12 Burst results for "University Of Miami"

SPORTS GOOFS
"university miami" Discussed on SPORTS GOOFS
"The washington football team. They they are goons so as you all know. They are being investigated right now for many scandals. And there's a massive cloud hanging over the team and really. I mean it's always been there but now it's it's it's darker it's it's much much darker and of course dan. Snyder is a horrible owner and wash the football team or the culture is damn good right guys rate line. It's awesome. it's an awesome line. I love out tree. Your any keeps using it but it's great. The culture for the washington. Football team was like you know what's a good thing that we should do we should. We should honor sean taylor. Former university miami hurricane tragically died back in two thousand seven protecting family from an armed burglary and died young died young and was yeah died young at already made. What three pro bowls by. That point was just superstar superstar. And who knows what could have been with the rest of his life and career and he played for the washington football team at that time and they they did honor him with the place in the ring of honor that that that seemed appropriate yes and he only played what three or four seasons with them and that was it and unfortunately so but they they decided you know that was that was the honoring that they would do for him. Well guys the nfl. They're getting investigated. And of course. Jon gruden was fired because of this investigation because his leaked email was to the was the president of the washington football. Yeah exactly so. That's the reason that came out. And who knows what else is gonna come out of this and that's going to be fun for the rest of this season but the washington is like we gotta get we gotta get the the public support back guys. We got a rally team. You know we're second in the nfc even though we're never going to catch the cowboys but we need some some. Some good feels here so they decided to retire. Sean taylor's football number rubber basically his number twenty one and it seemed like that seems like a nice gesture but fourteen years later guys fourteen years later. That's when you decide to retire. His number and you just happen to be investigated by federal agents with regards to all your sleaziness around the same time. Okay fine write when somebody got fire for something. They were even in employee of your organization for exactly. Okay all right all right. Washington football team will bite. When's the ceremony. Oh well we're announcing it. This thursday right now and it's this sunday this upcoming sunday. Wh what do you mean. is this upcoming say. Yeah we had like four days. You've you've got this all planned out. Didn't sure sure we do. Well the wash. The football team had the ceremony and it was as hastily put together as you could imagine. There's a wonderful tweets by a washington. Football team beat writer or somebody covering the nfl as to just the sheer lack of anything for that ceremony..

Game of Crimes
"university miami" Discussed on Game of Crimes
"Didn't think it was his sort of thing that i could opt out of. And that's what kind of sets up the contradiction because that's where we're going to get into his here. Somebody comes from a very patriotic family. I mean you joint look i. I was young back then. But i remember the draft. I remember seeing. My dad was like over vietnam for a year and a half. You know a lot of things going on. Not a lot of people volunteered for you volunteered and do that. It's kind of like a contradiction in terms with your later life but we just wanted to kind of set. The stage for that is that you had a lot of reasons. You didn't have to go but you still chose to go. That's correct and i went to get to the twenty fifth division. I went to. I was lucky enough because my military occupational specialty had changed infantry to cavalry. So i ended up with another armored unit and after a little more than four hundred days i came home and my parents had in the meanwhile moved to miami beach from new york. Why did they move my father. I think he wanted a little bit of a change. And we have family in florida so you know back then. Everybody was listening to the commercial. Said come on down. It wasn't the van was not the miami of today right. That's correct miami. The of the nineteen seventy was A totally different place. And i was lucky enough to go over to the law school in the graduate school and i was admitted to the law school on the first day of orientation that summer so you came back from doing your time over in vietnam you served came back. You got out of the military right. You're you're enlistment was up and then how long between the end of your enlistment and law school wasn't you're talking about just days weeks. How fast was at. Maybe a leak time but everybody in my class. Where all this a whole bunch of them had all gotten out of the service just like me now. Were you able to use the bill to go through the school We'll back then. No they did was give you three hundred dollars a