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Aces win 7th in a row to finish non-conference play

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Evansville moves to perfect 8-0 at home with win

EVANSVILLE, Ind. – Jaylon Brown scored a game-high 33 points to lead the University of Evansville men’s basketball team to a 68-55 win over Mount St. Joseph on Thursday evening at the Ford Center.

Brown drained 11 of his 16 shots to lead everyone and was 7-of-8 from the free throw line.  Next for the Purple Aces (9-4) was Ryan Taylor, who tallied 13 points. Duane Gibson posted 12.  Leading Mount St. Joseph (8-3) was Andrew Finley with 17 points.

“Give Mount St. Joseph credit, I thought they played with far more energy and executed better than we did,” UE head coach Marty Simmons said.  “Our guys played harder in the beginning of the second half, but couldn’t sustain it.  We are just fortunate, we were not able to execute what we practiced on either end of the floor over the last 3-4 days.”

Brown scored 22 points in the first half alone as the Aces took a 37-29 lead into the locker room.  Both teams had trouble finding their groove early on, leading to a 6-5 UE lead at the 16:43 mark.  The Aces got moving shortly after as a Brown jumper midway through the half gave UE a 22-12 lead.

Mount St. Joseph stayed tough as they cut the gap to two at 24-22 on a Bob Murdock trey.   That capped off a 10-2 stretch.  Over the final minutes, UE was able to regain its advantage as a Gibson bucket put the Aces up 37-29 with just over a minute to play in the half.

Out of the half, UE turned it up.  A 14-2 run in the opening six minutes of the stanza saw Evansville take its largest lead of the night at 51-31.  The Lions made a run late, cutting the gap to 13 at the final buzzer, making it a 68-55 game.

Evansville outshot the Lions by a 47.3%-38.6% margin thanks in part to a 6-for-7 effort from Duane Gibson.  The win moved UE to a perfect 8-0 record at home in non-conference play.

Missouri Valley Conference play is up next for the Purple Aces as they travel to Illinois State on December 29 for a 7 p.m. game.  On January 1, UE will be home to face UNI on West Side Night in a 3 p.m. tilt.

 

NTWAB MEMBER MOONEY HONORED BY KENTUCKY SENATE, LEXINGTON MAYOR

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Writer, historian ‘has taught us all how to face overwhelming adversity with great strength, courage, grit and class,’ Gray says in commendation

Bill Mooney, the award-winning turf writer who ranks among Thoroughbred racing’s premier historians of any generation, has been recognized by Lexington Mayor Jim Gray and the Kentucky Senate for his contributions to the horse industry and courage in the face of a devastating two-year battle with cancer.

The Senate proclamation on the motion of Sen. Reggie Thomas read in part that Mooney “has worked tirelessly to preserve for posterity horse racing’s illustrious history, using details and descriptions which, for the reader, bring to life the colorful world of horse racing, both today and throughout history.”

Mayor Gray in his commemoration declared December “Bill Mooney Month in Lexington,” in part stating that the Lexington writer “is a kind, loving person who goes out of his way to help others in need; who has been a role model for journalists; and who has taught us all how to face overwhelming adversity with great strength, courage, grit and class; and … has made incredible contributions to horse racing that will last in perpetuity.”

The full text of both commendations can be found at NTWAB.org, the website of the National Turf Writers and Broadcasters. Mooney last year was the inaugural winner of the NTWAB’s Bill Mooney Award for the racing participant displaying courage in the face of tremendous adversity.

Mooney is a two-time Eclipse Award winner, in 1985 for the quintessential story about Ellis Park that ran in Thoroughbred Record and in 2007 for a poignant story about the euthanization of champion Precisionist at Old Friends Thoroughbred Retirement Farm in Georgetown, Ky., that ran in Post Time USA. The native New Englander was awarded the 2012 Walter Haight Award by the NTWAB for career excellence, co-authored multiple editions of The Complete Encyclopedia of Horse Racing: The Illustrated Guide to the World of the Thoroughbred and is author of the Tony Ryan Book Award-winning Keeneland’s Ted Bassett: My Life. He also has been a racetrack publicist of note.

