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Hormuth claims 3rd place to carry USI Women’s Golfers in Tennessee

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USI Women’s Golf finishes in 6th place

MURFREESBORO, Tenn.— University of Southern Indiana Women’s Golf settled for a sixth-place finish out of 16 teams today after a rough second round at the Music City Invitational hosted by Trevecca Nazarene University.

The Eagles had an impressive outing in round one of the invitational shooting 301 as a team and tied for second place entering round two. USI dropped four spots after shooting a 33-over-par 321 on Tuesday finishing with a total score of 622 (+46). The Eagles accounted for the best par 3 average (3.10) and total birdies (21) in the tournament.

Freshman Kylee Hormuth (Wentzville, Missouri) led the Eagles shooting an impressive 36-hole score of 146 in two rounds of play. Hormuth finished at two-over-par (70-76) and placed third out of 95 competitors and trailed the top spot by just eight shots. This marks the second time Hormuth has clinched a top-five finish this fall.

Another top performer for USI was sophomore Katelyn Sayyalinh (Rockford, Illinois). Sayyalinh started off solid shooting a five-over-par 77 and tied for 18th at the conclusion of round one. Sayyalinh was able to clinch a tie for 29th after shooting 13-over-par with a 36-hole score of 157 (77-80) in two rounds of action.

Christian Brothers University won the Music City Invitational with a two-day score of 605, while Franklin Pierce University’s Kesinee Prukmathakul was the tournament medalist after carding an impressive six-under-par 138 (66-72) for two rounds of action.

EVSC HOLDING PUBLIC MEETING

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 In accordance with Indiana Code 20-29-6-19, the EVSC will hold a public meeting to discuss the tentative teacher collective bargaining agreement at the EVSC Administration Building, 951 Walnut Street, Evansville IN 47713 during its regularly scheduled Board meeting on Monday, October 25, 2021. The regularly scheduled Board meeting begins at 5:30 PM. 

Murder Investigation 1801 Stinson Ave

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 On October 19th, around 11:00 p.m., Evansville Police Officers were dispatched to the area of Stinson Ave and James Ave to assist Indiana State Police for a possible kidnapping and murder. Officers from multiple agencies, including EPD, arrived on scene and found out that the incident occurred at 1801 Stinson Ave. The reporter was on scene and told officers that she went to the residence to visit with Heidi Carter. While she was inside the residence, she saw a dead body and ran out of the home to get help. 

Officers located 36-year-old Heidi Carter outside of the home near a vehicle. She told officers that there were several people inside the home. Officers also located a gun on Carter. 

Officers surrounded the home and called out the other residents with loud verbal commands using a loud speaker. A male resident walked out of the home, complied with officers, and told officers that there were other individuals still inside including his two teenage children. He communicated with them by telephone and instructed them to stay upstairs. It was then communicated to all officers on scene that the children were upstairs. 

Over the next 4 minutes, officers continued to yell commands at another male that they could see just inside the doorway. After officers gave numerous loud, verbal, commands, the male disregarded their commands and rushed out of the front door in an aggressive manner. He was holding an object in his hand that he pointed at officers. Officers believed this object was a gun and several officers fired at the suspect to stop the perceived threat. 

Once officers were able to determine that the suspect was no longer a threat, they moved him behind cover to render aid and allow other officers to safely clear the home. The suspect was pronounced dead at the scene. 

Once officers cleared the home, the two juveniles were located upstairs and were  unharmed. They were safely taken out of the home. Officers located an adult female victim, who had been tied up, shackled, and had visible injuries. She was taken to a local hospital for treatment. 

Detectives obtained a signed search warrant for the home. Another individual was located in the residence but was unfortunately deceased and beyond help. The manner of death appeared suspicious and gruesome. He had been restrained, duct-taped, beaten, and strangled. The identity of the Victim and manner of death will be released by the Vanderburgh County Coroner’s Office at a later time. 

Detectives learned that the male suspect, along with Heidi Carter, murdered the individual who was found deceased inside the residence. They also tied and shackled the female Victim while the male suspect raped her multiple times. Heidi Carter was arrested and booked into the Vanderburgh County Confinement Center for the following charges: Murder, two Counts of Intimidation with a Weapon, Rape, two counts of Felony Criminal Confinement, Assisting a Criminal, Carrying a Handgun without a License, and Abuse of a Corpse. 

