USI’s Hodges named to National POY watch list
University of Southern Indiana Softball senior catcher Haley Hodges (Portage, Indiana) is one of 50 student-athletes from across the country to be selected to the watch list for the NFCA/Schutt Sports Division II National Player of the Year award in an announcement by the National Fastpitch Coaches’ Association Wednesday.
Hodges, who was a top-10 finalist for the award as a junior in 2016, was named first-team preseason All-America by Fastpitch News (FPN) two weeks ago after a historic 2016 season that saw her set single-season school records for home runs (22), RBIs (72), walks (45) and runs scored (58).
Along with leading the nation in slugging percentage (1.000) and on-base percentage (.578), Hodges ranked third, nationally, in home runs. She led the Great Lakes Valley Conference in batting average (.458), runs scored, RBIs and walks.
In 2016, Hodges was named the Diamond Sports Division II Catcher of the Year by the NFCA and was named first-team All-America byHerosports.com, the NFCA and the Division II Conference Commissioners Association.
Additionally, Hodges was named second-team Academic All-America by the College Sports Information Directors of America and was the GLVC Player of the Year.
Hodges is one of four players from the Great Lakes Valley Conference and one of six players from the Midwest Region to be recognized on the watch list. University of Indianapolis senior utility player Natalie Lalich, Truman State University sophomore outfielder Christa Reisinger and William Jewell College junior second baseman Brooke Benard joined Hodges as GLVC players on the list.
USI opens the 2017 season February 14 when it travels to Florence, Alabama, to take on defending NCAA II champion and preseason No. 1 University of North Alabama in a doubleheader. The Screaming Eagles host the Midwest Region Crossover February 24-26 at Deaconess Sports Park in Evansville.
Of the 50 players on the list, USI is slated to play games against nine of the players during the regular-season, including North Alabama senior pitcher Hillary Carpenter and junior outfielder Reagan Tittle.
Indiana’s Pieroni, Hixon Earn Weekly Big Ten Honors
Another week, another set of honors for Indiana University’s Blake Pieroni and Michael Hixon, as both earned weekly league accolades on Wednesday.
Pieroni was named Big Ten Swimmer of the Week for the third time this season and for the sixth time in his career, while Hixon was honored as the Big Ten Diver of the Week for the third time this year and for the seventh time in his IU career.
Both Pieroni and Hixon helped the No. 4-ranked Hoosiers take down No. 7 Louisville last Friday, 195-105, to finish the dual-meet season undefeated at 11-0. The unblemished record is the first for IU since 1981.
Pieroni, a Chesterton, Ind. native, took home two individual wins and one relay win against the Cardinals. The Academic All-Big Ten selection touched first in the 100 freestyle (43.18) and the 200 freestyle (1:35.28) with NCAA B cuts and also helped the Hoosiers earn a victory in the 400 freestyle relay with a mark of 2:56.11.
Hixon was incredibly impressive in both the 1-meter and 3-meter dives against Louisville, posting NCAA qualifying marks in his two wins. The Amherst, Mass. native scored a 447.98 in the 1-meter and then followed that with a total of 464.56 in the 3-meter dive.
 Sealed With A HISSÂ
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
Victim’s posthumously admitted testimony supports murder conviction
Dave Stafford for www.theindianalawyer.com
A woman’s deposition identifying to police the man who shot her in the face was properly admitted in the suspect’s murder trial after the victim died, the Indiana Court of Appeals ruled Tuesday.
The panel affirmed murder and attempted murder convictions of Kenneth Brittain, who challenged the admissibility of the evidence as well as the trial court’s denial his motion for a mistrial. Brittain was convicted and sentenced to an aggregate 80 years in prison for the April 2013 murder of Timothy Denny and the attempted murder of Victoria Richie in Indianapolis.
Brittain sat behind the two in a truck during a drug transaction during which Richie said she turned to look at him only to find him holding a pistol on them. She said he fatally shot Denny before shooting her in the face. The truck crashed into a building, and police found Richie bleeding on the ground beside the crash.
