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Robinson joins 500-rebound club in loss to Loyola

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Women’s Basketball will return to action on Sunday against Bradley

 Sasha Robinson joined an elite club for the University of Evansville women’s basketball team on Friday night as the junior pulled down 11 rebounds in a 63-49 loss to Loyola at the Ford Center.

The total was a season high for Robinson as the Nashville, Ind., native helped the Aces (1-13, 0-3 MVC) actually out-rebound the visiting Ramblers (6-7, 2-0 MVC), who boast of one of the top front courts in the Missouri Valley Conference. Robinson now has 505 boards in her career, and she is 59 away from moving into the top 10 in school history.

“It’s not easy to out-rebound a team like that,” UE head coach Oties Epps said. “Sasha did a great job in that match-up on the glass. Both Sara and Kenyia did extremely well for us too, but we needed to be better on defense tonight.”

The Aces were led offensively by the trio of Sara Dickey, Kenyia Johnson and Aaliyah Gaines as the team made a concerted effort to attack the rim all night. Dickey ended with 14 points and Johnson was 6-of-10 from the field with 12. Gaines added another 10 off the bench, but the group was no match for the Rambler duo of Taylor Manuel and Dakota Vann, which combined for 34 points.

“I thought we created a lot of good looks at the basket, but we have to find that healthy balance between going all the way, pulling up and kicking out for the three when we drive the lane,” Epps said. “I think we’ll get better at that once we sit down and study the film. We have to take care of the ball better too because our margin for error is too small to give it away like we did tonight.”

Dickey now has 1,368 points for her career, which is the fifth-best total in UE history.

After falling behind early the Aces were able to keep pace with the visitors in the second quarter before eventually cutting the deficit to two points less than three minutes into the third. However, Loyola responded forcefully, reeling off 14 consecutive points to take a commanding 46-30 lead late in the frame and effectively put things out of reach for UE.

The Aces will be back in action on Sunday as MVC play will continue against Bradley at 1 p.m. at the Ford Center.

 

IS IT TRUE JANUARY 9 and 10, 2016

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IS IT TRUE the Evansville IceMen bring people downtown with a frequency like few other attractions which helps add to downtown revitalization?

IS IT TRUE that the Owner of the Evansville IceMen Ron Geary has invested a lot of money in the IceMen and it has had a very positive impact on the City?

IS IT TRUE that the someone needs to tell the Mayor that NHL and the AHL would not be attracted to the Evansville market because it is not large enough?

IS IT TRUE if the IceMen decides to leave that the only other professional hockey league left is the ECHL and we doubt it would install a team in Evansville after the IceMen’s negative experience with the Mayor?

IS IT TRUE its obvious that the Ford Center is considered to be an Economic Development tool by the city that loses money every year? …the city feels investing City money in professional sports teams like the Evansville IceMen seems like a worthy economic stimulus project given the social and economic benefits the team brings to the area?

IS IT TRUE that we are sure that the Evansville IceMen have more options than the City of Evansville and we need to be reasonable in negotiating with them in order to keep them here?

IS IT TRUE todays “Readers Poll” question is; Do you feel that the Mayor playing hard ball with the Evansville Icemen is the best way to encourage them to stay in Evansville?

Sick Air FMX Scott Murray To Perform Freestyle Stunts

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Evansville, IN – International Championship Events is excited to announce a new addition to this year’s 40th Annual World Championship Ice Racing Series in Evansville, Indiana. I.C.E. has teamed up with Sick Air FMX professional stuntman Scott Murray out of Perronville, Michigan. Scott is a 14 year veteran and is well known in the motorsports industry as one of the best freestyle motocross stuntmen. Scott was the first person in history to land a double back flip on a mobile landing in 2008. He was also the 2008 Moto X Best Trick world Champion at Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego, CA. Scott has amazed millions of motorsports fans throughout the United States and across the world. He performs acrobatic freestyle daredevil stunts such as Kiss of Death, Switch Blades, Cliffhangers, among many backflip variations usually leaving the audience breathless. At the Ford Center Murray will attempt for the first time ever, a Back Flip on ICE. This spectacular and dangerous stunt will be performed 30 feet above the solid sheet of ice. Don’t miss all the racing action 7:00pm Saturday January 23rd at Ford Center. Doors open at 6:00pm and a pre-show pit party will open at 5:30pm. Gear Head VIP Tickets available which includes Pit Party Pass. For more information visit www.thefordcenter.com or purchase tickets at the Ford Center ticket office, ticketmaster.com or 1-800-745-3000.

