Michigan Football: Michigan vs Indiana Scores and NCAA TV Coverage
Michigan vs Indiana Game Scores and NCAA Football Schedule - A much anticipated game is said to be witnessed few minutes from now by millions of football fans as the ranked no. 19 Michigan Wolverines will be facing at the same time attempt to remain undefeated against the Indiana Hoosiers live at the Memorial Stadium in Bloomington, Indiana this Saturday afternoon at exactly 3:30pm ET, October 2, 2010.
Last weekend, the Wolverines crushed Bowling Green as expected by a 65-21 final. Some players have shown impressive game through the first four games of the season including Michigan quarterback Denard Robinsons. He has rushed for 688 yards and 6 touchdowns while passing for 731 yards with 4 scores and one interception.
The Michigan Wolverines squeaked by the Indiana Hoosiers last season by a 36-33 final to increase their lead in the all-time series to 51-9. Michigan is averaging 41.2 ppg and 562.8 total ypg, impressive numbers to say the least. The Wolverines are racking up 331.2 ypg on the ground, and they have already scored 17 rushing touchdowns.
Defensively, Indiana is yielding 19.3 ppg and 338.3 total ypg. The Hoosiers are permitting 177.0 rushing ypg at a clip of 5.2 yards per carry, so that is an area of obvious weakness. Demario Belcher leads the receivers with 21 grabs for 284 yards and two touchdowns, while Ted Bolser has four receiving touchdowns to his credit.
Some sports critics gave their predictions that Michigan will defeat the Indiana this weekend while the Shoelace will strengthen his Heisman bid with another big day awaits.
Catch them live now vis NBC and in some sports channels like in ESPNU, FOX CBS. You may start checking your local channel listings now for the availability of the game airing schedules.
More updates to come so better standby here from time to time to get the latest feeds about the Michigan vs Indiana game results and live scores.
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Saturday, October 2, 2010
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Wednesday, September 29, 2010
Meg Whitman employed illegal Immigrant
Meg Whitman employed illegal Immigrant
Meg Whitman, the Republican candidate for governor who has called for making California employers more accountable for hiring undocumented workers, faced allegations today that she herself had done so for nearly a decade - a charge that her campaign denied as an attack by Democrats playing "the politics of personal destruction."
The October surprise in the governor's race unfolded live on TMZ.com as Los Angeles attorney Gloria Allred, a longtime Democratic activist, held a news conference with the former employee, Mexican-born Nicandra Diaz Santillan, who worked for Whitman as a nanny and housekeeper from 2000 to 2009.
"What did Meg Whitman know and when did she know it?" said Allred, who charged that Whitman "never asked if Nicky were here legally" when she hired her to work as a $23-an-hour housekeeper in Whitman's 15,000-square-foot home in 2000.
Allred added that Whitman ignored correspondence sent to her home from the Social Security Administration in 2003. The letter informed her that Diaz' Social Security number did not match her name - a red flag for an undocumented worker.
The letter asked Whitman to show that Diaz had proper documentation, Allred said, and there is no record that Whitman had responded.
The charges came as Whitman was starring in a her own news conference in San Jose with Cisco Systems CEO John Chambers, an event aimed to underscore her credentials on job creation. She forcefully denied the accusations.
"I feel terrible for Nicky," the former eBay CEO told reporters. "She is being manipulated and I'm sorry. Everything Gloria Allred is saying is an absolute lie."
Whitman's campaign operatives insisted that the attorney was a plant for the campaign of Whitman's opponent, Democrat and state Attorney General Jerry Brown.
"We absolutely did what we needed to do as employers," Whitman told reporters, adding in a statement that Diaz provided false documentation about her immigration status to the employment agency through which Whitman made the hire.
The charges came a day after Brown and Whitman's first debate in their heated race, which recent polls show is at or near a dead heat. Whitman - who has been making inroads into the Latino vote in the state, according to polls - will participate in a Spanish-language debate with Brown in Fresno on Saturday, which will be broadcast on Univision.
