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UE Swimming And Diving Continues House of Champions

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Daniel O'Brien

Daniel O’Brien
UE swimming and diving continues House of Champions
Day Two Results

INDIANAPOLIS – Another full day of action took place as the Purple Aces swimming and diving teams completed the second day of action at the House of Champions in Indianapolis.

“Today was a great day. A lot of season best times and a few life time best times. At the start of the meet today we talked about being brave and what it meant to be brave and they were awesome,” UE head coach Rickey Perkins said.  “Daniel O’Brien had an excellent night getting second in the 100 fly and finishing high on the 100 back. Overall a very exciting night and I believe tomorrow will be even better.”

O’Brien came home in second place overall in the 100 fly.  His effort of 49.84 was second out of 24.  He was just 0.75 behind the winner.  In the 100 back stroke, O’Brien swam a 51.00 to take 5th place.

In the 200 medley relay, the guys finished in sixth place with Dan O’Brien, Troy Burger, Prescott Marcy and Matt Childress swimming a 1:33.78.  Burger was also stellar in the 100 breaststroke.  He came in 9thwith a 57.32.  Everett Plocek was just behind him in the event, taking 11th with his time of 58.50.

UE’s top relay finish of the day on the women’s side came in the 800 free relay as Madi Jones, Bridget Sheridan, Jessi Hildebrand and Maja Magnusson posted a 7:53.69 to finish in 5th.

The group of Michaela Kent, Amy Smith, Charlotte Lechner and Mackenzie Harris placed seventh in the 200 medley relay with a final of 1:48.51.  Lechner struck again in the 100 fly as her 58.44 was good for 10th place.  Madi Jones was just 0.2 seconds behind her in 11th.

Kent had a strong finish in the 100 back.  Her final of 57.92 put her in fifth place.  Magnusson was the top UE finisher in the 200 free.  She swam a 1:57.92 en route to a 14th-place effort.  Amy Smith came home in 12th place in the 100 breaststroke.  She swam a 1:08.29.

On the boards, it was Courtney Coverdale leading the way with a second-place finish in the 3-meter dive.  Her score was 251.35.  Miguel Marcano was the top finisher for the men in the 1-meter, placing tenth with a score of 207.25.

Overall, the ladies rank in fifth place out of ten squads while the men are sixth out of 9.

IS IT TRUE DECEMBER 4, 2015

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IS IT TRUE this week “Readers Poll”is: “Are you pleased with the way Governor Pence has conducted himself over the last four (4) years”?

IS IT TRUE we are hoping to have at least 2 million page views by the end of the year?

IS IT TRUE you can expect some redesign layout activity on our site spearheaded by our Webmaster? …we urge you to be patient with us over the next couple of days?

IS IT TRUE that starting next Monday IIT will posted twice a week? …you can expect to read IS IT TRUE on Monday and Thursday of each week?

IS IT TRUE we would like to share with you a new publication called FEDERAL FUMBLES-100 Ways The Government Dropped The Ball? …this publication was created by United States Senator James Lankford form Oklahoma? …you can Goggle it to read the entire publication? …heres a few TID BITS from this publication that we thought you would enjoy?

MORE MONEY, FEWER RESULTS

 No funds for failed state exchanges; repeal Obamacare Under Obamacare states were given the option to set up their own health insurance exchanges to buy and sell insurance or to allow the federal government to operate an exchange within the state. Fourteen states and the District of Columbia established their own exchanges. The Obama Administration, eager to support their efforts, shelled out $4 billion from taxpayers for planning, establishment, and innovator exchange grants—more than the federal government spent on the nationwide federally facilitated marketplace. Most taxpayers would reasonably expect that a higher investment would yield a higher return, but that was not the case. When the 14 states that established exchanges opened for business, seven were dysfunctional, disabled, or severely underperforming. 79 For example Oregon’s exchange failed to enroll a single person through its online platform, despite spending $304 million80 in taxpayer dollars. Oregon eventually gave up and turned its exchange over to the federal government. Maryland’s exchange failed almost as soon as it launched. Massachusetts, which already had a functioning state website for health insurance, received $184 million81 in federal funds for a boondoggle that flopped so spectacularly during its first open enrollment that its executive director “wept at a board meeting, where it was disclosed that 50,000 applications for health insurance are sitting in a pile, and have yet to be entered into a computer system.”82 Obamacare, “despite all the massive brainpower behind it, had some ‘glitches,’ in the same sense that the universe has some ‘atoms.’”83 So where did all of the money go? GAO reports, “[T]he specific amount spent on marketplacerelated projects was uncertain, as only a selected number of states reported to GAO that they tracked or estimated this information.”84 RECOVERY Unimpressed by this display of spending malfeasance and mismanagement, Congress declined to offer further funds for state exchanges. The entire system continues to drive up healthcare costs and healthcare complexities. It is time to stop wasting Americans’ money on a failed policy

