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UE leads wire-to-wire in 70-52 win over Valpo

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Aces face Crusaders on Monday at 6 p.m.

 The University of Evansville men’s basketball team scored the first seven points of the game and never trailed as the Purple Aces earned a 70-52 win over Valparaiso on Sunday afternoon inside the Ford Center.

Shamar Givance led a trio of double-digit UE (7-8, 5-4 MVC) scorers with 10 points.  He was 8-of-13 from the field and posted a game-high four assists.  Jawaun Newton and Samari Curtis posted 17 apiece.  Newton knocked down 7 of his 10 attempts and tied his career mark with eight rebounds.  Curtis was also 7-of-10 from the field.

“I thought we were focused and had a good mindset as far as playing with the type of purpose that we needed to,” UE head men’s basketball coach Todd Lickliter exclaimed following the win.  “Our guys really complemented each other and played to their strengths.  You look at Jax Levitch – he did not take a shot, but he had a really good game.  Shamar, Jawaun and Samari had open lanes because of the shooting ability that Jax and all of our guys have.”

A 3-for-3 start from the field extended to a 7-of-8 stretch that saw the Purple Aces hold an early 16-6 advantage.  Jawaun Newton hit two early shots as the Aces opened up a 7-0 lead. It was Shamar Givance capping off the early stretch with his first triple of the game to complete the 16-6 start.  Seven of the 16 points were scored by Newton.

Ben Krikke hit his first five attempts including two from outside to help the Crusaders (6-10, 3-4 MVC) get within four points at 27-23 at the 7:30 mark before Noah Frederking drained his first 3-point try on a feed from Jax Levitch to push the lead back to seven points.  Over the final moments of the half, Evan Kuhlman took over on the offensive end adding five points to send the Aces to the break with a 37-27 lead.  Kuhlman’s first triple came with an assist from Newton that cemented the double-digit halftime lead.  UE finished the half shooting 66.7% with 16 of its 24 attempts finding the bottom of the net.  Valpo finished the period at 47.8%.

Evansville’s hot shooting continued in the second half, converting four of its first six attempts on the way to a game-high 48-31 lead at the 16-minute mark.  Samari Curtis scored five in a row and added another field goal with 13 minutes remaining to push the advantage to 58-37.  Valpo kept the Aces off the scoreboard for a 5-minute span while cutting nine points off of the UE advantage.  A triple by Eron Gordon started a 9-0 stretch that made it a 58-46 game with eight minutes remaining.

Newton ended the scoreless drought when he converted an in-bound pass from Levitch.  It was the first field goal in a 6-0 run that saw the Aces regain control.  Over the remainder of the game, the lead would reach as many as 23 points (70-44) and would not go under 17 with Evansville ending a 3-game skid with a 70-52 win.

Krikke led Valpo with 18 points.  He knocked down 7 out of 9 field goal tries and was 2-for-2 from outside.  Gordon tallied 13.

Evansville hit a season-high 29 field goals in the win with 23 being inside the arc.  For the game, UE shot 60.4% while hitting 23 out of 30 inside attempts.  Valparaiso shot 47.5%.  The rebounding edge also favored the Aces to the tun of a 27-19 final.

On Monday, the teams will square off in a 6 p.m. game at the Ford Center.

ADOPT A PET

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2-yr-old male Shepherd mix! Very handsome! His adoption fee is $150 and includes his neuter, microchip, vaccines, and heartworm test. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at www.vhslifesaver.org/adopt for details!

 

Right Jab And Left Jab” February 1, 2021

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Right Jab And Left Jab” was created because we have a couple of commenters that post on a daily basis either in our “IS IT TRUE” or “Readers Forum” columns concerning local, state, national, or international issues.

The majority of our “IS IT TRUE” columns are about local or state issues, so we have decided to give our more opinionated readers exclusive access to our newly created “LEFT JAB and  RIGHT JAB”  column. They now have this post to exclusively discuss local, state, national, or world issues that they feel passionate about.

We shall be posting the “LEFT JAB” AND “RIGHT JAB” 7 days a week.  Oh, “LEFT JAB” is a liberal view  and the “RIGHT JAB is representative of the more conservative views. Also, any reader who would like to react to the written comments in this column is free to do so.

