Chris Horner and Levi Leipheimer uncorked champagne and celebrated on podium at the 2011 Amgen Tour of California. The celebration occured after Horner won the race after the Stage 8 finish into Thousand Oaks. RadioShack teammate Leipheimer came in second place, with a spot next to Horner on the podium.
Harold Camping's reaction was one of bewilderment and mystification after his failed May 21 Doomsday prediction, an associate revealed in a new report.
The Doomsday prediction failure by Harold Camping isn't the only one in history.
Harold Camping is a little bewildered and mystified that his Doomsday prediction on May 21 did not come true, a board member of Camping's Family Radio International said on Sunday, according to a report.
Chris Horner and Levi Leipheimer stood side by side on the podium after the final stage of the Tour of California, arms up in victory and content with a dominating victory, a possible showcase for Tour de France.
Harold Camping and his 'end of the world' 2011 prediction have captured the public's attention. While thousands of people believe him, the vast majority of people were there for the show.
While Harold Camping's doomsday prediction hasn't panned out, there is one associated with him that is. Camping is the President of California-based Family Radio, a religious broadcasting network that spans more than 150 outlets in the United States.
Camping is 89 years old and has made false predictions in the past.
The president of Family Radio Harold Camping's Doomsday prediction did not happen and failed once again.
The intimidating Hors beyond category climb of Mt. Baldy on Stage 7 of the Tour of California proved no match for RadioShack teammates Chris Horner, race leader and Levi Leipheimer, the eventual Stage 7 winner. Andy Schleck, on the other hand, faltered under the beating California sun, out of breath and no chance at keeping up with the strong legs of Horner and Leipheimer.
A Southern Baptist Convention pastor has called on Family Radio founder and predictor of a May 21 doomsday Harold Camping to repent after his prediction of devastating earthquakes and the “rapture” of “true believers” failed to come true.
With no sign of Judgment Day arriving as he had forecast, the 89-year-old California evangelical broadcaster seemed to have gone silent on the weekend.
As the streets were filled with rapture parties and the web alive with rapture discussions and jokes, a realistic question may remain. After the most-hyped nonevent since Y2K, how will Harold Camping take care of his devastated followers?
The leader of Family Radio Worldwide made a very bold statement that the world will end at 6:00pm on Saturday, May 21, 2001. Camping publically declared that he was utterly absolutely, absolutely convinced it's going to happen. However, nothing has happened so far and the world is still running as it used to be.
The president of Family Radio Harold Camping's Doomsday prediction failed and never happened.
Whether observers believed it or not, a California broadcaster's unwavering conviction that doomsday was set to strike on May 21, 2011 has sparked intense interest online, with thousands of Twitter users weighing in.
While Harold Camping's doomsday prediction hasn't panned out, there is one associated with him that is. Camping is the President of California-based Family Radio, a religious broadcasting network that spans more than 150 outlets in the United States.
On Saturday, June 4, from 10 to 4 p.m. TreePeople will host the 1st annual Green City Fair, a free family-friendly event, at their headquarters in Coldwater Canyon Park. Hosted by celebrity and environmental guru, EdBegley, Jr. and sponsored by The Gas Company, The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, Energy Upgrade California, Southern California Edison, Boeing, Wells Fargo and Whole Foods, the Green City Fair will bring together residents from all across Los Angeles to empower them with ...
Harold Camping, the bible teacher, broadcaster and author who predicted that May 21, 2011 would be judgment day, has not been heard from since the expected outcome of rolling mega earthquakes starting in New Zealand failed to materialize on schedule at 6 p.m. local time.
The Doomsday prediction failure by Harold Camping isn't the only one in history.
Self-proclaimed Doomsday prophet Harold Camping is nothing less than a charlatan, a fraud who has given a bad name to Christianity, according to Christian leaders.
Harold Egbert Camping was born July 19, 1921. He is a Christian radio broadcaster and president of California-based Family Radio, a religious broadcasting network that spans more than 150 outlets in the United States. It was formed in 1958 as non-profit ministry.