North Carolina
Hurricanes top Capitals 4-1 in Carolina’s 1st outdoor game
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — The Carolina Hurricanes stepped out of the tunnel in a stadium packed stuffed with buzzing followers, with the lights from cellphone flashlights bouncing alongside the stands and North Carolina State’s marching band enjoying to their pregame stroll to an out of doors rink.
“Not having skilled a kind of,” Carolina coach Rod Brind’Amour stated, “I don’t know the way it may very well be a lot better, to be sincere with you.”
The Hurricanes did their half on the ice, too.
Martin Necas had a purpose and two assists to assist the Hurricanes beat the Washington Capitals 4-1 on Saturday evening of their first NHL Stadium Sequence outside sport.
Jesperi Kotkaniemi, Paul Stastny and Teuvo Teravainen additionally scored for Carolina, which accomplished a three-game season sweep of their Metropolitan Division foe.
The sport was held at Carter-Finley Stadium, house to North Carolina State’s school soccer group and throughout the road from Carolina’s house ice at PNC Area. Delayed two years due to COVID-19 attendance restrictions, the sport drew a buzzing sellout crowd of 56,961 followers on an evening that felt extra like spectacle than a regular-season sport.
“That was cool,” Stastny stated. “I’m not an enormous school (soccer) man however I at all times form of watch these Saturday evening video games beneath the lights, once they come down from the tunnel, and that’s what it form of felt like.”
“There’s no query,” Carolina captain Jordan Staal stated, “these are pinch-yourself moments.”
Tom Wilson scored within the third interval for the Capitals, who suffered their fourth straight loss. The previous three have come with out captain and main goal-scorer Alex Ovechkin, who’s away after the demise of his father.
“We’ve received to get our confidence again,” Wilson stated. “We’ve received to get our swagger again just a little bit.”
Carolina completed with a tenth win in 11 video games. And this one had the added significance that got here with the long-awaited outside sport — the newest likelihood for the league to carry considered one of its marquee occasions in a so-called “nontraditional” market inside its southern footprint.
Temperatures hit the 70s for a number of days earlier within the week, whereas rain arrived to delay Friday’s practices, however situations had been optimum Saturday: clear and chilly all day, with temperatures dipping into the low 40s by the puck drop and excessive 30s by the ultimate horn.
The Hurricanes gave their festive crowd loads of causes to remain rowdy, beginning with Kotkaniemi’s end in shut barely two minutes into the sport. Then Carolina scored three objectives in a 5 1/2-minute span of the second interval to blow this one open.
“We discovered ourselves chasing them and chasing the sport,” Washington coach Peter Laviolette stated.
The spotlight was Necas hammering a one-timer on the ability play from the left aspect previous Darcy Kuemper. The flurry additionally included Hurricane goaltender Frederik Andersen tallying an help.
On an evening when he completed with 24 saves, Andersen earned some extent when he lofted a protracted cross to Teravainen to ignite a 2-on-1 likelihood, with Teravainen passing to Necas, who drew Kuemper to his aspect and despatched it again to Teravainen for the simple putaway and a 4-0 lead.
SWEET THREADS
The groups adopted outdoor-game custom by arriving in coordinated and themed apparel, from a comfortable afternoon on the links to a throwback to glory days on the high school gridiron.
The Hurricanes walked from PNC Area in old-timey plaid golf knickers, matching hats and a black prime over a white collared shirt with crimson tie. Defensemen Brent Burns and Jaccob Slavin had been amongst these to finish the look by carrying a golf membership.
The Capitals exited a faculty bus sporting blue denims, a white T-shirt, customized lettermen-styled jackets, knitted caps and toting footballs.
GOLF SURGE
Fittingly, Carolina’s postgame “Storm Surge” on-ice celebration for the followers adopted the golf theme.
After main followers in coordinated claps, the gamers dropped their gloves to the ice used their hockey sticks to swing at them as if they had been teeing off.
NODS TO THE PACK
NHL chief content material officer Steve Mayer had stated the evening would additionally honor host N.C. State. And there have been loads such touches.
The Wolfpack marching band sat behind one purpose at ice stage. Mascots Mr. and Ms. Wuf sported Hurricanes gear. And there was the acquainted soccer gameday sight of the motorized cart that includes a big white N.C. State soccer helmet on a wolf head parked close to the Capitals tunnel.
Former Wolfpack basketball greats David Thompson and Dereck Whittenburg — who led N.C. State to NCAA championships in 1974 and 1983, respectively — launched the Hurricanes as they emerged from the tunnel.
And at last, there was Ripken the Bat Dog — official tee retriever for N.C. State soccer and bat retriever for the close by minor-league Durham Bulls baseball group — performing a ceremonial puck drop between Staal and Washington’s Nicklas Backstrom.
