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Aces women in sixth at Indiana State

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One round remains on Monday

 TERRE HAUTE, Ind. – Kayla Katterhenry carded a 75 to lead the University of Evansville women’s golf team in the opening round of the Indiana State Spring Invitational on Sunday.

Katterhenry’s efforts have her in a tie for 5th place on the leaderboard, just two off of the lead, which is held by William Woods’ Lucy Matthews and Elayna Bowser of Loyola.

Next up for the Aces was Giulia Mallmann, who carded an 80 and sits in a tie for 22nd place.  One behind her was Madison Chaney, who notched a round of 81 and is tied for 28th.  Maggie Camp recorded an 82 in the opening round to sit tied for 33rd while Maria Pickens notched an 89.

Individual Lexie Sollman had a strong round for the Purple Aces, totaling 82 strokes while Carly Waggoner finished Sunday’s action with a 90, also playing as an individual.

William Woods has the team lead.  Their 308 is two ahead of Western Illinois.  Indiana State and Drake are tied for third place with rounds of 315 while Butler sits in 5th with a 316.  The Aces are in 6th, just two out of the top five with a 318.

One more round remains on Monday morning from the Terre Haute Country Club.

Women’s tennis falls in weekend finale

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UE looks ahead to Senior Day on Friday

 A pair of home matches on Saturday resulted in two 6-1 wins for the University of Evansville women’s tennis team.  The Purple Aces opened the day with a win over Bradley before defeating Taylor University at Tri-State Athletic Club.

“This loss is a tough one; not just because we had opportunities to win, but more because of how hard our team fought. We had four different sets go to tiebreaker and two, 3-set matches. For the match to come down to a 3rd set tiebreaker at #1 singles tells you just how close this match really was,” head coach Jayson Wiseman said.  “A lot of credit has to go to Illinois St. and their coaches Maja & Thiago, they had their team ready to go with a great mindset from the opening point. The put us in a hole early at #1 & #2 doubles that ultimately made the difference in the match as the took #1 easily and just held on at #2. Losing that doubles point really put us behind the 8 ball in singles, but we gave it everything we had and just came up a fraction short.

“We know we will likely see them again in our path through the MVC tournament, so we are going to refocus, look to improve moving forward, and direct all our attention to getting at win this Friday against Missouri St. on Senior Day,” Wiseman added.

Evansville’s success in singles on Sunday came from Diana Tkachenko and Andrea Pascual-Larrinaga.  Tkachenko earned the win at #2 singles while Pascual-Larrinaga won in the fifth flight.

Senior Day is set for Friday afternoon when the Purple Aces welcome Missouri State to Wesselman Park for a 1:30 p.m. match.

Tennis Match Results

Illinois State vs University of Evansville

Apr 09, 2017 at Evansville, Ind.

(Tri-State Athletic Club)

 

Illinois State 4, University of Evansville 3

 

Singles competition

  1. Marcia Tere-Apisah (ILS) def. Chieko Yamada (UE) 6-0, 6-7 (0-6), 7-6 (4-0)
  2. Diana Tkachenko (UE) def. Jelena Karla Vujicic (ILS) 6-4, 7-6 (4-0)
  3. Gabriela Sprague (ILS) def. Daria Pentsova (UE) 6-2, 6-1
  4. Valerija Gercar (ILS) def. Theodora Soldatou (UE) 6-2, 6-3
  5. Andrea Pascual-Larri (UE) def. Andrea Beneroso (ILS) 6-2, 4-6, 6-2
  6. Andjela Brguljan (UE) def. No player (ILS), by forfeit

 

Doubles competition

  1. Marcia Tere-Apisah/Jelena Karla Vujicic (ILS) def. Chieko Yamada/Theodora Soldatou (UE) 6-0
  2. Gabriela Sprague/Valerija Gercar (ILS) def. Diana Tkachenko/Nicoli Pereira (UE) 7-6 (6-0)
  3. Andjela Brguljan/Daria Pentsova (UE) def. Andrea Beneroso/No player (ILS), by forfeit

 

Parr sets program home run mark as Aces earn sweep

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Evansville defeats Drake, 13-5 on Sunday 

DES MOINES, Iowa – Senior Chandra Parr set the University of Evansville program record with the 31st home run of her career as the Purple Aces softball team finished off a weekend sweep at Drake with a 13-5 victory on Sunday morning.