month day. Didn't cover your tuition. So fortunately i was able to handle it. But the point is that It was a bit of a an adjustment. Because when you're used to being out in the bush and then all of a sudden you sitting in an office with a whole bunch of people of both sexes at a little bit unusual unusual. So did you have. I mean i know you kind of said you come from a family lawyer. Did you want to do anything else or did you disfigure. Just kinda like eight by better joined the army and get this out of the way. Did you feel a lot of family pressure to become a lawyer was that did you really wanna be one. I had gone to one of those vocational testing groups at new york university. And that's what they basically told me. Was you really should think about being a lawyer. So that's why. I took the law boards while still in school because i figured that somewhere down the road if i got lucky i could get in. Yeah are well. obviously it was still called the l. Sat back in the days or did they have a different name for it. No that's correct law school admission test. Okay well apparently that your score was good enough. Is that even though you went over what you're gone for probably at least what two years between the time you took the all sat and got into law school. Yes that's correct. But i was look lucky enough. I imagine that probably got in because at the last minute some people went to some other law school and i was just i was there and i was available. Well so you went to the university miami. Now being a notre dame guy. I gotta tell you. We had some contentious football games back in the ninety s the eighty s in the nineties. The canes had a tough time this week to. Yeah well hey. Notre dame prevailed though so y- ban late last night can't click over. We're we're we're recording us actually on labor day and this is gonna come out monday the thirteenth. And but i'm telling you. I didn't i normally don't stay up that late but we're up till midnight almost like yelling at the tv and then when they missed field goal florida state. Did a notre dame kick that. It's like victory irish. Quick divergence there can it is. It is college football season. We're back in the swing of football fan at all in your backyard. Did you go to games. Did you do anything with the college life. I was just always watching the games obviously because there were a lot of fancier and by the way my daughter is going to. Fsu ya well. They actually have a pretty good team. I think this year i was we. Were supposed to beat the pants off of them and it was too close for comfort. Let me tell you so anyway. Go irish so let's move on to so you go you get into law school. What areas do you in. This will factor in later into what you do. What areas did you decide to focus on twitter. Did you end up focusing on in law school. Well i'm interested in corporation securities and banking law. Because frankly that's the bread and butter of most miami lawyers or at least it was back then because miami wasn't really an international city to the extent that it is today back then while they had a lot of latin american business they didn't have all that european and international business people didn't get in and get on a plane and fly in from hong kong to do business here who is basically things coming from the south and i was always interested in civil practice anyway now. At that time in miami was the mob was still mobbed up during that time. Was there good. You see a lot of things with organized traditional organized crime. no frankly. The organized crime was Pretty much relegated to areas of miami beach and a little bit up in broward county. But they weren't really. That influential might have owned a lot of real estate in florida but they were not an ever present threat to public security of course by one thousand nine hundred seventy. The narcotics trade had exploded. That wasn't that originally for a lot of the original gangsters the oh jeez. The original organized crime guys they. They didn't want to be involved in drugs to them. That was like a no. They did their traditional racketeering. Extortion up things like that. So that kind of opened up the area down in miami. So how long does it take you to get through law school. I went through with the standard three year program. Of course. I work part time too. Because i wanted to get my hands dirty my feet wet and realize what it's like because of course going from being in the military to being a student again is kind of like a step backwards. How did you make that transition. Because i know. I spent six years in the reserves. Like my dad was world war. Two vietnam twenty eight years. Total friends at transitioning out. And there's a lot of people have an adjustment. I mean you're kind of in unique where you sitting in a classroom. Where it's kind of nice and safe after coming from the bush and being in the jungle where people were getting shot and killed and people trying to kill you on a daily basis. How did that. How did that transition affect you. When you went into law school did did you transition.

