Artemis II astronaut Victor Glover arrived home to a crowd of neighbors and shared a powerful message
"Let's be this more. Let's be neighbors. God told us to love Him with all that we are and love our neighbors as ourselves."
Artemis II Astronaut Victor Glover shares words of wisdom to his neighbors as he arrived home to a crowd 🇺🇸🙏🏼
“Let’s be this more. Let’s be neighbors. I don’t know if you heard me say it but God told us to love Him with all that we are and love our neighbors as ourselves.”
2008 Kansas is the most underrated champion of the last 25 years.
They are one of the 3-5 best teams we’ve seen in college hoops since 2000 but never get talked about like that.
-KenPom: #1 Def #2 Off
-37-3
-Won the toughest F4 of all time.
Rise of Nations (2003) is easily one of the best RTS games ever. It's maybe no surprise, since Brian Reynolds - the genius behind Civilization II and Alpha Centauri - created it.
I sank countless hours into this one, an unspeakable amount really. It was an absolute blast in both single-player and multiplayer. In conversations about the the all-time greats, games mentioned are usually Dune II, Command & Conquer, Age of Empires, Warcraft, and StarCraft - and all deservedly so - but in my opinion Rise of Nations also belongs in that uppermost echelon of RTS games ever made.
One of the features that felt more strategic were the visible influence of borders. You could only build inside your own territory, and expanding it was a core strategic layer. Entering enemy territory caused attrition (units slowly took damage over time), encouraging smart expansion and defense, you couldn't just blindly run in.
It also had 18 unique civilizations, each had distinct Nation Powers and unique units (e.g., Romans got extra territory, Mongols had powerful cavalry, etc.), giving strong asymmetry without breaking balance - a very tough balancing act in any RTS game with such diverse civilizations.
I would assume that you were of fan of RTS games during that era, you also invested a fair bit of your time into this one...
College basketball team goes nuts after successfully teaching their freshman teammate how to ride a bike.
The Fort Scott Community College team in Kansas was seen cheering on Taylor Frost as he successfully rode the bike.
Head basketball coach Matt Glover organized the event for a team bonding activity.
“He provided the bike and helmet for Taylor and his teammates were able to teach Taylor something I was unsuccessful in doing,” Frost’s mother said.
Wholesome.