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Arts Commission expands program to bring arts and creativity to older adults

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(INDIANAPOLIS) The Indiana Arts Commission (IAC) announced today a new partnership with Indiana Family and Social Services Administration (FSSA) Division of Aging geared towards benefiting older adults in Indiana. 

Lifelong Arts Indiana is a learning opportunity for aging services providers and artists to develop their skills in providing creative experiences for older adults. The program equips participants with the necessary knowledge and skills to provide impactful creative experiences for older adults, ages sixty-five and older, in their community– and provides access to the funds to help make it happen. 

“Through national research and previous agency work in this area, we have seen the immense impact that creative activity has on Indiana’s older adults,” said Miah Michaelsen, IAC Executive Director. “We are incredibly grateful for the partnership of the FSSA to bring training and funding to support this work around the state.” 

Lifelong Arts Indiana has two tracks, one for teaching artists and the other for aging services providers.  

Teaching artists can apply to be a part of the Lifelong Arts Indiana Artist Cohort. Selected participants complete a virtual, three-day workshop led by Lifetime Arts, a national leader in creative aging program development.  Training will explore best practices in creative aging and strategies to develop an effective, sequential arts learning experience for older adults.  Following training, participants will receive personal coaching and up to $1,500 via an Early Action Grant opportunity.  The deadline to apply for the artist cohort is March 30, 2023.  

Apply to be a part of the artist cohort.

Aging services providers can sign up for one of four free, in-person workshops. The training sessions are as follows:

  • April 28, 2023: Fort Wayne 
  • June 23, 2023: Bloomington 
  • Sept. 19, 2023: Evansville 
  • Nov. 14, 2023: Gary

Sign up to attend a training for aging services providers. 

The trainings are designed for professionals in the aging services community, such as area agencies on aging, senior centers, or other community-based senior serving organizations, and will focus on information about creative aging theory, step-by-step planning support, practical application of the learnings, and the opportunity for grant support. 

Aging services provider training participants will be eligible to apply for an Early Action Grant to fund a sequential arts-learning experience for a group of older adults in their community. Grants will be for up to $5,000 and must be led by a qualified artist.  

Bill Taking Aim At Gender-Affirming Medical Care For Minors Passes Committee

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Bill taking aim at gender-affirming medical care for minors passes committee

  • By Ashlyn Myers, TheStatehouseFile.com
  • Feb 22, 2023

INDIANAPOLIS—A bill that would ban minors from receiving gender-affirming medical care passed the Senate Health and Provider Services Committee on Wednesday.

Sen. Tyler Johnson, R-Leo, describes the specifics of his bill banning gender-affirming medical care for minors before the Senate Health and Provider Services Committee on Wednesday.

Screenshot by Ashlyn Myers, TheStatehouseFile.com.

Authored by Sen. Tyler Johnson, R-Leo, Senate Bill 480 would stop transgender children under 18 from receiving gender-affirming medical assistance, whether it be surgeries, hormonal therapy or other medication.

The bill appears this legislative session in conjunction with other bills on transgender rights currently being heard in the Indiana Statehouse, such as House Bill 1407, a bill on “parental rights,” and House Bill 1608, which would ban discussions on “human sexuality” in the classroom for children in kindergarten through third grade.

Johnson, a physician, said he authored the bill because he is worried some children may receive medical care and then regret it later on.

“We hear stories from adults about their regrets and about harms done to them as minors,” Johnson said. “Our goal here, really, is to cause less harm and let these kids get the counseling they need, and that’ll protect them from these life-altering decisions until they’re adults.”

With protestors shouting outside the Senate Chamber, many signed up to testify in opposition to the bill, each speaker limited to three minutes.

Parents Nathaniel and Beth Clawson testified that their daughter will not receive gender-affirming care if the bill is passed. Their daughter has already transitioned socially, meaning she wears feminine clothing and uses she/her pronouns, but the Clawsons are concerned that their child’s mental health will suffer once she begins puberty.

“Puberty can be a difficult time for everyone, but my fear is that my daughter will be forced to go through male puberty after she has been living as herself, as a girl, since she was very small,” Beth Clawson said. “Without age-appropriate medical care as recommended by our doctors, I fear that she will take her own life. … Please give her a chance at a happy childhood.”

Krisztina Inskeep and her husband, Kenneth, also testified in opposition, sharing that if their son had not received gender-affirming care, he might not be alive today.

