Sep 16, 2018 - The National Hurricane Center reported that Hurricane Florence made landfall near Wrightsville Beach, North Carolina at 7:15 AM ET.
University of Miami backup tailback DeeJay Dallas, who had his first career 100-yard rushing game Saturday in Miami’s 49-24 victory over Toledo, has a message for the onslaught of Hurricanes fans who have been bashing Canes quarterback Malik Rosier on social media. “Stop booing Malik,’’ Dallas said after the game. “I don’t like that. That’s not something that our fans should be about. “Yeah, it’s OK to be angry.
It’s OK to be upset. But Malik came out today and he played with an edge and he played like the starter should. And he’s going to continue playing like that, week in and week out.
Malik is going to be great. Malik, he’s OK. “I firmly stand behind Malik.”. Rosier threw for 205 yards and two touchdowns and ran eight times for 80 yards and another three touchdowns. “So now,’’ Dallas said, “he can stop being booed.’’ Dallas, who has become a team leader, said earlier in the week that UM is “built to crush dreams.’’ Before the game, the Toledo fans were taunting the Hurricanes, including Dallas, as they were warming up. Dallas motioned them with his hands in a ‘bring-it-on’ manner. “Yeah,’’ he said, “I went out and went at the game like I always go at the game.
We’re in enemy territory and I just feel like, ‘You want it? Come get it.’ So, we went out and we got it. “I told you in the beginning of the week, ‘We’re built to crush dreams,’ and that’s what we’re doing.’’ Next Saturday, FIU comes to Hard Rock Stadium to play the Canes. “And next week it’ll be the same thing,’’ Dallas said. “It’s the same story: underdog trying to come beat Miami in Hard Rock, and we’re just going to handle business.” ▪ Miami’s 12-play, 76-yard drive to open the scoring was its longest touchdown drive of the season. ▪ The UM defense had 13 tackles for loss and four sacks Saturday. The sacks were by Sheldrick Redwine, Gerald Willis, Michael Pinckney and Scott Patchan.
Willis led the team with three tackles for loss. Duane Burleson AP ▪ UM had at least four players walk off the field at different points of the game with apparent injuries, but three of them returned. The one who didn’t return: star senior safety Jaquan Johnson, who injured his hamstring during Toledo’s first scoring drive late in the second quarter.
Despite only playing in the first half, Johnson led UM with seven tackles. Defensive tackle Gerald Willis III limped off the field with cramps with 11:26 left in the third quarter, but returned to play. Cornerback Trajan Bandy also walked off the field at one point, but returned and had an interception. Striker Romeo Finley also left the game at one point.
▪ Richt said sophomore safety Amari Carter didn’t travel to the game because “he had a family member who passed away’’ and “gave the eulogy for that family. “He made the choice and he honored his family. “We had another player,’’ Richt said, “defensive end Joe Jackson, who had a family member pass away and he was at the family viewing on Friday and then ended up making the game.’’ ROCKETS FROM SOUTH FLORIDA Fourteen players on Toledo’s roster are from Florida, five of them from South Florida. Junior wide receiver Desmond Phillips (Miami Jackson High School), sophomore defensive tackle David Hood (Miami Carol City), redshirt freshman offensive lineman Kedonis Haslem (Fort Lauderdale St.
Thomas Aquinas), sophomore cornerback Keelen Roberts (Carol City) and sophomore receiver Neru N’Shaka (Hallandale High) are the South Florida reps. “Watching them growing up, that was one of the schools I wanted to go to,’’ Phillips told the Toledo Blade this week, saying “it was a lot of fun’’ attending games and watching them “get after other guys’’ at the old Orange Bowl. He specifically recalls attending the Clemson game, UM’s worst loss in history (58-0), the day before Al Golden got fired in 2015. “It wasn’t good,’’ he said. GLASS BOWL The historic Glass Bowl, where the Canes played Saturday, began construction in 1936 and finished in 1937 with an original seating capacity of 8,000. It has since grown to 26,038, but can seat more for major games.
The stadium, originally known as University Stadium, “fell into disrepair following nearly four years of vacancy (1942-45) during the war, when football was discontinued at UT,’’ the UT website wrote. In 1946, “glass blocks were installed throughout the stadium and a glass electric scoreboard was built in the south end zone.’’.
Contents. John Gregg was a candidate for of in the. On April 30, 2015, Gregg stated that he would challenge (R), due in part to Pence's position on the. Gregg cited the contentious debate over the act for damaging the state's reputation on a national level. He and running mate were defeated by (R) and (R) in the general election.
Gregg was the candidate for governor in the. He was defeated by Pence in the November general election. Gregg is a former in and served as speaker of the from 1996 through 2002.
Gregg officially announced his candidacy for the on August 2, 2011. Known for his handlebar mustache, Gregg made the image a centerpiece of his campaign, putting a blue mustache on most campaign material and using it as the official campaign logo.
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Email to notify us of updates to this biography. Gregg was born, and still lives, in Sandborn, Ind. He worked as an attorney before running for public office and was first elected to the in 1986. He became the chamber's House Majority Leader in 1990 and was elected Speaker of the House in 1996.
When he retired in 2002, Gregg was named a 'Public Official of the Year' by Governing Magazine. After leaving office, he served for two years as interim president of Vincennes University before resuming his private law practice. Education.
North Knox High School (1972). Vincennes University (1974). Indiana University (1976). J.D., Indiana State University (1978) Elections 2016 See also: and On April 30, 2015, Gregg announced plans to seek the governor's office in 2016.
