Leonhardt fans 10 as Eagles forge split with Saints
University of Southern Indiana Softball sophomore pitcher Jennifer Leonhardt (Louisville, Kentucky) struck out 10 batters as the No. 14 Screaming Eagles forged a doubleheader split with visiting Maryville University in their Great Lakes Valley Conference opener Saturday at the USI Softball Field.
After suffering a 5-3 setback in the first game, the Eagles earned a 3-0 triumph in the second contest to come away with the split. Sophomore shortstop Taylor Ricketts (Georgetown, Kentucky) went a combined 4-of-6 with an RBI to lead the Eagles at the plate.
USI (12-9, 1-1 GLVC) returns to action Saturday at noon when it hosts Bellarmine University in a GLVC doubleheader at the USI Softball Field.
Game 1: Maryville 5, at USI 3 (Box Score)
Maryville (12-6, 1-1 GLVC) scored three times on a three-run double by sophomore pitcher Alyssa Callans in the in the top of the first inning and had a solo home run by sophomore shortstop Jaclyn Pasakarnis in the third to take a 4-0 advantage.
Sophomore outfielder Allison Schubert (Nicholasville, Kentucky) put the Eagles on the board with a solo home run in the last half of the fourth frame, while Leonhardt drove in a pair of runs on a two-out error in the fifth to bring the Eagles to within a single tally.
The Saints, however, got an insurance run in the top of the seventh inning and set the Eagles down in order in the last halves of the sixth and seventh frames to preserve the win.
Junior pitcher Courtney Atkisson (Bringhurst, Indiana) was charged with the loss after giving up five runs, two earned, off eight hits in 6 1/3 innings of work. Atkisson (4-2) had a pair of strikeouts in the loss.
Game 2: at USI 3, Maryville 0 (Box Score)
A solo home run by junior outfielder/pitcher Caitlyn Bradley (Forest, Indiana) put the Eagles up 1-0 in the bottom of the fourth inning, while RBI-singles by Leonhardt and Ricketts in the fifth and sixth frames, respectively, gave USI a commanding three-run cushion.
Leonhardt (5-5) was masterful in the circle, surrendering just four hits while fanning 10 batters, just one off her season high, to pick up the victory. She allowed just five base runners in total and did not allow a runner past second base.
USI also was aided by the efforts of senior third baseman Mena Fulton (Bloomington, Indiana) and senior outfielder Olivia Clark-Kittleson (Carbondale, Illinois), both of whom went 2-for-3 at the plate. Clark-Kittleson’s lead-off single in the fifth frame led to a USI tally, while Fulton’s lead-off double in the sixth led to the Eagles’ third run of the contest.
Hoosier Divers Earn Three More Spots on Final Day of NCAA Zone C Championships
The Indiana University men’s and women’s diving teams earned three more spots at the NCAA Zone C Diving Championships on Saturday afternoon in Columbus, Ohio.
Both Jessica Parratto and Andrew Capobianco ended their great weeks on a high note, earning a third individual berth to the NCAA Championships. Both divers will compete in all three diving events at the NCAA’s. Freshman Mya Kraeger earned her first NCAA berth with a great performance in the platform dive.
In total, the Hoosier men qualified three divers that earned a total of seven NCAA spots, while the women had two divers earn four berths. Along with Parratto, Capobianco and Kraeger, both Michael Hixon and James Connor will dive in the 1-meter and 3-meter dives at the NCAA Championships.
In the women’s platform, Parratto was terrific, placing third overall in the final with a total of 604.65. Kraeger had a great showing, earning her spot at the NCAA Championships in the event with a score of 484.05.
Capobianco capped his week with another stellar outing, placing third overall with a total of 769.00 to earn his place at the NCAA’s. Capobianco is the only freshman in the nation to earn a place in all three diving events at the NCAA Championships.
Next up for the Indiana University men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams will be the NCAA Championships. The women’s NCAA’s run from March 14-17 in Columbus, Ohio, while the men’s NCAA Championships will take place from March 21-24 in Minneapolis, Minn.
Wanted Violent Felon Rams a Patrol Car, Crashes Truck During Pursuit
An Evansville man wanted for Aggravated Battery is in custody and facing new charges after leading sheriff’s deputies and police officers on a vehicle pursuit Friday night.
On Friday, March 09, 2018 a 10:42 PM sheriff’s deputies attempted to conduct a traffic stop on a grey 1994 Dodge Ram 1500 pick-up truck driven by Mr. Shane Hunter. Mr. Hunter was being sought on an active warrant for Aggravated Battery with a Knife as a Level 3 Felony.
