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UE Secures $30 Million Grant to Create Evansville Promise Neighborhood

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EVANSVILLE, IND. (03/30/2023) The University of Evansville (UE) has announced the receipt of a $30 million federal grant program through the United States Department of Education (DOE) that will establish the Evansville’s Promise Neighborhood (EPN). UE is part of a new cohort funded in 2023. Only three Neighborhoods in the nation were awarded in 2023.

The aim of the funding is to assist children and youth who are growing up in Promise Neighborhoods, providing them with access to outstanding schools as well as robust family and community support systems. These resources will help prepare them to achieve academic excellence, make the transition to college, and, ultimately, embark on a successful career.

The University of Evansville, as lead applicant, submitted the 2022 grant application to the DOE for an Evansville Promise Neighborhood on October 7, 2022, with a total request of $30 million over five years. Twenty-three Evansville Promise Neighborhood partner agencies accounted for a match totaling $32,497,295.55, for a total of more than $62 million to be invested in the community. This figure comes from the cost invested in providing wraparound care services to the schools and neighborhoods designated as the Evansville Promise Neighborhood. The Promise Neighborhood includes six schools: Evans Elementary School, Delaware Elementary School, Lincoln School, Bosse High School, Lodge Community School, and Glenwood Leadership Academy. The major partners for the EPN are UE, EVSC, E-REP, and the Evansville Promise Zone.

“The significance of this investment by our University for numerous families who require assistance is critical and extraordinarily impactful for the well-being of our entire Evansville community,” said UE President Christopher M. Pietruszkiewicz. “UE has been the leader of this initiative from day one, and we eagerly anticipate the positive outcomes it will bring. This is what being a Changemaker campus is all about and it emphasizes the strong partnership we have with our community.”

“This Evansville’s Promise Neighborhood investment is unmatched and will be critical to ensuring our community has the resources they need,” said Evansville Mayor Lloyd Winnecke ’82. “This is a major success for our city and will be beneficial in the months and years ahead.”

“We are excited and grateful for the opportunity to leverage this funding for the betterment of our students and the families we serve,” said Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation Superintendent Dr. David Smith. “It is, once again, another shining example of the collaborative efforts of our Evansville community.”

“This grant we received is a result of this community coming together and collaborating for the common good of Evansville,” said Evansville Promise Zone Director Silas Matchem. “This really solidifies all the work we have been doing since the culmination of the Promise Zone designation. I can’t emphasize enough how big of an impact this will truly have for not only the neighborhoods it serves but for our Promise Zone and the City of Evansville as a whole.”

“Over the past 2-3 years the Evansville Region has committed to enhancing quality of place for both current and future residents through strategic public/private investments. We know that the people care about high quality education, access to healthcare, improved infrastructure, and access to community resources, all of which are key components of what this approach will enable our communities to prioritize,” said Tara Barney, CEO of the Evansville Regional Economic Partnership. “This award is further testament to the high level of collaboration and strategic visioning that regional leaders have had, and as the regional economic development organization, we are thrilled to see the lasting impact and opportunity that is fostered through and from this opportunity.”

The Background

In June of 2016, the City of Evansville received a federal 10-year Promise Zone designation to support its most at-risk, yet most promising neighborhoods within its urban core. Schools and census tracts were selected after a careful review of school and neighborhood data based on areas of most concentrated need within the Promise Zone. This effort was led by Diehl Consulting, widely respected local program evaluation experts, in close partnership with EVSC to analyze the data. Leadership Everyone and UE’s Center for Innovation & Change conducted neighborhood vision and design thinking sessions with EVSC students and families to help guide the interventions selected. Dr. Timothy A. (Tad) Dickel of the T.A. Dickel Group, LLC helped facilitate the process of budget development with partners, and Amy Bolek (UE alumna) of Bolek Grant Writing and Consulting Services led the grant process. UE, as lead applicant, would house the staff leading the Promise Neighborhood, through its Center for Innovation & Change.

Evansville has applied for Promise Neighborhoods four times, including in 2021, the first year in which UE was a partner and is now the lead partner. Evansville’s selection as a Promise Zone was seen as a necessary precursor to eventually receiving the Promise Neighborhoods grant.

The University of Evansville is a private, comprehensive university located in the southwestern region of Indiana. Established in 1854, UE is recognized across the globe for its rich tradition of innovative, academic excellence and vibrant campus community of changemakers.

