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Turnbull, Comer, and Pozzato earn MVC postseason awards

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Turnbull, Comer, and Pozzato earn MVC postseason awards

UE well-represented on postseason list

 Connor Turnbull, Tayshawn Comer, and Gabriel Pozzato were recognized on Wednesday when the Missouri Valley Conference announced its postseason awards.  Turnbull was named the league’s Defensive Player of the Year while earning a spot on the All-Defensive Team.  Comer earned a spot on the All-MVC 2ndTeam and All-Newcomer Team and Gabriel Pozzato picked up All-Freshman Team recognition.

Turnbull joined Egidijus Mockevicius as the only two in program history to earn the league’s Defensive Player of the Year honor.  Mockevicius earned the award in 2016.  Turnbull completed the regular season as the MVC leader with 1.87 blocks per game while averaging 2.15 per contest against league foes.  He put up his best numbers in Valley play as he finished with 11.4 points and 5.3 rebounds per game.

His total of 58 blocks on the season ranks 25th in the nation while his average of 1.87 per game is 30th.  On Feb. 16 against Valparaiso, Turnbull recorded a career-high 27 points while converting 12 of his 15 attempts.  He is the fifth player in program history to earn All-Defensive Team recognition and the first since Mockevicius in 2016.

Tayshawn Comer became the first UE player since Shamar Givance in 2021 to be named to the All-Conference 2nd Team while also garnering All-Newcomer accolades.  Comer led the Aces with his season average of 16.0 points per game and his total of 127 assists.  Comer finished the year as the #2 scorer in conference games, scoring 18.5 PPG.

He recorded a career-high 27 points in the win over Murray State after setting his previous mark of 26 at Southern Illinois.  His 22-point game at UIC put him over the 1,000-point mark in his collegiate career.  Comer was named the MVC Player of the Week on Jan. 6 while picking up league Newcomer of the Week honors Feb. 24.

Finishing one of the best freshman seasons in program history, Gabriel Pozzato earned a spot on the All-Freshman Team.  He wrapped up the regular season with an average of 15.3 points and 4.6 rebounds per game.  Over the last five games, Pozzato has seen the floor for all 200 minutes.

The 3-time MVC Freshman of the Week was the #7 overall scorer and top freshman in the conference with his average.  His top effort of 28 points came in his collegiate debut at North Texas and marked the top freshman/newcomer debut in Evansville’s Division I history.

-www.GoPurpleAces.com-

No. 6 Trailblazers close out regular season with big win on Sophomore Night

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No. 6 Trailblazers close out regular season with big win on Sophomore Night

VINCENNES, Ind. – The Vincennes University Men’s Basketball team climbed one spot this week in the final NJCAA Division I National rankings to No. 6, while still holding their position at No. 3 in the JUCO Advocate Media Poll and Nielsen File Top 25 Rankings.

The Blazers got their first opportunity to defend this new ranking Tuesday night in the regular season finale against Kaskaskia College from Centralia, Ill.

The Trailblazers rode the home crowd early gained momentum and built an early lead as the Blazers rolled in the second half to a big 101-55 victory over the Blue Devils on Sophomore Night.

Vincennes got the game started early, opening the scoring strong and quickly building a 16-4 advantage over the visiting Blue Devils.

VU would continue to add to this lead building the largest lead of the half late at 46-29 before Kaskaskia picked up a late basket to cut the deficit to 15 going into the halftime break.

Coming out in the second half the Trailblazers were again the first to strike, using an early 11-0 scoring run to build their lead to 66-38.

Vincennes was able to put the game away down the stretch with a big 14-0 scoring run to take a commanding 91-48 lead, before using another 8-0 scoring run late to close out the game by the final score of 101-55, picking up VU’s 20th consecutive victory this season.

“I thought we had a good team effort,” VU Hall of Fame Head Coach Todd Franklin said. “I thought we got off to a pretty good start because we were shooting the ball in and we were defending pretty good. Then we got a little wonky the last 10 minutes of the first half that I didn’t like. I thought we let them dictate terms a little bit. Still were up 15 at the half but those last 10 minutes we didn’t show the sharpness, the intensity, the confidence that you’ve got to have this time of year and I expressed that at halftime.”

