Orlando, FL (AP) — UCF’s Tayven Jackson threw for 223 yards and scored a passing and rushing touchdown to guide UCF to a 34-9 victory over North Carolina.
The Knights were mostly methodical throughout the game, with three touchdown drives of longer than five minutes. But they scored a critical touchdown on a 64-second, six-play, 83-yard drive to close the second half when Jackson found Kylan Fox for an 18-yard score.
After forcing a punt to open the third quarter, the Knights scored on a short run from Myles Montgomery to take a 24-point lead and coasted to the finish, getting a rushing touchdown from Jaden Nixon on the team’s final drive with less than two minutes left.
The Tar Heels could not respond to the Knights’ long drives.
UNC quarterback Gio Lopez struggled with 11-for-14 passing and 87 yards. The Tar Heels tallied only 217 yards. The Knights had 366.
UCF forced two interceptions in the first half, picking off Lopez on a deflected pass at the line by Horace Lockett that was snagged by defensive end Nyjalik Kelly. They also got a second deflected pass when Jayden Bellamy tipped a pass to Braeden Marshall to stop a deep North Carolina drive.
Lopez left the game in the third quarter with an apparent right leg injury after he was tackled on a fourth-down conversion. Lopez left the field in a cart after an extended time in the medical tent.
Max Johnson took over, finishing the drive with a touchdown throw to Nathan Leacock late in the third quarter. He had 67 yards on 11-for-19 passing to go with his touchdown.
The Takeaway
North Carolina: The Tar Heels struggled in their second matchup with a Big 12 opponent after a 48-14 loss to TCU in Week One. They likely will need to switch to senior backup quarterback Max Johnson moving forward.
UCF: The Knights have firmly established their quarterback as Jackson took over for the second straight game and led UCF to a comfortable win.
Up Next
North Carolina has a bye week next week before opening ACC play at home against Clemson on Oct. 4.
UCF travels to Kansas next week to open Big 12 play.
WASHINGTON (AP) — An emerging TikTok deal with China will ensure that U.S. companies control the algorithm that powers the app’s video feed and Americans will hold a majority of seats on a board overseeing U.S. operations, the White House said Saturday.
A central question to the tug of war between Washington and Beijing has been whether the popular social video platform would keep its algorithm after the potential divestment of Chinese parent company ByteDance.
Congress passed legislation calling for a TikTok ban to go into effect in January, but President Donald Trump has repeatedly signed orders that have allowed TikTok to keep operating in the United States as his administration tries to reach agreement for ByteDance to sell its U.S. operations.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said tech giant Oracle would be responsible for the app’s data and security and that Americans will control six of the seven seats for a planned board. Oracle did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
“We are 100% confident that a deal is done, now that deal just needs to be signed and the president’s team is working with their Chinese counterparts to do just that,” Leavitt told Fox News’ “Saturday in America” A day earlier, Trump and China’s Xi Jinping discussed a TikTok deal in a lengthy phone call.
Leavitt said “the algorithm will also be controlled by America as well,” offering more detail about how the deal, at least in the eyes of the White House, is taking shape.
TikTok’s algorithm fuels what users see on the app. American officials have warned the algorithm is vulnerable to manipulation by Chinese authorities, who can use it to shape content on the platform in a way that’s difficult to detect.
Trump said after his call with Xi that American investors were lined up and that the Chinese leader has been “a gentleman” about the matter. The Republican president was vague on the crucial question of whether China would control the algorithm.
“It’s all being worked out,” Trump said. “We’re going to have very good control.”
A statement from the Chinese government after that phone call did not clarify what Xi had agreed to regarding a sale of a controlling stake by TikTok’s Chinese parent company to avoid a U.S. ban.
Leavitt said Trump “recognized the need to protect Americans’ privacy and data while also keeping this app open,” adding that “TikTok is a vital part of our democratic process.”
A recent Pew Research Center survey found that about one-third of Americans said they supported a TikTok ban, down from 50% in March 2023. Roughly one-third said they would oppose a ban, and a similar percentage said they weren’t sure.
Among those who said they supported banning the social media platform, about 8 in 10 cited concerns over users’ data security being at risk as a major factor in their decision, according to the report.
Leavitt expressed confidence that the agreement would be finalized soon. “Now we just need this deal to be signed,” she said. “And that will be happening, I anticipate, in the coming days.”
Grammy award-winning country songwriter Brett James, whose string of top hits includes “Jesus, Take the Wheel” by Carrie Underwood and “When the Sun Goes Down” by Kenny Chesney, died in a plane crash in North Carolina, authorities said Friday. He was 57.