Mr. Hunter fled from deputies, but lost control of his vehicle and struck a Vectren utility pole in a parking lot north of Campground Road and Stringtown Road. Mr. Hunter then reversed his vehicle, turned around and rammed a stationary Sheriff’s Office vehicle before continuing to flee west on Campground Road. During the pursuit, Mr. Hunter turned off all the lights on his truck in an attempt to evade pursuing deputies. Mr. Hunter lost control of his vehicle once again while on Kratzville Road, crashing into a wooded area just south of W. Buena Vista Road.
Mr. Hunter then fled on foot and was tracked by both a Sheriff’s Office K-9 team and a Evansville Police Department K-9 team. The Evansville Police K-9 located and apprehended Mr. Hunter hiding in a pile of sand in the driveway of a nearby residential address.
Deputies located a small amount of methamphetamine and marijuana in Mr. Hunter’s truck. Mr. Hunter was arrested and transported to Deaconess Hospital for treatment of a dog bite sustained during his apprehension. He was later discharged from the hospital and booked in at the Jail.
ARRESTED
Shane Ryan Hunter (pictured above), 24, of Evansville. Resisting Law Enforcement as a Level 6 Felony, Resisting Law Enforcement as a Class A Misdemeanor, Hit and Run as a Class B Misdemeanor (2 counts), Possession of Methamphetamine as a Level 6 Felony, Possession of Marijuana as a Class B Misdemeanor, Reckless Driving as a Class C Misdemeanor, Driving while License Suspended as a Class A Misdemeanor
Senate Democrats Calling For Gun Safety Study
Staff Report
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS—Senate Democrats, who are outnumbered 41-9, are summer study committee to look into the issue of gun safety across the state.
Just three weeks ago, a gunman entered a Florida high school and opened fire, killing 17 people and injuring dozens more. The events have sparked debate at both the state and federal level about the availability of guns and whether they should be more tightly regulated.
“We can’t accept these tragedies as a part of everyday American life,†Senate Minority Leader Tim Lanane, D-Anderson, said in a press release Wednesday. “We need to create common-sense legislation to secure the safety of our children while balancing the Second Amendment rights of responsible firearm owners as well as those rights guaranteed under the Indiana Constitution.â€
Senate Resolution 49 would create a summer study committee that would look topics ranging from Indiana’s background checks laws, banning assault weapons, raising the minimum age to purchase an assault weapon from 18 to 21, and banning bump stocks.
This resolution comes after legislation that would have allowed guns in a church with a school on the property and another that would have dropped licensing fees for lifetime gun permits appeared to die. The language in either or both bills could be resurrected in conference committee before the session ends March 14.
FOOTNOTE: TheStatehouseFile.com is a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
Time change Is This Weekend: It’s Time To ‘Spring Forward’ 1 Hour
Daylight Saving Time starts this weekend, meaning it’s time for people around the U.S. to set their clocks ahead one hour before going to bed Saturday night (March 10).
Daylight Saving Time officially start 2 a.m. Sunday, when clocks are moved ahead one hour to 3 a.m.
The good news is most electronic devices – cell phones, computers, some car clocks, etc. – are programmed to advance automatically. The bad news is most clocks and watches are not, meaning you will have to make the change yourself.
More Light In The Evening Hours
Sunrise and sunset will be about one hour later on March 11 than the day before, meaning more light in the evening hours. The time will change again on Nov. 4 when clocks will move back one hour.
The idea dates to Benjamin Franklin, who first proposed the idea as a way to conserve energy. DST – then known as “fast time” – was instituted in World War I in several countries, including the U.S., but abandoned shortly after the war ended. It was revived in 1942 by President Franklin Roosevelt and utilized during World War II.
President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Uniform Time Act in 1966, establishing schedules for daylight saving time and eliminating the problem of local governments setting their own. In 2005, President George W. Bush extended daylight saving time for an extra four weeks, setting the start date each year as the second Sunday of March with an ending day on the first Sunday of November.
The time-change idea is not without controversy. Hawaii and Arizona don’t observe Daylight Saving Time and just this year, Florida legislators passed a measure that would allow the Sunshine State to remain on DST year-round. The measure is awaiting Gov. Rick Scott’s signature and would require Congressional approval before it could be instituted.
Internationally, only about 40 percent of the world’s countries observe DST.
The beginning of DST doesn’t signal the official start of spring, however. The vernal (or spring) equinox will be on March 20 at 11:15 a.m. this year.
MEET BRENDA BERGWITZ PATRIOT, FRIEND AND VETERANS RIGHTS CRUSADER
MEET BRENDA BERGWITZ, PATRIOT, FRIEND AND VETERANS RIGHTS CRUSADER
Brenda had been a life long Democrat until at the age of 65 in 2008 she looked around, didn’t recognize her country got scared turned on the radio and listened to Glenn Beck and the rest was history.