“I am so proud of our hitting this series, the ladies have been working really hard on some adjustments and it is paying off,” head coach Mat Mundell said.  “I also want to congratulate Chandra on breaking the school’s all-time home run record!”

Evansville (16-20, 7-5 MVC) scored its 13 runs on 17 hits while Drake (19-19, 3-9 MVC) was credited with 13 hits.

Brittany Hay led everyone with four hits on the day and also tied for the game-high with three runs scored.   Hayli Scott also crossed the plate on three occasions.  Morgan Florey made the start for UE, going five innings while giving up four runs, three earned, on nine hits.  Ashleigh Downing threw the final two frames to finish off the win.

The Aces wasted little time getting on the scoreboard as Hay started things off with a double before scoring on a Florey groundout.  The next three runs belonged to the Bulldogs as they plated one in the first and two in the second on a Sarah Maddox home run.

 

UE fought back with the tying runs in the third.  Another hit by Hay got things going before she scored on a Scott double.  Later, Morgan Lambert brought home Ashlee Kawall on a single to center.

 

History was made for UE one inning later.  With the score knotted up at 3-3, Chandra Parr led the fourth off with a solo home run to center, setting the all-time program record with 31.  It also proved to be the difference as the Aces never looked back.  In the fifth, Parr and Michal Luckett each had RBI doubles before Morgan Florey connected on her third home run of the weekend, a 3-run shot, as the Aces took a 10-4 lead.  Luckett also had an RBI knock in the inning.

 

Drake added single runs in the 5th and 6th innings, but Evansville was just too much as they plated three more in the seventh.  Two came in on a Lambert double while the scoring wrapped up for the day on a Downing single.

 

On Tuesday, another midweek doubleheader is on tap as the Aces welcome UT Martin to Cooper Stadium.  Game one is set for a 3 p.m. first pitch with game two to follow.

Indiana State Police Now Accepting Applications for Motor Carrier Inspectors

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The Indiana State Police is now accepting applications for Motor Carrier Inspectors. These permanent scale facilities will include one position at the Ft. Wayne District and two positions at the Versailles District. These scale facilities are located on I-69 in Warren and on I-65 in Seymour. Inspectors enforce both state and federal regulations pertaining to commercial motor vehicles operating within the state of Indiana.

Trainees must complete the Motor Carrier Inspector School scheduled to begin on August 14, 2017, and conclude on October 27, 2017. The training will be conducted Monday through Friday at the Commercial Vehicle Enforcement facility in Indianapolis, IN. Housing will be provided. During the training, trainees will develop skills including: emergency vehicle operations, defensive tactics, communications, hazardous materials, first-aid, post-crash investigations and truck inspections.

In order to participate in the selection process, applicants for the position of Motor Carrier Inspector must meet the following basic requirements:

1. Be a United States citizen.
2. Be at least 21 years old by October 27, 2017.
3. Possess a high school diploma or G.E.D.
4. Possess a valid driver’s license.
5. Be required to pass a physical agility test, oral interview, polygraph exam and a background
Investigation.
6. Be required to complete a medical exam, a psychological exam and drug test.
7. Geographical proximity to the scale facility may be a factor in the selection process.

Trainees are paid during the school and are provided all necessary equipment. The starting salary is $27,989 and will increase to $28,825 at the end of the first year of employment. Over the next ten years with step increases in pay, a Motor Carrier Inspector may reach an annual salary of $42,249. A retirement program will be available through PERF.

To apply for a Motor Carrier Inspector position, visit the Indiana Government Job Bank at http://www.in.gov/jobs/. All state employment opportunities can be found on this website. To apply for any position with the State of Indiana, you must register with the Indiana Job Bank and have a valid e-mail address. Applications for Motor Carrier Inspector must be submitted by 11:59 PM (Indianapolis time), May 8, 2017.

