Games

March 15, 2008

Name That Car Revealed!

1958 Zundapp Janus 250Img_0467_2

March 14, 2008

Name That Car!

This picture was taken at Lane Motor Museum in Nashville.  I would be surprised if anyone could identify the make or model of this vehicle.Img_0466

October 11, 2007

WhirlyBall

Img_0035 The leadership team at VCC had a mini staff retreat this week.  Among many meetings, we were able to get away and play each other in a little Whirlyball.  Finally a sport that combines hockey and bumper cars!  Loved it!   
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We split up into two teams:
Red Team - Bob, Scotty, Kevin and Mathew
Yellow Team - John, Michael, Wayne and Becca.

Victory to the Red Team! 
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August 29, 2007

Football is Back

Lsu_athletics_primary LSU at Mississippi State
Thursday, August  30th, 2007  7:00 PM

LIVE ON ESPN HD!

 

Geaux Tigers!

February 12, 2007

"Altar Ego" Game for the Church ...

REDWOOD CITY, Calif. — At a recent board meeting, pastor Darrell Smith of Trinity Fellowship put a video game controller in each member's hands. Soon the 12 men were clobbering each other on an oversized TV screen as they played Altar Egos: Rumble in the Pew, the latest church staff craze.
    "I haven't felt this good about church in years," said one board member, smiling and sweating.
Foyer_frenzy     Video game maker Electronic Arts created Altar Egos to test the market for Christian video games. The game, which EA describes as "Grand Theft Auto without the graphic violence and sex, and set in a church building," is not yet available in stores but was sent to hundreds of churches across the U.S. where it has become an instant obsession.
    "It's a guilty pleasure," says a pastor in Appleton, Wisc., who plays with his staff as weekly therapy, but keeps the game a secret from his congregation. "It keeps tempers down around here. You seek out the person you're annoyed with and whack them. They say, 'Your sermon stunk,' and they hit me with a mic stand. And I say, 'Oh yeah? Well worship was lousy,' and bonk them over the head with a family-size Bible. Then we put down the controllers, go back to work and everything's fine."
    Altar Egos does have a point: to find the hidden church check book and clear the pastor's office of all other players. But most people just enjoy the rumble.
    "I like ripping up the hymnals. I don't know why," says one executive pastor who asked not to be identified.
    Matches often get ugly as virtual staff meetings and Sunday services go badly wrong, with people hurling folding chairs and offering plates at each other, and yelling Bible-inspired insults ("I'm gonna lay you waste, snake." Whack!).  (Bob - reminiscent of some ugly business meetings I've attended).

Read more HERE.