“If you vote for this bill, look us in the eye when you do,” Kenneth Inskeep said. “Your vote will tell us that we are bad and abusive parents, too stupid to make medical decisions for our own kids, that we do not have the right to make the decisions that are best for our family.”

Katie Blair, director of advocacy and public policy for the ACLU of Indiana, testified that other states have tried similar bills, though most are tied up in court. She said under the bill’s passing, doctors would not be able to treat patients properly.

“Senate Bill 480 exerts state control over medical professionals by limiting their First Amendment right to discuss medical care with their patients by gagging doctors’ ability to discuss treatment options and preventing them from referring patients to other qualified doctors.”

Leo Ryan, a 17-year-old who began taking hormonal medication two years ago, said the bill would severely hurt transitioning children and that the decision to transition is not made lightly.

“Banning gender-affirming health care for our trans siblings under 18 is extremely harmful,” Ryan said. “What you are saying with this bill is that you are OK with kids considering or actually attempting killing themselves, targeting families and doctors who are trying to save their children’s lives. Gender-affirming care saves lives.”

After having to end testimony in opposition due to time constraints, Committee Chair Sen. Ed Charbonneau, R-Valparaiso, moved on to those testifying in support of the bill.

Luka Hein, who received a double mastectomy at 16 outside of Indiana, said they were harmed by their gender-affirming procedures.

“They deserve a chance at life to get to know what it’s like as an adult before that is taken away from them and they are made a permanent patient,” Hein said. “They cannot consent to the long-term impacts of these things, and it is your job as the adults in the room to protect them from that.”

Prisha Mosley, who said she was harmed by her medical treatment, shared intimate details about her body post-procedure.

“My body burns all of the time due to the changes that caused. My hips are so small that they cannot support the weight of my painfully overgrown shoulders. Being disproportionate like this causes constant pain and clumsiness,” Mosley said. “I almost lost my nipples after my top surgery. During this procedure, the nipples are removed, cut up, reshaped and frozen while the chest is scraped, before being reattached to the chest. One day I pulled back my bandages to change them and half of my nipples were attached to the bandages. I am missing pieces of them now.”

Despite receiving her top surgery in North Carolina, Mosley said she is in full support of a “bill that saves children from so-called gender-affirming care.”

Dr. Erin Kay, an Indianapolis physician, said that the care transgender children receive is not the highest quality. Kay said that hormonal medications and treatments can create irreversible effects on fertility.

“Children under the age of 18 cannot consent to these. They’re not able to consent to these,” Kay said. “These medical protocols fundamentally harm normally functioning bodies and potentially cause disordered normally functioning bodies, which is something that as a physician I took an arm of oath to not do.”

Dr. Andrew Mullally said that many of these treatments are unneeded and unethical. “The state has a profound interest in protecting this vulnerable population, and as such, I support this bill,” he said.

With a vote of 8-3, the bill passed the committee and will be eligible for review by the full Senate.

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

HEALTH OFFICIALS ANNOUNCE ADDITIONAL $1 MILLION IN GRANTS TO HELP IMPROVE HOOSIER HEALTH OUTCOMES

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ATTORNEY GENERAL SUES EPA

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Attorney General Todd Rokita sues EPA to fight federal overreach and protect Indiana’s sovereignty

24-state coalition asks federal court to strike down new Waters of the United States (WOTUS) rule

Attorney General Todd Rokita this week sued the Biden administration to protect Hoosiers’ jobs, property and freedom from an overreaching U.S. Environmental Protection Agency rule redefining “navigable waters” under the Clean Water Act.

The new Waters of the United States (WOTUS) rule would force Indiana landowners to beg the permission of federal bureaucrats before using their own property in ways deemed to impact certain ponds, streams, ditches or other wet areas of ground.

“We all want to conserve and preserve our natural resources,” Attorney General Rokita said. “At the same time, exercising wise stewardship over the environment does not require citizens to surrender their legitimate liberties and rights to the federal government. And, in fact, we cannot tolerate edicts designed to subjugate free people in such a manner.”

Twenty-four states have joined together to bring the lawsuit against the EPA. Attorney General Rokita thanked his West Virginia counterpart for organizing the multistate coalition. The lawsuit also names the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers as a defendant.

The Biden administration’s new final rule is the culmination of a decades-long rulemaking process to define the geographic reach of the EPA’s and Army Corps of Engineers’ authority in regulating streams, wetlands and other water bodies under the Clean Water Act. It follows the Trump administration’s 2020 Navigable Waters Protection Rule, which offered a more restrained vision of federal jurisdiction.

