Home Blog Page 4106

Eagles snare top spot in final NFCA Coaches’ Poll

0

University of Southern Indiana Softball is the unanimous No. 1 team in the nation according to the final National Fastpitch Coaches’ Association Division II Top 25 Coaches’ Poll, which was released by the NFCA Wednesday morning.

The Screaming Eagles concluded the 2018 season with a 41-23 record, its second straight NCAA Division II Midwest Region crown and its first-ever national championship. It was the fourth NCAA II team title in school history and the first for a women’s sport.

Additionally, the Eagles won the Great Lakes Valley Conference Tournament championship for the fourth time in program history and the first since 1998.

The No. 1 ranking marks the first time in program history that the Eagles have grabbed the top spot in the national poll. USI did not receive a single vote in the previous poll, which was released prior to the start of the NCAA II Tournament, and it is believed to be the first time in the history of the NFCA II rankings, which began in 1995, that a team went from not receiving votes to the top spot in back-to-back polls.

USI began the year ranked No. 6 in the preseason NFCA Division II Top 25 poll, but had dropped out of the rankings by the middle of March after opening the year with a 17-16 record. It finished the regular season with a 27-22 overall record, 15-13 in GLVC play, and was the No. 6 seed heading into the GLVC Tournament.

The Eagles were the No. 5 seed in the regional and were the No. 8 seed heading into the NCAA II Softball Championship.

USI, however, won seven games against top 25 teams during the postseason and an additional four games against teams that were receiving votes.

Reaching the 40-win plateau for the second straight season and third time in program history, USI finished the postseason with a 14-1 record and eight consecutive victories. The combined record of the teams USI defeated in the postseason was 380-130-1 (.745).

PEF Children’s Theatre

0

page1image1669792 The Public Education Foundation is proud to partner with Compass Creative Dramatics to present a children’s musical adaptation of Beauty and the Beast. Two performances will be held on Friday, June 8th at 2:30 PM and 5:30 PM.

As their beloved books disappear off the shelves, Beauty and her team of local librarians embark on a quest to rescue them from the city sewers. There, they find the Beast and his henchmen searching desperately to cure the curse that has transformed them all into animals of the lowest degree. Amidst dancing, pigeons, ticklish boots, and enchanted blue roses, Beauty and the Beast learn that it’s only by working together that they can save the day.

This event is presented by the Public Education Foundation in collaboration with The Arts Council of Southwestern Indiana and the George L. Mesker Music Trust at no charge to the participants.

The performances will take place Friday, June 8th at 2:30 PM and 5:30 PM at the Academy for Innovative Studies-Diamond located at 2319 Stringtown Road. While the performances are free and open to the public, donations are greatly appreciated and help to ensure summer programming like this stays in our community.

For more information, please contact the Public Education Foundation at (812) 422-1699.

Salt Pool by Pat Sides

0

Located on an old salt well, Fritzlar Mineral Springs opened in 1894 after Dr. William Cluthe, a prominent physician, acquired the property. It was used for decades as a health spa, as well as for swimming and other recreational purposes. The salt pool was located on Buchanan Road in the Mount Auburn area, just west of Pigeon Creek on the city’s west side, where some families were building homes to escape the summer heat. The old pool in the foreground of this image was replaced in 1900 by the new one at the top of the hill, which maintained a comfortable temperature of 74 degrees. Even though the city began to open public pools in the early twentieth-century, the salt pool did not close until 1937, when the water unexpectedly ran dry.

Gov. Holcomb Public Schedule for June 7 and 8

1

INDIANAPOLIS – Below find Indiana Gov. Eric J. Holcomb’s public schedule for June 7 and 8, 2018.

Thursday, June 7, 2018: Spencer County Regional Chamber of Commerce Annual Luncheon

WHO:              Gov. Holcomb

WHAT:            The governor will participate in a Q&A.

WHEN:            Doors open at 11 a.m. CT, Thursday, June 7.

Q&A begins at 12:15 p.m. CT.

WHERE:          Santa’s Lodge

15 South Cedar Lane

Santa Claus, IN 47579

Celebration Room

 Please note the best address for GPS is listed. The mailing address for Santa’s Lodge is 91 West Christmas Blvd., Santa Claus, IN 47579.

Friday, June 8, 2018: Southwest Indiana Chamber’s Lunch with the Governor

WHO:              Gov. Holcomb

WHAT:            The governor will participate in a Q&A.

