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Eagles soar to 11-0 with 95-68 win over Thorobreds

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The 24th-ranked University of Southern Indiana men’s basketball team soared to an 11-0 overall record at the holiday break with a  95-68 victory over Kentucky State University Saturday afternoon in the final day of the Bellarmine University Classic in Louisville, Kentucky. USI sees its record go to 11-0 overall for the sixth time in the history of the program, while Kentucky State is 2-8 in 2016-17.

The Screaming Eagles had to rally in the first half to post a 46-32 lead at the intermission. Senior guard Bobo Drummond (Peoria, Illinois) took command of the game with 10:53 left in the opening half, erasing a five-point deficit (18-13) with 13-straight points in a 15-0 run as the Eagles took the lead, 28-18.

USI would outscore Kentucky State, 33-14, in the final 11 minutes of the opening half and shot a blistering 61.3 percent (19-31) in the first 20 minutes. The Eagles also had a 17-13 advantage on the glass.

In the second half, the Eagles wasted little time in racing out to a comfortable lead by extending the advantage to as many as 28 points, 71-43, with 12:25 left. Kentucky State, however, made one final run at USI and cut the margin to 16 points, 73-57, with 9:16 remaining.

The Eagles responded by rebuilding the margin back to 28 points, 95-67, with under a minute left before settling for the 95-68 victory. USI, as a team, shot 58.1 percent from the field (36-62) and 66.7 percent from the line (14-21), while outrebounding Kentucky State, 36-30.

Senior guard Jeril Taylor (Louisville, Kentucky) led four Eagles in double digits with 22 points. Taylor, who scored 12 of the 22 points in the second half, was eight-of-15 from the field, including two three-point field goals, and four-of-nine from the line.

Taylor was followed by junior forward DayJar Dickson (Washington, D.C.), who had a season-high 14 points on four-of-four from the field and six-of-eight from the line. Senior guard Cortez Macklin (Louisville, Kentucky) and Drummond rounded out the double-figure scorers with 13 points each.

In addition to the double-digit scorers, junior guard Marcellous Washington (Lexington, Kentucky) matched a season-best with eight assists for the second-straight night.

After the holiday break, the season restarts for the Eagles on January 2 at 7 p.m. when they return to the friendly surroundings of the PAC to host Bluefield State University. USI also restarts the Great Lakes Valley Conference schedule next month when it hosts William Jewell College January 5 and Rockhurst University January 7.

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Benzon’s career night leads UE to 77-69 win at Austin Peay

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Aces finish game on 20-5 run

Christian Benzon scored a career-high 18 points as the University of Evansville men’s basketball team finished the game on a 20-5 run defeat Austin Peay, 77-69, on Saturday evening at the Winfield Dunn Center.

Benzon hit 8 of his 10 shots for the Purple Aces (8-4) while hauling in a team-best seven rebounds.  Jaylon Brown led the way for UE with 25 points, hitting 9 out of 18 shots while having another perfect night from the line, going 6-6.

“Its not easy to win anywhere on the road, especially here.  I am really proud of our guys, they hung in there,” UE head coach Marty Simmons said.  “Christian played really well, that is what you expect from your seniors.  This is just a great road win for us.”

Josh Robinson was the top scorer for the Governors (4-7) as he totaled 24 points while playing all 40 minutes.  He hit 12 out of 13 free throws.  Zach Glotta went 4-5 from outside on his way to 14 tallies.

Neither offense was able to get rolling in the early minutes as Austin Peay held a 5-4 edge at the 15:42 mark.  Evansville made just one of its first six attempts from the field.

Duane Gibson hit a layup with 10:47 left in the period to give UE a 13-11 lead before Austin Peay made the first big run of the game.  The Governors reeled off 11 in a row over the next four minutes to go up 22-13.  They hit four out of six shots in the run, including a pair of triples.

Ryan Taylor hit a trey of his own to end the run as the Aces completed the half on a run of their own, outscoring APSU by a 23-9 margin to go into halftime leading 36-31.  After hitting four of their first 12 shots, the Aces regrouped to finish the period connecting on 10 of their final 13 tries.

Out of the break, the Aces knocked down three of their first five shots on the way to their largest lead of the game at 42-34.  The Governors punched back, hitting all three free throws on a foul before the fifth trey of the night got them within four at 44-40 just over four minutes in.

