NEW: Kentucky family rejects $26 million offer to convert part of their farm into a data center despite the offer being about 10 times the going rate for farmland in the area.
"If it's my way, I'll stay and hold and feed a nation. 26 million doesn't mean anything."
"As long as I'm on this land, as long as it's feeding me, as long as it's taking care of me, there's nothing that can destroy me if I've got this land."
Video: Local 12 WKRC
Shaquille O'Neal has stepped in to save the dream of Jordan Wilmore, a 7'3" police recruit who turned down the NBA only to fail his state exam by a single point.
He finished the academy, took the test, and failed by one point. But Shaq told Jordan, "I got you."
Shaq is now paying for Jordan's living expenses for the next 5 months. Why? So Jordan doesn't have to work a second job. He can focus 100% of his energy on studying to get that one extra point.
The motivation? Shaq already has a custom-made police car waiting for him.
The Bills could’ve EASILY had one last touchdown but decided to run down the clock with useless run plays, no yardage - just to settle for a FG.
Ulterior motive to keep the score at 31-21??? Seems awfully convenient the books had the spread sitting at -11.5 | O/U = 50.5 🧐
Raymond Theodore Robinson was a disfigured American man whose years of nighttime walks made him into a figure of urban legend in western Pennsylvania.
Raymond Robinson was eight years old when he was injured by an electrical line as he climbed a pole and reached for a bird's nest on the Morado Bridge, outside of Beaver Falls.
The bridge carried a trolley and had electrical lines of both 1,200 and 22,000 Volts, which were responsible for the death of another boy less than a year earlier.
Robinson survived, defying doctors' expectations, but he was severely disfigured: he lost his eyes, nose, and right arm.
Robinson was so severely injured from his childhood electrical accident that he could not go out in public without fear of causing a panic, so he went for long walks at night.
Local tourists would drive along his road in hopes of meeting the Green Man or Charlie No-Face; they became disappointed to see no such person.
However, they passed on tales about him to their children and grandchildren regardless, and people raised on these tales are sometimes surprised to discover that he was a real person who was liked by his family and neighbors.
He stopped his walks during the last years of his life, and retired to the Beaver County Geriatric Center, where he died in 1985 at the age of 74.