“Second half I thought we did all of that,” Franklin added. “I thought in the second half we played really hard, we made it really difficult for them when they had the ball. We were fighting screens and had active hands. We got some knock aways without gambling. Because our intensity was up, offensively we looked confident. They were extending that zone and giving you some funky looks with it and on those you have to be confident because they are basically saying you have to go downhill. When you start being unconfident and playing sideways it plays right into what they want.”

“Christian Andrews has to step up,” Franklin said. “There were times in the first half where he was giving you the freshman hesitancy look and we told him ‘hey, you can’t do that.’ I thought after that and in the second half he was assured, he was strong, he was tough and he was ready. And we are going to need him to be that next week. These guys should be able to take that and take it into next week because that’s the key.”

“When it’s all said and done, we’ll go as far as we can go,” Franklin added. “Hopefully we’re the last ones standing. But what you want to do is make sure that you’ve gone at it as aggressively, as confidently, as smartly and as tough as you can. That’s what I try to train them to do and preach that all year long and I can be a little rough on them when they don’t because I know they are going to regret that for the rest of their life if they don’t. I know this and they can’t win what they want to win and do what they want to do if they don’t do it. If you fall short, you want to know that you laid it all out there. You can live with that for the rest of your life, that’s fine. I thought the second half tonight was much more an example of what we are looking for in terms of that. I thought it was much better and across the board, everybody that played in that second half from start to finish, it’s not perfect and it will never be perfect, but I thought our attitude, intensity and confidence on both ends was what I was looking for.”

The Trailblazers were led offensively by freshman Travelle Bryson (Anderson, S.C.) who got the VU offense going early, getting 11 first half points on his way to 26 on the night with six made three-pointers and seven rebounds.

Freshman Dayton Williams (Louisville, Ky.) rode a big second half on his way to 17 points and a team-high three steals in the game.

Sophomore Michael Cooper (Minneapolis, Minn.) came off the bench to add 13 points and six rebounds, including shooting a perfect eight for eight at the free throw line.

Freshman Meyoh Swansey (Olympia Fields, Ill.) also scored in double figures off the bench, finishing his night with 12 points and five rebounds.

Sophomore Bryan Akanmu (Paris, France) was the fifth VU double figure scorer Tuesday night, finishing off another double-double with 11 points and 11 rebounds.

Tuesday marked the final home game for VU’s five sophomores, Bryan Akanmu, Michael Cooper, Ali Sakho (Toronto, Ontario), Hussein Elmaraghy (Cairo, Egypt) and 2024 NJCAA All-American Lebron Thomas (Bishopville, S.C.).

Thomas being the lone sophomore from last season’s VU Sweet Sixteen team that finished the season with a 30-4 record and won the Region 24 regular season and tournament championships.

“Meyoh has fought and battled and he’s had to improve,” Franklin said. “That’s what this is. Sometimes it works out better for you early and sometimes it doesn’t. Meyoh has kept working and improving. We always thought he could be a good player, we think all of these players can be good players and Meyoh has come on here. He’s a guy that can really help us in the playoffs. He’s got good quickness, he’s got good range. He’s a guy that will play hard, got really good bounce. So he brings a pop, an energy, a snap that you need and can be really big for us in this next week. So I was pleased to see him take another one of these games, another step these last three or four. You are seeing his opportunities and we really wanted to see that coming into this game and going into next week because now it’s really real.”

“Travelle shot it well early,” Franklin added. “He kind of went dead in the water the second 10 minutes of the first half. I thought his energy was better. His defense in the second half was better. His defense in the last 10 minutes of the first half, he was letting guys get to the rim and stick it in over him and standing there and act like that’s defense. That’s not defense and that’s not stopping a man. In the second half I thought he fought to stop people and he did.”

“I thought Michael Cooper gave us good energy off the bench,” Franklin said. “They are all the same key, we’ve got to have them all to win. When you are in the main rotation, it’s the main rotation. Starters, rotation, it’s all the same and they really are and we’ll see as the game goes who is going to play.”

