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Aces wrap up dual meet at IU Indy

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Men earn a pair of dual victories

                               

INDIANAPOLIS – Saturday’s dual meet at the IU Natatorium saw the University of Evansville men’s swimming and diving team earn a pair of victories to highlight the day. The men defeated Valparaiso by a score of 141.00-138.00 while edging out USI by a 153.00-144.0 score.

IU Indy defeated the men by a score of 216.00-81.00. The women’s scores finished with Valpo taking a 186.00-94.00 win while USI finished with a 181.00-105.00 decision. The Jaguars completed the day with a 224.00-68.00 win over the Purple Aces.

UE’s men completed the day with multiple victories beginning with Joseph Capo’s effort in the 200-free. He bested the competition with a time of 1:41.63. Carer Bolling and Tyler Jackson took 8th and 9th in the race finishing just over five seconds behind Capo. Capo took 6th place in the 500-free (4:41.62) while Wyatt Gallas was just behind him in seventh (4:50.48).

Logan Tenison recorded a victory in the 100-backstroke with a time of 50.18. His time was 0.04 in front of the competition and marked the 9th-best time in program history. Later, he took second in the 200-back posting a time of 1:53.20. Michael Pruett was victorious in the 100-free. A strong time of 46.21 came in 0.47 in front of the runner-up. Sammy McCall placed 8th in the race while taking 9th in the 50-free (21.71) and 8th I the 100-free (48.08).

Alex Willis, Chris Rector, Tenison, and Pruett earned a 3rd-place finish in the 400-medley relay. Their 3:25.72 was just over a second behind the runner-up. Bryce Ryan and Luke Cook registered top tens in the 100-free. Finishes of 10:13.34 and 10:22.21 saw them finish 6th and 7th, respectively. Willis had a strong race in the 100-fly. Swimming a 52.01, he took 6th. Rector picked up a top five in the 400-IM. His time of 4:18.00 gave him fifth.

Pruett, McCall, Capo, and Tenison took part in the 400-free relay. Combining for a time of 3:07.55, the group finished in third place.

Evansville had a strong race in the 100-breaststroke. Jesse Montano and Robert Hargrove came home in 4th and 5th, respectively. Their times finished at 58.24 and 58.64. Rector and Montano picked up top five finishes in the 200-breaststroke. Rector was second (2:09.03) while Montano placed fourth (2:11.68).

Claire Mewbourne and Evelyn Chin earned victories for the women. Mewbourne took top honors in the 200-breaststroke recording a time of 2:26.95. Chin picked up the win in the 100-fly with a time of 57.82. She bested her nearest competition by 1.27 seconds. Chin added a finish of 9th in the 200-free as she recorded a 2:03.24. Mewbourne followed her victory with a top five in the 100-breaststroke. An effort of 1:07.72 saw her finish fourth.

In the 400-medley relay, Evansville took second place as Jillian Giese, Grace Moody, Chin, and Mewbourne swam a 3:57.09 to finish less than one second behind IU Indy. Moody swam a 2:08.05 in the 200-backstroke on her way to a 3rd place effort. Mia Pesavento, Moody, Mewbourne, and Chin came in third place in the 400-free relay. They finished in a solid 3:38.50.

Hannah Krings picked up a top ten in the 1000-free. She took 7th place with a finish of 11:27.00. Jaley Hamilton placed 10th in the 100-back swimming a 1:02.69 before taking 9th in the 100-free (56.58). Jillian Giese rounded out the top ten in the 50-free with her finish of 25.42. Giese followed with a finish of 7th in the 400-IM. She swam a 4:48.28 in the event. In the 500-free, Luana Carrotta and Krings took 9th and 10th place, respectively. Their times finished at 5:33.49 and 5:35.82.

Leah Gardner took 9th place in the 3-meter dive registering a score of 180.45. She was followed by Eden McRoberts who finished 10th with a 170.45. The duo repeated their finishes in the 1-meter as Gardner finished 9th (183.60) and McRobets was 10th (174.70).

