Credit Morehead State University
Before she ended up on the latest season of Hell s Kitchen, Brittani Ratcliff found a little slice of heaven as a child in her grandmother s kitchen.
Growing up in the small Carter County town of Willard, the current executive sous chef and catering chef with Aramark at Morehead State University comes from a long line of farmers. She learned to raise livestock – not to mention grow, harvest and can her own vegetables – since she was around five years old. One of the first dishes she ever learned how to cook was when she assisted her grandmother Bonnie Ratcliff s chicken and dumplings at age 14.
Credit KCTCS / Twitter
Grammy-nominated artist Buffalo Stille from hip hop group “Nappy Roots” signed on to help promote the Work Ready Kentucky Scholarship. During today’s virtual press conference hosted by Kentucky Community and Technical College Systems (KCTCS), Stille recalled his experiences as a college student and the struggles many face today to fund their education.
Stille said he was just like any other ordinary student in college before he got signed to Atlantic Records in 1998. But because he spent so much time on tour, clocking more than 200 shows per year, he waited until 2017 to return to college.
“When you’re on the road and doing your career, I’m a rapper so you can imagine, school was the last thing on my mind at that point. But what made me decide to go back was just realizing where I am now as a 40-year-old hip hop artist, just hoping I can transition into something else. But I’m not planning on retiring anytime soon.”
Sullivan University College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences Students Give First COVID-19 Vaccinations in Southern Indiana
Share Article
Students from The Sullivan University College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences (SUCOPHS) were the first to administer the COVID-19 vaccination to patients in Southern Indiana. I was the first person in Indiana to be able to give the vaccine to a patient. ~SUCOPHS student Kelci Voyles LOUISVILLE, Ky. (PRWEB) December 23, 2020
As the first shots of the vaccine went into the arms of health care workers last week at Clark Memorial Health in Jeffersonville, Ind., pharmacists and pharmacy students including SUCOPHS students Kelci Voyles, Haley Smith and Merkie Slone helped with the vaccinations of the new drug, according to the Louisville Courier-Journal.