digging through rubble and physically pulling his neighbors up out from under their basement where the house had caved in on them. he did that at a couple houses. woke up the next morning to find his fence lines gone, his feed ruined. he lived on a farm in campbellsville, so he loaded up 40 head of cattle and took them to the stockyards, had to sell every one of them. and do you know what that man does for a living? he drives a school bus for the local school district. these are everyday heroes who are literally saving each other s lives, stepping up for each other. and as sad as that story is, my goodness, what an amazing act of humanity that we were able to see. kentucky lieutenant governor jacqueline coleman, thank you very much for joining us tonight. thank you, lawrence. and joining us now is congressional historian norm ornstein, he s an emeritus scholar at the american enterprise institute.
It's going to be a good time and for a great cause. Get signed up today for the John Wayne Cancer Foundation Grit Series 5-K. The closest Grit Series event will take place in Fort Worth, TX. in the Stockyards on Saturday, November 13th (11-13-21).
Tap List | Celebrate St. Patrickâs Day, Kansas City Style
Tap List | Celebrate St. Patrickâs Day, Kansas City Style
Have Fun, Drink Responsibly Share this story Published March 16th, 2021 at 11:00 AM Above image credit: Just embrace the green. Embrace it, we say. (Gregory Bull | AP File)
Thereâs so much lore surrounding St. Patrickâs Day.
Did you know, for instance, that Saint Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland, never
actually drove snakes out of Ireland and into the sea while standing on top of a hill?
Also, did you know that Saint Patrick is credited with explaining the Holy Trinity by using a three-leaf clover, which is why the shamrock is associated with the holiday?
Residents push back against new Toronto slaughterhouse that kills 1,600 cows a week
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A new slaughterhouse has just opened up in downtown Toronto, and residents, officials and animal advocates are not happy about it.
The new TruHarvest meat plant began operations on Monday, with plans to kill 1,600 cows and calves daily on Glen Scarlett Road near Weston Rd. and St. Clair Ave.
The factory sits right behind the busy Stockyards District shops in a building once occupied by Ryding-Regency Meat Packers, which famously had its license suspended due to non-compliances related to control measures and knowingly deceiving regulatory authorities amid E.Coli outbreaks.