Evansville, In.: With a spot in the President’s Cup Playoffs in April secured, the Thunderbolts prepare to embark on their final regular season trip to Pensacola, where they will play the Ice Flyers this Friday and Saturday night.
Week In Review:
Down 1-0 on Friday against Peoria, a pair of goals from Brendan Harrogate and a goal from Adam Pilotte in the second period helped turn the tables as the Thunderbolts defeated the Rivermen 3-1. Peoria got the upper hand in Saturday’s rematch, scoring four goals in the first period to overpower the Thunderbolts 4-1, with Evansville’s lone goal coming from Matt Dorsey shorthanded in the third period. Ty Taylor stopped 18 of 19 shots in Friday’s win, before being swapped on Saturday after stopping 6 of 9 shots, with Cole Ceci finishing strong with 22 saves on 23 shots.
EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Southern Indiana Softball junior pitcher Josie Newman (Indianapolis, Indiana) has been named Ohio Valley Conference Pitcher of the Week. The OVC’s weekly accolades are voted upon by the league’s communications directors. The pitcher of the week award is the first this season for Newman and the fourth of her career after earning the accolade three times in 2023. It is the first OVC weekly award this season for USI Softball. Newman also represented USI on the 2024 OVC Preseason Players to Watch List. In earning the honor, Newman went 2-0 in Southern Indiana’s three-game series at Lindenwood University. The right-hander tossed two complete games, posting a 1.31 ERA. Newman struck out 21 batters in 16 innings of work. Plus, the junior walked only one batter toward a 0.63 WHIP. Newman started the weekend on Saturday with a gusty performance in USI’s 3-2, extra-inning win. In a low-scoring affair with neither side wanting to give any ground, Newman pitched all nine innings and struck out 11. In another pitcher’s duel in Sunday’s 2-1 win in the series rubber match, Newman once again was in a rhythm. Newman struck out 10 toward her 10th victory of the season. The weekend outings by Newman helped USI get back to .500 on the season at 12-12 overall and tied for second in the OVC at 6-3. The Screaming Eagles are 6-1 in their last seven games. On the season, Newman is 10-5 with a sub-2.00 ERA and 118 strikeouts in 105 innings pitched. Additionally, out of 16 starts, Newman has gone the distance 15 times with three shutouts. The junior pitcher has held opposing hitters to a .194 batting average. Newman and the Screaming Eagles are back home at USI Softball Field Friday and Saturday for three games against Southeast Missouri State University in Ohio Valley Conference play. Friday is a doubleheader starting at 1 p.m., while Saturday’s series finale is at Noon. All three games can be seen with a subscription to ESPN+ and heard on The Spin 95.7 FM. Additional coverage links can be found on the USI Softball schedule page on usiscreamingeagles.com.
EVANSVILLE, Ind. – The University of Evansville baseball team will continue a season-long eight-game homestand on Tuesday night, as the Purple Aces will welcome the SIUE Cougars to German American Bank Field at Charles H. Braun Stadium for a non-conference contest. First-pitch is set for 6 p.m.
Evansville will bring a 9-13 overall record into Tuesday night’s game. The Purple Aces are trying to snap a season-long five-game losing streak, as UE has dropped three one-run decisions in the last five contests. UE is led offensively by graduate outfielder Mark Shallenberger, who will bring a team-best .398 batting average into Tuesday’s contest. Shallenberger currently ranks third in NCAA Division I baseball with 15 hit-by-pitches this season, as he is just one HBP shy of the national lead. Career-wise, Shallenberger ranks fifth among active Division I players with 47 career HBPs, and he is just four shy of UE’s career mark of 51, set by Troy Beilsmith in 2021. He currently ranks 11th among Division I players in on-base percentage this year at .561.
SIUE will bring a 7-17 overall record into Tuesday’s game after winning two out of three games against Lindenwood to open Ohio Valley Conference play over the weekend. Junior outfielder Lucas Spencer currently paces the SIUE offense with a .398 batting average. Spencer has collected eight doubles, two triples, and a home run offensively for SIUE, and he has been red-hot as of late, as he will ride a nine-game hitting streak into Tuesday’s contest.