 

RUSSIAN CIGARETTES

NIH’s stated mission is “to seek fundamental knowledge about the nature and behavior of living systems and the application of that knowledge to enhance health, lengthen life, and reduce illness and disability.”  Perhaps running counter to the mission, in April 2015 NIH announced a $48,500 grant to produce a book entitled, Cigarettes and Soviets: The Culture of Tobacco Use in Modern Russia. 54 While the title harkens images of a James Bond movie, the grant will go to pay a historian to write “the first solo-authored monograph in Russian or English to explore the history of tobacco use and government initiated cessation programs in Russia in the context of the country’s complex social, cultural, and political changes of the past 130 years.”

In order to compile the book, the author will “reconstruct the culture of tobacco using newspapers, journals, industry publications, etiquette manuals, propaganda posters, popular literature, films, cartoons, and advertising images.” The supposed hook into NIH and public health relevance is that “understanding Russia’s distinctive history may suggest different strategies for U.S. policy initiatives” and that it can “provide insights into the successes and failures of government-led tobacco control efforts.” While subjective, it is likely that most taxpayers would find the merits of the history of Russian smoking habits outside the scope of NIH’s mission and American national interests.

Recently NIH made major medical advances in Ebola research, gene therapy to treat hemophilia, blood tests for early detection of Alzheimer’s. Four men even regained muscle control from paralysis after spinal stimulation therapy.57 These advances truly make a difference and help families across the nation. Instead of funding the publication of niche history books, Congress should push NIH to continue to concentrate its resources on more transformative research to provide public health breakthroughs for the American people. Leave the study of Russian cigarettes to the Russians.

 TOY GUNS: REGULATORY

When asked to think of an industry that faces particularly duplicative and complex federal regulations, the financial or energy sectors come to mind first for most Americans. However, the federal government’s arm extends into every industry, including toy gun manufacturers and importers. It is important to ensure the safety of every child, but perhaps it can be done in a more efficient manner without sacrificing safety. GAO’s 2015 annual report to Congress on federal duplication and overlap describes multiple examples of duplicative regulations, but the toy gun industry example stands out in particular.

In order to distinguish toy guns from real firearms, NIST within DOC holds primary regulatory jurisdiction over toy guns and imitation firearms. This is a serious and important safety responsibility to protect the lives of millions of children. However, the 2015 GAO report found an interesting loophole in the regulatory structure of the toy gun industry, confirmed by the regulating agency itself: “NIST staff also noted that because there are few, if any, domestic manufacturers of toy and imitation firearms and because most are imported, NIST regulations on the markings for toy and imitation firearms are enforced almost entirely by Customs and Border Protection (CBP).” GAO also noted the possibility for inefficiency, stating “because the regulation of toy and imitation firearms falls outside the scope of NIST’s primary mission and functions and because NIST has no physical presence at ports of entry, NIST staff stated the regulation and oversight of toy and imitation firearm markings may better be administered by another federal agency.”

The difference between a toy gun and a real gun can result in fatal consequences. When it comes to children’s safety, the federal government must get this right.

The regulating authority of the toy gun industry should be transferred to the entity that actually has enforcement capability: CBP. Removing duplicative responsibilities will ensure regulations are implemented appropriately and keep toy costs low for parents.

Coverdale Wins As UE Finishes House of Champions

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Courtney Coverdale

Courtney Coverdale

Coverdale Wins As U E Finishes House of Champions

INDIANAPOLIS – Sophomore Courtney Coverdale took top honors in the 1-meter dive as the University of Evansville swimming and diving teams completed the House of Champions.

“It was a very exciting day, we had some excellent racing and fantastic diving,” head coach Rickey Perkins said.  “I am very proud of the way the team performed this week.  They are responding well to the training and hopefully we continue to improve throughout the remainder of the season.”

Coverdale’s score of 260.05 put her on top in the 1-meter event.  Her score was over 12 points better than the competition.   In women’s races, Maja Magnusson, Charlotte Lechner, Mackenzie Harris and Michaela Kent finished the 400 free relay in 3:35.73 to take 8th in the race.  Magnusson had a strong finish in the 1650 free.  She finished the event in 17:45.19 to take 6th.