Ford Center is managed by VenuWorks of Evansville, LLC. For more information on Ford Center visit:

www.thefordcenter.com www.facebook.com/fordcenterevansville www.twitter.com/thefordcenter

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.

 

Evansville, IN – Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office today.

Leslie Cyrilla Skipper Domestic battery, Level 6 felony

Harold Todd Booher Domestic battery, Level 6 felony

Daniel Francis Anderson Dealing in methamphetamine, Level 2 felony

Unlawful possession of a syringe, Level 6 felony

Possession of a narcotic drug, Level 6 felony

Possession of marijuana, Class B misdemeanor

Samantha Catherine Murphy Domestic battery, Level 6 felony 

Krishawn Anthony Harvey Operating a motor vehicle after forfeiture of license for life, Level 5 felony 

Federal Agencies Partner to Launch the Transform Tox Testing Challenge to Improve Chemical Screening

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Up to $1 million to be distributed among winning submissions

WASHINGTON – Today, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the National Institutes of Health’s (NIH) National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS), and NIH’s National Toxicology Program (NTP) within the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) are announcing a new challenge that will award up to $1 million to improve the relevance and predictivity of data generated from automated chemical screening technology used for toxicity testing.

Out of thousands of chemicals in commerce today, very few have been fully evaluated for potential health effects. Scientists from EPA, NIEHS/NTP, and NCATS are using high-throughput screening (HTS) assays to evaluate the potential health effects of thousands of chemicals. High-throughput screening uses automated methods that allow for a large number of chemicals to be rapidly evaluated for a specific type of biological activity.

Current HTS assays do not fully incorporate chemical metabolism, so they may miss chemicals that are metabolized to a more toxic form in the body. The challenge announced today, Transform Tox Testing Challenge: Innovating for Metabolism, is calling on innovative thinkers to find new ways to incorporate physiological levels of chemical metabolism into HTS assays. This will help researchers more accurately assess effects of chemicals and better protect human health.

Teams will compete in three stages for a total award of $1 million. The first stage, opening today and closing April 8 seeks practical designs that may be fully implemented. Up to ten submissions may receive a prize of $10,000 each and an invitation to continue on to the next stage.

The second stage requires a prototype that demonstrates the proposed idea in use. Up to five participants may be awarded up to $100,000 each and invited to participate in the final stage. The final stage requires a commercially viable method or technology for EPA and its partners to demonstrate and test. Based on this testing one participant may be awarded up to $400,000 for delivery of a method or device that will result in technologies that can provide metabolic competence to HTS assays.

All segments of industry, government, academia, non-governmental organizations, and others are encouraged to enter.

Governor Pence Makes Appointments to Various Boards and Commissions

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Indianapolis – Governor Mike Pence recently made appointments to various boards and commissions.

 

Board for Depositories

Justin L. McAdam [Vigo County], named as the Governor’s representative

 

Great Lakes Commission

Carol S. Comer [Marion County], appointed to complete an unexpired four-year term through December 31, 2018

 

Martin Luther King, Jr. Holiday Commission

Darrell S. Ragland, Sr. [Vanderburgh County], named chairman through December 31, 2016

 

Indiana State University Appraiser Task Force

Brian Conley [Vigo County], appointed to serve until task is complete

Stephen G. Junker [Vigo County], appointed to serve until task is complete

John S. Newlin [Vigo County] (Recommended by ISU), appointed to serve until task is complete

 

Indiana State Museum & Historic Sites Corp Board of Trustees

Gary J. Anderson [Brown County], reappointed to serve a three-year term through December 31, 2018

