); ✓the River Church at Tampa Bay (Mango, Florida); ✓New Day Church (Paso Robles, California); ✓Colorado Christian University (Lakewood, Colorado); ✓Eastern Kentucky University (Richmond, Kentucky); ✓Eastern Nazarene University (Quincy, Massachusetts); ✓Georgetown University (Washington, DC); ✓God’s Bible College (Cincinnati, Ohio); ✓Indiana Wesleyan University (Marion, Indiana); ✓Hope College (Holland, Michigan); ✓Kentucky Mountain Bible College (Jackson, Kentucky); ✓Calvary Christian Center (Ormond Beach, Florida); ✓Heritage Fellowship Church (Florence, Kentucky); ✓Rock of Ages Church (Vine Grove, Kentucky); ✓Belmont University (Nashville, Tennessee); ✓Midway University (Midway, Kentucky); ✓Mount Vernon University (Mount Vernon, Ohio); ✓Olivet Nazarene University (Bourbonnais, Illinois); ✓Oral Roberts University (Tulsa, Oklahoma); ✓Greater Life Apostolic Church (Lake Charles, Louisiana); ✓The Ramp School of Ministry (Hamilton, Alabama); ✓Life Church (Little Rock, Arkansas); ✓New Beginnings Baptist Church (Longview, Texas); ✓Jackson High School (Jackson, Georgia); ✓Bethel Church (Austin, Texas); ✓Park Hill Church (Kansas City, Missouri); ✓Kingdom Life Church (Oakville, Maine); ✓Christ for the Nations Institute (Dallas, Texas); ✓Cornerstone University (Grand Rapids, Michigan); ✓Spring Arbor University (Spring Arbor, Michigan); ✓The Gate Church (Charlotte, North Carolina); ✓Phoenix Community Ministry (Athens, Georgia); and ✓Ottawa University (Surprise, Arizona).
There are also reports that revival is spreading
https://beforeitsnews.com/christian-news/2023/02/asbury-revival-update-4-the-campus-churches-and-community-are-overwhelmed-by-the-swelling-crowds-2613932.html
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academyguide · 2 years
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[ad_1] online MBA programs USAAuburn University Baker CollegeBellevue University Capella University Colorado State University Dallas Baptist University Drexel UniversityLeBow College of BusinessDuke UniversityFuqua School of BusinessGolden Gate University Indiana University Kelley School of BusinessInternational School of Information Management Jones International University Keller Graduate School of Management Marylhurst UniversityNational UniversityNova Southeastern UniversityOhio UniversityMBA Without BoundariesOld Dominion University Pace UniversityPortland State UniversityPfeiffer University Purdue University Krannert School of Management Regis University Suffolk UniversitySawyer School of Management Syracuse University School of Management Tiffin UniversityUniversity of Baltimore, Merrick School of Business University of Colorado, Colorado Springs University of DallasUniversity of FloridaUniversity of Maryland University College University of Missouri, St. Louis University of Phoenix University of South Alabama Mitchell College of Business University of Texas TeleCampus University of Wisconsin, Whitewater [ad_2] Source link
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wutbju · 5 months
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Hobart V. Bell, Sr., 91, of Indiana went to his heavenly home on Saturday, January 21, 2023 where he joined his Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. He passed on at Indiana Square where he had resided for several weeks.
Born in Bells Landing, Clearfield County on August 21, 1931, he was the son of the late Frampton Bell and Mary (Bennett) Bell. Hobart married the love of his life, Juanita M. “Neet” (Villella) Bell on June 29, 1957. They were married nearly 63 years.
Hobart was a graduate of Curwensville High School and Indiana State Teachers College. He served his country in the United States Army in the Korean Conflict. As a young man, he combined his hard work ethic, along with his knowledge, ingenuity, and faith in God to successfully operate several small businesses. He later was known by many as the owner and operator of the Executive House Furniture in Indiana. Hobart also worked alongside his wife and son, Hobart Jr. at the furniture store renowned for fine furnishings, accessories, custom draperies, and flooring. Hobart also loved flowers and became known for the colorful and vibrant floral arrangements he designed for every season.