WHEN:            11:50 a.m. CT, Friday, June 8.

Q&A begins at 12:25 p.m. CT.

WHERE:          Old National Events Plaza

715 Locust St.

Evansville, IN 47708

Opioid deaths continue to rise across Indiana

0

Editor’s note: This is another in an occasional series about the impact of new laws on Hoosiers.

By Abrahm Hurt
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS — While Indiana has seen its number of opioid treatment centers increase in recent years, the number of opioid-related deaths continue to rise across the state.

In 2016, almost 800 people died of opioid overdoses in Indiana, which was nearly a 50 percent increase from 2015.

Initial estimates suggest that 2017 was even worse. A recent study published by the Centers for Disease Control found that opioid overdoses increased by 30 percent across the United States, 70 percent in the Midwest and 30 percent in Indiana from July 2016 to September 2017.

The state is not winning against the opioid epidemic, said Sen. Jim Merritt, R-Indianapolis.

“We have all these pilot programs that we hope we’re going to amplify them and ripple them out, but overdoses are not cresting,” Merrit said. “They’re continuing to increase. Overdose deaths are still happening. Babies are still being born dependent, neonatal absence syndrome babies are still being born.”

Dr. Claudie Jimenez, an addiction medicine specialist and area medical director for CleanSlate addiction treatment centers, said the state has been serious about providing access to more patients but more is needed.

“I think we can always use more facilities and more access to care for these patients,” she said. “We’re seeing phenomenal growth because our patients need care and there’s room for more facilities, there’s room for more access to counseling and there’s just a huge, huge need for more care for the patients.”

Getting patients into treatment is the most important step she said. Once patients are in treatment, they’re able to stabilize their brains, and they get better, and they get into recovery and they start leading normal lives.

This past year, the Indiana General Assembly passed House Enrolled Act 1007 which will increase the number of opioid treatment facilities in the state to 27 from 18 in the next three years.

The legislature also passed bills that increase the criminal penalties for drug dealers that deal drugs which result in death, expand the system that monitors opioid prescriptions and building data collected from local coroners on overdose deaths.

Senate Enrolled Act 221, requires doctors to have access to INSPECT, a website to allow practitioners to check a patient’s controlled substance prescription history.

Merritt, who has been heading legislation to combat the epidemic for three years now, said the first step was educating people that the state was in an epidemic.

“In the very beginning we started out with understanding what our tools were, what our equipment was, what our weapons were to slay the dragon, knowing how many doctors we had, how many social workers we have and how many nurses we have,” he said. “And we found we don’t have enough.”

From 2006 to 2016 the number of opioid-related deaths increased from 170 to 785, a nearly 400 percent increase, according to the Indiana State Department of Health.

Merritt said he became involved in the issue when a neighbor died of an overdose the next street over and when EMTs asked him why they couldn’t have Narcan on their ambulances.

Naloxone, also known as Narcan, is a medication, which reverses the effects of opioids. When injected, it works within five minutes, the individual will “wake up, ” allowing 30 to 60 minutes to seek medical attention.

In 2016, Merrit authored legislation allowing Indiana pharmacies to sell Naloxone over-the-counter.

While the state is not winning against the opioid epidemic, Merritt said the state is in a place where it is preparing to win. He said the next big question that needs to be asked what is the next weapon that the state is going to use to kill the epidemic?

“I think prevention and people having knowledge, moms and dads having knowledge, about checking their purse or their wallet for money that’s missing, a spoon in the drawer of their kitchen, foil out of the drawer in the kitchen, kids that they don’t know that are around the house with their kids and just different changes in behavior in your children,” he said.

Indiana also received another $10.9 million from the Opioid State Targeted Response grant to help fund evidence-based prevention, treatment, and recovery efforts at the state level.

The grant is the result of the federal 21st Century Cures Act. In 2017 Indiana received the same amount of funding which was put towards expanding residential treatment centers, anti-stigma campaigns and enhancement of INSPECT.

INSPECT is a website which allows practitioners to check a patient’s controlled substance prescription history.

The money will be spent in many of the same areas again this year but it will also put more toward prevention efforts.

Merrit said his focus during next year’s legislative session will be authoring bills that focus on prevention, particularly in schools.