 

Regional Works Councils

Raymond “Remo” C. Mezzatta [Marion County], reappointed to Region 5 to serve a two-year term through January 1, 2018

Michael D. Wickersham [Randolph County], reappointed to Region 6 to serve a two-year term through January 1, 2018

 

Veterans Affairs Commission

Richard “Rick” D. Caldwell [Bartholomew County], reappointed to serve a one-year term through January 1, 2017

Kenneth C. Hylton [Ripley County], appointed to serve a one-year term through January 1, 2017

Ronald S. Kautsky [Marion County], reappointed to serve a one-year term through January 1, 2017

 

Indiana War Memorial Commission

Felicia Brokaw [Marion County], appointed to serve a three-year term through December 31, 2018

 

White River State Park Development Commission

Dawn C. Tabler [Hamilton County], named chairman through December 31, 2016

Joe Bill Wiley [Marion County], named treasurer through December 31, 2016

University of Evansville to Celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day

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The University of Evansville will celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day on Monday, January 18. The theme for this year’s celebration is “Rebuilding the Village Through Courageous Conversations and the Initiation of Peace.” All events are free and open to the public. The schedule of events follows.

Monday, January 18

11:30 a.m.-Noon

Bernhardt Atrium, Schroeder School of Business Building

The celebration starts with a rally before the University’s annual symbolic Civil Rights March on Washington re-enactment. The march begins at noon.

1:00 p.m.

Ridgway University Center

The march returns to campus. There will be a Peace Pledge signing with free hot chocolate and coffee. Any participant signing a Peace Pledge will receive a gift.

1:00 p.m.

Rademacher Lounge, Ridgway University Center

There will be a showing of the “I Have a Dream,” speech by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

7:00 p.m.

Eykamp Hall Room 251, Ridgway University Center

Rev. Terry V. Atwater will be the speaker for the William G. and Rose M. Mays Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Lectureship. A native of Evansville, Indiana, Atwater earned his Bachelor of Science degree in electrical engineering and master’s degree in business administration from UE.  He was a member of the Aces basketball team that won the NCAA Championship in 1965. In 1979, he started his own business, Midwest Engineering & Technical Services. He has been the senior minister for 40 years at North Shore Church of Christ.

Tuesday, January 19

7:00 p.m.

Eykamp Hall Room 251, Ridgway University Center

Screening of the documentary 3 ½ Minutes: Ten Bullets (The Jordan Davis Story)

Wednesday, January 20

4:00 p.m.

Eykamp Hall Room 251, Ridgway University Center

Panel discussion on Indiana’s Stand Your Ground Law.

IceMen Receive Hobbs From Binghamton, Anthoine Traded

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(Evansville to receive future considerations from Manchester in trade.)

 

Contact John Peterson @ jpeterson@evansvilleicemen.com or 812-463-6129

 

EVANSVILLE, IN – The Evansville IceMen, proud ECHL affiliate of the NHL’s Ottawa Senators, and Head Coach Al Sims announced Friday that the AHL’s Binghamton Senators have assigned forward Danny Hobbs to the IceMen on loan. Evansville also traded forward Mark Anthoine to the Manchester Monarchs for future considerations.

 

Hobbs, 26, comes to the IceMen for the first time in 2015-16, after playing in 17 games for Evansville last season. The Shawville, QC native recorded one goal and one assist in 22 games with Binghamton this season, and has appeared in 62 AHL and 122 ECHL games in his four year professional career. Before turning pro, Hobbs played four years of NCAA hockey for the University of Massachusetts (Amherst).

 

Anthoine heads east where he’ll get a new opportunity with the Monarchs closer to his hometown of Lewiston, ME. The 5’10, 194 lbs. forward recorded four assists in ten games this season, with a plus-3 rating. After graduating from Maine University in 2013, he played in four games for Evansville and skated in 34 more games for the IceMen last season after starting the year in the Southern Professional Hockey League (SPHL).

Study: Future lawyers are hiding depression and drug and alcohol use

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Some of America’s future lawyers are hiding drug, alcohol, and depression problems instead of seeking help, a new report shows.

