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Stein, MBB Eagles power by LSSU

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 University of Southern Indiana senior guard Alex Stein (Evansville, Indiana) exploded for 48 points in leading the Screaming Eagles to a 110-88 victory over Lake Superior State University Friday afternoon in Indianapolis, Indiana. The Eagles go to 3-1 to begin 2018-19, while LSSU is 2-2.

The 110 points is the first time that USI has reached the century mark since the Eagles scored 122 points in the triple-overtime win at Saint Joseph’s College.

USI, which led from start to finish, built a commanding lead behind Stein’s 25 first-half points. Stein was a blistering eight-of-11 from the field, four-of-five from long range, and a perfect five-of-five from the stripe.

The Eagles flew out to an early seven point lead, 9-2, on a 7-0 run to put some space between them and the Lakers. Midway through the first half, the Eagles caught fire and boosted their advantage to 18 points, 45-27, on a 22-10 run. Stein led USI with 15 points during the run.

USI and LSSU would trade buckets in the final minutes of the opening half before the Eagles took at 46-29 lead in the intermission.

The Eagles continued to hit the offensively gas pedal in the second half, scoring 64 points in the final half and posting game-high leads of 36 points twice (94-58 and 96-60) with nearly seven minutes to play in the game. LSSU had a 14-4 run in the final three minutes to cut the USI advantage to 22 points as the Eagles closed out the 110-88 victory.

USI was a blistering 62.9 percent from the field in the second half (22-35), 60 percent from downtown (9-15) and a perfect 11-of-11 from the stripe as a team. The advantage on the glass also went to the Eagles, 39-29, for the game.

Stein continued to lead USI in the second half with 23 more points on seven-of-eight from the field, two-of-three from beyond the arc, and seven-of-seven from the stripe.

For the game, Stein would finish the contest with 48 points, six rebounds, four assists, and two steals. He was game-high 15-of-19 from the outside, six-of-eight from three-point land, and 12-of-12 from the line. In addition to Stein setting a career-high for points, he becomes just the third player in USI history to reach 45-or-more points (Chris Bowles, 45 points 1990-91; Stein 48 points 2018-19; Jeril Taylor 50 points 2016-17) and moves into the fourth all-time at USI with 1,580 career points, passing Cris Brunson (1562 points, 2001-05).

USI’s senior guard also needs 39 more points to catch Stan Gouard (1,619; 1993-96) for third all-time.

Junior guard/forward Kobe Caldwell (Bowling Green, Kentucky) caught fire offensively in the second half to bolster the Eagles’ offensive attack. Caldwell scored 16 of his 17 points in the final half on five-of-seven from the field, four-of-six from behind the arc, and two-of-two from the line. He also grabbed a team-high and season-high eight rebounds.

The double-digit scorers for the Eagles were rounded out by sophomore forward Josh Price (Indianapolis, Indiana), who had a season-high 14 points, 10 coming in the first half. Price was five-of-seven from outside for the game and four-of-four from the line.

The Eagles return to the friendly surroundings of the Physical Activities Center November 27 when they host Oakland City University to start a three-game homestand. Tipoff for the USI-OCU matchup is 7 p.m. Game coverage can be found on GoUSIEagles.com.

The three-game USI homestand includes the 2018-19 GLVC opener versus top-ranked Bellarmine University December 1.

Men’s Basketball travels to Ball State on Saturday

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For just the third time since 1979, the University of Evansville men’s basketball team will take on Ball State in a road game on Saturday at Worthen Arena.  Tip is at 1 p.m. CT and will be carried live on ESPN3.

 

“Ball State is a tough team who has good guard play and legitimate bigs who can hurt you on the glass,” Aces head coach Walter McCarty said.  “We are looking forward to it; they are in improved basketball team and we have to go up there and play really well.”

 

A late first-half run saw the Aces take a 35-26 halftime lead before defeating Texas Southern by a final of 85-63.  UE led by as many as 24 points in the final minutes.  Shea Feehan led the squad with 20 points; he was 7-of-12 from the floor.  Noah Frederking added 16 points while John Hall finished with 9 points and a career-high 12 rebounds.  The Aces finished with a 47-43 edge on the boards.  After shooting 37.5% in the first half, UE rebounded to go 18-of-32 in the final 20 minutes (56.3%).