In the 200 backstroke, Taylor Davidson had a strong race as her 2:06.91 placed her in 11th.  Kasey Rein was the top finisher in the 200 fly.  Her 2:13.72 put her in 12th.  In the 200 breaststroke, Amy Smith registered a 12th place finish of her own, swimming a 2:29.34.

The men picked up a 4th place finish in the 400 free relay.  Dan O’Brien, Ethan O’Rourke, Everett Plocek and Matt Childress posted a 3:06.61 to record the high finish.  On his own, O’Rourke had a great showing in the 200 backstroke as his 1:52.31 was good for 5th place.

Troy Burger came home seventh in the 200 breaststroke, recording a time of 2:07.35.  Jared Sutphin notched a 16:48.31 to take 11th in the 1650 free.

Evansville’s women finished the weekend in 5th out of 10 schools while the men remained in sixth place out of nine.

BRANDON LEE FERGUSON ANNOUNCES CANDIDACY FOR INDIANA STATE REPRESENTATIVE, DISTRICT 77

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Brandon Lee Ferguson announces his candidacy for the Democratic nomination for Indiana State Representative, District 77.

Mr. Ferguson official announcement statement:

I’m a proud Union Tradesman, part-time engineering student, husband, father of two wonderful children and expecting a Christmas baby boy.

I will be talking about issues, it won’t be fixing our infrastructure or our education system because all politicians say that. Those things should be automatic, to me issues are struggles and I want to talk about struggles that matter.

Starting with rising cost of our seniors, such as the medicine they take or their assist living. We need to helping out our small businesses by cutting all the unnecessary red tape and stop drowning them in taxes.

Crime is getting ridiculous, instead of incarcerating our youth and putting our police force in harm’s way, we have to start looking at prevention measures before they become a problem, such as youth programs.

The ever rising cost of hospital visits, insurance, and daycare. And the biggest issue I’d like to address is jobs,

GOOD paying jobs made by Americans! You can’t go anywhere to buy American made products. There isn’t a reason why we can’t make our own clothes, TV’s, washers…etc

I’m running for office because I truly believe to represent the working class citizen, we should try a candidate who is actually from the working class. Time and time again, the working class is either forgotten or being taken advantage of. We’ve already tried business owners, lawyers, and CEO’s who cater to the one percent. We see how well that works for congress!

My agenda is to take back our state and ensure that all residents have a fair shot to succeed at the American Dream.

More proceedings necessary in mortgage foreclosure action

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Jennifer Nelson for www.theindianalawyer.com

Because there are genuine issues of material fact as to the fair market value of a property at the time of sale and the true amount of indebtedness on a promissory note, a trial court erred in granting summary judgment in favor a bank on its foreclosure action, the Indiana Court of Appeals ruled Friday.

In R.P. Leasing, LLC, Robert C. Waite, and Ilene A. Waite v. Chemical Bank, 89A01-1412-MF-549, R.P. Leasing appealed summary judgment in favor of Chemical Bank on its foreclosure action involving Michigan and Indiana properties owned by R.P. Leasing. The company borrowed $700,000 from Chemical Bank to buy the properties. In 2009, the Michigan property was appraised at $1.2 million; in 2013, an appraisal valued the property at $500,000. By 2013, R.P. Leasing had defaulted on the loan, causing the Michigan property to go to a sheriff’s sale. The bank bought the property back through a credit bid for $500,000. It then sought to foreclose on the Indiana property, alleging that the amount the bank was owed was more than $716,000. The bank did not mention the sale of the Michigan property.

The trial court ruled in favor of the bank, ordering foreclosure of the Indiana property. The court denied R.P. Leasing’s motion to correct error.

“The fair market value of the Michigan property at the time of sale is a material issue in this case because, under Michigan law, it is a defense to a deficiency claim (such as the one the Bank brought in the instant case) that the property sold and applied against the Note was sold for less than fair market value,” Judge Edward Najam wrote. Thus, if R.P. Leasing could show that the fair market value of the Michigan property was more than the $500,000 credit bid, then, as a matter of Michigan law, the set-off applied to the Note would be the fair market value rather than the lesser amount of $500,000.”

The bank submitted evidence designating the fair market value to be $500,000; R.P. Leasing submitted the 2009 appraisal showing the property valued as high as $1.2 million. There is also conflicting designated evidence on the material issue of the true amount of indebtedness owing on the note. As such, summary judgment is precluded, the COA held.

Also, the judges affirmed the denial of R.P. Leasing’s motion for attorney fees because it failed to raise that issue until its motion to correct error.

