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USI begins NCAA II Tournament Thursday

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The 19th-ranked (NCBWA) University of Southern Indiana baseball team begins 2017 NCAA Division II Tournament action with the Midwest Regional May 18-22 at Gerace Baseball Stadium in Midland, Michigan. The Screaming Eagles (32-19), who enter the tournament as the second seed, start tournament action against Saint Joseph’s College (34-20), the seventh seed, at 4 p.m. (CDT) Thursday.

Prior to the USI-Saint Joseph’s match-up, fourth-seeded Drury University (36-18) plays fifth-seeded Bellarmine University (34-19) at 9 a.m. (CDT) to start the regional, while top-seeded and host Northwood (43-11) takes on eighth-seeded Kentucky Wesleyan College (27-22) at 1:30 p.m. (CDT) to finish the first session. Third-seeded Quincy University (32-20) and sixth-seeded Wayne State University (31-19) follow the USI-Saint Joseph’s game with the final contest Thursday at 7:30 p.m. The automatic qualifiers in the regional are Quincy (GLVC), ninth-ranked (NCBWA)/17th-ranked (Collegiate Baseball) Northwood (Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference), and Kentucky Wesleyan (Great Midwest Athletic Conference).

Live coverage of the Screaming Eagles baseball games this week can be found on GoUSIEagles.com, while NCAA II Midwest Regional information, including the bracket, ticket information, and directions to Gerace Baseball Stadium, can be found at GoNorthwood.com.

SCREAMING EAGLES BASEBALL NOTES:

USI versus the Midwest Regional Field. USI is 10-7 against the 2017 NCAA II Midwest Regional Field (1-2 vs. Drury; 2-2 vs. Bellarmine; 2-1 vs. Quincy; 3-1 vs. Saint Joseph’s; 2-0 vs. Kentucky Wesleyan; and 0-1 vs. Wayne State). The Eagles are hitting .289 as a team versus the field, led by senior designated hitter Jaylen Quarles‘ .455 average. Junior shortstop Sam Griggs drove in a team-best 14 RBIs against the tournament field, followed closely by junior leftfielder Drake McNamara and junior rightfielder Nick Gobert with 13 and 10 RBIs, respectively.

On the mound, senior right-hander Justin Watts leads the hurlers with a 0.73 ERA, while senior right-hander Lucas Barnett has a team-high three wins.

Eagles all-time versus the regional field and in NCAA II Tournament. USI is 294-230 all-time, 4-2 in NCAA II Tournament action, versus the NCAA II Midwest Regional field (vs. Saint Joseph’s: 45-42 all-time, 0-0 NCAA II Tournament; vs. Quincy: 36-40 all-time, 1-0 NCAA II Tournament; vs. Wayne State: 7-3 all-time, 2-1 NCAA II Tournament; vs. Bellarmine: 79-70 all-time, 0-0 NCAA II Tournament; vs. Drury: 21-9 all-time, 1-1 NCAA II Tournament; vs. Kentucky Wesleyan: 97-64 all-time; 0-0 NCAA II Tournament; and vs. Northwood: 9-2 all-time; 0-0 NCAA II Tournament).

USI history in the NCAA II Tournament. The Screaming Eagles are making their seventh appearance in the Midwest Regional in the last 11 seasons and their 13th appearance overall in the NCAA II Tournament. USI has won the Midwest Regional four times (2007, 2010, 2014, 2016) and the NCAA II National Championship twice (2010, 2014).

USI in national polls. The Screaming Eagles climbed to 19th in final the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association Top 25 of 2017. USI fell out of the Collegiate Baseball Newspaper Top 30 poll after going 0-2 in the GLVC Tournament.

The difference of a month. The Eagles went 21-7 in May and April with the team hitting .290 and posting a 2.72 ERA, compared to 11-12 in February and March with a team batting average of .259 and a 3.88 ERA. Senior designated hitter Jaylen Quarles has seen the biggest turn around amongst the players, going from .154 (3-19) in nine games during February/March to .378 (28-74) in 24 of the 28 games during April and May. On the mound, junior right-hander Kyle Griffin went from 2-3 with a 5.25 ERA to start the year to 4-0 with a 1.64 ERA in the last six weeks.

Season hitting leaders. Junior designated hitter/leftfielder Drake McNamara (.367) and senior designated hitter Jaylen Quarles (.333) are the Eagles hitting over .300  this season. McNamara leads USI with a team-best seven home runs and 43 RBIs.