The Drug Science Podcast
"university miami" Discussed on The Drug Science Podcast
"We have to find the money. And so i go all right so i go tonight. Ninety had invited me to give a talk on coke Again and so. While i was up there the head of the medication development division dr charles service and frankly Deputy i talk to them afterwards. Listen university miami's going to submit to the fda organised Ninety and i david. I swear to god i think when i turned round and went to walk out of the room that both of them laughed at the thought are yet right. Gina but i did on undeterred. Did they know you know snow. I submitted it and we went up before the drug abuse advisory so these were the same people at the same time that rick dobelin was going yet with the you know with his work at map so there were few few. I mean. We've got permission from the fda in nineteen ninety three to put to do the face one study of. I began in at that time. Of course. I was proposing that we would do it in cocaine dependent patients. Here's and again the same group and we got permission. Put our protocol in the. I n t went up and our our clinical trial protocol goes then and my medical safety officer dr. Dan spiker thirty days. They give you the call right. So i'm sitting here at my mask and a thirty. We got the phone call for dr cypher. And i ran and got one sanchez ramos. Who was our clinician on the study and we sat there on the phone with them and they said we're going to let you go. We're gonna let you do it. What should make a few changes that you're good ago. Go hang up the phone. And i couldn't believe my god. They've proved this. Wow and so ho- case now we're gonna do it and long story short few months later we got a phone call from dan and he says debra. Have you put on again into humans as dr spike. Were still getting ready to start the trial now and he said well. I'm gonna i need to tell you something. There is a group of investigators at johns hopkins. And they said that i became causes cerebellar tosses and that was george Colleague martin oliver right. Yes canvey do remembering that night. Yeah same strategy you know. Raise the neuro-toxins flag slipping down but either gave recreational by begins the therapy and again. It's not a recreational. Now run is taking gain in a in a dancehall same but you know it's used for sure the single purpose well that's right but you highlight a very important potent problem. Which is the group is analyzed finding problems with drugs. they find problems with drugs. Because i didn't think been damage turned out to be of any relevance. Didn't or was it meaningful. Now you know that there. It did appear recently flagged up again when senator shots and congresswoman alexandria of your cortez raise the issue about to congress and the senate about increasing funding for advancement. Gesture psychedelic medicines and they not only included soul sivan..

Just Between Us
"university miami" Discussed on Just Between Us
"I think we're pretty aware the prejudices. I was certainly aware of the comments. People may people would tell jokes about aids in It was just disgusting. You when you saw what people were thinking. You know what they're thinking was and what their lack of sensibility was it was just. It was awful. I remember being once in a store in addressing room and hearing these women talking about our there was some program on tv and save. My husband ever came home and told me you know that he had aids. I just you know. I would kick him out so fast and i just walked out of that dressing room and i lived with them and i said you know what you would do. Don't be so quick to judge. You don't know what you would do if someone you loved with six. Maybe that's exactly what they would do. You know poor them polyp their husbands and say you might doesn't really lovable has sort of wanted to ask a bit about your. You know your internal reaction to hearing that news. I mean i would assume you afraid for your own house you know. I know i never was really i never was. It was the day that he told me. I knew that i was there. Just to be his companion his wife his healer his lover everything that i had been to him and more. I never thought. I would get sick. And i never did. Wow you know. Obviously we never had unprotected sex after that but you know. I wasn't afraid to touch them to hold him to kiss him Didn't occur to me to do anything else and it was just a feeling that i had that was more than just a feeling. It was a surely that i had that we were meant to go through this together. You said that In the book. That pete because you had only been married for ten months there were some people who said you can get out. You should just get on. What was that reaction like in what. What was your response to that. My response was it had happened to bin. I know that what you're saying. Man that came from someone that i was very close to in the in the recovery program and my response to that person was. You don't know me very well for all the time we spent together and doing the steps together and opening up to each other. It was shocking to me that that would be what that person would say to me because that just never was in the cards. That never entered my mind to leave him. You know sure anybody could leave for for any reason at any time but to me that was never going to happen and for somebody to say that to me. First of all. I think is a little bit outside the boundaries at also they know me pretty well and they know that i'm very loyal and they know how much i love stephen and always have that i would ever think of just turning my back on him. It was surprising to me to hear that. I think a lot of people's true faces show when someone gets sick especially in a way that isn't palatable. Like cancer you know in a way that people go. Oh well