University of Southern Indiana Men’s Basketball Opened 2015-16 Great Lakes Valley Conference With An 89-61 Victory

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Southern Indiana Men’s Basketball opened the 2015-16 Great Lakes Valley Conference campaign with an 89-61 victory over McKendree University Thursday night at the Physical Activities Center. USI goes to 5-2 overall and 1-0 to open GLVC play, while McKendree sees its record go to 4-1 in 2015-16, 0-1 GLVC.

The Screaming Eagles, who are 4-1 during the six-game homestand, have won 24-straight GLVC openers since 1992.

In the first half, USI scored seven of the first nine points and controlled the first 20 minutes of the contest. The Eagles posted their first double-digit lead, 21-11, with 8:50 left in the half and extended the lead to as many as 17 points, 38-21, at the 2:19 mark. The Bearcats would scratch their way back to a 10-point deficit before the Eagles took a 40-28 lead into the intermission.

A key to USI’s first half run was its defense that held McKendree to 36 percent from the field (9-25) and outrebounded the Bearcats, 22-16.

The Eagles put on the jets in the second half and quickly put the contest out of reach. Led by junior guard Travis Britt’s (Rantoul, Illinois) 12-point second half performance, USI methodically extended the halftime advantage to a game-high 29 points, 89-60, in the final minute before the final buzzer rang on the 89-61 victory.

Individually, Britt would lead five USI players in double-figures with a career-high 15 points. He was five-of-eight from the field, four-of-six from beyond the arc, and a perfect one-of-one from the charity stripe.

Senior forward George Edwards (Chicago, Illinois) and junior guard Bobo Drummond (Peoria, Illinois) followed Britt in the scoring column with 13 points each, while senior forward Shane Seniour (Newburgh, Indiana) and junior forward T.J. Tisdell (Cape Girardeau, Missouri) rounded out the double-digit scorers with 12 points and 10 points, respectively. Drummond also had a game-high and career-high seven assists.

As a team, USI shot 50 percent from the field for the first time in three games, hitting 34-of-68, and won the battle on the glass, 43-26.

USI concludes the homestand and the first weekend of GLVC play against the University of Illinois Springfield Saturday at 3:15 p.m. The Prairie Stars lost their GLVC opener, 72-62, to 24th-ranked Bellarmine this evening in Louisville, Kentucky, and saw their record go to 3-4 overall and 0-1 in the league.

The Eagles lead the all-time series with Illinois Springfield, 7-2, after defeating the Prairie Stars, 67-54, on the road in 2014-15. The Eagles are 5-1 versus the Stars at the PAC since 2000 and have won last two meetings at home.

Marcum, Grooms Lead Lady Eagles Past Bearcats In GLVC-Opener

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For Immediate Release

December 3, 2015

Marcum, Grooms lead Eagles past Bearcats in GLVC-opener

-Box Score

Southern Indiana (5-1, 1-0 GLVC): 58

McKendree (1-5, 0-1 GLVC): 45

-Box Score

EVANSVILLE, Ind.—Junior guard Tanner Marcum (New Albany, Indiana) and sophomore guard/forward Kaydie Grooms (Marshall, Illinois) combined for 36 points to lead the University of Southern Indiana women’s basketball team to a 58-45 victory over McKendree University in the Screaming Eagles’ Great Lakes Valley Conference-opener Thursday evening at the Physical Activities Center.

USI (5-1, 1-0 GLVC), which never trailed in the contest, used a 7-0 first-quarter run to build a 16-11 lead after the opening period.

The Eagles used an 8-2 spurt early in the second quarter to extend their lead to 24-13; but McKendree slowly chipped away at USI’s advantage as the Bearcats held the Eagles scoreless for the final six minutes of the period to close to within six points (24-18) at the intermission.

McKendree (1-5, 0-1 GLVC) closed to within five points with a free throw early in the third quarter; but a 6-0 USI run pushed the Eagles’ cushion back to 11 points with six minutes to play in the period. Three different Eagles—sophomore forward Morgan Dahlstrom (Grayslake, Illinois), Marcum, and junior forward Hannah Wascher (Rantoul, Illinois)—scored during the run that stole momentum away from the Bearcats.

USI’s cushion ballooned to 15 points later in the third quarter as the Eagles used an 8-1 run that featured a three-pointer by sophomore guard Randa Harshbarger (Philo, Illinois), a bucket by Marcum, and an old-fashioned three-point play by Grooms.

Marcum’s three-pointer with 2:23 to play in the third frame followed by a layup by junior center Ruta Savickaite (Vinius, Lithuania) pushed USI’s advantage to 18.

