CARBONDALE, Ill. – Samari Curtis poured in a career-high 29 points as the University of Evansville men’s basketball tied a school record with 17 3-pointers in an 84-72 road victory over Southern Illinois on Monday evening at the Banterra Center.
Curtis knocked down 9 of his 13 field goals, went 6-for-8 from outside and hit all five free throws for Evansville (3-5, 1-1 MVC). He added four rebounds in a career-high 30 minutes of play. Noah Frederking connected on four triples en route to an 18-point game while Shamar Givance hit five field goals and all five free throws in a 17-point effort.
“I think the back-to-back games can favor you if you can make the right adjustments and your guys carry them out. Our poise, willingness to pass and spacing were excellent,†UE head coach Todd Lickliter explained. “Tonight reaffirmed that you need to stay the course, take the possession that you have at hand, do your job and support one another.â€
Evansville picked up its first Missouri Valley Conference win since March 2, 2019 when the Purple Aces earned a 65-63 win at Valparaiso. It ended a 19-game conference skid. For Southern Illinois (7-1, 1-1 MVC), it marked their first loss of the season. Marcus Domask paced the Salukis with 25 points on 9-of-13 shooting.
Noah Frederking and Jawaun Newton gave the Purple Aces a 6-2 lead in the opening two minutes of the game with each draining a triple. The early run continued with UE knocking down five of its first six attempts on the way to a 15-6 lead at the 14:07 mark. Frederking added his second long ball of the day before Evan Kuhlman finished the stretch off with his first from outside as Evansville picked up a 15-6 lead.
Over the next three minutes, the Salukis reeled off nine in a row to tie the score before Samari Curtis drilled a triple to put the lead back in the Aces’ hands. SIU continued to claw its way back and took its first lead at 21-20 with 7:19 remaining. Flawless shooting saw the Salukis hit five out of six 3-pointers over one stretch as they took a 30-20 lead inside of the 6-minute mark. A 13-0 run was just part of a 21-5 rally that saw the Salukis turn the tables.
Just when it looked like SIU would take control of the game, the Aces had other ideas. Curtis converted a 3-point play before a Jax Levitch trey cut the gap back to just four points – 33-29 – inside of four minutes left. That deficit is where things would land at the break with Southern Illinois taking a 39-35 advantage into the locker room. Hitting six of his seven attempts, Marcus Domask recorded 15 points in the first half while Curtis and Frederking registered 11 and 10, respectively, in the opening 20 minutes.
After making seven triples in the first half, UE continued its success from outside in the second. Back-to-back treys by Frederking and Newton cut the deficit to a pair before Samari Curtis put UE back in front with his third triple of the game – 44-43 – with 15:10 on the clock. SIU countered with four in a row, but it was Curtis getting the Aces back in front with consecutive triples to make it a 52-48 game. Iyen Enaruna got in on the shooting, connecting on a three at the midway point of the final half to cement a 58-54 UE edge. That came in a run that saw Evansville knock down eight out of nine 3-point attempts.
The career game for Curtis continued with a monstrous dunk that extended the lead to eight. Inside of seven minutes left, it was an and-one by Givance, which pushed the lead to nine tallies at 68-59. SIU stormed back with the next five points before Givance drained his second triple of the night. From there, the Aces held strong, extending the lead over the final minutes and finishing with the 84-72 triumph.
UE outrebounded the Salukis by a 30-21 margin with Levitch recording 10. Seven different Aces hit a triple in the record-tying effort. The shooting excelled in all facets of the game as UE shot a season-high 55.3% from the field, 58.6% from the 3-point range, and 88.2% at the line.
On Saturday, the home portion of the Valley schedule begins as UNI comes to town. The Aces and Panthers square off on Saturday and Sunday with each game starting at 3 p.m. inside the Ford Center.
FOOTNOTE: For all of the latest information on University of Evansville athletics, visit GoPurpleAces.com or follow the program on Twitter via @UEAthletics.Â
Arts Commission Announces Changes to the Arts Organization and Project Support Grant Programs
(Indianapolis, IN) The Indiana Arts Commission (IAC) announces the opening of applications for two programs: The fiscal Year 2022 Arts Project Support and Arts Organization Support.