they did this themselves like which is such a horrific way of putting that. Was he afraid that you would leave ever. I don't think so. Oh i don't think he was. I can't imagine that he was but he very often says that he couldn't have done it without me. Which i just say well you would have gone some chicken here. Do always had somebody. Well the what was. The life expectancy like when you first started seeing doctors. And and how did bats. Gary you eighteen months and you adjust married. Yes that was a good. And how long have you been married. now it'll be thirty five years summer. Wow no so right away. I mean how did you guys handle being newlyweds in hearing like you might be gone into years. Not very well. I mean he bursts of all never believes aids was going to take his life. He really did not. He really believed that he could live with aids and coexist with aids and that happened after a while i mean after a while of working with visualization and many healers We did go on a journey of healing and go to the navajo reservation. And i'll work with Of visualization person from the university miami. I mean we did a lot of things alternatively. He just felt that he could kind of make friends with disease and that he could find a way to live with aids and that he didn't have to kill it and it didn't have to kill him very interesting but he did it. Any also used whatever. Western medicine was available. That worked you know. He went through a lot of protocols where the other person other people in the protocol died and was last man standing and he didn't die. It didn't cure him but it but he didn't die. That was kind of interesting. I wanted to be as positive as he was and i. I worked on that. Because i knew that was part of what was going to keep him going was that we both were going to be as positive as he was and many times. I was but there was always that mary frightening. Thought that i could lose him. And i knew how powerful this was. If you remember. I had very good friend. Larry who did pass away from the disease and you know it was all around us. People that we met in the protocols that we became friends with very good friends with and they were all dying and there were so many people dying. We didn't know but there were people we did know we would meet people and make friends with them and then they'd be gone and i couldn't help it sink. This could be us. You know this could be stephen It was very difficult. And i just would be crushed by lawson and that sounds strange because some people would say. Of course. you're gonna lose him. But i did also feel the way. He felt like no. I'm not we're going to do this. And that's what kept us going. It was part of me that felt just like he did that. I wasn't. I mean you know us as much as i love you guys so much. I now you mel us. We didn't act like people that were going to lose the lose it all. We always had plans. You know big plans and we kept that on always trips always stuff in the future so to that first trip. We took after diagnosis. We didn't know if he was gonna liver die. And we went to paris and plenty to go to paris and he said let's go but we walked around like. Are we ever gonna to get to do anything like this again. I mean you know it was. It was pretty weird but we loved it. We had a great time loved it. Did the doctors ever give any sort of explanation as to why he was outliving. All these other patients one thing they said was that he was very sensitive to the medication and that he reacted well to it. Whenever that was supposed to me. I thought that was really the s because if everybody else was not living as a result of the medication i don't care how well he you know reacted to the medication. It wouldn't be working right if that clearly not working. Yeah personally. I got what they gave him the dose they gave me. The azt initially was too high. Because it was knocking. Everybody's.

The Bone 102.5
"university miami" Discussed on The Bone 102.5
"I'm sorry. That's that's exactly what I was gonna say. The music scene There's s so big. Yeah, like where it is. We're just used to be okay. Michelle was just country. It's really burgeoning with country and rock and alternative. So they got everything there. It's fantastic. Great City. I've been there. I've only been there one time with Wen Tile. Is there a lot of fun? Over there quite a few times. I love it. Oh, yeah. What you do there? Um, just hang out. I guess I guess not necessarily. Nashville. It's more more Gatlinburg area You're like loves other Southern state kind of guy between your Alabama and Gatlinburg visits. Yes, sir. Flora Bama. Laure Obama. Connecticut was last time you've been the Alabama it's been a while. Speaking Alabama Footballs out in university. Miami opens their college football season against Alabama up in Atlanta of all places to start there. There's Miami's first loss of their need to crush by Alabama, so I won't even watch the first game of the season. Lightning Looks like there's a break in the action right now it's 5 to 1 your lightning lead against the Florida Panthers in the period, too. It'll be 125. All right, Denise, I'm sorry I had to do it. That was on Twitter last. You know everything for everybody kept going with it for so long. I had a lower score. You can't. I'm sorry. No, that's one thing. That I totally is. Really? You can't do that. It makes my skin crawl. Yeah, we're in the game and we're winning 3 to 7. No. 3 to 7 is a time it's not a score. A terrible, terrible anyways, we got take a break. Ah, lot of fun to have today before four o'clock. Anyone know if Moe is live? Remember X today I'm gonna guess. Member Memorex live. Yeah, I think he's loved five. Who knows? All right, we'll find out one way or the other more to go, Michael Radio show on the Lightning Saturday. One or 2.5 the bone..

