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Attorney General Todd Rokita holds big tobacco accountable, $136 million for Indiana

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Attorney General Todd Rokita continues Indiana’s battle to help Hoosiers stop smoking and decrease the number of youth smokers throughout the state by holding tobacco manufacturers accountable.  

Last week Indiana received over $136 million from tobacco product manufacturers under the Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement.   

“The harmful effects of tobacco take the lives of thousands of Hoosiers every year,” Attorney General Rokita said. “My office is working hard to ensure our kids live a long and healthy life and they avoid the dangerous path of smoking.”

Under this agreement, Indiana receives annual payments as long as the tobacco manufacturers continue selling cigarettes in the state.  

The agreement also forbids participating cigarette manufacturers from targeting youth, imposes restrictions on advertising and promotional activities, and product placement in media, branded merchandise, free product samples, and sponsorships.  

The Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement remains the largest civil settlement in U.S. history. The funds received by Indiana under the settlement agreement go to healthcare, prevention, and reduction of smoking. 

The TMSA payments received during Attorney General Rokita’s administration totals to more than $433 million. 

Cigarettes cause cancer and other diseases, as the Surgeon General first concluded in its historic 1964 report. So, improving Hoosiers’ health remains a priority of the Attorney General, as it should for all elected officials.

This Week In indiana History

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April 30 – May 4

This Week in Indiana History


Lincoln Funeral Train April 30, 1865   The Abraham Lincoln funeral train arrived in Indianapolis. Over 50,000 people passed by the open coffin in the rotunda of the old Statehouse. Governor Oliver P. Morton and other Indiana officials had boarded the train as it entered the state at Richmond.

Corydon May 1st, 1813  Corydon became the second capital of the Indiana Territory. The seat of territorial government was moved from Vincennes. In 1816, Corydon was named the state capital when Indiana became the 19th state to join the Union.

The old state capitol (pictured) is now a museum open for public tours.


May 2, 1968 Indiana Governor Eric Holcomb, was born in Indianapolis. Governor Holcomb is the 51st and current governor of Indiana. A lifelong Hoosier and graduate of Hanover College, Holcomb is also a United States Navy veteran.

Governor Holcomb

Beulah Bondi May 3, 1889 Beulah Bondi was born in Valparaiso. Beulah was involved in local theater and attended Valparaiso University. She was an actress for many years. Beulah played the role of James Stewart’s mother in “It’s a Wonderful Life.”

Jackie Jackson May 4, 1951 Sigmund “Jackie” Jackson was born in Gary. Jackie, a singer and song writer, was a member of the Jackson Five.

Where in Indiana?

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April 30

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Indiana Statehouse Tour Office

Indiana Department of Administration

Guided Tours of the Indiana Statehouse are offered Monday through Saturday.  For more information, contact us.

(317) 233-5293
captours@idoa.in.gov


Statehouse Virtual Tour

Indiana Quick Quiz

1.What year did the General Assembly adopt the present state seal as official?

2. What Indiana town was portrayed in the movie Close Encounters of the Third Kind?

3.Who was the Hoosier who was the first commissioner of baseball?

4. John Stetson, the hat maker, married Hoosier Elizabeth Shindler. Where did she live?

Answers Below


Did You Know???

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Answers

1. 1963

2. Muncie

3. Kenesaw Mountain Landis of  Logansport

4. Orleans

Eagles rebound with 12-5 win

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EDWARDSVILLE, Ill. – University of Southern Indiana Baseball rebounded with a 12-5 win over Southern Illinois University Edwardsville Saturday afternoon in Edwardsville, Illinois. USI watched its record go to 15-27 overall, 6-11 OVC, while SIUE is 23-19, 6-8 OVC, this spring.
 
USI junior first baseman Tucker Ebest (Austin, Texas) put the Screaming Eagles on the right track early with a two-run blast and his team-best 10th home run of the season down the right field line for a 2-0 advantage. The 2-0 lead would last until the bottom half of the frame when SIUE knotted the game at 2-2.
 
The Eagles regained the lead for good in the top of the second, 5-2, by pushing three more across. Senior centerfielder Evan Kahre (Evansville, Indiana) started the scoring with a RBI-single before Ebest struck again with a two-run single for his third and fourth RBIs of the game.
 
