Podcasts about baptist town

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Best podcasts about baptist town

Latest podcast episodes about baptist town

This Juan Time
TJT - Ep61 Mike Eldred

This Juan Time

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2023 117:54


Today, I sit with guitarist, foodie, husband, father, and one badass human being, Mike Eldred. He set us up at the must-try Espiritu in downtown Mesa, Az and we had the best conversation as the night came alive with people venturing out of their homes on a beautiful Tuesday evening. Find Mike playing all over the Valley and catch his music video "Parchman" hitting a film festival near you! Music: "Somebody Been Runnin'" by Mike Eldred Trio off the album, "Baptist Town" Get you a bottle of Love Rub by Papa Legba HooDoo BBQ & Soul Supply available: www.hoodoobbq.com​  @PapaLegbaHoodooBBQSoulSupply  Follows are encouraged: ig: @MikeEldredTrio fb: @MikeEldredTrio yt:  @mikeeldredtrio  www.MikeEldredTrio.com ig: @JuanTimePodcast tw: @JuanTimePodcast fb: @ThisJuanTime www.ThisJuanTime.com --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thisjuantime/support

Marietta Daily Journal Podcast
Kennesaw girl celebrates being cancer free

Marietta Daily Journal Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2023 13:28


Charlotte Smith was joined by family and friends this month to celebrate being cancer-free after 27 months of treatment. Charlotte was diagnosed with cancer in October 2020, when she was 3. Her mother took her to the doctor after noticing she was tired, not eating much and prone to bruising. Her hemoglobin level was low — 4.9 — so they took her to Children's Scottish Rite Hospital, where she was diagnosed with leukemia. Charlotte was treated at the Aflac Cancer and Blood Disorders Center. Over the next two years, she had multiple chemotherapy infusions, oral chemotherapy for a year and a half, seven blood transfusions, 18 lumbar punctures and two surgeries. To celebrate being cancer-free, the Smiths threw a large party for their daughter, complete with a face painter and a DJ. During her treatment, Charlotte attended the Center for Early Education at Marietta First Baptist Church, where the Smiths are members. The teachers showed their support by wearing “Charlotte's army,” shirts. Charlotte is the great-granddaughter of Cobb Superior Court Senior Judge Adele Grubbs; Emily Smith is Grubbs' granddaughter. Charlotte's father, Brad Smith, is a business intelligence developer at Children's Healthcare. Emily Smith works as an intensive care nurse at Wellstar Kennestone Hospital, and had to take a leave of absence during her daughter's treatment. Charlotte was immunocompromised due to the cancer, and the risk of her working in the hospital was too great. Now, Charlotte is in kindergarten at Kennesaw Elementary. Charlotte has two younger siblings — Olivia, 3, and Cooper, her three-month-old brother. She likes arts and crafts and coloring, and wants to be a nurse like her mother.  It was a big night for Kell guard Crystal Henderson. Her number 30, along with her brother Scoot Henderson's 0, were retired in a ceremony between the girls and boys games against Chattahoochee on Tuesday. She was celebrated for reaching the 2,000 point plateau for her career, and she scored 25 points with seven assists and five steals in the Longhorns' 64-36 Region 6AAAAA victory.  The only thing she didn't get was the ovation during a timeout as she left the court, because she couldn't. Thanks to a short bench because of an illness that was running through the team, Kell only had six healthy players for most of the game and it led to nearly every player playing all 32 minutes. The victory allowed the Longhorns to secure the Number 1 seed for this month's region tournament, but it is something coach Kandra Bailey didn't even want to think about quite yet, because the Horns still have games to play in the regular season. Between their near-century of combined service to Marietta City Schools, Kenneth and Jeanie Carter left an indelible mark on the city's history. But the Carter family has a new memento of its contributions to Marietta, as the Cole Street home of Kenneth Carter's parents was recently recognized as a historic home in one of the city's historically Black neighborhoods. The home's marker was unveiled as part of an ongoing, joint effort between Cobb Landmarks and the Marietta History Center. The program looks to memorialize the most storied homes of the city's Black families in the Baptist Town, Louisville, and Fort Hill neighborhoods, among others. The 1909 Carter house is a worthy member for inclusion. Originally built by Taylor Woods, a Black resident, the house was purchased by Sarah Young and Oscar Carter in 1944. Oscar Carter worked at Marietta's Bell Bomber plant as a custodian during World