DEATH REPORT FOR VANDERBURGH COUNTY
MONDAY
“To the elders among you, I appeal as a fellow elder and a witness of Christ’s
sufferings who also will share in the glory to be revealed:â€
1 Peter 5:1 NIV
TUESDAY
“Be shepherds of God’s flock that is under your care, watching over them—not
because you must, but because you are willing, as God wants you to be; not
pursuing dishonest gain, but eager to serve;â€
1 Peter 5:2 NIV
WEDNESDAY
“not lording it over those entrusted to you, but being examples to the flock.â€
1Peter 5:3 NIV
THURSDAY
“And when the Chief Shepherd appears, you will receive the crown of glory that
will never fade away.â€
1 Peter 5:4 NIV
FRIDAY
“In the same way, you who are younger, submit yourselves to your elders. All of
you, clothe yourselves with humility toward one another, because, “God opposes
the proud but shows favor to the humble.â€â€
1 Peter 5:5 NIV
SATURDAY
“Humble yourselves, therefore, under God’s mighty hand, that he may lift you up
in due time.â€
1 Peter 5:6 NIV
SUNDAY
“Cast all your anxiety on him because he cares for you.â€
1 Peter 5:7 NIV
Submitted to the City-County Observer by Karen Seltzer
UE wraps up opening weekend on Sunday
In the second day of the season-opening Total Control Sports Invitational, the University of Evansville softball team split its two contests, defeating Western Illinois before falling just short against IUPUI at The Dome.
“Last night we challenged the team to be better tomorrow than we were today. The ladies met that challenge,†UE head softball coach Mat Mundell said. “We continue to get great pitching and defense. Those are two keys to good teams. I love how we are battling on every pitch. Excited to play one more tomorrow.â€
Evansville got the day started with its second win of the weekend, defeating Western Illinois by a 4-1 final in a morning contest. Following a scoreless opening frame, the Purple Aces erupted for three runs in the bottom of the second. With one out, Jessica Fehr reached on an infield single before scoring the first run of the game on a Hannah Hood triple. Katie McLean stepped to the plate and delivered the third hit in a row and second consecutive triple to plate Hood.
Kat Mueller reached on a walk before stealing second. On that play, McLean came home on the throw to push the lead to 3-0. The Leathernecks scored a run in the top half of the third before Evansville got it right back in the fourth when Alyssa Barela hit a 1-out home run to left field. That is where the scoring would end as the Aces clinched the 4-1 win thanks to stellar pitching from Emily Lockhart. She threw a complete game 3-hitter allowing just three hits and one walk. UE recorded eight hits with Fehr, Hood and McLean posting two apiece. Lindsay Renneisen added two walks.
Game two of the day pitted the Aces against IUPUI where the first three innings saw dominant pitching keep the game scoreless. That changed in the top of the fourth when the Aces pushed the first run across the plate thanks to a big 2-out hit from Jessica Fehr. Renneisen got the inning started with a single before advancing to second on a strikeout. With two outs, Fehr singled down the right field line to send Renneisen home.
The lead did not hold for long as the Jaguars scored twice in the fourth and once in the sixth to go up 3-1. Down to their final three outs, the Aces did their best to tie it up. With two outs, it was Renneisen reaching on a double to left. Haley Woolf followed up with a single that scored Renneisen to cut the deficit to a run, but IUPUI recorded the final out to clinch the 3-2 victory.
Izzy Vetter was in the circle for the contest and pitched all six innings. She gave up three runs on six hits and struck out seven batters. UE had eight hits in the game with Fehr going 3-for-3.
Tomorrow morning, the tournament wraps up with a 10 a.m. game against Green Bay.
University of Southern Indiana Men’s Basketball overcame a slow start to defeat Missouri University of Science & Technology, 89-66, Saturday afternoon in Rolla, Missouri. USI goes to 17-5 overall and 9-5 in the GLVC, while Missouri S&T finishes the afternoon 5-15, 3-11 GLVC.
The Eagles started slow, falling behind 8-0 and going without a basket until junior forward Emmanuel Little scored at the 16:09 mark of the opening half. Missouri S&T would extend its lead to nine points twice (10-1 and 12-3) before the Eagles went to work.
USI took command with an 18-4 run to post a 29-20 lead with 7:28 before the end of the half. Senior guard Joe Laravie scored eight points during the run to lead the way as the Eagles were seven-of-12 from field, two-of-three from beyond the arc.
The Eagles extended the lead out to 12 points, 37-25, with 96 seconds remaining in the first 20 minutes. The Miners closed the gap in the final minute to 39-31 with a 6-2 run as USI went into the intermission with the lead.
In the second half, USI went to work on methodically extending its advantage, pushing the margin to 18 points, 60-42, by the 11:28 mark when Laravie deposited a bucket in the lane. The lead continued to grow past the 20-point mark, reaching a game-high 27 points, 89-62, with 1:07 on the clock when sophomore guard Humaad Khan hit a three-pointer.