“I thought Bryan and Hussein gave us some good things in there,” Franklin added. “Hussein is good in the middle of the presses and the traps and in a game like that it becomes that’s more of what he’s going to give you because the zone is going to collapse and he needs to do a really good job with that and he did. And we got easy buckets early because he’s turning and finding the guy at the right time. We got some layups and some good buckets and he really makes a difference in there and in that. Things that maybe not everybody in the world notices but it was very key tonight.”

“Bryan did a good job and gave us some inside punch,” Franklin said. “11 rebounds, early in the year he wasn’t rebounding that way. It’s been the second half of the year where he’s getting all the double-doubles. First half of the year he’d get you three, four or five rebounds. It’s the improvement, taking your game to the next step, the next step, giving us what we need to give us a chance, he’s doing that.”

“Like I said about Christian Andrews,” Franklin added. “And we’ll see if he takes it into the next game. Another level of maturing. You can’t be taken out, Lebron’s a little dinged, it’s you. I think that was good for him. There was a moment where we said we could get our backside beat if you collapse out here, you can’t do that. You have to man up right now. If you do we’ll be fine, so you pick. He did and he picked correctly. Now he should know that he can do it. It’s there, you know how to do it and it’s in front of you. But it’s a learning process for all of these guys. I thought Ali Sakho did some good things tonight. I thought he had good moments after the beginning. He was a little tentative on his layup, we got after him because we’ve been getting after him about that and then after that I thought all of his finishes were assertive and you see the difference.”

“I thought Dayton in the second half was night and day,” Franklin said. “We’ve been challenging him. He’s lost a little confidence for some reason. Guys do that, it’s just one of the things that you go through. He started out pretty good, made some plays around the basket and in that zone where they are not really guarding him. I thought in the second half Dayton was very active and very assertive, very positive, very assured of himself and you say the difference and you saw how he carried himself differently. I know his reactions when he came off the floor was different. I’m happy for him. I’m happy that he got over that hump and hopefully he continues over that hump next week when we play.”

The Trailblazers will look to build on this momentum as VU looks to repeat as Region 24 tournament champions when Vincennes begins postseason play Monday, March 10 at 2 p.m. eastern at Rend Lake College in Ina, Ill.

VU’s opponent in Monday’s Quarterfinal of the Region 24 tournament is still to be determined.

“We start every year with the hope that we are going to win the District,” Franklin said. “And we hope that by the end of the regular season we have done enough that even before we have played any games in the District tournament that we’ve got to Hutch. I would think, by any metric, that we’ve done that. I don’t know any metric possible that you could look at where we are not in the field. That’s an incredible deal going from 6-3, we’re a brand new team trying to still figure it out, we had injuries to deal with, whether it was losing Vasser for the year, which we thought he was going to be a really good player for us. To Travelle being basically hurt the whole first semester. Ali Sakho not being able to do anything until the end of the first semester and an all new team of people learning. We play a challenging schedule and we’re sitting there at 6-3 and we’ve got Triton coming up, Logan coming up, a trip to Malcolm X, which is no walk in the park, a trip to Lincoln Trail coming up and I thought our team at that moment, we knew we couldn’t afford any more losses. We could go way down in the hole right here and still not be a bad team because we could have lost all of those games and not been bad. At that moment, if we were going to be good we had to handle it and that was a big week. We played Schoolcraft in the middle of that week and we won big.”

“But we had a week from the Mineral game, which I thought we played well in,” Franklin added. “Mineral played really well. We didn’t have all of our guys, we were still getting there. It was a good game. They hit a couple of big shots from three that switched the game over from us to them. But I had thought that we improved from the Moberly game to that game but we need to make one more big one to handle what was coming and our guys did. The Triton game was huge in here. We had to step up, handle it and get it done or we would be talking about these things. The team we were in November is no resemblance to now.”

“Then we had to make a quick turnaround and beat Logan,” Franklin said. “I thought Logan played really well in here and got them. Then we had to turnaround and Michael Cooper was not playing at Lincoln Trail and Travelle’s not, go down the list. Then we have to turn around and get Lincoln Trail and they are a nice team and did. Then we’ve got to do the same thing going to Malcolm X without those guys and then we basically played that whole game without Lebron. In the 15 minutes he played, we won by 20 plus. At that time in the year we are not as ready to handle that as we are now. And from that point, now we come back and we think we can do anything and they did.”

