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USI Women’s Hoops picked to finish 4th in GLVC

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Great Lakes Valley Conference Women’s Basketball coaches have predicted a fourth-place finish for University of Southern Indiana Women’s Basketball in 2019-20 according to the GLVC Preseason Coaches’ Poll, which was released this afternoon.

USI, which has finished in the top three of the GLVC regular-season standings in each of the last three years, received 178 points in the poll. Defending league champion Drury University was a unanimous choice to win the league in 2019-20, while Lewis University and Bellarmine University were picked to finish second and third, respectively, with 190 and 181 points.

League newcomer Lindenwood University rounded out the top five picks with 175 points, while Maryville University (1 first-place vote) and Truman State University were each picked to finish in a tie for sixth.

The top 10 teams were rounded out by McKendree University (119 points), the University of Missouri-St Louis (102 points) and William Jewell College (89 points), while the University of Indianapolis (87 points), Southwest Baptist University (74 points), Rockhurst University (71 points), Missouri University of Science & Technology (50 points), the University of Illinois Springfield (41 points) and Quincy University (20 points) rounded out the predictions.

USI, one of two GLVC teams positioned in the Women’s Division II Bulletin Preseason Top 25 poll, went 20-9 overall and 13-5 in league play a year ago. In the last three years, USI has gone 70-19 overall and 45-9 in the GLVC.

The Screaming Eagles return five players from the 2018-19 campaign, including a pair of starters in senior guard Ashley Johnson (Louisville, Kentucky) and junior guard Emma DeHart(Indianapolis, Indiana).

DeHart was fourth on the team in scoring a year ago with 9.6 points per game, while Johnson was fifth with 9.1 points per contest.

Also returning for the Eagles is senior guard/forward Morgan Sherwood (Charleston, Illinois), 6-foot-4 junior center Audrey Turner (Fishers, Indiana) and sophomore forward Ashlynn Brown(Perrysburg, Ohio).

Sherwood battled injury a year ago after playing an important role off the bench as a sophomore during USI’s run to the 2018 NCAA II Tournament. Turner saw her role off the bench expand a year ago and figures to continue that expansion into the 2019-20 season; while Brown averaged 3.1 points per game despite playing just 8.5 minutes per game as a freshman in 2018-19.

USI welcomes six newcomers into the fold in 2019-20, including 5-foot-9 senior guard Kiara Moses (Urbana, Illinois) and 6-foot-1 junior forward Chyna Anthony (New Albany, Indiana).

Moses averaged 4.3 points per game as a junior for Arkansas Tech University a year ago after racking up 152 assists and 131 steals as a sophomore at Kankakee Community College during her sophomore year in 2017-18. Anthony played in 22 games during her first two years of collegiate basketball at Division I Northern Kentucky University.

The Eagles’ freshman class includes 5-foot-4 guard Addy Blackwell (Bloomington, Indiana), 6-foot-0 forwards Hannah Haithcock (Washington Courthouse, Ohio) and Tara Robbe (Wildwood, Missouri), and 5-foot-11 guard/forward Lexi Thompson (Lafayette, Indiana).

Blackwell was a two-time All-State honoree at Bloomington South High School, while Haithcock was a first-team Division II All-Ohio performer after averaging 17 points per game as a senior at Washington High School.

Robbe was a three-time All-Conference and All-District honoree at Lafayette High School (Missouri), where she averaged 15.3 points and 6.5 rebounds per game as a senior in 2018-19. Thompson was an All-Hoosier Conference honoree after averaging 13.1 throughout her four years at Lafayette Central Catholic High School (Indiana).

USI opens the 2019-20 exhibition season October 30 when it travels to Lexington, Kentucky, to take on the University of Kentucky. The Eagles, who also visit Purdue University for an exhibition November 3, begin the regular-season November 13 when they host the University of Central Missouri in the first-ever collegiate basketball game at Screaming Eagles Arena.