The small plane with three people aboard crashed Thursday afternoon “under unknown circumstances” in the woods in Franklin, the Federal Aviation Administration said in a preliminary report. There were no survivors, the North Carolina State Highway Patrol said in a statement.
James was on a Cirrus SR22T, which was registered to him under his legal name of Brett James Cornelius, according to information provided by the FAA. It was not known if he was the pilot. The patrol confirmed his death. The FAA and National Transportation Safety Board said they will investigate the crash.
The other two people on the plane were Melody Carole and Meryl Maxwell Wilson, the patrol confirmed.
The plane had taken off from John C. Tune Airport in Nashville.
James was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2020. The organization posted an online statement of mourning.
A native of Oklahoma City, James left medical school to pursue a music career in Nashville, according his biography on the Hall of Fame’s site.
His first No. 1 hit was “Who I Am” in 2001, by Jessica Andrews. “Jesus, Take the Wheel,” which he co-wrote for Underwood, earned the 2006 Grammy for Best Country Song, among other honors.
James had more than 500 of his songs recorded, for albums with combined sales of more than 110 million copies, according to his Grand Ole Opry biography online.
Other artists who sang his songs include Faith Hill, Kelly Clarkson, Luke Bryan, Keith Urban, Nick Jonas and Meghan Trainor.
Additional hits include “Cowboy Casanova” by Underwood, “Out Last Night” by Chesney and “Summer Nights” by Rascal Flatts.
“Heartbroken to hear of the loss of my friend Brett James tonight,” country singer Jason Aldean posted on X. “I had nothing but love and respect for that guy and he helped change my life. Honored to have met him and worked with him.”
James recorded his own album in 2020.
“At my stage in life, I’m not going to write about driving around in pickup trucks, chasing girls,” he was quoted as saying on the Opry site. “It needed to feel more classic, lyrically. They all wound up being love songs, but hopefully love songs with a twist, that haven’t all been written before.”
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Associated Press reporter Kristin M. Hall in Nashville contributed to this story.
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Fourteen former N.C. State male athletes have filed a lawsuit in state court alleging sexual abuse under the guise of treatment and harassment by the Wolfpack’s former director of sports medicine, expanding a case that began with a federal lawsuit from a single athlete three years ago.
The lawsuit filed Wednesday evening in Wake County Superior Court alleges years of misconduct by Robert Murphy Jr., including improper touching of the genitals during massages and intrusive observation while collecting urine samples during drug testing.
Murphy, at N.C. State from 2012-22, is among nine defendants named individually. Others are school officials accused of negligence in oversight roles.
Twelve athletes are “John Doe” plaintiffs to protect anonymity, while two former men’s soccer players are named. One is Benjamin Locke, who filed the original complaint in August 2022. The other is one of two athletes who filed their own federal lawsuits in February and April 2023. The Associated Press typically doesn’t identify those who say they have been sexually assaulted or abused unless the person has spoken publicly, which Locke has done.
Durham-based attorney Kerry Sutton, who has represented plaintiffs in all four lawsuits, filed to dismiss those pending Title IX lawsuits before moving the case to state-level jurisdiction — though now with 11 additional plaintiffs.
Wednesday’s lawsuit outlines similar allegations of Murphy’s conduct and the school’s response. It alleges concerns about Murphy reached former athletic director Debbie Yow and other senior athletics officials, but nothing substantive was done to investigate nor prevent Murphy from “free rein” in working with male athletes despite being told to stop.
The lawsuit alleges Murphy’s conduct was known to the point that athletes on multiple teams joked derisively about it, while multiple athletes refused to let Murphy treat them again. It also alleged Murphy’s observation methods while collecting drug-testing samples were “unsettling and undignified,” with athletes exposed from calves to chest and sometimes with Murphy standing closely in the same bathroom stall.
“These 14 athletes have come forward together hoping to encourage others abused by Rob Murphy to see it wasn’t just them, they did nothing wrong, and NCSU should have protected them,” Sutton said in a statement on behalf of co-counsels Lisa Lanier and Robert Jenkins.
“A culture of fear in the NCSU athletics department led to this tragic set of circumstances. Athletes afraid of losing their scholarship or their spot on the team, trainers afraid of reporting their boss, coaches afraid of getting involved, directors afraid of harming NCSU’s reputation. Murphy took advantage of those fears to get away with abusing what we believe may turn out to be hundreds of former Wolfpack athletes.”
Seth Blum, who has represented Murphy along with fellow Raleigh-based attorney Jared Hammett, said Murphy has been falsely accused.
