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LYING PRESS

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USI Begins Play In SCB Hall Of Fame Classic Friday

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University of Southern Indiana Men’s Basketball begins the regular season with a pair of games in the Small College Basketball Hall of Fame Classic Friday and Saturday at the Ford Center. USI is slated to play Augustana University (SD) Friday at 6 p.m. and 24th-ranked Kentucky Wesleyan College Saturday at 6 p.m.

In addition to USI, Augustana, and KWC, the SCB Hall of Fame Classic field is well represented in the official NCAA Division II preseason poll, conducted by the National Association of Basketball Coaches. St. Thomas Aquinas College leads the way in fifth, followed by Indiana University of Pennsylvania in sixth; Ferris State University in10th; the University of Findlay in 20th; and KWC in 24th. Game times for the SCB Hall of Fame Classic are noon, 2:30 p.m., 6 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. both days. A complete classic schedule is on GoUSIEagles.com.

Game coverage for the USI games in the SCB Hall of Fame Classic, including live stats, video stream, and audio broadcasts, also is available at GoUSIEagles.com. The games also can be heard on WEOA 98.5FM/1400AM and 95.7FM The Spin.

USI Men’s Basketball SCB Hall of Fame Classic Quick Notes: 

USI reaches triple-digits in exhibition game. USI reached triple-digits in the 108-66 victory over Manchester University Monday night. Junior guard Alex Stein led USI with a double-double on 26 points and 10 assists. Freshman forward Emmanuel Little also posted a double-double with 13 points and 12 rebounds.

USI in the SCB Hall of Fame Classic. The Eagles enter the SCB Hall of Fame Classic for the second season after going 2-0 in the inaugural tournament last year, defeating Florida Southern College, 108-94, and Kentucky Wesleyan College, 85-81. USI was led by tournament MVP Jeril Taylor, who averaged 30.5 points in the two contests.  Junior guard Alex Stein joined Taylor on the All-Tournament team with 19.5 points per game.

USI vs. Augustana & KWC. USI will be meeting Augustana University (SD), who won the 2016 national championship, for the first time in men’s basketball. The Vikings have averaged 27.6 wins per year since 2014-15. The Eagles trail the all-tim.

Adopt A Pet

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CeCe is one of the VHS’ longest residents! She can be shy and scared in the shelter setting, so right now she’s in foster care with a staff member. But a visit can easily be arranged with her foster mom. CeCe likes people and gets along fine with multiple other cats! She’s about 5 years old. Her adoption fee is $30 and includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details or to set up a visit!

Yesteryear: Mechanic Arts School By Pat Sides

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In 1937, a committee of state and local officials recommended the construction of a vocational school in Evansville because of the shortage of skilled workers for manufacturing jobs. The building was designed to resemble a factory, which was thought would make students more easily adjust to working in such an environment.

This image shows the school as it nears completion; over a hundred boys from Bosse, Central, and Reitz high schools transferred to Mechanic Arts when it opened early in 1939. The skills they learned were soon put to use in the scores of local industries that produced military goods in the Second World War. In 1956, the school was renamed North High School.

Long Struggle for Racial Equality in Indiana to be Topic of UE Fiddick Lecture

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James H. Madison, Thomas and Kathryn Miller Professor Emeritus of History at Indiana University, Bloomington, will be the speaker for this year’s University of Evansville Thomas C. Fiddick Memorial Lecture. The event is planned for Friday, November 3. at 7:00 p.m. in Room 170 (Smythe Lecture Hall) in the Schroeder School of Business Building. This is the 16th year for the lecture, which is free and open to the public.

Madison will be delivering an illustrated lecture on “Hoosiers and the Long Struggle for Racial Equality.”

For over two centuries the people of Indiana have struggled with challenges of race. There were times when African American Hoosiers could not vote, when the danger of lynching was real, when the Ku Klux Klan seemed right and necessary, when segregationists created schools, restaurants, and basketball tournaments for whites only. Beginning in the1950s, Indiana reformers began a push toward equality that we know as the great civil rights movement. Madison’s lecture will focus on several flash points of challenge and change to spark thinking about race and about where we have been, where we are, and where we want to go as citizens in a changing world.

 

Madison is without doubt one of the most distinguished scholars to work in the field of Indiana history. An award winning teacher for over four decades at IU, he is the author of several books, including Eli Lilly: A Life; A Lynching in the Heartland: Race and Memory in America; and Slinging Doughnuts for the Boys: An American Woman in World War II. He has taught as a Fulbright professor in Japan and England and has served on the boards of Indiana Humanities and the Indiana Historical Society, as well as being a member of the Indiana Bicentennial Commission. Madison’s most recent book is the highly acclaimed bicentennial history, Hoosiers: A New History of Indiana; it is the basis for an Emmy-awarded PBS documentary on Indiana’s history.

