UPDATE- we will be in East Tennessee late tonight.
We will open my shops up to collect items as of Tomorrow morning, and we will deliver it to the counties in need. Kelly and Evan will be there all day beginning at 8am, and the rest of us will be taking stuff where it is needed.
If Morristown is closer for you and you want to help, we will get it there immediately. You have my word on that.
Also, if you want to donate cash and it be immediately put to use for goods, my venmo is attached. We will be loading the truck as we come back into town through Pennsylvania and Virginia.
Thank you all, and we will do what we can to assist without getting in their way.
For over 20 years, we’ve had the best seat in the house for the SEC on CBS.
We’ll forever celebrate the iconic moments, indelible memories and remarkable calls from the SEC on CBS. https://t.co/frgcg48SFC
Byron Young wasn’t recruited at all coming out of high school, and ended up taking two jobs at Dollar General and Burger King.
One day, he saw a flyer about a tryout at Georgia Military College, tried out, and ended up making the team.
After just one season, Young gained the attention of many D1 schools and committed to Tennessee.
Young dominated at Tennessee, and turned himself into a third round pick in this past NFL Draft.
Now, Young leads all rookies in pressures (25) and QB hits (8) through six weeks.
What a STORY 🔥
While drinking, a Pilot bet he could land outside the bar, 2 hours later he touched down in central New York in a stolen aircraft. Years later he repeated the stunt because someone wouldn't believe him.
In September 1956 after drinking heavily at a bar in New York City, Thomas Fitzpatrick made an intoxicated barroom bet that he could travel from New Jersey to New York City in 15 minutes.
At 3 a.m. he stole a single-engine plane from the Teterboro and flew without any lights or radio before landing on St. Nicholas Avenue near 191st Street in front of the bar where the bet was made.
The New York Times called it a "fine landing" and a "feat of aeronautics". For his illegal flight, he was fined $100 after the plane's owner refused to press charges.
In October 1958 just before 1 a.m., Fitzpatrick again stole another plane from the same airfield and landed on Amsterdam and 187th after another bar patron disbelieved his first feat.
For his second stolen flight, judge John A. Mullen sentenced him to six months in prison. When asked why did had undertaken the 2nd flight Fitzpatrick told the police "he had pulled off the second flight after a bar patron refused to believe he had done the first one"
Fitzpatrick was a Marine during the Korean War and received a Purple Heart. He has three sons and was married to his wife, Helen, for 51 years working as a steamfitter. He died in 2009 at the age of 79.
Fitzpatrick has a mixed drink named after him for his feat called the "Late Night Flight"