Evansville out-lasted SIUE, 11-7, last March in Edwardsville, Illinois to win the only season meeting a year ago. UE launched four home runs in the contest, led by current graduate catcher Brendan Hord, who went 4-for-6 with two home runs and four RBI. All-time, UE leads the series 18-8.
I’m seated now on a rooftop terrace in this old, old city in Provence, a glass of good local wine in hand, the past whispering all around me.
Across the street, with the sun setting behind them, are the ruins of a Roman amphitheater nearly two millennia old. It was constructed in the first century following the birth of Christ and once served as a kind of colosseum. As many as 20,000 people crowded inside its elegant stone walls to watch chariot races and hand-to-hand battles.
It is still in service, presenting bullfights during festival times and concerts and plays during the summer for much smaller crowds.
When we think of the Romans, their games and their spectacles, we focus on the combatants in the arena, the gladiators who jousted to hear the crowd’s roar—the men Russell Crowe mythologized a generation ago in the Ridley Scott film.
I find myself now, though, pondering the lives of those who filled the stands, the ones who came to the amphitheater not to battle but instead to seek diversion and entertainment.
Earlier, not long after arriving here, I wandered the narrow, twisting streets of the oldest part of this ancient city. Many are so tight that cars cannot pass over them. They and the aged structures that line them were built when the mass of people traveled only on foot.
Arles now is a community of slightly more than 50,000 people.
In earlier times, though, it likely was home to twice as many people. I try to imagine how crowded these winding streets must have been in those long distant days, filled with people moving over them, doing work, living lives.
At times, I can almost see them, but then they whisk away, like a picture fading from a screen.
Time swallows so much. It is hard for those who live in one era to connect with those who lived in an earlier one.
“The past is a foreign country; they do things differently there,” the novelist L.P. Hartley famously wrote.
He was right.
History is a vast warehouse of lost objects. So many people live only to have their existences forgotten, their toil unremembered, their joys, struggles and traumas erased from the collective memory by the steady tolling of days, weeks, months, years, centuries and millennia.
As I sip my wine, my thoughts stretch back.
My ancestors on both sides of my birth family must have felt the touch of Roman rule, if not the yoke as the people who lived here did. My forebears, peasant stock on each side, lived and toiled for centuries in the lowlands of Scotland and what eventually would become Germany.
I think of the lengthy, unbroken string of survival and endurance that led to my life and continues into another generation with the lives of my children. I ponder all the quiet acts of determination that linger now only in my blood and cannot be recovered by mind or memory.
I look across the street at the ancient ruins that once hosted thousands and remind myself that mine is only one set of bloodlines. There are so, so many others.
So many pasts.
So many foreign countries.
So many people doing things differently there.
I sip my wine, savoring each drop. The residents of Provence have been making wine for more than 2,500 years—or more than a half-millennium before the amphitheater here was built.
Long, long before my mother’s ancestors arrived in what were the American colonies in the 1760s.
Long, long, long before my father’s forebears arrived in the United States at the end of the 19th century.
I look across the street at the stone walls that have seen so much and watch as twilight descends. The tangerine of the sun melts into the darkening blue of the evening sky. The shadows deepen as the night comes.
And time moves on.
FOOYNoTE- 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.
Gov. Eric Holcomb on Monday opted to issue his first — and last — veto of the session on House Bill 1002, a priority proposal to further define antisemitism, particularly in academic settings, citing concerns with a compromise reached in the final hours of the session.
He also signed a bill that would make it easier to fire the Public Access Counselor and limit what the office can use in interpreting the law.
It is his eighth and final veto of his tenure as governor.
“While I applaud the General Assembly’s effort to address and define antisemitism, I cannot agree with the outcome,” Holcomb said in a statement. “The language that emerged in the final days of the legislative session fails to incorporate the entire International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) definition and its important contemporary examples. Additionally, the confusing language included in the bill could be read to exclude those examples therefore I must veto (it).”
