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Winders earns another All-America honor as Eagles finish 21st at nationals

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Sophomore Titus Winders earned All-America honors for the second consecutive year as No. 12 University of Southern Indiana Men’s Cross Country finished 21st out of 34 teams at the NCAA Division II Championships Saturday afternoon.

Winders completed the 10-kilometer course in 30 minutes, 8.40 seconds, good enough for 13th in the 263-competitor field. His All-America honor makes him the sixth runner in program history to earn back-to-back All-America awards on the cross country course and the first since Johnnie Guy won a program-record three straight All-America awards from 2013-15.

As a team, the Eagles finished with 499 points, just 33 shy of a top-15 finish. Senior Austin Nolan finished 99th to aid the Screaming Eagles’ efforts, while juniors Wyat Harmon and Gavin Prior were 141st and 163rd, respectively. Senior Nathan Hall was 167th to round out the Eagles’ top five finishers, while junior Grady Wilkinson and senior Javan Winders were 181st and 249th, respectively, to complete USI’s lineup.

Top-ranked Colorado School of Mines won the team title with 57 points, while NCAA II Midwest Region Champion Grand Valley State University was fourth with 177 points. American International freshman Ezra Mutai was the individual champion with a time of 29:31.20.

 

U OF E Men’s Basketball Falls In Bahamas Opener

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Aces Lost By 85-68 Final On Friday

East Carolina scored the first nine points on Friday and did not look back, finishing with an 85-68 win over the University of Evansville men’s basketball team in the Islands of the Bahamas Showcase.

Noah Frederking and Sam Cunliffe led Evansville (3-2) with 17 points apiece.  Both connected on five triples apiece.  Artur Labinowicz finished the night with 12.  With the loss, UE will take on George Washington on Saturday at 1 p.m. CT

“They played harder than us; we were also selfish,” Aces head coach Walter McCarty said.  “Our guys need to understand that after beating Kentucky, we have a target on us.  Our guys did not come to play tonight.  When we do not play the right way, it gets contagious.  We need to regroup and be ready for George Washington tomorrow.”

Evansville did not get the start it was looking for as East Carolina (2-3) jumped out to a 9-0 lead in the first four minutes.  The Pirates forced five UE turnovers during that span. Artur Labinowicz put UE on the board with a pair of free throws, but the ECU run continued as they took a 16-2 lead.  Evansville missed its first 10 shots of the night.

Sam Cunliffe hit a 3-pointer for UE’s first field goal of the game with 9:27 left in the half.  His basket started a 9-0 run as the Seattle native drained another triple before Noah Frederking drained a three to make it a 16-11 game.

The Pirates quickly bounced back with the next four points before another UE run cut their deficit to just a pair in the final minute.  Trailing 23-15, K.J. Riley connected on his first shot of the game before Frederking’s second triple capped off a 5-0 run.  Riley added a layup with 55 ticks left in the half that made it a 28-26 game.  The Pirates had the final basket of the half and entered halftime up by a 30-26 tally.

After East Carolina extended their lead in the opening minutes of the second half, Cunliffe continued his precision from outside, knocking down another triple to make it a 36-32 contest.  The momentum did not last too long as the Pirates were able to regroup and extend their lead back to 13 points at 53-40.

UE continued to hit 3-pointers to stay within striking distance with Labinowicz, Marcus Henderson and Shamar Givance each hitting a triple to cut the ECU lead to 10.  Over the final minutes, the Aces could not get over the hump and fell by a final of 85-68.

Jayden Gardner led the Pirates with 28 points and 10 rebounds.  He was 11-for-17 from the floor.  Tristan Newton scored 18 with Seth LeDay and Brandon Suggs posting 12 and 10, respectively.

East Carolina shot 53.6% for the game while holding Evansville to 38.0%.  The Pirates also finished with a 42-23 edge on the glass.

 

Samy, Steele Headline Day Two in Knoxville

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The No. 4 Indiana men’s swimming team overtook No. 12 Georgia for the overall team lead, while the No. 16 women’s team fell to fourth place at Tennessee Invitational at the Jones Aquatic Center after posting a season-best 26 NCAA B Cut times on Friday evening.

 

Both diving teams opened the 2019 House of Champions event in Indianapolis, hosted by IUPUI. Both groups tackled the platform dive for the first time this season. Junior Mory Gould claimed fourth place with an NCAA Zone Qualifying score of 307.80 to lead all Hoosiers.

