Father Eric Groner follows family examples in vocation - Arkansas Catholic arkansas-catholic.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from arkansas-catholic.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Commentators: Jimmy Smith, Byron Saxton, Corey Graves
We have two Raw’s left before both the return of fans and Money in the Bank, meaning that it is time to start kicking things into a higher gear. WWE needs some momentum on their way back into normal and I’m not sure if they know how to do that at the moment. We are also likely getting some more hard pushes towards the ladder matches so let’s get to it.
We open with MizTV with Miz and John Morrison in the ring. Miz’s guests this week will be the four entrants in the men’s Money in the Bank match, starting with Morrison as you might expect. Morrison says it is time for the Aquaholics to get soaked as he becomes Senor Dinero En El Banco. This brings out Drew McIntyre to say he has been fighting back to the title since Miz cashed in Money in the Bank. McIntyre recaps the Money in the Bank concept and since the show is in Texas, it is time for McIntyre’s History Lesson. This week is about the Alamo, because he is a distan
1 dead, 1 missing as floods and landslides affect thousands across Colombia -- Earth Changes -- Sott net sott.net - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sott.net Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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Deep in northern Colombia, amid the wetlands where the Magdalena and the Sucre rivers meet, sits the town of El Banco, where peak temperatures soar over 100 degrees and the humidity is inescapable.
It was along those riverbanks where Indigenous and people of African descent met some 200 years ago and began creating the musical rhythms now known as cumbia.
“Cumbia is the result of those cultures meeting and converging on the land,” Colombian singer Carlos Vives writes in a new book. “Cumbia is what brings us together.”
Vives’ book, “Cumbiana,” was published this month with the historian Guillermo Barreto, and issued a short documentary and an album earlier this year under the same name. His goal, he says: to highlight Colombian Indigenous peoples’ essential contributions to folklore and the importance of the rivers past and present.