War II, and later for the city government, while his wife served as head of the Lemon Street PTA and worked as a washer woman, maid, and a nurse in the offices of Marietta physician Dr. Remer Clark. The couple raised four children in the home, which today is the last private house on the block of Cole Street between Lawrence and Lemon streets. While the Marietta Housing Authority bought the properties to the south, and Cole Street Missionary Baptist bought the properties to the north, the Carter family held on to their home. Among their children was Kenneth “Coach” Carter, who purchased the home when his mother died in the 1990s. Coach Carter, who died in 2019, spent nearly half a century as an educator and coach in Marietta City Schools. Residents interested in nominating a site for consideration as a landmark can contact Cobb Landmarks or the Marietta History Center. Two people were shot and injured in south Cobb Tuesday morning, the Cobb County Police Department said. According to police, officers were dispatched around 5:30 a.m. to a home on Main Station Drive off Hurt Road. Antoine McCain of Marietta, stated that he shot Ricky Robinson of Marietta, police said. Both men were suffering from apparent gunshot wounds, according to police. Police and firefighters responded and treated the men, who were both taken to a local hospital. The incident remains an open and active investigation. Anyone with information about it is asked to call police. University officials, alumni and students gathered Monday for the unveiling of Kennesaw State University's renovated Engineering Lab Building, a $5 million project. The 35,000-square-foot facility, known colloquially as the “G Building,” was built in 1962, said KSU President Kathy “Kat” Schwaig — the same year as she was, Schwaig joked — and last renovated in 1984. Schwaig spoke of the importance of students having a space for hands-on, collaborative work in the sciences. The building is part of the school's Southern Polytechnic College of Engineering and Engineering Technology and is home to a variety of opportunities for students, including different labs, such as for 3D printing and senior projects, a peer-to-peer tutoring program and academic advisers. Barnes & Noble plans to open a new store in the Avenue East Cobb this summer. The bookseller confirmed that it will open a 15,000-square-foot store, using part of the former Bed Bath and Beyond space at the popular shopping center off Roswell Road. The store will have a different feel to the bookstore chain's other locations — a “revamped model replicates the personal touch found in independent bookshops,” in the words of North American Properties, the owner of the Avenue East Cobb. Barnes & Noble's new approach also lets local stores stock a “hand-curated selection” of books tailored to its specific community. The store will feature “modern fixtures and furniture, an updated paint scheme, cozy book rooms, and an in-store café,” NAP said, and sell gifts, vinyl records, toys, games and puzzles. The east Cobb store is one of 30 that Barnes & Noble plans to open this year, using that new model. The company did not provide a specific opening date. #CobbCounty #Georgia #LocalNews      -            -            -            -            -            The Marietta Daily Journal Podcast is local news for Marietta, Kennesaw, Smyrna, and all of Cobb County.             Subscribe today, so you don't miss an episode! MDJOnline            Register Here for your essential digital news.            https://www.chattahoocheetech.edu/  https://cuofga.org/ https://www.esogrepair.com/ https://www.drakerealty.com/           Find additional episodes of the MDJ Podcast here.             This Podcast was produced and published for the Marietta Daily Journal and MDJ Online by BG Ad Group   For more information be sure to visit https://www.bgpodcastnetwork.com          See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Blues Music (Blues moose radio)
Episode 1195: Bluesmoosenonstop 1195-50-2016

Blues Music (Blues moose radio)

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2016 59:09


Michael Katon – Millions miles away - Ror outta Hell – 2016Troy RedFern – The Whip - Love & War – 2017Damned and Dirty – Bye bye to ya – 2016Danny Giles - Don't messin with me – More is more - 2016Rolling Stones – all of your love - Blue & Lonesome – 2016Mike Zito – Bad news is coming - Make Blues Not War – 2016Veldman Brothers, The - Brothers Groove - refuel – 2016The Mike Eldred Trio – Somebody been running -Baptist Town - 2016 Robbie Robertson – Testimony (unity mix) Testimony – 2016KRIS POHLMANN – One day baby - 10 Years Live - 2016Michael De Jong and Willem van Dullemen – Same old blues - In The Woods (Live 2015) – 2015

Americana Music Show Podcast
Mike Eldred shines the light on Baptist Town (Ep305)