The AIB Show
"university miami" Discussed on The AIB Show
"Welcome everybody back again for another episode this episode when numbers seven. Seventeen we're making progress and so to continue on our growth as a show. We actually have a guest for the first time in a long time. A guest who dominic and. I were lucky enough to meet many years ago at a wedding for somebody else's on this show drew palmer and it was hit sued six seven seven and and we met a doctor. Monique daisy at that time. And we honestly have not spoken since much. I'm not gonna lie to you. And then we go in. Regards to the podcast. 'cause she listened to dominic episode and found it interesting both comedic and sad but and all of that in between so i'll give you a quick little background and who and why dr breezy is is with us. And then i'll have retirement. I'm reading directly off bio so she's currently an associate professor of history and african and africa. Sorry wartime associate professor of history and of african and african american studies. I don't know what that means. We'll find out soon. At washington university of saint louis correct phd from university miami go canes and according to her bio by reading off directly all right so professor professor. Did you write this. Does your your i think i wrote that one. Is that from my reading at work. Yes okay because it says professor but daisy is a historian of africa and the african diaspora with a focus on east africa. And the caribbean based on a deep interest in trans-national histories her work moves betwixt betwixt. This word was just betwixt and between both the twix and between. So they're not they're not synonyms. Apparently different things betwixt and between regions that have traditionally been been calcified into separate field of study. Her interests include the intellectual political and social history of decolonization black internationalism and african diaspora politics. Hot damn i don't even know how things are. She's also renowned author. Yes that's correct having penned the monograph which had to look up the meaning of l. Kingdom russified ends tanzania and pan-africanism in the age of decolonization. So yes so. She's done a whole bunch more than i ever have or will do right. I mean completely right. That's so much stuff going on. It's crazy so welcome and thank you for the time. Thank you so much for having me your crazy here. It's good to see you today but a mate. Well no on the real. It's been it's it's we had a chat a couple weeks ago so literally as i mentioned we had not really spoken since the since the wedding. She's been very nice. Listen to our podcast and our foolishness and heard dominance episode and actually reached out regarding that episode of because it was as i mentioned troubling slash. Comedic not the situation but the way we discussed it and Lets us having a conversation about all of this and a lot of her background. And so i wanted to kind of start there is. What is your background. I e like your last name. Be daisy where does that come from there. What is the etymology okay. So the last name is the birth of the indian iran born and raised in jamaica. And i have both african ending act on both sides so the name is indian What if you want to know will. How does one. And i'll touch on this as we progress into this. How does one get into becoming. The professor of decolonization black internationalism african diaspora politics. Like what i how. How does somebody go from jamaica to this field of study. No i okay. I would rains in a rectifier on family and my parents were members of the twelve of is now which is one russell group in jamaica founded in jamaica in ninety six to eight but the white almost was founded in the nineteen thirties So when i met you make up to high school at about eighteen. I think i did. High school stayed for a couple of years and then moved to miami and then started college and gravitated toward any and everything about black people. Globally and at that point didn't dawn on me consciously that my upbringing Had much to do with that I actually had. I was not you know doing. He's checking out my first three losing leash and i had my in anthropology and when it just study Looking back their religious studies minos away to think through what it meant to be raised classifying Trying to figure out what really meant to me. And then you know figuring out what the politics of rastafari movement Also meant to me and how it shaped me then. I finished a degree in english. Did a master's in african studies cornell And at the end of the master's degree which is also you know people moving two different disciplines. I wanted to do own a history of the phd and decided to do african history And then went from there. That i ended up being my first book. Which was my dissertation. And you know doing. Both africa asking. I ask for And and ended up being a whole different story which we can get into lethal but it was not the book i plan to write i action and went to the field and thompson here for research and Change dissertation topic. Because of what's i phoned. Why would any stop because for the first time. Those becca five. Yes back research. Unbeknownst to you you saw the rest influences their correct or now that i write my question. My question was was going to be if you grew up in it because i was ignorant. I always find jamaica. We think the fire. I would think ethiopia like tanzania no clue about this and learn. I learned all about this in the last few days. In essence julius. If i'm slaughtering his last name new array. Yes and just you know the landgraf. They provided the rest. You can aspires upon that. But i learned that you were enlightened When you were there and seeing the influences that the rest of foreign people at movement had in that country at the time and the way and change what you were planning to do and right yes. You're absolutely right in that. You know the fact that. I write about repackage. It tends india ethiopia surprise many people Because most defiant you know think of repatriation. I think you feel And that of course comes from the fact that heinsohn the thought ever after firing on You know actually obviously You know was you. Know crawling king of kings or lords conquering lineup. To try to travel to in ethiopia and he should unmanned ground throughout the fire and In the nineteen fifties and back ago. He's been you know considered the home aggressive. Rem people.