TEAM SCORES

Men

No. 4 Indiana – 655 points

No. 12 Georgia – 648 points

No. 8 Tennessee – 555.5 Points

No. 10 Virginia – 359.5 points

 

Women

No. 2 Tennessee – 737 points

No. 8 Georgia – 663.5 points

No. 4 Virginia – 498.5 points

No. 16 Indiana – 456 points

HOOSIER WINNERS

MEN

Kai Bathurst – 800 freestyle relay (6:22.79)

Brendan Burns – 800 freestyle relay (6:22.79)

Jakub Karl – 800 freestyle relay (6:22.79)

Mohamed Samy – 200 freestyle (1:33.65); 800 freestyle relay (6:22.79)

Jacob Steele – 100 backstroke (46.35)

WOMEN

None.

 

EPD REPORT

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EPD REPORT

Democratic Attorneys General Association’s Litmus Test Doesn’t Meet Hoosier Standards

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The Democratic Attorney General Association (DAGA) recently announced that they would only financially support and endorse candidates who support pro-choice policies. In order to gain this financial and political assistance, a candidate will be required to make a public statement declaring their support of abortion rights.

“It is no surprise that the Democratic Attorneys General Association intends to only support and provide resources to candidates that fully embrace their policies of abortion on demand without restriction,” said Rob Burgess, Campaign Manager for Curtis Hill for Indiana. “All Hoosiers need to be on the lookout for this ultra liberal organization to recruit an Indiana Democrat that will adhere and march in lockstep with their policies rather than the beliefs and values of those who call the Hoosier State home.”

DAGA is the first national party committee to place such a litmus test on candidates according to The New York Times. In contrast, Attorney General Curtis Hill is proudly pro-life and fighting to defend life at every stage, starting with the most vulnerable. Recently, the Attorney General worked to return the fetal remains of nearly 2,500 unborn children to Indiana.

They were located within the home and vehicles of the abortionist who conducted the procedures. At this time, those fetal remains are being securely stored until they can be laid to rest in a humane and respectful manner as legally required by a 2016 law that overwhelming passed the Indiana General Assembly.

Senator Braun’s Weekly Update

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THIS WEEK, SENATOR BRAUN weighed in on President Trump “strongly considering” testifying in the impeachment hearings, pushed for the USMCA trade deal and put pressure on Democratic members in red states with farmers who need it, responded to testimony from EU Ambassador Gordon Sondland, and applauded President Trump for taking bold action on healthcare price transparency similar to a bill he introduced to ensure American patients know what they’re paying for before they pay it at the hospital and the pharmacy counter.

 

This week, President Trump said he was “strongly considering” testifying in House Democrats’ impeachment hearings. Senator Braun joined Kennedy on her Fox Business show to discuss the impeachment hearings and whether President Trump should testify.

KENNEDY: “Should President Trump testify?”

BRAUN: “President Trump is clearly quite confident that there’s no case against him, and he’s going to push the point that nothing else is getting done here.

“This goes back to when he was first elected in 2016 and they’ve been trying to get rid of him one way or another since then. He would do well either way.”

 

Senator Braun joined David Westin on Bloomberg‘s Balance of Power to discuss the political forces pulling USMCA closer to the finish line, specifically pressure on Democratic Representatives in red states where farmers are clamoring for the trade deal.

 

Senator Braun was quoted in POLITICO‘s piece on Ambassador Gordon Sondland’s testimony, charging that the impeachment plan is hitting a brick wall now that all the facts are out and all testimony is further interpretation and presumptions about those public facts.

“This thing looks like it kind of crescendoed maybe three weeks ago,” said Sen. Mike Braun (R-Ind.). “There’s been nothing that’s changed the dynamic, even with Sondland’s discussion today. His is an interpretation, he was presuming.”

 

Senator Braun joined Stu Varney on Varney & Co. to applaud President Trump’s decision to force hospitals and insurance companies to disclose their secret negotiated rates and publicize their costs.

The executive action mirrors a bill from Senator Braun called S.913, the True Price Act, which would require health insurers to disclose negotiated rates—including any cost-sharing obligations for consumers—for health care services covered under their health plans to increase transparency and competition, putting the decision-making power into the hands of the American consumer.

 

Senator Braun joined Terry Meiners of WHAS in Louisville to talk about the impeachment hearings, Ambassador Sondland’s testimony, term limits, and Governor Matt Bevin.

 