Richie died in January 2014, before Brittain’s case came to trial, and he moved to exclude her sworn deposition testimony to investigators. In the deposition taken after her shooting, she identified Brittain as “Ken Bart,†a nickname he acknowledged he used, along with identifying characteristics.
Judge Elaine Brown wrote for the panel that unanimously affirmed Brittain’s conviction in Kenneth Brittain v. State of Indiana, 49A02-1511-CR-1784. “Brittain had the opportunity to and did cross-examine Richie, and accordingly we conclude that the court’s admission of Richie’s deposition did not violate Brittain’s confrontation rights under the Indiana Constitution,†Brown wrote. Likewise, the court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the deposition testimony into evidence.
Brittain also moved for a mistrial because handwritten notes from Richie were admitted in a trial when investigators asked her questions when she could not speak, and she wrote “Ken Bart†as the name of the man who shot her and Denny.
“Under these circumstances, in which Richie had just been brought to the hospital after being shot through the mouth, her vocalization was impaired, and she was situated in the shock room, we believe that she was still under the stress of excitement caused by the shooting and that she was accordingly incapable of thoughtful reflection, and we conclude that State’s Exhibit 11 was admissible as an excited utterance. The court did not abuse its discretion when it admitted the exhibit, and it did not err in denying Brittain’s motion for a mistrial,†Brown wrote.
IS IT TRUE FEBRUARY 1, 2017
IS IT TRUE the saga of raising tax rate on the citizens of Evansville and Vanderburgh County is one of those sad things that happens when property values do not increase to go along with the general cost of living?…expenses tend to rise in the Midwest along with the rest of the country with the odd exception of housing?…that is why a flat percentage tax fuels the coffers of government in areas where housing values increase without needing to raise the rates?…over a ten year period of a moderate inflation on goods and services of say 2.5% leads to an overall cost of living or business operation of roughly 30%?…when the municipal employees are granted annual increases based on cost of living statistics, and the assets used to run a government increase the sobering truth is that a $300 Million budget in 2007 would naturally turn into a $390 Million budget in 2017?.
IS IT TRUE in a situation where incomes and properties are not going up for the bulk of the taxpayers the City or County will not see their tax revenues increase over the same period of time?…the result is a need to raise taxes collected by the 30% increase in operating expenses just to keep doing the same things?…the City of Evansville and Vanderburgh County are both caught between a rock and a hard place due to the phenomena of rising prices in a stagnant economy?
IS IT TRUE in most situations where one is not getting any raises the correct action would be to cut back on consumption?…the City of Evansville in particular has not only kept up the spending, they have doubled down on fun and games under the irrational assumption that the fun and games would make the cash register ring?…the reality could not have been further from the truth?…with the combination of the Ford Center ($127 Million), the Doubletree Hotel ($21 Million), and the Indiana University Medical School ($57 Million), the trustees of the fair City of Evansville have borrowed over $205 Million that consume interest payments of over $10 Million per year?…not a one of these expensive baubles has come even close to paying for itself and the end is nowhere in sight?…all of this spending excludes bike paths, ball fields, penguin exhibits, and that shiny new home for a couple of jaguars all of which adds nearly another $50 Million to the party tab?…the future may well have been mortgaged to the fun and games obsession of the present?
IS IT TRUE the crime statistics for large American cities were just released and contrary to popular belief Chicago is not the murder capital of America?…that distinction goes to St. Louis where 59.6 people out of every 100,000 are murdered in any given year?…Chicago is a distant 8th place on the murder capital list?…some Indiana towns did make the list?…Indianapolis comes in at #21 with a murder rate of 17.6 per 100,000 while Fort Wayne debuts on the murder capital list at #24 at 16.5 out of 100,000?…little Evansville by the Ohio fares much better than any of them with a murder rate of 7.5 per 100,000?…the article went on to state that the driving force behind this crime spree in major US cities is the resurgence of heroin as the drug of choice for opiate users, many of whom are in the Midwest?…a couple of years ago Indiana had more prescriptions for opiates than it had people?…when the feds cracked down on the legal distribution of opiates, the heroin scourge that had been underground for many years came roaring back?…this is a tragedy that is just beginning to get traction so expect things in the mega cities to get worse before they get better?