KNBR The Sports Leader
"university miami" Discussed on KNBR The Sports Leader
"And you heard him on KNBR. You You so money ESPN, most notably through the bonds, home run Chase. If you love baseball. Understand that Pedro Gomez loved baseball and his because covering of baseball, and as I mentioned he was very, very good reporter that came through to the fact that a is a professional but be he loved the game he was reporting on. He loved baseball, and he loved the people within the game as well. So you might not have known Pedro Gomez. But you had something in common with him. If you're a baseball fan, do you love the game of baseball? He loved it Justus much, maybe even some instances Maura than you did, And we don't have too many people, you know, kicking it around nowadays that genuinely love Baseball and baseball us to last a great reporter and gay man. Just just This family. I can't even Yeah, that's it. And this. This is one of his hometown's and and it sounds weird to say that because you know his family was from Cuba. He went to Miami Dade Community College University, Miami. He's a Miami guy. But then he came out here and he was the ace beat writer for the B. I believe in the nineties. Um and I think AIDS beat writer even for Merck. I think he was Merc and B. But then you know, he went to the Arizona Republic and then Arizona became a home for him, and it sounds like maybe that's where he kind of settled and that became his ESPN base when he started working for them and 2003 something between Miami and Northern California and Southern California and then Arizona. I mean, he made every one of those his homes and and set roots and made friends and Just we lost a great We lost a great loving guy who's just You know, he was special. There was he? There was enthusiasm and joy in his in his work. Um, and he just He was just a very But the more more thing that more than anything in the world, the number one word. I think it's just kindness because he just was such a kind hearted guy in us in some and what can be kind of a cut throat. Fast paced. Nobody cares. Everybody's jaded kind of a world in sports media. This guy this guy cared. And he would ask you about your family and and wasn't it wasn't just an act. You know him. He was a very genuine She's a good dude. Just a good dude. If you knew Pedro Gomez a little bit or a lot. Um, we're sorry for your loss. Hey, was he was a good man. All right, we will make the somewhat awkward turn to the toy Department of Life. We will get into Super Bowl discussion and our comments on the Super Bowl will fall somewhere in the middle of the extremes that have been blown out at you all day long on one hand. Tom Brady is the greatest winner in the history of winning and humankind and on the other hand, Patrick Holmes is a fraud and he's not what he is all been talked up to be those of your extremes. We shall fit somewhere comfortably in the middle with our analysis here on the Tolbert, Kruger and Brooks show. KB, KNBR, 1045 and 68 ft towards leader Third by covert clinic dot or g'kar cases around the rise. Getting tested easy. A covert clinic with drivers in the Bay Area get professional and reliable testing from the safety of your car Results in 60 minutes, plus expedited testing for travelers go to covert clinic that orc to book an appointment. You asked them for the Bayshore Freeway from the Children Auto Body Traffic desk. This'd about the middle of the peninsula north at 101 at Whipple, the right lane. If not, the two right lanes are blocked. So traffic's backing up to Woodside Road. Still seeing heavy traffic into the Santa Cruz Mountains, where there was a car with a blowout, south bound 17 jams up from Bear Creek out toward Hubbard. And if you're getting up the limits that's already heavy today from Alvarado to a street out of the city that's packed from before Vermont Street to the Bay Bridge. I think you sponsored by Marin Health, your gateway to better health with an exceptional medical center and more than 150 primary and specialty care doctors in clinics throughout the North Bay.