Arts Project Support
Arts Project Support grants provide funding to nonprofit organizations to support a specific part of the organization’s arts activities, such as a one-time event, a single production, an exhibition, an educational workshop, or a series of related arts activities such as art classes or training sessions. In response to the pandemic, the IAC’s funding priorities for the program are as follows:
Benefit local or Indiana artists by supporting applications that will directly financially benefit and/or support the work of Indiana artists.
Ensure geographic access to arts opportunities by funding the highest scoring eligible application from each county in a region.
The priority to directly support artist careers and/or benefit artists financially is in response to the challenging business environment due to COVID 19 for professional, practicing artists and the agency and state’s limited resources due to reduced tax revenue.
Additionally, there will be no match requirement for FY22 Arts Project Support. Current grant recipients that received an extension into the new fiscal year due to COVID cannot apply for this round of funding.
Projects for FY22 grant support should be scheduled to take place between July 1, 2021 – June 30, 2022.
Arts Organization Support grants provide annual operating support for the ongoing artistic and administrative functions of nonprofit arts organizations. The IAC has adjusted the evaluation criteria of this core program to responsibly acknowledge the pandemic’s effect on the arts and culture sector. These adjustments include:
Panelists will assess the applicant’s organizations resiliency based upon the extent to which the organization demonstrates it is operating, and will continue to operate, during the funding period. Organizations must, at minimum: Hold regular board meetings, conduct ongoing planning, continue basic operations, continue regular communication with constituents and supporters, and preserve and/or advance the art form.
Provide the following financial information:
Projected income and expenses for the current year
Financial statement from the most recently completed fiscal year
Applications with a majority “yes†review and high scoring resiliency assessment will be recommended for two-year funding.
Current grant recipients recommended for funding will be awarded funding based upon their current funding award and category.
New applicants recommended for funding will be awarded based upon their submitted financials, and not to exceed the highest level one organization support award amount in their respective region.
In FY22 only, organizations that choose to respond to the optional “Extraordinary Effort†narrative question in the application will be considered for a small merit award. Although merit awards may be given in all budget categories, priority will be given to organizations with a budget of less than $250,000.
Right Jab And Middle Jab And Left Jabâ€Â was created because we have a couple of commenters that post on a daily basis either in our “IS IT TRUE†or “Readers Forumâ€Â columns concerning 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 Middle Jab and RIGHT JAB† column. They now have this post to exclusively discuss national or world issues that they feel passionate about.
We shall be posting the “LEFT JAB†AND “MIDDLE JAB†AND “RIGHT JABâ€Â several times a week.  Oh, “LEFT JAB†is a liberal view, “MIDDLE JAB†is the libertarian 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.
Mal is a female 1-year-old brown tabby tuxedo! She was transferred to VHS from Evansville Animal Care & Control when VHS had extra cat space. Which is amazing, and it has taken more than 60 years to get to that point! Her adoption fee is $40 and includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Get details at www.vhslifesaver.org/adopt!
 CARBONDALE, Ill. – Samari Curtis poured in a career-high 29 points as the University of Evansville men’s basketball tied a school record with 17 3-pointers in an 84-72 road victory over Southern Illinois on Monday evening at the Banterra Center.
Curtis knocked down 9 of his 13 field goals, went 6-for-8 from outside and hit all five free throws for Evansville (3-5, 1-1 MVC). He added four rebounds in a career-high 30 minutes of play. Noah Frederking connected on four triples en route to an 18-point game while Shamar Givance hit five field goals and all five free throws in a 17-point effort.
“I think the back-to-back games can favor you if you can make the right adjustments and your guys carry them out. Our poise, willingness to pass and spacing were excellent,†UE head coach Todd Lickliter explained. “Tonight reaffirmed that you need to stay the course, take the possession that you have at hand, do your job and support one another.â€
Evansville picked up its first Missouri Valley Conference win since March 2, 2019 when the Purple Aces earned a 65-63 win at Valparaiso. It ended a 19-game conference skid. For Southern Illinois (7-1, 1-1 MVC), it marked their first loss of the season. Marcus Domask paced the Salukis with 25 points on 9-of-13 shooting.