“They went through the 16 games in District, won all of them both home and away,” Franklin added. “Even now you are dealing with Lebron being a little dinged up. The last three games you’ve basically had him with one game not being able to play at all and very limited in the other two. So this team, with no veteran guards at all had to say, it’s one more thing and we’ll deal with it. They have. So they should be very much commended, it’s been a heck of a run to win these 20 games in a row with this new bunch and the teams that we’ve played, what they have had to face and the way that they’ve handled it. Very proud of them. It’s a tremendous achievement if it looks like we get to Hutch and if and when we get to Hutch and that becomes something official, it’s a tremendous achievement. They deserve it at this point, there’s no question in my mind about that.”

“Now we’re trying to get that top four seed,” Franklin said. “Certainly want to get a bye but we feel like we’re a team that deserves to be in that top four and if we can handle our business next week that’s a big deal. But now we go and play for the excitement of playing in this District Tournament. You want to go win it and you want to be a champion every chance you get to be. We use it as a spring board to go to Hutch now and the better we win and the better we do, the better those seeds and things are. I just want to see us continue to progress. I just want to see us play our most aggressive, smartest, most confident basketball. That’s it. As long as we do that, we’ll live with it. Obviously we feel like we have every chance to win. You are not going to go 16-0 in the regular season and not think you can win. But we know it’s hard. You are driving over there two hours every other day. Our fans don’t get there as much, we hope tries to as best as they can to help our team. We’re behind enemy lines, that’s for sure. But we’re used to it and I want to see our guys handle it much like they handled the second half today.”

VINCENNES BOX SCORE

VINCENNES (101): Bryan Akanmu 4-7 3-4 11, Travelle Bryson 10-18 0-0 26, Hussein Elmaraghy 3-7 0-0 6, Lebron Thomas 0-1 0-0 0, Dayton Williams 8-12 0-0 17, Christian Andrews 2-5 1-2 6, Meyoh Swansey 4-6 2-2 12, Jalen Calloway 1-1 0-0 2, Taveon Smith 1-2 0-0 2, Michael Cooper 2-4 8-8 13, Darstin Onye 0-0 0-0 0, Ali Sakho 2-3 0-0 4, Kenaz Ochogwu 1-1 0-0 2, Team 38-67 14-16 101.

Kaskaskia – 31   24 – 55

VU (26-3, 16-0) – 46   55 – 101

Three-point goals: VU 11 (Bryson 6, Swansey 2, Williams, Andrews, Cooper). Rebounds: VU 43 (Akanmu 11). Assists: VU 26 (Andrews 10). Steals: VU 13 (Akanmu 3, Williams 3). Blocked Shots: VU 7 (Bryson 2, Elmaraghy 2). Turnovers: VU 14. Personal Fouls: VU 7. Fouled out: None.

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The No. 6 ranked Vincennes University Trailblazers improve to 26-3 on the season, with a 16-0 record in Region 24 play.

Drew Davis named Assistant Volleyball Coach at UE

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Drew Davis named Assistant Volleyball Coach at UE

Davis joins UE from UTSA 

EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Evansville Head Volleyball Coach Zach Weinberg has announced the hiring of Drew Davis as Assistant Coach for the Purple Aces.  Davis brings a wealth of coaching experience from his time on the staffs at UTSA, North Dakota State, and Creighton.

Over the course of his career, Davis has coached seven 1st Team All-Conference members, two 1st Team Academic All-Americans, four All-Freshman Team players, a Freshman of the Year, two Setters of the Year, three AVCA All-North Region players, four All-Tournament Team honorees, and 12 CSC All-District student-athletes.

“Evansville Volleyball got better when Drew Davis decided to join the Aces family. His recruiting experience and training style in the gym will pay dividends immediately, and I’m excited to see what wrinkles and new training tactics he brings to our block and defense as our Defensive Coordinator,” Weinberg exclaimed. “Drew’s energy, enthusiasm, and personality all make him an outstanding fit for UE Volleyball, and we’re excited to have him here in the River City!”