After reviewing witness statements, body camera footage, and other video footage, we believe that all officers from the Evansville Police Department, Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office, and Indiana State Police relied on their training and did an exceptional job under extremely stressful circumstances. This appears to be a case of suicide by cop 

Women’s Swimming & Diving Sweeps Valley Weekly Awards

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ST. LOUIS, Mo. – The University of Evansville women’s swimming and diving team has swept the Missouri Valley Conference Swimmer and Diver of the Week awards this week after an impressive showing against conference rival Valparaiso.

Junior Sarah Jahns (Lilburn, Ga./Parkview) garnered MVC Swimmer of the Week honors this week after a record performance in the women’s 200-yard backstroke.  Jahns lowered her own pool record at Roy and Mary Wyttenbach Pool with a mark of 2:02.54 in the 200 back to win the event by over 13 seconds.  Jahns also took home first place honors in the women’s 200 free with a time of 1:56.38 earlier in the meet.

“This is a well-deserved award for Sarah,” said UE head coach Stuart Wilson.  “She has been great so far this season, especially in her training.  And, that hard work in training is really paying off in meets, which you love to see as a coach.”

Senior Maggie Franz (Mundelein, Ill./Mundelein) took home the MVC’s Diver of the Week honor this week, after she won both the one-meter and three-meter competitions against Valparaiso.  Franz won the one-meter competition with a mark of 229.12, while taking home the three-meter competition title with a score of 228.60.  It was her first competition of the year.

“Maggie opened the year with a very solid performance,” said UE diving coach Dustin Bredemeier. “She has been very focused and driven thus far, and I expect that will continue for her throughout the season.”

The UE women will return to the pool this Saturday when they travel to Normal, Illinois to take on Illinois State.

O’Donnell earns top ten at Braun Intercollegiate

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Aces come home in fifth place

 

EVANSVILLE, Ind. – Senior Caitlin O’Donnell picked up the top finish for the University of Evansville women’s golf team while sophomore Mallory Russell had the low round of the day to complete the Charles Braun Intercollegiate at Oak Meadow Country Club.

 

O’Donnell finished the Purple Aces’ home event with an 80 in the final round.  Her final tally of 158 was good for a 10th place tie in the final standings after fin9ishing the first 18 holes with a 78.  The low score for the final 18 on the UE squad belonged to Mallory Russell.  After shooting an 82 in the first round, Russell lowered her tally by four strokes on her way to a 160.  She finished in 16th.

 

After finishing the first 18 holes in a tie, the duo of Alissa McMinn and Allison Enchelmayer did the same on Tuesday.  Both fired off rounds of 83 to begin the tournament before carding scores of 81 on Tuesday.  Both finished with a 164.  Joining them in a tie for 21st was Carly Frazier.  She registered an 85 in the final 18 to tie her teammates.

 

Magdalena Borisova was UE’s top individual finisher.  She tied for 37th in her first college tournament with a 171.  After carding an 86 to open play, she lowered her final on Tuesday by one to an 85.  Taylor Keating was seven spots behind her with a 184.  Her scores checked in at 91 and 93.

 

Evansville took 5th place in the final team standings with a score of 642.  The Aces completed the tournament t just one behind UIC and Western Michigan, who tied for third place.  Green Bay took the team championship with a 618, cruising to an 11-stroke win over IUPUI.

 

Three players tied for the individual win with Ashley Kulka (Green Bay), Shelby Busker (IUPUI) and Alissa Fish (Western Michigan) each completing the two rounds with a 154.   After two playoff holes, Kulka took the championship.  All three of the individuals who tied for the top spot began the playoff on hole #1, parring the hole (4 strokes).  The second hole in the playoff was #18.  Kulka earned another par of four while Shelby Busker and Alissa Fish each had a bogey.

 

The fall season comes to a close in Greensboro, N.C. when the Aces take part in the Grandover Invitational. UE’s final tournament of the fall takes place on November 1-2.

 

USI set for Senior Day Sunday Eagles hope to get on track at home

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Southern Indiana Men’s Soccer returns to the friendly surroundings of Strassweg Field looking to break a three-match losing streaking and get back into the hunt for a berth in the Great Lakes Valley Conference Tournament. The Screaming Eagles (5-7-0, 4-6-0 GLVC) welcomes Maryville University (10-2-1, 8-2-0 GLVC) Friday at 5:30 p.m. before concluding the homestand with Senior Day versus Missouri University of Science & Technology (5-6-1, 4-5-1 GLVC) Sunday at noon.

Game coverage for 2021, including live stats, video stream, and audio broadcasts, can be found on GoUSIEagles.com.