FOOTNOTE: The City-County Observer posted this CAGEL Political Cartoon without bias in order to generate a rational discussion.

HEALTH DEPARTMENT UPDATES STATEWIDE COVID-19 CASE COUNTS

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Foul trouble dooms Eagles in loss to Truman

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Despite getting career-high scoring efforts from sophomore forward Hannah Haithcock (Washington Courthouse, Ohio) and senior center Audrey Turner (Fishers, Indiana), University of Southern Indiana Women’s Basketball could not hang onto a seven-point third-quarter lead as visiting Truman State University handed the No. 11 Screaming Eagles a 73-67 Great Lakes Valley Conference setback Saturday afternoon at Screaming Eagles Arena.

Haithcock had a career-high 22 points and team-high eight rebounds, while Turner finished with a career-high 15 points. However, a season-high 27 fouls proved to be too much for the Eagles to overcome as Haithcock was among three starters to foul out in the fourth quarter.

Truman State (11-2, 11-2 GLVC), which overcame a seven-point third-quarter deficit to earn the win, went 21-of-37 from the free throw line, including 14-of-18 in the fourth quarter.

The Bulldogs used runs of 11-3 and 5-0 in the final period to take a 67-60 lead with a minute to play in the contest.

Turner, however, hit a pair of free throws and a layup in the lane to get USI to within three points with 37 seconds to play.

After a pair of free throws by sophomore guard Hannah Belanger put the Bulldogs back up by five, senior guard Emma DeHart (Indianapolis, Indiana), who finished with 15 points and a career-high six assists, converted the old-fashioned three-point play to get the Eagles to within two points (69-67) with 32 seconds left on the clock.

The Bulldogs converted one-of-two free throws on the other end and USI had the ball with a chance to tie the contest with a three-pointer in the final 20 seconds. Junior guard Katie Klucking, however, intercepted a pass from sophomore guard Soffia Rieckers (Evansville, Indiana) and was fouled by DeHart, who picked up her fifth personal in the process.

Klucking, who had 20 points, hit 1-of-2 free throws to raise Truman’s lead to 71-67 with 18 seconds left. After the Eagles failed to score on their next possession, Belanger, who had a game-high 26 points, put the game on ice with a pair of free throws.

USI, which had four fouls in the first 75 seconds of the contest, overcame early foul trouble to take a 36-33 lead at the break. Haithcock had a pair of three-pointers and 13 first-half points to pace USI in the opening 20 minutes.

The Eagles extended their advantage to 49-42 six minutes into the third period before the Bulldogs closed the frame on an 8-2 run. USI led 53-50 early in the fourth and had a 56-54 lead before Truman State scored seven straight points to build a five-point edge.

USI returns to action Tuesday at 5:30 p.m. when it visits Quincy University. The Hawks (1-12, 1-12 GLVC) suffered an 87-52 setback to the University of Indianapolis Saturday in Indianapolis.

Key Committee Supports McNamara’s Bill Helping Students Impacted By Pandemic

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State Rep. Wendy McNamara’s (R-Evansville) legislation that would establish the Student Learning Recovery Grant Program to help students experiencing learning loss due to the pandemic advanced out of the House Ways and Means Committee.

According to McNamara, students transitioning back and forth between e-learning and classroom learning are likely to experience some form of learning loss. McNamara’s proposal would create a $150 million grant program to provide individuals or organizations resources to help students who have fallen behind in class, scored below academic standards or are at risk of falling behind.

“We want to ensure all students have the opportunity to reach their full potential,” McNamara said. “This grant program is designed to close learning gaps created by the pandemic, and connect students with tools and resources to catch up to their peers. While the steps schools have taken over the last year have been necessary to keep our children and educators safe, we must now work to ensure students catch up and get ahead.”

McNamara said many students experience some form of learning loss after summer break, but most are typically able to relearn forgotten lessons quickly. However, a recent study completed by Stanford’s Center for Research on Education Outcomes, shows the average Indiana student lost 129 days of reading knowledge and 209 days of math knowledge as a result of COVID-19 disruptions.

Program criteria for grants would be determined by the Indiana Department of Education, along with the State Board of Education. McNamara said applying organizations, which could include local schools, colleges or universities, community or philanthropic organizations, and prospective, current and retired educators, would be required to submit a plan detailing the programs that would supplement a student’s regular coursework. The DOE would be responsible for overseeing the grant program.

