The View: Ricky Gervais, Hot Topics
Wyoming GQP censured Liz Cheney for voting to impeach T45, but she doesn’t care, is sticking to her position. Rand Paul and Mark Meadows are blaming Democrats and Pelosi because of course. Thinks approaching someone in a restaurant is the same as insurrection where 6+ people died as a result. Conviction is unlikely because the GQP are cowards but here we are. Sara likes that Cheney said all the right things -on Fox- so maybe it resonated even with a few. Thinks we all need to elevate the level of discourse. Whoopi remembers no one (eg Dems) denied they said things, and were called out at the time.
Dear @armiehammer You can have my rib cagehow do you just keep getting hotter and hotter #letsbbq Brandi Glanville (@BrandiGlanville) February 8, 2021 Brandi tweeted at the “Call Me By Your Name” star late Sunday, inviting him to enjoy her rib cage. “Dear @armiehammer You can have my rib…
Published February 08. 2021 12:56PM | Updated February 08. 2021 5:17PM
Waterford Charter Oak Federal Credit Union donated more than $100,000 in emergency food assistance to eastern Connecticut’s food pantries and food centers during 2020, the credit union has announced in a news release.
Charter Oak initially donated $75,000 in emergency grants in April for food supplies at food centers and food pantries serving New London and Windham counties. The credit union donated an additional $32,000 in year-end assistance to the organizations in December for a total of $107,000 in emergency food assistance.
“The COVID-19 pandemic has been particularly hard on our region’s food pantries because the demand was so strong throughout the year, especially during the holidays,” said Brian Orenstein, Charter Oak’s president and chief executive officer. “So in addition to our donations this past spring, we made sure to allocate an additional $32,000 at year’s end to help restock t
A grandfather who became the oldest person to row 3,000 miles unassisted across the Atlantic Ocean has encouraged older people to “keep active and challenge yourself.”
Korean Church ponders new approach amid pandemic
Church needs to focus on how to maintain communion with people in the changed scenario
Trending
Catholics attend Mass at Myeongdong Cathedral in Seoul last April when public Masses resumed after suspension due to the Covid-19 pandemic. (Photo: Catholic Times of Korea)
More than a year after the Covid-19 pandemic hit South Korea, the Church is mulling a new pastoral approach to continue evangelization and to tend to the spiritual life of the faithful in the new normal conditions.
As the outbreak posed enormous challenges to the social, economic and religious life of people, the Church needs to focus on how to maintain communion with people in the changed scenario, said Father Chung Hee-wan, director of the Catholic Culture and Theology Institute.