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USI Picked 5th In OVC By Blue Ribbon Basketball Simmons Named To Preseason All-OVC Squad

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. – The University of Southern Indiana Men’s Basketball was predicted to place fifth in the Ohio Valley Conference (OVC) by Blue Ribbon Basketball Magazine. The official OVC preseason poll will be released in October at the league’s annual basketball media day.

The Screaming Eagles are entering their first season as an NCAA Division I program after spending the last 50 years in Division II and the last 43 years in the Great Lakes Valley Conference (GLVC). USI finished its run in Division II with a national championship (1995), four regional championships (1994, 1995, 2004, 2019), and 12 GLVC titles.

Individually, senior guard Jelani Simmons (Columbus, Ohio) was named preseason All-OVC by Blue Ribbon Basketball. Simmons was second team All-GLVC after averaging 14.2 points and 4.5 rebounds per game a year ago.

The senior guard posted a season-high 23 points in the GLVC Tournament game versus the University of Missouri-St. Louis and grabbed a season-high eight rebounds at Drury University a year ago. Simmons reached 1,000 points for his collegiate career during a 22-point performance versus the University of Illinois Springfield (Youngstown State: 430 points; USI: 597 points).

USI finished 2021-22 with an 18-8 overall record, 12-6 in the GLVC, and returns five players, four of whom started 20 or more games last year.

BLUE RIBBON OVC FORECAST

  1. UT Martin

  2. Tennessee State

  3. Morehead State

  4. Little Rock

  5. Southern Indiana

  6. Southeast Missouri State

  7. Tennessee Tech

  8. SIUE

  9. Lindenwood

10. Eastern Illinois

PRESEASON ALL-OVC TEAM

G- Jalen Hawkins, GR, Morehead State

G-Jelani Simmons, SR, Southern Indiana

G-Phillip Russell, SO, Southeast Missouri State

G-Jr. Clay, GR, Tennessee State

G-KJ Simon, SR, UT Martin

PLAYER OF THE YEAR

KJ Simon, SR, UT Martin

 

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Arizona Juvenile Arrested After Making Threat Toward Mt. Vernon Senior High School

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Arizona Juvenile Arrested After Making Threat Toward Mt. Vernon Senior High School

Posey County – Wednesday morning, September 7, Mt. Vernon Police and Indiana State Police initiated a criminal investigation after a threatening text message was sent to an Mt. Vernon Senior High School student. The message was sent through an app that disguises the true sender. The letter alleged shooting was going to occur the following day at Mt. Vernon Senior High School. During the investigation, officers identified the sender as a 15-year-old male from Mesa, AZ. The teen had previously attended Mt. Vernon Senior High School and knew the student to whom the message was sent.  Indiana State Police and Mt. Vernon Police collaborated with Mesa Police to locate the teen. During the investigation, it was revealed the teen made the alleged threat using the text app. The 15-year-old was arrested for Interfering with an Educational Institution, a Level 6 Felony, and for Threatening and Intimidating, a Class 1 Misdemeanor. The juvenile is currently in custody in a juvenile detention center in Phoenix, AZ.

All threats toward students, staff, and schools are taken seriously and will be thoroughly investigated. It is also important to remind students and parents to immediately report threats to police or school administrators.

Investigating Officers: Detective Deig, Detective Walden, Sergeant Chandler, Indiana State Police

Detective Ben Boehleber and Captain Korben Sellers, Mt. Vernon Police

Thomas Clowers, Posey County Prosecutor

 

Commentary: Another Morning Cup Of Coffee “News”

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coffee

“A Little of This and That – Part Two”

By Dannie McIntire

SEPTEMBER 8, 2022

Good morning Indiana, time to review news items that caused me to go back to the kitchen for a splash of Jim Beam In my morning coffee

California continues to be at the top of the list of states I would never move to. Those who enjoy entering the water at the beaches in Southern California are being bitten by swarms of aggressive sea bugs which have an appetite for human feet.

The bugs, which are tiny water isopods referred to as “mini sharks”, can form swarms of more than 1,000 individuals.

Beachgoers who are attacked by the isopods describe their bites as being painful pinpricks, saying the swarms of bugs resemble a group of tiny piranhas attacking their extremities.  

Well, I certainly wouldn’t wade in waist-deep in loose-fitting trunks!

Now I tried hard not to turn this snippet of news into anything political, but let me be the first to extend an invitation to Nancy Pelosi to enjoy the refreshing waters off the coast of Southern California; perhaps someone would care to dunk her.  

I’m back from refreshing my cup of coffee.

Well, rest easy my fellow Hoosiers; I’m here to report our tax dollars are continuing to be well spent. I’m sure you remember the $1.9 Trillion dollar American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) passed by congress in early 2021.