The Miners would get the final four points of the game before the Eagles closed out the 89-66 victory.
USI was dominating after the first four minutes, outscoring the Miners, 86-54, by shooting 50.7 percent from the field (34-67), 38.9 percent from downtown (7-18), and 70 percent from the stripe (14-20). The Eagles also won the battle of the glass, 46-33.
Individually, Little led five players in double-digits with 18 points and a game-high 12 rebounds for his sixth double-double of the year and his second of the road trip. The junior forward was seven-of-14 from the field and four-of-five from the line in 24 minutes of action.
Laravie followed in the scoring column with 13 points after adding five more in the second half. Senior guard/forward Kobe Caldwell, junior forward Josh Price, and sophomore forward Tyler Dancy added 12 points each to round out the double-digit scorers.
USI returns to the friendly surroundings of Screaming Eagles Arena next week after a two week absence for a pair of games and begin the final stretch of the regular season with six of eight at home. The Eagles begin Homecoming Week with Lindenwood University Thursday at 7:30 p.m. and finish with ninth-ranked University of Missouri-St. Louis for the Homecoming game Saturday at 3:15 p.m.
Lindenwood is 9-13 overall and 3-11 in the GLVC after posting a 74-64 at Quincy University this afternoon. USI won the first meeting in program history with Lindenwood, 83-74, in St. Charles, Missouri, during the first half of the four-game road swing. Little led the way for USI in the victory with a career-high tying 29 points.
UMSL, who plays at McKendree University Thursday before its visit to Screaming Eagles Arena, finished its conference weekend by falling out of first in the GLVC standings after suffering a 72-71 loss at Truman State University. The Tritons, who are 20-4 overall and 11-3 in the GLVC after the loss, defeated USI to start the Eagles road trip, 73-68, in St. Louis two weeks ago. Caldwell led the Eagles in the loss with a season-high tying 18 points.
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released the 2019 Year in Review outlining major accomplishments and environmental progress during the Trump administration.
“Under President Trump, we have fulfilled many promises to the American people to address some of our most important environmental and human health challenges while unleashing the economy and fostering innovation,â€Â said EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler. “In 2019, EPA deleted 27 Superfund sites — the largest number of sites deleted from the National Priorities List since FY 2001 — and proposed the first update to the Lead and Copper Rule in nearly three decades. This administration is building on a long history of environmental success for example in the past three years, EPA has re-designated 36 areas around the country, moving them into attainment with federal air quality standards and lifting major regulatory burdens off local businesses, and all six criteria air pollutants have decreased. As we celebrate our 50th year of EPA, I am honored to lead an agency with such a successful record.â€
FY 2019 EPA accomplishments include:
How much time should online students spend learning?
After the state lost $47 million from two now-defunct virtual charter schools enrolling thousands of inactive students, Indiana lawmakers want to make sure online students are showing up.
A new proposal that sailed through the House last week would seek to define online attendance and add steep consequences for students and schools when those enrolled don’t spend enough time on schoolwork or take standardized tests.
“This kind of teaching can be very beneficial, but it’s not beneficial if the machine is never turned on and the student never participates,†said Rep. Ed DeLaney, D-Indianapolis.
State lawmakers have been walking a tightrope on virtual charter schools: In recent years, they have taken small steps to crack down on the publicly funded sector’s low academic results, while not wanting to impose too many regulations on what they see as an important school choice option for students struggling in brick-and-mortar settings.
But at the state’s remaining virtual charter schools, officials protested online education being painted with a broad brush because of the problems at Indiana Virtual School and Indiana Virtual Pathways Academy, which they say were isolated incidents of wrongdoing.
“It’s not what’s happening across the board. It’s just not,†said Chandre Sanchez, executive director of two virtual charter schools, Indiana Connections Academy and Indiana Connections Career Academy. “It feels like an over-reaction.â€
State and local oversight officials found last year that Indiana Virtual School and Indiana Virtual Pathways Academy took in about $47 million combined in state funding for thousands of students who weren’t actively attending the online schools. While claiming perfect attendance rates, the two schools over-reported enrollment by keeping on their rolls students who hadn’t logged in for months, students who had moved out of state, and even at least one student who had died.
School officials denied inflating enrollment, but the two troubled virtual charter schools closed in August under the weight of the scandal. The state recovered about $7 million before the closures.
Under last week’s proposal, if a virtual charter school student doesn’t participate enough or doesn’t take the state’s mandatory tests, that student will be barred from continuing to attend virtual charter schools and the school will lose funding for that student.
The two Connections schools, along with the virtual charter network that includes Hoosier Academy of Indianapolis and Insight School of Indiana, have slightly lower attendance rates than most brick-and-mortar schools — between 86% and 90%.
They follow the same state attendance requirements as other schools, officials say: 180 days of instruction, with five hours per day for elementary students and six hours per day for middle- and high-school students.
