A shocking new advertising campaign has hit the far-left enclave of Portland, where human reproduction is fast becoming a taboo offense. Large billboards featuring a cartoon image of a baby with [.]
When local businessman Ken Harrison resurrected Promise Keepers in 2019, one of his goals was a return to the inspiring stadium rallies pioneered by former Colorado University football coach Bill McCartney, who founded the men’s ministry in 1990.
But COVID-19 had other plans for 2020, and last year’s event went virtual, reaching over 1 million men from 84 countries and all 50 states
Harrison recently announced that PK will host its first live stadium gathering in years at AT&T Stadium in Dallas on July 16-17. A publicist says 30,000 men have registered.
The event will also be simulcast to churches. A publicist initially said churches could view the event for free, but later clarified that churches will pay $99 to view the event, with real-time translation into Mandarin Chinese, Arabic, French, Hindi, Indonesian, Portuguese, Bengali, and Russia.
Promise Keepers announces July event after going virtual in 2020 gazette.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from gazette.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Harvard researcher Donald Yacovone discussed his research on the ways white supremacy permeates textbooks used by American students at a Harvard Medical School event Tuesday.
During the event, Yacovone â an associate at the Hutchins Center for African and African American Research â discussed his upcoming book, âTeaching White Supremacy: The Textbook Battle Over Race in American History.â The Medical Schoolâs Office for Diversity Inclusion and Community Partnership organized the conversation, which was moderated by David J. Harris, managing director of the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice at Harvard Law School.
Yacovone said he did not originally intend to write the book and was initially working on another book about the impact of the anti-slavery movement on the rise of the modern Civil Rights Movement. While conducting research, though, he was âstunnedâ to discover a 1930 textbook that âhad on the first page the blaz