2019-20 WOMEN’S BASKETBALL PRESEASON POLL
Pl. Team               Points (1st-place votes)
1. Drury                 225 (15)
2. Lewis                 190
3. Bellarmine            181
 4. Southern Indiana      178
5. Lindenwood            175
6. Maryville             159 (1)
Truman State          159
8. McKendree             119
9. Missouri-St. Louis    102
10. William Jewell         89
11. Indianapolis           87
12. Southwest Baptist      74
13. Rockhurst              71
14. Missouri S&T           50
15. Illinois Springfield   41
16. Quincy                 20

Governor Eric Holcomb Directs Flags To Be Flown at Half-Staff

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Governor Eric J. Holcomb is directing flags across the state to be flown at half-staff for Indiana State Trooper Peter “Bo” Stephan.

Flags should be flown at half-staff from sunrise to sunset on the day of his funeral, Friday, October 18, 2019.

Gov. Holcomb also asks businesses and residents to lower their flags to half-staff on Friday.

 

USI holds off Christian Brothers to capture Don Morris Invitational title

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The University of Southern Indiana men’s golf team finished first of eight teams on Tuesday at the Don Morris Invitational, hosted by Union University.

USI posted a strong 288 in round one Monday eleven strokes better than the next best team, giving the Eagles the tournament lead heading into Tuesday morning.
The Eagles held off Christian Brothers to ultimately capture their first team victory of the fall season.

Sophomore Zach Williams (Mt.Vernon Illinois) led the way with a tied-for-first finish for the Eagles as he carded a 70 and 72 for a two-under-par for the tournament. Williams was edged out by Jaime Jalve of Bethel University in a one-hole playoff to narrowly miss his first collegiate victory.
Senior K.O. Taylor (Madisonville, Kentucky) rounded out the top five individuals with a respectable four-over-par for the tournament.

Junior Nate Caudle (Wayne City, Illinois) also landed inside the top ten nabbing tied-for-sixth place with an eight-over-par tournament total. Caudle led the tournament field after posting an opening round three-under-par 69 which was also the best individual round for USI.

Up next, with the fall season for Eagles concluding Tuesday, USI will shift their focus to the spring season in the upcoming months.

USI takes sixth at the Music City Invitational

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The University of Southern Indiana women’s golf team came away from the Music City Invitational with a sixth-place finish Tuesday afternoon at the Old Fort Golf Club. The Screaming Eagles posted rounds of 314 and 303 in the two-day, 13-team tournament hosted by Trevecca Nazarene University.

Junior Brooke Moser (Leo, Indiana) led the way for the Eagles after posting back-to-back rounds of 74 for a four-over effort. Moser’s 148 total performance landed the junior eighth out of the 72 participants.

The Eagles notched two top-40 finishers to follow Moser. Junior Kiley Swisher (Williamsport, Indiana) and sophomore Hannah Herma (Demotte, Indiana) posted totals of 153 (+9) and 157 (+13), respectively. Herma’s second-round card of 75 and Swisher’s second-round 76 both represent their respective low-rounds of the 2019-20 season.

Senior Abbey Leighty (Mt. Carmel, Illinois) and freshman Kelci Katterhenry (Newburgh, Indiana) rounded-out the five Eagles on the trip with totals of 159 (+15) and 162 (+18), respectively.

USI Women’s Golf closes the fall schedule on Monday when it visits the Fair Oaks Golf Club for the McKendree Fall Intercollegiate.

CAN-AM LEAGUE AND FRONTIER LEAGUE ANNOUNCE HISTORIC MERGER

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CAN-AM LEAGUE AND FRONTIER LEAGUE ANNOUNCE HISTORIC MERGER

New Alliance Will Create The Largest Independent League in Professional Baseball

Starting in 2020, The 14-Team League Will Play A 96 Game Schedule

WASHINGTON, Pa – Today the Can-Am League and the Frontier League are announcing a historic merger resulting in the creation of the largest league in all of Independent Professional Baseball. The newly formed Frontier League will begin to play in 2020 with a soon to be revealed 96-game schedule spanning from mid-May through September.

