USI has two at the PAC for Homecoming Week
University of Southern Indiana Men’s Basketball hosts a pair of games at the Physical Activities Center during Homecoming Week, beginning with Maryville University Thursday at 7:30 p.m. The USI Homecoming game is scheduled for Saturday at 3:15 p.m. when the Screaming Eagles host Quincy University.
Game coverage for all of USI’s game action, including live stats, video stream, and audio broadcasts, is available at GoUSIEagles.com. The games also can be heard on ESPN 97.7 WREF and 95.7FM The Spin.
Following this week’s two-game homestand, USI has only one home date left on the schedule when it hosts Bellarmine University for Senior Day February 10 at 7:30 p.m. The Eagles are slated to play five of their last six on the road to end the 2017-18 regular season.
USI Men’s Basketball Week 12 Notes:Â
USI continues to receive votes for national poll. For the second-straight week, USI received votes for the D2SIDA Media Poll this week, falling two votes shy of entering the top 25 for the first time this season. The Screaming Eagles also received votes two-straight weeks in December, but has not appeared in the D2SIDA Media Poll or the NABC Top 25 Poll this year.
Eagles goes 2-0 last week. USI started last week by completing a homestand sweep with a 74-55 victory over the University of Wisconsin-Parkside. Junior guard Alex Stein led the Eagles with 20 points, while senior forward Julius Rajala and senior guard Marcellous Washington rounded out the double-digit scorers with 14 and 11 points, respectively. Freshman forward Emmanuel Little led USI on the glass with 10 rebounds, his seventh double-digit rebounding game this season.
The Eagles completed last week’s action with an 86-56 victory at McKendree University. Senior forward DayJar Dickson led three players in double-digits with a career-high 22 points. Washington was second in Saturday’s victory with 17 points and a team-high, season-best seven rebounds.
Watson wins number 200. USI Head Coach Rodney Watson becomes the third Eagles’ head coach to reach the 200-win mark with the victory, tying for second all-time in program history. He is tied with Rick Herdes (200-59, 2001-09) and 31 wins behind all-time leader Bruce Pearl (231-46, 1992-2001).
Eagles on four-game winning streak. USI is on a four-game winning streak, tying for the second longest stretch of the season. Junior guard Alex Stein leads five players averaging in double-digits with 15.0 points per game. Senior guard Marcellous Washington is second with 13.5 points per outing, while freshman forward Emmanuel Little is posting a double-double with 12.3 points and 11.0 rebounds per contest. Junior guard/forward Nate Hansen and senior forward DayJar Dickson round out the double-figure scorers with 11.5 and 10.5 points per the last four games.
USI Leaders. USI has three players averaging double-digits in 2017-18. Junior guard Alex Stein leads the scorers with 18.4 points per game, while junior guard/forward Nate Hansen and senior guard Marcellous Washington round out the double-digit scorers with 14.4 and 12.2 points per contest, respectively. Freshman forward Emmanuel Little has the team lead on the glass with 7.5 rebounds per outing, 8.6 per contest in GLVC action. Senior forward DayJar Dickson is second with 7.1 rebounds per contest, 7.6 per league game.
Washington and Stein among GLVC, NCAA leaders. Junior guard Alex Stein is first in the league and second nationally in free throw percentage (95.4; 103-108) and 27th nationally in free throws made (103).Senior guard Marcellous Washington leads the GLVC and ranks 19th nationally for assist-turnover ratio (2.89). USI, as a team, is first in the GLVC and fourth nationally in rebounds, and second in the league and 12th nationally in rebound margin.
USI in GLVC action. The Eagles are back at the Physical Activities Center for a two-game homestand that features Maryville University (February 1) and Quincy University for Homecoming (February 3).
mayors race research for future article
Democrats seized the U.S. House, but that momentum hasn’t reached Evansville.
Here, it’s going in the opposite direction.
In 2008, 56 percent of Vanderburgh County voters went straight-ticket Democrat. Ten years later, in last month’s election, that dropped to 45 percent – about 3,000 voters less. In that same time span, Republicans went from 42 percent to 53 percent – or about 4,000 more.
