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HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE

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Specimen Collector
InSource Diagnostics 3.9/5 rating   7 reviews  – Henderson, KY
As a Specimen Collector, you will be a critical part of the quantitative drug testing analysis performed by our client….
Easily apply
Feb 15
Veterinary Receptionist
West Side Pet Hospital – Evansville, IN
Responsive employer
No phone calls please. We are currently hiring for a full time receptionist for a busy veterinary clinic. Experience is preferred….
Easily apply
Feb 15

ADOPT A PET

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Mia’s a sweet female Lab mix! She is well-mannered on a leash and energetic, but not as extremely high-strung as many young Labs. She’s silly and sweet and would do great in an active home. Mia’s adoption fee is $110 and includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!

Hill and Hall excel in road game at Loyola

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UE falls by a 70-58 final in Chicago

 Marty Hill and John Hall recorded double figure outings, but Loyola shot over 69% in the first half and used the big start to finish with a 70-58 victory over the University of Evansville men’s basketball team on Wednesday night inside Gentile Arena.

Hill led the Aces (10-18, 4-11 MVC) with 18 points in an efficient 7-of-10 effort while knocking down four triples.  Hall posted 13 points while connecting on three triples.  Loyola (17-11, 10-5 MVC) saw three players reach double figures, led by Marques Townes, who scored 21.

“We came out in the second half and really fought, I’m very proud of our guys,” UE head coach Walter McCarty said.  “We are building this the right way.  If we continue to play defense the way we did in the second half, we could really turn this around.”

Loyola scorched the nets in the first half, shooting 69.6% overall while going 7-for-9 from outside to take 43-29 lead at halftime.  Evansville had a pair of early leads, but with the Aces up 4-3, Loyola took control, going up 8-4.  UE got back within a pair, but the Ramblers added seven in a row to go up 15-8 at the 12:26 mark.

The largest lead of the period for the Ramblers came with just over five minutes remaining when they found themselves up 32-18.  A Dainius Chatkevicius layup and a Marty Hill triple cut the deficit to nine before LUC pushed its lead back to 14 at the break.  Hill paced the Aces with 11 points in the opening stanza.

Evansville’s defense improved in the second half, but Loyola was able to add to its lead, opening up a 53-36 advantage with 12 minutes remaining.  Marty Hill continued his lights out shooting, drilling his fourth 3-pointer to cut the deficit back to 14.

After the Ramblers pushed their lead to 18 points, the Aces had one more run in them as the second John Hall triple of the night cut the LUC lead back to 12 (61-49) with five minutes remaining.  Hall’s third long ball got Evansville within 11 tallies with three minutes remaining before Hill banked one in from the free throw line a minute later to make it a 65-56 game.

That would be as close as UE would get as their tenacious comeback came up short with Loyola finishing with 70-58 win.  The Ramblers finished the night shooting 55.1% while UE was at 45.5%.

Another road game is on tap this weekend when the Aces travel to Bradley for a 1 p.m. game on Saturday.

 

SICK OF WINTER

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Hoosiers Win 200 Medley Relay Title on First Night of Big Ten Championships

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The No. 17-ranked Indiana University women’s swimming and diving team got the 2019 Big Ten Women’s Championships off to a fast start on Wednesday night at the Counsilman Billingsley Aquatic Center in Bloomington, Ind.

After the first two events, the Hoosiers sit in second place overall with a total of 114 points. Michigan leads the way with 120, while Wisconsin, Minnesota and Ohio State are tied for third with 106 points.

The Hoosiers started the week off with a title, as the team of Morgan Scott, Lilly King, Christine Jensen and Shelby Koontz won the 200 medley relay with a NCAA A cut and CBAC pool record time of 1:34.71. IU has won the last two 200 medley relay championships and three of the last four. The time is also the second-fastest in Indiana history.

Scott got the Hoosiers off to the lead with a 35.66 backstroke leg and was followed by a blistering 50 breaststroke split from King, who touched the wall in a remarkable time of 25.36. King’s time is the fastest 200 medley relay breaststroke split in history. Jensen and Koontz swam well to hold off second-place Michigan in the final two legs to secure the crown for Indiana.

In the 800 freestyle relay, the IU team of Maria Paula Heitmann, Noelle Peplowski, Bailey Andison and Morgan Scott took fifth overall with a time of 7:07.41.