However, Mooney’s greatest legacy could be his painstaking research and colorful descriptions of long-forgotten subjects such as the end of racing in Texas in 1938 before being banned for 50 years and short-lived Tri-State Fair Grounds in Huntington as the site of the first West Virginia Derby in 1923. The latter story (http://bit.ly/2hVhnk5) was published in the Paulick Report in August when Mooney was critically ill but still drove the six hours each way between his home in Lexington to Mountaineer Park to handle publicity for the West Virginia Derby.

“One of the things that bothers me about the illness is that there are so many other stories that I wanted to write about,” Mooney said. “There was a great racetrack in Charleston, S.C., back in those days where something like four Kentucky Derby winners raced there. I so much wanted to write about that racetrack. There are a lot of lost racetracks out there that people don’t know about. It’s our history and our heritage.”

Mooney — whose magnificent and voluminous history and story-telling have been typed with one finger (a byproduct of being in a horrific auto crash at age 15) — sounds befuddled by the tributes, saying, “I’m an ordinary guy.” 

That might be the one fact that Mooney has gotten wrong.

“I’ve never met a more diligent reporter,” said Michael Blowen, president and founder of Old Friends after being a critic for the Boston Globe. “I never met anyone, regardless of what their beat is, who is as good a fact-checker as Bill Mooney. On top of all that, we just owe him everything at Old Friends. Because he was one of the first people who had a reputation at stake who thought this was a good idea…. He’s just been a tremendous friend. We’re going to name a street after him. There’s nobody I’ve met more courageous than Bill.”

“Bill Mooney has been a mentor and, most importantly, an invaluable friend to the Thoroughbred racing industry and the Bluegrass community as a whole,” said NTWAB president Alicia Hughes. “The courage he has shown in his battle with cancer and the perspective he has maintained have further solidified his status as an inspiration to all.”

Tributes to Mooney from his colleagues can be found at NTWAB.org (direct link: http://bit.ly/2ihG8WP). Also on the website: The definitive story about rather than byMooney, the son of two circus performers, including a world-class aerialist, and his distinction with the Walter Haight Award for Career Excellence In Turf Writing. http://bit.ly/2heF8GJ

 

Adopt A Pet

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Leo is a 5-year-old male longhaired Chihuahua. He’s a nervous little guy and would prefer a home with no young children, please. A patient, older family would be best for him. Leo is already neutered, up-to-date on vaccinations, & ready to go home today! His adoption fee is $120 and also includes his registered microchip. Contact the Vanderburgh Humane Society at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!

 

Renovations Underway for IU Swimming & Diving Locker Rooms

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 BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – Renovations are underway at the Counsilman-Billingsley Aquatic Center for new locker rooms for the Indiana University men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams.

“Our locker room renovation is yet another example of how committed our administration is to the pursuit of a national championship,” IU head swimming coach Ray Looze said. “What we accomplished at the Olympics this past summer was a huge step to returning Indiana Swimming and Diving to the top.”

The renovations to the locker rooms, which are right on deck at the CBAC, will feature new flooring, paint and lockers and are scheduled to be completed in January.

The new locker rooms will also feature modern team graphics and televisions and plug-ins for the team’s mobile devices. With the upgrades, the team will be wired for social media and will be able to monitor the most up-to-date college standings and swimming and diving news.

The Indiana University men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams will be back in action on Jan. 13, 2017 when the teams host Big Ten rival Michigan in Bloomington, Ind. The dual meet is scheduled to begin at 2:00 p.m. ET at the Counsilman-Billingsley Aquatic Center.

Be sure to keep up with all the latest news on the Indiana men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams on social media – Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.

 

 

The Peaceful Transition of Power?

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The Peaceful Transition of Power?