Season pitching leaders. Senior right-hander Lucas Barnett has the Eagles’ best ERA among the starting pitchers with a 2.64 ERA in 13 games, 12 starts, and 75.0 innings of work. Barnett, senior right-hander Colin Nowak, and junior right-hander Kyle Griffin all have six victories, while Griffin recorded a team-high 86 strikeouts in 12 games.

Griffin posts single-game high; season record. Junior right-hander Kyle Griffin struck out a season-high 12 batters versus Saint Joseph’s and set a USI single-season record with 86 strikeouts this season. Griffin broke the record of 84 set by Jonathon Wandling during USI’s run to the national championship in 2014.

Archuleta at USI. USI Head Coach Tracy Archuleta is USI’s all-time winningest coach with a record of 410-211 (.660) in nine-plus seasons and is 558-335 (.625) in 14-plus seasons all-time as a head coach. He has been named the ABCA Division II Coach of the Year twice (2010 and 2014) after leading the Screaming Eagles to a pair of national championships and the ABCA Division II Midwest Region Coach of the Year after leading USI to the regional crown in 2016. Archuleta also has earned a pair of GLVC Coach of the Year awards (2011 and 2014) at USI.

NCBWA Top 25 Poll
Rank  Team -First Place Votes-
1. Mount Olive (N.C.) -8-
2. Chico State (Calif.) -1-
3. Mercyhurst (Pa.) -6-
4. Delta State (Miss.) -1-
5. Angelo State (Texas) -1-
6. Southern New Hampshire
7. Minnesota State
8. Northwood (Mich.)
9. North Georgia
10. Tampa (Fla.)
11. Azusa Pacific (Calif.)
12. Colorado Mesa
Emporia State (Kan.)
14. West Chester (Pa.)
15. USC Aiken
16. Dixie State (Utah)
17. Nova Southeastern (Fla.)
18. West Texas A&M
19. Southern Indiana
20. St. Cloud State (Minn.)
21. New Haven (Conn.)
22. Catawba College (N.C.)
23. UC San Diego (Calif.)
24. Florida Southern
25. Lubbock Christian (Texas)

 

Police continue to investigate Tuesday shooting on N Main St

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Evansville Police continue to investigate a Monday shooting that left one person injured.
Police were dispatched to the 1015 N Main St at 1:00pm for a report of a person with a gun. Before officers arrived, the situation escalated into a shooting. Police believe the victim and the suspect were arguing prior to the shooting. It is not clear if the two knew each other prior to the incident.
Officers arrived and found 27 year old Thendis Compton at the scene. Compton had multiple gunshot wounds. He was taken to a local hospital for treatment. His injuries are not considered life threatening at this time.
The suspect left the scene in a small silver car before officers arrived. Investigators are working to identify him.He was described as a light skinned black male with long hair on top.
Anyone with information about this case is asked to call EPD at 1-812-436-7979 or WeTip at 1-800-78-CRIME.

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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Below are the felony cases to be filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office today.

Jeffrey Eugene Canary: Unlawful possession of syringe (Level 6 Felony), Possession of paraphernalia (Class C misdemeanor)

Christian William Wells: Carrying a handgun without a license (Level 5 Felony), Possession of a synthetic drug or synthetic drug lookalike substance (Class A misdemeanor), Criminal mischief (Class B misdemeanor)

Bethany Lynn Weeks: Unlawful possession of syringe (Level 6 Felony)

David Charles Lawrence: Theft (Level 6 Felony)

Descry Jarnaize Hackner: Resisting law enforcement (Level 6 Felony), Resisting law enforcement (Class A misdemeanor)

IS IT TRUE MAY 16, 2017

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IS IT TRUE that the City County Observer has spent considerable time and effort over the last several months in trying to get someone to provide us and the taxpayers of Evansville with the answer to two questions about the operation of Ford Center?…both questions have easy short answers and thus far we have met nothing but resistance to releasing these simple answers?…resistance takes many forms but the most common ones in this case are ignoring the questions and the second is to attempt to marginalize the questions by providing long and complicated statements that dance around the answers?…those days have come to an end as the CCO has it on good authority that Scott Schoenike of VenuWorks has provided the answers to pastor and monthly newspaper publisher Steve Ary that we have been seeking?

