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HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE
Aces set for trip to Carbondale on Thursday
UE has won four of the last six road games against SIU
  Following the weekend trip to Des Moines, the University of Evansville men’s basketball team remains on the road for a Thursday evening contest at Southern Illinois with tip set for 7 p.m. ESPN+ and the Purple Aces Radio Network have the broadcast.
 Setting the Scene
– With the regular season winding down, the Aces trek to Carbondale for their second-to-last road game
– The newly renamed Banterra Center has been kind to the Purple Aces with UE winning four of the last six games
– Entering the 2014 meeting, Evansville dropped 12 road games in a row at SIU before reeling off four in a row between 2014 and 2017
– Despite falling in its last two visits to the facility, the Aces have played well, losing by just 3.5 points per game
– UE hopes to end a 14-game losing streak, which is tied for the longest in its time at the Division I level (2009-10); the largest winless stretch in program history was a 15-game span in 1928-29
Last Time Out
– Two UE player set the career scoring marks on Sunday in an 85-80 loss at Drake inside the Knapp Center
– Sam Cunliffe and Evan Kuhlman each registered their top offensive games with the program
– Cunliffe scored 25 points on 9-of-16 shooting while Kuhlman hit five triples on his way to 17 points
– The Aces led by as many as nine tallies in the first half, but a 15-0 run in the final minute of the first half through the opening four minutes of the second half changed the complexion of the contest
– Evansville knocked down 13 3-pointers in the game, but Drake countered with 32 free throw makes in 42 trips to the line
Just Six Away
– Senior K.J. Riley enters Thursday’s game with 994 points in his UE career
– He is 6 points away from becoming the 50th player in program history to score 1,000 in his career
Stepping Up
– In his biggest performance of the season, Sam Cunliffe scored a career-high 25 points and grabbed six rebounds in the contest at Drake
– Cunliffe passed both his UE scoring mark (21 pts) and career high (23) with the effort
– He converted nine field goals, also a high
– Over the last seven games, Cunliffe leads the squad with 6.0 rebounds per game; he recorded 3.3/game in the first 20 games
– Aside from that number, he has played 33 minutes per game and has recorded 15.0 points; he has seen the floor for at least 26 minutes in each of those contests and set his career mark with 38 versus Loyola
– He has shot 40% or higher in nine of the last 14 games with his most efficient effort coming at Indiana State where he was 5-of-7 from the field
Putting up the Numbers
– Junior Evan Kuhlman joined Sam Cunliffe in posting his career scoring mark against the Bulldogs with 17 points
– He drained six of his 12 attempts overall and was 5-of-9 from outside
– His last six games have seen him post 10.7 points, 5.0 rebounds and 2.2 blocks
– Kuhlman’s low scoring game in the stretch was a 5-point showing against SIU, but he picked his game up in every other way, totaling seven blocks, six rebounds, four steals and three assists
Scouting the Opponent
– Southern Illinois enters Thursday’s game with a 15-12 mark and stand at 9-5 in MVC play
– The Salukis have dropped their last two games following a 7-game win streak; last time out, they fell by a 69-67 final against Bradley
– Marcus Domask continues to pace the Salukis with 14.6 points per game while playing 35.2 minutes
– Domask scored 22 points and had 9 rebounds in the first meeting against UE
– Eric McGill stands with 11.1 points while Barret Benson has 10.8 points and a team-best 5.7 caroms per game
– Benson led everyone with 10 boards in the contest at the Ford Center
TSMA Q1 Event Leading & Coaching – Feb. 20
The Southwest Indiana Chamber Tri-State Manufacturers’ Alliance will host the Q1 Event: Leading & Coaching from 7:30am to 10:30pm at IVY Tech Community College on February 20, 2020.
Modern manufacturing practices have required leaders to transition from a traditional style of top-down supervision into leaders who can lead and coach individuals and teams for improved performance.
Join us and learn from Joe McMurry, Purdue University and Minhthy Nguyen, Ph.D. Vice President, Global R&D at RB as they share their experience coaching and leading employees to be their best.
After attending this session you will be able to:
Identify the skills and attitudes needed to be an effective leader and coach.
Assess your own leadership style and ability.
Identify employee motivators.
Define participative leadership and list its benefits.
Define the coaching process and best practices.
Identify your company/personal leadership purpose.
About Tri-State Manufacturers’ Alliance
The Tri-State Manufacturers’ Alliance (TSMA) is a group of local manufacturers and their support network. The mission of the group is to create a vibrant and attractive manufacturing environment that results in improved revenue and profitability as well as an increase in employment for Tri-State manufacturers. TSMA continually works to fulfill its mission by engaging managers and executives from area manufacturing companies in plant tours, quarterly events, peer group discussions, networking sessions, best practice sharing and other activities.
About Southwest Indiana Chamber
Since 1915, the Southwest Indiana Chamber has been a trusted ally of the regional business community. Today we are one of the state’s largest, strongest, and most impactful nonprofit business organizations, representing a total membership of more than 1,400 businesses, organizations, and agencies. About one-third of members have invested in our organization for 10 or more years. While nearly all major employers in our region invest in the Southwest Indiana Chamber, 71% of our member businesses have 25 or fewer employees.