Law students with addiction and mental health issues may be afraid to report the problems because they think that doing so would jeopardize their chances of being admitted to the bar or getting a good job after graduating, according to the study, which was conducted by a law professor, a dean of law students, and the programming director of a nonprofit focused on lawyers’ mental health. It was published last month in the Bar Examiner, an industry magazine.

“Students who probably need to seek help are profoundly reluctant to, because they don’t perceive seeking help as being beneficial to their bar admission process,” said Jerome Organ, a law professor at the University of St. Thomas in Minnesota and one of the report’s authors. Organ suggested that the effect of untreated addiction or depression in lawyers could affect their ability to serve clients. “If I am dealing with mental health issues that are untreated, and I am not taking care of myself, I’m probably not going to be able to take care of someone else well.”

From February to May 2014, Organ and his colleagues surveyed more than 3,300 law students from 15 law schools about their drinking, drug use, and mental health. Twenty-two percent reported binge drinking two or more times in the previous two weeks, and almost a quarter showed signs that they should undergo further testing for alcohol addiction. More than a quarter had received at least one diagnosis of “depression, anxiety, eating disorders, psychosis, personality disorder, and/or substance use disorder,” the study found.

Fourteen percent of law students said they’d used marijuana in the past 30 days, and 2.5 percent said they’d used cocaine in that time. That’s higher than the results shown in a 1991 study of 3,388 students at 19 law schools, in which 8 percent of law students reported using marijuana and 1 percent said they’d used cocaine in the previous 30 days.

Only 4 percent of would-be lawyers said they had ever relied on a health professional to deal with alcohol or drug abuse. The same pattern played out with mental health. The researchers found that 17 percent of survey takers screened positive for depression. Forty-two percent said they thought they needed support for emotional or mental problems in the past year, but only half of the people who thought they needed counseling got it.

People preferred to leave their illnesses untreated than risk not becoming a lawyer. More than 60 percent of students said they didn’t get help for their reliance on drugs or alcohol because they were worried it would affect their career prospects or their chances of getting admitted to the bar. Before they can practice law, students have to pass a “character and fitness” screening, in which officials look into their personal histories with the aim of rooting out people who are too morally compromised to serve clients. The American Bar Association says potential red flags include “drug or alcohol dependency” and “mental or emotional instability.”

Law schools have tried in recent years to convey that students will not be penalized for admitting that they’re suffering, but the report suggested that the efforts haven’t gone far enough. It is tough to counter what the study characterized as a deeply rooted culture of fear in legal education that discourages students from admitting weakness.

“While in law school, students are getting messages indicating that seeking help may be problematic for their professional careers,” the authors wrote. “The competitive nature of law school reinforces a message that students are better off not seeking help and instead trying to handle problems on their own.”

Governor Pence to Offer Remarks at Key Ceremony for Wounded Veteran Tomorrow

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Will also keynote the Baptist Ministers and Deacons Alliance Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Scholarship Banquet

 

Indianapolis – Tomorrow, Governor Mike Pence, joined by First Lady Karen Pence, will offer remarks as Homes for Our Troops, a national nonprofit that builds specially-adapted, mortgage-free homes for wounded Veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan, ceremonially turns over the keys to a home for Marine Corporal Zachary Nelson. Later that evening, Governor Pence will travel to Evansville to keynote the Baptist Ministers and Deacons Alliance Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Scholarship Banquet. Details below.

 

Saturday, January 9:

 

10:00 a.m. EST – Governor Pence, joined by First Lady Karen Pence, to offer remarks as Homes for Our Troops ceremonially turns over the keys to a mortgage-free, specially-adapted home to Marine Cpl. Zachary Nelson

*Media are welcome to attend.

Home of Cpl. Zach Nelson – 5220 Nightshade Lane Noblesville, IN

 

6:00 p.m. CST – Governor Pence to keynote the Baptist Ministers and Deacons Alliance Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Scholarship Banquet

*Media are welcome to attend.

Old National Events Plaza – 715 Locust St., Evansville, IN