“In three years of representing Robert Murphy in and out of court, we have yet to see one scrap of credible evidence that he assaulted anyone,” Blum said in a statement Thursday. “He is a talented professional who has been targeted as an early victim in the new frontier of mass torts: suing universities for spurious allegations of sexual assault.
“Put simply, Robert Murphy did not do this.”
Defendants include Yow, who retired in 2019; former chancellor Randy Woodson; and current AD Boo Corrigan. In an email Thursday, spokesman Mick Kulikowski said N.C. State wouldn’t comment on pending litigation. Yow declined to comment, deferring to the school, in a text message to the AP.
Locke’s 2022 lawsuit stated he learned during the Title IX investigation that former men’s soccer coach Kelly Findley allegedly told a senior athletics official in February 2016 that Murphy was engaging in conduct “consistent with ‘grooming’ behavior.” That was a key point when a federal appeals court in January reversed the dismissal of the “John Doe 2” lawsuit, determining that Findley’s comment was “objectively” an allegation qualifying as notification to school officials.
Wednesday’s lawsuit alleges Findley had raised concerns after the 2012 season to a senior athletics official and wanted Murphy removed as the team’s trainer. The senior official reassigned Murphy to other teams in 2013, but Murphy resumed working with soccer the next year in what the lawsuit calls “a self-directed return.”
That official’s successor later instructed Murphy multiple times from 2016-21 to stop treating male athletes or hanging around the soccer team, and instead focus on administrative duties. Yet as Murphy “failed to comply,” the school took no corrective action and elevated him to an associate AD role in addition to his sports-medicine director role in 2018, the lawsuit states.
Murphy went on administrative leave in January 2022 amid the Title IX investigation tied to Locke, whose first lawsuit stated he learned that Murphy no longer worked at N.C. State after an “involuntary separation” that summer. That Title IX investigation ultimately found “a violation would have been substantiated via the preponderance of the evidence standard” if Murphy remained, according to a letter to Locke from the school’s Office for Institutional Equity and Diversity.
N.C. State has previously said campus police also investigated Locke’s complaint but filed no criminal charges.
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This story has been corrected to show the lawsuit states Murphy took an associate AD role in addition to that of director of sports medicine, instead of being elevated to director.
North Carolina (2-1) at UCF (2-0), Sept. 20 at 3:30 p.m. EDT.
BetMGM College Football Odds Opening Line: UCF by 7. Against the spread: UCF 1-1, North Carolina 2-1.
How to listen: WPTF
How to watch: FOX
Key stats UCF Offense Overall: 491 yards per game (21st in FBS) Passing: 259 yards per game (43rd) Rushing: 232 yards per game (20th) Scoring: 42.5 points per game (23rd)
UCF Defense Overall: 261 yards per game (26th in FBS) Passing: 98.5 yards per game (3rd) Rushing: 162.5 yards per game (102nd) Scoring: 8.5 points per game (9th)
North Carolina Offense Overall: 279 yards per game (127th in FBS) Passing: 148.7 yards per game (119th) Rushing: 130.3 yards per game (101st) Scoring: 25 points per game (87th)
North Carolina Defense Overall: 337.3 yards per game (69th in FBS) Passing: 203 yards per game (64th) Rushing: 134.3 yards per game (72nd) Scoring: 19 points per game (53rd)
UCF ranks 15th in defensive third down percentage, allowing opponents to convert 25% of the time. North Carolina ranks 109th on offense, converting on 33.3% of third downs.
UCF ranks 110th in the FBS averaging 67.5 penalty yards per game, compared to North Carolina’s 40th-ranked 43.3 per-game average.
North Carolina is 58th in FBS in red zone offense, scoring on 88.9% of trips. UCF’s red zone defense ranks 5th at 50%. North Carolina ranks 119th in the FBS with an average time of possession of 26:30.
North Carolina Passing: Gio Lopez, 343 yards, 3 TDs, 1 INT, 58.5 completion percentage Rushing: Demon June, 200 yards on 23 carries, 1 TD Receiving: Jordan Shipp, 149 yards on 10 catches, 2 TDs
Last game
UCF won 68-7 over North Carolina A&T on Saturday, Sept. 6. Jackson threw for 189 yards on 12-of-21 attempts (57.1%) with no touchdowns and no interceptions. He also carried the ball three times for 1 yard and two rushing touchdowns. Nixon had 156 rushing yards on four carries and two touchdowns. Thomas had three receptions for 68 yards.