If the final rule is left in place, the lawsuit states, “then ranchers, farmers, miners, homebuilders, and other landowners across the country will struggle to undertake even the simplest of activities on their own property without fear of drawing the ire of the federal government.”

The lawsuit further states: “Landowning Americans of all stripes will thus be left with a choice: (a) fight their way through an expensive and lengthy administrative process to obtain complex jurisdictional determinations and permits or (b) face substantial civil and criminal penalties. The Final Rule’s ambiguous environmental benefits do not justify any of this.”

Indiana Celebrate National FFA Week With Proclamation

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Indiana officials celebrate National FFA Week

with proclamation and resolution

INDIANAPOLIS (Feb. 21, 2023) — In honor of National FFA Week, seven Indiana State FFA Officers and National Officer, MacKenna Clifton of North Carolina, met in the Statehouse to receive a proclamation and resolution declaring Feb. 18-25 Indiana FFA Week.

“It was a pleasure to have these outstanding young professionals representing the State of Indiana and agriculture so well in the Statehouse today,” said Lt. Gov. Crouch, Secretary of Agriculture and Rural Development. “FFA is a dynamic youth led organization and I am excited to celebrate National FFA Week this week and agriculture year-round.”

Gov. Eric Holcomb signed the proclamation to name this week FFA Week in recognition of all the work the Indiana FFA Organization, agriculture educators and FFA advisors do to cultivate the next generation of agriculturists for our state.

During the week, chapters across the state and nation will host a variety of events to educate, advocate and celebrate the agricultural industry. From a school animal experience to a farmer’s breakfast, these activities pay homage to the dedication and commitment of today’s agriculturalists. Throughout the week, the Indiana FFA State Officers travel the state to participate in activities alongside local FFA chapters and their communities.

The Indiana FFA Association also received a Senate Concurrent Resolution highlighting the impact of the FFA Organization, which is preparing more than 13,000 members in 90 of Indiana’s 92 counties for the over 250 unique careers in the food, fiber and natural resource sectors. The resolution was led by Sen. Jean Leising, Senate District 42 and Rep. Michael Aylesworth, House District 11.

Jenna Kelsay, 2022-2023 Indiana FFA Southern Region Vice President shared what this resolution means to her and the FFA Organization.

“Receiving the proclamation and house concurrent resolution today in the Indiana Statehouse was such an exciting way to kick-off National FFA Week,” said Kelsay. “Indiana FFA and its members are so fortunate to have support and recognition from our states agricultural leaders and elected officials.”

Tamara Ketchen, Director of the Indiana FFA Association, is looking forward to seeing all the work done this week at FFA chapters across the state.

“National FFA Week is a time for local chapters to highlight their programs showcasing their success and passion for agriculture,” Ketchen said. “We also use this as an opportunity to recognize community supporters and broadcast the mission of the organization.”

FFA members are agriculture’s future leaders, future food suppliers, future innovators and more! Whether it is through service projects or community gatherings, National FFA Week is a time for FFA members to raise awareness about agricultural education and the role the National FFA Organization plays in the development of agriculture’s future leaders.

The first National FFA week was held in 1948, when the National FFA Board of Directors designated a weeklong celebration to recognize George Washington’s example and legacy as a leader and farmer. For the past 75 years, FFA members across the country have taken part in agricultural, leadership and service-based activities during National FFA Week.

Visit www.inffa.org to learn more about Indiana FFA.

UE Students Lead New Band Program at Joshua Academy

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ue building
ue building

UE Students Lead New Band Program at Joshua Academy

EVANSVILLE, IN (02/21/2023) Since 2019, a small number of students in University of Evansville’s Music Conservatory have been leading a new band program at Joshua Academy in Evansville, Indiana. The group took a temporary hiatus in 2020 through the pandemic, but picked the program back up in 2021 and have steadily grown its participation and capabilities.

Joshua Academy principal Arvenda McDonald reached out to UE Music Conservatory faculty member Fran Vile, UE Clinical Assistant Professor of Music, with an idea to start a band program at the academy. She had found a closet filled with old instruments and wondered about the possibility.

Fran in turn reached out to Erin Lewis, Executive Director of UE’s Center for Innovation & Change and said “Is this possible?” And Erin said, “Let’s make it a ChangeLab.” Fran took it from there, and instrumental music education students began the Joshua Academy band program in the fall of 2019.