Davis joins the UE program from UTSA where he served as the 1st Assistant Coach and Recruiting Coordinator.  He managed all phases of the recruiting process including scouting, outreach, and evaluation of potential recruits.  On the floor, he oversaw development in serve receive, defense, and blocking.  Davis analyzed game footage to provide insights and feedback to the coaching staff.

“I want to thank Zach Weinberg, Dr. ‘Ziggy’ Siegfried, the team, and the University of Evansville campus and athletic community for the opportunity to be a part of this program. I haven’t met a single person who hasn’t greeted me with a smiling face and a warm welcome and that was a huge reason why I chose to take this job,” Davis said. “I am extremely excited about the opportunity to work alongside Zach and Jordan to make a name for Evansville Volleyball as a perennial powerhouse in the region, the Missouri Valley Conference, and the nation. There are so many great aspects that make this place special and I’m thrilled to be a Purple Ace!”

Before joining the Roadrunners, Davis spent six years as Recruiting Coordinator and Assistant Coach at North Dakota State.  He spearheaded all recruiting activities including planning scholarships, travel, phone calls, and managing the travel budget.  Davis created and assisted in practice planning while directing all training for middles and OH/RSs.  In 2022, NDSU advanced to the postseason, receiving an invitation to the NIVC.

He was extremely active in the campus and local communities as he coordinated youth camps for the program while taking care of scheduling, registration, camp store, social media, and campus tours.  Davis engaged in fundraising activities and collaborated with the NDSU alumni network.

Davis started his coaching career at Creighton where he was the Social Media Coordinator and Volunteer Assistant Coach from 2017-2018.  He oversaw all social media platforms associated with Creighton Volleyball while developing strategies to promote the team.  He assisted in practice planning and drills, along with simulated opponents in practice.  Along with those duties, he assisted in recruiting by maintaining updated club and high school schedules and results for recruits.

A 2017 graduate of Limestone (S.C.) University, Davis earned his Bachelor of Arts in Education with a Minor in Coaching.  He was named to the Presidential Honor Roll in 2016 and 2017 while garnering Conference Carolinas Academic Honor Roll in both years with the program while serving as the Team Captain for the men’s volleyball squad.  In 2017, his squad was ranked as high as 9th in the nation.  His collegiate playing career started at Erskine (S.C.) College.  In 2014, his team was the Conference Carolinas Regular Season and Tournament Champions while earning a berth in the NCAA Men’s Volleyball Championship.

-www.GoPurpleAces.com-

Morgan Adams named MVC Player and Newcomer of the Week

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Morgan Adams named MVC Player and Newcomer of the Week

Aces drop 8-0 contest to Wildcats

In a week that saw her record four home runs and eight RBI, University of Evansville infielder Morgan Adams has been named the Missouri Valley Conference Player and Newcomer of the Week.

Adams batted .412 with four home runs, eight RBI, and five runs in a big week for the Purple Aces.  She slugged 1.118 while picking up four walks to complete the week with a .545 on-base percentage.  Adams hit a home run last Monday against Western Michigan while going 2-3 with two RBI in the contest.  She hit two more homers against UT Martin, finishing the day with a 2-3 effort from the plate.

After scoring a run against #24 Kentucky, Adams belted another home run on Friday against Tennessee Tech and went 2-3 with three RBI.  Saturday’s rematch versus TTU saw her pick up a hit, RBI and walk before picking up two walks on Sunday against Kentucky.

-www.GoPurpleAces.com-

USI Women’s Basketball’s Raley and Shafford receive All-OVC selections

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USI Women’s Basketball’s Raley and Shafford receive All-OVC selections

EVANSVILLE, Ind. – The Ohio Valley Conference announced on Tuesday that University of Southern Indiana Women’s Basketball graduate forward Meredith Raley and senior guard Vanessa Shafford were recognized with All-OVC honors for the second consecutive year.

The league’s head coaches and communication directors voted upon the OVC’s postseason accolades.

Raley was named to the All-OVC First Team for 2024-25. Raley paced USI this season with 13.6 points per game and shooting 51.3 percent from the floor. Raley’s scoring ranked top 10 in the OVC while leading the conference in field goal percentage. Raley was second on the team with five boards per outing and had a team-best 17 blocked shots. In conference play, Raley recorded 13.8 (11th in OVC) points while shooting over an OVC-best 53 percent.