North Carolina beat Richmond 41-6 on Saturday, Sept. 13. Lopez led North Carolina with 119 yards on 10-of-18 passing (55.6%) for two touchdowns and no interceptions. He also carried the ball 11 times for 40 yards and one rushing touchdown. June had 148 rushing yards on 14 carries and one touchdown, adding one reception for 19 yards. Shipp recorded 52 yards on four catches with two touchdowns.
Next game
UCF plays at Kansas State on Sept. 27. North Carolina hosts Clemson on Oct. 4.
By MAKIYA SEMINERA of The Associated Press and LAURA HACKETT and JOSE SANDOVAL of Blue Ridge Public Radio
SWANNANOA, N.C. (AP) — When 12-year-old Natalie Briggs visited the ruins of her home after Hurricane Helene, she had to tightrope across a wooden beam to reach what was once her bedroom.
Knots of electrical wires were draped inside the skeleton of the house. Months after the storm, light filtered through breaks in the tarps over the windows. “All I could think of was, ‘This isn’t my house,’” said Natalie, who had been staying in her grandparents’ basement.
Hurricane Helene displaced thousands of students. Some struggled to get back on track with school (AP Video)
Thousands of students across western North Carolina lost their homes a year ago when Helene hit with some of the most vicious floods, landslides and wind ever seen in the state’s Appalachian region, once considered a “climate haven.” Across the state, more than 2,500 students were identified as homeless as a direct result of Helene, according to state data obtained by The Associated Press.
At school, Natalie sometimes had panic attacks when she thought of her ruined home in Swannanoa.
“There were some points where I just didn’t want people to talk to me about the house — or just, like, talk to me at all,” Natalie said.
While storm debris has been mostly cleared away, the impact of the displacement lingers for the region’s children. Schools reopened long before many students returned to their homes, and their learning and well-being have yet to recover.
The phenomenon is increasingly common as natural disasters disrupt U.S. communities more frequently and with more ferocity.
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The Associated Press is collaborating with Blue Ridge Public Radio, Honolulu Civil Beat, CalMatters and Centro de Periodismo Investigativo in Puerto Rico to examine how school communities are recovering from the disruption of natural disasters.
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In the North Carolina mountains, the challenge of recovery is especially acute. After all, many families in rural, low-income areas already deal with challenges such as food insecurity and rent affordability, said Cassandra Davis, a University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill public policy professor.
“I would almost argue that they don’t get the opportunity to recover,” Davis said.
Finding stable housing became all-consuming
After Helene flooded her rental home in Black Mountain, Bonnie Christine Goggins-Jones and her two teenage grandchildren had to leave behind nearly all their belongings.
“They lost their bed, clothes, shoes, their book bag,” she said.
The family lived in a motel, a leaky donated camper and another camper before moving into a new apartment in June.
Goggins-Jones, a school bus aide at Asheville City Schools, struggled to heat the camper during winter. Her grandchildren kept going to school, but it wasn’t top of mind.
The area around Asheville, western North Carolina’s largest city, still has a significant housing shortage a year after the storm.
The family of America Sanchez Chavez, 11, had to split up to find housing. Helene left their trailer home in Swannanoa uninhabitable, and money from the Federal Emergency Management Agency wasn’t enough to cover the renovations.
America and some relatives went to stay at her grandmother’s apartment, while her older brother lived at a friend’s house. Eventually, America moved with her mother to a room at a Black Mountain hotel where she works.
America said she is still frightened by rain or thunder.
“At one point when the rain actually got, like, pretty bad … I did get scared for a while,” she said.
Helene damaged more than 73,000 homes, knocking out electricity and water for weeks if not months. The destruction of local infrastructure also closed schools for large stretches of time, and a barrage of snow days exacerbated the time out of class even more. In rural Yancey County, which has approximately 18,000 residents, students missed more than two months of school last year.
Displaced students spread across North Carolina
After natural disasters, it’s common to see a surge in students living in unstable, temporary arrangements, such as sleeping on a couch, staying in a shelter, or doubling up with another family, according to research from UCLA’s Center for the Transformation of Schools. Those arrangements qualify students as homeless under federal law.
In Puerto Rico, more than 6,700 students were identified as homeless in Hurricane Maria’s aftermath during the 2017-2018 school year, the study found. Hawaii saw a 59% increase in its homeless student population following the 2023 Maui wildfires.
In Helene’s aftermath, student homelessness spiked in several hard-hit counties, according to AP’s analysis of data from the North Carolina Homeless Education Program.
Yancey County saw the region’s highest percentage increase. The number of homeless students went from 21 in the 2023-2024 school year to 112 last school year. All but 15 were homeless due to Helene.
Some students enrolled in other school systems, at least temporarily. Others never returned.