USI junior designated hitter Jack Ellis (Jeffersonville, Indiana) increased the margin to 8-2 with a three-run drive over the right field wall. The drive was Ellis’ fourth of the season.
 
After the Cougars picked up a pair of runs in the sixth to close the gap to 8-4, the Eagles sealed the victory with a three-run seventh to re-extend the lead to 11-4. Senior second baseman Lucas McNew (Floyds Knobs, Indiana) had the big hit in the frame with a bases clearing three-run triple.
 
USI would add an insurance run in the top of the ninth to lead, 12-4, on a sacrifice fly by Ellis. The Cougars would get a tally to end the scoring before the Eagles closed out the 12-5 victory.
 
For the day at the plate, Ebest and Ellis had a team-best four RBIs each. Ebest also joined Kahre, McNew, and junior rightfielder Ren Tachioka (Japan) with three hits each.
 
On the mound, junior left-hander Blake Ciuffetelli (Newburgh, Indiana) took the win after going 5.1 innings. Ciuffetelli (2-0) allowed four runs on six hits, while striking out one.
 
USI junior right-hander Carter Stamm (Jasper, Indiana) posted his first save of the season in completing the game for Ciuffetelli. Stamm allowed one run on four hits and a walk, while striking out one in 3.2 innings of work.
 
Up Next for the Eagles:  
The Eagles and the Cougars conclude the three-game series Sunday at 1 p.m.  at SIUE’s Roy E. Lee Field.
 

UE Computer Science students to present papers at International Conference

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ue building
ue building

EVANSVILLE, IND. (04/28/2023) Two University of Evansville (UE) students will present their papers at the 2023 IEEE International Conference on Electro/Information Technology at Lewis University in Romeoville, Illinois.

Senior Ethan Abney and Freshman Daniel Dwyer will present papers during the conference which takes place May 18 through May 20. Abney and Dwyer are Computer Science majors in the Koch School of Engineering and Computer Science.

“This shows the incredible partnership and mentoring that happens between the students and faculty in our programs at UE,” said Dr. Suresh Immanuel, Associate Dean and Professor of Civil Engineering. “The School of Engineering and Computer Science would like to offer congratulations to both of our students and Dr. Maxwell Omwenga for supporting them through the writing and submission process and co-authoring their papers. The collaborative efforts of our faculty and students can lead to limitless possibilities.”

The papers being presented are listed below:

Ethan D. Abney, Maxwell M. Omwenga, “The Effects of Basic Obfuscation on Neural Based Android Malware Detection,” 2023 IEEE International Conference on Electro/Information Technology (eit2023), May 18-20, 2023.

Daniel Dwyer, Maxwell M. Omwenga, “Training Topology With Graph Neural Cellular Automata,” 2023 IEEE International Conference on Electro/Information Technology (eit2023), May 18-20, 2023.

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No. 14 INDIANA STATE EVENS SERIES WITH EVANSVILLE WITH 7-4 WIN 

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. –  The visiting #14 Indiana State baseball team took advantage of some uncharacteristic wildness from University of Evansville junior starter Donovan Schultz to score four runs in the first inning Saturday en route to a 7-4 win at German American Bank Field at Charles H. Braun Stadium in Evansville.

“We just couldn’t overcome the first inning today,” said UE head coach Wes Carroll.  “We didn’t play clean baseball, and because of it, we weren’t able to get the series win today.

“I thought that Jarrett Blunt and Jakob Meyer gave us a chance by keeping us close, but we could not put together another big offensive inning that we needed to get the win.  Tomorrow is a very important rubber match for us.  Hopefully, we can get another great crowd to come out and cheer us on!”

Schultz (5-3), who had hit only one batter in his last six starts on the mound spanning 32.0 innings of work, opened the first inning giving up a hit, a walk and hit two batters to give Indiana State a 1-0 lead.  After a strikeout, ISU catcher Grant McGill was able to flare a double down the right field line to score two runs to extend the lead to 3-0.  An infield ground out then capped the first-inning scoring for ISU, but Indiana State took a 4-0 lead before Evansville headed to home plate.

