MURRAY, Ky. – Murray State plated two runs in the second, fourth and sixth innings to win Sunday’s series finale against the University of Evansville softball team at Racer Field.
Ailey Schick got the scoring started with an RBI triple in the second inning before two more RBI knocked in the fourth extended the lead to 4-0. Scoring on a walk and wild pitch in the sixth, the Racers made it a 6-0 game. Marah Wood led the third inning off with the Purple Aces’ first hit of the afternoon – a double to left center. Alexa Davis drew a 1-out walk before the Racers escaped damage and recorded the final two outs. Trailing by six entering the top of the seventh, the Aces were able to manufacture two runs. Zoe Frossard doubled to bring in Hannah Hood, who reached on a leadoff error. Kaylee Lawson brought in Frossard on a ground out, but the late rally came up short with MSU clinching the series with a 6-1 win. Sydney Weatherford made the start for UE and allowed four runs, three earned, in four innings. Erin Kleffman went the final two frames and allowed two earned runs. As a team, the Aces picked up two hits on the day.
On Tuesday, UE will be back home to face SIU Edwardsville in a 6 p.m. game.
AZUSA, Calif.—School records and personal bests were on notice this weekend as University of Southern Indiana Men’s and Women’s Track & Field turned out strong performances at the Brian Clay Invitational.  Junior Audrey Comastri (Indianapolis, Indiana) broke the school record in the women’s 800 meters Friday with a time of two minutes, 12.67 seconds, while freshman Emily Rempe (Owensboro, Kentucky) broke the freshmen record with her 800-meter time of 2:13.61.  On Thursday, junior McKenna Cavanaugh (New Albany, Indiana) improved on her personal-best time in the steeplechase as she crossed the finish line in 10:39.09. Senior Kara Martin (Herrin, Illinois) was on her heals, coming in with a personal-best time of 10:42.59. The two marks rank second and third on USI’s all-time steeplechase list.  Cavanaugh highlighted the final day of competition for the Eagles as she eased past USI Hall of Famer Mary Ballinger for second on USI’s all-time 1,500-meter list with a personal-best time of 4:29.79.  Martin also was strong in 1,500 meters Saturday, running a season-best time of 4:33.96, while Rempe and Comastri respectively finished in personal-best times of 4:39.98 and 4:40.33.  In total, USI’s women racked up nine personal-best times to go along with three season-best times.  Juniors Hadley Fisher (Evansville, Indiana) and Aubrey Swart (Noblesville, Indiana) posted personal-bests in the 10,000 meters Friday morning, while senior Emma Brown (Evansville, Indiana) tallied season-best times in the 800 meters and 1,500 meters.  Senior Noah Hufnagel (Santa Claus, Indiana) was the lone representative on the men’s side this weekend. Hufnagel ran to a personal-best time 29:12.35 in the 10,000 meters Friday morning, a mark that ranks fourth all-time at USI.  The Eagles return to action Friday-Saturday when they compete at the EKU Rick Erdmann Twilight in Richmond, Kentucky. Â
NASHVILLE, Tenn. – University of Southern Indiana Men’s Tennis dropped two matches this weekend in Nashville, Tennessee as they fell to Tennessee State University, 5-2, on Saturday and Belmont University, 7-0, on Sunday. The Screaming Eagles fall to 5-14 (1-6 Horizon League) while the Tigers go to 10-12 (6-2 Horizon) and the Bruins improve to 18-5 (9-0 Horizon).  USI vs Tennessee State Doubles: After the Tigers took the number two doubles to open the match, the Eagles bounced right back and earned a win in one doubles, as freshman Omar ElSamahy (Cairo, Egypt) and senior Lucas Sakamaki (Louisville, Kentucky) took down their opponent 7-5. Tennessee State would take the number three doubles match to secure the point.  Singles: The Tigers stayed hot as they took the number three, four, and six singles matches to claim the match victory early. USI would not back down as ElSamahy would earn a win by default in number two singles while senior Yahor Bahdanovich (Minsk, Belarus) would earn a victory of his opponent in number five singles, 1-6 6-3 7-5.  USI vs Belmont Doubles: Belmont would take both the number two and three doubles matches to claim the point while the number one doubles would go unfinished.  Singles: The Bruins would stay hot and take all six singles matches in straight sets to earn a match victory.  Up Next for the Eagles: USI returns home for their final two matches of the regular season as they play host to Lindenwood University on April 22 at 1 pm and Eastern Illinois University on April 23 at noon. The Eagles will celebrate Senior Day when they host Eastern Illinois. Both matches will be played at the USI Tennis Courts.  The USI match with Tennessee Tech University that was previously postponed will not be made up and will go as a no contest for both teams.
