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MEET OLYMPIAN GOLD MEDAL WINNER ANNE AUDAIN WITH A “HEART OF A LION”

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OLYMPIAN GOLD MEDAL WINNER ANNE AUDAIN

Summer of ’81 and the Cascade Run Off 15K

by Anne Audain

On June 28th, 1981 in Portland, Oregon after the Cascade Run Off 15K, I made a decision that changed my life and the lives of hundreds of Track and Field athletes around the world and future Olympians from all sports.

I was 25 years old and had arrived in the USA from my native New Zealand a few months prior, to try my luck racing on the newly formed USA road racing circuit.

My first 10 years as a competitive runner had been spent as an amateur, belonging to a local athletic club, finishing high school, going to teachers college, and teaching elementary school for 4 years.

During those years I was very competitive in my sport representing New Zealand at World Cross Country Championships (5 times), Commonwealth Games (1974), and Olympic Games (qualified in 1972, 1976, and 1980, but only went to Montreal in ’76). I was a multiple New Zealand Champion and record holder.

The hardships came as an amateur trying to combine the training with school, college, and eventually being a school teacher (at age 20 years!). I caught all sorts of bugs from the kids, didn’t have a car, and rode buses to school each day! I would get up at 5:00am to run a few miles and then do a hard training session at the club track after school. If I was lucky, folks with cars would drive me to and from the bus station which was 2 miles from my home. Otherwise I walked.

In 1980, after the USA boycott of the Moscow Olympics, supported by New Zealand and other allies, I quit the sport entirely, got out of shape and overweight.

After some months, I was encouraged to start again and joined my second coach John Davies

In early 1981, I made my 5th New Zealand cross country team to Madrid, Spain. While there, I heard about the USA road racing scene and how women were being allowed to race the longer distances. At this time the 800m and 1500m were the longest distances in the Olympic Games for women.

I told my parents I would not be coming home but had decided to try my luck in the USA. I arrived in New Orleans, from London, in March of 1981 and raced the first 10K of my life finishing 3rd. Many people involved in the circuit were extremely supportive, letting me stay in their homes, paying me a few dollars (against all the amateur rules) to speak in running stores so I could support myself a little. After New Orleans, I raced in Eugene, Spokane, Boulder, New York, Denver, and Colorado Springs with so much success! I was born again!

There was a great deal of excitement surrounding this “new world” of road racing and it brought us all to Portland, OR in June to compete in the Cascade Runoff, a 15K sponsored by Nike.

Start of the 1981 Cascade Run Off 15K

Phil Knight, Nike’s founder, wanted the sport to be professional, as did many of the race directors. Nike put up $50,000 as prize money to be equally distributed between the male and female top ten finishers. First place was $10,000. The night before, all the athletes were assembled and told of the risks of accepting the money (i.e., being banned from the sport!). I was confident that if I finished in the top six I would have enough money to stay a little longer in USA. I had no doubt about my decision, as I had witnessed so many male athletes on the European track circuit being paid “under the table”! I wanted the opportunity to pursue a professional career and to see how good I could be!

Race day turned out better than I thought and I won! I was presented with the check for $10,000 and was immediately in a lot of trouble. I received a telegram – yes a telegram – from the New Zealand Federation banning me from the sport. I was only in the USA on a visitor’s visa, so accepting the money was illegal too. My parents just wanted me to get on a plane and come home!

The telegram I received from the New Zealand Federation declaring me ineligible

Fast forward

After so much support from so many, Nike, my coach, race directors, immigration lawyers, and fellow athletes, I was able to continue racing on the road circuit and went on a 20-race win streak, which took me into 1983! During that time I broke the World Record for the 5000m and won the Gold Medal in the Commonwealth Games 3000m in Brisbane, Australia (1982).

I was reinstated to race on the track one week before winning the Commonwealth Gold Medal and retroactively awarded the World Record.

Track & Field News reporting on my 5000m World Record

There is obviously so much more to this story, but simply said, the Cascade Run Off 15K win changed my life! I became a full time professional runner which enabled me to completely control my environment to enable success. I retired in 1992, having been named the most successful road racer, male or female, in the 80’s!

I often say that if it wasn’t for that small group of runners in June of 81, Michael Jordan and the Dream Team would never have competed in the Olympics, as no professional athletes were allowed prior to that.

It was scary at the time but the risk was SO worth it!


EDITORS FOOTNOTE: For more information on the 1981 Cascade Run Off 15K, read the article 1981 Cascade Run Off: The Race that Changed the Sport on Runner’s World

For more on Anne’s life on and off the track, check out her site anneaudain.com. Running Her Way, Anne Audain’s story is available for rent and purchase here.