During the conference season, Raley tallied double figures in 16 games including four 20-point outings. Raley set a new career mark with 29 points on the road at Southeast Missouri State University on January 9, earning OVC Player of the Week for the second time in 2024-25 the following week. The forward posted two double-doubles during the month of February. Raley reached 1,500 career points on January 28 at Morehead State University and has since moved into the top five on USI’s all-time scoring list. Raley also set a USI record for total games played during the OVC slate while eclipsing over 100 games started.

Shafford was named to the All-OVC Second Team. Shafford was top 15 in the OVC in overall scoring and second on the team with 12.3 points per game. Once again, Shafford topped the squad with 6.6 rebounds per game, which ranked fifth in the conference. Shafford shot over 45 percent from the floor and 40 percent from three-point range. Shafford’s two made threes per contest ranked fifth in the OVC. The guard was third on USI in assists and steals. During league play, Shafford averaged 12.7 points (13th in OVC) and 6.9 rebounds (7th in OVC) per game.

Shafford dropped 10 or more points in 15 OVC games and scored over 20 points in two conference games. Shafford’s conference high was 24 points on February 8 against Southeast Missouri State. The senior had four double-doubles in OVC play. It was also during the OVC season that Shafford broke the USI Women’s Basketball record for most three-pointers made on January 12 at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock. Shafford has since drained over 200 three-pointers in her career.

Southern Indiana reached 20 wins and clinched a berth into the OVC Women’s Basketball Championship Tournament for the second consecutive season. USI will take the court to start its quest as reigning OVC tournament champions this Wednesday at 12:30 p.m. from Ford Center in downtown Evansville, Indiana. As the no. 5 seed, the Screaming Eagles square off against 8-seeded Tennessee State University in a rematch of the regular-season finale.

All games from the OVC Women’s Basketball Championship Tournament can be seen live with a subscription to ESPN+. 95.7 FM The Spin and 97.7 FM WREF will have radio coverage of USI contests. Tickets for the OVC Tournament are on sale through the USI Ticket Office online. For more information, call the USI Ticket Office at 812-465-1189.

Protestors march at statehouse once more in opposition to Trump

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Protestors listen to Jackson Franklin’s speech during the 50501 protest on Monday. Photo by Caleb Crockett, TheStatehouseFile.com.

Protestors march at statehouse once more in opposition to Trump

By Caleb Crockett, TheStatehouseFile.com

Mar 4, 2025

On the eve of President Donald Trump’s congressional address, hundreds of protestors marched again outside of the Indiana Statehouse chanting, “Take it back,” and “America has no kings,”  to express their disdain for the administration.

The march, similar to the one that took place in February, was a part of the nationwide 50501 (representing 50 states, 50 capitals, and one protest) movement to protest Trump’s administration.

Protestors march around the building chanting during the 50501 protest on Monday. Photo by Caleb Crockett, TheStatehouseFile.com.

Scott Johnson, Indiana’s state leader for 50501, was the facilitating speaker at the protest.

“The ultimate goal is that Trump shouldn’t be in office,” He said. “We are in a constitutional crisis, he is in violation of the law, and we got rid of Nixon for that right? So this can be done.”

Johnson then detailed what Trump had done to ignite the protestors’ rebellion.

“What we have seen over the past month and 10 days has been a profound approach to lawlessness,” Johnson said. “This isn’t Trump 1.0.  I don’t like the man, I’ll admit it, but Trump 1.0 mostly operated within the boundaries of the law. Trump 2.0 from pretty much the moment he entered office has been defying the rule of law.”

Jackson Franklin, 25, has launched a challenge to Republican Rep. Victoria Sparks for Indiana’s fifth congressional district.

“United we can stand together and fight these oligarchs that are running our politics,” Franklin said. “The swamp is filled with corruption.”

A protestor named Patrick, who declined to give his last name, shared what was so frustrating to him about Trump.

“The lies, just the lies,” Patrick said. “Every day citizens have to wake up, listen to statements and go check them. And when your world leader, the leader of the free world, can’t even tell you what’s honest, then everybody is threatened.”