Fans can watch free of charge on the GLVC Sports Network (GLVCSN), which is available both on your desktop, mobile/tablet devices, as well as four over-the-top (OTT) platforms (Roku, Amazon Fire TV, Android TV and Apple TV). GLVCSN.com is the official website of the GLVC Sports Network, while the GLVCSN mobile app is available for iOS in the App Store and Android on Google Play. More information can be found at GLVCSN FAQs.

All broadcasts on GLVCSN are subject to weather or other unforeseen circumstances that could prevent the games from being broadcast.

USI Men’s Soccer Week 8 Notes:

USI in the GLVC: With four matches remaining in 2021, USI starts this week 10th in the Great Lakes Valley Conference standings with 12 points, four points behind a two-way tie for seventh between Lindenwood University and the University of Missouri-St. Louis. The top eight qualify for the GLVC Tournament slated to begin November 7 with the top four team hosting first round matches. The GLVC Tournament semifinals and finals are slated for November 12 and 14.

USI last week: The Eagles lost both ends of their road trip last weekend, falling at Drury University, 3-1, and at Southwest Baptist University, 1-0.

Barton, Schoenstein lead the Eagles in 2021: USI sophomore forward Zach Barton and freshman forward Zach Schoenstein (Evansville, Indiana) lead the Eagles in scoring this year with 13 points each (six goals and one assist). Sophomore midfielder Brian Winkler (Philpot, Kentucky) follows with 11 points on one goal and a team-high nine assists.

Santoro is USI’s all-time leader: Head Coach Mat Santoro is the program’s all-time leader in victories (109). Santoro, who has a 109-94-22 overall record at the helm, has guided the Eagles to a pair of NCAA II Tournament appearances; the 2018 GLVC regular season crown, and seven GLVC Tournament appearances during his tenure.

Maryville in 2021: Maryville is second in the GLVC with 24 points, on point behind front-running University of Indianapolis. The Saints were 2-0-0 last week, defeating UMSL, 2-1, in overtime and Lindenwood University, 3-1, and have won six-stright .

USI versus Maryville: USI has a 9-4-1 series lead over Maryville since the Saints joined the GLVC in 2008. Maryville has won the last two meetings, including last spring 3-0 in St. Louis, and three of the last five.

Missouri S&T in 2021: The Miners of Missouri S&T looking to break a four-match losing streak and a six-match winless streak. Missouri S&T, which visits the University of Indianapolis Friday night, lost a pair in double-overtime last week, 2-1, to McKendree University and UMSL at home.

USI versus Missouri S&T: The Miners lead the all-time series with Missouri S&T, 15-13-1, but USI has won the last four meetings. The Eagles took last season’s match-up in Rolla, 2-0.

Eagles to celebrate Senior Day Sunday USI brings winning streak back for homestand

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Southern Indiana Women’s Soccer is riding a five-match winning streak as it comes home to Strassweg Field to prepare for the final regular season homestand of 2021. The Screaming Eagles (7-4-2, 5-4-1 GLVC) is slated to host Maryville University (5-6-1, 4-5-1 GLVC) Friday at 7:30 p.m. before honoring the team’s six seniors for Senior Day versus Missouri University of Science & Technology Sunday at 2:30 p.m.

Game coverage for 2021, including live stats, video stream, and audio broadcasts, can be found on GoUSIEagles.com.
Fans can watch free of charge on the GLVC Sports Network (GLVCSN), which is available both on your desktop, mobile/tablet devices, as well as four over-the-top (OTT) platforms (Roku, Amazon Fire TV, Android TV and Apple TV). GLVCSN.com is the official website of the GLVC Sports Network, while the GLVCSN mobile app is available for iOS in the App Store and Android on Google Play. More information can be found at GLVCSN FAQs.

USI Women’s Soccer Week 8 Notes:

USI in the GLVC: With four matches remaining in 2021, USI starts this week seventh in the Great Lakes Valley Conference standings with 16 points. The Eagles, who started last week 10th in the league, are one point away from a tie for fifth with Lewis University and Missouri S&T and three points away from fourth-place University of Indianapolis. The top eight qualify for the GLVC Tournament slated to begin November 7 with the top four team hosting first round matches. The GLVC Tournament semifinals and finals are slated for November 12 and 14.

USI sweeps road trip: USI swept its road trip and its second-straight weekend with a 2-1 win over Drury University and a 1-0 win at Southwest Baptist University. Sophomore midfielder Madison Crawford (O’Fallon, Missouri) led the way offensively with three points (one goal, one assist) in the win over Drury University.

