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USI Volleyball signs two for 2017

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University of Southern Indiana Volleyball announced the signing of two players who will join Head Coach Leah Mercer‘s Screaming Eagles in 2017. Set to join the Eagles next fall are 5-foot-8 setter Casey Cepicky (St. Louis, Missouri) and 5-foot-10 outside hitter Jayla Garnett (Indianapolis, Indiana).

“We are extremely excited to add these two very talented athletes to the roster in 2017,” Mercer said.

Currently a senior at Ursuline Academy in St. Louis, Missouri, Cepicky has competed in both volleyball and basketball. She was a three-time All-Conference and All-District honoree, as well as earning the team MVP award her senior year. She also helped lead her team to the 2015 district championship.

Cepicky played club volleyball for High Performance STL, with her team winning the regional tournament the past four years to qualify for nationals along with the 2016 Premier League championship.

“Casey is a very defensive minded setter and her pursuit on defense is one of the qualities that attracted us to her. She runs a quick tempo offense that our team really responded to during her time with us in the gym. We expect Casey to contribute right away,” Mercer said.

A senior at Warren Central High School in Indianapolis, Indiana, Garnett led WCHS to the Ben Davis Invitational championship this fall. She also earned team MVP, All-Conference, and All-County honors in 2015.

Playing club volleyball for Team Indiana, Garnett was named the MVP at the AAU Nationals, MVP of the Mid-East Qualifier tournament, and helped her team place 10th at the AAU National Championships.

“Jayla is a very versatile hitter, actually playing middle for her club team last spring, after swinging outside for her high school team. She got better each time we watched her play and had that winning attitude we like to see in our future Screagles. Jayla is a true competitor that will bring some much-needed offense to our team,” Mercer said.

TROPICANA EVANSVILLE ANNOUNCES 21st ANNUAL CHARITY TOURNAMENT

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Since 1996, Tropicana Evansville has celebrated the spirit of the holiday season by hosting charity slot and blackjack tournaments in the month of December.  These tournaments are unique in that players’ entry fees are either a new toy valued at $10 or more, or $10 or more in cash.  The generosity of Tropicana Evansville’s players is exhibited through the many toys collected and money donated.  This year’s tournaments will be held Thursday, December 1 through Sunday, December 4.

All proceeds benefit two area organizations, Salvation Army’s Toy Town and Santa Clothes Club. Tropicana Evansville has a 20-year history with both organizations and has donated more than 20,699 toys ($206,990 value) and $41,110 to assist them in their efforts over the years.

Please join Tropicana Evansville’s Sponsorship & Donations Coordinator, Kim Henning, Salvation Army Captain, Scott Strissel and President of Santa Clothes Club, Doug Duell for the announcement of this year’s charity tournament community contribution results onTuesday, December 6, 2016 at 9:30AM (CST) in Tropicana Evansville’s riverfront pavilion.

About Tropicana Evansville

Tropicana Evansville is a casino, hotel and entertainment facility situated on the Ohio river in Evansville, Indiana that includes a 2,700 passenger riverboat casino, a 243 room hotel, a 96 room boutique hotel, an executive conference center, a 1,660 vehicle parking garage and Riverfront Pavilion housing pre-boarding facilities, retail shops, restaurants and lounge area.

 

About Tropicana Entertainment

Tropicana Entertainment Inc. (OTCQB:  TPCA) is a publicly traded company that, through its subsidiaries, owns and operates eight casinos and resorts in Indiana, Louisiana, Mississippi, Nevada, Missouri, New Jersey and Aruba. Tropicana properties collectively have approximately 5,526 hotel rooms, 8,075 slot positions and 277 table games. The company is based in Las Vegas, Nevada and is a majority –owned subsidiary of Icahn Enterprises, L.P. (NASDAQ:  IEP).

 

 

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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

Loren Edward Henderson Sexual battery, Level 6 felony

Domestic battery, Class A misdemeanor

Kevin Dwayne Martin Unlawful possession of a firearm by a serious violent felon, Level 4 felony

Adrian Romain Armstead Attempted robbery, Level 5 felony

Attempted robbery, Level 5 felony

Intimidation, Level 6 felony

Intimidation, Level 6 felony

Timothy Dewayne Rice Jr. Domestic battery, Level 6 felony 

Armonie Taizjon Howard Residential entry, Level 6 felony 

Mychael Nae Zhon King Residential entry, Level 6 felony 

Rodney Peek Criminal confinement, Level 3 felony

Criminal confinement, Level 3 felony

Strangulation, Level 6 felony

Bryant Westley Hooper Maintaining a common nuisance – controlled substances, Level 6 felony 

Roger David Curtis Jr. Maintaining a common nuisance – controlled substances, Level 6 felony 

Erica Michelle Kemp Dealing in methamphetamine, Level 2 felony

Aiding, inducing or causing dealing in methamphetamine, Level 2 felony

Kevin M. Thompson Operating a motor vehicle after forfeiture of license for life, Level 5 felony 

Stephen R. Sapp Burglary, Level 5 felony

Unlawful possession of a syringe, Level 6 felony

Brannon Dwight Gipson Domestic battery, Level 6 felony

Criminal confinement, Level 6 felony

Tammy Lynn Whittaker Forgery, Level 6 felony

Fraud, Level 6 felony

Theft, Class A misdemeanor

Melanie Ann Akers Domestic battery, Level 5 felony

Battery against a public safety official, Level 6 felony

Battery against a public safety official, Level 6 felony

Resisting law enforcement, Class A misdemeanor

Vashon Deryon Sherman Operating a vehicle as a habitual traffic violator, Level 6 felony 