The all-new league will be comprised of all five Can-Am League organizations and nine members of the Frontier League, totaling 14 clubs in two divisions. The former Can-Am League clubs – including the New Jersey Jackals, Quebec Capitales, Rockland Boulders, Sussex County Miners and Trois Rivieres Aigles – along with the Washington Wild Things and Lake Erie Crushers of the Frontier League will play in the Can-Am Division. The Midwestern Division will consist of the Evansville Otters, Florence Freedom, Gateway Grizzlies, Joliet Slammers, Schaumburg Boomers, Southern Illinois Miners, and the Windy City ThunderBolts.

“I couldn’t be more proud of everyone’s efforts behind making this historic merger a reality,” Can-Am League Chairman of the Board Al Dorso said. “It’s been a long time coming and yet the final stages came together overnight. I can’t wait for what will be our first Frontier League meetings as we implement our vision of fostering exciting baseball and expansion into new markets.” 

Through this groundbreaking pact, the Frontier League will bring together strong ownership groups, teams, and facilities from each league. Plus the league will feature some of the longest-running teams in the industry’s history. The Evansville Otters began to play in 1995 and the New Jersey Jackals were born in 1998. Plus several major markets will be well represented through this landmark accord such as New York, Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Quebec City, and St. Louis. As a result, the newly formed association will be an even more attractive beacon for cultivating and developing professional baseball talent.

“It has been my honor to be a part of this groundbreaking deal and I can’t thank all parties involved enough for getting us to this historic moment,” Can-Am League Executive Director Kevin Winn said. “I look forward to seeing where our newly formed alliance heads next and all the Independent Professional Baseball history that’s yet to be written.”

Frontier League Commissioner, Bill Lee, who has held that position since 1994, will continue in that role. He states, “I am extremely excited about this merger announcement. Not only does it strengthen the Frontier League, but it strengthens Independent Professional Baseball as a whole. I want to thank everyone from both Leagues that have worked so hard to make this happen.”

The oldest Independent Professional Baseball League in the country, the Frontier League began to play in 1993 and just finished its 27th consecutive season. Over this remarkable span, more than 1000 players have been sold to MLB teams and 38 of those players have advanced to play in Major League Baseball.

The Can-Am League’s predecessor was the Northeast League that began play in 1995. Prior to the 2005 season, the Can-Am League name was officially adopted. During these years, 137 players have been sold to MLB clubs and 16 of them played in Major League Baseball. In addition, two Can-Am League umpires have reached the Majors.

 

EPD REPORT

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EPD REPORT

Gannett/Gatehouse Merger Has State Journal-Register Journalists Asking Community To Help

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Gannett/Gatehouse Merger Has State Journal-Register Journalists Asking Community To Help

By Benjamin Cox of The State Journal-Register

Local media continues to take hit after hit nationwide. Small-town newspapers and radio are being bought for pennies on the dollar nationwide for the sole purpose of turning corporate profits. In 1996 the Telecommunications Act changed radio landscape dramatically, allowing for deregulation, which has led to rapid consolidation in the radio industry. Currently, about 10 parent companies control about two-thirds of the airwaves. Newspapers are currently experiencing the same issue.

In Springfield today, NewsGuild-CWA hopes to raise awareness of the issue of the 50 GateHouse Media newspapers in 14 states will be losing local coverage due to a merger with Gannett. Chairman of the local NewsGuild in Springfield, Dean Olsen, who writes for the Springfield State Journal-Register hopes that the event will raise awareness that if local media goes away, the effect is profound. “We really believe we need to preserve a local newspaper. To do that, you have to have local jobs with local people. We are dealing with a company, GateHouse Media, that has really been ramping up its interest in cutting back on news operations. We believe that’s unnecessary and that the company should be focused on journalism, not so much on padding their profit margin. We are leafleting out in front of those newspaper outlets today to tell GateHouse that we believe they should not be gutting news operations because local journalism is what readers and listeners want. We want to preserve that.”