A ChangeLab is a project-based course offered at the University of Evansville where students can earn academic credit while working on passion projects that help improve the community. So far this year there are 20 ChangeLabs being offered on topics ranging from music education, food access, data analytics for the National Forest Service, environmental sustainability, and many more. More than 100 students are registered in these courses.

For this course, UE music education students worked with Joshua Academy to grow a music program from the ground up. Beginning with assessing viability of current instruments to recruiting the first few students to the program, and even arranging music to suit their capabilities, the project has been a success so far.

“Music is flourishing at Joshua Academy,” said Will McDonner, a senior music education major at UE. He and his colleague Luke Robertson, also a senior music education major, have led the project beginning in 2021.

The group meets at 7:00 in the morning before classes begin. Together, with Vile’s advice, McDonner and Robertson have navigated challenges of recruiting, scheduling, communicating between students and parents, and finally teaching students what music is and how to read it and play an instrument.

It doesn’t always go smoothly, and plans don’t always work out the way they expect. But that hasn’t kept the program from being successful. When things get particularly challenging, McDonner says, “We’re going to push ahead and see how much music we can make.”

In its first semester, six Joshua Academy students “met” instruments and chose their favorite to learn, practiced and rehearsed regularly, and then performed a concert at the end of the year. The following semester, the group nearly doubled. And, thanks to grant funding received by the school, several brand-new instruments were made available.

“The real-world experience in music education is invaluable,” said Vile. “Students leading this program hope to teach music professionally and building this band program has given them experiences that they would never get reading textbooks and studying theory in the classroom.”

“We are so impressed and proud of what these students have accomplished,” said Lewis. “These types of community-building projects are what ChangeLab is all about. Teaching young people how to read music and play instruments is an experience that will benefit them for years to come.”

The Fall 2023 semester will be the third semester for this program. This program has been nominated for a Leadership Everyone award.

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.

Home of the Purple Aces, UE offers over 75 majors, 17 Division I sports, and a unique study abroad experience at Harlaxton College, a Victorian manor located in the countryside of the United Kingdom. For more information, please visit evansville.edu.

 

Game Feed Nostrums: Saving The Plot of America

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Game Feed Nostrums: Saving The Plot of America

 By Richard Moss MD

            I went to a “Game Feed” recently, an event put on annually by a local who goes by the name of “Chief.” He organizes this every January, in the winter, on a Saturday, in the middle of God’s country, on the outskirts of the town of Duff in Dubois County, southern Indiana.

         It was a cold day with freezing temperatures, which was better than last year when it was raining and muddy.  The dirt road was rocky and curving and surrounded by dense forest; it led into the property where the hunters gathered.  It included a run down but functioning old cabin that dated back more than a hundred years, something from a bygone era within which was a fireplace, a perfect place to congregate and escape the cold. Some one hundred or so hunters and friends met here every year. These were gun people, a Second Amendment and hunting crowd, comfortable in the world of guns, ammo, camouflage, decoys, field dressing, butchering, and living off the land, my kind of people. A few years back, when I visited during my Congressional campaign, they received me well, recognizing me as a fellow Second Amendment patriot. There were all ages represented including my son and his friends in their early 20s, and then up into the 50s, 60s, and beyond.

         The theme here was “game,” which meant flesh garnered through hunting, not from the supermarket or deli, and so the various meats were lean, free of chemicals or additives, as good and tasty as it got.  The hunters prepared the meats, cooking, sautéing, grilling, barbecuing, or frying on small gas or other makeshift stoves in the open weather.  There was turkey, pheasant, duck, moose, deer, squirrel, beaver, elk, rabbit, and boar. They prepared it fresh, the enticing aromas everywhere.  Some of the morsels were wrapped in bacon or strips of ham, or layered with cheese, accompanied by different sauces or gravies, or plain, the wondrous flavors of the ungarnished meat more than delicious enough.

         The spirits flowed freely including whiskey, gin, bourbon, vodka, rum, beer, and homemade wine, accompanied often by cigars, manly combinations. There was a plentitude of small fires around which the congregants huddled, drinking and eating, enjoying the camaraderie and their shared passion for hunting. The conversations were lively and good-natured.