Noah Frederking and Jawaun Newton gave the Purple Aces a 6-2 lead in the opening two minutes of the game with each draining a triple. The early run continued with UE knocking down five of its first six attempts on the way to a 15-6 lead at the 14:07 mark. Frederking added his second long ball of the day before Evan Kuhlman finished the stretch off with his first from outside as Evansville picked up a 15-6 lead.
Over the next three minutes, the Salukis reeled off nine in a row to tie the score before Samari Curtis drilled a triple to put the lead back in the Aces’ hands. SIU continued to claw its way back and took its first lead at 21-20 with 7:19 remaining. Flawless shooting saw the Salukis hit five out of six 3-pointers over one stretch as they took a 30-20 lead inside of the 6-minute mark. A 13-0 run was just part of a 21-5 rally that saw the Salukis turn the tables.
Just when it looked like SIU would take control of the game, the Aces had other ideas. Curtis converted a 3-point play before a Jax Levitch trey cut the gap back to just four points – 33-29 – inside of four minutes left. That deficit is where things would land at the break with Southern Illinois taking a 39-35 advantage into the locker room. Hitting six of his seven attempts, Marcus Domask recorded 15 points in the first half while Curtis and Frederking registered 11 and 10, respectively, in the opening 20 minutes.
After making seven triples in the first half, UE continued its success from outside in the second. Back-to-back treys by Frederking and Newton cut the deficit to a pair before Samari Curtis put UE back in front with his third triple of the game – 44-43 – with 15:10 on the clock. SIU countered with four in a row, but it was Curtis getting the Aces back in front with consecutive triples to make it a 52-48 game. Iyen Enaruna got in on the shooting, connecting on a three at the midway point of the final half to cement a 58-54 UE edge. That came in a run that saw Evansville knock down eight out of nine 3-point attempts.
The career game for Curtis continued with a monstrous dunk that extended the lead to eight. Inside of seven minutes left, it was an and-one by Givance, which pushed the lead to nine tallies at 68-59. SIU stormed back with the next five points before Givance drained his second triple of the night. From there, the Aces held strong, extending the lead over the final minutes and finishing with the 84-72 triumph.
UE outrebounded the Salukis by a 30-21 margin with Levitch recording 10. Seven different Aces hit a triple in the record-tying effort. The shooting excelled in all facets of the game as UE shot a season-high 55.3% from the field, 58.6% from the 3-point range, and 88.2% at the line.
On Saturday, the home portion of the Valley schedule begins as UNI comes to town. The Aces and Panthers square off on Saturday and Sunday with each game starting at 3 p.m. inside the Ford Center.
FOOTNOTE: For all of the latest information on University of Evansville athletics, visit GoPurpleAces.com or follow the program on Twitter via @UEAthletics.Â
We hope that today’s “IS IT TRUEâ€Â will provoke honest and open dialogue concerning issues that we, as responsible citizens of this community, need to address in a rational and responsible way?
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We understand that sometimes people don’t always agree and discussions may become a little heated.  The use of offensive language, insults against commenters will not be tolerated and will be removed from our site.
IS IT TRUE one of the best-kept secrets in this area is that local hospitals are distributing a coronavirus vaccine called BAM that could keep people out of the hospital? …that Vanderburgh County Health Officer Ken Spear recently said: “that the monoclonal antibody treatment known as BAM is proving to work well in treating COVID patients who are at high risk for hospitalization”?  …we are told that there are stringent requirements for those who can receive the BAM treatment because of the allocations numbers available to the general an extremely low? …if you have tested positive for COVID-19, you should contact either Deaconess or Ascension St. Vincent by calling their COVID triage lines?
IS IT TRUE the City Council, County Council, and County Commissioners will be electing a President in early January?… that County Council will elect Joe Kiefer as County Council President?…that County Commissioners will elect Ben Shoulders as President?…. the big surprise is that that City Council will elect Ron Beane as City Council President?
IS IT TRUE  that the Vanderburgh County inauguration will be held on New Year’s Day at noon?…this inauguration will be zoomed and the event Master of Ceremonies will be County Commissioner Ben Shoulders?  …the oath of office will be handled by the Honorable Vanderburgh County Circuit Court Judge David Kiely and County Clerk, Carla Hayden?