HOT JOBS

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Encompass Health 3.4 3.4/5 rating
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Company-matching 401(k) and employee stock purchase plans. Affordable medical, dental, and vision plans for both full-time and part-time employees and their…
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Lead customer invoicing, receivables, and collections. Track and manage action items from meetings, transcripts, and communications.
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Medical Office Receptionist

Tri-State Orthopaedic Surgeons 4 4/5 rating
Evansville, IN
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Conkright Aesthetics
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United Way of Southwestern Indiana 4.1 4.1/5 rating
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University of Evansville 4.4 4.4/5 rating
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Legislative and State Government Updates

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Protecting Medicaid for Hoosiers in Need

Indiana’s Medicaid program exists to help disabled and sick Hoosiers get the medical care they need, but major increases in Medicaid costs are threatening the future of the program.

 

In the last four years alone, spending on the entitlement program has increased by $5 billion, which hurts Indiana’s ability to fund other important needs like K-12 education. That’s why I supported a new law that moves the state toward getting Medicaid spending under control and creates a more fiscally responsible program.

 

Senate Enrolled Act 2 requires the Indiana Family and Social Services Administration to gather information from state and federal agencies to verify whenever individuals are eligible for Medicaid, which will help find and eliminate waste, fraud and abuse within the program. SEA 2 also enacts common-sense reforms to the Healthy Indiana Plan (HIP) by including work or volunteer requirements of 20 hours or more per week for able-bodied, working-age adults.

 

While Washington, D.C. continues to add to our national debt, here in Indiana we balance our state budgets. That’s why we must operate the state’s Medicaid program with fiscal integrity – so it remains available for those who truly need it.

Paid Senate Internships Available

The Indiana Senate Republican Caucus is offering paid spring-semester internships in our communications, information technology, legal, legislative, page and policy offices during the 2026 legislative session.

Qualified candidates may be of any major and must be at least a college sophomore. Recent college graduates, as well as graduate and law school students, are also encouraged to apply.

Interns earn a $900 biweekly stipend and benefit from scholarship and academic credit opportunities, professional development, community involvement and networking.

Senate internships are full-time positions at the Statehouse in downtown Indianapolis that typically begin with a mandatory orientation in late December or early January and conclude at the end of the legislative session in March 2026.

The priority application deadline is Oct. 31.

“We’re not subjects, we’re citizens”: Protestors rally at Statehouse for No Kings 2.0

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  • Thousands of protestors gathered on the Indiana Statehouse lawn Saturday for the No Kings 2.0 protest, led by Indivisible Central Indiana with help from Concerned Clergy of Indianapolis, the American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana, MADVoters Indiana and Women4Change in opposition of the Trump administration’s agenda, including immigration arrests and early redistricting efforts.

    The Indianapolis protest was one of 44 taking place across the state in cities as large as Fort Wayne and small as Brookville, with nearly 3,000 demonstrations occurring across the country and an estimated 7 million people in total attending. This second nationwide protest was planned by several nonprofits and organizations, including the American Federation of Teachers and the League of Conservation Voters.

    Protesters at Saturday’s No Kings rally at the Indiana Statehouse pose with their signs.

    Photo by Olivia O’Neal, TheStatehouseFile.com.

    Jennifer Midkiff, a professional harpist and music teacher from Noblesville, sang Woody Guthrie’s “All You Fascists Bound to Lose” shortly after No Kings 2.0 began at 11 a.m. The weather was crisp, sunny and breezy—a sharp contrast to the rainy, overcast No Kings protest on June 14. Instead of chanting from beneath raincoats and umbrellas, several attendees donned inflatable costumes of dinosaurs, unicorns and chickens, perhaps inspired by recent Portland, Oregon, protestors who dressed as inflatable frogs as they demonstrated against ICE arrests.

    “We got a zoo here,” said one man.

    Rev. David Green, president of Concerned Clergy of Greater Indianapolis, followed the live music with a speech.

    Danielle Cooney recalls her time in the foster care system during her speech at the No Kings 2.0 protest Saturday at the Indiana Statehouse.

    Photo by Olivia O’Neal, TheStatehouseFile.com.

    “In America, we don’t value kings; we value democracy,” he said. “We’re not subjects, we’re citizens.”

    Every anecdote and speech was met with cheers and applause from the crowd. Protestors held U.S. and Indiana flags, chanting phrases like, “When Trump says get back, we say fight back.” Some wore red hats, but instead of MAGA slogans, they bore puns like, “Arrest Trump 2026.” Others raised signs with the words, “Honk if you’re not in the Epstein Files.” Drivers on North Capitol Avenue listened, and beeps and the sound of revving car engines rose from the road.

