|
|
|
|
Aces host Panthers on Sunday and Monday
A 2-game set against UNI opens the month of February for the University of Evansville volleyball team when the Purple Aces welcome the Panthers this weekend. Game one is set for Sunday, February 7 at 2 p.m. before Monday’s contest begins at 4 p.m. inside Meeks Family Fieldhouse. Both games will be carried live on ESPN+.
Last Time Out
– On Sunday, the Aces earned a non-conference split with a 3-2 win over Saint Louis before falling by a 3-0 final to #24 Western Kentucky in Bowling Green
– Trailing 2-1 against the Billikens, the Aces stormed back with a 25-22 win in the fourth game before finishing the match with a 15-12 decision in the fifth
– Alondra Vazquez posted 20 kills and 14 digs while Melanie Feliciano had 17 kills and 16 digs in the victory
1-2 Punch
– Through the first week of action, UE has been led by Alondra Vazquez and Melanie Feliciano on the offensive end
– Vazquez ranks third in the MVC with 3.73 kills per set while Feliciano checks in with 3.27, putting her 9th in the league
– They have led the team in kills in each of the opening four matches of the season
Playing Some Defense
– Serving as Evansville’s libero in 2021, Laura Ruiz has adjusted nicely, recording 3.53 digs per set in the opening week of action
– After posting 73 digs in her entire freshman season, Ruiz has already accumulated 53 in UE’s first four matches
– Ruiz set her season mark with 17 in the opener against the Sycamores and the contest against Saint Louis…UE is 2-0 when she has over 12 digs
Scouting the Opponent
– UNI enters the series with an 0-5 mark including a pair of losses to Drake to open their conference season
– In non-conference action, the Panthers took on Big East squad Marquette along with 15th-ranked Creighton on the road
– Emily Holterhaus paces the UNI offense with 3.47 kills per set while the defense is led by Baylee Petersen’s 3.68 digs per contest…Peterson is the daughter of UNI head coach Bobbi Petersen
STATEHOUSE (Feb. 5, 2021) – Today, Lt. Gov. Suzanne Crouch received her first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine at the Deaconess Downtown Clinic Vax site on Chestnut Street in Evansville.
“The COVID-19 vaccine is one tool we have to help Hoosiers end this pandemic and return to a sense of normalcy,” Crouch said. “Thank you to the healthcare workers who helped administer my vaccination, and I encourage eligible Hoosiers to schedule an appointment and help keep themselves healthy with this extra layer of protection. Registering online was easy and only took me a couple of minutes.”
Crouch, who is 68, received the Pfizer vaccination and is scheduled to receive her second dose in approximately three weeks.
Earlier this week, Indiana opened COVID-19 vaccinations to individuals 65 and older. Appointments can be made by visiting ourshot.in.gov or by calling 211. A caregiver or loved one may make an appointment on behalf of an eligible senior.
Vaccinations are made available at no out-of-pocket costs to patients. Vaccine providers can bill a patient’s insurance for a fee to administer the vaccine, but will not be able to charge the patient. Providers can seek reimbursement for uninsured patients from the Health Resources and Services Administration’s Provider Relief Fund.
To read the latest information on Indiana’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic, visit coronavirus.in.gov.
Governor Eric J. Holcomb and the Indiana Family and Social Services Administration’s Division of Mental Health and Addiction today announced the state will partner with Overdose Lifeline, Inc. to expand access to the opioid reversal agent naloxone through the purchase of 24/7-access “NaloxBox†units.
“Making overdose response tools like naloxone readily available to any Hoosier who may encounter an individual suffering from an overdose is critical in addressing the drug epidemic,†Gov. Holcomb said. “We’re committed to raising awareness about the need for bystanders to carry this lifesaving drug, which is why we’ve made it available via so many avenues, oftentimes at no cost to Hoosiers.â€
Any business or community entity committed to helping Hoosiers at risk of opioid overdose is eligible to request a NaloxBox unit to install in an accessible and highly visible area. Community partners who receive a unit will be responsible for monitoring the NaloxBox location daily and requesting naloxone refills after use.
Naloxone, or Narcan, is a medication approved to reverse overdose by opioids. Naloxone is given when a person is showing signs of opioid overdose. It blocks the toxic effects of the overdose and is often the difference between a patient living and dying.