The protestors march and wield their signs calling out Trump’s treatment of the war between Ukraine and Russia during the 50501 protest on March 3.
Photo by Caleb Crockett, TheStatehouseFile.com.

Johnson and Franklin described how the protests are just one step towards accomplishing what they see as a nationwide transformation.

“We need to rediscover our political voice. We need to do better than we’ve done,” Johnson said. “I don’t want to see the violent protests we see in France, but we absolutely need to have the people in there realize,” he said gesturing to the Statehouse, “‘You know what? I can’t do it the way I’ve been doing it.’”

Protestors were vocal as they carried hand-made signs and made several laps around the Statehouse building. Even though no lawmakers spoke or appeared to participate in the rally, Franklin is optimistic that the 50501 message is reaching a wider audience.

“People are standing up now, this is a real movement,” Franklin said. “We’re forcing change; these politicians have to hear us.”

A protestor holds up her homemade “We Are The Resistance” sign during the 50501 protest on Monday. Photo by Caleb Crockett, TheStatehouseFile.com.

Franklin then said, “People who make peaceful protest impossible, make violent protest inevitable.” He attributed the quote to Martin Luther King Jr. However, it was actually President John F. Kennedy that said, “Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.”

Protestors listen as Scott Johnson thanks them for attending the 50501 protest on March 3 in Indianapolis.Photo by Caleb Crockett, TheStatehouseFile.com.

Patrick explained what he believes is driving the public to participate in these marches.

“You know we see something precious, our democracy that we fought so hard for, slowly being chipped away without explanation and largely without evidence,” Patrick said. “These people here, we are all just unhappy. Not unhappy with democracy, but unhappy with what’s going on and what they’re doing.”

Johnson said that he believes that one day, change will arrive.

“Will it happen today? Absolutely not,” Johnson said. “Will it happen at the next protest? Probably not. Will it happen someday? Absolutely.”

Caleb Crockett is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

Governor Braun Signs Executive Orders to Protect Women’s Sports and Reinforce Indiana’s Legal Definition of Sex

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Governor Braun Signs Executive Orders to Protect Women’s Sports and Reinforce Indiana’s Legal Definition of Sex

INDIANAPOLIS – Governor Mike Braun today signed two executive orders to ensure fairness in women’s sports and rejecting extreme gender ideology in favor of the scientific reality of biological sex.

The executive order protecting opportunities for women in college sports comes ahead of International Women’s Day this Saturday, and follows Governor Braun’s landmark executive order expanding paid parental and childbirth recovery leave for women signed Monday.

Executive Order 25-35: Protecting Opportunities in Post-Secondary Women’s Sports 

This executive order mandates that Indiana’s state educational institutions must comply with the 2020 Title IX Rule rather than the 2024 Biden Administration reinterpretation that extended protections based on self-reported, ever-changing new idea of “gender identity.”

The order ensures that female athletes in college sports are not forced to compete against biological males, preserving the integrity of women’s athletics and protecting opportunities for women in female-only sports leagues.

“Women’s sports create opportunities for young women to earn scholarships and develop leadership skills. Hoosiers overwhelmingly don’t want those opportunities destroyed by allowing biological males to compete in women’s sports, and today’s executive order will make sure of that.” —  Governor Mike Braun

Executive Order 25-36: Ensuring Indiana Law is Based on the Reality of Biological Sex Rather than Extreme New Gender Theories 

Alongside protections for women’s sports, Governor Braun also signed an executive order making clear that Indiana will not go along with the extreme gender ideology that created the problem in women’s sports in the first place.

“Replacing the scientific fact of biological sex with the always-changing, self-reported idea of ‘gender identity’ has real consequences: it puts women in danger in female-only spaces like prisons, it destroys opportunities for women in sports, and it tells troubled kids that their mental health problems can be solved with sterilizing drugs and irreversible sex change operations. Indiana will not go along with this radical new idea of what gender means, and we will not allow tax dollars to be used to promote this ideology — instead, we’re going to focus on providing Freedom and Opportunity for all Hoosiers.” —  Governor Mike Braun

Link To February 2025 Printed Paper

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Link To The March 2025 Printed Edition of the CCO

Look for the City-County Observer at newsstands now.