Little Flock - Church of God In Christ, Inc.
Little Flock - Church of God in Christ acquired its present name "LITTLE FLOCK" by the divine leading of the Lord. The church started in July of 1955 with seven neighborhood children in the home of Pastor E. J. O'Neal and his wife Lula. This effort commenced September 29th, 1955 when they had their first Sunday School session. The church continued its progress with Sunday School in the morning and church in the evening and the Lord blessed them to grow in number. They secured Forester's Hall in Redwood City to accomodate the group for night services, but they continued Sunday School at home. After an unexpected setback of tribulations, yet with determination and favor with God they gained an entirely new congregation; this group was inspired to build a house for God. Pastor O'Neal and his group of volunteers layed the foundation for Little Flock in an area that was previously a nursery. By faith they worked on this endeavor knowing that the Lord would not forsake them. It was on December 29, 1956, in wind and rain, the foundation was poured by the Pastor, along with Brother Martin and Brother Edward Knight.
Category: Flock Member
Flock the new mozilla based browser | Start up Web 2.0
Flock the new mozilla based browser Posted June 16th @ 10:07 pm by Luci3n Just testing the Flock developer release browser and the Blogger plugin which is very easy to use and also but as i normally use firefox what is it really adding. Having started this post with the Flock and the finishing it off with Performancing from what i see there is no advantage here. One of the major features is the image integration with Flickr or Photobucket and social bookmarking with del.icio.us. All very nice and ideas which i am sure if the don’t already exist with Firefox extensions will do soon and also will most likely be similar. But this is one to watch as it TechCrunch states it is rumored to have has raised some large capital. If your interested in trying Flock you can preview the beta release for yourselves at http://www.flock.com/download Filed in: Web 2.0 Tags: flickr, flock, mozilla, photobucket ← Busting out of the sandbox Installing Ubuntu for dual boot with XP → No Comments Yet You can be the first to comment! Live Preview Leave a comment
Category: Flock Photobucket Web
flock - Definitions from Dictionary.com
.] Synonyms : These nouns denote a number of animals, birds, or fish considered collectively, and some have human connotations. Flock is applied to a congregation of animals of one kind, especially sheep or goats herded by people, and to any congregation of wild or domesticated birds, especially when on the ground. It is also applicable to people who form the membership of a church or to people under someone's care or supervision. Herd is used of a number of animals, especially cattle, herded by people; or of wild animals such as antelope, elephants, and zebras; or of whales and seals. Applied to people, it is used disparagingly of a crowd or of the masses and suggests the gregarious aspect of crowd psychology. Drove is used of a herd or flock, as of cattle or geese, that is being moved or driven from one place to another; less often it refers to a crowd of people in movement. Pack is applicable to any body of animals, especially wolves, or of birds, especially grouse, and to a body of hounds trained to hunt as a unit. It also refers disparagingly to a band or group of persons. Gang refers to a herd, especially of buffalo or elk; to a pack of wolves or wild dogs; or to various associations of persons, especially when engaged in violent or criminal pursuits.
Category: Flock It
Flock of Dodos: Information and Much More from Answers.com
all over the U. S. and abroad. The documentary will be shown in museums and universities as part of a "Dodos Darwin Day " event (celebrating Charles Darwin 's birthday) on or around March 17, 2007. Flock of Dodos: the Evolution-Intelligent Design Circus will be released to television and DVD shortly thereafter in the spring of 2007. Response The Discovery Institute, a hub of the intelligent design movement, responded to the documentary by mounting a campaign, Hoax of Dodos, characterizing the documentary as "revisionist history," and a " hoax " filled with inaccuracies and misrepresentations. To the statement in the documentary that Ernst Haeckel 's exaggerated drawings of embryos have not been used in recent biology textbooks "other than a mention that once upon a time Haeckel came up with this idea of ontogeny recapitulating phylogeny " and that the latest instance of textbooks supporting Haeckel's drawings Olson could find was in a 1915 textbook, supporters of intelligent design have since claimed reproductions of Haeckel's drawings persist in contemporary biology textbooks.
Category: Dodos Flock
Flock 1.1 Offers Built-in Webmail Support | Compiler from Wired.com
« Has Apple Banned Firefox From the iPhone? | Main | Zoho People: Manage Your Company's HR Needs From the Web » Flock 1.1 Offers Built-in Webmail Support By Scott Gilbertson March 07, 2008 | 2:42:26 PM Categories: browsers Flock, the web browser based on Firefox, but with added features for tracking your friends across the web, has released a small but welcome update. Flock 1.1 adds support for webmail services like Gmail or Yahoo Mail. A new mail button in the Flock toolbar allows you to stay logged in to your webmail account without having to keep a browser window or tab open. The toolbar button will notify you when new mail arrives. Clicking the button opens a menu showing the number of unread messages and even the subject of the first few messages - just click on a message and it will open in a new tab. To make the webmail integration it more complete, Flock 1.1 will also intercept any mailto: links and automatically open the Gmail or Yahoo Mail compose page in a new browser tab (to set a webmail service as your default e-mail handler head into the Flock preferences panel). The other notable new feature in 1.1 is that Google’s Picasa photo sharing service is now available for search and subscription through Flock’s media bar — joining similar options for sites like Facebook, Flickr, YouTube and more. Flock is free and can be downloaded from the official site.
Category: 1 Flock