For the season: Sophomore midfielder Jill DiTusa (St. Charles, Missouri) leads the Eagles in scoring with 11 points on a  team-high five goals and one assist. Freshman midfielder Avery Schone (Galena, Ohio) follows with 10 points on four goals and two assists.

Etienne between the posts: Sophomore goalkeeper Maya Etienne (Midland, Michigan) has a team-best five shutouts this season, raising her career total to 26 in two-plus seasons. She is two shutouts away of shattering the USI mark (27.5) that has been held by Angie Gries since 1999.

Schoenstein is second all-time at USI: Head Coach Eric Schoenstein is second all-time at USI with a 60-34-14 mark in five-plus years at the helm of the Eagles. He has led the Eagles to their only GLVC regular season and tournament championships, along with the program’s second trip to the NCAA Division II Tournament.

Maryville in 2021: The Saints of Maryville is tied for ninth in the GLVC, one point behind eighth place University of Missouri-St. Louis and three points behind seventh-place USI. Maryville, which tied UMSL, 0-0, in double-overtime and defeated Lindenwood University, 1-0, last weekend, has been on a roll the last three weeks, going 4-1-1.

USI versus Maryville: USI has a 7-5-1 series lead over Maryville since the Saints joined the GLVC in 2009. The Eagles have taken three of the last five match-ups, including a 3-1 win in St. Louis last spring.

Missouri S&T in 2021: The Miners of Missouri S&T are tied for fifth in the the GLVC after sweeping a homestand last weekend, defeating McKendree and UMSL, 1-0, each. Missouri S&T also has won three of its last four matches.

USI versus Missouri S&T: The Miners lead the all-time series with Missouri S&T, 11-6-1, but USI has won the last four meetings. The Eagles took last season’s match-up, 5-1, in Rolla.

USI Satellite, UNITE CubeSat, Nears Reentry

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The Milestone Comes As Satellite Nears 1,000th Day In Orbit

As UNITE CubeSat, USI’s student-built satellite, nears yet another milestone, 1,000 days in orbit, it is also reaching the mission-critical phase of its journey where it will descend back into the earth’s atmosphere, tracking critical data during reentry.

It’s been nearly two years and seven months since a handful of USI students and professors sat, eyes glued to screens, as NASA’s Mission Control announced the deployment of UNITE CubeSat. The 18th Space Control Squadron of the U.S. Space Force is now predicting that the satellite could reach reentry as early as this Thursday, October 21. The 18th Space Control Squadron is tasked with providing support to the space surveillance network, maintaining the space catalog, and managing the United States Space Command’s space situational awareness sharing program to the United States, foreign governments, and commercial entities.

Designed and built by a team of University of Southern Indiana undergraduates, UNITE is the first orbiting satellite designed by students at an Indiana public university and was also the first functional CubeSat in orbit to have been made as part of NASA’s Undergraduate Student Instrument Project, which provided funding for the undergraduate design and construction of satellites across several institutions.

“I’m stunned that it has worked every day—not perfectly, but every day—for almost 1,000 days,” says Dr. Glen Kissel, Associate Professor of Engineering and lead advisor to the UNITE CubeSat team. “I would never have guessed that it would work that long and stay in touch for that long.”

Asked to what he attributes the unit’s longevity, Kissel says with a grin, “It was built here at USI!” But pressed further he aptly passes credit to the students involved with its construction and those who joined the team later to see through the testing and delivery to NASA. He also points out that “we kept it simple.”

As the CubeSat nears the end of its lifespan, its mission is to measure plasma levels in the lower ionosphere, record its own internal and exterior temperatures and measure its orbital decay as it reenters the Earth’s atmosphere. As of Monday afternoon, the satellite was still around 125 miles out from the surface of the Earth. Kissel explained that at around 50 miles it would begin to break up. While data is coming in daily, Kissel says he most likely will not know exactly when and where UNITE burns up during reentry.

Kissel is quick to point out that this is not the end of the mission. There will be significant amounts of data to review as it becomes available. “Orbital operations will come to an end, but we still have data to look at and examine,” he says.

As many as 12 students previously worked on various stages of the project over the past five years, most of whom are now graduated and have moved on to careers in engineering and aerospace. Currently, due to complications caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, only one student, the newest to join the project team this past year, is working with Kissel. Clayton Davis, a mechanical engineering major from Normal, Illinois, is analyzing the data being sent back by UNITE and will continue to do so both during and after burn up on reentry.