IS IT TRUE a coffee shop in San Francisco now has a robot that will take your coffee order, prepare it for you, and put it into a cup for 40 cents less than Starbucks charges?…this innovation uses 30 year old robotic technology that was pioneered by the auto industry?…it was the excessive wage demands of people who think they deserve $15 per hour for pouring coffee in a cup that inspired this adaption of robotic technology?…someday soon the day of the barista will end due to yet another machine that does a better job for a better price than a human being?
IS IT TRUE that around 75 City of Evansville employees are being sued for unpaid medical bills? Â …we hear that the City Controller had to find about $4 million dollars to pay towards past medical bills? …the City still owes many more million of dollars on unpaid medical bills? Â …we wonder where the City Controller got the $4 million dollars to pay the past unpaid City employees medical bills?
IS IT TRUE we would like members of City Council to ask Finance Chairman Dan McGinn to give them a detailed recap concerning the real status of 2016 and 2017 unpaid employees medical bills? Â …we also would like for him to explain where he going to get the money to make unpaid medical bills current?
FOOTNOTE: Todays “Readers Poll” question is: Do you feel that our elected officials should force the State to include Ivy Tech in the IU-Evansville Medical school project?
CHANNEL 44 NEWS: CAR SHOPPING IN INDIANA MAY BE CHANGING IN NEAR FUTURE
Car Shopping in Indiana May Be Changing in Near Future
Car shopping in Indiana may be changing in the near future. If new legislation does not pass, it could allow manufacturers of vehicles, like Tesla, to sell directly to consumers. This would happen in place of manufacturers selling the car to a…
St. Mary’s Hospital for Women & Children Birth Records
Brittany and Joshua Osterman, Evansville, daughter, Emersyn Jean, Jan. 23
Amanda and Greg Cox, Evansville, son, Chase Daniel, Jan. 23
Stephanie and Chad Wagner, Chandler, Ind., son, Leo Andrew, Jan. 23
Sarah Mickus, Henderson, Ky., daughter, Skyler Grace, Jan. 24
Samantha and Joshua James, Evansville, son, Korbin Wylder, Jan. 24
Kyndal Thompson and Tristan Brown, Rockport, Ind., daughter, Kobie Jo, Jan. 24
Tricia Gerteisen and Jason Gerteisen, Evansville, daughter, Jacie Helen, Jan. 24
Jessica and Dale Roos, Evansville, daughter, Faith Evangeline, Jan. 25
Kendra Pickens, Evansville, daughter, Calmly Jade Genesis, Jan. 25
Kerri Martin and Troy Willett, Evansville, daughter, Kora Rain, Jan. 25
Katlyn Lenz and Shawn Glover, Princeton, Ind., daughter, Lenzee Lynn, Jan. 26
Leah and Matthew Hall, Evansville, son, Easton Vincent, Jan. 26
Beth and Stephen Nungesser, Evansville, son, Luke Elliott, Jan. 26
Breanna and Michael Bechtel, Haubstadt, Ind., son, Bryson Joe, Jan. 27
Holly and Stephen Smith, Evansville, son, Xavier Wade, Jan. 27
Adrienne and Abraham Ford, Evansville, daughter, Caroline Nicole, Jan. 27
Mckenzie and Kyle Walker, Evansville, son, Carsen Anthem Wayne, Jan. 27
Aerial Gulley and James Jones, Evansville, son, James Lee Jr., Jan. 27
Kaysha Ward, Evansville, daughter, Ma’Ziana Niyjah Sharon, Jan. 28
Danien Boyle and Michael Pauley, Princeton, Ind., daughter, Gracie Day, Jan. 28
Kaisha Jennings and Joshua Piper, Evansville, daughter, Aspen Cheyennelee, Jan. 28