A NaloxBox is a hard acrylic box mounted to an exterior wall that provides 24/7 access to naloxone and is an effective measure of addressing the increase of opioid overdoses in Indiana. Each unit contains six to eight doses of naloxone, instructions for use, and treatment referral cards.
Overdose Lifeline, Inc., an Indiana nonprofit dedicated to helping individuals, families and communities affected by substance use disorder through advocacy, education, harm reduction, prevention, resources, and support, intends to purchase and place 215 NaloxBox units across the state, including at least one in every county.
Overdose Lifeline, Inc. has negotiated a purchase price with the manufacturer of $58,200 to include 215 NaloxBox units and shipping costs. Funds were made available by the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration’s state opioid response grant.
Naloxone administration rates by emergency medical services continue to climb statewide during the COVID-19 pandemic. Local health departments registered with the Indiana Department of Health as entities to dispense naloxone may be experiencing limited access to resources due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The state’s partnership with Overdose Lifeline, Inc. allows local health departments to devote their resources to the COVID-19 public health emergency.
“Our mission is to save lives from a disease that has devastated communities across our state,†said FSSA Secretary Jennifer Sullivan, M.D., M.P.H. “NaloxBoxes are just one innovative strategy we’re using to support Hoosiers with substance use disorders. By normalizing access to this overdose reversal tool, we’re reducing the stigma often associated with opioid overdose.â€
Businesses or community entities who wish to receive a NaloxBox should contact Justin Phillips, founder and executive director of Overdose Lifeline, Inc. at justin@overdoselifeline.org.
This initiative is in addition to an existing collaboration with Overdose Lifeline, Inc. announced by Gov. Holcomb in May 2020 to fund a nearly $1 million distribution of naloxone to ensure the medication reaches Hoosiers who are at risk of overdose.
First responders, families, caregivers, and other individuals who would like to receive a supply of naloxone can register online at www.overdoselifeline.org/2020-indiana-naloxone-request.
Braun on HHS Pick : “The Perfect Wingman For Bernie Sanders On Healthcare”
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, Senator Braun appeared on Varney & Co. to discuss President Biden’s nominee to lead the Department of Health and Human Services, Xavier Becerra.
SENATOR BRAUN ON BECERRA ON VARNEY:
Beside the fact that he’s spent a career in Congress and has very little healthcare experience, I think he’s going to be the perfect wingman for the Bernie Sanders approach to healthcare.Â
I come from Main Street. I took on the healthcare industry in my own business: stressing transparency, getting rid of barriers to entry, getting my employees as healthcare consumers engaged in their own well-being. My main reservation is why would you not want to reform the broken healthcare system before you get the government more involved with it?
That’s what happened with Obamacare. It turned into the Unaffordable Care Act because you had big health insurance and big government together: that never sounded like a good remedy to me.Â
I’d really like to see Becerra embrace reform measures before you embrace the Bernie Sanders approach of getting even more government involved in a broken system.Â
UE faces Ramblers on Saturday and Sunday
After earning its second home series sweep, the University of Evansville men’s basketball is set to travel to Chicago for a 2-game set at Loyola this weekend
– The Purple Aces face the Ramblers on Saturday and Sunday with each game starting at 1 p.m….the Purple Aces Radio Network and ESPN+ will have full coverage
– Two of Evansville’s top defensive efforts of the season saw the Aces earn a series sweep over Valparaiso
– Off to its best MVC start since 2015-16, UE travels to Gentile Arena for face a Loyola squad that is receiving votes in both polls…the last two trips to the venue have not been very positive for UE, who fell in those contests by an average of 23 points per game
– Loyola uses an efficient formula in its success – the Ramblers are second in the nation in scoring defense, allowing just 56.2 points while their offense is the third-most efficient in the NCAA shooting 51.7% from the field
Last Time Out
– Trailing by as many as 16 points in the first half on Monday, the Aces cut that deficit to nine points at the break before outscoring Valparaiso by a 34-18 margin in the second half on the way to a 58-51 win
– Four players reached double figures for UE with Jawaun Newton and Shamar Givance scoring 12 while Jax Levitch posted 11 and Noah Frederking added 10 points
– The difference came on the defensive side as Valpo shot 54.2% in the first half while hitting five out of eight triples..in the second half, the Crusaders shot 37.5% while going 0-for-5 from outside
