Morales to continue work with the Purple Aces program
EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Evansville head volleyball coach Fernando Morales has added another impressive line to his résumé with the announcement that he has been named the head coach of the South Korea National Team.
Morales will continue as head coach of the Purple Aces program along with his work with the South Korea squad.
“South Korea is a program with a lot of tradition and history. They have won Olympic medals in the past and were among the best teams in the world,” Morales said. “It is my goal to take them back to that competitive level.”
Evansville has a great deal of momentum heading into the 2024 season highlighted by Melanie Feliciano returning for her fifth season to team up with reigning Missouri Valley Conference Player of the Year Giulia Cardona.
SEVIERVILLE, Tenn. – Carson Parker recorded an even score of 72 on Monday to jump into the top 25 at the Bobby Nichols Intercollegiate at the River Course of the Sevierville Golf Club.
After opening the tournament with a 77, Parker lowered his score by five strokes to an even 72. With a 149, he is tied for 22nd in the individual standings. Second for the Purple Aces is Caleb Wassmer. He led the team with a 76 on Sunday and completed Monday’s 18 holes with a 77. His 153 is tied for 38th.
Isaac Rohleder is third on the team with a 156. Rohleder posted a 79 on Sunday before coming on with a 77 in round two. He is tied for 56th. Andres Rodriguez checked in with an 81 in the second 18 holes. Combined with his opening round 77, he has a 158. Daniil Romashkin completed the round with an 82 and heads into the final day with a 163.
Belmont continues to hold the team lead, but a huge day by Lee University has them right on the Bruins’ heels. Belmont heads into Tuesday’s final round with a 577 while Lee sits at a 581. Pablo Riveiro of Chicago State paces the individuals with a 140. He posted identical scores of 70 in the opening two rounds. He is one in front of Belmont’s Michael Senn.
A chat I had years ago with then Indiana Gov. Evan Bayh has been in my thoughts lately.
It happened in the spring of 1992, not long before the Indiana presidential primary. Bayh and I talked after a press conference in which both he and his fellow Democrat, then Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton, had talked with journalists.
At the time, Clinton was well on his way to securing the Democratic presidential nomination and, eventually, the presidency.
I had come to the press conference after snagging a ride from the airport with Clinton so I could interview him. It was the first time I’d talked with him. It didn’t take long to realize what a skilled political performer he was as he danced and parried through the interview with the smooth assurance that prompted one admiring biographer to refer to him as “The Natural” and his critics to label him “Slick Willie.”
Clinton demonstrated the same skills in the press conference, moving without any seeming effort from combative testiness to comforting consolation.
Afterward, I walked out with Bayh.
I asked him, more to make conversation than to elicit information, how he saw the campaign shaping up.
He stopped, so I did, too.
He said that the Clintons were friends of his and his wife, the now-departed Susan Bayh. When the Bayhs first had moved into the governor’s residence and Evan was only 33 while Susan still was just in her late 20s, the Clintons had been kind to them, Evan explained.
The Clintons, too, had come to power early. Bill Clinton became Arkansas’s governor when he was just 32, with Hillary only a year younger.
The shared experience of being both young and at the center of a state’s government linked the two couples. They bonded over being members of such a small club.
Bill and Hillary Clinton were friends and fellow Democrats, Evan Bayh explained to me. For those reasons and others, he wanted them to win.
I lingered, sensing there was a “but” coming.
There was.
George H.W. Bush was the incumbent president then. His wife, Barbara Bush, had been friends with Evan Bayh’s late mother, Marvella, whose husband was U.S. Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Indiana.
The two women got to know each other when their husbands, both then young politicians on the rise, arrived in Washington, D.C.
Evan Bayh was just in elementary school then.
“Barbara Bush used to babysit me when I was small,” he told me. “I know she and her husband are good people.”
He paused, then did a small, rueful headshake.
“So, how can I be that upset if the Bushes spend four more years in the White House?”
After we said our farewells, I walked away oddly heartened.
This was how elections in America ought to be, I thought—you hoped for one outcome, but you weren’t crushed if things went the other way.
That 1992 presidential election was rancorous, of course. Presidential elections always are because the stakes are high.
There were accusations of marital infidelity on both sides and broadside criticisms of each candidate’s character and courage.
But it wasn’t the exercise in existential apocalyptic dread that the last three presidential campaigns have been. No one feared that the country would self-destruct or democracy itself would die if their side lost.
The losing candidates didn’t riot or attempt to overthrow the government because the vote didn’t go their way.
