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“CMT Presents Jennifer Nettles With 2016 Next Women of Country Tour” with Brandy Clark At Ford Center

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 “CMT Presents Jennifer Nettles with 2016 Next Women of Country Tour,” and the sought-after ticket will include Brandy Clark and special guests Lindsay Ell and Tara Thompson. The tour is an extension of CMT’s Next Women of Country campaign, an effort that

seeks to give more attention and airplay to female country artists. Tickets go on sale to general public Friday, January 29 at 10 AM.

Nettles has racked up over 22 million in worldwide record sales since exploding onto the music scene in 2004, amassing eight #1 hits and countless accolades and awards. She recently embarked as headliner on the “Playing with Fire Tour” with Brandy Clark and Ryan Kinder. She’s also a vocal supporter of females in the industry.

CMT first launched its “Next Women” campaign in 2013 in an effort to emphasize undiscovered female artists in the male- dominated format. The campaign showcases emerging female artists across screens throughout the year, and several alumnae – Kacey Musgraves, Brandy Clark, Cassadee Pope and Ashley Monroe included – have achieved both commercial and critical acclaim. In 2015, CMT expanded the franchise to include its first-ever female-powered tour featuring Jana Kramer and Kelsea Ballerini.

Tickets can be purchased at Ford Center Ticket Office, Ticketmaster.com or by phone 800.745.3000

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UE men welcome Wichita State to Ford Center on Sunday

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Arena is sold out for huge game

  In one of the most highly anticipated games in the Missouri Valley Conference this season, the University of Evansville men’s basketball team will play host to #22 Wichita State on Sunday afternoon at 3 p.m. inside the Ford Center in front of what will be a sold out crowd.

 

ESPNU will have the live broadcast and the contest will also be available to ESPNU subscribers on the WatchESPN app and ESPN3.com.

 

In a game for the ages, the Purple Aces staged a late comeback to defeat Southern Illinois by a final of 85-78 in overtime on Thursday night.  Trailing by seven with under four minutes remaining, the Aces roared back as Mislav Brzoja hit a three to tie it up with under a minute remaining.  After the Salukis countered with a triple of their own, D.J. Balentine hit one at the buzzer to send the game into OT where UE was able to pull away for the win.  Balentine and Brzoja each finished the game with 25 points; for Brzoja, it was a career-high as he hit 9 of his 12 attempts, including 4 out of 5 shots from 3-point range.

 

D.J. Balentine now stands at 2,235 career points and enters today’s game just one behind the great Larry Humes for second place on the UE all-time list.  Balentine is also just 44 away from tying Colt Ryan’s program mark of 2,279.  Egidijus Mockevicius is also within shouting distance of the top spot on the Aces’ all-time rebounding list.  The senior has 1,097 boards in his career and is 100 behind Dale Wise’s mark of 1,197, which was set in 1961.

 

Evansville’s total of 18 wins this season is tied for the most in the nation; UE is one of 11 programs to have won 18 games.  Evansville is an unbelievable 23-4 in its last 27 games, dating back to the beginning of the CIT Championship run in March.  The run is UE’s top streak since 1988-89 when the Purple Aces went 23-4 to begin the 1988-89 season.

 

Mislav Brzoja was feeling it in the win at Southern Illinois, posting a career-best 25 points as he hit 9 of his 12 shots.  His efforts from outside were even better as 4 of his 5 treys found the bottom of the net.  Brzoja is now the top 3-point shooter in the Valley, hitting 48.9% of his attempts; over his last ten games, Brzoja is 17-of-30 from outside.

 

Wichita State enters Sunday’s game with a perfect 9-0 mark in MVC play and stand at 15-5 overall.  WSU has won their last 10 games in a row and 13 out of 14 games.  A pair of Preseason All-Conference First-Teamers lead the way for the Shockers as Ron Baker and Fred VanVleet are the leading scorers; Baker has averaged 14.7 points per game while VanVleet stands at 12.2 PPG.  In their last game, an 80-54 win over Loyola, Shaquille Morris registered a game-high 12 points while Rashard Kelly was next up for the Shockers with 11 tallies.

 

Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation Will Meet In Executive Session

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The Board of School Trustees of the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation will meet in executive session for a board training at 4:00 p.m. on Monday, February 1, 2016, at 20 NW First Street, Evansville, IN 47713, Evansville, IN. The session will be conducted according to Senate Enrolled Act 313, Section 1, I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1, as amended. The purpose of the meeting is for discussion of collective bargaining, (2)(A); initiation of litigation or litigation that is either pending or has been threatened specifically in writing, (2)(B); purchase or lease of property, (2)(D); and job performance evaluation of individual employees, (9).