Olsen explains why local media is so important. “Local news coverage is particularly important now because GateHouse is looking to merge with another huge newspaper organization called Gannett. As part of that merger, GateHouse has told federal regulators that it plans to cut as much as $300 million a year from this combined company. We are just worried that there are going to be even more cuts. All of these cuts will affect individuals in Springfield but they also affect readers and the public throughout Central Illinois because we are one of the larger news operations. The watchdog function that we serve as journalists serves the public. It’s been proven in studies that there is a value in taxation, in quality of life, by having an aggressive press. It can be a watchdog over local institutions, local governments and we don’t want that watchdog function to be lost.”

Olsen says that he’s unaware locally how many journalists will eventually be cut after the merger. He says GateHouse has already cut several managers who are not covered by the News Guild. However, if journalists are eventually laid off he expects local coverage to evaporate. He says that the company has always told employees that the Journal-Register has been profitable but the profits haven’t stayed locally, but rather to corporate ownership and in stockholder dividends sent to the State of New York.

Olsen gives readers a pathway to petition ownership to stop the local cuts and preserve local media coverage. “We have had many readers complain to us that they are being charged more for their subscriptions, either online or in print, and are getting less and less out of it. We are calling on the community to tell GateHouse that they need to stop the cutting and preserve journalism. We are asking them to go to our website which is www.springfieldguild.wordpress.com or on Facebook at Save the SJR. There’s a link to a website where you can automatically send an email to a top GateHouse official about this problem. That’s what we are calling on people to do with this leafleting.”

Olsen says the danger of large conglomerated media’s homogenized news coverage is a lack of a good explanation that only local media can provide. “When you don’t have people who are trained on how to gather the facts, how to present the facts in an unbiased way to provide a needed analysis; you just get a bunch of opinions being thrown back and forth on social media. It doesn’t brink the community together. It actually hinders communities from solving problems because issues aren’t fully explained. That’s our concern. When you lack the local flavor in a news organization like ours, the overall community suffers not just the people that work at the newspaper.”

The mega-merger between Gannett and GateHouse Media is expected to be completed by Thanksgiving. The news media market products across 265 locations throughout the United States are expected to be under one umbrella by January 1st.

Commentary: It Doesn’t Have To Be This Way

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By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com 

INDIANAPOLIS – Two moments made me miss two friends.

One came when President Donald Trump spoke at a rally in Minnesota. The president of the United States said that the only reason his opponent Joe Biden had been a good vice president was that Biden had been willing to kiss former President Barack Obama’s, uh, posterior.

The crowd roared its approval.

Others were appalled.

Some of Trump’s critics noted the crassness of the president’s language. They said it was beneath the dignity of his office.

Others found it ironic that a man whose appetite for obsequiousness and flattery among his own underlings is endless would criticize someone else for bootlicking.

Few noted, though, that it degraded not just the speaker, but the nation and our notions of shared citizenship.

The other moment took place when Indiana Superintendent of Public Instruction Jennifer McCormick, a Republican, introduced Indiana Sen. Eddie Melton, D-Gary, when Melton announced he is running for governor.

Republicans have been outraged that McCormick has been supportive of Melton. When the two went on a listening tour to hear from parents and students how Indiana’s schools might be improved, the chair of the state GOP released a statement that would have to cool down several hundred degrees to be considered merely scorching.

Doubtless, because these are relentlessly partisan times, there also are Democrats who are less than thrilled that Melton is making nice with a Republican.

This is the point where I shake my head and think of two departed friends, the late U.S. Rep. Andy Jacobs Jr., D-Indiana, and four-term Indianapolis Mayor Bill Hudnut, a Republican.

The two men ran against each other twice – in 1972 and 1974. Bill won the first campaign. Andy captured the second one. (I’m going to use their first names because they both were friends of mine.)

Those days, like these days, were contentious ones. The Vietnam War, struggles over civil rights and other seismic changes in the American experience frightened and angered people.