    A few paces away on the Statehouse lawn, a man was making giant bubbles for children to jump through, and protestors’ pets wagged their tails at passersby or lay asleep on the grass.

    Indianapolis’ No Kings 2.0 protest Saturday at the Indiana Statehouse was one of nearly 3,000 occurring across the country.

    Photo by Olivia O’Neal, TheStatehouseFile.com.

    “I am angry and disgusted by what is happening in this country, aren’t you?” asked Karla López Owens.

    From the Statehouse stairs, she relayed her experience as an immigrant from Mexico who became the first college graduate in her family. She is now a deputy prosecuting attorney with the Marion County Prosecutor’s Office and president of the Indiana Latinx Democratic Caucus.

    Her story was followed by an anecdote from Danielle Cooney, a member of Live Free Indiana, about her own childhood. When her father was incarcerated for child abuse and the murder of her baby sister, 7-year-old Cooney was placed in the foster-care system. Now a foster mother herself, she advocated for other families separated, but this time by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) arrests.

    She said the ICE detainees in the Marion County Jail are not criminals and are placed in a system that treats them as “less than human.”

    “What is happening in Chicago could happen in Indianapolis,” Cooney said.

    Indianapolis’ No Kings 2.0 protest Saturday at the Indiana Statehouse was one of nearly 3,000 occurring across the country.

    Photo by Olivia O’Neal, TheStatehouseFile.com.

    Several speakers condemned ICE arrestsand early redistricting.

    Sen. Fady Qaddoura, D-Indianapolis, told the thousands of protestors that if the Trump administration is successful, the results could be Medicaid cuts, cuts to the Child Care Development Fund, which provides financial assistance to low-income families for child care, and the shifting of power and money to the ultra wealthy.

    Qaddoura urged Indiana residents to contact state lawmakers and voice their concerns.

    “Tell them we are Hoosiers. We live as honest people, and we don’t respect or support cheaters,” he said. “Hoosiers, let’s get to work.”

    Olivia O’Neal is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news site powered by Franklin College journalism students.

Indiana revises school accountability plan to add new reading, diploma measures

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The latest draft keeps A–F grades but changes how schools earn them, including rewards for reading gains and postsecondary readiness.

Indiana education officials on Wednesday unveiled major updates to the state’s proposed school accountability system — including new reading and “back on track” indicators — as they work to finalize rules that will replace the state’s former A-F grading model by the end of the year.

The presentation to the State Board of Education marked the second draft of the overhaul first released in June. Under a state law passed earlier this year, the Indiana Department of Education must deliver a final plan by Dec. 31 that aligns school ratings with the state’s “Graduates Prepared to Succeed,” or Indiana GPS, framework.

“This is critically important public policy for education in Indiana,” said Ron Sandlin, IDOE’s chief innovation officer. “What we’ve built is a model that values both academic mastery and the knowledge, skills and experiences that make up a student’s full story — not just a test score.”

The latest proposal keeps the state’s A-F letter grade scale but revises how those grades are calculated. 

Schools would earn points based on each student’s academic achievement and additional indicators such as attendance, literacy progress, work-based learning and credential attainment.

Sandlin said the revision “creates more consistency” in how points are awarded and simplifies the system so that “the average Hoosier can look at it and feel comfortable.”

Measuring every student

A central change to the proposal is what Sandlin and Indiana Secretary of Education Katie Jenner described as an “n of one” model in which school quality is evaluated based on the outcomes of each individual student rather than aggregated percentages.

“Every single student matters,” Sandlin told the board. “Their success as an individual should inform school success — not the averages of large groups where individual stories get lost.”

Jenner added that Indiana is “forging ahead” by measuring both academic mastery and real-world skills. 

“Please call us on it,” she said. “Academic mastery, assessment and accountability matter in Indiana — regardless of what the federal government does or does not do — but there are other things that matter as well.”

Jenner also pushed back against critics who argue the approach softens academic expectations.

Story continues below.