Healthcare Is Hard

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Hot Jobs in Evansville

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CSR / Teller – West Side BC – Full-Time
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Route Service Sales Representative – Uniform (4 day) – CMV
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$8.50 – $9.00 an hour
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Adopt A Pet

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Daisy is a 3-year-old female Bloodhound mix. She has waited on a home for several months since her owner surrendered her for a change in lifestyle. She is energetic, loves going to the park, and is sweet & social. Daisy’s $100 adoption fee includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact the Vanderburgh Humane Society at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!

Indiana Argues It May Discriminate In Some Court Services

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Indiana Argues It May Discriminate in Some Court services

Dave Stafford for www.theindianalwywer.com

A deputy attorney general argued the state may discriminate in providing certain court services as Indiana appealed a ruling that a deaf man was discriminated against when Marion Superior Court denied him an interpreter for a mandatory mediation.

The statement came near the end of oral arguments Thursday before the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals, in which the state is appealing a ruling in favor Dustin King. Indiana asks the court to reverse Chief Judge Jane Magnus-Stinson’s ruling last May that the court violated the Americans with Disabilities Act by denying King a sign-language interpreter during a federally funded modest-means mediation program in his child custody case. By local court rule, civil litigants must mediate their disputes, but a judge waived the requirement that King participate when he asked for an interpreter in his mediation.

“Can the state discriminate against the disabled with respect to non-essential (court services)?” Circuit Judge David Hamilton asked Deputy Attorney General Kyle Hunter.

“Yes, with a rational basis,” Hunter said. “Under the Equal Protection Clause, with a rational basis.”

Hunter said the trial court, for instance, “has a rational basis to not pay an interpreter for an out-of-court proceeding.”

The exchange came after Judge Frank Easterbrook hammered advocates for King with questions about whether King’s fundamental right of access to the court had been violated. After all, he said, a judge had waived the requirement that King participate in the mediation, and his case was adjudicated. He also did participate in the mediation with the assistance of a family member who could interpret.

But King’s attorney, Andrea Ciobanu, supported by U.S. Justice Department Civil Rights Division attorney Dayna Zolle, argued that precluding King from court-mandated mediation services he wanted to participate in was not a reasonable accommodation under the ADA. They also said King’s family member wasn’t a court-certified interpreter, and they urged the panel to affirm Magnus-Stinson’s ruling.

“You’re just not remotely addressing what concerns me; maybe you don’t plan to,” Easterbrook challenged Ciobanu. “But the question is whether a particular thing is a fundamental right of access to the court?” He said the Supreme Court in Tennessee v. Lane, 541 U.S. 509 (2004), sought to distinguish between those services a court may provide and what constitutes fundamental access to courts.

“If Mr. King is not able to participate in the modest means mediation but for his disability, then it’s fundamentally unfair to him because everyone else can participate in the program,” Ciobanu said. “This is access to the court.”

“The right to access of the courts includes the right to access judicial services that are designed in the administration of justice,” Zolle argued.

“We argue this case falls squarely within Tennessee v. Lane as this case also implicates the accessibility of judicial services, this class of cases involving access to services that the court offers to adjudicate legal disputes,” she said.

“Is the United States saying there is no distinction at all between all court-related services and the fundamental right of access to the court?” Easterbrook asked Zolle. After she sought to draw a distinction and Easterbrook persisted in questioning whether King’s fundamental rights had been violated after the trial court judge waived the mediation requirement, Zolle asked Easterbrook to repeat his question. He did not, instead sighing in seeming exasperation.

“I think we have completely lost one another now, counsel. Thank you very much,” Easterbrook said.

The state is entitled to sovereign immunity, Hunter said, and King’s request for an interpreter in the program would fundamentally alter the nature of the mediation program. The state also argues King failed to show that the Marion Superior Court had intentionally discriminated against him.

“The choice to waive (the mediation requirement) is actually only important because it shows the court is mindful of that right of access to the courts,” Hunter said.

“Access to mediation is not a constitutional right, it’s not a due process right. When the individual has full access to the court, mediation is not required.” he said.

Audio of the 7th Circuit arguments in Dustin King v. Marion Circuit Court, 16-3726, is available here.

Attorney General Curtis Hill Aims To Protect Storm Victims 

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