DIGGING OUT by Jim Redwine

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Gavel Gamut

By Jim Redwine

(Week of 01 February 2016)

DIGGING OUT

The American Society of Civil Engineers publishes its assessment of America’s infrastructure every four years. Its most recent report was in 2013. The engineers assign a letter grade to our status. For 2013 it gave us a D+. The Society estimates it would cost us 3.6 trillion dollars and take until 2020 to repair and replace our failing sewers, water systems, dams, electrical grids, bridges, streets and highways.

It does not take lead poisoning in Flint, Michigan for any of us to know we are in trouble. We are rightly concerned about where we live, but, as such disasters as Flint or the ghost town of Times Beach, Missouri warn us, we should be alert to possible health and safety hazards all over America. It is a shock to know we in America may have to take some of the same precautions here we used to worry about in traveling to other countries.

Much of our infrastructure dates from just after the Civil War when we had two hundred million fewer people and no motorized vehicles. Even our interstate highway system dates back to President Eisenhower.

In real dollars, the ASCE estimates that public spending on infrastructure is the lowest it has been since 1947 when we were trying to recover from World War II. And if we are not replacing such things as dangerous bridges, we most likely are not maintaining such things as government structures. Therefore, such necessary items as airports may become unusable.

As with most seemingly intractable problems, an incremental approach is all we can do. There is no magic wand to erase over one hundred years of unaddressed needs. We can start with those systems in crisis such as Flint’s water system and the long term health requirements of children with lead poisoning, a one hundred million dollar price tag is estimated, then we can prioritize the rest of our crumbling home.

Of course, the reason we are in need of trillions today is because we put off spending millions over time. However, there is precedent for our federal and state governments to rely upon. It was less than ten years ago we guaranteed almost one trillion dollars of taxpayer funds to make sure such billion dollar companies as American International Group (AIG), Lehman Brothers, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac would suffer no loss from their greed. We might want to begin our charitable work at home and spend our money on critical infrastructure.

It is not as if we do not have the resources to protect our water systems, etc. If we would create a Marshall Plan for ourselves, we could rebuild America in about the same amount of time we rebuilt Europe.

Where would the money come from? According to the news organization, Mother Jones, for the fiscal year we plan to spend $579 billion dollars on defense. If we could redirect just about 10% of this per year to ourselves, we could make an investment of $60 billion each year, more than one billion per year for every state and U.S. territory. That would not give us $3.6 trillion by 2020, but it would by 2076, our three hundredth birthday.

Should someone complain we will not be caught up on our infrastructure for sixty years, I respond, if we had done this sixty years ago, there would be no lead in Flint’s water today and people might be able to live in Times Beach.

One of the not so collateral benefits is the money would not only be spent on ourselves, it would be paid to ourselves. And for those of you with a more liberal bent, you could take satisfaction in America spending 10% less on destroying other countries and 10% more on rebuilding our own.

WHY IOWA AND NEW HAMPSHIRE?

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Raging Moderate by Will Durst

And now the question that’s been dancing on the lips of politically concerned citizens for decades – Who’s the genius that chose Iowa and New Hampshire to be the first and most influential states in determining who becomes the next president? It was probably the same guy who figured out how to bundle subprime mortgages. Or related to the brewer who invented Cold Turkey Breakfast Beer. The idiot behind pay toilets on airplanes.

The premier production, the Iowa Caucuses, is a wild and wacky adventure that takes up an entire evening. First you find where your designated precinct gathering is being held in a school, church, library or neighbor’s house, one of more than 1680 in the state’s 99 counties on a dark February night. Which means motivating supporters to attend is an integral part of the campaign, making the promise of snacks incredibly influential.

Because the Hawkeye State is fiercely independent, the Republicans and Democrats have different rules. This will be the first year the GOP will announce a delegate count, which will be binding. Before, it was more of a “Santorum did well. Gingrich didn’t,” sort of thing.

All hell broke out last year, when Mitt Romney was declared the winner, but two weeks later it was revealed Rick Santorum had won, even though Ron Paul got the most delegates. This year, they promise more transparency. Stay tuned.

The Democrats huddle together with people who share a candidate preference. But supporters whose candidates don’t cross a viability threshold (15 percent or so) can either try to convince other people to join their group, or disband and hook up with a different favorite.

It’s the Tinder of electoral politics and places an emphasis on the art of hygienic schmoozing. A pleasantly odiferous group of followers holds a distinct advantage. People still talk about the delicious cookie smell that emanated from John Edwards’ supporters back in 2004.

The following week, the action moves north and east to New Hampshire. In the Granite State they are fiercely independent and proud of traditionally being the first primary since 1920. They actually have a state law that mandates they remain first in the nation, even if they have to move it to the previous year and compete with July 4th fireworks to do it.

While the Iowa Caucuses are a game of musical chairs without the music and no chairs, the New Hampshire Primary is more straightforward. You just up and vote. The problem is who is doing the voting. Iowa is 87 percent white but New Hampshire is 91 percent. The two are as representative of the country as sushi is of Southwestern Cuisine.