KEEP Applauds Legislature for Passing Sports Wagering Legislation

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Lexington, KY. (Friday, March 31, 2023) - The Kentucky Equine Education Project (KEEP) released this statement following the passage of HB 551:

KEEP commends the Kentucky Legislature for passing HB 551, which will legalize sports wagering in Kentucky.

KEEP and Kentucky’s horse industry have been actively involved for the past several years in advocating for sports wagering legislation that protects the role of Kentucky’s signature industry in the landscape of wagering options and provides new revenue for the state.

HB 551 accomplishes this by allowing for sports wagering to be offered in-person at Kentucky’s racetracks. Additionally, sports wagering will be governed by the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission, a testament to the trust that wagerers place in Kentucky’s horse industry.

Overall, this bill will benefit Kentucky’s horse industry and community by offering new revenue sources for the industry, as well as attracting new fans to the sport through the in-person experiences at Kentucky racetracks.

The legalization of sports wagering in Kentucky is a result of the hard work and dedication of lawmakers, industry leaders, and advocates who have been fighting for this change for years. KEEP has been a vocal supporter of this legislation, and we are proud to have played a role in making it a reality.

KEEP would like to thank the members of the Kentucky Legislature for their leadership and vision in passing this important legislation. We look forward to continuing to work with them and other stakeholders to ensure that Kentucky remains the horse racing capital of the world.

About KEEP

The Kentucky Equine Education Project, Kentucky’s equine economic advocate, is a not-for-profit grassroots organization created in 2004 to preserve, promote and protect Kentucky’s signature multi-breed horse industry. KEEP is committed to ensuring Kentucky remains the horse capital of the world, including educating Kentuckians and elected officials of the importance of the horse industry to the state. KEEP was the driving force in the establishment of the Kentucky Breeders Incentive Fund, which has paid out more than $177 million to Kentucky breeders since its inception in 2006, and pari-mutuel wagering on historical horse racing, which has been responsible for more than $40 million to purses and more than $24 million to the Kentucky Thoroughbred Development Fund.

KEEP works to strengthen the horse economy in Kentucky through our statewide network of citizen advocates.

USI to host roundtable discussion on diversity in the classroom

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The University of Southern Indiana College of Liberal Arts Equity, Diversity and Inclusion Committee and the Center for Social Justice Education will present a roundtable discussion about the importance of centering diverse backgrounds and voices in the classroom at 3 p.m. April 11 in Liberal Arts 1003 in the Liberal Arts Center. This event is open to the public at no charge.

The roundtable discussion will feature a panel that will share personal and professional experiences and the challenges facing educators. The panel will also discuss the importance of diversity in the classroom and how it can benefit students of all backgrounds.

For more information, email Dr. Kristalyn Shefveland, Associate Professor of History, or call 812-461-5434.

About the Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion Committee

The College of Liberal Arts Equity, Diversity and Inclusion Committee is a University of Southern Indiana College of Liberal Arts initiative committed to diversity and inclusion on our campus and to promote an academically enriching and supportive climate that allows all members to thrive and succeed.

About the Center for Social Justice Education

The Center for Social Justice Education is dedicated to individual and societal well-being in a global community, promoting critical thinking, and a systems perspective across agencies, institutes, departments and individuals to pursue social change for all individuals’ well-being.

Huddleston Farmhouse, utility shut-offs, plant biostimulants

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Preservationists and organic farmers Tyler and Gentry Gough have purchased Cambridge City’s historic Huddleston Farmhouse and 18 acres from Indiana Landmarks. Built in 1841, the 14-room farmhouse originally provided a home for the 13 members of the Huddleston family and functioned as an inn for weary National Road travelers. Huddleston family members sold the home in the 1930s, and it served a number of uses before Indiana Landmarks acquired the property in 1974.

Indiana Landmarks President Marsh Davis: “We couldn’t have asked for better stewards. Their vision for the land and its historic structures carries on the legacy and tradition of the Huddleston family and others who have cared for this important historic property.”

Gentry Gough: “Our goal is to provide a place of beauty, integrity, stability and knowledge to the community for generations to come. We’ll provide fruit, vegetables, herbs, nuts, grains, heritage meat, syrup and more.” 

This week, CenterPoint Energy reminded customers that Indiana’s winter regulatory moratorium, which temporarily suspends disconnections of customers who meet low-income guidelines and have received federal and state utility heating assistance, has expired. Customers who have received a disconnect notice should contact the company at 1-800-227-1376 to make payment arrangements and avoid potential disconnection.