IS IT TRUEÂ we are told that the newly elected EVSC School Board Trustee Amy Word has already met with most of the school system’s top school administrator? …many of her supporters are hoping that she will now spend some time returning phone calls to people who supported her election to the school board?
IS IT TRUE we are told that a prominent local Democratic officeholder will be announcing that he or she will be leaving the Vanderburgh County Democrat party sometime in January 2021?
IS IT TRUEÂ we are told that the issue of renovating the Vanderburgh County jail will be put back on the agenda sometime in January-2021?
IS IT TRUE that the 2022 Vanderburgh County Sheriff race is shaping up to be a dandy?…that Chief Deputy Sheriff Noah Robinson and Major Jason Ashworth are already politicking hard to win the 2022 Democrat party primary?
IS IT TRUEÂ there is a major difference between politicians and political leaders? …we do respect and listen to political leaders? Â …when it came to taking the CORVID-19 virus head-on the scientists and political leaders got the job done, not the politicians?
IS IT TRUE next time you vote for someone running for public office we highly recommend that you spend some quality time researching and analyzing them to determine if they have the skills to manage a public crisis? Â …it’s obvious that several elected officials are not managing the Coronavirus crisis very well because they are allowing the crisis to manage them?
IS IT TRUEÂ that the State of Indiana reported numbers of people testing positive with the COVID-19 Â virus were misleading low because of a computer niche? Â …that some people believe the Governor’s explanation but the overwhelming majority of people don’t?
IS IT TRUE when we love and care for each other all things are possible? ...during times like these please pray for our medical providers, first responders, law enforcement and fire fighting personnel, delivery people, grocery store clerks and stockers, food service cooks and servers, construction workers, and truck drivers?
IS IT TRUE the stark reality is that newspapers across the country are victims of large investment groups that have cut talent, alienated advertisers, and produced irrelevant biased narratives?…at this rate, there will only be a handful of newspapers still in print in the United States in 10 years?
IS IT TRUE we are really pleased with the way the Vanderburgh County Treasurer Susan Kirk runs her office?  … Ms. Kirk is well respected among other county officials, the public, and her employees alike?  …Susan is retiring next month from public office after 50 plus years? …if you see Ms. Kirk at the Civic Civic Center during the next several weeks tell her what a great job she has done on our behalf?
IS IT TRUE that Pigeon Township Trustee Mariama Wilson and Knight Township Trustee Kathryn Martin both continue to put people first and are both doing outstanding jobs as public servants?
IS IT TRUE when the people fear the Government we have Tyranny! Â When the Government fears the people we have Liberty?
IS IT TRUE our “READERS POLLS†are non-scientific but trendy?
Today’s “Readers Pollâ€Â question is: Do you feel positive about the coming year?
Please take time and read our articles entitled “STATEHOUSE FILES, LAW ENFORCEMENT, “READERS POLLâ€, BIRTHDAYS, HOT JOBSâ€, EDUCATION, OBITUARIES and “LOCAL SPORTSâ€.
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 STATEWIDE COVID-19 POSITIVE CASE COUNTS IS A WHOOPING 493,841Â
INDIANAPOLIS — The Indiana Department of Health today announced that 1,844 additional Hoosiers have been diagnosed with COVID-19 through testing at state and private laboratories. That brings to 493,841 the number of Indiana residents now known to have had the novel coronavirus following corrections to the previous day’s dashboard.
A total of 7,496 Hoosiers are confirmed to have died from COVID-19, an increase of 35 from the previous day. Another 347 probable deaths have been reported based on clinical diagnoses in patients for whom no positive test is on record. Deaths are reported based on when data are received by the state and occurred over multiple days.
To date, 2,600,211 unique individuals have been tested in Indiana, up from 2,595,969 on Saturday. A total of 5,536,056 tests, including repeat tests for unique individuals, have been reported to the state Department of Health since Feb. 26.
INDIANAPOLIS – Greg Weaver still doesn’t know if he made the right decision to retire early from journalism.
Last year, Weaver, who is in his late-50s, ended his more than a 30-year-long career in journalism when he accepted an early retirement buyout from The Indianapolis Star, a newspaper he worked for since the 90s.
It was a tough decision, he said, but he felt like this job would not see him through to his actual retirement.