Midway through the half, Austin Peay went back in front.  A Zach Glotta triple, his fourth of the night, gave the Governors a 54-52 lead and they pushed the lead to seven points (64-57) with 5:58 left on the clock.  At that point, the Aces defense clamped down, notching seven in a row to tie it up three minutes later.  Four of Benzon’s points came in the run before a pair of free throws put APSU back on top.

Benzon’s career night continued as he hit a pair of clutch free throws to tie it at 66 before a Ryan Taylor layup saw UE retake the lead.  Following a pair of Governor free throws that tied it back up, Jaylon Brown’s and-one pushed the UE lead to 71-68 with just over a minute on the clock.  From there, the Aces were able to extend the lead to the final of 77-69.

The rebounding battle went the Aces way by a 36-29 final while UE also outshot APSU, 54.5%-39.6%.

Regular season non-conference play wraps up on Thursday as the Purple Aces will f

Indiana State Police Release Crash Stat Information for 24hr Period from 10 p.m. Dec. 16 to 10 p.m. Dec. 17, 2016 

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Over the 24 hour period of time starting at 10:00 p.m. on Dec. 16th thru 10:00 p.m. Dec. 17th the Indiana State Police responded to:

  • 442 Property Damage Crashes
  • 77 Personal Injury Crashes
  • 2 Separate Fatal Crashes, both in Marion County with one death at each crash
  • 206 Slide Offs
  • 258 Assist Motorist Calls

Over the course of this 24 hour period seven ISP police vehicles were also struck. Fortunatley, no troopers were injured in any of these crashes.

Presently, at the time of the publication of this release, there are no reported road closures.

Zehme named NSCAA All-North Central Region Scholar

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University of Southern Indiana junior goalkeeper Adam Zehme (Orland Park, Illinois) was named Scholar All-North Central Region by the National Soccer Coaches Association of America. Zehme is the first Screaming Eagle in the history of the program to receive this award.

Student-athletes receiving Scholar All-Region recognition must meet the following criteria:

  • Record a 3.30 cumulative grade point average (on a 4.0 scale) or better;
  • Start more than 50 percent of all games and significantly contribute to their team;
  • Nominated by head coach of current NSCAA College Services member institution;
  • Junior or above in academic standing; and, if a transfer student, in second year at school.

Zehme, a business administration major, led the Eagles to the NCAA Division II Tournament for the first time since 1982 and to a 13-4-4 overall record, 10-2-3 in the Great Lakes Valley Conference. The first-team All-GLVC and CCA/D2SIDA All-Midwest Region goalkeeper concluded the season with a career-best 13 wins, seven shutouts, and 74 saves. He also had a 1.04 goals against average.

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Only About 10 States Matter In Electoral Politics.

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Only About 10 States Matter In Electoral Politics.

By Joe Wallace

Winning the presidency is not accomplished by getting the most popular votes. It is won in 50 independent elections for the electors of the states. This is not a new set of rules that was concocted last month to cheat Clinton out of winning. It has been this way since the nation was established.

The first rule of winning any game and this is a game, is to understand the rules and to make choices that result in scoring more points than the opposition. Some states are mismatches and others are tightly contested. CA and NY would go blue if Charles Manson was the Democrat nominee. WY, WV, AL, and a host of other rural states would support Candidate Manson if the Republicans nominated him.

Big wins in these uncontested states are as meaningless as Ohio State running up a 80-0 win over some obscure small college in football. The opposition doesn’t really have a chance and sometimes the scrubs play the whole game to minimize injuries.

Only about 10 states (games) matter in electoral politics. We all know where they are. This year the big games that determined the outcome were FL, NC, OH, PA, MI, and WI and everyone with half a brain knew it. President Obama won them all in 2008 and 5 of them in 2012. So why didn’t Clinton win these states? If Democrat strategists can answer those six questions (or even 4 of them) and correct for their own failures to play the game to win, they will have a battle plan for 2020.

To abolish the electoral college and move to a popular vote will take a constitutional amendment. That will require a 2/3 majority of the states (34) to pass. There is no path to such a victory this year and probably not in the foreseeable future.

Democrats have full control of a whopping 5 state legislatures that would likely vote to eliminate the electoral college. That leaves 29 more votes that would be needed.

We can rage at that reality and assert unfairness in the streets and on Facebook until the stars flame out if we choose, but that will not change the Constitution. A more prudent approach would be to audit the most unlikely defeat in modern politics and form a rational plan to win next time by playing within the rules of the game. This is a fundamental choice that Democrats have to make.