         I spent time with my son and his friends. Most of them had been very supportive of my prior political runs; they were a rarity, it seemed today, young conservatives.  In somewhat inebriated fashion, they bemoaned the changes occurring in the country, the breakdown of the family, the coarsening of the culture, and the rejection of faith. There was the ticking debt bomb.  They worried also about future assaults on the Second Amendment and their right to self-defense.  They expressed unease about their future, and I did not blame them.

         These young men and the other kindred spirits here, patriotic, gun-loving Americans in flyover country, were a despised demographic in today’s media and culture.  Taken together, they were quite a motley collection: factory workers, small business men, farmers, truckers, mechanics, builders, marketers, salesmen, website designers, students, teachers, merchants, retailers, attorneys, craftsmen, accountants, and so on, in other words, the backbone of the nation.  They were united by a love of the outdoors, guns, and the hunting arts, and, I suspected, many shared values.  While conversing with them, I felt a sense of despair, as if I were witnessing the passing of a way of life and culture, one that had dominated the country since its inception, had always been mainstream, but had now become marginalized and under attack.

         These young people and, I suspected, the majority of those present that day, understood that America was a unique phenomenon.  Its formation was providential and based on a most improbable sequence of events and convergence of philosophies; it was unlikely to be repeated.  The way of centralized planners and the encroaching, coercive state was the way of all history and of the world today other than a precious few outliers, led, of course, by this country.

         The United States was different in that it upheld from its origin a belief in the sanctity of the individual, the right to self-defense, small government, the free market, and Judeo-Christian tenets. Most important was the influence of the Bible, and the belief that individuals were created in the image of God.  Indeed, these were the magic ingredients, the critical strands that the founders cobbled together to forge a nation that rejected tribal norms and historical precedent and embraced instead inalienable rights and liberty.

         I hoped that America would withstand the assaults from within and not go the way of Rome and other great civilizations that have come and gone.  I prayed that a divided nation with so many of its citizens having lost the plot of America, would not succumb to illiberal and hostile ideologies, culminating in its demise and fragmentation, a once magnificent civilization that ultimately could not be sustained.

         Yet my young friends were confident even as they expressed their apprehensions.  Their eyes were glazed, intoxicated as they were, but they were laughing and rowdy.  Through the haze of gin and bourbon, they espoused optimism.  They stumbled through defenses of the American way.  They drunkenly tripped over declarations of allegiance to free enterprise.  And, yes, even with the alcohol, they were rational.

         Many of them were athletes from high school days including my son.  They were a hardy bunch, full of themselves, and of sturdy timber.  They had engaged in high level contests at young ages on the courts and fields of athletic competition.  Victory and defeat had seared them.  They understood discipline, teamwork, and sacrifice.  Young leaders, they were among the best this nation had to offer.  They did not doubt themselves or their future prospects. They had their plans come what may.  They intended to continue the plot of America, the story of America, the great dream of America.  I believed in them, and the country depended on them – and millions of others like them.  I hoped they would succeed, convince others of their creed, and thus save the nation.

Dr. Moss is a practicing Ear Nose and Throat Surgeon, candidate for Congress in 2016 and 2018, author, columnist, local investor, and small businessman, residing in Jasper, IN.  He has written A Surgeon’s Odyssey and Matilda’s Triumph, available on amazon.com. Find more of his essays at richardmossmd.com. Visit Richard Moss, M.D. on Facebook, Twitter, Parler, Gettr, GAB, TruthSocial, and Instagram.

 

The University of Southern Indiana will host writer and journalist Craig Fehrman

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The University of Southern Indiana will host writer and journalist Craig Fehrman ‘07 to speak at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, March 15 in the USI Performance Center. He will discuss his book, Author in Chief: The Untold Story of Our Presidents and the Books They Wrote, which explores the historical and biographical writings of the American presidents. The event is hosted by the USI College of Liberal Arts and the USI Foundation, along with Indiana Humanities, and is open to the public at no charge. Light refreshments will be served pre-event.

Fehrman, who double majored in English and psychology during his time at USI, spent more than a decade writing and researching his first book, which The Wall Street Journal called “one of the best books on the American presidency to appear in recent years.” He was born and raised in southern Indiana and currently lives in Bloomington, Indiana, with his wife and children. Fehrman is an adjunct lecturer at the Media School at Indiana University, Bloomington. In addition to Author in Chief, which was also a finalist for the Marfield Prize, Fehrman has edited an anthology, The Best Presidential Writing, and is currently finishing his next book which takes a revisionary look at the explorations of Lewis and Clark.