Both have tiny populations and are so damn white the blue veins running down their outer thighs could be interstate roads on the map of prejudice. These guys make the Pillsbury Doughboy look like a Central American coal miner after a double- shift. We’re talking about people who need SPF 50 to protect them from moonburn. If they were any more Caucasian, they’d be translucent.

Besides, in February, climate change notwithstanding, both the Hawkeyes and the Granitoids tend to experience a little thing we call winter. Needless to say, if it were up to the journalists, the first two primaries would be held in Hawaii and Guam.

ILNEWS Court split on whether defendant’s actions were proximate cause of injury

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Jennifer Nelson for www.theindianalawyer.com

A divided Indiana Court of Appeals ordered a man’s Level 6 felony resisting law enforcement conviction reduced to a misdemeanor because of a lack of evidence his actions were the proximate cause of the police officer’s injury during a foot chase.

Willie Moore Jr. was stopped by an off-duty police officer working as a courtesy officer at an apartment complex as Moore and another man were walking by the complex. Officer Christopher Helmer found it suspicious that Moore was wearing a dark hooded sweatshirt when it was nearly 80 degrees outside. He began talking to the men, and Moore volunteered his name, which Helmer recognized as on the apartment complex’s trespass list.

Moore’s father, Willie Moore, had rented the apartment, but the complaints lodged by residents were against the son. As Helmer attempted to pat down the two men, Moore took off. Helmer fell and injured himself during the pursuit but caught up to Moore. Moore was convicted of Level 4 felony possession of a firearm as a serious violent felon and Level 6 felony resisting law enforcement, which was enhanced due to Helmer’s injury.

Moore appealed, raising three arguments. He maintained that the officer didn’t have reasonable suspicion to stop him, but the judges found Helmer did under both the U.S. and Indiana constitutions. Moore claimed that his Illinois conviction for residential burglary couldn’t be used to support his serious violent felon status because the statutes in the states were not substantially similar. But again, the judges ruled against Moore, noting that Illinois legal authority indicates that the state’s residential burglary statute implies the use of force, like the burglary statute in Indiana. The only difference is Illinois’ statute does not include the term “breaking” as Indiana’s does.

Finally, Moore challenged his resisting law enforcement conviction, which the majority of Judges Rudolph Pyle and John Baker reversed and ordered that he be convicted of and sentenced for it as a Class A misdemeanor. The majority did not find sufficient evidence to support the causation element that enhanced Moore’s conviction to a Level 6 felony. But they did hold there was sufficient evidence to convict him of resisting as a misdemeanor.

Judge Cale Bradford dissented as to this issue, believing the evidence was such that the trial court could reasonably conclude that Moore’s actions were the proximate cause of Helmer’s injury.

The case is Willie Moore v. State of Indiana, 49A02-1505-CR-321.

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Men’s Swimming And Diving Defeats Ball State

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Men’s Swimming And Diving Defeats Ball State
Aces Defeat Cardinals, 151.5-148.5

EVANSVILLE, Ind. – An exciting meet came down to the final events as the University of Evansville men’s swimming and diving team defeated Ball State by a final of 151.5-148.5 on Friday afternoon at Wyttenbach Pool.

“I am super happy, we did a great job of coming together as a team. The divers were awesome and relays were great,” Purple Aces head coach Rickey Perkins said. “Ethan O’Rourke won three meets and did a nice job. I am very happy with the win, the guys worked very hard and it is great to see their work pay off.”

O’Rourke’s stellar day began in the 100 backstroke event as he swam a 52.16, topping the competition by 1.49 seconds. He was even more dominant in the 200 backstroke race. O’Rourke’s time of 1:55.25 was over four seconds better than his nearest competition. He finished the day with another great race, taking top honors in the 200 IM. His 1:57.44 was nearly four seconds ahead of second place.

Evansville swept the diving events, led by Cory Barnes and Miguel Marcano. Barnes was credited with a 212.17 to take first place in the 1-meter event while Marcano recorded a 258.15 in the 3-meter dive to earn the win.

Dan O’Brien had a solid day for the Aces. The sophomore came home on top in the 100 fly, registering a 51.86 to win by 0.41 over Ball State. He also contributed to a team win in the 200 medley relay. He joined Troy Burger, Matt Duke and Matt Childress to swim a 1:36.35. The group won by just 0.12.

Troy Burger was victorious in the 100 breaststroke, finishing in 59.61. He was 1.69 seconds ahead of teammate Will Glasscock. Burger got the job done again in the 200 yard breaststroke, dominating the competition by over three seconds as he finished with a time of 2:12.60.

Tomorrow, the Aces men and women will hold their final home event of the season, taking on Valparaiso at 1 p.m. at Wyttenbach Pool.