The challenge for Davis and Kissel is that UNITE is not responding to new commands designed to ramp the satellite back into high-data mode. Early in its mission, UNITE was sending back data too frequently, which was costly, and had to be forced into a lower data frequency mode, a task that gave the team some fits as it was slow to respond. Now, as it nears its mission-critical phase, it needs to be sending data more frequently but is again slow to respond to commands. “The key now is the plasma data,” says Kissel. “We will be getting some, but ideally we would be constantly taking in data, as well as constant temperature data. If we don’t get a continuous data stream, we may be missing some things.”

Despite the hiccup, Davis continues to analyze incoming data with a current focus on the satellite’s decay rate as it continues to near reentry. His first task was to reevaluate the original predicted mission time, using the same tools that the original predictor used, and spot any mistakes. In doing so, he found the cause of miscalculations that initially predicted a much earlier reentry date in 2016. Kissel explains that UNITE was deployed during solar minimum, a period of low solar activity that may have affected drag on the satellite and why it took longer to get to reentry.

“It’s very exciting to be a part of the project as the mission comes to an end,” says Davis, “I never thought I would be involved in such an important project for USI Engineering, during my collegiate career.”

NASA’s part in the project ended with a final report in June 2020 and Kissel looks back fondly on the two major papers and presentations students gave during conferences in 2019. He has remained in touch with several members of the core student team over the years and says he even consulted several of them during recent attempts to get the CubeSat back into high-data-rate mode. He looks forward to congratulating all of them as UNITE pings its final signals back to Earth.

Relive UNITE’s journey to space:

Watch the UNITE CubeSat’s deployment (courtesy of NASA/NanoRacks) and the UNITE CubeSat team’s reaction to the deployment.

 

THE CHANGES HAVE JUST BEGUN

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THE CHANGES HAVE JUST BEGUN

By John Krull, 

Updated

A banner draped across the front of the business says the place is hiring. The wages are $16 per hour plus tips.

Another restaurant not far from it bears a similar sign. It promises $17 per hour. This eatery doesn’t mention tips, but it pledges to pay a signing bonus to anyone who comes on board.

At the same time, we read reports that record numbers of Americans have left their jobs in recent months. Many of them are leaving low-wage service jobs, such as the ones the restaurant and hospitality industry provides.

Welcome to the new economy.

There are many politicians—particularly conservative ones—who have been moaning about this supposedly newly discovered labor shortage. They complain that it is the result of pandemic relief payments that, they say, paid people not to work. They also say that Americans are now lazy, self-indulgent and reluctant to work.

They’re wrong on every count.

Their observations just demonstrate, once again, that most politicians don’t pay close attention to what’s really going on and that they would prefer to waste their time—and ours—with silly fights.

Economists have been warning that a labor shortage is coming for at least a decade. There are several causes. Declining birth rates over the past couple of generations mean there are fewer people available. This was compounded by the Great Recession of 2008 and 2009.

As a result, economists have said that, by the year 2030, there will be a labor shortage as great as 25 percent.

That means the changes we’re seeing now will become even more dramatic.

Businesses, communities, states, and countries will be prodded by these changed circumstances to make themselves more attractive to workers. That’s why the savvier nations around the globe are talking not about building walls to keep people out but revising their immigration policies to make it easier for talented people to relocate and labor within their borders.

Here in this country, states with leadership that looked ahead to this emerging reality didn’t waste time and resources on, for example, silly and perhaps self-destructive battles over things like right-to-work legislation and campaigns to encourage skilled LGBTQ citizens not to consider Indiana a good place to make a home.

But the alterations in the ways we live and function will go beyond traditional politics.

We’re seeing that already.

The relative scarcity of labor means, of course, that wages will go up. That will lead to similar rises in prices, especially for those goods and services that are the most labor-intensive.

But it also will tilt the balance of power between labor and capital at least a little bit back in labor’s direction. Part of the reason so many workers have quit working at restaurants and hotels is that they are confident in this new economy that they can find jobs elsewhere—often ones that pay better.

Those laborers who aren’t leaving their jobs are organizing to demand better pay and better conditions in the ones they already have. We have begun to see strikes pop up around the country.

The companies and states that assume hardline positions with the unions run a great risk. It isn’t just that those businesses will face unrest and disruptions in the short term. It’s also that they send a signal to potential future workers that they have no interest in working with or even listening to their employees.

In a labor market that’s right now and only going to grow tighter, that’s not just foolish. It’s borderline suicidal.

But that’s a new reality.

Whether businesses like it or not—whether politicians like it or not—we’re going to have to stop refighting and refighting battles from the 1930s, ’40s, and ’50s and focus on finding new ways to work together.

Because paying $16 per hour plus tips to make and deliver pizzas is just the beginning.

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