Apparently, it’s not as easy to spend 1.9 trillion dollars as you might think, but they’re trying for the “good of the taxpayer”.

The city of Seattle budgeted $2.5 million of those ARPA dollars to upgrade over 25 miles of their neighborhood greenways. Now I could possibly view that a reasonable expenditure of our tax dollars if the intent is to supply shade to their many homeless encampments. 

New York City budgeted nearly $4.9 million of its ARPA funds for a “No Stopping New York” ad campaign. I’m just saying to me that was an unnecessary expenditure as I have no plans of ever “stopping In New York”.

Another cup Of Coffee; Well the rush to go “green” seems to be progressing with just a few hiccups.

Amazon, the online retail juggernaut, has temporarily shut the rooftop solar panels at all their US facilities due to “critical fire or arc flash events” that have occurred at six installations.

One such fire broke out at an Amazon warehouse in Perryville, Maryland, in June 2021 and caused $500,000 worth of damages.

After California recently banned the sale of fossil fuel vehicles after 2035, there are apparently seventeen states that have rules, and laws, setting their state’s vehicle emission standards to match those in California.

Many of those states are located in our country’s northeast which usually in winter have more severe winter temperatures. Outside temperatures affect electric car batteries when the temperature falls below 20 degrees.

Triple AAA did a study that found that if you use your electric car’s heater while driving in cold temperatures, your mileage can be temporarily cut by as much as 41 percent.

Hey, I have a promotion idea for all-electric car dealers in our northern states, “buy an all eclectic vehicle and receive a free fleece coat”.

One last cup of coffee this morning;

Well, with the passing of Labor Day the old saying of “don’t wear white after Labor Day” comes to mind. Is it time to put away your white articles of clothing? 

One theory on the origination of the above saying is that wearing white in the nineteenth century distinguished between those that came from “money” and didn’t have to work from those that did have to work, as white clothing would more easily become dirt stained if one worked.

Now I could be wrong, though it’s highly unlikely, it seems to me since the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic and government money giveaways a lot more people seem to be wearing white.

FOOTNOTE:  The City-County Observer posted this article without bias or editing.

  

EPA Updates Superfund National Priorities List To Clean Up Pollution and Address Public Health Risks

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EPA Updates Superfund National Priorities List To Clean Up Pollution and Address Public Health Risks

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) just announced that it is adding five sites to the Superfund National Priorities List and is proposing to add another two where releases of contamination pose significant human health and environmental risk.

“All people in this country, no matter the color of their skin, their zip code or income, deserve to live in communities free from harmful pollutants and contaminated lands,” said EPA Deputy Administrator Janet McCabe. “By adding sites to the Superfund National Priorities List, we are accelerating cleanups and working to ensure that more people living near the nation’s most serious uncontrolled or abandoned releases of contamination have the health and environmental protections they deserve.”

Thousands of contaminated sites, from landfills and processing plants to manufacturing facilities exist nationally due to hazardous waste being dumped, left out in the open, or otherwise improperly managed. President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law will accelerate EPA’s work to help communities clean up these contaminated sites with a $3.5 billion investment in the Superfund Remedial Program and reinstates the Superfund chemical excise taxes, making it one of the largest investments in American history to address legacy pollution. This historic investment strengthens EPA’s ability to tackle threats to human health and the environment, and EPA has already set action in motion to clear the backlog of the 49 contaminated sites which had been awaiting funding to start remedial action.

With this Superfund National Priorities List update, the Biden-Harris Administration is following through on its commitment to update the Superfund National Priorities List twice a year, as opposed to once per year. By pledging to add sites more regularly to the Superfund National Priorities List, EPA is taking action to protect the health of communities across the country while cleaning up and returning blighted properties to safe and productive reuse in areas where environmental cleanup and jobs are needed most.

EPA is adding the following sites to the Superfund National Priorities List:
Lower Hackensack River, Bergen and Hudson Counties, New Jersey
Brillo Landfill, Victory, New York
Ochoa Fertilizer Co., Guánica, Puerto Rico
Georgetown North Groundwater, Georgetown, Delaware
Highway 3 PCE, Le Mars, Iowa

EPA is proposing to add the following sites to the Superfund National Priorities List:
East Basin Road Groundwater, New Castle, Delaware
PCE Carriage Cleaners, Bellevue, Nebraska

EPA is also withdrawing a previously proposed site, the East Tenth Street site in Marcus Hook, Pennsylvania, following the Agency’s determination that the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection will continue to investigate and clean up the site pursuant to its state cleanup authority. EPA remains committed to using all available tools to ensure the protection of human health and the environment.