“There is a movement around the country lowering cut scores,” the education secretary said. “Indiana is standing firm. We have a tough assessment. We just believe there’s more to a child than if they pass or fail a test.”

Cindy Long, executive director of the Indiana Association of School Principals, said her group supports the latest changes, especially the grade 12 shift toward diploma seals. She also praised revisions that allows schools to earn credit in other ways even if they don’t meet attendance goals.

Board member Byron Ernest called the asset-based approach “awesome,” saying it will finally let data “tell a story” about each learner. 

Board member Erika Dilosa additionally stressed that the new framework “isn’t punitive” but “creates opportunities for students that may have been overlooked in the past because they didn’t quite fit.”

Addressing concerns — and pushing for progress

Still, board member Kathleen Mote worried how the term “approaching proficiency” might be interpreted, and said the terminology might signal the opposite to parents and the public.

“We are using the same labels for these things, but now they have very different definitions, and there is dissonance there that we have to figure out how to resolve,” she noted.

Sandlin responded that the department will review the terminology to ensure it clearly communicates student progress but made clear that schools “will not earn maximum points” for students who “are not proficient.”

“We want to encourage progress,” Sandlin told Mote. “If you’re ‘approaching proficient,’ but you’re making enough progress to eventually reach proficiency, it does earn you maximum points. We’ve inherently built in … an incentive for schools to help (students) reach that next step, and to receive the credit as (a student) makes the necessary progress to get there.”

Sandlin emphasized that the model “does not take the gas pedal off,” even as students improve, “because we know there’s more (they) can do.”

Board member Scott Bess addressed other concerns that the new accountability model might be softening academic standards by placing less emphasis on high-stakes test scores.

He acknowledged that some national experts have argued that Indiana may be lowering expectations — and said some of the state’s education partners “will be chippy on this one” — but made it clear the state intends to “stand firm” on its approach.

“There is a body of thought out there that says, ‘Nope. It’s are you proficient, or are you not? And that’s it.’ And if you deviate from that, then you’re somehow lowering standards, or you’re excusing people and passing them through,” Bess said.

“This model … is making sure that each student is achieving something,” he added. “The field clearly believes that this is a step in the right direction.”

‘Put(ing) our money where our mouths are’

The first draft of the proposed accountability rule, unveiled in June, tied school ratings to the Indiana GPS system, emphasizing literacy and math in early grades, work-based learning and credentials in high school, and a mix of academic mastery and skill development indicators across grade levels. 

Officials said that draft sought to capture a fuller picture of student performance beyond test scores but left some details undefined, especially around how certain skills and benchmarks would be measured.

In response to months of feedback, the second draft adds several new and clarified indicators designed to better reflect student growth and school effort, Sandlin said.

A new “Accelerated Literacy” measure gives schools credit when students flagged as “at risk” on the second-grade IREAD exam later pass it in third grade — a change meant to reward successful reading interventions. 

A companion “Adolescent Reading” indicator extends that recognition to upper elementary grades, too, allowing schools to earn points when students who failed the IREAD later demonstrate proficiency in grades 4 through 6.

At the high school level, a “Back on Track” indicator acknowledges schools that help ninth-graders who fall behind on credits catch up by the end of 10th grade. Another draft adjustment provides flexibility for biology testing, letting schools earn points for students who complete the end-of-course biology assessment in any grade — fixing a technical issue that previously credited only those who took it in grade 10.

For grade 12, new Indiana Diploma seals — which reflect whether students meet college, employment or service “recipes for success” — would further serve as the universal outcome for graduation, Sandlin noted. 

That benchmark would replace the SAT as the central measure of high school performance and instead align the new accountability model with the state’s new graduation and diploma requirements.

Every single student matters. Their success as an individual should inform school success — not the averages of large groups where individual stories get lost.

– Ron Sandlin, IDOE’s chief innovation officer

“We’ve said that there are multiple pathways to success,” Sandlin said. “This shift puts our money where our mouths are. And it says, if you earn an honor seal, or if you earn an honors plus seal, you are on track for success.”

The rule also formalizes a transition period through the class of 2028 so current students earning Core 40 diplomas are not penalized before the new diploma and seals take effect.

Next steps towards adoption

Indiana’s school accountability grades have been in flux for years.

