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Grooms, Dahlstrom lift Eagles past Lakers in defensive slugfest

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University of Southern Indiana Women’s Basketball senior guard/forward Kaydie Grooms (Marshall, Illinois) and senior forward Morgan Dahlstrom (Grayslake, Illinois) combined for 40 points and 24 rebounds as the No. 17 Screaming Eagles defeated Midwest Region foe Grand Valley State University in a defensive slugfest between a pair of nationally-ranked teams at the Bellarmine Thanksgiving Classic.

The Eagles (5-0) used a dominating fourth-quarter performance to complete a comeback that began in the late stages of the second quarter. USI, which trailed by as much as 13 points late in the second period and 11 points late in the third frame, outscored the No. 25 Lakers 39-17 throughout the final 21 minutes of the contest to secure its fifth straight regional victory.

Grooms finished with 27 points and nine rebounds for the Eagles, who scored the final five points of the first half to trim their 13-point deficit to 27-19 at the break.

Dahlstrom had her third double-double of the year with 13 points and 15 rebounds for USI, which trailed 34-23 with less than four minutes to play in the third quarter.

The Eagles return to action Sunday at noon when they take on Midwest Region opponent Northern Michigan University in their final game of the Bellarmine Thanksgiving Classic. The Wildcats (3-2) were playing host Bellarmine University Saturday afternoon.

1st Quarter
After falling behind 5-0 early in the contest, USI went on an 11-1 run to take a five-point lead. Grooms had seven points for the Eagles, who held the Lakers to just 21.4 percent (3-14) from the field in the first 10 minutes of the contest. USI held a 13-10 advantage on the glass in the opening period as it took an 11-8 lead into the second quarter.

2nd Quarter
Grand Valley State used a 21-3 outburst that began in the late stages of the first quarter to build a commanding 13-point lead. USI scored the final five points of the period, but a .214 shooting percentage (3-14) hampered the Eagles as they went into the break facing a 27-19 deficit.

3rd Quarter
After falling behind by 11 with just over four minutes to play in the period, the Eagles closed the third quarter with a 9-1 run to cut Grand Valley State’s lead to 35-32 heading into the final 10 minutes. USI held the Lakers to just 3-of-15 (.200) shooting in the third quarter as it got back into the contest.

4th Quarter
USI held the Lakers to just one field goal and a .067 shooting percentage (1-15) in a fourth quarter that saw the Eagles earn a 21-9 scoring advantage. Grooms scored 12 points and grabbed five rebounds in the period as USI outscored the Lakers 9-2 throughout the first five minutes to take a 41-37 lead. The Eagles finalized the period with a 12-4 surge to put the win on ice.

Newspaper Box Score
Grand Valley vs Southern Indiana
11/25/17 1 p.m. at Louisville, KY (Knights Hall)

SOUTHERN INDIANA 53, GRAND VALLEY 44

GRAND VALLEY (4-1)
Natalie Koenig 5-13 4-8 16; Jenn DeBoer 2-10 2-2 8; Maddie Dailey 3-11 0-0 7; Cassidy Boensch 2-7 0-2 4; Korynn Hincka 1-2 2-2 4; Megan Belke 1-2 0-0 2; Victoria Hedemark 1-4 0-2 2; Taylor Parmley 0-5 1-2 1; Emma Wright 0-0 0-0 0; Anja Smith 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 15-56 9-18 44.

SOUTHERN INDIANA (5-0)
Grooms, Kaydie 9-16 6-8 27; Dahlstrom, Morgan 6-12 1-4 13; Harshbarger, Randa 1-7 2-2 4; Davidson, Alex 1-5 0-0 3; Eschweiler, Kacy 0-5 2-2 2; Rowan, Mikayla 1-4 0-0 2; Sherwood, Morgan 1-4 0-0 2; DeHart, Emma 0-2 0-0 0; Johnson, Ashley 0-2 0-0 0; Guy, Imani 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 19-59 11-16 53.

Grand Valley………………    8   19    8    9  -   44
Southern Indiana…………..   11    8   13   21  -   53

3-point goals—Grand Valley 5-19 (Jenn DeBoer 2-4; Natalie Koenig 2-5; Maddie Dailey 1-6; Megan Belke 0-1; Victoria Hedemark 0-2; Anja Smith 0-1), Southern Indiana 4-16 (Grooms, Kaydie 3-5; Davidson, Alex 1-3; Harshbarger, Randa 0-3; Eschweiler, Kacy 0-1; Sherwood, Morgan 0-2; DeHart, Emma 0-2).