I am an Independent and always have split my vote so please don’t rage at me for a rational analysis of reality. I understand and have felt the thrill of victory and the pain of loss. Picking oneself up and changing after a loss is a valuable and lasting experience. Good luck to both parties at giving us great choices in 2020.

 

CHANNEL 44 NEWS: Lieutenant Governor-elect Crouch Finishes Tour of All Indiana Counties

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Lieutenant Governor-elect Crouch Finishes Tour of All Indiana Counties

 Indiana State Auditor Suzanne Crouch marks the end of her visits to all 92 Hoosier counties.

Crouch was back in Warrick County Friday for the last stop.  It is also where the lieutenant governor-elect started her trek. A graduate of Mater Dei High School, Crouch says she wanted to start and end her journey here in southern Indiana.

She found that during her trek across the Hoosier State local budgets are a problem. Crouch says she looks forward to being a watch dog for local government on the state level.

U.S. EPA Releases Final Report on Impacts from Hydraulic Fracturing Activities on Drinking Water Resources

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EPA’s Report Concludes That Hydraulic Fracturing Activities Can Impact Drinking Water Resources 

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is releasing its scientific report on the impacts from hydraulic fracturing activities on drinking water resources, which provides states and others the scientific foundation to better protect drinking water resources in areas where hydraulic fracturing is occurring or being considered. The report, done at the request of Congress, provides scientific evidence that hydraulic fracturing activities can impact drinking water resources in the United States under some circumstances. As part of the report, EPA identified conditions under which impacts from hydraulic fracturing activities can be more frequent or severe. The report also identifies uncertainties and data gaps. These uncertainties and data gaps limited EPA’s ability to fully assess impacts to drinking water resources both locally and nationally. These final conclusions are based upon review of over 1,200 cited scientific sources; feedback from an independent peer review conducted by EPA’s Science Advisory Board; input from engaged stakeholders; and new research conducted as part of the study.

“The value of high quality science has never been more important in helping to guide decisions around our nation’s fragile water resources. EPA’s assessment provides the scientific foundation for local decision makers, industry, and communities that are looking to protect public health and drinking water resources and make more informed decisions about hydraulic fracturing activities,” said Dr. Thomas A. Burke, EPA’s Science Advisor and Deputy Assistant Administrator of EPA’s Office of Research and Development. “This assessment is the most complete compilation to date of national scientific data on the relationship of drinking water resources and hydraulic fracturing.”

The report is organized around activities in the hydraulic fracturing water cycle and their potential to impact drinking water resources. The stages include: (1) acquiring water to be used for hydraulic fracturing (Water Acquisition), (2) mixing the water with chemical additives to make hydraulic fracturing fluids (Chemical Mixing), (3) injecting hydraulic fracturing fluids into the production well to create and grow fractures in the targeted production zone (Well Injection), (4) collecting the wastewater that returns through the well after injection (Produced Water Handling), and (5) managing the wastewater through disposal or reuse methods (Wastewater Disposal and Reuse).

EPA identified cases of impacts on drinking water at each stage in the hydraulic fracturing water cycle. Impacts cited in the report generally occurred near hydraulically fractured oil and gas production wells and ranged in severity, from temporary changes in water quality, to contamination that made private drinking water wells unusable.

As part of the report, EPA identified certain conditions under which impacts from hydraulic fracturing activities can be more frequent or severe, including:

  • Water withdrawals for hydraulic fracturing in times or areas of low water availability, particularly in areas with limited or declining groundwater resources;
  • Spills during the management of hydraulic fracturing fluids and chemicals or produced water that result in large volumes or high concentrations of chemicals reaching groundwater resources;
  • Injection of hydraulic fracturing fluids into wells with inadequate mechanical integrity, allowing gases or liquids to move to groundwater resources;
  • Injection of hydraulic fracturing fluids directly into groundwater resources;
  • Discharge of inadequately treated hydraulic fracturing wastewater to surface water resources; and
  • Disposal or storage of hydraulic fracturing wastewater in unlined pits, resulting in contamination of groundwater resources.

The report provides valuable information about potential vulnerabilities to drinking water resources, but was not designed to be a list of documented impacts.

Data gaps and uncertainties limited EPA’s ability to fully assess the potential impacts on drinking water resources both locally and nationally. Generally, comprehensive information on the location of activities in the hydraulic fracturing water cycle is lacking, either because it is not collected, not publicly available, or prohibitively difficult to aggregate. In places where we know activities in the hydraulic fracturing water cycle have occurred, data that could be used to characterize hydraulic fracturing-related chemicals in the environment before, during, and after hydraulic fracturing were scarce. Because of these data gaps and uncertainties, as well as others described in the assessment, it was not possible to fully characterize the severity of impacts, nor was it possible to calculate or estimate the national frequency of impacts on drinking water resources from activities in the hydraulic fracturing water cycle.