Newsradio 700 WLW
"university miami" Discussed on Newsradio 700 WLW
"Of sports talk show host here it by heart media. You know, it's just crazy. Our boss David Er, Brewster, you know every few days since Adam memo, all this case been postponed, canceled. And the radio schedule, you know, gets revamped. So it's just crazy for everybody. It is, you know, with the games I've been broadcasting, you know, especially with loyal, appear in Chicago. Um, it literally is on a week to week basis. And you know what we're finding out is a lot of these head coaches. They're kind of preempting covert restriction times toe where if it's not the team Not their team to get put aside because it killed it. Then if, like saved, you know Xavier was gonna play Butler today and all of a sudden, two days into before the game, Butler says. Well, we got a positive test. We gotta sit out. Well, then they have a line of teams that they could just run and play sometimes in conference or outcome, But you know, the conference administrators are really earning their money this year. But more than anything it's team on wants to get his many games as possible because there could be some opportunities where the amount of games that you play in the season determines what you do in a postseason tournament. And that could be very important and then also with a lot of these conference games, there are obviously all playing back to backs wherever they go. So if you if you play or supposedly one team on on a Friday Saturday, and they get a covert restriction that you could possibly you don't not play a game for two weeks, so it's just really Move it on the fly. Yeah, I wish you know, especially locally. If a team You know, has a game postponed. Man have have somebody waiting in the wings where you can go run and play, you know, like, you know, in Miami or a right state or a Dayton You know when? When? You know when a tank is shut down for a few days? Yeah, You know, I have been an advocate. Then before this season came out, so let's let's take Ohio. Okay? I was an advocate for what I call the Southern Ohio Basketball Conference for say, where the athletic directors from Ohio State Ohio University, Miami. Deighton, right state, Northern Kentucky. You see Xavier All had a pact to where if one team got positive, and another team needed a game that they would work with each other to play these games, and you could have a central location there in Cincinnati, like wherever you wanted to play. It's all bus trip. You could drive there in the morning. Play the game and drive back to you don't have stayed a hotel or anything like that. And I'm just surprised that not a lot of regions or conferences have gotten together to do this again. You know, we're not dealing with professional sports. We're dealing with collegiate sports, and any time you start dealing with academia and a lot of the red tape and bureaucracy that comes out academia, smart, simple..

ESPN Chicago 1000 - WMVP
"university miami" Discussed on ESPN Chicago 1000 - WMVP
"Love. It's a love of the death. Hey, no, seriously empty. You guys did an unbelievable job and covering senior bowl week. Mac Jones. What did you see for people who weren't football nerd ng out? I'm getting out. It comes to the quarterback of Alabama or maybe a couple small college sleeper guys that really stood out to you that when we get to the NFL draft in our coverage here on ESPN radio, you're gonna be going that is a great pick. You guys. It was so much fun. Louis, Riddick Todd McShay Field, Jason, a great job hosting it. Quint, Kessenich sideline reporter and what's so much fun about that event as you guys like. We're on the field in the drills like our access was incredible. Jim Negative executive director was fantastic. And what I said was and I really feel like this is where this conversation is going. Couple years ago, Daniel Jones skyrockets up Come topside pick because of how you played, Dave Gettleman said. It was based on how we played in mobile. Why they took him aside. He did. Justin Herbert continued his ascent up the board because you played great guns. Wisconsin. The Rose Bowl, nailed it in mobile crushed it at the combine, became the sixth pick with the Chargers and Mack Jones is on that same trajectory. I'm watching the body language between that rule and math Jones and I'm Carolina on there, and eight. I'm disappointing Teddy Bridgewater, and I'm telling you guys like, I don't know if it's gonna happen, But don't be surprised to see the Carolina Panthers at eight. Take Mack Jones and we could go back to this week's practice. But in terms of like under the radar guys, I mean, there's just so many of them. But you know, there was a couple like every guy like Rochet from University, Miami who Even play a lot. You look like a three down defensive lineman to me. Michael Carr from North Carolina. Undersized guy explosive caught the ball really? Well. Mine hurts from Whitewater, Wisconsin Whitewater Division three was dominant and one on one, so there were a number of guys that really stood out. Mike, you always stand out despite the bit of table party one notice, and Fitzsimmons, not money on her was appreciate your brother like sweats. Him shot you That work sweats, right? I just want to get out here. Just cause I wanted, you know, clothing check over under was over on the pants for Ian uses the under literally and figuratively. A time when it comes to the offensive is have a good night. Mike. Appreciate a man. Thanks a lot Grace about my 10 about ESPN NFL front office inside of Like I mentioned in my Twitter is a great foul at real Tan a bomb here and Freddie Fitzsimmons thanks to aggressive insurance. But taking your business of specialized coverage is for your commercial vehicles. More more progressive commercial dot com That is progressive commercial dot com. She's head coach Andy Reid feels the same way you do about this. This is ESPN radio Lucy's.