– Levitch was a perfect 3-for-3 from outside and now leads the MVC in 3-point accuracy
Elite Company
– Evansville currently averages 10.2 3-point makes per game this season. Just one team in MVC history has averaged 10 or more triples per game – Bradley in 2006-07 (10.0/game)
– In league action, the Aces have been even better, standing with 10.7 outside makes per contest…no MVC team has averaged 10 3-point makes in league games since the shot was enacted before the 1986-87 season…the highest mark belongs to the 2007-08 Bradley squad, who finished with an average of 9.8
Making the Comeback
– In Monday’s contest against the Crusaders, the Purple Aces faced a 16-point deficit in the first half as Valparaiso used a 19-4 run to open up a 28-12 lead with 5:35 left in the first half…Evansville cut the gap to a manageable 9 points at halftime before completing the rally in the second half
It marked the largest comeback for Evansville since erasing a 17-point deficit against Ball State on December 9, 2018…that game saw UE put forth an unbelievable 44-11 run that turned a 43-26 deficit into a 70-54 lead before winning by an 89-77 final
– The last time Evansville overcame a 16-point deficit against a conference opponent was on January 1, 2015 against UNI. Interestingly – the Aces trailed UNI by a 28-12 score (identical to the 2/1/21 game against Valpo) before coming back for a 52-49 win over the 23rd-ranked Panthers
Turning the Corner
– After going winless in league play last season, Evansville has already won six conference games in 10 tries
– With one more Valley win, the Aces will become just the second team in league history to follow a winless season by winning more than six conference contests
Scouting the Opponent
– Loyola stands at 15-3 overall and 10-1 in the MVC and is receiving votes in both national polls…in the AP Top 25 poll, the Ramblers are 28th with 52 votes and sit in 29th in the Coaches Poll with 43 votes
– They head into the weekend with an 8-game winning streak following a sweep at Missouri State where they won by an average of 23 PPG
– Cameron Krutwig is getting the job done in all facets of the game for Loyola – he leads the team with 15.2 points per game, 5.8 rebounds, 15 blocks and 34 free throw makes
– He is tied for second on the team with 45 assists
– Tate Hall checks in with 9.3 points while Braden Norris controls the offense and has dished out 56 assists on the season
With the Spring 2021 Semester underway for both USI and local school corporations, USI students completing their student-teaching hours in K-12 schools are finding the COVID-19 pandemic creates both obstacles and opportunities.
COVID-19 regulations and safety measures have drastically impacted the way elementary and high school students attend and interact with teachers. For the 53 USI student teachers in the Fall 2020 Semester, this impact stretched beyond the classroom into every detail of their experience.
“I walked into the classroom, with my cooperating teacher, and we had all the desks spaced six-feet out,†said Sam Herdegen ’20, an English secondary education major. “We had a staff meeting, and we had to bring in our own computer chairs or lawn chairs into the gym, and we had to space six feet apart. We spent a couple hours going through different procedures and started to think ‘This is going to be different.’â€
“I definitely feel like it was done safely,†said Christian Green ’20, a special education major who both taught and substituted. “They were very quick if anybody was sick in any way, making sure that they were pulled out of school, people were notified, that if there was any kind of worry it was taken care of. With the way they did the class sizes, it was definitely a lot better in terms of safety—how far everybody was spaced out, how small the class sizes were.â€
As the semester started, school corporations found they had a problem: many teachers were unable to teach due to illness or exposure to the virus and a need to quarantine. This challenge created a new opportunity for USI students, the offer to substitute teach. After acquiring a substitute teacher permit, students were able to substitute for up to 10 days in their assigned school.
“Student teachers who served as a substitute teacher were able to experience different grade levels, collaborate with many teachers and learn about the strategies used to teach a variety of students,†said Joyce Rietman, Director of Advanced Clinical Experience and Co-Teaching for the Teacher Education Department. “The substituting experience often involved virtual planning and teaching. These skills will be important to the new teachers as they begin their careers.â€
Beyond supplementing their income, USI students said the experience of substituting proved to be invaluable to their educational growth. Of the 53 who taught during the Fall Semester, 28 took advantage of the opportunity to substitute teach.