Ashley Babcock, vice president, Indiana and Ohio Gas: “Throughout the winter heating season, we have been communicating with customers who may be experiencing financial hardships on the options available to manage their accounts. We encourage customers experiencing financial challenges to contact us as soon as they receive a disconnection notice to make arrangements to avoid a disruption in service.”

On Wednesday, U.S. Senators Mike Braun and Alex Padilla introduced the Plant Biostimulant Act, which would create a uniform process for approving commercial plant biostimulant use as an alternative to synthetic pesticides and fertilizers and conducting research on the technology’s benefits for soil health. 

Braun: “Plant biostimulants are important tools that allow farmers to make more with less, which preserves our natural resources and increases efficiency. I’m glad to lead this bipartisan bill with Sen. Padilla so that there is clear pathway for these innovative products to be on the market for farmers in Indiana and across the nation.”

UE, BELMONT MEET FOR FIRST TIME AS VALLEY BASEBALL FOES THIS WEEKEND

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. – Two of the hottest teams in the Missouri Valley Conference will square off this weekend trying to bounce back from their first loss in a while, as the University of Evansville Purple Aces will host the Belmont Bruins in a three-game Valley series at German American Bank Field at Charles H. Braun Stadium in Evansville.

The three-game series will begin on Saturday afternoon at 1 p.m. with a single game, before a noon Sunday doubleheader will conclude the series.  The first two games of the series can be seen live on ESPN+, with the second game on Sunday being available on ESPN3.  All three games of the series can be heard live in Evansville on 107.1 FM-WJPS and the Old National Bank/Purple Aces Sports Network from Learfield.

Both Evansville and Belmont will be looking to bounce back from a loss in their last trip to the diamond, as both teams saw long winning streaks snapped last time out.  Evansville will bring a 16-8 overall record and 3-0 MVC mark into Saturday’s opener after seeing its nine-game winning streak broken on Wednesday against Southeast Missouri State.  Belmont, meanwhile, will enter the weekend set at 14-12 overall and 2-1 in the Valley after seeing a seven-game winning streak snapped in its last game against Illinois State last weekend.

Evansville will enter the weekend series leading the Valley in scoring, with 175 runs in 24 contests.  Fifth-year outfielder Eric Roberts is the current MVC Player of the Week, and he will enter this weekend’s action as the only player in NCAA Division I baseball to lead his league in home runs, RBI and stolen bases.  Roberts hit his league-leading 10th home run of the year and collected his MVC-best 33rd RBI on Wednesday night against Southeast Missouri State.  Roberts also leads the Valley with 10 stolen bases, and he is one of just two Division I players currently with double-digit totals in both home runs and stolen bases (North Carolina’s Mac Horvath is the other).

Belmont will counter UE’s offense with a pitching staff which currently leads the MVC with a 4.66 ERA.  Saturday’s starter, Andy Bean, is the current MVC Pitcher of the Week after tossing a complete-game shutout in the Bruins’ 2-0 series-opening win over Illinois State.  Bean will bring a 2-3 overall record and 3.26 ERA into Saturday’s contest, and he has not allowed a run in his last two starts.  The Bruins’ pitching staff is led by former UE pitching coach A.J. Gaura, who is in his second season in Nashville.

This weekend will mark the first-ever Valley series between UE and Belmont.  The two teams first met in 2010, and have met every year outside of two (2011 and 2021) since.  The Bruins lead the all-time series, 15-4, and won a pair of mid-week games over Evansville last year by scores of 7-4 and 8-2.  Saturday’s opener will be just the seventh all-time meeting in Evansville, however, as 13 of the previous 19 meetings have taken place in Nashville.

Evansville will send senior LHP Tyler Denu to the mound in Saturday’s opener.  Denu is 2-0 with a 3.37 ERA and is coming off a career-best outing in which he struck out a career-high 10 men in a collegiate-best 7.0 innings of work in UE’s 7-3 victory at Missouri State last Saturday.

VU Men’s Basketball opens 2023 recruiting class with Gerard Thomas

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VINCENNES, Ind. – The Vincennes University men’s basketball team is looking to reload after an impressive run to the Elite Eight of the NJCAA National Tournament in 2023.

VU wasted little time putting together the 2023 recruiting class, picking up their first signee of the summer in Henderson County point guard Gerard Thomas.

“I am excited to work with Coach Franklin and take my game to the next level,” Thomas said. “I am ready to get to work and add another National Championship banner at VU. When I met with Coach Davis and toured the campus, I knew Vincennes was where I wanted to be.”

Thomas is a six-foot-two point guard who averaged 18.4 points, 8.2 rebounds and 4.4 assists per game last season for the Colonels.