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Sammy L. Davis Receives 2018 Sachem Award

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INDIANAPOLIS – Gov. Eric J. Holcomb awarded the 2018 Sachem Award today to Vietnam veteran and Congressional Medal of Honor recipient Sgt. 1st Class Sammy L. Davis of Freedom, Indiana at the Indiana War Memorial. Attached are the governor’s remarks, and below are photos from the event. Learn more about the life of Sgt. Davis and the history of the Sachem award on the governor’s webpage. 

Pictured left to right: Maj. Gen. Erika Steuterman, Pastor Terry Webster, Indiana War Memorial Executive Director Brig. Gen. (ret) Stewart Goodwin, Former Indy 500 Broadcaster Paul Page and  Gov. Eric Holcomb applaud  the 2018 Sachem award recipient,  Sgt. 1st Class Sammy L. Davis  of Freedom, Indiana.

 

 

Gov. Holcomb and Sgt. Davis with the 2018 Sachem award.

 

 

Following the official ceremony, Sachem recipient Sammy L. Davis played “Shenandoah” for friends, family and guests. See video of his performance at www.youtube.com/watch?v=a3_CWebul1U.

 

Dahlstrom, Grooms net D2CCA All-Midwest Region honors

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University of Southern Indiana senior forward Morgan Dahlstrom (Grayslake, Illinois) and senior guard/forward Kaydie Grooms (Marshall, Illinois) have been named to the Division II Conference Commissioner’s Association Women’s Basketball All-Midwest Region second team in a vote by the region’s sports information directors.

Dahlstrom had a career year for the Eagles as she averaged 16.5 points and a Great Lakes Valley Conference-best 9.9 rebounds per contest. She was named first-team All-GLVC, first-team Academic All-District and was twice named GLVC Player of the Week.

The two-time All-GLVC honoree finished her four-year career at USI ranked fifth all-time in program history with 749 career rebounds, tied for fifth in games played (115), 10th in blocks (65) and 15th in scoring (1,069).

Grooms, who was a unanimous first-team All-GLVC honoree, also had a career year for the Eagles as she was fourth in the conference with a team-best 17.8 points per contest. She also earned GLVC Player of the Year honors during the regular-season.

Like Dahlstrom, Grooms also was a two-time All-GLVC honoree. She finished her career at USI ranked first all-time in games started (119); second in games played (119); fourth in free throws made (364); fifth in scoring (1,567), three-point field goals attempted (376) and field goals made (530); sixth in three-point field goals made (143), free throws attempted (454) and steals (185); tied for seventh in blocks (69); 10th in assists (239); and 13th in rebounds (530).

Along with senior guard Randa Harshbarger (Philo, Illinois), who was a third-team All-GLVC selection, Dahlstrom and Grooms helped lead the Eagles to an 89-30 overall record and a 54-18 mark in GLVC play during the last four years. They played in a combined 338 games, recording 3,164 career points, 1,547 rebounds, 701 assists, 141 blocks and 472 steals.

USI finished the year with a 26-5 overall record and advanced to the GLVC Championship game and NCAA II Midwest Region Tournament for the second time in four years. The Eagles finished the year with a 16-2 GLVC mark to earn their second straight GLVC East Division title.

Adopt a Pet

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Chloe is a 14-year-old female longhaired calico. Her previous family suddenly developed “allergies” after having her for her entire 14 years of life. She desperately wants a quiet retirement home to snuggle up in! Chloe’s $40 adoption fee includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 or adoptions@vhslifesaver.org for details!

Justices To Hear Insanity Appeal In Pastor’s Fatal Shooting

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Dave Stafford for www.theindianalawyer.com

The Indiana Supreme Court will hear the state’s challenge of an Indiana Court of Appeals order to enter a not guilty by reason of insanity judgment for a woman who shot and killed a Southport pastor.

Lori Barcroft was previously found guilty but mentally ill for the 2012 shooting of Bethel Community Church Pastor Jama Iseminger. Barcroft shot Iseminger after her son, Jordan Asbury, had confided in the pastor about Barcroft’s deteriorating mental state.

According to the record in Lori Barcroft v. the State of Indiana, 18S-CR-135, Barcroft admitted to police that she shot Iseminger. She later was diagnosed with schizophrenia, paranoid type, or delusional disorder, persecutory type. For example, she told officers that Iseminger had ordered her father to be smothered to death, while Jeb Bush had killed her grandmother and the Bush family and Iseminger together caused her grandson to become infected with a disease. She also claimed that she was a member of the Colombian mafia and that Iseminger had plans to kill her entire family.

