Researchers conclude homosexuals and trangenders are not ‘born that way’
10,000 Syrians gain U.S. entry, fewer than half of one percent are Christians
Johnny Hunt: from poolroom to SBC president
Former LSU baseball player Warren Morris to address students at LC
By Norm Miller, Louisiana College communications PINEVILLE (LCNews) - Louisiana College’s Division of Business will host several leaders of Red River Bank on Sept. 13. Warren Morris - Red River Bank’s assistant vice president - will address students during a plenary session in LC’s Granberry Conference Center at 11 a.m. Bank managers will lecture in several business classes during the day. Morris, a member of Calvary Baptist Church in Alexandria, is best known among long-time fans of LSU baseball. In 1996 He punched a bottom-of-the-ninth, two-run, two-out homer that KO’d Miami 9-8. It’s still the only walk-off homer to win the College World Series. Red River Bank personnel visiting LC classes is another “Industries Day” at the college, where local business leaders share their expertise and methodology with students. Leaders from CLECO and Crest Industries also have assisted LC in this effort to expose students to more than classroom theory. “We want to connect student learning outcomes to practical work skills by bringing practitioners into the classroom,” said Arthur Mazhambe, Chair, LC Business Division. “Our students are privileged to hear the challenges, solutions, and varied issues encountered in … [Read more...]
Finding your focus: a flood or a river
By Norm Miller, Louisiana College communications PINEVILLE - Louisiana College president Rick Brewer drew from John 7:38 as he compared characteristics of a river to the recent Louisiana flood waters during remarks in the college’s first chapel session, Aug. 23. “Floods are chaotic; they are destructive, unpredictable, and harmful. Rivers have purpose. Rivers are controllable. Rivers have direction. Rivers have focused energy,” said Brewer after noting flood-related statistics. Brewer challenged students to “become a river. Focus on your academic life, focus on your spiritual life, and focus on your relational life.” “You show me someone who is acting like a flood, and I will never expect any growth or leadership out of that person,” he said. “But someone that says I want my life to be like a river - and even more so I want to be like John 7:38 - I want that river of life flowing through me from Jesus Christ - you show me that young person and I will show somebody who will be successful in life.” “If you are a Christ follower, your number one purpose while you are here at Louisiana College is to be an amazing, focused college student,” he said. President Brewer noted that LC exists to help students to prepare for … [Read more...]
N.Y. Mets sign Tebow to minor league contract
Fleming: supporting the value of life
By John Fleming The ability to affirm our nation’s traditional values is central to the First Amendment and America’s way of life. The inherent worth of an unborn child and the sacred religious traditions we practice—these are the foundations that create strong family units, and an even stronger society. As an elected official—but perhaps more importantly, as a husband, father, grandfather, and fellow American—I intend to fight continually for the freedom to practice these rights without being hindered by the government. Recently, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down Texas state laws designed to protect women by requiring that abortion facilities meet certain health and safety standards. We’ve already seen what happens when poorly managed clinics are not held to the same specifications as other health clinics: negligence, unsanitary conditions, and—within the walls of Kermit Gosnell’s Philadelphia clinic—even murdering women along with their children. The abortion industry’s goal is to make money, not protect women, their children, or their families. To read the rest of the article, please click here. … [Read more...]
Louisiana bakery refuses to write ‘Trump 2016’ on birthday cake
Baptist students, 450 strong, aid flood survivors
By Carmen K. Sisson DENHAM SPRINGS (BP) - John Whitehead woke to an unfamiliar sight in mid-August - water had breached his house and was rising fast. The Louisiana State University student panicked for a few minutes, facing tough decisions. What should he save and what should he leave behind? In the end, the answer was simple. Muddy water lapped against his waist as he struggled to heave his black Labrador retriever Rascal into his kayak. Then, he paddled away from everything he and his family owned in Denham Springs near Baton Rouge, knowing they would never see most of it again. His parents, Darrell and Zanie Whitehead, were in Tuscaloosa, Ala., trying to get home. They talked by phone several times as the situation worsened. "I called the fourth time, and he said, 'Quit calling me, I'm trying to save people,'" his father recounted. By the end of the day, John Whitehead and his kayak had carried a number of people to safety, including two elderly women who were clinging to a chain link fence, with water up to their chins. On Labor Day weekend, flood survivors like the Whiteheads in south Louisiana were on the receiving end of an even larger wave of help. LSU's Baptist Collegiate Ministry spearheaded a massive … [Read more...]
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 973
- 974
- 975
- 976
- 977
- …
- 1051
- Next Page »