“Professor Jim Madison is an extremely eminent scholar of Indiana History and we are absolutely thrilled to bring him to the University of Evansville to deliver the Fiddick Lecture and interact with students in class,” said James MacLeod, UE professor of history and director of the Fiddick Memorial Lecture Series.

“As recent events have catapulted race relations back into the center of public discourse,” MacLeod added, “this is a perfect time to educate ourselves about the history of racial equality in our home state. There can be few better-qualified people to tell this story than Professor Madison. It is especially appropriate given Tom Fiddick’s lifelong passion for many of the key issues discussed by Jim Madison, especially Civil Rights.”

Thomas C. Fiddick, for whom the Fiddick Memorial Lecture is named, served as professor of history at the University of Evansville from 1963 to 2002. In his 39 years at the University, he was a dedicated teacher, a productive scholar, and a tireless fighter in the cause of justice. His untimely death on the day of his retirement in 2002 stunned the UE community, especially his many former students. It was from the former students’ efforts in particular, with the support of Fiddick’s friends and the University, that the annual Thomas C. Fiddick Memorial Lecture was established.

“The Fiddick Lecture is one of the best events of the year, as we get to celebrate the career of a truly outstanding faculty member here at UE,” MacLeod said. “Tom Fiddick was a brilliant scholar and an incredible teacher who made a life-transforming impact on generations of students.”

For more information, please contact the UE Department of History at 812-488-2963.

TROPICANA EVANSVILLE ANNOUNCES NOVEMBER 4 JOB FAIR

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Tropicana Evansville is looking to add fun, energetic and dedicated workers to their team.

On Saturday, November 4, the Tropicana Evansville Human Resources Department will be hosting a Job Fair showcasing their variety of employment opportunities with on-the-spot job offers.  The Job Fair will be held in the Tropicana Evansville Hotel in the Las Vegas & Atlantic City Conference Rooms from 9AM to 1PM CST.

“If you’re looking for your first job or ready to make a career change, come talk to us,” encourages Bill Plahn, Executive Director of Human Resources at Tropicana Evansville.

“Our company is growing and, with our new land-based casino, this is an exciting time to join our Team!  Ask us about our Referral Bonus Program.  This is an opportunity for Team Members and applicants to share a total of $1,150 over a one-year period.”

Positions are available in many departments including Table Games, Slots, Food & Beverage, Hotel, Housekeeping, and Security.

To be considered for an interview, visit www.tropicanacasinos.com/careers/ and search Tropicana Evansville for current job openings.  Review the job listings and complete an online application.  Tropicana Entertainment is an equal opportunity employer and prescreens for illegal substances.

 

Double Homicide

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The Vanderburgh County Coroner Office and the Evansville Police Department are investigating a double homicide on Maryland St. the victims have been identified as Dewone Broomfield

29 yrs old
DOD 10/30/2017 @23:36 at Deaconess Midtown
Mary Patrice Chalonda Woodruff
28 yr old
DOD 10/30/2017 @ 23:37 at St. Vincent hospital.
Autopsy scheduling is pending.

Eagles fly by Spartans in exhibition game

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University of Southern Indiana Men’s Basketball team opened the 2017-18 campaign with a 108-66 victory over Manchester University in an exhibition game Monday evening at the Physical Activities Center. USI starts the 2017-18 regular season November 3-4 in the Small College Basketball Hall of Fame Classic at the Ford Center in Evansville.

The SCB Hall of Fame Classic features the Screaming Eagles against Augustana University Friday at 6 p.m. and Kentucky Wesleyan College Saturday at 6 p.m.

The first half saw USI build an impressive 52-33 lead by shooting a blistering 62.1 percent from the field (18-29). The Eagles were led during the first half run by the hot hands of junior guard Alex Stein (Evansville, Indiana) and senior guard Marcellous Washington (Lexington, Kentucky).

Stein had a team-high 18 points on five-of-seven from the field, including a three-point field goal, and seven of eight from the stripe. Washington followed Stein in the scoring column with 12 points on four-of-five from the field and four-of-four from the stripe.

In the second half, the Eagles continued to cruise as the extended the first half lead to as many as 43 points, 102-59, with 4:45 to play before settling for the 108-66 victory. USI finished the game shooting 61.9 percent from the field (39-63), 47.8 from beyond the arc (11-23), and 76.0 percent from the line (19-25).

Stein finished the game with a double-double, including a game-high 26 points and 10 assists. He finished nine-of-12 from the field, one-of-two from long range, and seven-of-eight from line.

Washington ended the exhibition game behind Stein with 17 points. Senior forward Julius Rajala (Helsinki, Finland) and freshman forward Emmanuel Little (Indianapolis, Indiana) rounded out the double-digit scorers with 16 points and 13 points, respectively.

Little also finished the game with double-double, grabbing a game-high 12 rebounds.