The race was initially set to be a rematch of the 2012 election, when defeated Gregg to win the governor's seat. However, Governor Pence withdrew from the race on July 15, 2016, in order to join presidential candidate 's ticket as his running mate and vice presidential pick. It would have been only the second time in Indiana history, and the first since Whig Noah Noble defeated Democrat James Read in 1831 and 1834, that two candidates for governor have faced each other in consecutive elections. The Republican state committee had 30 days from the date Pence withdrew to select a replacement candidate for governor and nominated on July 26. (R) joined the Republican ticket as the lieutenant gubernatorial nominee—replacing Holcomb, who was initially running as Pence's running mate.
Gregg selected. (D) as his running mate. Gregg and Hale competed in the November 8 general election with Holcomb and Crouch; and his running mate,; and independents.
Defeated, and in the Indiana governor election. Johng Gregg announcement (April 30, 2015) 2012 See also: Gregg was the candidate for.
He ran unopposed in the primary election and lost to (R) in the general election. (L) and write-in candidate also ran. Governor/Lieutenant Governor of Indiana General Election, 2012 Party Candidate Vote% Votes Democratic John Gregg / Vi Simpson 46.6% 1,200,016 Republican Mike Pence / Sue Ellspermann 49.5% 1,275,424 Libertarian Rupert Boneham / Brad Klopfenstein 4% 101,868 Independent Donnie Harold Harris / George Fish 0% 21 Total Votes 2,577,329 Election results via Governor of Indiana Democratic Primary, 2012 Candidate Vote% Votes John Gregg 100% 207,365 Total Votes 207,365 Election results via. Issue positions. Economic Development: Gregg said some parts of the state were not receiving equal benefits from state economic development programs.
'We need to do everything that we can to promote Indiana's business, regardless of where they're located,' he said. Health care: On August 27, 2012, Gregg said he was leaning towards the creation of a hybrid healthcare exchange for Indiana, which would be operated jointly by the state and federal authorities. He said use of that model would allow some state control while being able to shift costs to the federal government. Jobs: The major issue of the 2012 campaign was jobs, with each candidate detailing their plan to get citizens back to work.
Gregg said Indiana needed to examine its energy resources and that wind turbine parts should be manufactured in the state rather than overseas. Endorsements Gregg's endorsements included the following:. IN AFL-CIO Campaign donors Gregg lost the election to the position of Governor of Indiana in 2012.
During that election cycle, Gregg raised a total of $6,472,738. Governor of Indiana 2012 election - Campaign Contributions Top contributors to John Gregg's campaign in 2012 Democratic Governors Association $484,165 Midwest Region Laborers $300,000 Auto Workers Region 3 $260,000 Indiana State Teachers Association $252,500 Indiana Regional Council of Carpenters $150,000 Total Raised in 2012 $6,472,738 Source: Awards In 2002, Governing magazine named Gregg and Minority Leader of the as two of 11 'Public Officials of the Year' for their collaboration in restructuring the state tax code. Other honorees included New York Attorney General. Each year since 1994, Governing has selected a handful of state and local officials to honor for standout job performance. The Public Officials of the Year program 'recognizes leaders from state, city and county government who exemplify the ideals of public service.'
State profile. This excerpt is reprinted here with the permission of the 2016 edition of the and is up to date as of the publication date of that edition. All text is reproduced verbatim, though links have been added by Ballotpedia staff. Indiana, a key manufacturing hub the industrial Midwest, experienced pain during the Great Recession, before recovering along with the rest of the country. But despite economic gains, Indiana – a red state that narrowly voted for Barack Obama in 2008 - responded eagerly to the angry message of Donald Trump and his running mate, Gov. Mike Pence, eight years later. In the 1940s, Indiana-raised journalist John Bartlow Martin wrote that Indiana was 'the central place, the crossroads, the mean that is sometimes golden, sometimes only mean.'
Look no further than the map, with Indianapolis in the center and highways radiating at regular angles to all corners of the state. Indiana's name recalls its frontier past, when William Henry Harrison defeated Tecumseh's Indians at Tippecanoe in 1811. Its most famous venue opened a century later, in 1909-the Indianapolis Speedway, where the Indy 500 is still held every Memorial Day weekend. (The original bricks have been replaced by asphalt, except.
Demographic data for Indiana Indiana U.S. Total population: 6,612,768 316,515,021 Land area (sq mi): 35,826 3,531,905 Gender Female: 50.7% 50.8%. White: 84.2% 73.6% Black/African American: 9.2% 12.6% Asian: 1.9% 5.1% Native American: 0.2% 0.8% Pacific Islander: 0% 0.2% Two or more: 2.2% 3% Hispanic/Latino: 6.4% 17.1% High school graduation rate: 87.8% 86.7% College graduation rate: 24.1% 29.8% Income Median household income: $49,255 $53,889 Persons below poverty level: 18.4% 11.3% Source: U.S. Census Bureau, 'American Community Survey' (5-year estimates 2010-2015). Note: Percentages for race and ethnicity may add up to more than 100 percent because respondents may report more than one race and the Hispanic/Latino ethnicity may be selected in conjunction with any race.
Read more about race and ethnicity in the census. Presidential voting pattern See also: Indiana voted Republican in four out of the five presidential elections between 2000 and 2016.
Pivot Counties (2016) Ballotpedia identified 206 counties that voted for (R) in 2016 after voting for (D) in 2008 and 2012. Collectively, Trump won these Pivot Counties by more than 580,000 votes. Of these 206 counties, five are located in Indiana, accounting for 2.43 percent of the total pivot counties. More Indiana coverage on Ballotpedia.