South Florida's First News with Jimmy Cefalo
Schools in Miami-Dade, Broward, Monroe closed Monday due to Tropical Storm Eta
"Are being taken air being taken in and around the area. In response to this tropical storm beaches in some schools, Miami Dade, Broward and Palm Beach are closed public schools no school today, not even online for Broward and Miami Dade. Other affected schools include Florida International University, Miami Dade College, Broward College, Barry University, the University of Miami is holding classes online at last check. Everglades Biscayne, Dry Tortugas national parks are closed until further notice

Safe Money with Marcus Bradford Bray
Early returns show Putin re-elected in a landslide tainted by fraud
"Putin for president the russia probe i'm anne cates exit polls show vladimir putin has nabbed three quarters of the votes of the russian presidential election today correspondent frederik plotkin says there were other candidates on the ballot seven people running against ladimir putin it seems as though the closest runnerup at this point he's at around eleven percent so from what we can see so far it seems pretty much assured that latimer putin is going to spend another six years in office as the russian president the president is attacking the fbi and special counsel robert muller after his personal attorney called for an end to the probe into russian meddling in the election and any trump campaign ties to moscow senate minority whip dick durbin tells fox news sunday that president trump is straying into dangerous territory is president is engaged in desperate and reckless conduct to intimidate the law enforcement agencies in this country and to try to stop the special counsel that is unacceptable in a democracy ousted fbi deputy director andrew mccabe is mulling a new position congressman mark poke and says he's offered to hire mccabe to work on election security something the wisconsin democrat says is a legit job and seth moulton of massachusetts also a democrat tweeted saturday that he'd consider giving mccabe job saying his district would benefit from the wisdom and talent of such an experienced public servant it's not clear how long they've been affect as mccabe only needs a couple of days on a federal job to qualify for his full pension a spokeswoman for mccabe didn't immediately rule out the idea but said they're considering all options richard johnson washington after days of digging through nine hundred fifty tons of steel and concrete authorities say the remains of all six victims of the pedestrian bridge collapsed in florida have been recovered rescuers have worked day and night to extract the victims and mangled cars after the pedestrian bridge which was under construction crumbled last thursday near florida international university miami i'm ann cates.

Wisconsin's Morning News with Gene Mueller
Prosecutors drop assault charges in Penn State hazing death
"And teenagers in that time melissa barklay wtmj news hennigan says all seven service members on board a us military helicopter were killed in a crash in iraq more from abc's tom rivers defense officials say so far there's no indication that the pave hawk helicopter was shot down the chopper had been used by the air force for combat search and rescue and it was in transit from one location to another when it came down near the town of kwame and bar province near the syrian border six people now said to be dead in that bridge collapse on the campus of florida international university miami dade police spokesman elvira zabaleta says rescue crews are still searching through the rubble that bridge whatever's left of it is very very unstable so we have to be very careful as they're moving stuff because of the fact that you're talking to tons of concrete the bridge was lifted into place just five days ago prosecutors are topping all assault charges against members of penn state fraternity in a hazing death of a pledge details from cbs news anne marie green investigators say tim piazza was given at least eighteen alcoholic drinks over ninety minute period last year he fell down basement stairs hitting his head fraternity members found him unconscious but waited forty minutes before calling for help prosecutors will continue to pursue involuntary.