IS IT TRUE we are puzzled why the above information wasn’t provided to pastor Ary, City County Observer  and the general public by Council President Missy Mosby (D), Finance Chairman Dan McGinn (R), Mayor Lloyd Winnecke (R), City Controller Russ Lloyd Jr or DMD Director Kelly Course long ago?  …could it be that this is a political hot potato that they all want to run and hide from? …we are pleased to tell you they won’t be able to hide from this budgetary bombshell?  …we also predict that the Thunderbolt/Venueworks and the City of Evansville backroom Thunderbolts hockey acquisition and Ford Center utilities deals will cause some Council members major re-election problems?

IS IT TRUE that the first question we sought the answer to was, “how much are the utility bills for Ford Center and who is responsible for paying them”?…The answer to the question is that the taxpayers of Evansville are contractually obligated to pay all the Ford Center utility bills?  …the tab for the utility bills is well over $600,000 per year?  …let that sink in folks, you are paying the utility bills for the Ford Center which is a defacto handout for any activity that is not paying market rate to use the facility?…the market rate rent per hockey event was determined back in 2011 at $11,000 per home game for the Evansville Icemen?…with the establishment of the Evansville Thunderbolts at a paltry $1,000 per home game rental fee the utility bills associated with hockey are now considered a hockey subsidy?

IS IT TRUE that the other simple question was, “do the taxpayers of Evansville cover the losses for the Evansville Thunderbolts hockey team”?...the answer to this simple question is YES?…remember you heard it first from the CCO that the taxpayers of Evansville are totally responsible for the losses associated with having this hockey team? …we would like to know how much money did the Thunderbolts loss during the 2016-2017 hockey season? …we are told by reliable sources that this figure could between $500,000 to $700,000 dollars? …if you are outraged to learn this,  you need to let your council members know how you think about this?

IS IT TRUE several of the current council members were serving on City Council when the utilities deal was made but some weren’t?…individuals not on Council when the Ford Center utilities contract were approved are Council members: Justin Elpers (R),  Jim Brinkmeyer (D), Anna Hargis-CPA (R) and Michelle Mercer (R)?…we encourage these newcomers to use their skills to unwind these insane agreements and make this work for the benefit of people of Evansville?…it is about time that Councilwoman Hargis used the CPA degree that she boasted so much about during her campaign?…Councilman Elpers just needs to keep up his persistence to find answers?…we are sure he is being subjected to all sorts of pressure to look the other way and let the good old boys keep their insane ways of doing business stay intact?…we encourage Councilman Elpers to stay strong and do the right thing even if no one else including CPA Anna Hargis does?

IS IT TRUE it is time this City Council realized that there are 120,000 people in this town and a little more than a 1,000 of them are willing to pay $10 to see a taxpayers subsidized hockey game?…when one looks at it from this perspective, subsidized hockey is nothing more than penalizing the 119,000 citizens to entertain around a 1,000 or more hockey fans?

IS IT TRUE that we would like to thank Scott Schoenike of VenuWorks for publicly announcing what we consider to be a couple of financially irresponsible deals that the City of Evansville made with his company?…the CCO will be publishing an editorial with supporting documents toward the end of the week?  … stay turned because we can guarantee it shall be a good read?

IS IT TRUE we wonder if our friends with the local main stream media will inform their readers and viewers that the taxpayers of Evansville are responsible for all theThunderbolts financial losses for the 2016-2017 hockey season?…we also wonder if they will report that the Evansville taxpayers are paying all the utilities bills at the Ford Center?  …we predict they won’t touch this story because they will consider this to be “FAKE NEWS”!

FOOTNOTE: todays “READERS POLL” question is :Do you feel that the majority of our elected officials knowingly withheld information about who is paying the utilities bills at the Ford Center?

CHANNEL 44 NEWS: Komen Evansville’s Pink Sunday

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Komen Evansville’s Pink Sunday

Komen Evansville is celebrating Mother’s Day weekend with “Pink Sunday.” The event at Dove Chapel Church is designed to inform the community of good breast health practices. Organizers say Pink Sunday is a grassroots effort between Komen…

LETTER TO EDITIOR: WOLVES VS LOGS

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Wolves vs Logs

by Rev. Jerry Wirth

The problem before us is not that of mote vs log but one of wolves vs lambs. While Jesus did indeed warn us of the folly of judging the speck in the eyes of others while being blind to the log in our own eyes, He also warned us of the ravenous wolves and the need for and duties of good shepherds. The good shepherd protects his flock from the wolves and does not allow wolves to enter in and dwell among the sheep.