The state’s A-F rating system has been effectively suspended since 2018 due to transitions in state testing and COVID-related disruptions.

During the pause, schools instead received performance report cards posted online. The cards offered data on test scores, graduation rates, attendance, and postsecondary readiness, but stopped short of assigning a single letter grade.

The shift to an updated model is part of a broader effort mandated by House Enrolled Act 1498, signed into law earlier this year. The legislation, authored by Rep. Bob Behning, R-Indianapolis, requires the state education board to adopt a new school accountability model by the end of December, with implementation beginning in the 2026–27 school year. 

Education officials said the overhaul aims to merge elements of the previous accountability model with a simpler, more transparent grading system that parents can understand — and that focuses less on “penalizing” schools.

“We want a model that encourages schools to focus on improvement for each individual student — our n size is 1,” Sandlin said. “Because every single student’s story deserves to count.”

The second 30-day public comment period opened immediately after Wednesday’s meeting and will run through Nov. 17, when a public hearing is scheduled at the Indiana State Library. 

IDOE staff said the department  expects to bring a final accountability rule to the board in December for adoption.

“We’ve tried to build a model that is inclusive of more elements that we believe matter. And we very, very humbly, in Indiana, want to hear constructive feedback from partners,” Jenner said. “It would be easy for us to immediately build a pass-fail system. … We just believe we have to look at the full child picture. We have to think about education differently. The status quo is not getting us anywhere.”

Jenner said another round of public comments will be “so important” as the board gets closer to final adoption.

“We’ll probably have a few tweaks here and there before we land it,” she said, “and that’s exactly why this process matters.”

Vanderburgh County Board of Commissioners

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DRAFT AGENDA

Vanderburgh County Board of Commissioners

October 21, 2025 – 9:30 a.m.

Room 301, Civic Center Complex

1. Call to Order

2. Attendance

3. Pledge of Allegiance

4. Action Items

A. Engineer

1. 2. Financial Commitment Letter for INDOT Community Crossings Matching Grant

Application #14904: Paving of County Roads

Recommendation for Administrative Settlement: “Hornby Lane Reconstruction”

i. Parcel 1 (ID 82-04-11-009-073.024-030) – Irrevocable Income-Only Trust

of James R. Marx, Et al.

3. Change Order #1: “Boonville-New Harmony Road Reconstruction”

4. Change Order #12: “Oak Hill Road Reconstruction”

B. Burdette Park

1. Request to Close Primitive Tent Camping Sites 36, 44-54, Effective November 1,

2025

C. Health Department

1. Indiana Department of Health (IDOH) Grant Agreement Contract #96729

D. Aurora, Inc. 2026 Grant Agreement

E. Jacob’s Village, Inc. 2026 Grant Agreement

F. Old Vanderburgh County Jail Appraisals

G. Veterans Coliseum Preservation Foundation Contract with Cool City Band

5. Department Head Reports

6. New Business

A. County Employee Health Plan Discussion Presented by Chris Maynard of Shepherd

Insurance

B. Burdette Park Safety Audit Presented by Glenn Henderson of Above Basic Compliance –

Safety Consulting and Training

C. Veterans Coliseum Preservation Foundation Inaugural Gala

November 1, 2025 at 6:00 p.m.