“I went through 10 rounds of layoffs in 10 years, so every year the staff got smaller. Every year, you started to wonder whether your number was up,†Weaver said.
Greg Weaver, a former editor at The Indianapolis Star.
Weaver now works as communications and operations director for the Indiana Forest Alliance, but that passion for reporting and storytelling never left him.
“Journalism will always be my passion and thankfully I have found an outlet for it through freelancing,†Weaver said. “But I feel lucky to have found another avenue for truth-telling through environmental advocacy and communications.â€
News breaks almost every minute now, and the industry is changing to adapt to the digital age. But even with more news constantly presented, the industry is shrinking with newsrooms losing reporters every year. And with the ever-growing “Fake News†rhetoric, it seems as if journalists’ careers are under fire at every moment.
From the viewpoints of local journalists, these problems are a heavy weight to bear while working. But they don’t see this industry as a dying field. It’s just changing and will prevail.
A doomed business model
The newspaper industry has lost more than 50% of its employees since 2001, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Experts in the field all agree this loss is due to traditional news outlets’ “failed business model†of relying on subscriptions and ad revenue for profits, and then refusing to catch up to the digital age.
“For decades, we’ve known people wanted their news online. Newspapers were slow to change,†said Al Tompkins, senior faculty for broadcast and online at the Poynter Institute. “They kept doing the same thing over and over and over again.â€
Newspapers have faced declining revenues and newsrooms have been gutted in recent years. Photo illustration by Emily Ketterer, TheStatehouseFile.com
When the internet first became prominent, news outlets thought it would be a fad. Most news organizations made the mistake of giving away content for free online that people generally would have to pay to read in print, said Mary Beth Schneider, a veteran journalist, who worked at The Indianapolis Star for more than 30 years, and served as an editor for TheStatehouseFile.com from 2019 to 2020.
“The news business was so stupid and didn’t take it seriously … they thought, ‘Well isn’t this cute? People can read news on their computers,’†Schneider said.
That mistake is one traditional newspapers may not come back from, Tompkins said. The national outlets that did jump on digital media, such as The New York Times and the Wall Street Journal, are doing very well, but local papers will continue to struggle.
“Once a customer is getting something free, it’s very difficult to start charging them,†Tompkins said.
Although the entire industry is hurting, small newspapers are seeing the worst. Oseye Boyd is editor of the Indianapolis Recorder, a 125-year-old small newspaper that focuses on the Black community of Indianapolis.
The Recorder is a fraction of what it used to be, and it’s hurting, she said.
“There’s that saying that when white America gets a cold, Black America gets the flu or pneumonia. The same thing goes for newspapers,†Boyd said.
She thinks people often overlook local news, and don’t realize the impact smaller papers have. The Recorder specifically focuses on telling untold stories of the Black community, and there would be many stories that went untold without it.
“We’re focusing even more on local-local,†Boyd said. “We’re getting down to issues that a lot of times you wouldn’t even think about because we come from a different perspective.â€
The traditional news industry needs a new business model and there is no solid solution. Public broadcasting, which is funded by donations and foundations, is a part of the industry that is growing nationally and in Indiana, so that may be a solution to the hurting traditional outlets, said Brandon Smith, Indiana Statehouse bureau chief at Indiana Public Broadcasting.
There is also nonprofit news, with successful organizations like Chalkbeat and The Texas Tribune.
“It’s not dying, there are just segments of the industry that need to figure out what does the future look like,†Smith said.
Deadlines every minute
Schneider remembers typing her stories on a typewriter and ripping up the paper if she wanted to rearrange a story. That, like many practices in journalism, is far in the past now with the digital age.
Social media and the internet turned the news into a 24/7 business, with journalists meeting deadlines every minute, it seems like. Schneider saw first-hand the impact the digital world had on news, and she embraced it while she was at The Star.
Mary Beth Schneider, former politial reporter at The Indianapolis Star and editor at TheStatehouseFile.com
“I remember I turned down a job for the AP because I didn’t want to have a deadline every minute, but then I ended up doing that anyway here,†Schneider said.
Now, she’s dubbed as the “Twitter Lady,†a name she picked up while covering the Statehouse, for live-tweeting news coverage as it was happening. Twitter rose to more prominence around 2010, which is when Schneider decided to send live tweets about the Right to Work debate happening at the Statehouse.