AG Curtis Hill encourages U.S. Department of Education to protect religious liberties
Attorney General Curtis Hill on Tuesday submitted comments to U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos supporting a proposed rule aimed at ensuring the U.S. Department of Education (DOE) adequately protects the religious liberties of students, teachers and faith-based institutions.
The DOE’s proposed rule follows President Trump’s issuance of Executive Order 13831, which seeks to improve the federal government’s protection of First Amendment rights across all agencies.
“Religious liberties are a cornerstone of American freedom,†Attorney General Hill wrote. “The stated goal and purpose of the Proposed Rule is to bring DOE policies in line with Supreme Court of the United States precedent, guidance from the (U.S.) Attorney General, and President Trump’s Executive Order 13831. All of these emphasize the importance of ensuring that religious liberties are safeguarded and religious persons and groups are not subject to unconstitutional discrimination.â€
The DOE’s press release about its proposed rule, including a link to the text of the rule, may be found online.
“As a matter of broad public interest, the rule simply provides that religious or faith-based organizations stand on equal footing with non-faith-based or secular organizations,†Attorney General Hill wrote in the comments. “Those receiving benefits will have more options and will have the opportunity to choose whether they want to obtain services from a faith-based organization or secular organizations.â€
Two Evansville Residents Arrested for Dealing Methamphetamine
Indiana State Police and Indiana State Parole responded to an apartment located at 1510 Riverside Drive yesterday morning after receiving information that illegal drug activity may be occurring. When officers arrived they found Margaret Gibson, 36, inside apartment A4. Joseph Martin, 37, who is the tenant of the apartment, arrived a short time later. While inside the apartment officers found 12 grams of methamphetamine, digital scales, drug paraphernalia, a loaded .32 caliber handgun and ammunition. Martin and Gibson were arrested and taken to the Vanderburgh County Jail where they are currently being held without bond.
Arrested and Charges:
- Joseph Martin, 37, 1510 Riverside Drive, Apartment A4, Evansville, IN
- Dealing Meth, Level 2 Felony
- Possession of Meth, Level 4 Felony
- Possession of a Firearm by a Serious Violent Felon, Level 5 Felony
- Parole Violation Warrant
- Margaret Gibson, 36, Evansville, IN
- Dealing Meth, Level 2 Felony
- Possession of Meth, Level 4 Felony
Investigating Agencies: Indiana State Police and Indiana State Parole
Appellate Judges Rule For St Vincent Hospital In Medical Malpractice Case
Appellate Judges Rule For ST. Vincent Hospital In Medical Malpractice Case
A man who filed a medical malpractice claim against a doctor and hospital following his surgery for a herniated disc could not convince the Indiana Court of Appeals that he should be permitted to amend his complaint and add a federal claim.
In 2012, Robert Williams visited the St. Vincent Hospital and Health Care Center emergency room after experiencing pain and numbness in his lower back, left buttock, legs, groin, genitals, and perianal area. Following an MRI and examination, Dr. Gavin Inglis determined Williams had a central disc extrusion with central spinal stenosis and muscle strain.
Inglis discharged Williams with instructions to follow up with an orthopedic surgeon in two or three days and prescribed steroids, pain medication and muscle relaxants. Inglis also told Williams to return to the ER if the pain worsened, and Williams returned a few days later. At that point, Williams arranged to have a neurosurgical consult and was subsequently admitted to the hospital for a laminectomy and discectomy.
Williams later filed a medical malpractice complaint against Inglis, the hospital and St. Vincent Emergency Physicians, alleging in part that he had failed to obtain a neurosurgical consult prior to discharging him from the ER during his first visit. Three years later, a unanimous medical review panel concluded the evidence did not support that the defendants had failed to meet the standard of care and that “the conduct complained of was not a factor of [Williams’] resultant damages.â€
In response, Williams successfully filed a motion to amend his trial court complaint to identify the anonymous defendants. He also sought to add a federal claim under the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act or EMTALA, but was denied. The Marion Superior Court eventually granted the hospital’s motion for summary judgment on the medical malpractice claim but denied summary judgment to the hospital on Williams’ respondeat superior claim.
Williams appealed in Robert L Williams v. Gavin H. Inglis, M.D., and St. Vincent Hospital and Health Center, 19A-CT-1438, arguing the trial court erred by denying his motion to amend and by granting partial summary judgment to the hospital.
In affirming the trial court, however, the Indiana Court of Appeals rejected Williams’ argument that the EMTALA was tolled because the State Medical Malpractice Act “prohibited†him from filing an EMTALA claim until after the medical review panel had rendered an opinion on his medical malpractice complaint before the Indiana Department of Insurance.
The panel further concluded Williams’ additional arguments that the trial court should have allowed him to forego the EMTALA statute of limitations and include that claim in his original complaint “have not stuck the desired procedural landing.â€
“Here, Williams attempted to file an EMTALA claim on December 18, 2017, which was more than two years after the date of the alleged violation of EMTALA on December 2, 2012. Thus, Williams’ EMTALA claim was barred by EMTALA’s two-year statute of limitations. Because his proposed amendment to add this claim would have been futile, we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying Williams’ motion to amend his complaint,†Judge Rudolph Pyle III wrote for the appellate court.