Derek Hunter for Townhall

Let’s hop in the way-back machine for a minute, shall we? We don’t need to go far … just a few months back to be exact.

It was a different time. Hairstyles were different. Fashion was different. Kids were listening to a different type of music their parents couldn’t understand. It was a crazy time. It also was a time marked by the Democratic Party insisting that what made this country great was the “peaceful transition of power.”

Like I said, it was a different time.

It was Oct. 19 when Donald Trump would not give in to Chris Wallace, the moderator of the final presidential debate, on the question of whether he would accept the results of the election. In the few remaining weeks of the campaign, that became one of the most talked about moments of the entire years-long ordeal. Little did we know that moment would come into play more than a month after all the votes were counted.

Hillary Clinton wasn’t asked the question herself, but she never stopped feigning outrage from that moment forward at the concept. Not to the concept of her team committing the very offense which so horrified her, but to the idea there was any circumstance under which the oafish Trump would not bow down and admit her superiority to the world.

Of course, it was Hillary who, on election night, refused to concede to the clear victor. Few could blame her for needing a couple of hours to soak in the fact that she’d duffed a tap-in putt on the 18th hole in The Masters and would not be sliding into the Green Jacket. When your dream slips away for a second and final time, it’s understandable composure would elude you.

Pulling herself together, she did admit defeat the next morning, but she and her team don’t seem to have accepted it.

In the ensuing weeks there has been nary a Clinton campaign veteran who hasn’t made a grousing public statement or bitter, unfounded accusation about how a “rigged election” denied the queen her throne.

FBI Director James Comey’s two letters cost her votes; sexism denied Clinton the White House; the Russians interfered with the election. You name, they’ve blamed it.

In all those accusations was an undercurrent of not only denying Donald Trump won but denying his coming presidency its legitimacy. Rooted in all of it, especially the Russian “hacking” story, is a hint of the idea that were it not for nefarious forces, Hillary would be president.

The FBI and sexism charges held no water, one having been of her own doing and the other overplayed by her campaign. So those unwilling to accept the constitutional order of things hung their hats on Russia.

The bitter grumblings were just that, grumblings of losers. But when those grumblings came from the mouth of the CIA director, another level was achieved.

Director John Brennan, who ironically voted for the Communist Party candidate for president in 1980, was now pointing an official finger at the Kremlin for interfering with the election.

AG-elect Says Drug Offenders Need To Be Held Accountable

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AG-elect Says Drug Offenders Need To Be Held Accountable

by Marilyn Odendahl for Indiana Lawyer Daily

Since the Legislature revised the state’s criminal code to provide drug treatment and recovery services to low-level drug offenders, Indiana has been brutalized by an opioid epidemic that has led to a resurgence of HIV along with needle exchange programs in eight counties and counting.

Indiana Attorney General-elect Curtis Hill agrees that jails and prisons are good places for offering addiction programs but maintains that offenders still need to be held accountable for their crimes.

“I want to make sure that while we’re addressing the addictive nature of someone’s being that we don’t lose sight of the fact that have an accountability standard that addresses the person who has committed multiple acts of criminal behavior,” Hill said.

The incoming attorney general discussed his views during and after a panel discussion Wednesday at the Bingham Greenebaum Doll LLP Legislative Conference in Indianapolis. He was joined by Sen. Jim Merritt, R-Indianapolis, University of Illinois at Chicago economist Frank Chaloupka, along with physicians Timothy Kelly, medical director of addiction treatment services at Community Hospital Behavioral Care Services and Jennifer Walthall, deputy state health commission and director for health outcomes with the Indiana State Department of Health.

The session on health infrastructure, the opioid crisis, and the tobacco tax took a broad look at what the state can do to curb drug dependency.

Merritt described addiction as an illness that “we can’t arrest our way out of.” He said he wants Indiana to kick its heroin habit in five years and he is planning to introduce a bill in the upcoming legislative session that offers a comprehensive approach to the drug problem.

