Florida is a good choice. His vote counts again and a great place for birds. I understand. I went on a field trip down there with Dr. Anderson’s avian biology class.
I think I was a junior, so Spring ‘96.
Florida is a good choice. His vote counts again and a great place for birds. I understand. I went on a field trip down there with Dr. Anderson’s avian biology class.
Was ‘96 the legendary trip when he drove the van into a ditch because he was birding and driving? I never did the grade horse challenge, but I did play with him often. I got to join his research lab and hang with all his grad students and play horse. That guy was an awesome professor, the totally epitome of the academic value of going to Wake.
I didn't know they taught classes on fictional subjects outside of English departments.
Soon-to-be Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler plans to spend $20 million of her own money on her 2020 Senate campaign in Georgia — a massive sum that could give potential rivals pause about trying to unseat her.
Loeffler, a wealthy financial executive and co-owner of Atlanta’s WNBA team, was tapped Wednesday morning to replace Sen. Johnny Isakson, who is resigning later this month due to health problems, on an interim basis. She has told advisers in recent days of her intentions to tap her vast fortune to win next year's special election to complete Isakson's term, according to a person with direct knowledge of the decision.
Loeffler, a Republican mega-donor. is the chief executive of Bakkt, a bitcoin trading platform based in Atlanta. Her husband, Jeffrey Sprecher, is the chairman of the New York Stock Exchange.
She is poised to join other immensely wealthy candidates to tap their personal fortunes in recent years. Now-Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) spent over $60 million of his own on his successful 2018 bid, while New Jersey Republican Bob Hugin dropped $36 million on his failed effort the same year.
That’s the one Kemp picked over Trump’s choice, Doug Collins.