The 2019 Big Ten Women’s Championships continue on Thursday with the first full day of competition. The action gets underway at 11:00 a.m. ET with the prelims of the 500 freestyle, 200 IM, 50 freestyle and 1-meter dive.

For all the latest on Indiana University women’s swimming and diving, be sure to follow the t

Changes made to USI Softball Schedule

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University of Southern Indiana Softball has been forced to make changes to its schedule this weekend as the Midwest Region Crossover at Deaconess Sports Park has been canceled due to the heavy rain the Evansville area has had as well as the expected rain that is forecasted for the weekend.

The Screaming Eagles (2-4) will head north to play games Friday and Saturday at Grand Park in Westfield, Indiana. USI will take on Ferris State University and Ohio Dominican University Friday at 11 a.m. (CST) and 1 p.m., respectively, before taking on Tiffin University and Northwood University Saturday at noon and 2 p.m.

Live stats, if available, will be accessible at GoUSIEagles.com, while live updates throughout the contest can be found on USI’s Twitter page (@USIAthletics).

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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 Below are the felony cases to be filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office today.

Detriona Nicole Dillard: Possession of methamphetamine (Level 6 Felony), Dealing in marijuana (Class A misdemeanor), Possession of a synthetic drug or synthetic drug lookalike substance (Class A misdemeanor), Possession of paraphernalia (Class C misdemeanor)

Dusty W. Chumley: Possession of methamphetamine (Level 5 Felony), Possession of a synthetic drug or synthetic drug lookalike substance (Class A misdemeanor)

Jeffrey Leon Fields: Possession of methamphetamine (Level 6 Felony)

Christopher James Estrada: Failure to register as a sex or violent offender (Level 5 Felony)

Timothy Paul Jones: Criminal confinement (Level 6 Felony), Intimidation (Level 6 Felony), Neglect of a dependent (Level 6 Felony), Domestic battery (Class A misdemeanor)

Christopher Allen May: Carrying a handgun without a license (Level 5 Felony), Possession of methamphetamine (Level 5 Felony), Possession of methamphetamine (Level 6 Felony), Carrying a handgun without a license (Class A misdemeanor)

Dawn L. Wininger: Possession of methamphetamine (Level 6 Felony), Dealing in a synthetic drug or synthetic drug lookalike substance (Class A misdemeanor), Possession of marijuana (Class B misdemeanor)

Author Brooks Rexroat to Speak at UE’s February Coffee Hour

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The University of Evansville’s Department of Creative Writing welcomes author Brooks Rexroat as the featured speaker for UE’s Coffee Hour on Friday, February 22. The lecture will begin at 4:00 p.m. in the Melvin Peterson Gallery. This event is free and open to the public.

After earning an MFA in Creative Prose from Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, Rexroat embarked on a journey in higher education that has included teaching opportunities at open enrollment community colleges, regional public universities, and rigorous private liberal arts colleges. He is now based at Brescia University in Owensboro, Kentucky.

Rexroat was a 2016-17 Fulbright US Teaching and Research Scholar at Novosibirsk State Pedagogical University in Siberia, Russia, and a 2014 Bread Loaf Bakeless Camargo Fellow in Cassis, France. In 2010, he was named a Southern Illinois University Department of Irish and Irish Immigration Studies Research Fellow in Galway, Ireland.

Senate Republicans strip hate crimes bill of victim categories

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Lindsey Erdody for www.theindianalawyer.com

The Republican-majority Senate stripped a hate crimes bill Tuesday of language that specified the types of crimes it would apply to — those motivated by race, religion, sexual orientation, gender and other categories — despite emotional pleas by Democrats to leave the bill as written.

Senate Bill 12 will now be eligible for a vote by the full Senate on Thursday — but in a form that Gov. Eric Holcomb and business leaders have said repeatedly they don’t like. The bill now makes crimes motivated by bias eligible for stronger penalties, but it doesn’t define bias.

Holcomb released a statement after the vote on the amendment saying that new version of the bill “does not get Indiana off the list of states without a bias crime law.” Indiana is currently one of five states without such legislation.

“We have a long way to go, a lot of work to do, and fortunately the time yet still to do it,” he said of the legislative session, which is scheduled through the end of April. “I will continue to fight for the right ultimate outcome for our state and citizens this year so we’re not right back here in the same place next year.”