The panel discussion took place a day after Washington passed the bipartisan 21st Century Cures Act, which includes $1 billion over the next two years to fight the opioid and heroin epidemics. Merritt said he is unsure how much of that money will come to Indiana so he is basing his approach on not getting any federal assistance.

A representative from Sen. Joe Donnelly’s office told the panel that while the amount is unclear, Indiana should expect to receive funds from the new federal initiative. The money will be funneled through the Division of Mental Health and Addiction of the Indiana Family and Social Services Administration.

Hill said he wants to change the perception that the county jails and state prisons are filled with violent and nonviolent offenders. Instead the incarceration system is comprised of violent criminals and chronic offenders. He defined the latter group as individuals who break the law multiple times and even though the infractions might be minor, the only accountability mechanism available is incarceration.

“Our jails are filled with users,” Hill said. “That’s not why we’re putting them there. We’re putting them there to hold them accountable for bad behavior and if we don’t address that accountability, they’re going to continue to re-offend and re-offend and re-offend regardless of whether they’re substance abusers or not.”

In 2013, the Indiana General Assembly overhauled the state’s criminal code to revamp penalties and mandate low-risk offenders serve their sentences in county jails rather than being sent to the Indiana Department of Correction. The Legislature then appropriated $55 million to help communities across the state bolster services and programs aimed at helping low-risk offenders quit the cycle of recidivism.

Hill said he wants to provide assistance to make sure everyone is talking the same language and all understand the problem of substance abuse.

“We all want to have less people locked up, less people addicted and more people being productive,” he said. “So if we start from that standpoint, we should be able to work together to find solutions.”

EPA Announces Smart City Air Challenge Awardees

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Awards Will Enable Two Communities To Deploy Hundreds Of Air Quality Sensors And Make The Data Public.

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has selected the City of Baltimore and the Lafayette, Louisiana, Consolidated Government as awardees of the Smart City Air Challenge. The challenge encourages communities to install hundreds of air quality sensors and share the data with the public. The agency also has recognized four projects for honorable mention: New York, New York; Mesa County, Colorado; Raleigh, North Carolina and Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minnesota.

“I firmly believe that data can make a positive difference in human health and environmental protection,” said Ann Dunkin, EPA’s Chief Information Officer. “We are looking forward to working with these Smart City Air Challenge awardees and honorable mention communities to share knowledge about collecting, storing and managing large amounts of data.”

The projects were evaluated on four criteria: data management, data use, sensor procurement and deployment and project sustainability. The two awardees will receive $40,000 each to deploy air sensors, share data with the public and develop data management best practices. After a year of implementing the projects, both communities will be eligible to receive up to an additional $10,000 based on their accomplishments and collaboration.

The following two projects were selected as awardee recipients:
•           An Air Quality Sensor Network for Greater Baltimore: This Baltimore, Maryland, project incorporates plans to engage several partners and neighborhoods to deploy a network of sensors in a phased approach, leveraging a scalable cloud platform for data management. They plan to assemble commercially-available components to build their sensor system and distribute the data on a City of Baltimore website.

•           Lafayette Engagement and Research Network (LEaRN): This Lafayette, Louisiana, project proposes a partnership between collegiate, local government and non-governmental organizations to deploy a network of sensors. The project has a strong data management plan that will use a scalable cloud platform. They plan to use commercially-available sensors for the project and share the data with the public in a variety of ways.

 

EPA is recognizing these four projects for honorable mention because of their innovation and potential:

 

•           Healthy Mesa County & Mesa County Health Department: Smart City Air Challenge Solution: Mesa, Colorado

•           Air Quality Crowdsourcing Data in Minneapolis/St. Paul: Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minnesota

•           New York City Air Casting Project: EPA Smart City Air Challenge Solution: New York, New York

•           Citizen science with Ground-Level Ozone Wearables Sensors (GLOWS) for real-time pollution maps across the Research Triangle: Research Triangle, North Carolina