She is now an Republican conservative  that fights for disadvanatged people. She also attempts to force our elected officials to practice transparency, accounability and fiscal responsibility
Brenda grew up in poverty in West Virginia. To escape her disadvantaged enviourment, she joined the Marine Corps during the Viet Nam era. She served two years as a secretary in Washington DC, then was forced out of the military by a policy that didn’t allow married enlisted female marines to served in the military. She married fellow Marine, John Bergwitz and they had five children. Â One son is in the Marines today and another died at the Drury Inn plane crash.
Brenda and John were married 51 years. She started her working carreer as a nurse at St. Mary’s Hosipital, Evansville. Â After her nursing carreer she worked and retired from Sterling Brewery. She is known for being extremely generous with her time figting for conservative causes.
Brenda is presently experiencing majpr health issues. Â She just returned from Vanderbilt Medical Center and is presently doing rehab at a local healthcare facility. We encourage you to pray for Brenda health to improve.
SO LONG, FOODS OF MY 1970S CHILDHOOD
By Tom Purcell
The Wall Street Journal article made me both hungry and wistful.
According to The Journal, Aunt Jemima pancake mix, Campbell’s Soup, Kellogg’s cereals and many other “big-food†staples of the ’70s are in trouble.
“High-end consumers are shifting toward fresher items with fewer processed ingredients, while cost-conscious shoppers are buying inexpensive store brands,†reports The Journal.
Processed foods were all the rage in the ’70s. With big families to feed in a down economy, parents were looking for what they thought was “safe, affordable and convenient food.â€
It was the golden era of Hamburger Helper, which originated in 1971. Hamburger Helper included dried pasta and powdered, seasoned sauce to add to browned hamburger – a tasty meal that even my father could make.
Truth be told, my parents didn’t often purchase name-brand foods. They spent our limited budget on fresh fruit and produce – which my sisters and I viewed as a disappointment.
That’s because the ’70s was also the golden era of television advertising. The big-food makers exploited color TV’s power to make us crave their products.
I’m 55 and I still have “Big Mac Attacks.†I wake sweating, convinced that the Hamburglar made off with my meal.
I have Big Mac Attacks because our parents never took us to McDonald’s.
Nor would they buy us other heavily advertised products, such as Cap’n Crunch, source of the world’s most intense sugar buzz; Hostess Ho Hos, source of the world’s second most intense sugar buzz; or soft, white Wonder Bread, which, I’m pretty sure, has less nutritional value than the plastic bag in which it comes.
No, my parents bought Cellone’s Italian bread, good stuff still. However, Cellone’s, combined with bologna, a processed food they did buy, made lunchtime unpleasant.
I don’t know how my mother did it, but every single day, she assembled my sandwich with two end pieces of bread, which were glued together by a hunk of bologna and a dollop of warm mayonnaise. It was wrapped in wax paper (no name-brand sandwich wraps for the Purcell clan).
Every day, I sat next to Jimmy Schmidt. His lunch included peanut butter and jelly on fresh Wonder Bread, a can of Coke, Ho Hos and a Nestle Crunch bar.
Every day, I asked Jimmy if he wanted to trade.
Every day, he looked at me like I had rocks in my head.
The only other processed food we consumed was Velveeta.
Note to people under 30: Velveeta is one of the tastiest gastronomic inventions of the past two centuries – even though it’s not really cheese.
Every Friday night, my mother made tuna melts with the stuff. I could have eaten a million of those sandwiches. Good thing, too – I needed the calories then.
Because every Saturday night, my father made greasy, burnt hamburgers in a cast-iron skillet. And the only member of our family able to digest them was our dog, Jingles, to whom we slipped them when our father wasn’t looking.
It’s a good thing that more people are aware of the ingredients in the food we eat – that fewer are consuming the processed-food staples of my youth – but, as I said, my family never consumed most of them, anyhow.
Much like humorist Calvin Trillin, my mother made leftovers for dinner ALMOST EVERY NIGHT for 30 years.
Like Trillin, we sent a crew of anthropologists into her kitchen, but they were unable to find the original meal.
Out Going State Rep. Tom Washburne Honored For Service
State Rep. Tom Washburne Honored For Service
Washburne will retire when his term is up in November. During his time in the Indiana House of Representatives, he served as chair of the House Committee on Courts and Criminal Code.
He was also a member of the House Judiciary Committee and the House Financial Institutions Committee.
Washburne says he and his wife decided before the election in November of 2016 that this term would be his last.
During his time, Washburne examined proposals related to how the Hoosier court system operates. He was first elected in 2012.
Washburne represents Gibson County, and parts of Knox, Pike, Vanderburgh and Posey Counties.