ISU would tack on a run in the third inning on another hit-by-pitch by Schultz, a balk, a wild pitch and a sacrifice fly to push the lead to 5-0.  Evansville would finally answer back in the bottom of the third inning, as junior outfielder Adam Euler, making his first start of the year, singled to open the inning.  After a single from sophomore third baseman Ben Stuart, graduate outfielder Eric Roberts launched a three-run home run to center field for his MVC-leading 16th home run of the year to cut the ISU lead to 5-3.

The Sycamores would add a run in the fifth inning on a solo home run from shortstop Randal Diaz that went in and out of the glove of UE outfielder Ty Rumsey as he crashed into the wall in center field to take a 6-3 lead.  Diaz would later double off of the glove of Rumsey again in the seventh inning and score on an RBI single by third baseman Mike Sears to push the lead to 7-3, before UE fifth-year first baseman Chase Hug would belt a solo home run to center field in the bottom of the eighth inning to cap the scoring on the day.

Hug went 3-for-4 with a home run, while Roberts went 2-for-4 with a home run and three RBI.  Stuart also had two hits for UE.  Diaz went 2-for-4 with three runs scored to lead ISU.

Fenlong got the victory on the mound by holding Evansville to four runs on eight hits in 8.0 innings of work, while striking out six.  Reliever Brennyn Cutts worked a perfect ninth inning to earn his second save of the year.  Schultz took the loss for UE, yielding five runs on just two hits with a walk.  He did hit three batters.  UE graduate reliever Jarrett Blunt struck out a career-high eight men in a season-best 4.0 innings of work to try and keep Evansville in the game, and senior reliver Jakob Meyer struck out three over 2.0 scoreless innings of work for UE.

With the victory, Indiana State improves to 27-13 overall and 15-2 in the MVC.  Evansville, meanwhile, falls to 25-17 overall and 9-8 in the MVC with the loss.  The series will be decided on Sunday afternoon at 1 p.m., with UE expected to start graduate LHP Michael Parks (2-1, 2.34 ERA) against Indiana State RHP Lane Miller (4-0, 2.12 ERA).  Sunday’s rubber match can be heard live in the Tri-State area on 107.1 FM-WJPS and the Old National Bank/Purple Aces Sports Network from Learfield.

Nink and Wood hit home runs in 3-2 win over Redbirds

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Series finale set for Sunday at noon

EVANSVILLE, Ind. – Solo home runs from Jenna Nink and Marah Wood, strong pitching and big-time defensive plays around the diamond, helped the University of Evansville softball team take down Illinois State by a score of 3-2 at Tri-State Orthopaedics Field at James and Dorothy Cooper Stadium.

Nink registered her sixth homer of the season while Wood picked up her fourth.  Erin Kleffman made the start on her Senior Day with one run scoring in her four innings of work.  Sydney Weatherford earned her sixth win of the year, tossing two frames of 1-run ball.  Megan Brenton threw a scoreless seventh on the way to her sixth save of 2023.

Evansville’s defense was the first to make a statement, coming through in a big way to prevent an Illinois State run in the top of the seconds.  With two outs and runners on first and second, the Redbirds picked up a base hit to left field and sent the baserunner home.  Zoe Frossard’s accurate throw was grabbed by catcher Taylor Howe, who made the tag and ended the inning.

In the bottom of the third, UE broke the scoreless tie when Marah Wood drilled a 1-out home run to left center.  It extended her hit streak to 11 games and marked her fourth homer of 2023. It did not take long for ISU to rebound as they put two runners on with no outs.  A sacrifice fly brought in the tying run before Erin Kleffman pitched out of the jam.

Entering the game in the top of the 5th, Sydney Weatherford struggled with the opening three batters as each would get on base.  Facing the bases loaded, no out situation, Weatherford regrouped and limited the damage to just one run with the Redbirds going up 2-1.

Jenna NInk wasted little time in tying it right back up.  With UE facing its first deficit of the afternoon, her leadoff home run in the bottom of the 5th tied the score.  Pinch hitter Brooke McCorkle followed up with a double as Sydney Kalonihea reentered and would score the go-ahead run on a sacrifice fly from Alexa Davis.