“Once I secured my sub permit, I was allowed to effectively teach on my own, and then have debriefs with my cooperating teacher about times when she wasn’t there,†said Green.
For Spring 2021, 60 USI students were expected to student teach according to Rietman. As in the Fall, many of them will have opportunities to substitute teach as well.
“It’s been a learning process all together as a teaching community,†said Herdegen. “These challenges gave me a lot more experience, and that experience with my cooperating teacher will be there when new challenges arise that I haven’t expected. That experience is really rewarding, even if it was a bit more difficult than it would normally be.â€
For more information about USI’s teacher education programs, visit USI.edu/science/teacher-education or contact Dr. Jill Raisor, Chair of the Teacher Education Department, at 812-465-7024.
A GOAT ROPING
GAVEL GAMUTÂ By Jim Redwine
Last Thursday morning at 8:00 a.m. Peg and I joined supplicants from numerous Oklahoma communities at the Grant County Health Department in Medford, Oklahoma, population one thousand. Medford is 105 miles from our home in Barnsdall, Oklahoma but there were pilgrims there from even further away. The convocation had the feel of a Hadj with the tiny health department being the Ka’bah and Medford being Mecca. Instead of seeking a later reward we were all beseeching the higher authority, our government, for salvation here and now from COVID-19.
The congregation consisted of a continuous stream of persons all of whom had the same color hair, were of similar size and shape and shuffled along as if in fear of falling. Because Medford’s Health Department is staffed with small-town Oklahomans who were born in the 20th century they were unfailingly friendly and efficient. Peg and I arrived early, of course, as did many others and were welcomed in out of the forty mile per hour cold wind gusts into the 10’ x 20’ reception area. We were there about 45 minutes, most of that time being required to see if either of us had a bad reaction to the shots; we did not. However, since these supplicants were mainly friendly refugees from an Oklahoma of the 1940’s and 50’s, in that time we learned more about them and they about us than any government census worker ever would.
Our experience with the fine folks of Medford, most of whom were unpaid volunteers, was difficult to reconcile with America’s over all response to COVID-19. Whereas our federal government should receive praise for developing vaccines in record time, we have fallen way, way short in delivering the vaccine. Every day the battle we are in with the constantly mutating virus becomes more dangerous and ’Ole 19 has already killed over 450,000 of us.
Toni Morrison (1931-2019) has her main character, Milkman, in her novel Song of Soloman thinking, “Perhaps all human relationships boil down to: Would you save my life? or would you take it?†Morrison clearly understood Franz Kafka’s (1883-1924) anguished frustration with the legal system in his novel The Trial. Kafka’s main character, Joseph K, cannot even get the legal system to explain what he is charged with or why. William Shakespeare’s (1564-1616) Macbeth sums it up: “Life is a tale told by an idiotâ€. Apparently Morrison, Kafka and Shakespeare were trying to get their governments to provide something as essential as a COVID-19 vaccination or whatever basic public service they needed then.
Whereas most of us are amazed that our government ramped up vaccines in about one year, the euphoria over discovery appears to have interfered with actually inoculating us. It is as if we have been so proud of finding a potential prevention of the plague that we have failed to develop a plan to employ the prevention. At the rate we are inoculating ourselves ’Ole 19 will mutate us out of existence. Supposedly millions of doses of vaccines will soon be shipped to CVS, Walgreens and Walmart. That is great but if our government has to use the existing Internet portal system, the virus will outpace us. We must be able to sign up “at the door†of the pharmacies or have the vaccine delivered and applied at our doors. We have already appropriated trillions of dollars to respond to COVID-19. We have spent enough taxpayer vaccination money to send a trained UPS, FedEx, Amazon worker or National Guard soldier to every one of our 330 million citizens with a needle and a vile of vaccine and the knowledge, training and emergency supplies to check for and respond to any bad reactions. Although in the millions of shots already given there have been virtually no deaths reported. We are allowing an extremely unlikely deadly reaction to the vaccination to interfere with the delivery of the vaccine and the almost guaranteed possibility the virus will continue to kill us in huge numbers if we do not quickly vaccinate a large percentage of our population. Another possibility would be to have the vaccines delivered directly to us and then allow us to contact medical providers of our choice to inject them. After all, millions of us receive billions of doses of medication by mail already.