Visit iga.in.gov for more information on House Bill 1008. This legislation now moves the full Indiana House of Representatives for further consideration.

Braun: Biden Should Reconsider Divisive HHS Nominee Xavier Becerra

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OP-ED | BRAUN: Biden should reconsider divisive HHS nominee Xavier Becerra

Braun: Biden should reconsider divisive HHS nominee Xavier Becerra
Senator Mike Braun
January 28, 2021
https://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/healthcare/536234-braun-biden-should-reconsider-divisive-hhs-nominee-xavier

During his inaugural address, President Joe Biden used the word unity nine times to emphasize his administration’s initiative to bridge the divide in the country. If Americans are to take him at his word, then it’s time for him to replace California Democrat Xavier Becerra as his pick to run the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) with a mainstream nominee who has experience in the health care industry and is equipped with the expertise to enact critical industry reform and lead us to the end of the coronavirus pandemic.

Through his position as attorney general of California, Becerra was the ringleader of the far-left’s resistance movement and personally led a lawsuit to harass the Little Sisters of the Poor — a group of nuns who run elderly care facilities — with a lawsuit to force them to pay for abortion pills in contradiction to their Catholic faith, which undercuts Biden’s hollow call for unity.

During an interview on “Fox News Sunday,” Becerra said he supported the radical socialized medicine plan Medicare for All. In fact, Becerra’s exact words were, “I’ve been a supporter of Medicare for All for the 24 years that I was in Congress. This year, as attorney general, I would fight for that if we had an opportunity to put that forward in the state of California.” This is troubling for those of us who know that a socialist overhaul of our health care system would bankrupt our country and ruin quality of care for Americans.

As a one of the few Republicans willing to reform the health care industry through price transparency and holding Big Pharma accountable for monopolistic drug pricing, I believe President Biden would be wise to select an HHS secretary who has experience in health care rather than in the halls of Congress like Xavier Becerra.

For example, our last HHS secretary spent over a decade at Eli Lilly and used his experience in the health care industry to reform the broken system through executive actions on price transparency and other measures to bring drug costs down.

As we approach the finish line of the coronavirus pandemic, it’s hard to understand why Becerra is the right person for the job considering he defended Gov. Gavin Newsom’s blanket shutdowns that devastated California small businesses while still leading to the worst COVID-19 surge in the country.

Instead, it’s my hope that President Biden rescinds Becerra’s nomination and taps a nominee who comes with experience dealing with health care crises. Ideally, someone with experience and a record of success working on the coronavirus pandemic, Ebola pandemic, or Zika outbreak.

HHS has a budget of $1.2 trillion with nearly 80,000 employees, and it’s clear that Xavier Becerra lacks the qualifications to run a federal agency of this magnitude in the midst of a pandemic. President Biden should reconsider his nomination and choose a more qualified candidate.

Sen. Mike Braun serves on the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee.

Ivy Tech Community College Announces MLK Essay Contest Winners

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Ivy Tech Community College Announces MLK Essay Contest Winners

Evansville, Ind..- Winners of the Ivy Tech Evansville Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Doing the Dream 2021 Essay Contest have been selected.

  • Payton Watkins of North High School is the winner in the High School category
  • Hannah Robinson of Ivy Tech is the winner in the College category. 

Both recipients will receive a $500 Ivy Tech Scholarship.

The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day essay contest, is an annual event through the Ivy Tech Evansville Diversity, Equity and Belonging Council. Entrants were asked to submit a 500-word essay describing how they would carry out Dr. King’s 1963 Dream in 2021 and beyond.

About Ivy Tech Community College

Ivy Tech Community College is Indiana’s largest public postsecondary institution and the nation’s largest singly accredited statewide community college system, accredited by the Higher Learning Commission. Ivy Tech has campuses throughout Indiana and also serves thousands of students annually online. It serves as the state’s engine of workforce development, offering associate degree and short-term certificate programs, and trainings that align to the needs of the community. The College also offers courses and associate degree programs that seamlessly transfer to other colleges and universities in Indiana, as well as out of state, for a more affordable route to a Bachelor’s degree.

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