Fouled out—Grand Valley-Korynn Hincka; Cassidy Boensch, Southern Indiana-None.

Rebounds—Grand Valley 40 (Korynn Hincka 7), Southern Indiana 47 (Dahlstrom, Morgan 15).

Assists—Grand Valley 9 (Natalie Koenig 3; Jenn DeBoer 3), Southern Indiana 8 (Rowan, Mikayla 2; Harshbarger, Randa 2).

Total fouls—Grand Valley 17, Southern Indiana 20.

Technical fouls—Grand Valley-None, Southern Indiana-None.

Attendance—125

Bellarmine Thanksgiving Classic

 

Vicki Hubiak President Of HR Solutions Is An Outstanding Community Leader

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It was 1994, and Vicki Hubiak faced a career crisis. For 15 years she had been climbing the ladder at Peabody Energy, all the way to employee relations manager of the Midwest Division, before the age of 40. In 1990, however, Congress had passed an amendment to the Clean Air Act to significantly reduce acid rain within five years. By 1994, the amendment had taken its toll on the coal industry, and Hubiak was spending much of her time handing out pink slips to employees. The work became, in her words, “overwhelming” and “depressing.”

Hubiak resigned from the only employer she had known since attending the University of Evansville, set up a desktop computer in the walk-out basement of her Henderson, Kentucky, home, and went to work as a human resources consultant and certified resume writer. Despite her departure, Hubiak was respected so much by her former bosses that she signed Peabody as one of her first clients.

Twenty-one years later, the woman who took a leap of faith in becoming an entrepreneur has turned a business in her basement into a $10 million company. She is president and owner of HR Solutions, Inc. in Evansville, which serves businesses and individuals with five core services: staffing, executive recruiting, outplacement, executive coaching, and training. Hubiak and her staff of 15, including her son, Nicholas, recently purchased and moved into the former Umbach & Associates building on Saint Joseph Avenue near the intersection of the Lloyd Expressway after outgrowing their longtime location across the street. The new building is named the HR Solutions Business Complex with 18,000 sq. ft. and is also an income property for her business.

“I never thought it would be to the level it is today,” Hubiak says with a shake of her head and a smile. “One thing I learned early on is that when you go above and beyond, and exceed expectations, you connect with people. I love working with our team. We’re ever-changing and growing and learning every day.”

HR Solutions has many clients providing temporary, temp-to-hire, and contract employees ranging in numbers of one to more than 170. More than 100 of these positions are at $18 an hour or more. It’s the job of HR Solutions to advertise for these positions, then review applicants to find the best qualified candidates. Detailed testing sessions, reference checking, background checks, and in-depth interviews by Hubiak’s staff whittle down the list, and clients interview the finalists. Many of their candidates tell them they have never been through such an in-depth hiring process and that the process has a lifelong benefit to them, while providing HR Solutions clients with a highly pre-qualified talent pool and excellent job skills match.

“All of our clients feel we are an integral part of their business,” says Hubiak, about the relationships she and her team have built with their clients. “High-quality staffing and recruiting is what we do for all clients. Whether they need one employee or 100, our process of pre-qualification is the same. What we do works, because we are able to give our clients the cream of the crop of candidates. Most of our employees reach the point of being fully trained and are ready to become an employee of the client. By this time, the company can see that the employee is performing at a high level, is a good cultural fit and that they have a good, solid work ethic. They’re high quality.”

There are many clients that Hubiak has worked with since the day she started her company in the basement of her home. Hubiak has instilled in her staff a strong desire and commitment to building relationships with clients. These clients range from large manufacturing companies to small family-owned businesses, and include industries such as healthcare, engineering, pharmaceutical, energy, and finance. This spring, Hubiak is heading the search for a new CEO for a major healthcare provider. Clients like this and others have turned Hubiak’s home business into a multi-million dollar operation, but individual successes please her the most.

“I just hope we continue to make a difference with people,” Hubiak says about her company’s future. “We’ve helped people who simply don’t understand why they cannot get a job. By listening, and coaching them, giving feedback, and helping them improve their computer skills, we can guide them. We fully prepare people for an interview, not only to speak about their skills and experience, but by making sure they understand the expectations and the culture of the company where they’re interviewing.”