Thomas helped guide Henderson County to a 22-9 record last season under Head Coach Tyler Smithhart and helped the Colonels reach the Semifinals of the Region Two Tournament after leading HCHS to a District 6 Championship.

Thomas finished his high school career as the nine All-Time leading scorer in Henderson County school history and was named the Region Two Player of the Year in Kentucky.

Thomas was also a candidate for the Mr. Basketball honor in Kentucky and was named Third-Team All-State by the Herald-Leader newspaper in Kentucky.

“I came to a game day visit earlier this year and went into the locker room after the game,” Thomas added. “The team welcomed me like it was my home and then when I visited and we played, I felt like it was the right fit. The team was very welcoming and right after my visit I told Coach Franklin this is where I want to be.”

When asked what he hopes to bring to the Trailblazers next season, Thomas said, “A great teammate that wants to win.”

As for what the biggest part of his game he is most excited to show the VU fans next season, Thomas added, “my shot making ability”.

“We’ve looked at Gerard all year,” VU Hall of Fame Head Coach Todd Franklin said. “He’s one that we’ve known about and have paid attention to for quite a while. He came up to a couple of games and watched us during the season and we had him up on a visit this week to just confirm what we thought and he is what he is.”

“He is a strong, six-one and a half, 218 pound point guard,” Franklin added. “He is similar in some ways to Devin Foster, but right-handed. He probably doesn’t shoot it quite as well as Devin did but may be a little better at going both ways to the basket. He brings physicality to the position and we are into physicality here and I think that this team next year is going to be very much into physicality with the returners that we have. He’s really good playing downhill and has good vision. He’s very long, like Devin, across the shoulders and his arms. He’s a long six-one and that plays into the things he does. It helps him finish using his body at the basket. He gets a lot of deflections and steals with his quick hands.”

“Teams will be playing against some grown men next year on our squad and he fits right in,” Franklin said. “He really wanted to be here. We were his choice, which is very important to us that he wanted to be here over his other options. He’ll be here over the summer, so he will be able to jump right in and I think he has a real chance to help us. I think he has a chance to be able to play right away because physically, he’s ready and I think his game and the way he plays fits into the way that we play. I think as long as he comes in and comes to work from day one here in the summer, I think he’ll be a guy that can help us next year.”

Thomas is joining a Vincennes University team that is coming off a spectacular bounce back season, where the Trailblazers finished with a record of 30-6 and earned a spot in the NJCAA National Quarterfinals in Hutchinson.

The Blazers will look to fill spots left behind by departing sophomores Tasos Cook, Trenton Johnson, Devawn White, Shilo Jackson and Caleb Johnson.

“We are putting together, what I think, is a traditional for us,” Franklin said. “We are strong, physical, tough and we need the point guard position to reflect the same thing and I think Gerard is a step in that direction along with the returners that we have coming back as well as some other guys that we are still looking at in recruiting.”

“The biggest thing for us right now in recruiting is that we want guys that fit what we are doing,” Franklin added. “We’ve got to get point guards, we’ve got to get two guards, we’ve got to get some more centers. Probably another wing-type player, guys that are going to make an impact. We’ve got to get point guards and two guards that can come in and play and we’ve got to get a five that can come in and play, as well as another guy at the three-four position that is in the rotation, kind of like a Kris King or a Caleb Johnson type of player last year.”

“We’ve got Michael Osei-Bonsu, Karyiek Dixon and Victor Lado back,” Franklin said. “Those are three strong, built guys. I think you are going to see Victor expanding his game next year. He can really shoot the ball at the top of the key and we are going to work at that really hard this summer. We are going to work with Karyiek and Michael about putting the ball on the floor more and not only beating you, but then posting up after the drive. Things that Villanova has done over the years.”

“Kris King will, in theory, play more as a three next season with Caleb gone,” Franklin added. “But he also has that ability to switch back and forth like those other guys in the post. Ryan Oliver will be back next year with another year of being better and stronger at the two. Kent King is also back for next year. We think that he really has the potential and I think an offseason will really help him after his first season here.”

“We all know that we have to get better at shooting the ball this offseason and the guys will work hard at it,” Franklin said. “We would also like to bring some guys in that could shoot it a little better too. But the bottom line is, we have to guard you, we’ve got to take good shots and we’ve got to get on the glass. That has been our recipe for being extremely successful over the years and we were again successful last year. Now we’ve got something that we haven’t had since before COVID, we’ve got a bunch of returners. A solid core of returners that will be better next year. How much better is the question, but they will be better.”