FOOTNOTE: Â EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.
Just when it seems as though the lawmakers in the Indiana General Assembly have demonstrated they are as far removed from reality as is humanly possible, they find another level.
A new dimension of delusion and detachment from real people’s lives.
On the same day that another mass shooting took place in Louisville, Kentucky, our legislators decided to honor the National Rifle Association and its leader, Wayne LaPierre, ahead of the NRA’s convention in Indianapolis.
That’s right.
Just after the news broke that another disturbed person had used a legally obtained military-style weapon to kill five people and wound nine others, including two police officers, our elected representatives opted to pay tribute to the NRA, the organization that has done more than any other group to turn the United States into a mass murderers’ amusement park.
Worse, the lawmakers also opted to genuflect before LaPierre, the huckster who led the NRA’s transformation from a club for sportsmen into the most radicalized special-interest group in the country while bilking the membership and contractors out of hundreds of thousands—and perhaps even millions—of dollars.
Your tax money at work.
There are several things that make this act of obeisance offensive.
The first is that many of the rigid and unrealistic stands the NRA takes don’t even have the backing of the organization’s membership. Several polls have revealed, for example, that somewhere between 70% and 80% of the NRA’s members support universal background checks for firearms purchasers.
That doesn’t matter to the NRA’s leadership, including LaPierre.
Their opposition to background checks and any other reasonable attempt to keep deadly weapons out of disturbed people’s hands has little do with either the U.S. Constitution or common sense. Background checks delay sales. The gun manufacturers and merchants who provide the bulk of the NRA’s funding, through means they try to hide, want to keep the cash registers ringing.
So, regardless of what the members of this supposed members’ organization want, the NRA continues its intransigence to the most common-sense gun laws even as the body count continues to climb.
LaPierre, the man before whom our legislators bowed down, is of a similar mercantile mindset.
The NRA is the focus of litigation in New York state. The discovery process in the state’s civil suit has revealed that LaPierre leads a lavish lifestyle for a man who leads a supposed not-for-profit organization.
He routinely has taken personal flights on the NRA’s private jets, sometimes dispatching to collect family members from exotic places so that they can provide childcare. Investigators have determined that some of LaPierre’s personal vacations could have price tags as high as a half-million dollars apiece.
That’s not surprising.
LaPierre likes a lavish lifestyle. His mansion in Texas cost $6 million—in part because it has an extensive and expensive security system to protect the occupants from all the people running around with the guns LaPierre has worked to make so readily available.
Such security systems sadly aren’t available to most of the rabble who send LaPierre their hard-earned cash.
The NRA’s flacks tried to contend that none of the organization’s money went to helping with the purchase of LaPierre’s home. Independent accountants disproved that whopper in a hurry.
So, here’s where we are: a majority of Indiana’s legislators abased themselves before an organization that is heedless of the damage its profit-driven policies have done to the country and a man who seems never to have seen an expense account he didn’t want to pad, even to the point of overstuffing it.
This all might be just unseemly—if it weren’t for one thing.
Our legislators don’t work for Wayne LaPierre and the NRA.
They work for us.
Or at least they’re supposed to.
But it doesn’t seem to matter to them that most Hoosiers, like most NRA members, would like to see some common-sense legal protections against the epidemic of gun violence plaguing our communities.
The reason it doesn’t matter to the lawmakers is that they reside in legislative districts, thanks to gerrymandering and other forms of political skullduggery, that are as heavily fortified against the ire of the electorate as Wayne LaPierre’s huge homestead is against the gun-toting populace he helped bring into being.
Both our legislators and the NRA like to live behind barricades—barricades that shelter them from everything.
Including reality.
FOOTNOTE: John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students. The views expressed are those of the author only and should not be attributed to Franklin College.
The City-County Observer posted this article without opinion, bias, or editing.