Americana Music Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2016 120:00


Mike Eldred plays tracks from Baptist Town and talks about how his trips to Greenwood Mississippi & Baptist Town shaped the album. Also on this episode, the new album from Sarah Jarosz and the new country album from Irene Kelley. I've also got the new rock & roll album from the Plott Hounds, the blues album from Andre Williams, rock from the Hard Working Americans, and another track from that awesome Honeycutters album. "Mike Eldred shines the light on Baptist Town (Ep305)" originated from Americana Music Show.

shines eldred sarah jarosz andre williams hard working americans honeycutters baptist town greenwood mississippi
Freight Train Boogie Podcasts
Freight Train Boogie Show #343

Freight Train Boogie Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2016 59:57


Show #343   Rebecca Pronsky - Bag of Bones (Known Objects) Darryl Purpose - Prince of the Apple Towns  (Still The Birds) Josh Harty - The Kind  (Holding On) Dave Insley - Drinkin' Wine and Staring at the Phone  (Just the Way That I Am) (mic break) Ted Russell Kamp - The Way Love Burns (Flying Solo) Mary Chapin Carpenter - Something Tamed Something Wild  (The Things That We Are Made Of) The Nouveaux Honkies -  Life Ain't Easy  (Blues For Country) Rebecca Pronsky - Nothing Yet (Known Objects) (mic break) Darryl Purpose - The Meaning of My Love (Still The Birds) Ashleigh Flynn - Don't Leave Me Lonesome (The Low Arc of the Sun) Jeff Crosby -  The Homeless and the Dreamers  (Waking Days) Shoebox Letters - Used To Believe  (Love Sick Town) The Mike Eldred Trio - Bess  (Baptist Town) (mic break) Rebecca Pronsky - Gondwanaland  (Known Objects) Darryl Purpose - The Birds  (Still The Birds)

Oral History of the Cobb County Branch of the NAACP and Civil Rights Activities in Cobb County, Georgia (audio excerpts)

James E. Gober grew up in the Baptist Town area of Marietta, Georgia, and graduated from Lemon Street High School. He attended Allen University in Columbia, South Carolina, and Daniel Payne Junior College in Birmingham, Alabama. While Mr. Gober was in Birmingham he participated in the civil rights movement. His arrest for protesting segregation was reversed by the U.S. Supreme Court in the case Gober v. City of Birmingham in 1963. He returned to Marietta and has worked in the City of Marietta Dept. of Recreation and the construction industry. Mr. Gober was the first African American male to hold a position in the Urban Renewal Dept. of the Marietta Housing Authority. He was a longtime friend of community activist Hugh Grogan and is married to Grogan's ex-wife, Bettye. ID:ksu-45-05-001-03028 Rights:To request permission to publish, reproduce, publicly display, broadcast, or distribute this material in any format, you must contact the Archives, Rare Books and Records Management.

Oral History PDF's of the Cobb County Branch of the NAACP and Civil Rights Activities in Cobb County, Georgia (PDF Format)

James E. Gober grew up in the Baptist Town area of Marietta, Georgia, and graduated from Lemon Street High School. He attended Allen University in Columbia, South Carolina, and Daniel Payne Junior College in Birmingham, Alabama. While Mr. Gober was in Birmingham he participated in the civil rights movement. His arrest for protesting segregation was reversed by the U.S. Supreme Court in the case Gober v. City of Birmingham in 1963. He returned to Marietta and has worked in the City of Marietta Dept. of Recreation and the construction industry. Mr. Gober was the first African American male to hold a position in the Urban Renewal Dept. of the Marietta Housing Authority. He was a longtime friend of community activist Hugh Grogan and is married to Grogan's ex-wife, Bettye. Use Restrictions: To request permission to publish, reproduce, publicly display, broadcast, or distribute this material in any format, you must contact the Archives, Rare Books and Records Management.

Oral History PDF's of the Cobb County Branch of the NAACP and Civil Rights Activities in Cobb County, Georgia (PDF Format)

Clara Garrett Jenkins was born in the Happy Flat section of Marietta, Georgia, and grew up in the Baptist Town area. She attended Morris Brown College in Atlanta, Georgia, and graduated in 1951 from the Freedman's Hospital School of Nursing in Washington, D.C., which later became the Howard University Division of Nursing. Mrs. Jenkins returned to Marietta and immediately began work at Kennestone Hospital, which was segregated at the time. She was active in the National Congress of Colored Parents and Teachers (Black PTA), during segregation, as well as the Parent Teacher Association after integration. Use Restrictions: To request permission to publish, reproduce, publicly display, broadcast, or distribute this material in any format, you must contact the Archives, Rare Books and Records Management.