As a businesswoman, she is recognized in the community as a driving force for giving back both through her service on nonprofit boards and committees, and monetarily. Over the years, Hubiak and many others on her staff have put in time and resources to help local nonprofits, notably the Women’s Fund of Evansville, SCORE, YWCA, Boys and Girls Clubs, United Caring Shelters, Aurora, Girl Scouts, Ronald McDonald House, Evansville Rescue Mission, American Red Cross, and Tri-State Food Bank.

Hubiak is especially proud that her company is able to serve as an H-1B sponsor for Tianlin Xu, a Purdue University graduate from China whom HR Solutions recently placed in a chemistry lab analyst position at a local manufacturing company. Hubiak and staff members BethAnn Langlois and Amanda Smith are working with an attorney through the American Staffing Association to assure that Xu can stay in the U.S. through what is called H-1B status, which allows U.S. employers to temporarily employ foreign citizens in specialty occupations for three to six years.

“Tianlin sent BethAnn a big bouquet of flowers; she was so happy,” Hubiak says of Xu. “This employee has made a big commitment through her education and training, and I’m so glad we were able to do this. This process can be complicated and companies will sometimes shy away from the financial burden and the legal process. This was a milestone for us in being able to sponsor her. Our company grows from meeting people, and learning, and listening, and helping others. We exceed expectations and give back. I believe in that. I have a passion for that.”

PROFESSIONAL PROFILE

Vicki L. Hubiak, CMF HR Solutions, Inc., an OI Gobal Partner

EDUCATION/CERTIFICATIONS

B.S. – Business Administration/Marketing

UNIVERSITY OF EVANSVILLE

Certified Management Fellow

INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE OF CAREER CERTIFICATION

Certified Compensation Professional

AMERICAN COMPENSATION ASSOCIATION

Certified Professional Resume Writer

PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATION OF RESUME WRITERS

Women-owned Business Enterprise (WBE)

PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS

Member, Board of Advisors, The Women’s Fund

Member, Board of Advisors, USI

Member, Board of Directors, SCORE; Past Assistant Vice Chair

Past Member, Board of Directors, Community Marriage Builders

Past Member, Board of Directors, WorkOne

Past Member, Raising Incomes Committee

Past Board of Directors, Junior Achievement

Past Board of Directors, Evansville Association for the Blind

Past Board of Directors, YWCA

Past Board of Directors, Ronald McDonald House

Member, Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM)

Member, Evansville-Area Human Resource Association, Inc. (EHRA)

Member, Professional Association of Resume Writers

Member, Metropolitan Evansville Chamber of Commerce

Past Member, Henderson-Henderson County Chamber of Commerce

Past Member, ANEW – A Network of Women

BREAKING NEWS: University of Southern Indiana Student Found Dead In Indianapolis

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CHANNEL 44 NEWS: University of Southern Indiana Student Found Dead In Indianapolis

A University of Southern Indiana student was found dead at a home in Indianapolis.

Indianapolis Metropolitan Police were called around 5:30 p.m. friday night to the 4500 block of Stone Mill Drive following a 911 call from one of the victim’s father. Investigators found two dead female victims.

The Marion County Coroner identified the women as 20-year-old Meredith Opel and 27-year-old Mallory Jackson. Opel was a senior at USI, studying sociology.

The investigation is ongoing.

CITY OF EVANSVILLE COMMON COUNCIL MEETING

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CITY OF EVANSVILLE COMMON COUNCIL MEETING AGENDA

NOVEMBER 27, 2017

ROOM 301, CIVIC CENTER 5:30 P.M.

I. INTRODUCTION
II. APPROVAL OF MEETING MEMORANDA
III. REPORTS AND COMMUNICATIONS
IV. SPECIAL ORDERS OF THE DAY
V. CONSENT AGENDA: FIRST READING OF ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS

ORDINANCE G-2017-35

Sponsor(s): Discussion Led By: Notify:

ORDINANCE G-2017-36

Sponsor(s): Discussion Led By: Notify:

ORDINANCE G-2017-37

Sponsor(s): Discussion Led By: Notify:

ORDINANCE F-2017-24

Sponsor(s): Discussion Led By: Notify:

An Ordinance Granting a Certificate of Convenience and Necessity for the Operation of Taxicabs for the Year 2018 – Relaxi Taxi Brinkmeyer
A.S.D. Chair Brinkmeyer 12/4/2017

Jackie Kollker, Relaxi Taxi Co. LLC

An Ordinance Granting a Certificate of Convenience and Necessity for the Operation of Taxicabs for the Year 2018 – River City Yellow Cab Co., Inc.
Brinkmeyer

A.S.D. Chair Brinkmeyer 12/4/2017 Deborah Dillon, River City Yellow Cab Co., Inc.