Barcroft was found guilty but mentally ill after a bench trial in 2014, but the Indiana Court of Appeals reversed and remanded the case for a new trial in 2015. The case then proceeded to a second bench trial in 2017, when Barcroft once again asserted an insanity defense against charges of murder and a sentencing enhancement for the use of a firearm.

Despite three expert witnesses who determined Barcroft was unable to appreciate the wrongfulness at the time of the shooting, Marion Superior Court once again found Barcroft guilty but mentally ill by relying on demeanor evidence. Specifically, the court determined Barcroft had a motivation for the shooting because Iseminger had advised her son to move her out of his home and that her decision to hide after the shooting showed she appreciated the wrongfulness of her conduct.

Barcroft’s conviction was overturned a second time in December, with the Court of Appeals majority of judges Edward Najam and James Kirsch remanding to the trial for entry of a judgment of not guilty by reason of insanity. Judge Elaine Brown dissented and would have affirmed Barcroft’s conviction of guilty but mentally ill.

The case is one of 22 transfer petitions decided last week by the Indiana Supreme Court, and the only transfer petition granted. Transfer dispositions may be viewed here.

LETTER FROM THE JD SHETH FOUNDATION TO HELP HOMELESS VETERANS

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To Whom it May Concern,

My name is Jaimie Sheth and I am the President/CEO/Founder of the JD Sheth Foundation. I’m writing to introduce myself and our foundation to you in order to possibly work in conjunction to aid the homeless veteran population of Evansville. Our foundation is a 501(c)3 US recognized nonprofit incorporated in Indiana. We are a project to project foundation, meaning we are presented with projects from other foundations/organizations/individuals and we review them to see if they fit our mission. If they do, we gather all necessary information to see if we can successfully complete the project and what we have committed to do.

At the end of 2017, ECHO, an Evansville based nonprofit who focuses on housing and assist- ing homeless veterans, approached us to help fund part of their Gresham House project. The Gresham House will be used in 2018 by homeless veterans as transitional housing prior to integrating into the Evansville community. We accepted. We will be throwing a fundraiser on May 12, 2018, to support this project and would like you to consider supporting us in whatever way you see possible. Some things that we need to make our fundraiser a success include, but aren’t limited to, donated gift cards, donated items for a silent auction, and donated services from local businesses.

I encourage you to look at our website (www.jdshethfoundation.org) when able to get a better understand of the type of work we do. Because we are an Indiana based foundation and have a high affiliation with Evansville, we love supporting our local community, especially our veterans and would appreciate your support in this process.

If you have any questions, please feel free to contact me via email at jaimie@jdsheth.org. Thank you kindly for your time.

To changing lives,

Jaimie D Sheth, President/CEO
JD Sheth Foundation: EIN #47-4129062

Vanderburgh County Democratic Party Calendar of Events 3/12/18

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Saturday,

March 17

FUNDRAISER

DINNER

CELEBRATION

Cocktails: 5:00pm

Dinner: 6:00pm

NEIGHBORS FOR STEVE FOLZ FUNDRAISER

ST. PATRICK’S DAY CELEBRATION

AMERICAN LEGION

6001 NEW HARMONY RD.

EVANSVILLE, IN 47720

COCKTAILS AT 5:00PM, DINNER AT 6:00PM

Thursday,

March 22

Fundraiser 5:00 PM

BEN SHOULDER’S BIRTHDAY BASH

PARTY CENTRAL

120 NW MLK JR BLVD

EVANSVILLE, IN 47708

5PM – 9PM

Thursday,

March 29

Fundraiser

Spaghetti Dinner

5:30 PM MARY HART FOR TRUSTEE SPAGHETTI DINNER

FOP LODGE – FRATERNAL ORDER OF POLICE

801 Court Street – Evansville, IN

5:30 PM – 7:30 PM

Sunday,

April 8

Meet & Greet

Brunch

11:00 AM MEET & GREET & BRUNCH WITH EDIE HARDCASTLE

Lamasco Bar and Grill

1331 W Franklin Street, Evansville, Indiana

11 AM – 1 PM

Libs Candies Inc. by Pat Sides

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Thanksgiving week in 1950 ushered in temperatures that dipped below zero, but that did not deter early Christmas shoppers from venturing downtown. Libs Candies opened its first store that week, just in time for the holiday rush, offering customers a selection of fine chocolates and other flavorsome treats. The firm soon opened another store at 122 NW Fourth Street (seen here), and in 1959, the original store relocated to Sixth and Main, where it remained for decades. Robert Libs, an Owensboro native who learned the art of candy-making in California, founded the business and was soon joined by his brother John. The firm also expanded into North Park and Henderson, Kentucky, eventually making its candies available in numerous Tri-State outlets.