 

Evansville scored 85+ points for the third game in a row.  Feehan led the Aces with 20 points; he is the top scorer through four games with 15 PPG.  Frederking scored 16 points; he has averaged 21 points in the last two contests.  The win marked the 31st home non-conference win in a row for the Aces.  Evansville hit 10 triples for the third-straight game.

 

Through four games, UE is averaging 80.5 points per game.  That is the highest tally since the 1988-89 season when UE finished with 82.6 PPG.  Five players are averaging double figures; the last time the program saw five players do so came in 1990-91.  The 2006-07 season marked the last time the program had four in double digits.

 

UE has scored 85 or more points in each of the last three games.  It is the first time in five years that UE has scored 85 or more in three-consecutive outings.  In 2013, the Aces had 98, 100 and 91 in wins over Mercer, Valparaiso and Anderson. Should the Aces score 85 on Saturday at Ball State, it would mark the first 4-game streak of 85+ points since 1993-94 when the team hit the mark in six consecutive games.

 

The Aces and Cardinals rivalry has a long history, dating back to 1930.  The teams have met on 52 occasions, but this marks just the third meeting since 1979; the teams met 40 times between 1952 and 1971.  UE assistant coach Todd Lickliter was 0-3 vs. BSU as a player but was 5-1 against them as the head coach at Butler; included in that was a 75-66 win over BSU in 2002; the Cardinals were ranked 21st at the time.  As an assistant at Eastern Michigan, Lickliter led the Eagles to three wins over the Cardinals in 1997-98 on their way to the NCAA Tournament.  Matthew Graves was 1-3 versus the Cardinals in his playing career, but was 8-2 as an assistant at Butler.

 

Ball State enters Saturday’s game with a 2-3 record with victories coming over Indiana State and Appalachian State.  Their losses have come against Purdue, Virginia Tech and Alabama.   Tayler Persons leads the Cardinals with 19 points per game; he is the #3 scorer in the Mid-American Conference.  K.J. Walton is next with 13.8 PPG while Tahjai Teague is averaging 11 points.  Persons led BSU with 29 points while going 12/12 from the line against ASU.

 

“READER FORUM” NOVEMBER 24, 2018

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We hope that today’s “READERS FORUM” will provoke honest and open dialogue concerning issues that we, as responsible citizens of this community, need to address in a rational and responsible way? 

WHATS ON YOUR MIND TODAY?

Todays“Readers Poll” question is: Should City Council release any funds to ECHO Housing Corp. until they are given a copy of the Forensic Audit report of that agency?

If you would like to advertise on the CCO please contact us at City-County Observer@live.com

Footnote: City-County Observer Comment Policy. Be kind to people. No personal attacks or harassment will not be tolerated and shall be removed from our site.
We understand that sometimes people don’t always agree and discussions may become a little heated.  The use of offensive language, insults against commenters will not be tolerated and will be removed from our site.
Any comments posted in this column do not represent the views or opinions of the City-County Observer or our advertisers.

Indiana School Voucher Program Draws Mixed Responses

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Indiana School Voucher Program Draws Mixed Responses

Indiana’s voucher program has been in place since 2011. It was designed to provide families with funds to help pay for a private education. According to the Indiana Department of Education, approximately 35,000 students utilize the voucher program.

While the program aims to help curb the cost of private education, it’s not without controversy. Indiana legislators are in disagreement on how voucher should work and where the money should go.

Indiana has attached a few strings to the use of voucher money, but state Superintendent of Public Instruction Dr. Jennifer McCormick wants to change that.

Earlier this year Indianapolis Roncalli High School fired a female counselor after the counselor admitted to being married to another woman, something in conflict with the teachings of the Catholic Church.

McCormick says if private schools want to receive tax dollars, they should be open to everyone.

“When we still have schools that receive taxpayer dollars that can exclude students that`s a problem,” says McCormick.

However, Superintendent Dr. Daryl Hagan does not agree. He says the money goes to the parents who decide where to spend it.

“I think the Indiana school choice scholarship program has been a benefit and it was set up to provide parents the opportunity to select the best fit of education for their child and I think it’s done that,” says Hagan. “Parents choose to make that choice and when they do they’re the ones directing it, not the government.”

Warrick County Superintendent Brad Schneider believes more strings should be attached to voucher dollars.