Kim of North Korea and radical Islamic leaders are not good shepherds. They do not love their flocks; they eat their flocks. It is the duty of our shepherds, our leaders, to protect us from these wolves in sheep’s clothing. I have no more issue with preventing tyrannical nations from achieving nuclear capabilities than I have in keeping firearms out of the hands of criminals. But for some the log in their eye is so obstructive, and they are so focused on the speck in eyes of others, that they can not see the wolves

Our nation is a good nation. When tested with the possession of the world’s most powerful weapon, we used it as necessary for the protection of our own people but not for world dominance and the eradication of our enemy. In our strength we made peace. Despite our problems, our faith and our constitution corrects us. We value those among us, even those with whom we disagree, because that diversity corrects us and keeps us straight. But there are wolves who abuse and oppress their own sheep and if allowed the capabilities and opportunity would dominate and oppress the world.

The problem in Islam is not just a different view of Christ. The problem is a systemic problem within Islamic theology where violence and oppression becomes its nature. The more faithful a Muslim becomes, the more radicalized and violent the person becomes. Good Muslims are bad people, and bad Muslims are good people.

When we see the violence and oppression committed in the name of Islam, we must ask if that person is following the teachings of Islam or sinning against it? If they are sinning against it, then how will their sins be atoned for under Islamic soteriology? In fact, does not radical Islam teach that salvation is achieved in acts of violence? And if they are obeying Islam’s teachings, then, being as Muhammad is the last and greatest prophet of Islam, who will correct Islam as Christ corrects Christianity? There is no Christ to come and save and correct Muslims except the Christ of Christians. But that that does not mean we become oppressors of Muslims. Jesus says love your enemy. But to love your enemy, you must also know your enemy.

So the question is not one of a “speck in your brother’s eye” problem; it is a knife at the throat of the world problem.

by Rev. Jerry Wirth

Vanderburgh County

FOOTNOTE: Posted by the CCO Editor without opinion, bias or editing.

Last Class Graduates From Indiana Tech Law School

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Last Class Graduates From Indiana Tech Law School

Marilyn Odendahl for www.theindianalawyer.com

Waiting for graduation ceremonies to begin Saturday morning, Philip Davis summed up his place in the university’s history — at age 60, he is the oldest student who has ever graduated and ever will graduate from Indiana Tech Law School.

Davis is a member of the law school’s Class of 2017, which is the second and the last class to complete their studies at the Fort Wayne’s Indiana Institute of Technology. In October 2016, Indiana Tech president Arthur Snyder made the surprise announcement that the law school would be closing at the end of June 2017. He cited the school’s $20 million loss in operating expenses and the expected low enrollments as reasons for discontinuing the legal education program.

The decision shocked and angered students and has left lingering resentment. Of the 21 students receiving J.D. degrees, only five attended the university-wide commencement Saturday at the Allen County War Memorial Coliseum.

According to Davis, some of his classmates opted to stay away because they did not want walk across the commencement stage and have to shake Snyder’s hand.

The class did have a private hooding ceremony the evening of May 12 at the Allen County Public Library in downtown Fort Wayne since some did not want to include the university in their celebration. About 17 graduates attended the event with their families and received their degrees from law school dean Charles Cercone and associate dean Charles MacLean.

“That was basically our ceremony which was very meaningful and important because we had stuck together and gotten through this process,” Davis said.

Waiting for the main commencement exercises to begin, Davis and his four classmates stood apart in the sea of black caps and gowns. They were clustered under the sign designating where the law school graduates should stand and talked quietly amongst themselves.

Snyder presided over the 96th Indiana Tech graduation and his last as the leader of the university. Despite criticism for opening a law school in 2013, a time when lawyers were struggling to find J.D.-required jobs, Snyder championed the new venture. His retirement coincides with the school’s closure.

The law school graduates were among the first to enter the arena, taking seats near the commencement stage. As Cercone called their names, they walked across the stage, had the hood placed on their shoulders and proceeded back to their chairs. No mention was made that they were members of the final law school class.

Noah Moore, who relocated from Jackson, Mississippi, to attend Indiana Tech Law School, called the graduation day bittersweet.

“We put in a lot of hard work,” Moore said of the Class of 2017. “That’s what actually makes (this day) bittersweet and kind of has me upset. Our hard work can’t be overlooked.”

He and his classmates started in August 2014, just a few months after the law school’s founding dean, Peter Alexander, abruptly left. The program then failed in its first attempt to gain accreditation from the American Bar Association but was successful on the second try, getting notice it had provisional accreditation shortly before the inaugural class graduated in May 2016.

Bad news came again when only three graduates passed the July bar exam and, not long after that, university board of trustees decided to close the law school.

