Ed Dodds - Revangel

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Ed Dodds - Revangel

Ed Dodds - Revangel

@project_network

This is where I concentrate on the great global grid

Nashville, TN USA Se unió Ocak 2011
4.4K Siguiendo624 Seguidores
Talbot en Español
Talbot en Español@TalbotenEspanol·
«La misión de la Escuela de Teología Talbot es servir al Señor Jesucristo y a su iglesia global a través de la educación bíblica y teológica, la erudición y la formación cristiana, equipando a los estudiantes para comprometerse con el mundo por Cristo».
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Ed Dodds - Revangel retuiteado
CSPAN
CSPAN@cspan·
Sen. @amyklobuchar: "Sen. Grassley and I wanted to highlight how important it is for all television providers, including major streaming services like @YouTubeTV, owned by @Google, and @Hulu + Live TV, owned by @Disney, to provide the American public with C-SPAN."
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Ed Dodds - Revangel
Ed Dodds - Revangel@project_network·
CSPAN@cspan

Sen. @ChuckGrassley: "Our resolution calls for television providers, including streaming services, to make C-SPAN public affairs programming available to all Americans in real time on all platforms...For the tens of millions of Americans who have cut the cord and get their content on streaming services, they should not be cut off from the civic content made available by C-SPAN."

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Ed Dodds - Revangel
Ed Dodds - Revangel@project_network·
@DavidDark Writing August 1852. Alex Campbell: “God has given, in awful charge, to Protestant England and Protestant America – the Anglo-Saxon race – the fortunes, not of Christendom only, but of all the world.”
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Ed Dodds - Revangel
Ed Dodds - Revangel@project_network·
@carmenjoyimes Paul (1 Cor . 9:1-2) [If the Head of the Divine Council calls you to a commissioning appointment...]
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Ed Dodds - Revangel
Ed Dodds - Revangel@project_network·
@JMitchellNews This is Nashville: Elevating local African American history wpln.org/post/episodes/… Linda Wynn, Historian and Co-founder, Nashville Conference on African American History and Culture Dr. Edward Robinson, Author, To Pave the Way for His People: A Life of Preston Taylor
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Jerry Mitchell
Jerry Mitchell@JMitchellNews·
#OnThisDay in 1960, students, many of them students from Fisk University, began sit-ins in downtown Nashville, Tennessee. In the months that followed, more than 150 were arrested. Rather than pay fines, the students served their time in jail. When a mayor’s committee suggested separate “Black” and “White” sections at the lunch counters, the students balked. Two months later, a bomb exploded, nearly destroying the home of Z. Alexander Looby, the defense attorney representing many protesters. Later that day, more than 3,000 marched to city hall. Diane Nash asked the mayor if it was wrong for a citizen of Nashville to discriminate on the basis of color. The mayor admitted it was wrong. Confronted about the lunch counters, the mayor acknowledged they should be desegregated. Weeks later, six downtown stores desegregated their lunch counters, serving Black customers for the first time. James Lawson, who knew the principles of nonviolent resistance, led the students, many of whom became important leaders in the civil rights movement: Nash, John Lewis, James Bevel, C.T. Vivian, Marion Barry and Bernard Lafayette. David Halberstam captured their story in his book, “The Children.” mississippitoday.org/2025/02/13/on-…
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Ed Dodds - Revangel
Ed Dodds - Revangel@project_network·
OneTenn A 21st Century Cyberinfrastructure for Tennessee A Plan for Creating and Sustaining a 21st Century Infrastructure for Research and Education in Tennessee tntech.edu/research/pdf/r…
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Jerry Mitchell
Jerry Mitchell@JMitchellNews·
#OnThisDay in 1925, “The King of the Blues” was born Riley B. King on a plantation near Itta Bena, Mississippi, the son of sharecroppers. While singing in the church choir, he watched the pastor playing a Sears Roebuck guitar and told the preacher he wanted to learn how to play. By age 12, he had his own guitar and began listening to the blues on the radio. After playing in churches, he went to Memphis to pursue a music career in 1948, playing on the radio and working as a deejay who was known as “Blues Boy” and eventually “B.B.” Within a year, B.B. King was recording songs, many of them produced by Sam Phillips, who later founded Sun Records. In 1952, “3 O’Clock Blues” became a hit, and dozens followed. While others sought to bring change through the courts, King did it through music. The songs that he and other blues artists created drew many listeners across racial lines. One of the biggest fans walked into the studio one day and called him “sir.” His name? Elvis Presley, whose first big hit was the blues song, “That’s All Right, Mama.” King explained that music was like water — something “for every living person and every living thing.” His smash hit, “The Thrill Is Gone,” made him an international star and led to collaborations with some of the world’s greatest artists. He survived a fire that almost burned up his beloved guitar, “Lucille,” and won 18 Grammys as well as a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. In 1987, he was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. Both Time and Rolling Stone magazines ranked him as one of the greatest guitarists of all time. In 2006, he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the greatest civilian honor. Two years later, his hometown of Indianola honored him by opening the B.B. King Museum and Delta Interpretive Center. After he died in 2015, thousands flocked to the Mississippi Delta for the wake and funeral. “Hands that once picked cotton,” the preacher told the crowd, “would someday pick guitar strings on a national and international stage.” He performed till the end, telling Rolling Stone in 2013 that he had only missed 18 days of performing in 65 years. He died two years later at 89 after battling diabetes for decades. mississippitoday.org/2024/09/16/on-…
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Jerry Mitchell@JMitchellNews·
#OnThisDay in 1921, Alex Haley, the author of “Roots” and “The Autobiography of Malcolm X”, was born in Ithaca, New York. He spent much of his first five years with his mother and grandparents in Henning, Tennessee. He graduated from high school at 15, attended what is now known as Alcorn State University and eventually joined the Coast Guard, where he discovered his gift for writing, penning love letters for friends and eventually articles and short stories for magazines. After serving as chief journalist for the Coast Guard, he became a struggling freelance writer. His interview with Malcolm X became a highly regarded 1965 book on the civil rights leader before he experienced the immense success of “Roots”, which won widespread adulation at the time and some criticism in the years that followed. Harold Courlander, author of “The African”, won payment for plagiarizing portions of the novel. Haley said the copying was unintentional and apologized. After his death in 1992, the Coast Guard named one of its ships after Haley. The cutter has made its way to faraway ports, just like the late author, throughout the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands, into the Sea of Japan and north into the Arctic Circle. mississippitoday.org/2024/08/11/on-…
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