Photo by G. N. Lowrance/NFLPhotoLibrary
My DMC-12 in my black-and-gold mind operates on auto-pilot. So, as I open the door to my cranial Delorean in anticipation of the date displayed on the time circuits, I pray that it’s not from the 60s (those were dark times in the ‘Burgh). But I was pleased to be only going back 15 years when the Lombardi trophy returned from its 26-year Steel City siesta.
Welcome to February 5, 2006.
It was a day when America lost the comic brilliance of Franklin Cover, the man who portrayed Tom Willis on
The Jeffersons. Also Costa Rica held presidential elections, slasher thriller
In defense of critic Claudia Cassidy chicagotribune.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from chicagotribune.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Like other church leaders in St. Augustine, the Rev. Hunter Camp had some tough decisions to make about Christmas Eve services this year because of COVID-19.
The church he leads, Memorial Presbyterian Church, typically draws more than 1,400 people for Christmas Eve services, he said. We can only hold ― socially distanced ― roughly 100 individuals, Camp said.
The church, which is at 32 Sevilla St., is currently allowing only about 90 people in each regular Sunday service. So instead of having a lot of services or turning people away, the church decided to forgo an in-person Christmas Eve service and stream the service at 5 p.m. on the church s website, memorialpcusa.org, and its Facebook page.
It is impossible to turn on television today and not see commercials suggesting intimacy of interracial couples. I want to go down this road in todayâs column but let me first explore the early episodes of intimacy between interracial couples in the movies.
Understand, my focus is on Black and whites in intimate situations. Chinese, Asian, Native American, or ethnicities with a white person do not count.
So, what is the first movie that you recall showing or suggesting intimacy between a Black and a white? I am not a movie buff but the 1967 movie, âGuess Whoâs Coming to Dinnerâ is my guess. While Sidney Poitier and Katharine Houghton were never shown in any romantic scenes, they were anticipating marriage. Intimacy was implicit.