“One of the reasons I felt like I could lead this effort is because it needs a theme of killing heroin in five years,” he said. “It needs phrases such as, ‘Addiction is an illness; not a character flaw.’ About once a month someone comes to me and they’ve lost a loved one or a friend, and I always tell them to use their grief for good and to help others.”

Sen. Jim Merritt, R-Indianapolis, has led efforts to pass laws to combat opioid addiction. Photo by Makenna Mays, TheStatehouseFile.com

Abrahm Hurt is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

ADOPT A PET

0

Meredith is a female cat estimated to be around 4 years old. She came into the shelter with a pretty significant neck injury that has healed very nicely! She spent several weeks in a cone, learning to eat and move around with it on. She was a trooper and now she’s back to her normal self, ready for a home. Meredith’s $40 adoption fee includes her spay, microchip, and more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!

Bankruptcy trustee files $250M suit against ITT Tech’s former CEO, directors

0

Hayleigh Colombo for www.theindianalawyer.com

The bankruptcy trustee charged with trying to get a settlement for ITT Technical Institute’s students and creditors has filed a $250 million lawsuit against ITT Educational Services’ ex-CEO and eight of its former directors.

Deborah Caruso, the Chapter 7 trustee, last week filed the suit in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in the Southern District of Indiana, alleging former ITT Educational CEO Kevin Modany and the company’s board of directors, including Indianapolis hospital executive Samuel Odle, breached their fiduciary duty to ITT and its stakeholders, leading to ITT’s bankruptcy.

The suit names Modany and Odle, who was presiding director, along with former board directors John E. Dean, C. David Brown II, Joanna T. Lau, Thomas I. Morgan, John Vincent Weber, John F. Cozzi, and Jerry M. Cohen.

Carmel-based ITT Educational, the corporate parent of ITT Tech, closed all 130 ITT campuses in 38 states in September 2016 and left the educational futures of about 40,000 students in disarray.

The lawsuit says that ITT Educational, despite having cash and equivalents of $108.6 million on March 31, 2016, shut down five months later “without an orderly plan for winding down its operations or even providing for a teach-out of its 40,000 active students.”

“ITT’s free-fall bankruptcy left it with no shareholder equity and billions of dollars in potential claims,” the suit says. Caruso began exploring possible bankruptcy remedies in 2017.

The trustee’s complaint says the “resulting tragedy could have been avoided, or at a minimum, the damages could have been significantly reduced, if Defendants had fulfilled their fiduciary duties to ITT and its stakeholders, including creditors and active students.”

The suit alleges the breach of fiduciary duties happened because of the following:

• the directors abdicated “crucial decision-making authority” to Modany to negotiate with important partners despite knowing “Modany was conflicted and could not be trusted to place ITT’s interests above his own personal interests, including his desire to retain control of ITT and the obvious incentive to maintain the benefits of his substantial compensation package.” Modany’s total compensation in 2014 from ITT Tech was $3.2 million. In 2015, it was $1.4 million. In 2016, it was about $824,000, but he received other benefits, including use of a company car.
• retaining Modany against the wishes of accreditors, regulators, attorneys general and other partners, and “chronically failing to exercise reasonable oversight” over him.
• failing to “independently investigate ITT’s financial condition and ability to continue operations.”
• failing to secure a merger, sale or other transaction to maximize ITT’s value for constituents.
• failing to secure an orderly wind-down of ITT’s operations, including a teach-out of its student body.

Neither Odle nor a lawyer representing the directors immediately responded to IBJ’s request for comment.

The lawsuit states that ITT’s “crisis period” started on April 20, 2016, when accreditor ACICS, known as the Accrediting Council for Independent Colleges and Schools, sent a letter ordering ITT to show cause why its accreditation should not be withdrawn or conditioned, in part because of “public and widely-known allegations” regarding the quality of its instruction.

The defendants, Caruso alleges, “knew (or recklessly disregarded the fact)” that failing to satisfy ACICS could cause ITT to lose its accreditation, rendering it ineligible to receive crucial federal funding that accounted for about 90 percent of its revenue.

They also knew or disregarded, Caruso alleged, the fact that ACICS “wanted to terminate Modany.” In fact, Modany wrote to executive chairman John Dean that their resignations were “likely a necessary action” because “it’s almost a certainty that we need to give these guys a dead body!”

Instead of stepping down, the lawsuit alleges Modany “downplayed the risk of de-accreditation and pushed the board to pursue a sale of the company or its assets, but only on terms that were beneficial to Modany, personally.”