And then, as now, America had a president in the White House who sought to divide rather than unite the country. Richard Nixon called his political approach “positive polarization” and built enemies’ lists of fellow citizens he wanted to destroy.

Bill and Andy weren’t built that way.

Both went into politics because they liked people, including those with whom they disagreed. They saw government as a place where free people could work out their differences and build better communities and lives for everyone.

I remember Andy telling me once how he disliked hearing political candidates say they would “fight” for this or that goal or program.

“What’s wrong with saying, ‘I’ll work for this’ rather than ‘I’ll fight for this?’” he said.

His point was clear: Why do we have to reduce everything to an us versus them dynamic – particularly when people in the “them” camp are our neighbors and fellow citizens?

In the two races in which they ran against each other, they often drove to debates and joint campaign appearances together. Before they were called to the stage, they’d sit in the back of the room together. Both superb raconteurs, they’d be laughing out loud, trading stories and jokes.

Their friendship continued for the rest of their lives.

After Bill became mayor, he often had to travel to Washington on city business. When he did, he stayed at Andy’s apartment. When Bill and his wife Bev had their son, Chris, Andy’s wife Kim sewed the baby a birthing gown.

Their friendship didn’t mean that they didn’t have political differences.

They did.

Bill told me once about the time Andy called the revamping and repurposing of Union Station that happened on Bill’s watch as mayor in Indianapolis “a turkey.” It stung, Bill said.

But then he chuckled.

“He might have had a point,” Bill said. “It might have been a turkey.”

And that is the point.

Bill Hudnut and Andy Jacobs were different men, but they understood the forces that unite us – friendship and a shared love of country – are greater than those dividing us. Because they liked and listened to each other, they could learn from each other.

Andy and Bill are gone now, but they still can teach us.

That’s what true leaders do.

John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

Kentucky Downs Plans For 3-Part Expansion Is Unexpected News For Ellis Park

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Kentucky Downs Plans For 3-Part Expansion

  • Updated
Kentucky Downs plans for 3-part expansion
The Franklin-Simpson Planning and Zoning Commission gave preliminary approval to Kentucky Downs during their meeting on Oct. 1 to start construction on an expansion plan covering three phases.

“The expansion will only enhance Kentucky Downs’ role as an economic engine for the Franklin-Simpson area and beyond. Just the first phase is expected to add more jobs to our workforce of 300,” said Kentucky Downs’ Director of Marketing John Wholihan.

Denny Griffin, executive director of the Franklin-Simpson Industrial Authority, said Kentucky Downs is one of the larger employers in Simpson County right now.

 

The first of three phases will add 18,000 square feet to the south end of the facility on U.S. 31-W South with an estimated investment of approximately $20 million to $25 million. The new building will have more gaming area as well as more food, beverage and entertainment options.

\According to a press release from Kentucky Downs, construction is expected to begin on the first phase in the next few weeks with the completion date estimated before the 2020 race meets in early September. This expansion will be the largest construction project on the racetrack grounds since the track opened in 1990.

The existing building will undergo its own renovation during the expansion, which includes transforming part of the current gaming floor into restaurants and adding other food and beverage outlets, the press release said.

“We are looking forward to the expansion and renovation of our existing facility,” Wholihan said. “It just demonstrates the new owners’ commitment to making Kentucky Downs a prominent regional destination. We want everyone to know us as a go-to stop year-round for gaming and entertainment in addition to our famous September live horse racing.”

The expansion and renovations will nearly double the gaming operation at Kentucky Downs. Currently,y there are 753 Historical Horse Racing terminals, after the expansion and renovations there will be 1,200 terminals.

Two prominent Nevada entrepreneurs Ron Winchell and Marc Falcone purchased Kentucky Downs earlier this year and created a new company, Kentucky Downs LLC.

Winchell said the goal is to “make it bigger and better pretty much all the way around, whether it’s the main building, the racing, everything.”

Kentucky Downs must now receive final planning and zoning commission approval for the expansion, which will be addressed at a future meeting.