Additionally, the appellate court declined to address Williams’ argument that there are material questions of fact regarding whether a violation of EMTALA occurred, among other things.
In support of its decision, the appellate panel noted the trial court found there was “no EMTALA claim contained in [Williams’] Amended Complaint†and that any “argument regarding EMTALA and his claim for negligence per se is MOOT as there is no such claim for the Court to consider.â€
Retiree Saves California’s Oldest Newspaper From Shutting Down
Retiree Saves California’s Oldest Newspaper From Shutting Down
BY JOHN BLACKSTONE
FEBRUARY 17, 2020Â
San Francisco — In the gold rush town of Downieville, population about 300, the Mountain Messenger has been rolling off the presses for 166 years, making it California’s oldest weekly newspaper. Even Mark Twain once wrote for the Messenger.
For the past 30 years, its owner and editor has been Don Russell, a man who was ready to sell, but couldn’t find a buyer until Carl Butz showed up. Â
“I’m just delighted that I find someone stupid enough to take it over,” Russell said. Â
Butz, a former computer programmer who retired to Downieville about a decade ago, bought the Mountain Messenger instead of taking a long vacation. Â
“I thought, ‘God, if I’m going around the world and the paper is gone, I’m going to feel guilty for the rest of my life for not stepping up and, and doing something,'” Butz said.
According to CBS Sacramento, the Messenger prints about 2,400 copies a week and Russell hasn’t raised advertising rates for some customers in 30 years. Owning the paper means doing just about everything. But it’s worth it to Butz.
“This past year, the bank went away. The gas station has been closed. You know that the town is like dying,” he said. Â
Now, the Mountain Messenger will live on. Â
“Local papers can be something to bind together a community,” Butz said.
House Honors Bacon For Decade Of Service In General Assembly
Members of the House of Representatives honored State Rep. Ron Bacon (R-Chandler) today for his years of public service.
“The time spent serving our community in the Indiana House of Representatives has been one of the most rewarding experiences of my life,†Bacon said. “I have done my best to represent the Hoosiers in our area, and I look forward to continuing to serve the people of House District 75 in whatever capacity I am able.â€
Bacon announced his retirement in January and will finish out his term through the Nov. 3 election.
Over the course of his career, Bacon advocated for causes helping the most vulnerable Hoosiers. He championed legislation protecting the sanctity of life, and improving health outcomes for students and athletes.
Several of Bacon’s accomplishments include co-authoring Indiana’s fetal remains law, which was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court, requiring the respectful and humane disposal of aborted babies. Bacon’s efforts also resulted in new laws helping school officials and staff to recognize and treat serious threats to students and athletes like concussions, sudden cardiac arrest and heat exhaustion.
“Representative Bacon has passionately advocated for issues at the Statehouse over the last decade that have made his district and Indiana stronger,†said House Speaker Brian C. Bosma (R-Indianapolis). “It has been a pleasure working with Ron, and I know he will continue serving his community moving forward.â€
Bacon serves as chair of the House Statutory Committee on Interstate and International Cooperation, and is a member of the House Public Health Committee and House Commerce, Small Business and Economic Development Committee.
He and his wife, Karen, reside in northwest Warrick County, and have two daughters and four grandchildren.
U.S. Divers WIN A Total of Nine Medals in Madrid
U.S. Divers Win A Total of Nine Medals in Madrid
Madrid, Spain – On the final day of competition at the FINA Grand Prix in Madrid, Spain, U.S. divers added another three medals to the overall medal count. Jessica Parratto (Dover, N.H.), who won gold the previous day with partner Amy Magaña in the 10-meter synchronized competition, earned another gold in the individual 10-meter event.
“I’m so happy to come away with two gold medals here in Madrid. I still have some details I need to improve on, but I’m most proud of saving my best list for last in my individual final, especially considering the large amounts of reps I did on the 10-meter the day before†said Parratto. “I’m excited to keep my momentum going onto Rostock.â€
Kassidy Cook (The Woodlands, Texas) and Sarah Bacon (Indianapolis, Ind.), who went 1-2 respectively in the individual 3-meter springboard earlier this week, paired up to take gold in the 3-meter synchronized dive.
“Sarah and I were both very happy with our performance today,†said Cook. “Although we missed our last dive, we were still very happy with our overall performance and placing and are ready to improve and gain momentum in Germany. This was a great meet to help us prepare for the World Cup.â€
The Indiana duo of David Boudia (Lafayette, Ind.) and Steele Johnson (Carmel, Ind.) paired up to take silver in the men’s 3-meter synchronized dive.
“Today wasn’t our best performance, but we can walk away from Madrid with a lot of positives, also knowing exactly what needs to be worked on as we continue our pursuit to the World Cup in Tokyo and ultimately the Olympic Games in July,†said Boudia.
In all, USA Diving athletes earned nine medals throughout the week, six gold medals, two silver medals and one bronze.
U.S. divers will travel to Rostock, Germany to compete in the next stop of the FINA Grand Prix February 20-23.