“I was in there tweeting the live debate, and the labor guys picked up on that, and I gained thousands of followers overnight,†Schneider said. “It is instantaneous to put people right exactly where you are.â€
With the deadlines being constant there is less time for reflection as a daily news reporter, and there are a number of added responsibilities to worry about, Weaver said. Now, journalists have to know how to be active on social media, take photos and videos, and write quickly to meet deadlines online.
“You’re just trying to put the news out at that moment, you don’t really have time to reflect or be intense about it,†Weaver said.
Digital and social media have greatly benefitted journalists though, especially as a way to communicate with readers. With newsrooms shrinking, it is difficult to cover everything, but social media allows journalists to see what the public cares about the most, a form of communication that was not as easy before, said Allison Carter, senior digital manager of content for Indy Star.
“When I see a lot of normal, non-journalist people talking about something, I’m like, ‘OK, we need to address this,†Carter said. “I sometimes get a lot of weird looks from my more traditional colleagues, but most of the time it works out.â€
Carter is very active on Twitter, and like many journalists, she’s had to learn to find that balance between being a professional online while also being a human being, but also being careful to not spew her opinions on her timeline.
She uses her platform to not just Tweet news, but she also puts her own personality into her posts when giving analysis or criticism on certain issues she knows are facts, including wearing masks, climate change or election results, she said.
“It’s OK to be yourself, and you really need to be a person. A lot of people see media as a faceless entity,†Carter said. “I’m not going to play both sides with climate change. I’m not going to play both sides on wearing a mask. There are facts that back up each of those to the extent that I’m comfortable that those are not opinions anymore.â€
Pew Research survey completed in the spring of 2020. Graphic by Emily Ketterer, TheStatehouseFile.com
Smith also frequently uses Twitter to give analysis on state issues he covers. It is difficult to find the line between being critical or just ranting, he said.
“That’s something I’m constantly battling,†Smith said. “Whenever I tweet something, I’m always thinking about, ‘If someone were to challenge me on this, can I back it up?’â€
A profession under scrutiny
Forty-eight percent of Americans say they trust the media to act in the best of the public’s interest, according to a survey conducted by the Pew Research Center in the spring.
The word “Fake News,†first touted by President Donald Trump, is thrown around to describe the news media today. Reporters have been labeled as the “enemy of the people,†and in an industry that is already struggling to get by financially, hearing these criticisms is difficult, Smith said.
“It weighs you down, especially in an industry that is already difficult to be in to begin with,†Smith said. “When I talk to student groups, I love to see they’re interested in this industry, but on the other hand, my question half the time to them wants to be, why?â€
Media has always been an attacked industry, and some criticism is valid, but many times, it comes from a public that does not understand how journalism works, Boyd said.
“Oh, it pisses me off, to put it mildly. We are busting our busts in this industry to do our best,†Boyd said. “There is nothing wrong with us being asked to be better, but the problem is that most people don’t understand what we do. It’s annoying when people try to tell me how I’m not doing my job.â€
While the public may ask journalists to be “less biased,†it is impossible for a human to be completely objective, and that should not be the goal of journalism, Smith said. He added that reporters should not put it upon themselves to change the public’s trust in media, but should instead continue to focus on the job and reporting the truth.
Bradon Smith, Statehouse reporter for WFYI.
“The goal of good journalism should be to recognize your biases and make sure it doesn’t unduly influence your writing,†Smith said. “But chasing this idea of balance creates more problems.â€
In national media, there are blurred lines between commentary and news, Tompkins said, which is confusing for the general public, he said. But in general, by human nature, people tend to rely on news that fits their beliefs anyway, he said.
“We expect the people to differentiate between who is a news person and who is a commentator. But it doesn’t help that one day, Anderson Cooper is a commentator and one day he is a news anchor,†Tompkins said.
Despite the plights in the industry though, journalists will always be needed, Weaver said. It is a difficult profession to be in, but those who really want to do it will prevail, he said.
“Journalists will never be the enemy of the people,†Weaver said. “They will always be the superheroes of the truth.â€
FOOTNOTE: Emily Ketterer is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.