As recently as Tuesday's debate in Davis, Whitman has called for employers to be held accountable for hiring undocumented workers. Whitman was asked Wednesday why she had not previously discussed her experience and problems with hiring immigrant workers.
"It never came up," she said.
In Los Angeles, Diaz tearfully alleged that she was fired in June 2009 when she came to Whitman for help in obtaining her green card. Whitman, she said, was planning her run for governor at the time, and fired her longtime employee a few days later.
Diaz said Whitman called her and said: " 'I don't know you, and you don't know me. Understand?' "
Allred cast Diaz as the victim of a politically ambitious employer who skirted the law. The attorney charged that Whitman hired Diaz to work for 15 hours a week as a nanny in her home.
Although Diaz was paid $23 an hour, Allred said she was "exploited, disrespected, humiliated, and emotionally and financially abused" in the Whitman household because she worked many more hours than she was paid for. Allred said she intends to file a claim with the state asking that Diaz be paid back wages.
Allred said that Whitman never asked Diaz for documentation and once asked whether she ever traveled to Mexico and Diaz told her employer, "I cannot travel outside the country."
Whitman said she had always believed Diaz to be a legal resident alien, adding that her employee had been hired on the basis of false documents Diaz presented to an employment agency.
"After nine years of faithful service, Nicky came to us in June 2009 and confessed that she was an illegal worker," Whitman said in her statement. "Nicky had falsified the hiring documents and personal information she provided to the employment agency that brought her to us in 2000," Whitman's statement said.
"Nicky told me that she was admitting her deception now because she was aware that her lie might come out during the campaign," Whitman's statement said, adding that Whitman said she had no choice but to fire Diaz.
Rob Stutzman, a Whitman political adviser, told reporters that the event was engineered by Allred and Democrats precisely to hurt Whitman as she headed into a crucial debate before a Latino audience.
"What's a California governors' race without Gloria Allred inserting herself into it," Stutzman said. He said it was "curious" that Allred had donated $150 to Brown's 2006 campaign for attorney general. "There's a clear relationship and party affiliation that's undeniable," he said.
"This is the post-debate smoke bomb," he said.
Asked whether Whitman saw Diaz' Social Security documentation, as Allred insisted, Stutzman said Whitman "never saw it ... and guess who picked up the mail every day? (Nicky) was in control of it."
Whitman appeared unruffled in her press conference in San Jose after the meeting with Chambers, but one part of their conversation appeared to allude to today's troubles.
"Politics is tough, isn't it?" Chambers said to her at one point during the event.
Whitman's response: "Politics is a blood sport."
Credits
Meg Whitman, the Republican candidate for governor who has called for making California employers more accountable for hiring undocumented workers, faced allegations today that she herself had done so for nearly a decade - a charge that her campaign denied as an attack by Democrats playing "the politics of personal destruction."
The October surprise in the governor's race unfolded live on TMZ.com as Los Angeles attorney Gloria Allred, a longtime Democratic activist, held a news conference with the former employee, Mexican-born Nicandra Diaz Santillan, who worked for Whitman as a nanny and housekeeper from 2000 to 2009.
"What did Meg Whitman know and when did she know it?" said Allred, who charged that Whitman "never asked if Nicky were here legally" when she hired her to work as a $23-an-hour housekeeper in Whitman's 15,000-square-foot home in 2000.
Allred added that Whitman ignored correspondence sent to her home from the Social Security Administration in 2003. The letter informed her that Diaz' Social Security number did not match her name - a red flag for an undocumented worker.
The letter asked Whitman to show that Diaz had proper documentation, Allred said, and there is no record that Whitman had responded.
The charges came as Whitman was starring in a her own news conference in San Jose with Cisco Systems CEO John Chambers, an event aimed to underscore her credentials on job creation. She forcefully denied the accusations.
"I feel terrible for Nicky," the former eBay CEO told reporters. "She is being manipulated and I'm sorry. Everything Gloria Allred is saying is an absolute lie."
Whitman's campaign operatives insisted that the attorney was a plant for the campaign of Whitman's opponent, Democrat and state Attorney General Jerry Brown.