FOOTNOTE: Founded in 1965, the University of Southern Indiana enrolls nearly 9,200 dual credit, undergraduate, graduate and doctoral students in more than 130 areas of study. A public higher education institution, located on a beautiful 1,400-acre campus in Evansville, Indiana, USI offers programs through the College of Liberal Arts, Romain College of Business, College of Nursing and Health Professions and the Pott College of Science, Engineering, and Education. The University offers study-abroad opportunities in more than 60 countries and hosts international students from around the globe. USI is a Carnegie Foundation Community Engaged University and offers continuing education and special programs to more than 15,000 participants annually through Outreach and Engagement. USI is online at USI.edu. 

 THUNDERBOLTS HOST RIVERMEN FOR 80’s NIGHT THIS SATURDAY 

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Evansville, In.: After a weekend off, the Thunderbolts look to keep their five-game winning streak rolling as they take on the first-place Peoria Rivermen, starting in Peoria on Friday night followed up by a rematch at Ford Center for 80’s/Hairball Night on Saturday.

Week In Review: 

  The Thunderbolts were idle for the past weekend due to league rescheduling, as Evansville was originally scheduled to play at Vermilion County this past Friday and Saturday, before the Bobcats ceased operations.  Two weekends ago, the Thunderbolts swept their weekend series against Quad City, winning 4-1 on Friday the 10th off third period goals from Alex Cohen, Fredrik Wink, and Brendan Harrogate, who scored twice.  Harrogate got the scoring started once again on Saturday the 11th in Quad City, with other goals from Felix Sasser and Derek Osik propelling Evansville to a 3-1 win.  Following the weekend, goaltender Trevor Gorsuch was named SPHL Co-Player of the Week after only allowing 2 goals on 77 total shots in his two wins in net against the Storm.

 The Week Ahead: 

The Thunderbolts start the upcoming weekend at Peoria this Friday the 24th, puck drop at 7:15pm CT.  On Saturday the 25th, the Thunderbolts host the Rivermen for 80’s night, featuring specialty game-worn jerseys which will be auctioned off after the game, along with live performances from Atlas of the Dogs, the opening band for Hairball at Victory Theatre on Saturday, March 11th, during the pregame as well as during intermissions.  River City Ice Theatre will also perform during the first intermission.  Ticketholders for the Hairball show at Victory Theatre on March 11th are eligible for $7 tickets with proof of purchase.  For tickets to Saturday’s game, call (812)422-BOLT (2658), go to EvansvilleThunderbolts.com, or visit the Ford Center Ticket Office.  Friday night’s game can be viewed on SPHL TV with a paid subscription through HockeyTV, or can be listened to for free on the Thunderbolts Radio Network via the Thunderbolts MixLr Channel or at EvansvilleThunderbolts.com/fan-center/live .

Coming Soon: 

  The Thunderbolts’ next home game following this weekend will be on Sunday, March 5th for the final Sunday Funday game of the season, against the Peoria Rivermen at 3:00pm CT.  $2 Bud Light 12oz cans and $2 hot dogs will be available until the end of the first intermission (while supplies last), and kids under 12 will receive a voucher for a free small bag of popcorn.  There will also be a postgame meet-and-greet with the players at BJ’s Brewhouse on North Green River Road.  On Friday the 10th and Saturday the 11th, the Thunderbolts will host the Macon Mayhem, both games starting at 7:00pm CT.  Friday the 10th will be PTO Giveback Night, where Tri-State Parent Teacher Organizations and Associations can purchase tickets to this game, with a portion of each ticket going back to their PTO or PTA.  Saturday the 11th will be Pink the Rink & Heart Health Wellness Night, honoring those who have or are still dealing with life challenging health situations.  More information on this game night will be coming soon.

  Scouting the Opponent: Peoria Rivermen: 

    • Record: 30-9-2, 62 Points, 1st Place
    • Leading Goal Scorer: Alec Hagaman (19 Goals)
    • Leading Point Scorer: Alec Hagaman (48 Points)
    • Primary Goaltender: Eric Levine (14-6-2, .913 Save %)
    • Thunderbolts 22-23 Record vs PEO: 3-3-0

The Rivermen swept the Macon Mayhem in a three-game weekend series at home this past weekend.  On Friday, two goals from Joseph Widmar and a goal each from Jordan Ernst, Alec Hagaman, Nick Neville, Dale Deon, and Alec Baer led the Rivermen to a 7-1 rout of the Mayhem.  Saturday saw Macon take a 1-0 lead into the third period, where Rivermen goals from Deon, Hagaman, and Zach Wilkie again helped the Rivermen prevail in a 3-1 victory.  On Sunday, the Rivermen erased an early Macon lead as five unanswered goals from Ernst, Baer, JM Piotrowski, Marcel Godbout, Joseph Drapluk helped the Rivermen sweep Macon with a 5-2 win.  The Rivermen play this Thursday night at Quad City before hosting Evansville on Friday.