Background
The Superfund National Priorities List includes the nation’s most serious uncontrolled or abandoned releases of contamination. The list serves as the basis for prioritizing EPA Superfund cleanup funding and enforcement actions. Only releases at non-federal sites included on the Superfund National Priorities List are eligible to receive federal funding for long-term, permanent cleanup. Cleanup at federal facilities is funded by the lead federal agency responsible for the site.

EPA proposes sites to the Superfund National Priorities List based on a scientific determination of risks to people and the environment, consistent with the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act and the National Oil and Hazardous Substances Pollution Contingency Plan. Before EPA adds a site to the Superfund National Priorities List, a site must meet EPA’s requirements and be proposed for addition to the list in the Federal Register, subject to a 60-day public comment period. EPA will add the site to the Superfund National Priorities List if it continues to meet the listing requirements after the public comment period closes and the agency has responded to any comments.

Superfund cleanups provide health and economic benefits to communities. The program is credited for significant reductions in both birth defects and blood-lead levels among children living near sites, and research has shown residential property values increase up to 24 percent within three miles of sites after cleanup.

Further, thanks to Superfund cleanups, communities are now using previously blighted properties for a wide range of purposes, including retail businesses, office space, public parks, residences, warehouses, and solar power generation. As of 2021, EPA has collected economic data on 650 Superfund sites. At these sites, there are 10,230 businesses operating on these sites, 246,000 people employed, an estimated $18.6 billion in income earned by employees, and $65.8 billion in sales generated by businesses.

 

State Senator Vaneta Becker Study Committee Assignments For 2023

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State Senator Vaneta Becker Study Committee Assignments For 2023 Legislative Year 

September 8, 2022

In preparation for the 2023 legislative session, State Senator Vaneta Becker will be serving on a number of study committees over the coming months.

These committees allows us to take a closer look at issues affecting Hoosiers and give us the information necessary to form policy when the session starts in January. 

This year Senator Vaneta Becker will be serving on the following study committees:

Senator Becker stated “that improving the health of Hoosiers continues to be a top priority of mine. I’m especially looking forward to being a part of the committee on public health, behavioral health, and human services, which will be taking a look at issues like our substandard maternal mortality and the potential benefits or consequences of THC products.

The topics being discussed were approved by the bipartisan Legislative Council, which is comprised of 16 voting members – eight from the Senate and eight from the House of Representatives.

To view study committee agendas and stream hearings online, visit iga.in.gov.

 

FSIS Issues Public Health Alert for Poultry and Meat Products

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FSIS Issues Public Health Alert for Poultry and Meat Products Containing FDA-Regulated Corn Starch That Has Been Recalled Due to Misbranding and Undeclared Allergens

FSIS Announcement

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) is issuing a public health alert for poultry and meat products containing a Food and Drug Administration (FDA) regulated corn starch that has been recalled due to an undeclared allergen, specifically milk. FSIS is issuing this public health alert to ensure that consumers are aware that these products should not be consumed. This situation is currently evolving, which means additional products may be added. Please continue to check back for possible updates.
While this public health alert focuses on chicken and pork tamale products, FSIS believes it is likely that additional meat and poultry products will be affected by the FDA-regulated corn starch. The list of products subject to the public health alert are available here and the labels are available here. The tamales were shipped to warehouses, distributors, and retail locations in Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin. However, if other products are added, additional states might be affected.FSIS and FDA are coordinating on the recalled corn starch and are working together to determine the extent of the distribution of the corn starch to other establishments.
There have been no confirmed reports of adverse reactions due to the consumption of these products. Anyone concerned about an illness should contact a health care provider.FSIS is concerned that some products may be in consumers’ homes.
Consumers who have purchased these products are urged not to consume them. These products should be thrown away or returned to the place of purchase. Consumers with food safety questions can call the toll-free USDA Meat and Poultry Hotline at 888-MPHotline (888-674-6854) or live chat via Ask USDA from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. (Eastern Time) Monday through Friday. Consumers can also browse food safety messages at Ask USDA or send a question via email to MPHotline@usda.gov.
For consumers that need to report a problem with a meat, poultry, or egg product, the online Electronic Consumer Complaint Monitoring System can be accessed 24 hours a day at https://foodcomplaint.fsis.usda.gov/eCCF/.

Virtual Author Talk: Dr. Michele Borba Today At 1 PM

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Shorthanded UE Squad Travels To Waco

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Aces Set For Baylor Invitational

 EVANSVILLE, Ind. – Looking to gain experience against some of the top competition in the nation, the University of Evansville volleyball team travels to the Baylor Invitational in Waco, Texas.  Opening play on Friday, the Purple Aces face Colorado State and Arizona State before taking on #15 Baylor on Saturday evening.  Live stats will be available for all three matches while none of the three are set to be televised.