Brenton took to the circle in the 7th and two runners would reach with one out.  Appropriately enough, it was the defense shining once again, forcing a game-ending double play to seal the win.  Both squads recorded seven hits on the day with Willsey picking up two.

Following the game, seniors Hannah Hood and Kleffman were recognized as well as Alyssa Barela, who played her final season at UE in 2022.  The team also recognized senior members of the Illinois State team.

The teams will battle it out for the series on Sunday with first pitch set for 12 p.m.

Hufnagel PRs in 5,000m, USI women shatter rare mark

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2023 Ohio Valley Indoor Championship

DES MOINES, Iowa—Senior Noah Hufnagel (Santa Claus, Indiana) notched a personal-record to lead University of Southern Indiana Men’s Track & Field at the Drake Relays, while the Screaming Eagles’ women shattered a record in an event they rarely compete in during their final weekend of the regular season.
 
Hufnagel raced to a 10th-place finish in the 5,000 meters Thursday night, crossing the finish line with a personal-best mark of 14 minutes, 2.73 seconds. His effort ranks him seventh on USI’s all-time outdoor 5,000-meter list.
 
The Eagles’ men had just three student-athletes competing this weekend, with junior Mitchell Hopf (Santa Claus, Indiana) and sophomore Luke Heinemann (Georgetown, Kentucky) competing at the Clark Wood Open in Louisville, Kentucky.
 
Hopf was unable to finish in the 5,000 meters, while Heinemann scored a 27th-place finish in the 1,500 meters with a time of 4:11.14.
 
USI’s women had just four student-athletes competing at the Drake Relays this weekend.
 
Junior McKenna Cavanaugh (New Albany, Indiana) and senior Kara Martin (Herrin, Illinois) posted respective finishes of 12th and 29th in the 3,000 meter steeplechase Thursday, while senior Emma Brown (Evansville, Indiana) was 19th in the 800 meters.
 
Brown, Cavanaugh, Martin and freshman Emily Rempe (Owensboro, Kentucky) comprised two different relays on Friday. After tallying a seventh-place finish the 4×1,600-meter relay, an event USI has no recorded history in, the quartet raced to a third-place finish in the 4×800-meter relay later in the evening.
 
The quartet shattered the program’s all-time record in the event Friday by finishing in 9:06.36, nearly 50 seconds faster than the previous record of 9:54.90, which was set in 2001. USI last competed in the 4×800-meter relay in 2017.
 
USI concludes its first season of Division I competition when it competes at the Ohio Valley Conference Outdoor Championships May 11-13 in Edwardsville, Illinois.

Joshua Hughes signs with UE Men’s Basketball

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Native of Australia played at the U17 World Cup in 2022

EVANSVILLE, Ind. – Head Coach David Ragland has announced another addition to the University of Evansville men’s basketball roster for next season as Joshua Hughes has signed with the Purple Aces.

Hughes is a 6-foot-10 forward/center from Australia.  He represented his country at the U17 World Cup in 2022 and is currently playing for Basketball Australia Centre of Excellence in the NBL1 League.

“We are extremely excited to add Joshua and his family to our UE family. Josh is a wonderful young man who comes from a great family,” Ragland explained.  “Our staff has focused this offseason on adding size, skill and shooting to our roster and Josh fits all those aspects as well as the importance of adding quality people to our roster.”

“The combination of Josh’s skill set and work ethic will keep UE fans entertained watching him develop over time.”

NBL1 is a semi-professional league in Australia, which is the equivalent of the G-League for the NBA in the United States.  In 14.7 minutes per game, Hughes is averaging 6.9 points and 3.1 rebounds.  His shooting has been extremely efficient as he holds a 56% mark from the field and is an 85% free throw shooter.

Since January of 2021, Hughes has been training at the CoE and NBA Academy.  He is set to join the Aces as a freshman in the fall of 2023.

EPA Releases Report Showing Health Impacts of Climate Change on Children in the United States

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Clumps of pollen from the oak trees that line the trail fill the sidewalks along Rice Boulevard, Tuesday, April 12, 2022, near Rice University in Houston. The area has seen record pollen counts over the past weeks inflaming allergies and blanketing surfaces in yellow.