UP NEXT
Capitals: Host Detroit on Tuesday evening.
Hurricanes: Host St. Louis on Tuesday evening.
___
Observe Aaron Beard on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/aaronbeardap
___
AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
North Carolina
North Carolina man gets maximum sentence for 2021 murder
JEFFERSONVILLE, Ind. (WAVE) – A North Carolina man found guilty of killing a Wisconsin man in Jeffersonville will likely spend the rest of his life behind bars.
Christopher Tandy was sentenced to 65 years for the 2021 shooting death of Rodrick Wallace. Police found Wallace’s body on the side of Edgewood Way in the Oak Park subdivision on July 23, 2021.
Tandy was arrested in North Carolina days later. The court found him guilty and the judge gave him the maximum sentence allowed in Indiana.
“I’m very pleased with the court’s decision today,” Clark County Deputy Prosecutor Calvin Blank said. “I believe it was appropriate in this instance. The crime of murder is highest in which we have in Indiana and we were able to prove that the defendant did it and he received the sentence that is appropriate under Indiana law.”
Tandy was given 55 years for murder and auto theft and another 10 years for being a felon with a firearm.
Copyright 2024 WAVE. All rights reserved.
North Carolina
A power grab by Republicans in North Carolina becomes a referendum on democracy in the states
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Democrats in North Carolina were celebrating big wins in the swing state after the November election, including victories in races for governor and other top statewide offices. But the political high didn’t last long.
Republican lawmakers are stripping away some core powers of the newly elected officials through a series of wide-ranging changes, anticipating that the result of a yet-to-be-called state legislative race will cost them their veto-proof majority next year. Critics say the moves, which were rushed through without any chance for public comment or analysis, undermine the voters and are simply undemocratic, but they have few options for undoing them.
“Let us speak plainly: This bill is nothing more than a desperate power grab,” said Courtney Patterson, vice president of the NAACP’s North Carolina chapter.
Among the changes, which were included in a bill that also addressed Hurricane Helene relief, are stripping the incoming governor of the authority to appoint members to the state elections board and instead giving that responsibility to the state auditor — a job won by a Republican last month. The measure also weakens the ability of the governor to fill vacancies on the state court of appeals and the state supreme court. It prohibits the attorney general from taking legal positions contrary to the legislature’s and weakens the powers of the state school superintendent and lieutenant governor.
Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper and Attorney General Josh Stein, who will succeed Cooper next month, have already filed a lawsuit against Republican lawmakers, saying many portions of Senate Bill 382 violate the state constitution. The Republicans’ actions in North Carolina are the latest example of how majority parties in some states have tried to undermine representative democracy in recent years, using extreme gerrymandering to expand their hold on power or trying to undercut officeholders of the opposing party or ballot initiatives that passed in statewide elections.
“This is not how healthy democracies work,” said Steven Greene, a political science professor at North Carolina State University. “You don’t lose and decide you’re going to change the rules because you don’t like that you lost. It’s corrosive of the basic principles of democracy.”
Greene said he was disappointed but not surprised by the effort he describes as part of a familiar playbook. In 2016, hundreds of people protested and more than two dozen were arrested after Republicans passed a bill that stripped powers from Cooper’s incoming administration during a special session.
Republicans point out that Democrats acted to weaken executive branch positions after voters elected the state’s first GOP governor in the 20th century, in 1972, and the century’s only GOP lieutenant governor in 1988. North Carolina Senate leader Phil Berger blamed Democrats’ “blatant partisanship” for necessitating the changes, which came just weeks after voters chose Democrats for the top statewide positions.
“The new measures in Senate Bill 382 actually balance our three branches of state government so that North Carolina remains on a positive trajectory, free from Democratic Party and liberal activist obstruction,” he said in a statement earlier this month.
While Democrats have won many top statewide offices for several election cycles, Republicans maintain a tight grip on the other two branches of government in North Carolina. Republicans have control of the legislature and hold at least a 5-2 majority on the state Supreme Court, where any dispute over the power-stripping legislation could ultimately land.
Since winning control of North Carolina’s legislature in the 2010 elections, Republican lawmakers have repeatedly drawn voting districts to their favor, just as Democrats had done when they were in charge. That has helped Republicans retain a firm hold on power in the legislature while also triggering protracted court battles over redistricting.
The current legislative districts are advantageous to Republicans. The GOP won about nine more state House seats this year than would have been expected based on their average share of the district votes, according to an Associated Press analysis using a mathematical formula designed to detect gerrymandering.
“North Carolina is very much a purple state,” said Melissa Price Kromm, executive director of North Carolina for the People Action. “… But our legislature has been gerrymandered to allow for a Republican supermajority that makes these nefarious attacks on our democracy possible. It’s baked into the system.”