Deaconess Aquatic Center Update

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Deaconess Aquatic Center Update From Friends Of Mayor Winnecke
This week the Evansville Parks Board accepted final construction bids for the Deaconess Aquatic Center. The action was a big step forward for the project, as construction contracts can now be prepared and considered for approval at the December 4th meeting of the Parks Board.
Approval of the contracts will then allow contractors to begin work, which is expected to break ground this December with work lasting 14-18 months.
The $28.4 million state-of-the-art facility will be located in Garvin Park, a central location that is in the middle of Jacobsville which is attracting new housing developments and investment along the North Main Street corridor.
Throughout the process to replace Lloyd Pool, the Mayor’s Aquatic Task Force has worked diligently to ensure Evansville builds a facility for everyone – competitive and recreational swimmers. The “stretch 50” pool will be able to accommodate local swim and diving teams while swim programming will be the primary focus of the recreational pool. And to be honest, the spray park will simply be for fun.
While construction begins, development of swim programming, forming operational partnerships, recruitment of events and private fundraising will all continue so that the Deaconess Aquatic Center becomes a top destination for swimmers.
A tremendous amount of work has taken place to get to this point and the thank you list is very, very long. However, it is important to recognize the leadership of Mayor Lloyd Winnecke, the support from our Olympian Lilly King and the financial investments from our private donors to which Deaconess Health Systems has led the pack.
In the coming months, more updates will be shared as progress happens on this exciting facility.
It is still our goal to have a groundbreaking in December so that work can proceed through the winter season. Behind the scenes, the Fundraising subcommittee has been working hard to raise private funds and soliciting interest from groups/events seeking to use the facility.
Thank you for your support!

Protecting Hoosier Students

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Protecting Hoosier students by Wendy McNamara
Our children deserve to be safe. While concerns about bullying and cyberbullying continue to grow, I remain committed to help achieve that goal. Bullying comes in many forms – physical, verbal, social and cyber – and can even cross the line into criminal behavior. As an educator, I know how unnerving the possibility of this situation can be.

There are laws to prevent this type of behavior including a law I authoredthat adds cellphones to the definition of cyberbullying and requires the Department of Education, State Board of Education and school corporations to clearly identify resources for cyberbullying on their website.

All schools must adopt policies prohibiting bullying and determine appropriate responses, and must establish investigation and reporting procedures. School administrations are required to distribute a discipline plan to students and parents.Students in grades 1-12 undergo age appropriate, research-based instruction on bullying prevention. State law directs schools to quickly reach out to both parents of the involved students.

Click here to learn more on how to recognize, prevent and report bullying. The Indiana Department of Education also maintains a resource page on anti-bullying school policy if you have additional questions.

 

NOTHING’S PLENTY FOR ME

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Gavel Gamut By Jim Redwine

NOTHING’S PLENTY FOR ME

For those of you who read last week’s Gavel Gamut and are wondering about Peg’s and my cinematic futures let me report we have not yet received a call from Martin Scorsese. I know he has been busy. We remain both confident and hopeful. However, as we await stardom life goes on. Specifically, what we have going on is the interminable saga of our move from JPeg Ranch Hoosier in Posey County, Indiana to JPeg Osage Ranch in Osage County, Oklahoma.

Peg and I bought a cabin in Osage County last December. Our plan was to vacation there occasionally as we have numerous family members in Oklahoma. What we have discovered is the truism of the ancient admonition, “Where your treasure is there will your heart be also.” And as our modest treasure has ever so increasingly been “invested” in the cabin we have slowly shifted our focus to the Tall Grass Prairie. Let me say the simple pleasures described by Laura Ingalls Wilder in her Little House on the Prairie books have been put in jeopardy by our transition.

We are in the throes of our tenth round trip of 1,200 miles with a loaded trailer and pickup.  (This time we have graduated to a U-Haul, my guess is Atlas Van Lines is in our future). At first we amused ourselves with the bucolic image of The Beverly Hillbillies with junk piled high as they headed west. After a couple of trips the analogy became too apt. Now we feel more closely aligned with the fate of Sisyphus. We are not sure why, but it seems the completion of one trip only guarantees we must start another. And what we have discovered is that no matter what household item we need in one place is always in the other. We now have duplicates of everything from can openers to skillets.

Peg and I used to wonder how other people had such difficulty with everyday tasks such as how does one keep track of where they put what. Now we get it. However, the question we now most often ask one another is, “Why did you ever buy that?” We are continually discovering items that have not surfaced in years, many still in their original packaging. Of course, we must pack and move them anyway. This phenomenon has tested our ability to refrain from asking one another, “Can we just throw that away?” 

I have found that a great deal of what Peg holds to be indispensable is really superfluous. And I resent her attitude about many of the items in my Man Cave; wait until we start on the junk in her Girl Cave. She does not understand that I might need some of what she calls worthless items someday. I suggest we ask the husbands of the world to fairly judge what should be placed in the Conestoga and what should be dumped along the trail.

What Peg and I do agree on is the mystery of how over thousands of years we have gone from maintaining what is truly essential to accumulating thousands of items we forget we have. George Gershwin’s old song goes:

♫ I got plenty of nothing

And nothing is plenty for me.

I got no car.

I got no mule.

Got no misery. ♫

Porgy and Bess (1935)

Well, paring down to the essentials is a fine thought but I must end this column as Peg is calling out to me to load another box onto the trailer.

For more Gavel Gamut articles go to www.jamesmredwine.com

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