“They want to be here and they want to get it done and they are excited about it,” Franklin added. “They are already working on it. They like each other and everybody that we bring in here in recruiting is going to be somebody we think fits into that. We think we’ve done that with Gerard and we will see in time when they are here. But everybody that we sign, they have to be somebody that fits into what we have. Because we are back to having that thing where it flips over and we know our identity and we think the guys coming back fit our identity and everybody that we sign, regardless of position, is going to be somebody we think fits in with that identity. Because I think we are going to be really hard to beat, as long as we stay true to that.”

The Vincennes University Athletic Department would like to welcome Gerard Thomas to the 2023 recruiting class and wishes him well as he finishes his senior year of high school.

Gov. Holcomb appoints Don Lamb as new executive director of the Department of Agriculture

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Governor Eric J. Holcomb appointed 2nd -generation farmer Don Lamb, from Lebanon, Indiana, as the executive director of the Indiana State Department of Agriculture (ISDA).

Lamb is the co-owner and operator of Lamb Farms Inc., along with his brother and father. The farm produces popcorn, corn, soybeans and wheat. The family also owns AgRecycle, a composting and recycling business, and Lamb Farms Agronomy, which provides soil management and crop production products to surrounding farms.

Lamb graduated from Purdue University in 1989 with a bachelor’s degree in Agricultural Economics. He was named the Agricultural Professional of the Year in 2014 by the Boone County Chamber of Commerce.

USI communications students bring home six awards from IASB competition

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University of Southern Indiana communications students were recognized as award winners in six categories during the Indiana Association of School Broadcasters (IASB) annual college broadcasting competition ceremony Saturday, March 25 in Carmel, Indiana.

IASB is an organization consisting of and supporting Indiana high schools and colleges to promote professional excellence and student recognition in media education.

The statewide competition includes over 30 audio and video categories with a panel of industry professionals to judge entries, awarding first, second and third places in each category. USI students brought home awards in six categories, including first place for Radio Copywriting and Radio Imaging, to name a few.

The complete list of USI award recipients is listed below:

First Place Winners 

Radio Copywriting - Becca Lanham

Radio Imaging – Tyler Huyser

Second Place Winners 

Radio News Story - Andrew Newland

Third Place Winners  

Radio Newscast – Andrew Newland

Sound Design - Ryan Allega

Radio Show - Jada Hamby and Tyler Huyser

Eagles grounded by Lions’ late rally

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ST. CHARLES, Mo. – University of Southern Indiana Baseball allowed three runs in the bottom of the eighth and lost the series opener at Lindenwood University, 6-3, Friday afternoon in St. Charles, Missouri. USI, which continues to search for the first win in the conference play, watched its record go to 7-19, 0-4 in the OVC, while Ball State goes to 4-22, 1-3 OVC.
 
USI had the early momentum with a pair of first inning runs to take a 2-0. Junior designated hitter Tucker Ebest (Austin, Texas) knocked in the first run with a ground out, while freshman third baseman Caleb Niehaus (Newburgh, Indiana) pushed the second tally across with a single up the middle.
 
After Lindenwood knotted the game at 2-2 with a two-run third, the Eagles took the lead for a second time with a tally in the fourth on a bases-loaded walk drawn by senior catcher Lucas McNew (Floyds Knobs, Indiana). The Lions, however, bounced back in the bottom half of the frame to re-tie the game, 3-3.
 
The score remained tied until the bottom of the eighth when the Lions took the lead for the first time scoring three times for the eventual final score of 6-3.
 
On the mound for USI, junior right-hander Carter Stamm (Jasper, Indiana) took the loss for the Eagles in relief. Stamm (1-1) allowed three runs, loading the bases in the eighth on a walk and two hit batters which would come in on a pair of hits allowed by junior right-hander Cory Anderson (Linton, Indiana).
 
Sophomore right-hander Tyler Hutson (Villa Hills, Kentucky) started ad go the no decision. Hutson went 3-2 innings, allowing three runs on five hits and four walks, while striking out three.
 
USI, once again, got great middle relief from junior left-hander Blake Ciuffetelli (Newburgh, Indiana). Ciuffetelli blanked the Lions for 3.1 innings, allowing two hits and two walks, while striking out five batters.
 
The Eagles have lost 10-straight games, the longest streak since 2006.
 
Up Next for the Eagles:  
The Eagles and the Lions resume OVC three-game series Saturday at 1 p.m. The series finale is Sunday at 1 p.m.
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