An Ordinance Amending Chapter 13.20 (Wastewater Discharge Regulations) of the Evansville Municipal Code
Elpers
Public Works Chair Weaver 12/4/2017

Marco DeLucio, ZSWS

An Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of Evansville Authorizing Transfers of Appropriations, Additional Appropriations and Repeal and Re-Appropriations of Funds for Various City Funds McGinn
Finance Chair McGinn 12/4/2017
Russ Lloyd, Jr., City Controller

ORDINANCE F-2017-25

Sponsor(s): Discussion Led By: Notify:

An Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of Evansville Authorizing Repeal and Re-Appropriations within the Department of Metropolitan Development
McGinn
Finance Chair McGinn 12/4/2017
Kelley Coures, DMD

VI. COMMITTEE REPORTS
VII. REGULAR AGENDA: SECOND READING OF ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS

ORDINANCE G-2017-33 AMENDED
Sponsor(s):
Discussion Led By: Notify:

ORDINANCE G-2017-34

Sponsor(s): Discussion Led By: Notify:

VIII. RESOLUTION DOCKET

An Ordinance Establishing an Economic Improvement District in Downtown Evansville, Indiana
Mosby, McGinn, Mercer, Robinson, Weaver
Finance Chair McGinn 11/27/2017

Joshua Armstrong, Southwest Indiana Chamber

An Ordinance Granting a Certificate of Convenience and Necessity for the Operation of Taxicabs for the Year 2018 – PAST, LLC Brinkmeyer
A.S.D. Chair Brinkmeyer 11/27/2017

Bill Kramer, PAST, LLC

IX. MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS

  1. THE NEXT MEETING of the Common Council will be Monday, December 4, 2017 at5:30 p.m.
  2. ADDITIONAL MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS

X. COMMITTEEREPORTS

XI. ADJOURNMENT

CHANNEL 44 NEWS: EPD Shares Holiday Shopping Safety Tips

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EPD Shares Holiday Shopping Safety Tips

 Evansville Police tweeted word of two people who were arrested for stealing from parked cars at Eastland Mall this afternoon.

This brings safe holiday shopping tips in mind. Sergeant Mark Saltzman spoke with 44 News about keeping alert during the holiday season.

Sergeant Saltzman says, “When you’re in stores and when you’re shopping, I would tell people to make sure that you keep your purses close, wallets close, don’t leave your carts and your valuables unattended. Always make sure you keep them with you all the time.”

Many of the shoppers we talked to were well aware of the possibility of being taken advantage of by criminals. One Black Friday Shopper says, “Like it’s monotonous you know I mean everybody have a job to do and if they don’t have none you know I mean they got to invest in getting a job and they don’t have to worry about stealing.”

Evansville Police stress that staying alert of your surroundings – and simple tactics to outsmart thieves are the most important steps in making your holiday shopping experience a safe one.

Sergeant Saltzman suggests, “Going from store to store and if you’re storing your items in your car put as many of the items as you can in the trunk or at least cover them up so your items of value aren’t visible or at least easily visible through the windows. It’s gonna give you a better likelihood of your vehicle not being broken into.”

He also encourages parents to keep a close eye out for children as well while shopping during the holiday season. If anyone witnesses any suspicious activity whether it’s in a parking lot or inside of a store, please contact Evansville Police.

Indiana State Senate Democrats Push Redistricting Reform, Raising Minimum Wage In 2018

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By Adrianna Pitrelli
TheStatehouseFile.com

 INDIANAPOLIS — Creating redistricting reform, passing hate crime legislation and raising the minimum wage are the Senate Democrats top priorities for the 2018 legislative session.

“We’ve accomplished some things in the General Assembly, but we’ve dropped the ball on several important issues,” said Senate Democratic Leader Tim Lanane, D-Anderson.”

Lanane and members of the Senate Democratic Caucus discussed their priorities for the 2018 legislative session Thursday, which they are calling INvision 20/20. The plan sets goals to reach by 2020.

The public, said Lanane, is fed up with partisan gerrymandering that draws lines so legislators choose voters rather than voters choosing their legislators. State and federal legislative districts will be redrawn following the 2020 census.