WASHINGTON (April 25, 2023) — The signs of climate change are all around us, and children are uniquely vulnerable to its impacts. Climate change-related impacts in childhood can have lifelong consequences due to effects on learning, physical health, and housing security. A new national-scale, multi-sector EPA report showcases some of the ways children are especially vulnerable to a variety of health effects from climate change due to physical, cognitive, behavioral, and social factors.

This peer-reviewed report quantifies projected health effects associated with extreme heat, air quality, changing seasons, flooding, and infectious diseases. Where possible, the analyses consider the extent to which health effects disproportionately fall on children who are Black, Indigenous and people of color [BIPOC], low income, without health insurance, and/or have limited English proficiency.

“Understanding health risks to children is critical for developing effective and equitable strategies that will protect our current and future generations,” said EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan. “Today’s report will help further efforts being taken by the Biden Administration across the Federal government to address the climate crisis and advance environmental justice.”

The report finds a number of impacts to U.S. children’s health and well-being. For example, at 2°C and 4°C of global warming:

  • Climate change is expected to increase the incidence of asthma in children. Specifically, climate-driven changes in air quality are estimated to increase annual cases of asthma between 4% and 11%, respectively.
  • Increases in oak, birch, and grass pollen are projected to increase children’s asthma-related emergency department visits from 17%-30% each year.
  • Additional cases of Lyme disease in children are projected to rise 79% to 241%, or an additional 2,600 to 23,400 new cases per year.
  • Heat experienced during the school year affects concentration and learning in children. Climate-driven temperature increases are projected to result in 4% to 7% reductions in annual academic achievement per child. These learning losses can affect future income, with potential losses across cohorts of graduating students reaching billions of dollars annually (and in the thousands of dollars per individual).
  • If no additional adaptation actions are taken, 1 million to 2 million+ children are estimated to experience temporary home displacement or complete home loss, respectively, from coastal flooding at 50cm to 100cm of global mean sea level.

Today’s report is an important new resource in the Biden-Harris Administration’s efforts to address the climate crisis and advance environmental justice. Agencies across the federal government are working to protect all children from environmental health risks, with EPA particularly focused on impacts to the health of children due to climate change and other environmental factors.

“EPA’s new report offers a clear, compelling overview of how climate change impacts our children’s health. Its findings underscore the necessity of considering children’s well-being in every climate policy — and the moral urgency of taking effective action to stop climate pollution on behalf of younger and future generations,” said Moms Clean Air Force Senior Policy Analyst Elizabeth Bechard. “We know that children are especially vulnerable to nearly all of the health impacts of climate change, from extreme heat and worsened air quality to coastal flooding and increased prevalence of insect-borne diseases. The new report is painful to read. But necessary. It offers an important roadmap for policymakers, parents, teachers, health care providers, and childcare workers by highlighting both the challenges we face and potential solutions. For all who care about children’s well-being, EPA’s new report is a call to action — a call we must answer for our children’s sake.”

“Children are experiencing the impacts of climate change from negative health outcomes impacting their physical and mental health,” said Children’s Environmental Health Network Executive Director Nsedu Obot Witherspoon. “It is very important for the EPA and the Biden-Harris Administration to generate this report and take a stand for children and their well-being. Available evidence and lived experience support the fact that children’s health is further threatened by increased changing seasons, extreme heat, air quality, flooding, and infectious diseases, all of which are influenced by climate change. We also know that Black, Indigenous, Latino/a/x, Asian and Pacific Islander children, and those from lower wealth families experience cumulative impacts from environmental and climate injustice. We applaud the EPA for this important leadership and will continue to identify ways to collaborate to advance the health of all children from the growing and urgent threat of climate change.”

“As a physician, I understand that the environment is a key determinant of our health,” said Congressman Raul Ruiz, M.D. (CA-25). “This report makes clear the profound impact of climate change on our children’s health, well-being, and development and highlights the need to address the climate crisis through a public health lens. I appreciate the Biden Administration’s commitment to protecting our children’s health, and I look forward to working together on solutions that advance environmental justice for all.”