"We absolutely did what we needed to do as employers," Whitman told reporters, adding in a statement that Diaz provided false documentation about her immigration status to the employment agency through which Whitman made the hire.
The charges came a day after Brown and Whitman's first debate in their heated race, which recent polls show is at or near a dead heat. Whitman - who has been making inroads into the Latino vote in the state, according to polls - will participate in a Spanish-language debate with Brown in Fresno on Saturday, which will be broadcast on Univision.
As recently as Tuesday's debate in Davis, Whitman has called for employers to be held accountable for hiring undocumented workers. Whitman was asked Wednesday why she had not previously discussed her experience and problems with hiring immigrant workers.
"It never came up," she said.
In Los Angeles, Diaz tearfully alleged that she was fired in June 2009 when she came to Whitman for help in obtaining her green card. Whitman, she said, was planning her run for governor at the time, and fired her longtime employee a few days later.
Diaz said Whitman called her and said: " 'I don't know you, and you don't know me. Understand?' "
Allred cast Diaz as the victim of a politically ambitious employer who skirted the law. The attorney charged that Whitman hired Diaz to work for 15 hours a week as a nanny in her home.
Although Diaz was paid $23 an hour, Allred said she was "exploited, disrespected, humiliated, and emotionally and financially abused" in the Whitman household because she worked many more hours than she was paid for. Allred said she intends to file a claim with the state asking that Diaz be paid back wages.
Allred said that Whitman never asked Diaz for documentation and once asked whether she ever traveled to Mexico and Diaz told her employer, "I cannot travel outside the country."
Whitman said she had always believed Diaz to be a legal resident alien, adding that her employee had been hired on the basis of false documents Diaz presented to an employment agency.
"After nine years of faithful service, Nicky came to us in June 2009 and confessed that she was an illegal worker," Whitman said in her statement. "Nicky had falsified the hiring documents and personal information she provided to the employment agency that brought her to us in 2000," Whitman's statement said.
"Nicky told me that she was admitting her deception now because she was aware that her lie might come out during the campaign," Whitman's statement said, adding that Whitman said she had no choice but to fire Diaz.
Rob Stutzman, a Whitman political adviser, told reporters that the event was engineered by Allred and Democrats precisely to hurt Whitman as she headed into a crucial debate before a Latino audience.
"What's a California governors' race without Gloria Allred inserting herself into it," Stutzman said. He said it was "curious" that Allred had donated $150 to Brown's 2006 campaign for attorney general. "There's a clear relationship and party affiliation that's undeniable," he said.
"This is the post-debate smoke bomb," he said.
Asked whether Whitman saw Diaz' Social Security documentation, as Allred insisted, Stutzman said Whitman "never saw it ... and guess who picked up the mail every day? (Nicky) was in control of it."
Whitman appeared unruffled in her press conference in San Jose after the meeting with Chambers, but one part of their conversation appeared to allude to today's troubles.
"Politics is tough, isn't it?" Chambers said to her at one point during the event.
Whitman's response: "Politics is a blood sport."
Credits
Tyler Clementi - Sex to Suicide
Tyler Clementi - Sex to Suicide
Click Here for an Image
A Rutgers University freshman posted a goodbye message on his Facebook page before jumping to his death after his roommate secretly filmed him during a "sexual encounter" in his dorm room and posted it live on the Internet.
Items belonging to 18-year-old Rutgers student Tyler Clementi were found by the George Washington Bridge last week, according to authorities. Clementi's freshman ID card and driver's license were in the wallet.
Clementi's post on his Facebook page, dated Sept. 22 at 8:42 p.m. read, "Jumping off the gw bridge sorry."
Clementi's body has not been recovered, but police have pulled an unidentified male body from the Hudson River just north of the bridge.
Paul Mainardi, the attorney representing the Clementi family, released a statement confirming Clementi's suicide.
"Tyler was a fine young man, and a distinguished musician. The family is heartbroken beyond words. They respectfully request that they be given time to grieve their great loss and that their privacy at this painful time be respected by all," Mainardi said.