Shawna Marie Eden Possession of methamphetamine, Level 6 felony

Possession of paraphernalia, Class C misdemeanor

Umaara M. Hadley Operating a vehicle while intoxicated, Level 6 felony

Javon Gass Theft of a firearm, Level 6 felony

Carrying a handgun without a license, Class A  misdemeanor

Dealing in marijuana, Class A misdemeanor

Kortney Rejean Moore Unlawful possession or use of a Legend Drug, Level 6 felony

Drew Michael Goodridge Possession of methamphetamine, Level 6 felony

Possession of paraphernalia, Class C misdemeanor

Marvin Thomas Tramill Operating a vehicle as a habitual traffic violator, Level 6 felony

Operating a motor vehicle without financial responsibility, Class C misdemeanor

Thomas Aaron Cruse Operating a vehicle as a habitual traffic violator, Level 6 felony

Operating a motor vehicle without financial responsibility, Class C misdemeanor

Staci Blair Moore Dealing in methamphetamine, Level 5 felony

Unlawful possession or use of a Legend Drug, Level 6 felony

Possession of paraphernalia, Class A misdemeanor

Possession of marijuana, Class B misdemeanor

Presale Passcode for Gabriel Iglesias FluffyMania World Tour!

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GABRIEL IGLESIAS “FLUFFYMANIA WORLD TOUR”

PRESALE PASSCODE: FLUFFY
Ticket Presale runs from November 30 at 10:00am through December 1 10:00pm. 
The “FluffyMania” tour goes on-sale to the general public on Friday, December 2.

Don’t miss FluffyMania World Tour: 20 Years of Comedy on Saturday, March 4!
Tickets are $73, $53 and $38. VIP are $148, $128 and $113.
NO ONE UNDER THE AGE OF 7 FOR THIS SHOW PLEASE.

TICKETS

Election Rigged

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‘Leaky pipeline’ study spotlights gender inequality in law schools

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Marilyn Odendahl for www.theindianalawyer.com

The problems of gender inequality in the legal profession start when women apply to law school, according to a new report from Law School Transparency.

Data compiled by Deborah Jones Merritt, professor at Moritz College of Law at The Ohio State University, and Kyle McEntee, executive director of LST, shows the pipeline leading women to a J.D. degree has many leaks. Women are applying to law school at a much lower rate than men, they are not admitted in the same numbers as their male counterparts and they are more likely to attend schools that have worse job placement rates.

McEntee described his reaction to the data as “shocked.” Crunching numbers from the American Bar Association, he found that since 2000, the inequality between men and women law students has increased. By 2011, the split had become statistically significant and could not be attributed to random behavior.

The study found that 2.6 percent of female college graduates apply to law school compared to 3.4 percent of male college graduates. If women applied at the same rate as men, applications would jump 16 percent overall.

The lower number of applications cannot be linked to women not having an interest in graduate education. Women outpace men in earning master’s and doctoral degrees, 59.9 percent and 51.8 percent respectively.

Once they apply to law school, women are less likely to be admitted than men, the study found. Male students outnumber female students in law school. Overall for the class that enrolled in the fall of 2015, 79.5 percent of male applicants were admitted as compared to 75.8 percent female applicants.

In addition, women students are clustering in the “least regarded” law schools, McEntee said. The study examined 11 schools with strong placement rates which had at least 85 percent of their graduates getting full-time, long-term jobs requiring bar passage. But those schools averaged just 46.6 percent female enrollment.

Conversely, law schools that placed less than 40 percent of their graduates in full-time, long-term, J.D.-required positions had an average female enrollment of 55.9 percent.

This disparity is seen in Indiana.

Notre Dame Law School, ranked in the Top 25 by U.S. News and World Report, admitted a class in 2015 that comprised 59 percent men and 42 percent women. Comparatively, Valparaiso University Law School, which is unranked by the magazine and was recently censured by the ABA, admitted a class the same year that was 49 percent men and 51 percent women.

Of the Notre Dame Law School students who graduated in 2015, a total of 130 graduates obtained full-time, long-term, J.D. required jobs. Four of these jobs where listed as funded by the law school or university. Valparaiso had 55 graduates in the Class of 2015 land this kind of employment. None of these jobs were funded by the law school or university.

Merritt and McEntee speculated a cause of the gender inequality might be the U.S. News rankings. As law schools vie for the top spots on the Best Law Schools list, they might be less inclined to accept applicants with lower LSAT scores. According to McEntee, women, on the whole, score two points lower on the law school entrance exam than men, which could be putting the female applicants at a disadvantage.

However by the time women take the bar exam, they outperform expectations based on their LSAT scores. Looking at data from National Association for Law Placement, Merritt and McEntee noted of the Class of 2015, 66.4 percent of the women and 67.0 percent of the men secured jobs that required bar passage.

Indiana Board of Law Examiners does not collect data on the number of men versus women passing the state’s bar exam.

Merritt believes that law schools have put the priority on improving their U.S. News ranking at the cost of gender equity. She is hoping law school faculty and deans will look at this study and consider ways to attract more women.

Adopt A Pet

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 Murphy is an 8 ½-year-old male orange tabby cat with some white areas. He is VHS’ LONGEST resident, waiting on a home since April 2nd! He can be shy, and spends most of his time hiding in the Cageless Cat Lounge, which is probably why so many people overlook him. His adoption fee is $30, or free for senior citizens 70+! Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 or adoptions@vhslifesaver.org to inquire!

Cyber Shopping

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“READERS FORUM” NOVEMBER 30, 2016

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WHAT IS ON YOUR MIND TODAY?

Todays Readers Polls Questions is: Do you feel that the City of Evansville should continue to pour millions of our tax dollars into the Downtown and Hayne’s Corner area?

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