Call-up Report 

– Chase Perry – Allen Americans (Prev. Greenville) – ECHL

                                – Greenville: 2 GP, 1-0-1, 1.93 GAA, .944 Save %

                                – Allen: 9 GP, 6-3-0, 3.14 GAA, .913 Save %

                – Matthew Barron – Trois-Rivieres Lions (Prev. Indy) – ECHL

                                – Indy: 4 GP, 2 G, 1 A, 3 P, 0 PIM
– Trois-Rivieres: 20 GP, 1 G, 3 A, 4 P, 8 PIM

                – Mike Ferraro – Savannah Ghost Pirates – ECHL

                                – 6 GP, 2 G, 2 A, 4 P, 6 PIM

                – Dillon Hill – Trois-Rivieres Lions – ECHL

                                – 9 GP, 0 G, 2 A, 2 P, 6 PIM

– Cameron Cook – Trois-Rivieres Lions – ECHL

                                – 5 GP, 0 G, 0 A, 0 P, 4 PIM

Transactions:     

Wed. 2/22: D Bryan Etter returned from call-up to Reading (ECHL)
Tue. 2/21: D Kristaps Nimanis placed on team suspension

Wed. 2/15: RW Jason Lavallee signed to contract

Tue. 2/14: D Bryan Etter called up to Reading (ECHL)

Fri. 2/10: LW Mathieu Cloutier placed on 21-Day Injured Reserve

Eagles host Tech, State in final week

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USI hopes to improve seeding for OVC Tournament​​​​​​​

EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Southern Indiana Men’s Basketball enters the final week of the 2022-23 regular season looking to improve its seeding in the upcoming Ohio Valley Conference Tournament when it hosts Tennessee Tech University Thursday and visits Tennessee State University Saturday. Game time Thursday at Screaming Eagles Arena is set for 7:30 p.m., while tipoff Saturday in Nashville is 3:30 p.m.

The Screaming Eagles (15-14 8-8 OVC) begins the week tied for sixth in the OVC, but could rise as high as fourth with a good week. The OVC Tournament, which is set for March 1-4 at the Ford Center in Evansville, features the top eight teams in the league, giving the top two seeds buys to the semifinals and the third, fourth seeds buys to the quarterfinals.

USI split its two games last week, winning a hard-fought game at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, 82-81, and falling in a tough game at Southeast Missouri State University, 85-80.

Sophomore guard Isaiah Swope (Newburgh, Indiana) led the way for the Eagles last week by averaging 24 points per game, including a 27-point performance versus SEMO on Saturday. Senior forward Jacob Polakovich (Grand Rapids, Michigan) followed, posting 18.0 points and 11.5 rebounds per game.

Polakovich also shot 77.8 percent (14-18) from the field during the games with Little Rock and SEMO.

Swope and senior guard Jelani Simmons (Columbus, Ohio) lead the Eagles with 14.9 points and 13.9 points, respectively. Polakovich is averaging 12.9 points per outing  along with grabbing a team-best and OVC-best 12.6 rebounds per game.

The Golden Eagles of Tech (13-16, 9-7 OVC) are 3-2 in the last five games after splitting last week. TTU won a 77-68 decision over Lindenwood University, but fell to the University of Tennessee at Martin, 100-91 at home.

TTU took the first-ever meeting with USI, 84-69. USI was led by Swope with 15 points, while Polakovich had a double-double with 14 points, 14 rebounds.

The TSU Tigers (17-12, 9-7 OVC), who have won six of their last seven, split last week with a 74-64 loss at Morehead State University and a 100-85 home victory over Southern Illinois University Edwardsville.

USI lost the first meeting since 1977, 80-76, at Screaming Eagles Arena in OVC action. Swope led the Eagles with 24 points in the loss.

All 2022-23 games are normally streamed on ESPN+ in addition to being heard on ESPN 97.7FM and 95.7FM The Spin.