We inoculated the whole country for polio without so much as a ripple. We all have had shots for smallpox, measles, TB, etc., etc. without this bottleneck. As Jonathan Reiner, Professor of Medicine at George Washington University, said back in January 2021, “The bottleneck is actually the logistics of vaccinating people (not the supply of the vaccine)â€. And former FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb stated in The Wall Street Journal, “New variants of the virus that appear more contagious increase the urgency to deploy the vaccine as fast as possibleâ€.
The craziness of signing up on Internet portals, waiting in lines of vehicles or waiting in lines outside in the weather adds another level to Dante Alighieri’s (1265-1321) Inferno. Americans can order everything from food to computers over the Internet and get them sent overnight right to our doors with simple instructions on how to use them. A packaged, pre-loaded syringe packed in dry ice is not a space shot problem. A looped YouTube video and public TV demonstration would get to 99% of our cell phones and homes for those who wish to DIY.
If our government does not think we, their bosses, are competent to give ourselves or our families shots then why not use each state’s National Guard or our 2 ½ million regular military personnel. When I joined the United States Air Force fifty-eight years ago, they gave us enough inoculations in one day to save the world from all known diseases and some not even thought of. Surely we can adapt from that system.
By the way, in a week or two after we get the promised email notices from the Oklahoma Board of Health, Peg will have to get back on the online portal to schedule appointments for our second shots at a location somewhere around the state. Hopefully it won’t take a month of checking daily/hourly to schedule the second dose as it did with the first. And, of course, we each have to get a separate appointment within the three to four week allotted period before the next dose is due. All this must take place while the virus continues to out fox us.
For more Gavel Gamut articles go to www.jamesmredwine.com
Or “Like/Follow†us on Facebook & Twitter at JPegRanchBooks&Knitting
The University of Evansville men’s golf team officially starts the spring 2021 season on Monday with a trip to Lake Jovita Country Club in Dade City, Florida for the Earl Yestingsmeier Match Play.
Set to begin on Monday, the two-day event will consist of three rounds of match play competition, two rounds Monday and one round Tuesday. Teams are seeded 1 through 7 based upon 2019-20 year-end Golfstat rankings and then placed into a bracket. As the No. 1 seed, Ball State has a bye in the first round. The team that loses by the widest margin in the first round will sit out the second round and then play in the fifth-place match in the final round. The team that loses in both of the first two rounds will sit out the final round and finish in seventh place. Each team match will consist of six individual matches. Lineup order for each team is based upon 2019-20 year-end Golfweek player rankings, with the top-rated player in the No. 1 position and so on.
A shotgun start with continuous play opens up on Monday at 8:30 a.m. where the first and second rounds will be played. The final round of action on Tuesday is also set for an 8:30 a.m. shotgun start. Evansville will face Eastern Michigan in the opening round.
Dallas Koth finished with a 72.90 stroke average last season to lead the Aces squad. Matthew Ladd was just behind him with a 73.18. Koth was on a roll in the spring when the pandemic put a halt to the season. In the first event of 2020, Koth took second place at the ASU Spring Classic, carding a 3-round score of 211 (5 under par) to come home in second place.
Koth continued his strong start with a tie for 8th place at the Don Benbow Invitational. In five spring rounds, he finished with a 72.20 average. Two more returners finished with averages near the 74 mark. Spencer Wagner finished the 2019-20 campaign with a 74.10 average with three rounds in the 60’s in the spring of 2019. His lowest effort – a 68 – came in the final fall round at the APSU Intercollegiate.
Isaac Rohleder was another player who was nearing the top of his game last spring. After averaging 75.20 strokes in the fall of 2019, Rohleder cut that down by three strokes, finishing his five spring rounds with a 72.20. His 1-under 215 at the ASU Spring Classic earned him a tie for fifth place while his 2-under 69 in the final. Koth, Ladd and Wagner earned spots on the 2020 Missouri Valley Conference Men’s Scholar-Athlete First Team.