That’s just one problem the local party faces as the 2019 election looms. The biggest? They don’t have a candidate for mayor.
A recent story by the Courier & Press’ Tom Langhorne featured a long list of prominent Democrats saying “no†to a possible run against Lloyd Winnecke.
State representative Ryan Hatfield? No. County commissioner Ben Shoulders? Pass. City Councilman Jonathan Weaver? Don’t think so.
Those creepy nutcrackers standing amid the Christmas decorations on Main Street? They didn’t seem interested either.
Local Democratic chairman Scott Danks claims the party will find a strong candidate. But he admitted it won’t be easy.
After all, Winnecke has steamrolled his last two opponents. And as of 2017, he had at least $500,000 in campaign funds. That number has only grown since then, and there’s no telling what kind of cash he’ll have to work with by the time November rolls in.
A Democratic win would be a huge upset no matter who steps forward. But even if the party can’t win, the 2019 election presents a giant opportunity.
Now is the time to find a candidate who speaks to Evansville voters who usually sit out of city elections. Only 20 percent of voters cast a ballot in 2015 – that’s a gargantuan slab of untapped potential.
You could get a lot of those folks on your side in a few easy ways.
Protect their wallets
Vectren – soon to be CenterPoint – charges the highest residential electrical rates in the state. Yet the company has been immune from political criticism for years thanks to its healthy campaign contributions and status as a major area employer.
But Evansville residents are drowning in bills. It would be nice for a mayoral candidate to acknowledge that and vow to oppose any future rate hikes.
Just do anything to speak to the army of city residents who are struggling financially – 21 percent of whom are living in poverty.
I doubt any of those people care in the slightest about a swanky Downtown hotel in which they could never afford to stay.
Find an outsider candidate
It’s all the rage, man.
Every person who turned down possible mayoral runs were white men who are already ensconced in area government.
Evansville has never had a non-white, non-dude top executive. It’s time to change that.
Address neglected areas
Downtown Evansville has seen a lot of improvements under Winnecke. But most city residents don’t live there. And I’ll bet there are a lot of voters who feel like their neighborhoods have been ignored.
Talk with folks in Center City or Howell. See what people in the Diamond-Stringtown area have to say.
There are loads of unheard voices in this city. Act as their megaphone.
Find a way around the money
Granted, in American politics, that might be like asking a gunshot victim to find a way around the bullet.
University of Evansville political scientist Robert Dion summed it up this way.
“People typically don’t want to give big contributions to somebody who has no money,†he told the Courier & Press. “To get off the ground is a challenge, because to get those big donors early on, you have to have a really compelling case. And it’s hard to have a compelling case when you don’t have any money.â€
Essentially, to get money, you need money. Otherwise, you’ll never have the money you need to get more money. Who says the system is broken?
The only thing that could overcome a mound of dollars is a major surge of voter excitement.
Eighty percent of registered voters in Evansville felt like there was no point in voting in the 2015 election. Show them they’re wrong, and you might have a shot.
Know Before You Go – Security Protocol For Sound Of Music
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VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES
 Below are the felony cases to be filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office today.
Lucas James Pace: Possession of methamphetamine (Level 6 Felony), False informing (Class B misdemeanor)
Demanio Lamont Morris Moss: Operating a vehicle while intoxicated (Level 6 Felony), Driving while suspended (Class A misdemeanor)
Teiha Ann Bechtel: Possession of methamphetamine (Level 6 Felony), Possession of paraphernalia (Class C misdemeanor)
Dylan Cody Alan Anderson: Possession of synthetic drug or synthetic drug lookalike substance (Level 6 Felony)
IS IT TRUE JANUARY 30, 2018
House Committee Unanimously Votes to Increase Cigarette Tax, Smoking Age
House Bill 1380 increases the cigarette tax from 99 cents per pack to $2.99 per pack. $1 in revenue from each pack would go toward tobacco use prevention and education.
That same bill also increases the legal age to buy cigarettes and other tobacco products from 18 to 21.