This Week at USI

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Reception – 4 p.m. Saturday, March 10. Exhibit open through Saturday, April 7

New Harmony Gallery hosting Women in Illustration exhibit

The New Harmony Gallery of Contemporary Art’s latest exhibition, The Politics of Imagination: Women in Illustration, will be on display through Saturday, April 7. The exhibition is free and open to the public. A reception will be held at the gallery at 4 p.m. Saturday, March 10 prior to the Under the Beams concert, featuring Ranky Tanky at 7:30 p.m. Read More

Exhibit open through Wednesday, March 14

2017 USI Efroymson Fellow to showcase work at McCutchan Art Center/Pace Galleries

“I Made This for You,” an exhibit created by Matt Perez, a 2015 graduate, during his yearlong Efroymson Bridge Year Fellowship at the University of Southern Indiana, will open Sunday, February 25 in the McCutchan Art Center/Pace Galleries, located in the lower level of the Liberal Arts Center on the USI campus. The exhibition will continue through Wednesday, March 14. Read More

7 p.m. Wednesday, March 21

Annual Shaw Biology Lecture to feature science advisor to Finding NemoDr. Adam Summers, professor of biology at the University of Washington, will present the University of Southern Indiana’s seventh annual Marlene V. Shaw Biology Lecture at 7 p.m. Wednesday, March 21 in Mitchell Auditorium located in the Health Professions Building on the USI campus. The presentation, entitled “From Finding Nemo to Finding Patents,” is free and open to the public. Read More

Exhibit open through Wednesday, March 14

USI Foundation 50th Anniversary Performance: Kate Tombaugh

As part of the USI Foundation’s 50th anniversary celebration, the USI Foundation will be hosting a special performance by mezzo soprano, Kate Tombaugh. Tombaugh is an award-winning vocalist and has performed at renowned venues across the country, including NYC’s Metropolitan Opera and Carnegie Hall. She will present her one-woman show It Just Takes One. This performance is provided at no cost. To secure a seat, please RSVP to the USI Foundation at 812-464-1918 or usi.foundation@usi.edu.  More Information

7 p.m. Thursday, March 22, Friday, March 23, and Saturday, March 24

USI Theatre presents Standing on My Knees

University of Southern Indiana Theatre continues its spring 2018 season with a student-directed production of Standing on My Knees, by John Olive, from March 22-24.  USI theatre student Isabelle Rogers will direct the play. There will be FREE ADMISSION on a first come, first served basis. All performances will take place in the lower level of the College of Liberal Arts in the Helen Mallette Studio Theatre (LA 0105). The performances will be held March 22-24 with all showings starting at 7:00 p.m. More Information

Friday, April 6 – Sunday, April 8

Startup Weekend 7.0

The largest event of its kind in Indiana, Startup Weekend 7.0 will be held Friday, April 6 through Sunday, April 8 in the Business and Engineering Center on the University of Southern Indiana campus. Open regionally to all students and community, Startup Weekends are 54-hour events where developers, designers, marketers, product managers, and startup enthusiasts come together to share ideas, form teams, build products, and launch startups. Developers, designers, educators, students, and those with an interest in entrepreneurship, business, marketing, strategy and more are welcome – no previous entrepreneurial experience is required!. More Information

A collection of events on campus and in the community sponsored by USI student organizations can be found on the USI events calendar by clicking here.

 

 

SOUTHWEST INDIANA CHAMBER HOSTS THE ANNUAL LUNCH WITH THE LT. GOVERNOR

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The Southwest Indiana Chamber will host Lunch with the Lt. Governor

from 11:30am to 1:00pm at Old National Events Plaza.

Lt. Governor Suzanne Crouch will report to the business community. Suzanne built her extensive career in state and local government as a state representative for Vanderburgh and Warrick Counties, a Vanderburgh County commissioner, and as Vanderburgh County auditor.

Sponsors for this event are Vectren, Old National Bank, Alcoa, BKD and St. Vincent.

About Southwest Indiana Chamber

Since 1915, the Southwest Indiana Chamber has been a trusted ally of the regional business community. Today we are one of the state’s largest, strongest, and most impactful nonprofit business organizations, representing a total membership of more than 1,500 businesses, organizations, and agencies. About one-third of members have invested in our organization for 10 or more years. While nearly all major employers in our region invest in the Southwest Indiana Chamber, 71% of our member businesses have 25 or fewer employees.

Learn more about the Chamber, our members, and the Southwest Indiana regional business community at www.swinchamber.com. 318 Main St., Suite 401, Evansville, IN 47708.