- Evert’s Electables
- How to Save the USA
- Football Player Exposes Diabolical Lies of Feminism
- Our Beloved Republic is in Danger of Becoming a Socialist Country
- A Layman's Awe in the Revelation of Jesus Christ
- Memorial Day - Including the Remembrance the USS Mount Hood
- American Lawfare in New York
- Timmons's Condescending Remarks of a Children's Christian Ministry
- There Is An Operational And Management Concern About Greenville Coroner’s Office
- Are SC State Legislators Spying on Its Citizens?
- Audacy Announces All-Star Lineup on 98.9 WORD
- Evert’s Electables Republican Primary - June 11, 2024
- County Council Candidate’s Shady Practices and Dark Money Ties
- Evert’s Electables - June 25th, 2024 Republican Primary Runoff
- The Times Examiner Endorses Steve Shaw for Greenville County Council
Education
Hemphill Award Honors Brashier Legacy of Ministry
- By LaVerne Howell - NGU
Recognizing the life work of a mentor to pastors, North Greenville University (NGU) recently presented the 2021 Paula and Ken Hemphill Award for Denominational Service to the late Dr. T. Walter Brashier, Sr. The honor was bestowed posthumously to the noted real estate developer who died March 24, 2021, at the age of 86, after battling several health issues in recent years.
“Many do not realize that Dr. Brashier was also an evangelist,” said NGU President Dr. Gene C. Fant, Jr. “He preached over 1,000 revivals across the Carolinas, and he was a mentor to pastors all over the place.”
The Hemphill Award was presented on June 15 in Nashville, TN, at NGU’s Alumni and Friends Dinner during the Southern Baptist Convention annual meeting. More than 90 people were in attendance at the dinner in the Aquarium Restaurant.
- Hits: 1424
Deaf and Hard of Hearing Students Win in NGU, TriState Deaf School of Theology Partnership
- By LaVerne Howell - NGU
North Greenville University (NGU) and TriState Deaf School of Theology (TDST) are partnering to provide the NGU Bridge Program to offer select undergraduate courses for the 2021-22 academic year. The NGU Bridge Program is designed to provide accredited transferable college credit to qualified TDST students in support of their educational development.
“NGU has a long history of supporting education for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing, and we are grateful for a variety of partnerships we enjoy in this important area,” said NGU President Dr. Gene C. Fant, Jr. “The TriState School is another opportunity for us to apply our mission—’equipping transformational leaders for church and society’—in this important community and serving the Kingdom with these programs.”
- Hits: 1271
A Fight for the History Books
- By Tony Perkins - Family Research Council
"We oppose attempts to ban critical race theory and/or The 1619 Project," the National Education Association (NEA) said in a resolution late last week. At its 2021 annual meeting, America's largest teachers' union -- and largest union of any kind -- passed a slew of pro-CRT resolutions. They also approved "an already-created, in-depth study that critiques white supremacy, anti-Blackness, anti-Indigeneity, racism, patriarchy ... capitalism ... and other forms of power and oppression." The resolutions amounted to a declaration of war on parent organizations that have sprouted up as sentinels against encroaching wokeness. The victor will determine the path of education for America's children and -- by extension -- our country's future. Finally, the battle lines are drawn clearly.
- Hits: 1146
Dr. Carl Abrams Participates in 2021 C-SPAN Historians Survey of Presidential Leadership
- By Randy Page - BJU
Dr. Carl Abrams, 1972 Bob Jones University graduate and former history faculty member, was one of 142 historians and professional observers of the presidency surveyed by C-SPAN for the fourth annual Historians Survey of Presidential Leadership.
Abrams taught at BJU from 1974-2020. He is the author of three books: Conservative Constraints: North Carolina and the New Deal; Old-Time Religion Embracing Modernist Culture; and Selling the Old-Time Religion: American Fundamentalists and Mass Culture 1920–1940, for which he was nominated for the best book on Southern history. He has also contributed to numerous publications and historical journals.
- Hits: 1217
Gail Nicholas Inducted into NSDA Hall of Fame
- By Randy Page - BJU
Gail Nicholas, Bob Jones Academy (BJA) faculty member, was recently inducted into the National Speech & Debate Association (NSDA) Hall of Fame. Nicholas is the first South Carolina coach to receive this honor.
This year’s Hall of Fame recognitions were given during NSDA’s virtual national competition in June 2021.
The NSDA Hall of Fame is the highest honor for speech and debate coaches. Of the thousands of coaches in the United States and around the world, only 193 have achieved the award since its inception in 1978. Hall of Fame members along with coaches who have earned three or more diamond awards vote to elect the new members from a slate of those nominated by member coaches.
- Hits: 1340
Nationwide Call for Cameras in the Classroom
- By Nevada Family Alliance
RENO, Nev., -- Since we released our call for body cameras in a Nevada school district, a nationwide outcry over political speech in the classroom has led us to join the fight on a national level.
"The response has been overwhelming. Parents from across the nation are contacting us wanting help to make this idea a reality in their district, "said Karen England, Executive Director and Founder of Nevada Family Alliance.
- Hits: 1335
Save Our Children
- By Dr. Duke Pesta - The New American
The well-being of America’s children is being sacrificed on the altar of globalism and social justice. It’s time to get them out of the public schools.
Time is running out.
The progressive resetting of American public schools is about to be unleashed with full force on drowsy, preoccupied, and COVID-weary families from coast to coast and from preschool through high school. What we’ve seen accelerating for months now — rolled out in experimental and ham-fisted ways on virtual platforms and behind the fog of masked and socially distanced chaos — is about to become the primary way to “teach” our children and oversee “education” in government schools. New, transformative education mandates will also redirect the learning policies of the majority of private and so-called religious schools that take their pedagogical cues not from classical education or scriptural models, but from ideologically driven university departments of education, with their tenured armies of social justice-drunk educrats and administrators.
- Hits: 1877
- BJU Places Second at 2021 IGVC Competition
- North Greenville University Announces Spring Semester Dean’s List
- Call for Body Cameras in the Classroom
- NGUleads Celebrates First Cohort Graduates
- Local Students Graduate in NGU's Class of 2021
- NGU Honors Brashier Legacy at Dedication Ceremony
- NGU Earns Excellence in Giving’s Transparency Certification