“They’re diverting taxpayer dollars in these private schools, but they play by totally different rules than public schools play by. So I think they should be held accountable to the same degree. They should not be allowed to determine who they educate and who they don’t if they’re going to take taxpayer dollars, but they still have select enrollment and it’s just wrong,” says Schneider.

It does not appear a serious effort will be made to attach more strings to Indiana’s voucher system in the near future.

Evansville mother Keely Griggs is one of many parents who decided to send her two children to Catholic school.

“I remember my daughter Jaylee, we were sitting down for dinner and she said ‘hold on mommy we must pray.” And she started singing bless us o lord for these thy gifts and I thought our hands are together and our eyes were closed and I thought this is the reason why we made this happen as a family,” says Griggs. “To be able to practice our faith in an open environment was just really important to us as a family and I was just grateful for the opportunity to send the kids there.”

She says paying for a private education would have been difficult, if not impossible, without financial assistance.

“Sister Carlene welcomed our family and she said ‘honey, you do not have to worry. We have opportunities for you even though you may not be financially ready,” says Griggs.

People like Griggs and her family would like to keep the system as is whole people like Schneider can’t believe more strings haven’t been attached already,

While they don’t agree on the what restrictions should be placed on vouchers, both agree on what is or is not decided will affect Hoosier education for years to come.

FINALLY RAISING THE VEIL

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FINALLY RAISING THE VEIL

GAVEL GAMUT By Jim Redwine

During one week in October 1878 seven Black men, three from one family were murdered by a well-organized group of about two hundred white men in Posey County, Indiana. At that time Posey County had 20,000 residents only 200 of which were Negroes. The odds were 100 to 1 and white people held every position of power including the newspaper owners and editors, the Circuit Court Judge and the Prosecuting Attorney.

Making the crimes disappear was easy. As John Leffel, the owner and editor of The Western Star newspaper, wrote on the front page, “Now let the appropriately dark pall of oblivion cover the entire transaction”. Leffel had been an eyewitness to five of the murders and even interviewed the victims before four of them were lynched on the courthouse campus and another was “slaughtered like a hog” and his body parts thrown into the jailhouse privy.

With the active assistance of Posey County’s legal and law enforcement community and the acquiescence and quiet approval of the entire white community Leffel’s directive was carried out and no one was ever brought to justice. In fact, some who were aware of and involved in the murders and coverup even went on to higher political offices.

This sordid chapter of our county’s history was brought sharply to my mind again last week when I received a letter from Deidre Eltzroth of Indianapolis. I do not know and have not met Ms. Eltzroth but, according to her letter, she is the daughter-in-law of a close friend of mine, Jerry Kuykendall. Jerry and I have been friends for forty years and as a teacher, at Mt. Vernon Junior High he coached our son, Jim, in track. Jerry is a generous public servant who gives countless hours through the Red Cross and numerous other activities. Deidre wrote that she had read my book, JUDGE LYNCH!, which is about the murders. She opined I might be interested in a memorial to the victims.

Deidre enclosed a brochure on the Equal Justice Initiative in Montgomery, Alabama. The memorial at EJI is dedicated to the more than 4,000 Negro lynching victims who were murdered in America between 1877 and 1950. Some of Posey County’s victims are named on a bronze coffin. EJI is asking each of the localities where people were lynched to dedicate a memorial to the victims. Peg and I toured the EJI in Montgomery this past summer. It is a sobering reminder of our treatment of “freed” slaves and other African Americans after the Civil War.

By coincidence, just recently three of the leaders of the Posey County Bar Association inquired about honoring my 38 years of service as a judge. I was humbled and gratified by their thoughtfulness and suggested what would be most desired by me would be a memorial on the campus of the Posey County Courthouse to those long-forgotten souls who were murdered without due legal process than cast into the dustbin of history by the establishment and the legal system.

So, thank you, Deidre, for your timely and thoughtful letter. I hope we can now all work toward righting a great wrong. For more information about the Equal Justice Initiative go to www.museumandmemorial.eji.org.

Want to read other Gavel Gamut articles? Go to www.jamesmredwine.com

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Indiana State Police Seeks Recruits for the 79th Recruit Academy

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The Indiana State Police is now accepting applications for the 79th Recruit Academy.  Individuals who are interested in beginning a rewarding career as an Indiana State Trooper must apply online at http://www.in.gov/isp/2368.htm.  This website will provide a detailed synopsis of the application process as well as information on additional career opportunities with the Indiana State Police.