The lawsuit also states Modany was not only financially conflicted, but was “obsessed about protecting his reputational interest.”

He “selfishly focused on securing a strategic transaction that would trigger his severance payment and provide him continued employment or some other face-saving exit,” according to the complaint.

Modany also apparently tried to scuttle other possible deals that ITT could have taken part in, according to the complaint.

There was a possible transaction with U.S. Skills LLC and Thomas H. Lee Partners, but the complaint states Modany took affirmative efforts to undermine the offer by saying he was “increasingly doubtful about the seriousness … of the offer, and encouraged the directors to cease discussions.”

In one email, Modany stated, “the sooner we stop talking to these guys and wasting our time, resources and the globe’s oxygen supply the better!”

To another potential deal inquiry from Genki Capital, which had suggested an acquisition, ITT officer Rocco Tarasi forwarded the inquiry to Modany and said “I’m going to ignore this unless you want otherwise.”

Modany replied: “I think you know the answer … wild ass fishing!”

The complaint also lays out troubles that the board had in communicating or engaging with Modany.

Odle on April 30, 2016, asked Dean, as chairman of the board, to set up a conference call with Modany to discuss different transaction options. Dean replied later that Modany “declined the request.”

Odle responded: “John you are his boss. How does he decline your request?”

The lawsuit also alleges the defendants “disregarded their duties to take concrete steps to limit ITT’s liabilities.”

“They knew (or recklessly disregarded the fact) that an orderly wind-down would require [the federal government’s] cooperation and take many months and that by not so acting, they would be exposing ITT to otherwise avoidable catastrophic liabilities.”

The lawsuit states that “as a direct and proximate result of the wrongful acts, omissions and breaches of duty alleged heriein, ITT has been damaged in an amount subject to proof at trial, but in any event, no less than $250 million.”

It also asks for a jury trial, claims that the defendants should be ordered to disgorge all compensation received by their roles at ITT, and that Modany’s claims as an unsecured creditor should be delayed until other creditors are paid.

Summer 2018 Lifelong Learning courses now available for registration

0

University of Southern Indiana Outreach and Engagement has released the summer 2018 series of Lifelong Learning noncredit courses. Over 100 courses are now open to the community for registration.

“We’re pleased to continue to develop new courses essential for personal and professional growth,” said Dawn Stoneking, director of Lifelong Learning. “We hope you’ll share with us how the resources enhance your life’s journey.”

Courses offered each semester include a wide variety of topics to learn and improve life skills. Whether a learner is seeking Professional Development, Fitness and Recreation or anything in between, Lifelong Learning has something for everyone. Two new courses developed for the summer include:

Drawing Trees with Trees (Saturday, July 14): Learn how to draw and connect with nature in a refreshing way. Bill Whorrall has been drawing landscapes and still lifes with ink, watercolor and sticks for the past several years.

Using Your iPad (Tuesday and Thursday, June 5 and 7 and Monday or Wednesday, July 9 and 11): During this two-session, hands-on course we will explore how you can get the most out of your device as well as address many common questions associated with the iPad.

These newly developed courses join a collection of popular courses. More information can be found for each course at its respective link:

Smartphone Photography 101 (Saturdays, June 16 and July 14): Would you like to improve the quality of photos taken with your smartphone? This class will teach you the nitty gritty of smartphone photography.

Beginning Golf (Wednesdays, starting June 20): Get into the swing with professional instruction on golf equipment, terminology, rules and etiquette.

Introduction to Personal Finance for High School Students (Wednesday, June 27): Before long, your high school student will be entering college or the workforce. Are they equipped with the proper financial tools and knowledge?

Microsoft Excel 2016 Levels I-III (Thursdays, starting June 14, June 28 and July 12): Expand your Microsoft Excel knowledge by enrolling in one of the three levels offered. Whether you are starting at the basics or mastering the software, there is a level for everyone.

Six Sigma Green Belt (Monday through Friday, August 6 through 10): Knowing how well your processes deliver the products or services your customers need is at the heart of Six Sigma.

Lifelong Learning courses are open to anyone in the community regardless of educational background. The broad range of courses are presented in a noncompetitive atmosphere, where interest in learning and personal growth is the primary focus. USI alumni receive a 10 percent discount on most courses.

Registration is available online or by calling USI Outreach and Engagement at 812-464-1989. A complete listing of current courses is available at USI.edu/LifelongLearning.