In fact, when the Clintons won, Bush’s vice president, Indiana’s own Dan Quayle, offered one of the most gracious concessions I’ve ever heard.
Quayle said that if Bill Clinton and his running mate, then U.S. Sen. Al Gore, D-Tennessee, were half as good at running the country as they were at campaigning, America would be just fine.
That was 32 years ago, not all that long in the life of a grand republic.
Somehow, though, it seems like eons ago.
John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students. The views expressed are those of the author only and should not be attributed to Franklin College.
TELEVISED DEBATE LEAVES TWO GUBERNATORIAL CANDIDATES OUT
written by Johnny Kincaid
March 19, 2024
Six candidates are running in the Republican primary for Governor: Mike Braun, Brad Chambers, Suzanne Crouch, Eric Doden, Curtis Hill, and Jamie Reitenour. But, not all of the candidates will be allowed to participate in the next debate on March 26 in Indianapolis.
Campaigning has been going on for months already, and now, with under 60 days to go, the race is on to the finish line. Every handshake and opportunity to speak is of vital importance to the candidates.
That’s why there has been a statewide uproar over the upcoming Fox59 gubernatorial debate rules. To participate in the debate, candidates must have more than 5% in a poll and have raised over $100,000. The rules will prevent two candidates, Jamie Reitenour and Curtis Hill, from taking to the stage.
In a recent Facebook post, Reitenour said, “Myexclusion from these important events in the democratic process is an injustice that needs to be corrected!”
Most people aren’t sure who to direct the outrage at. In the case of the March 26 debate, the rules are established by the company that owns Fox59, Nexstar Media Group. The company owns 197 television stations, and the rules are handed down from the corporate headquarters in Irving, Texas, Midtown Manhattan, and Chicago.
As a private company, Nexstar is within its rights to create a set of standards that candidates must meet to participate. However, having the right to do something does not always mean it is the right thing to do. In the crowded field of candidates, this decision could significantly impact those left off the stage.
Relying on candidate polling numbers fails to take into consideration the huge number of undecided voters. Polling shows that almost half of Hoosier Republicans have not made up their minds about who to vote for in the May primary. With that many undecided voters, a strong debate could change many minds.
If you believe that undecided voters should have the opportunity to hear from all candidates, you can contact Fox59 in Indianapolis. You can email the station’s news department at fox59news@fox59.com.
The Evansville Police Department Pension Board (the “Board”) will hold an Executive Session on March 19, 2024, at 8:15 a.m.The Executive Session will be held in Room 307 on the third floor of the Civic Center at 1 N.W. Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard in Evansville, Indiana.The Executive Session will be closed to the public for the following reason:for discussion of records classified as confidential by state or federal statute (I.C. § 5-14-1.5-6.1).Immediately following the Executive Session, the Board will conduct a Special Meeting at the same location, which is open to the public.
“Agriculture is the backbone of our rural communities, and this sector is a large employer of Hoosiers and contributes so much to our state, both economically and socially,” said Lt. Gov. Suzanne Crouch, Secretary of Agriculture and Rural Development. “Today, we not only celebrate all Hoosiers involved in any capacity, but we thank them also!”
National Ag Day, March 19, 2024, highlights agriculture’s contributions to our state and local economies and allows producers, agricultural associations, corporations, universities, government agencies and countless others across America to recognize and celebrate the abundance provided by American agriculture.
Indiana is the ninth-largest agricultural-producing state in the country. The state has over 94,000 farmers, and agricultural production is valued at over $18 billion. Indiana farmers cultivate over 14.6 million acres and establish over 47,000 soil conservation practices each year which kept an estimated 1.8 million tons of soil in the farm fields.
Indiana’s top commodities are:
Number one producer of popcorn, gourds and duck
Number two producer of pumpkins
Number three producer of spearmint, turkeys and total eggs
Number four producer of peppermint and soybeans
Number five producing state for corn and hogs
Number six producer of watermelons
Number ten producing state for maple syrup and hemp for floral (CBD and other cannabinoid usage)
“Indiana’s agriculture breadth is deep and wide. We have traditional row crop farmers and animal producers, we have farmers who grow popcorn for movie theaters and corn for tortilla chips, we have food manufacturers who make snack cakes that are beloved worldwide, and we have organic farmers and farmers that sell directly to restaurants and consumers,” said Don Lamb, ISDA director. “My favorite part about agriculture in Indiana is that everyone has a seat at our table. Today, we honor them and extend our gratitude.”