Test participation rates at those four virtual charter schools hover just under or at the state average. Getting students to show up for standardized tests is one of the toughest challenges virtual charter schools face, since they have to arrange test-taking sites across the state and sometimes provide transportation for students.
For 2017-18, the most recent state A-F grades available, Hoosier Academy and Insight received Cs. Connections had a D, and Connections Career Academy was not rated because that was its first year open. Another school in the Hoosier Academies network, Hoosier Academy Virtual Charter School, closed in 2018 after eight straight years of F grades.
Officials raised concerns that the proposed legislation would single out virtual charter schools — not applying the same consequences for truant students or students who miss state tests at brick-and-mortar schools or fast-growing district-run virtual programs.
“It just doesn’t seem very fair,†said Jeff Kwitowski, senior vice president of public affairs for K12 Inc., the national for-profit online education company that manages Hoosier Academy and Insight. “If it’s a good policy to do it, do it across the board.â€
Officials also pointed out that a law approved last year already requires virtual charter schools to withdraw truant students and report attendance policies to their local oversight agencies.
In addition, state education officials are working on new rules for online programs that could craft mandates for onboarding, tracking attendance, and engaging students, though it’s unclear how far those regulations could go. The state board of education expects to discuss potential new rules later this year.
DeLaney said his proposal offers “a way to honestly monitor the virtuals. [Officials] don’t have to insult them, but they can put them under a limitation that’s effective.â€
Despite last year’s fraud allegations at Indiana Virtual School and Indiana Virtual Pathways Academy, state lawmakers were poised to skip addressing virtual schools this session until Delaney tacked these last-minute provisions onto another education bill about enrollment.
House education leader Bob Behning, R-Indianapolis, had said he wanted to see the results of pending state and federal investigations into the two troubled virtual charter schools before considering new legislation.
The late addition of virtual school matters means there wasn’t a chance for much public debate, but it could get more discussion as the bill moves to the Senate for consideration.
Still, the Democratic-led proposal received an unusual show of bipartisan support in the Republican-controlled House.
After his party shot down a flurry of Democratic suggestions, the Republican lawmaker behind the enrollment bill asked his colleagues to back DeLaney’s addition to virtual charter schools: “I hope you vote for it,†Rep. Robert Cherry said.
Delaney paused, unsure.
“He … he said he liked it, Ed,†House Speaker Brian Bosma explained to a bewildered DeLaney, prompting laughter in the chamber.
The virtual school provisions passed 93-0. Republicans, including Behning, backed the proposal “to send a message,†he said, “that there are concerns.â€
The Board of School Trustees of the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation will meet in executive session at 4:30 p.m. on Monday, February 10, 2020, in the John H. Schroeder Conference Centre at the EVSC Administration Building, 951 Walnut, IN 47713, Evansville, IN.
The session will be conducted according to Senate Enrolled Act 313, Section 1, I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1, as amended. The purpose of the meeting is for discussion of one or more of the following: collective bargaining, (2)(A); initiation of litigation or litigation that is either pending or has been threatened specifically in writing, (2)(B); purchase or lease of property, (2)(D); for discussion of the assessment, design, and implementation of school safety and security measures, plans, and systems (3); and job performance evaluation of individual employees, (9); to train school board members with an outside consultant about the performance of the role of the members as public officials (11).
Beginning at 5:30 PM, the Board will call upon those who have completed and submitted a Request for Public Comment form and the regular meeting of the School Board will commence immediately following in the EVSC Board Room, the same address.
University of Southern Indiana’s freshman Zach Barton earned an NCAA II provisional qualifying mark, as three other Screaming Eagles scored, giving the team 19 points at the Tiger Small College Invitational.
Barton known by most for his soccer skills, dazzled the crowds Friday evening as he made his USI track & field debut in the 60 meters. Barton came out blazing with an NCAA II provisional qualifying time of 6.85 seconds. This mark won him the event and gave the Screaming Eagles 10 points. Barton’s 60m time currently ranks T-25th in the nation and second in the Great Lakes Valley Conference. If that wasn’t enough Barton also set a new track, meet, and school record all at once. Barton bested Tom Cunningham’s time of 6.89 in 2009 to vault him to the top of the USI record book. Senior teammate Silaf Harris followed close behind with a time of 7.29 adding six more points to the Eagles’ total. Harris’s time vaulted him into a tie-for-fourth all-time in USI history.
Another Eagle who scored was senior Almustapaha Silvester, he paced the way for USI in the 800m with a time of 2:03.53 good for sixth place and six points tacked onto the team’s total.
In the field events, freshman Caleb Madden nabbed the sixth place in the shot put with a throw measuring in at 46 feet, 3.25 inches. Madden’s toss was a personal best by almost three feet.
Up Next: USI will travel up north for the GVSU Big Meet on Feb. 14-15 held in Allendale Michigan.