Getting off the “list” of states without a hate crimes bill has been a primary goal of the legislation because business and community leaders say it hurts state and local economic development efforts. But Senate President Pro Tem Rodric Bray said he’s not clear on what language is or isn’t necessary to make that happen.

He said legislative leaders have asked the organizations that publicize rankings on issues such as hate crimes what version of the bill would achieve the larger goal. But, Bray said, “the answer has generally been: You need to pass something, and we’ll let you know.”

Business groups have been pushing lawmakers to pass a hate crimes bill that is specific in detailing the types of victims against whom crimes would qualify for enhanced penalties. And they have said that list should include gender identity and sexual orientation.

Indy Chamber CEO Michael Huber issued a statement late Tuesday that called the Senate’s action “a disappointing setback for Indiana, for our business climate and our collective conscience as Hoosiers.”

He said the bill as it’s now written would provide no clarity and “do little to protect our fellow citizens in any effective way from violence and vandalism motivated by hate.”

“And instead of signaling that Indiana is open for business, it shuts out opportunity by discouraging a diverse workforce and the employers who follow,” Huber said. “It would put us on the defensive and playing catch-up — again.”

Salesforce Marketing Cloud CEO Bob Stutz, who oversees the company’s significant operations in Indianapolis, tweeted Tuesday that he was “extremely disappointed that the Senate weakened” SB 12. He said Salesforce “stands for #EquityForAll and urges the House to amend the list of all the protected classes back into the bill.”

But Sen. Aaron Freeman, R-Indianapolis, who introduced the amendment approved Tuesday, argued the resulting legislation would treat Hoosiers equally.

“I’m adding the word bias. I think it covers everyone,” Freeman said. “I don’t think it leaves anyone out … and I think it makes a lot of sense.”

The version of the bill the Senate Public Policy Committee approved by a 9-1 vote on Monday included a list that specified it would cover crimes motivated by race, religion, color, sex, gender identity, disability, national origin, ancestry, sexual orientation and age.

Critics say the move by Senate Republicans to remove the list guts the bill.

Several Democrats — including the Legislature’s only openly gay member and several black lawmakers — spoke passionately against the change. Sen. Lonnie Randolph, D-Terre Haute, accused Republicans of failing to “recognize me as a human being.

Sen. Greg Taylor, D-Indianapolis, was visibly upset while he spoke on the Senate floor about how he has fought for hate crimes legislation for years and repeatedly run into opposition from Republicans.

“Don’t do this,” Taylor said. “You guys all know what you’re doing. I’m begging you.”

Democrats also argued that the amended version of the bill will be unclear to judges because it does not define bias, but Republicans disagreed.

“I think it’s fairly clear what bias is,” Bray said. “When you keep it open, it allows the judge to make some distinction there.”

The amendment passed 33-16. Democrats plus seven Republicans — including Indianapolis mayoral candidate Jim Merritt — voted against the amendment.

“I voted against it because it wasn’t what it was in committee,” Merritt said. “It’s important to me that we follow what we do in committee.”

Merritt said he was convinced by the testimony he heard at Monday’s meeting that the list should be included in the legislation. But he said he will still support the bill in its amended form.

Bray said Republicans have the 26 votes necessary to pass the bill — which was authored by Republican Sens. Ron Alting of Lafayette and Mike Bohacek of Michiana Shores — even without any support from Democrats.

He said it was less clear that the original version of the bill — with the list — would have passed. It would have been close, he said.

The vote on the amendment came after the Senate took a 30-minute break, which Bray said was meant to let lawmakers cool off. But after the vote, Senate Democrats walked out of the chamber in protest of what they said was a watered-down bill.

Republicans, who have a super majority and do not need Democrats present to conduct business, continued voting on legislation without them.

Senate Minority Leader Tim Lanane accused Republicans of throwing what he described as a clear, specific and inclusive bill in the trash.

“What we’re left with today, I gotta tell you, I’m just shocked by it,” Lanane said.

Lanane and Taylor both said they’re worried the state could face similar backlash of the kind it experienced after the Legislature passed the Religious Freedom Restoration Act and then-Gov. Mike Pence signed it into law in 2015.

“This is a disaster for the state of Indiana,” Taylor said. “It might be worse than RFRA.”