Two students, Dharun Ravi and Molly Wei, have been charged with two counts each of invasion of privacy after allegedly placing a camera in Clementi's room and livestreaming the recording online on Sept. 19, according to a written statement by New Jersey's Middlesex County Prosecutor Bruce Kaplan.
A Twitter page that appears to have been operated by Ravi but has since been taken offline shows messages in which the accused student takes credit for the alleged videotaping of Clementi.
On Sept. 19, Ravi appears to tweet, "Roommate asked for the room till midnight. I went into molly's room and turned on my webcam. I saw him making out with a dude. Yay."
Ravi faces two additional counts of invasion of privacy for allegedly attempting to use the camera to view and transmit another sexual encounter involving the same student just two days later, said Kaplan.
On Sept. 21 Ravi posted, "Anyone with iChat, I dare you to video chat me between the hours of 9:30 and 12. Yes it's happening again."
Clementi's lawyer said the family is cooperating with the ongoing criminal investigation into Ravi and Wei's alleged actions.
A Facebook memorial group created in honor of Clementi already has hundreds of members, many of whom are fellow graduates of Ridgewood High School in New Jersey. Clementi had graduated Ridgewood this past spring.
One of Tyler's friends, Courtney Ayukawa, posted to the group's wall, "I will always remember everything from our preschool's Halloween party to your amazing musical talents. When you picked up the violin and began to play, it was as if everything just paused until you put it down again. We will never forget you Tyler. May you rest in peace."
Strangers have also contributed to the memorial page, one writing simply, "R.I.P from a stranger."
Credits
Click Here for an Image
A Rutgers University freshman posted a goodbye message on his Facebook page before jumping to his death after his roommate secretly filmed him during a "sexual encounter" in his dorm room and posted it live on the Internet.
Items belonging to 18-year-old Rutgers student Tyler Clementi were found by the George Washington Bridge last week, according to authorities. Clementi's freshman ID card and driver's license were in the wallet.
Clementi's post on his Facebook page, dated Sept. 22 at 8:42 p.m. read, "Jumping off the gw bridge sorry."
Clementi's body has not been recovered, but police have pulled an unidentified male body from the Hudson River just north of the bridge.
Paul Mainardi, the attorney representing the Clementi family, released a statement confirming Clementi's suicide.
"Tyler was a fine young man, and a distinguished musician. The family is heartbroken beyond words. They respectfully request that they be given time to grieve their great loss and that their privacy at this painful time be respected by all," Mainardi said.
Two students, Dharun Ravi and Molly Wei, have been charged with two counts each of invasion of privacy after allegedly placing a camera in Clementi's room and livestreaming the recording online on Sept. 19, according to a written statement by New Jersey's Middlesex County Prosecutor Bruce Kaplan.
A Twitter page that appears to have been operated by Ravi but has since been taken offline shows messages in which the accused student takes credit for the alleged videotaping of Clementi.
On Sept. 19, Ravi appears to tweet, "Roommate asked for the room till midnight. I went into molly's room and turned on my webcam. I saw him making out with a dude. Yay."
Ravi faces two additional counts of invasion of privacy for allegedly attempting to use the camera to view and transmit another sexual encounter involving the same student just two days later, said Kaplan.
On Sept. 21 Ravi posted, "Anyone with iChat, I dare you to video chat me between the hours of 9:30 and 12. Yes it's happening again."
Clementi's lawyer said the family is cooperating with the ongoing criminal investigation into Ravi and Wei's alleged actions.
A Facebook memorial group created in honor of Clementi already has hundreds of members, many of whom are fellow graduates of Ridgewood High School in New Jersey. Clementi had graduated Ridgewood this past spring.
One of Tyler's friends, Courtney Ayukawa, posted to the group's wall, "I will always remember everything from our preschool's Halloween party to your amazing musical talents. When you picked up the violin and began to play, it was as if everything just paused until you put it down again. We will never forget you Tyler. May you rest in peace."
Strangers have also contributed to the memorial page, one writing simply, "R.I.P from a stranger."
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