Moore thought about transferring, even though it would have meant repeating his second year. He talked to his family who encouraged him to stay, reminding him of the work he had done and how much he had changed.

After the closure announcement, he had to push himself even more.

“I think we got support from the dean and the faculty but once we started going downhill, everything was in shambles and everyone was in a frenzy,” Moore said. “But I took it upon myself to just channel what I needed to do to move forward.”

Davis also noted the changes that came immediately after the university decided to shutter the law school. Support staff were pulled, at least one class had to be cut, an academic conference was cancelled and the occasional pizzas with the dean were stopped. In fact, the day after the announcement, students noticed people walking around the hallways and classrooms with clipboards and tape measures, evaluating how to repurpose the building.

A final insult came on graduation day when Davis noticed his first name was misspelled in the commencement program.

“I’ve got to believe that that’s the kind of thing that would have been caught if we’d had proper support staff,” he said.

Following the commencement ceremony as graduates and their families flooded the lawn outside the coliseum, trading hugs and taking photos, the law school building on the edge of campus was silent. The parking lot was empty, the doors were locked and the windows were dark. Inside the main entrance, the grandfather clock, given to the school by the inaugural graduating class, stood against the wall.

Davis, a real estate broker before he pursued a J.D. degree, plans to stay in Fort Wayne and practice real estate and business law. He described the education at Indiana Tech as a mixed bag. The experiential learning activities were great but, having done some pro se work, he said at one point he had more Indiana trial experience than the entire faculty at the school.

“There’s been great instruction and then there’s been instruction that hasn’t been maybe what we needed to get,” Davis said.

Moore plans to move to Georgia, where he has family, and look to begin his career in either the district attorney’s office or the public defender agency. During his studies, he completed externships with the National Center for Youth Law in Oakland, California, the Allen County Prosecutor’s Office and the Northern District of Indiana Federal Community Defenders’ office.

“It was very difficult,” Moore said of his tenure at Indiana Tech. “It was a very emotional time but I kind of took the attitude of a lawyer that you’re going to encounter certain hardships, certain obstacles on your journey. With that in mind, I just decided to move forward.”

 

Vanderburgh County Democratic Party Calendar of Events 5/15/2017

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Tuesday
May 16th
Address 11:30 AM County Commissioners’ State of the County Address

Wednesday, May 31st Meeting 6:00 PM Vanderburgh County Democrat Club Meeting

  • Location: FOP – 801 Court Street – Evansville, IN
Monday
June 5th
Golf Scramble 1:00 PM Sheriff Wedding Annual Golf Scramble

  • Location: Oak Meadow Country Club – 11505 Browning Rd – Mt. Vernon, IN
  • Contact: Dave Wedding (812) 319-5593
Saturday,
June 10th
Golf Scramble 9:00 AM Posey County Democrats Golf Scramble

  • Location: Country Mark Golf Course – 1200 Refinery Rd. – Mt. Vernon, IN
  • Cost: $75 per golfer.
  • Contact: Ed Adams (812) 457-1183
Wednesday,
June 28th
Meeting 6:00 PM Vanderburgh County Democrat Club Meeting

  • Location: FOP – 801 Court Street – Evansville, IN
Wednesday,
July 12th
Golf Scramble 11:00 AM EST 8th District Democratic Committee Golf Scramble

  • Location: Geneva Hill Golf Course – 13446 South Geneva Hills Road – Clinton, IN
  • Cost: $75 per golfer.  Sponsorships available.
  • Contact: Jeff Lehman jldemo@minerbroadband.com
Wednesday,
July 26th
Meeting 6:00 PM Vanderburgh County Democrat Club Meeting

  • Location: FOP – 801 Court Street – Evansville, IN
Wednesday,
August 30th
Meeting 6:00 PM Vanderburgh County Democrat Club Meeting

  • Location: FOP – 801 Court Street – Evansville, IN
Wednesday,
September 27th
Meeting 6:00 PM Vanderburgh County Democrat Club Meeting

  • Location: FOP – 801 Court Street – Evansville, IN
Wednesday,
October 25th
Meeting 6:00 PM Vanderburgh County Democrat Club Meeting

  • Location: FOP – 801 Court Street – Evansville, IN
Wednesday,
November 29th
Meeting 6:00 PM Vanderburgh County Democrat Club Meeting

  • Location: FOP – 801 Court Street – Evansville, IN
Wednesday,
December 27th
Meeting 6:00 PM Vanderburgh County Democrat Club Meeting

  • Location: FOP – 801 Court Street – Evansville, IN