He focused on his family and his faith. He loved to read the Bible and made it a yearly priority to read the Bible from beginning to end. He was a longtime member of the Calvary Baptist Church in Clymer. He also was a board member of Bob Jones University in Greenville, SC.
Hobart was an excellent cook who loved to make specialty dishes for his family and friends.
Hobart and Juanita included their family in nearly everything they did. They celebrated birthdays and holidays together. They traveled on vacations together taking several European trips, various locations in the U.S. and two trips to the Holy Land. In short, they had a very close and loving family. He treasured his close relationships to his family, especially his four granddaughters.
Hobart is survived by his children: Cindy (Sam Shirley) and Hobart Bell, Jr. (Wendy) all of Indiana. His four granddaughters: Abigail (Dr. Matthew Middler) of Loyall, KY, Hannah Shirley of Greensburg, PA, Jessica (Nicholas DiGiorgio) of Charlottesville, VA and Julia Bell of Washington, DC. He is also survived by his sister, Dolores Spencer of Grampion, PA and niece Kim (Tom Petrie) and nephews Shane and Shad Spencer.
He was preceded in death by his wife and parents.
Pastor Stephen Stockton will officiate his funeral service, Saturday, January 28th at noon at the Calvary Baptist Church, Route 286, Clymer. Visitation will be held Saturday morning from 10:00 a.m. until noon, the time of service at the church. Burial will be at the Oliveburg Cemetery, Oliveburg, PA. Service arrangements are with the Rairigh-Bence Funeral Home & Crematory of Indiana.
Memorial donations may be made to the Calvary Baptist Church, 11394 Route 286 Hwy E., Clymer, PA 15728, the Independent Baptist Church, 123 Bridge St., Blairsville, PA 15717 or Bob Jones University, 1700 Wade Hampton Blvd, Greenville, SC 29609
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knudsen42goodwin · 2 years
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kent63dorsey · 2 years
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Chanel Cc Logo Belt
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aroundfortwayne · 3 years
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Mad Ants make four selections in NBA G League Draft
New Post has been published on https://aroundfortwayne.com/news/2021/10/24/mad-ants-make-four-selections-in-nba-g-league-draft/
Mad Ants make four selections in NBA G League Draft
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The Fort Wayne Mad Ants, the NBA G League affiliate of the Indiana Pacers, selected four players in Saturday’s NBA G League Draft.
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lboogie1906 · 1 year
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Richard Henry Boyd (March 15, 1843 – August 22, 1922) was a minister and businessman who was the founder and head of the National Baptist Publishing Board and a founder of the National Baptist Convention of America, Inc. He was born into slavery at the B. A. Gray plantation in Noxubee County, Mississippi. He was one of ten children of his mother, Indiana Dixon. He was originally named Dick Gray, having been given the surname of his slave master. He moved twice with his master's household, to Lowndes County, Mississippi in 1848, and to Claiborne Parish, Louisiana in 1853. In 1859 he was sold to Benoni W. Gray, who took him to a cotton plantation near Brenham in Washington County, Texas. During the American Civil War, he served Gray as a body servant in the Confederate Army. After Gray and his two eldest sons were killed and a third son was badly wounded in fighting near Chattanooga, he returned to Texas with the surviving son. He took over management of the Gray plantation, successfully producing and selling cotton. Following emancipation, he worked as a cowboy and in a sawmill. In 1867, he changed his name to Richard Henry Boyd; Richard ("Dick") had been his grandfather's first name, but there is no record of the reasons for the choice of his new middle name and surname. He did not learn the alphabet until age 22 and began a process of self-education. He used Webster's Blue-Backed Speller and McGuffey's First Reader as texts and hired a white girl to teach him. In about 1869 or 1870 he enrolled in Bishop College. He attended Bishop for two years but did not graduate. He received honorary doctoral degrees from Guadalupe College and Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical State College. He married Laura Thomas (1868), who died less than a year later. He married Harriett Albertine Moore (1871). #africanhistory365 #africanexcellence https://www.instagram.com/p/CpzyS7sro7Q/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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