 Long-term Goals

– This weekend, Evansville will be without the services of two of their top weapons – Alondra Vazquez and Melanie Feliciano

– Both are battling injury but are on track to return when the Aces open Missouri Valley Conference play on September 23

– In their absence, the younger players will have the opportunity to play against top competition while gaining valuable experience heading into the league slate

 National Rankings

– Since the start of the 2022 season, multiple UE players have been near the top of the national statistical rankings

– Freshman Kora Ruff has accumulated 304 assists, which ranks second in the NCAA while her average of 10.13 assists per set is just outside the top 50

– Giulia Cardona continues to rack up the aces at an impressive rate – her total of 21 is third in the nation while her average of 0.70 per set is 17th

– Cardona’s 138.5 points checks in 6th nationally and her season total of 110 kills is 9th

Back-to-back-to-back

– In each of the last three matches, Giulia Cardona has recorded 18 kills, an average of 4.5 per set over that span

– Last time out, Cardona recorded 18 kills, 6 digs and 5 aces against Tennessee State

– She has posted at least 9 kills in each of Evansville’s eight matches while her most efficient effort saw her hit .333 against USI

– Last year’s MVC leader in service aces paces the league once again with 0.70 per set and a total of 21 (3rd in the NCAA)

Picking up the Slack

– With Alondra Vazquez sidelined for the last four matches, Emilee Scheumann has stepped in and has put up the top numbers of her collegiate career

– Scheumann has five or more kills in each of the last four contests and is coming off the top performance of her Aces career, totaling 11 kills versus Tennessee State on Tuesday

– She added nine kills against Northwestern and set her top mark with 28 attacks, a number that she tied against the Tigers

Making her Presence Known

– As the season has progressed, Madisyn Steele has gotten into a nice groove both offensively and defensively

– She has posted 5+ kills in five of the eight matches thus far and checks in with an average of 1.43 per set

– On the defensive side, Steele recorded at least one block in each match and set her season mark with 5.0 total blocks against Big Ten foe Northwestern and paces UE with 0.80 per game

Rising up the Charts

– Finishing with at least 33 assists in all eight matches, freshman Kora Ruff has racked up 304 assists, which ranks second in the nation

– Her total paces all freshmen nationally and leads the MVC

– Ruff’s average of 10.13 helpers per set is second in the conference

– Her top assist tally came in the opener against Wright State where she registered 45 assists along with a season mark of 10 digs on the way to her first UE double-double and has a pair of 2-kill efforts thus far

 

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

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EPD

 

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

MEDIA

 

 

Trailblazers Golf takes fourth at Rend Lake Fall Invitational

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– The Fall 2022 VU Golf season continues to pick up steam as the Trailblazers took part in their second tournament of the year Tuesday at the Rend Lake College Fall Invitational at Rend Lake Golf Course in Ina, Ill.

VU battled in the one-day, 36-hole tournament to finish fourth as a team with a team score of 627.

Vincennes was led on the links by sophomore Paxton Schwomeyer (Oakland City, Ind.) who shot a very consistent 152 for the tournament, hitting a 76 in each round to place himself in a tie for fifth on the leaderboard.

“Paxton played consistently,” VU Hall of Fame Golf Coach Dennis Chattin said. “He still hasn’t played as well as he can, because he is really a strong player and is capable of winning these types of tournaments. He has been consistent so far and I think will continue to be very consistent.”

The next VU low-man was freshman Preston Broce (Indianapolis, Ind.), who finished with a first round 77, second round 79 for a tournament score of 156 and a tie for 12th place.

Sophomore Luke VanDeventer (Columbus, Ind.) was the third scorer for VU, shooting a 76 in the opening round, and a final round 81 to tie for 15th.

“I told our guys after the first round, we were 12 shots behind the leaders, which is three shots a person and we had two guys that had really rough starts,” Chattin added. “Preston started his day with a double and a triple bogey and still came back to shoot a 77 for the round. Luke VanDeventer also started four-over after the first three holes and got it back to even par and let it slip again toward the end of the round. But he played well.”

Sophomore Sam Stewart (Floyds Knobs, Ind.) finished fourth for VU, with a pair of 81’s good for a tie of 21st on the leaderboard.

The Trailblazers were rounded out by fifth-man Caleb Maris (Terre Haute, Ind.) who shot an 88 and an 89 in his two rounds, placing him 31st on the board.

Vincennes as a team shot 310 in the opening round and were just 12 shots back from the leaders after 18 holes in third place.

VU followed up with a 317 in the second round, which slid the Blazers back to fourth.