“It’s time now for an independent redistricting commission,” Lanane said. “We feel it is by far the best way to make sure every vote counts.”

Some states have already created nonpartisan commissions to draw the lines — a step Indiana tried to take during the 2017 legislative session. House Bill 1014, which would have created an independent redistricting panel, never made it out of the House committee.

Lanane and the Senate Democrats also plan to make voting easier by extending polling hours by one additional hour and implementing same day registration. Lanane said he believes both proposals will have bipartisan support.

But as far as raising the minimum wage goes, Lanane said he will challenge Republicans to hear the bills they will offer. Democrats in the Senate are in the minority by a margin of 41-9.

“Can you really say realistically that people can live on a minimum wage?” Lanane asked. “It’s time for us to have respect for the dignity of work.”

Hoosiers should not work 40 hours a week and not be able to pay for basic neccesaities, like food, electricity or child care, said Sen. Frank Mrvan, D-Hammond.

“More and more families depend on minimum wage and Hoosiers deserve to have their voices heard,” Mrvan said. “We aren’t the best we could be and as senators we have to strive to be the best, we should be proud of our state and we have to take everybody into consideration but that’s where we fail.”

The minimum wage in Indiana is currently $7.25 an hour — lower than 29 other states — and hasn’t been raised since 2009. According to in.gov, a full-time job at $7.25 an hour will not support a single adult in any county in Indiana, and the poverty rate has increased 29.3 percent since 2007.

For the fifth year in a row, Sen. Greg Taylor, D-Indianapolis, touted the need for Indiana to have a bias crime law.

In the past two years, Taylor said there has been a significant increase in bias-motivated crimes. Recent incidents include the vandalism of Jewish community centers and attacks on Muslims because of their religion.

“It is time that Indiana joins the 45 other states who recognize the heinous nature of these crimes to show we are welcoming to all people and protect victims of crime targets on the basis of their race, religion, sex, disability, sexual orientation or gender identity,” Taylor said. “We need to demonstrate to the country that Indiana welcomes all people, all skin colors, all religions.”

During the 2017 legislative session, a hate crime bill fail which would have allowed Hoosier judges to consider enhancing criminal sentences based on whether a crime was committed because of a victim’s religion, ethnicity, sexual orientation, gender identity or gender.

According to a Bowen Center for Public Affairs survey, 64 percent of Hoosiers support passing a bias crime law. Currently, Arkansas, Wyoming, Georgia and South Carolina are the only other states that don’t have a bias crime bill.

FOOTNOTE: Adrianna Pitrelli is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

‘God’ Gets More Time To Pay Filing Fee To Sue IU

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Dave Stafford for www.theindianalawyer.com

A man claiming to be God but who’s a little light on money can sue Indiana University and the Lilly Library by paying his federal court filing fees in installments, a federal judge ruled this week.

Judge Tanya Walton Pratt gave plaintiff “God also known as Michael H. Waller” until Dec. 18 to pay the first $100 of the $350 filing fee in his lawsuit in the District Court for the Southern District of Indiana against Indiana University and the Lilly Library on the Bloomington campus.

Waller filed a handwritten, five-page pro se complaint in August alleging he was denied the ability to read the original First Edition of the Book of Mormon at the Lilly Library. He seeks more than $1.4 billion in damages and other relief.

 Pratt noted in her order Tuesday that Waller had stated in an affidavit, “As God the original creator of The Universe and Living in The Highest Heaven Possible … I have no income or expenses. I essentially own everything.” Nevertheless, he told the court he had cash resources of $1,200, prompting her to allow Waller to pay the filing fee in installments.

Meanwhile, Pratt rejected Waller’s motions for entry of default judgment and motion for relief from service of summons. She noted the defendants are not in default and there was no showing they had been properly served.

The case is God also known as Michael H. Waller v. Indiana University and Lilly Library, 1:17-cv-3028.

Ivy Tech to Host Holiday Party Dec. 8

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Evansville, Ind.- The public is invited to join Ivy Tech students, staff, and alumni at its Holiday Party on Dec. 8.

The Student Government Association and Campus Activities Board will host a free holiday party complete with face painting as well as arts and crafts. The free event is planned for Friday, December 8, 2017 from 5:30 – 7:30 pm at Ivy Tech Community College, 3501 N First Avenue. The event will take place in the College’s Koch Student Center.

For more information call 812-492-0301.