Grooms hit her fourth three-pointer of the game with 2:20 to play in the fourth quarter to give USI its largest lead at 58-39.

Marcum finished the contest with a season-high 19 points and a career-high six assists; while Grooms added 17 points, seven rebounds, and three steals.

USI returns to action Saturday at 1 p.m. when it hosts the University of Illinois Springfield at the PAC. The Prairie Stars (3-3, 0-1 GLVC) fell to Bellarmine University, 72-58, Thursday evening in Louisville, Kentucky.

Note: USI is now 12-1 versus teams in its four-team pod since the GLVC went to pod-play in the 2013-14 season.

Coleman’s has career night against Bowling Green

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Freshman Camille Coleman had the best night of her young career as she scored 19 points in a 74-56 loss for the University of Evansville women’s basketball team against Bowling Green on Tuesday night.

Coleman hit six of her 10 attempts, four triples and all three free throws to lead everyone with 19 points. Aaliyah Gaines also had a solid night, posting 10 points and four rebounds. Sara Dickey had eight points while lead the Aces (1-5) with 5 rebounds and 4 assists.

Three Falcons (4-2) hit the double-digit mark, led by Lauren Tibbs’ 15-point outing. Rachel Myers had 14 while Carly Santoro finished the night with 10.

“I was encouraged with our team’s ability to execute tonight, I thought we were able to create a lot of good shots,” head coach Oties Epps said. “We will work hard to improve our transition defense and scoring this week. This road swing has been challenging and it will help us in the long run. We are looking forward to playing at home on Saturday. I anticipate that our team will have a renewed energy.”

Evansville held strong in the early minutes as a Coleman triple gave them a 3-0 lead, but with the score tied at 5-5, BGSU finished the opening quarter on a 12-2 run to lead by a 17-7 score going into the second. In the final minutes of the second quarter, Bowling Green extended its lead to 31-14 before UE reeled off the final three points to enter the break trailing 31-17.

A 6-2 run, which came via two more Coleman triples, got the Aces within 10 points at 33-23 in the first 90 seconds of the third quarter, but the Falcons once again extended their lead. With 20 seconds remaining in the period, Erin Sinnott hit a layup to get the Aces back within 12 going into the fourth stanza. After UE cut the gap to ten once again (52-42), Bowling Green clamped down, going on an 18-6 run to take their largest lead at 70-48 before finishing up with the 74-56 win.

Following a 6-game road trip to open up the season, the Aces will finally be at home on Saturday afternoon. UE will be at the Ford Center to face Murray State in a 1 p.m. game.

Missouri Blanks IceMen to Win 13th Straight Game

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The Evansville IceMen, who had won three of their last four games, returned home from Alaska only to run into the ECHL’s hottest team Wednesday. The Missouri Mavericks shutout the IceMen 3-0 at the Ford Center to win their 13th consecutive game dating back to October 31.

The Mavericks got to IceMen starting goalie Cody Reichard early, when Kane Lafranchise tipped a Josh Holmstrom centering pass through the five-hole to give Missouri a 1-0 lead.Tanner Barnes then scored 38 seconds later and again at 14:23, opening up the lead to 3-0. Evansville Head Coach Al Sims called his timeout after the third Missouri goal and Keegan Asmundson replaced Reichard in goal.

The IceMen managed just eight shots on Mavericks goalie Parker Milner in the first 40 minutes, as Milner and his defense held Evansville’s attack at bay.

The best IceMen scoring chance came short-handed in the third period, when leading scorer Tyson Fawcett skated in on Milner on a breakaway, but Fawcett clanked the shot of the post. Missouri coasted to victory the rest of the way, as Milner earned his second shutout of the season with 18 saves. Asmundson was replaced by Reichard again midway through the third period when his skated blade broke, and Reichard finished the game.

Reichard stopped 11 of 14 Mavericks shots in his second loss of the season, while Asmundson stopped all 12 shots he faced in relief.

The IceMen bounce back for two more home games this week, before playing four games in five days late next week. This Friday, the Fort Wayne Komets come to the Ford Center for the first time this season for a 7:15pm start. It’s Coldstone Blizzard’s Birthday Party, as IceMen mascot turns eight. The first 1,000 kids under 12 will receive a free Coldstone Blizzard bobblehead.

Evansville then hosts Quad City Sunday at 5:15pm when the Mallards come to the Ford Center. It’s Sunday Family Night, where fans can purchase tickets to the game and get a t-shirt and vouchers for a free popcorn and soda all for just $21.