EPA’s final assessment benefited from extensive stakeholder engagement with states, tribes, industry, non-governmental organizations, the scientific community, and the public. This broad engagement helped to ensure that the final assessment report reflects current practices in hydraulic fracturing and uses all data and information available to the agency. This report advances the science. The understanding of the potential impacts from hydraulic fracturing on drinking water resources will continue to improve over time as new information becomes available.

Farmers Push Back Against Animal Welfare Laws

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Farmers Push Back Against Animal Welfare Laws
By Jen Fifield for Stateliness /Pew Charitable Trusts

All hogs in Massachusetts will be able to stretch their legs and turn around in their crates and all hens will be able to spread their wings under a law passed this month by voters in the state.

Laws like this one, which strictly regulate how farm animals are confined, are becoming more common across the U.S., as large-scale farming replaces family farms and consumers learn more about what happens behind barn doors. Massachusetts is the 12th state to ban the use of some livestock- and poultry-raising cages or crates, such as gestation crates for sows, veal crates for calves or battery cages for chickens, which critics say abusively restrict the animals’ movement.

The restrictive laws have taken hold so far in states that have relatively small agriculture industries for animals and animal products and fewer large-scale farming operations. But producers in big farming states see the writing on the wall. Backed by state farm bureaus, large-scale industrial farmers are pushing for changes that would make it harder for states to further regulate the way they do business.

North Dakota and Missouri adopted amendments in the last few years that enshrined into their constitutions the right of farmers and ranchers to use current practices and technology. Legislatures in many states, including Indiana, Mississippi, Nebraska and West Virginia, considered proposed amendments this year. And Oklahoma voters this month rejected a similar amendment sent to them by the Legislature.

Farmers acknowledge that some people who do not spend much time on farms may object to some of their practices. But they say that they do not abuse animals and that their practices are the most efficient and safest way to keep up with demand for food. And, they say, complying with restrictions on raising poultry and livestock like those approved in Massachusetts are costly for them and for consumers.

They point to an 18 percent increase in the price of eggs — about 49 cents a dozen — in California last year that was attributed to a law that created strict space requirements for hens. The law applies not just to producers in the state but to producers in other states that sell eggs there.

“Our nation’s ability to protect its food supply can be threatened by unnecessary regulations driven by activist agendas, often by people who’ve never set foot on farmland or have no idea what it takes to produce a crop,” said Paul Schlegel, director of environment and energy policy for the American Farm Bureau Federation.

‘Right to Harm’
Right-to-farm laws were put in place by all 50 states starting in the 1970s, as suburban development sprawled to rural areas. The laws were intended to protect farm owners from lawsuits brought by new neighbors who claimed the farms — with their smells, sounds and chemicals — were a nuisance. The newly proposed amendments would extend the protections by locking in farmers’ ability to use modern technology and practices.

Animal welfare advocates, such as Daisy Freund, director of farm animal welfare for the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, say the modern practices are not humane and call the right-to-farm amendments “right to harm” laws.

The amendments would not only prevent states from passing new animal treatment laws, but would make it harder for anyone to win a lawsuit against an agriculture business, even if the operation was affecting nearby quality of life, or air or water quality, Freund said.

Matthew Dominguez, a former lobbyist at the Humane Society of the United States who now works a national advocacy organization called the Nonhuman Rights Project, said the legislators who are proposing the amendments — including some who have received hefty donations from the industry — are trying to find any way they can to continue agriculture business as usual.

But consumer expectations already are forcing producers to change how they operate, said Josh Balk, vice president of farm animal protection at the Humane Society of the U.S. Demand for free-range eggs and grass-fed beef is growing, pushing large companies to change their standards. Wal-Mart and McDonald’s recently committed to using only suppliers that raise cage-free hens by 2025.

Market demands will force producers to change their practices or be left behind, Balk said. The U.S. Department of Agriculture projects that to meet demand, the industry will have to convert over half its egg production to cage-free systems by 2025, up from the current rate of 10 percent.

“It’s kind of similar to which companies are trying to still produce black and white TVs, and which ones are selling color TVs,” Balk said.