Meanwhile, an extremely tight race for a state Supreme Court seat has sparked a legal battle over the potential removal of tens of thousands of ballots. With the incumbent Democratic justice clinging to a narrow lead, the Republican candidate’s challenge includes objecting to ballots from voters whose registration lacks driver’s license or Social Security numbers. His attorneys argue that makes them incomplete.
“North Carolina voters see that the same folks who are trying to overturn the results of the state supreme court race are the same people who are trying to change the way our elections are handled, the way powers and government functions are handled,” said Julia Hawes, communications director at the statewide advocacy group Democracy North Carolina. “A lot of us have been watching these power grabs and attempts to overturn the will of the people for over a decade.”
In several other states, lawmakers also have made attempts to nullify some results of the November election. In Missouri, Republicans are taking initial steps to curtail voter-approved abortion protections by introducing a new constitutional amendment to restrict abortion access. Massachusetts Democrats are exploring options to alter the auditing process after voters overwhelmingly approved giving the state auditor the authority to watchdog the Legislature.
During last week’s veto override in the North Carolina House, over 100 demonstrators chanted “Shame” and “People power” as they were escorted out of the chamber’s gallery. Two days before, hundreds marched to the Legislative Building to deliver documents opposing the bill.
Rep. Cynthia Ball, a Democrat and member of the election law committee, criticized Republicans for not making the bill public earlier, not offering a public comment period and tucking such a significant power shift into legislation that included storm relief.
“Our democracy is threatened more and more when things are done behind closed doors,” she said.
Della Hann, 64, traveled the 2 1/2 hours to Raleigh from her home in Southport to demonstrate when the Senate agreed to override Cooper’s veto of what she called “a horrible bill.”
The legislation, she said, is “not for the people of the state. It’s for the people sitting in that room to keep their power.”
Kromm, of North Carolina for the People Action, said watching crowds gather in protest offered hope and said her group would be focused on educating voters so they can hold lawmakers accountable.
“The sheer number of people who turned up showed that people in North Carolina care about what’s happening in our legislature, and they don’t give up without a fight,” she said. “They know authoritarianism thrives on complacency and that we must stand together and refuse to let this assault on democracy go unanswered.”
___
Fernando reported from Chicago. Associated Press writers Makiya Seminera in Raleigh, North Carolina, and David A. Lieb in Jefferson City, Missouri, contributed to this report.
___
The Associated Press receives support from several private foundations to enhance its explanatory coverage of elections and democracy. See more about AP’s democracy initiative here. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
North Carolina
Local charity says its in 'crisis mode' as NC struggles with donations during holiday season
In the season of giving, charities and organizations in North Carolina are struggling with holiday donations.
With Christmas just one week away, many charities are feeling the pinch.
Less than a week ago, the Triangle Nonprofit and Volunteer Leadership Center said it lost an important sponsor, which they said could affect more than 50 families that rely on the center.
Kim Shaw of the Triangle Nonprofit and Volunteer Leadership Center said the center has been in “crisis mode.”
It’s one of the issues many nonprofits are facing around the state.
According to the World Giving Index and WalletHub, the United States is the sixth-most giving nation in the world, but in the country, North Carolina ranks as the 29th most charitable state.
“That’s one of the things we’ve heard from nonprofits we support is that contributions are down,” she said.
The DJ Rowell Foundation did its part on Wednesday and donated bookbags with goodies to children at the Ronald McDonald Houses in Durham and Wake County.
“It’s an incredible impact,” founder David Rowell said. “We have to spark this new cultivation of giving. We all know what it’s like to receive, but we’ve got to start giving more.”
While the DJ Rowell Foundation is helping fill the gap, Shaw said she remains hopeful the community will rise to the occasion this holiday season with a financial donation to help the families that feel left behind.
Those interested in supporting the center can volunteer here.
-
Politics7 days ago
Canadian premier threatens to cut off energy imports to US if Trump imposes tariff on country
-
Technology1 week ago
Inside the launch — and future — of ChatGPT
-
Technology6 days ago
OpenAI cofounder Ilya Sutskever says the way AI is built is about to change
-
Politics6 days ago
U.S. Supreme Court will decide if oil industry may sue to block California's zero-emissions goal
-
Technology6 days ago
Meta asks the US government to block OpenAI’s switch to a for-profit
-
Politics1 week ago
Conservative group debuts major ad buy in key senators' states as 'soft appeal' for Hegseth, Gabbard, Patel
-
Business4 days ago
Freddie Freeman's World Series walk-off grand slam baseball sells at auction for $1.56 million
-
Technology4 days ago
Meta’s Instagram boss: who posted something matters more in the AI age