Applications must be submitted electronically by 11:59 pm (EST) on Sunday, February 10, 2019.  Applications submitted after the deadline will not be accepted for the 79th Recruit Academy.

Basic Eligibility Requirements and consideration factors for an Indiana State Trooper:

  1. Must be a United States citizen.
  2. Must be at least 21 and less than 40 years of age when appointed as a police employee. (Appointment date is December 19, 2019)
  3. Must meet a minimum vision standard (corrected or uncorrected) of 20/50 acuity in each eye and 20/50 distant binocular acuity in both eyes.
  4. Must possess a valid driver’s license to operate an automobile.
  5. Must be willing, if appointed, to reside and serve anywhere within the State of Indiana as designated by the Superintendent.
  6. Must be a high school graduate as evidenced by a diploma or general equivalency diploma (GED).

The starting salary for an Indiana State Police Department Recruit is $1,615.39 bi-weekly during the academy training.  At the completion of academy training, the starting salary is $48,000.00 a year.  Graduates of the 79th Recruit Academy are offered an excellent health care plan, which includes medical, dental, vision and pharmacy coverage for both current and retired employees, along with their families, until reaching age 65.  The Indiana State Police pension program provides a lifetime pension after 25 years of service.  Additionally, the Indiana State Police Department provides comprehensive disability coverage and a life insurance program.  Student loan forgiveness programs are being offered at this time through the following:  https://studentaid.ed.gov/sa/repay-loans/forgiveness-cancellation/public-service

Interested applicants can obtain additional information about a career as an Indiana State Trooper by visiting https://www.in.gov/isp/3041.htm to find the recruiter assigned to your area.

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Political Strategist, Author Donna Brazile To Keynote USI’s 2019 Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Luncheon

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Donna Brazile, former Chair of the Democratic National Committee and New York Times best-selling author, will be the keynote speaker at the University of Southern Indiana’s annual Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Luncheon at 11 a.m. Monday, January 21, 2019, in Carter Hall, located in University Center on the USI campus.

A veteran political strategist, Brazile was the first African American woman to serve as the manager of a major party presidential campaign when she served in Vice President Al Gore’s campaign in 2000. O, The Oprah Magazine chose Brazile as one of its 20 “remarkable visionaries” for the magazine’s first-ever O Power List. In addition, she has been named among the 100 Most Powerful Women by Washingtonian magazine, Top 50 Women in America by Essence magazine and has received the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation’s highest award for political achievement.

Brazile has lectured at over 200 colleges and universities across the country on such topics as “Inspiring Civility in American Politics,” “Race Relations in the Age of Obama,” “Why Diversity Matters,” and “Women in American Politics.” In October 2017, Brazile was the recipient of the W.E.B Du Bois Medal, Harvard’s highest honor in African American studies. She has served as an adjunct professor at Georgetown University since 2002 and spent the fall of 2017 serving as a Joan Shorenstein fellow in Media, Politics and Public Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School. Brazile, a native of New Orleans, has a bachelor’s degree in industrial psychology from Louisiana State University.

Tickets will be available for USI students and employees beginning Monday, November 26 and will be available for the general public beginning Monday, December 10. All tickets may be purchased online on the USI website or at the USI Multicultural Center, located at Room 1224 in University Center East. Tickets are $5 for USI students, $10 for USI employees and $20 for the general public.

The annual Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Luncheon features a prominent, successful African American keynote speaker and attracts a large crowd from throughout the community. The luncheon encourages and inspires attendees to continue working for the cause of racial equality, for which King gave his life. The event is sponsored by the USI Foundation and the USI Multicultural Center and will include entertainment by student and community groups.

For more information, contact the USI Multicultural Center at 812-465-7188 or at USI.edu/mcc.

Troop 399 Christmas Tree Lot Open For Business

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Troop 399 Christmas Tree Lot Open For Business

One of the Tri-State’s largest Christmas tree lots is now open for business.

Boy Scout Troop 399 is set up once again at Sacred Heart Church on Evansville’s west side. More than a thousand trees and freshly made wreaths are available.

From now until Christmas Eve the lot will be open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. during the weekdays and 8 a.m. until 9 p.m. on the weekends.

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