Paying a Premium
Consumer expectations have shifted as animal welfare groups such as the Humane Society have used undercover investigations to expose industry practices.

Videos and images published on the advocacy groups’ websites, on YouTube and in documentaries depict windowless warehouses with hundreds of sows confined in gestation crates, where they spend most of their lives. Hens are shown in cages as wide and long as a letter-sized piece of paper, and barely tall enough for them to stand in.

Many of these methods are accepted by industry groups such as the United Egg Producers and the National Pork Producers Council. Farmers say keeping animals in cages is the most sanitary and safest way to care for large groups of farm animals. And farming groups say the practices encouraged by animal welfare groups might not make life for farm animals any better.

The National Association of Egg Farmers said that while Massachusetts voters will pay more for eggs, the lives of chickens will not improve. Caging chickens, the association said, reduces the likelihood they will become diseased. It also improves the quality of eggs, the group said, by reducing the chance that the eggs touch manure.

Farmers and ranchers aren’t opposed to regulation that protects “the environment, that protects the food supply and that protects our families,” said Tom Buchanan, president of the Oklahoma Farm Bureau. “We buy our food from the same shelves you do,” he said.

But Buchanan and others, such as Harry Kaiser, a professor at the Charles H. Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management at Cornell University, say consumers should have the option of buying meat and eggs without paying a premium for special animal treatment.

Kaiser led the study, funded by the National Pork Producers Association, that showed an 18 percent increase in the price of eggs in California. The price increased even more than that because of a bird flu crisis, but that additional increase was filtered out of the study’s results.

Kaiser said the results didn’t surprise him. If businesses aren’t able to use the most efficient methods for producing eggs, he said, their costs will go up.

Not everyone can afford to pay premium prices, he said, and others don’t want to.

Rodolfo Nayga, professor in the department of agricultural economics and agribusiness at the University of Arkansas, has found that while a segment of the population is willing to pay higher prices for organic food, or food produced using higher standards for animal treatment, not everyone is.

“This isn’t for everybody,” Nayga said. “There are some farmers that won’t be able to accommodate the regulations for animal welfare and for environmental concerns.”

Industry Response
When animal welfare groups started about a decade ago to pay their employees to take jobs on farms to expose practices, the industry responded by pushing for what animal welfare advocates call ag-gag laws. Some of the laws made it a crime to take photos or videos of private farm property without the owner’s permission, while others made it a crime for an employee of an animal welfare organization to lie about where they worked when they applied for a job on a farm.

About 26 states considered ag-gag laws from 2010 to 2015, but only nine — Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Montana, North Carolina, North Dakota, Utah and Wyoming — passed them.

The Humane Society is not aware of any ag-gag bills proposed this year. Interest in these laws has faded after they faced opposition from animal welfare groups, as well as groups advocating for food safety, freedom of speech and workers’ rights, said Dominguez, who traveled the country fighting the laws for the Humane Society. Lawmakers also may be hesitant to propose the laws when so many are being challenged in court, he said.

Idaho’s ag-gag law was overturned last year by a U.S. district judge who said it suppressed freedom of speech and violated the Equal Protection Clause. Lawsuits are pending in North Carolina, Wyoming and Utah.

Six states — Alabama, Iowa, Kentucky, Missouri, Nebraska and Oklahoma — filed suit against California for its anti-confinement egg law, which was approved by voters in 2008 and took effect last year.

The states said the law put their egg producers that supply California at a disadvantage, requiring them to either stop selling eggs in California or spend hundreds of millions of dollars to comply with the California law, which would increase prices even at home.

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled this month that the farming states had no legal right to challenge California’s law, upholding a lower court’s decision to dismiss the case.

Updates to right-to-farm laws have seen some success, but not everyone thinks they are the way to go.

In Oklahoma, small farmers worried that the proposed constitutional amendment would prevent them from suing larger producers whose practices damage their business. It took years for the Oklahoma Farm Bureau to get the measure on the state’s ballot, only to see it overwhelmingly defeated.

The amendment was meant to prevent the Legislature from passing the same type of law Massachusetts approved, one that would “drastically handcuff and handicap farmers and ranchers, which ultimately results in less food and higher prices,” Buchanan said.

Although Oklahoma is a traditional farming state, Buchanan fears that as more people move to cities and away from rural areas, and as more legislators come from urban backgrounds, laws further regulating farms may eventually have a chance of passing there.

It’s better to pass a law now to block such measures, he said. “As the saying goes, it’s too late to shut the barn door once the horse is out.”