Old National Events Plaza – 715 Locust St, Evansville, IN 47708

Purchase tickets at https://veteranscoliseum.org/ by October 23, 2025

7. Old Business

8. Consent Items

A. Approval of October 7, 2025, Board of Commissioners Meeting Minutes

B. Employment Changes

C. Auditor

1. Claims Voucher Reports

i. ii. October 6, 2025 – October 10, 2025

October 13, 2025 – October 17, 2025

Drainage Board Immediately FollowingD. Commissioners

1. Transfer Request

E. Convention Center Operating Fund

1. Appropriation Request

F. Engineer

1. Report and Claims

G. Superior Court

1. Surplus Request

H. Superintendent of County Buildings

1. Appropriation Request

I. Treasurer

1. September 2025 Monthly Report

J. K. L. 3rd Quarter 2025 Veterans Services Report

Evansville Land Bank Corp 2025 Tax Sale No-Sales Property Selection

Community Corrections Advisory Board Appointments

i. Cherie Epley

ii. Chris Kiefer

iii. Claire Will

iv. Dan Haviza

v. Dee Lewis

vi. Donovan Phipps

vii. Heather Woods

viii. Jay Dickerson

ix. Jodi Uebelhack

x. Lauren Jones

xi. Nick Iaccarino

xii. Stephanie Powell

9. Public Comment

10. Adjournment

12. Members of the Vanderburgh County Board of Commissioners

i. Justin Elpers, President – District 2

a. Term: January 1, 2023 – December 31, 2026

ii. Amy Canterbury, Vice President – District 3

a. Term: January 1, 2025 – December 31, 2028

iii. Mike Goebel, Member – District 1

a. Term: January 1, 2025 – December 31, 2028

Drainage Board Immediately Following

BOARD OF PARK COMMISSIONERS SPECIAL  MEETING

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BOARD OF PARK COMMISSIONERS

SPECIAL  MEETING

ROOM 307, CIVIC CENTER COMPLEX

WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 22, 2025

 NOON

   AGENDA

1.      CALL TO ORDER

2.      MEETING MEMORANDUM:   October 1, 2025 (Meeting Canceled October 15, 2025)

                     

3.      CONSENT AGENDA

          N/A

4.       OLD BUSINESS   

          N/A

                   

5.       NEW BUSINESS

         a. Request Re: Approve and Execute Land Use Agreement with Central Bark Dog Park.

             – Bouseman

         b. Request Re: Central Bark Dog Park requests permission to expand the gravel driveway   and parking area. -Houseman        

         c. Request Re: Approve and Execute Bayard Park Trail Agreement with DMD.-Crook

         d. Request Re: Change Order Wesselman Playground Restroom for clarification 

             of conflicting dates. -Crook

         e. Request Re: Change Order Tepe Splash Pad reflection of a deduction in the amount 

             of ($4,454.00) due to a decision not to use color concrete. – Crook

         f. Request Re: Approve and Execute Agreement with Legacy Hospitality and 

             Entertainment Group, LLC for Swonder Ice Arena Concessions. – Lord

         g. Request Re: Approve and Execute Agreement with Midwest Construction for the 

             4th and Main project. – Crook     

         h. Request: Any Other Business the Board Wishes to Consider and Public Comment.

 6.       REPORTS

           Danielle Crook- Executive Director Department of Parks & Recreation

         

 7.       ACCEPTANCE OF PAYROLL AND VENDOR CLAIMS 

 8.       ADJOURN

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

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EPD

 

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

FOOTNOTE: EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.

USI picks up win over Evansville, but falls to Valparaiso and IU Indy

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Indianapolis, Ind.- University of Southern Indiana Women’s Swimming and Diving wrapped up its meet against Indiana University Indianapolis, the University of Evansville, and Valparaiso University with a record of 1-2 Saturday afternoon.
 
The Screaming Eagles came out on top against Evansville with a 181-105 victory. This marked their third consecutive win against the Aces dating back to last season. USI narrowly fell to Valparaiso, 153-140. IU Indy came out victorious, 203-96.
 
Freshman Hannah Pryor impressed throughout the day. She tied the USI record in the 200 backstroke with a time of 2:08.10. Pryor also finished second in the 100 backstroke after a 58.95 run. She was a member of the third-place Medley Relay team, along with sophomore Emma Gabhart, sophomore Elizabeth Ketcham, and junior Caiya Cooper. The team clocked a 3:59.20.
 
USI swimmers had several top-three finishes on the day. Senior Mattilynn Smith finished third in the 1000 freestyle with a 10:58.75. Cooper grabbed third in the 200 freestyle, clocking 1:58.29. Gabhart recorded three second-place finishes: the 100 backstroke (1:07.25), the 200 backstroke (2:27.09), and the 400 individual medley (4:38.45).
 
The divers were magnificent in the meet, as sophomore Anna Bunnell finished second in both the one and three-meter dives, recording a 247.10 in the one-meter and a 2:47.65 in the three. Sophomore Gabbie Meier grabbed two top-five finishes, placing fourth in the three-meter (233.40) and fifth in the one-meter (215.20).
 
The Eagles are back in action on October 25, when they face off against Indiana State University and get a rematch against Evansville at the Deaconess Aquatic Center in Evansville, Indiana.