Terri Dolan of Swannanoa sent her two young children to stay with her parents in Charlotte ahead of the storm. After seeing the extent of the devastation, Dolan had them enroll in school there. They stayed over a month before returning home.
“My job is to make money for our family and their job is to go to school,’” Dolan says she’d always told her kids. “Just because the school wasn’t open here, I felt like they needed to go to school and do their job.”
Some districts receive federal money for services such as transporting homeless students to their usual school buildings and providing tutoring under the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act. But districts must apply in a competitive process, and they can’t request more money immediately after a natural disaster until the next application cycle. Many miss out on McKinney-Vento funding entirely.
Helene-impacted students made up at least a fifth of the homeless population in 16 counties, but only six counties received McKinney-Vento money last funding cycle. Nationally, only 1 in 5 school districts receives McKinney-Vento money due to limited funds, said Barbara Duffield, executive director of Schoolhouse Connection, a nonprofit that advocates for homeless students.
“If there’s a disaster, it’s going to involve districts that don’t get money from McKinney-Vento,” Duffield said.
Housing instability has a lasting impact
Gwendolyn Bode, a prelaw student at Appalachian State University, had to leave her mud-wrecked apartment complex after Helene. Told she couldn’t get campus housing, she found an Airbnb where she could stay at until her FEMA housing application went through, and then she moved into a hotel.
She felt like she was drowning as she tried to keep up with her classes and a part-time job.
“I can’t tell you what I learned,” Bode said. “I can’t even tell you when I went to class, because (mentally) I wasn’t there.” She found more stability after moving into an apartment for the spring semester.
For Natalie Briggs, now 13, the grief of losing almost everything, coupled with the tight quarters in her grandparents’ basement, sometimes got to her — and to her mother, Liz Barker. Barker said it felt like a “time with no rules” because there was so much to deal with on top of her job as a health care worker.
The circumstances sometimes led to friction. But Barker said overall, she and Natalie had “done pretty well” together.
“She’s been a little bit more loving since all of this happened,” Barker said, smiling at her daughter.
“I give her hugs and stuff,” Natalie said, “and I’ll tell her I love her, more than I did.”
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The Associated Press’ education coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.
This recipe is amazing for a quick, fresh and tasty lunch or dinner.
Ingredients
1 package spring roll wrappers
8 large lettuce leaves (Romaine or Butter lettuce work well)
1 cup cooked protein of choice (shrimp, shredded chicken, or tofu work well)
1 cup shredded carrots
1 cup thinly sliced cucumber
1/2 cup fresh mint leaves
1/2 cup fresh cilantro leaves
1/2 cup bean sprouts
2 green onions, thinly sliced
Peanut sauce or hoisin sauce for dipping (optional)
Instructions
1. Prep the protein and veggies Cook or reheat your protein of choice, then wash and pat the lettuce dry. Wash and cut up the veggies and herbs as well.
2. Assemble the wraps Place a leaf of lettuce on a plate, then fill it with the protein, some shredded carrots, a few cucumber slices, a sprinkle of mint and cilantro, a few bean sprouts, and some green onion. Then, tightly wrap the lettuce around the fillings.
3. Wrap and repeat Wrap the lettuce and fillings with a spring roll wrapper and repeat the process for each spring roll.
4. Serve and enjoy Serve the wraps immediately with peanut or hoisin sauce, if you’d like, and enjoy this quick, easy and balanced meal.
It’s almost officially fall! Celebrate the changing seasons with these delicious pumpkin muffins.
Ingredients
1 3/4 cups all-purpose flour
1 tsp. baking soda
1/2 tsp. baking powder
1/2 tsp. salt
1 tsp. cinnamon
1/2 tsp. ground nutmeg
2 large eggs
1 cup sugar
1/2 cup melted butter
1 cup canned pumpkin puree
1/4 cup milk (or milk subsitute)
1 tsp. vanilla extract
Instructions
1. Preheat the oven Preheat the oven to 350 degrees f.
2. Mix the dry ingredients In a large bowl, combine the flour, baking soda, baking powder and spices.
3. Mix the wet ingredients In a separate bowl, whisk the eggs, sugar, oil, pumpkin puree, milk and vanilla together until smooth.
4. Combine dry and wet ingredients Add the wet ingredients to the dry and mix until combined.
5. Bake Line a 12-muffin tin with cupcake liners and fill each cup about 3/4 of the way up. Bake in the preheated oven for 20-25 minutes, then let the muffins cool for about 10 minutes.
5. Enjoy Serve warm and enjoy an early taste of fall.