Senators expressed concerns over using an outside entity’s definition of antisemitism in state law and critics targeted the included “contemporary examples” of antisemitism, saying they were overly broad and limited free speech. Following the compromise, which included a dated IHRA definition but no examples, all but one member of the General Assembly voted in favor of it.
The examples include several references to Israel that the bill did not have. Opponents were concerned that criticizing the government of Israel would amount of antisemitism under the definition.
Holcomb instead issued a signed proclamation condemning “all forms of antisemitism” that includes the full IHRA definition and examples — something the Indiana Jewish Community Relations Council (JCRC) thanked him for doing.
“We appreciate that his proclamation clarifies these concerns and affirms that Indiana endorses the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s (IHRA) definition of antisemitism including the reference to the specifically identified examples of contemporary antisemitism,” the organization said in a statement. “JCRC will work diligently with members of the Indiana General Assembly, executive agencies, statewide educational institutions, and statewide educational organizations to ensure that the guidance of Governor Holcomb’s proclamation is correctly applied to identify and confront antisemitism and meet the needs of Jewish students in K-12 and higher educational settings.”
The JRCR pulled its support for the bill after senators stripped out the contemporary examples but reinstated it for the compromise, which was one of the last bills of the 2024 session.
House Speaker Todd Huston said he understood Holcomb’s actions in a statement and supported the proclamation.
“As the compromised bill continued to be scrutinized after passage, we recognized that more clarity is needed,” said Huston, R-Fishers. “(Holcomb) made a strong statement in declaring Indiana’s support for our Jewish brothers and sisters.”
Rep. Chris Jeter, the bill’s author, said he’d been working on the bill for years “after hearing concerns from Indiana’s Jewish community about antisemitic concepts being taught in Hoosier classrooms.” In 2023, the proposal passed the House but never got a hearing in the Senate.
“Our Jewish students need to feel safe and welcome in our K-12 schools and college campuses, and I believe the House-passed version of this bill accomplished that goal. After we worked alongside Jewish organizations and our Senate colleagues to find middle ground and pass legislation, concerns arose about the need for further clarity to ensure the strongest protections are in place. I support the governor’s proclamation, which I believe captures the original intent of House Bill 1002,” said Jeter, R-Fishers.
Additionally, Holcomb signed a controversial measure, House Enrolled Act 1338, that would weaken the role of the Public Access Counselor to an “at-will” position that critics worry will expose the position to political whims. Senators added the language in the final days of session to a bill related to decorum in public meetings.
“Today, I signed HEA 1338 to provide local government entities across our state with the ability to better control public meetings when faced with unruly, disruptive and disorderly behavior. Concerns raised regarding the provisions affecting the Office of Public Access Counselor were taken into account but ultimately, in my opinion, muted by the fact that judicial review of the office’s decisions is left untouched and that the governor retains the ability to appoint the position in the future.”
FOOTNOTE: Indiana Capital Chronicle is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Indiana Capital Chronicle maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Niki Kelly for questions: info@indianacapitalchronicle.com.
NCAA will host Division II pre-championship Coaches press conference on Monday
March 27. 2024
EVANSVILLE, IND. (March 20, 2024) – The NCAA will host a news conference on Monday, March 25 at 1:30 p.m. at the Ford Center with head coaches from the eight teams participating in the NCAA Division II Men’s Basketball Elite Eight. Evansville mayor, Stephanie Terry, will make an opening statement before the evening quarterfinal session coaches’ availability at 1:30 p.m. followed by the afternoon session coaches at 1:55 p.m. Those wishing to cover the event and/or the press conference must apply for credentials at ncaa.com/media.
What: NCAA Division II Men’s Basketball Elite Eight Pre-Championship Coaches Press Conference When: Monday, March 20 – 1:30 p.m. Where: Ford Center Lobby
Coaches attending the press conference will be:
(Seed) Region: School (Record) – Coach – Alma Mater (Years at Institution)
(1) Central: Minnesota State (32-2) – Matt Margenthaler – Western Illinois (23rd season)
(8) Midwest: Ferris State (28-7) – Andy Bronkema – Cornerstone (10th season) (4) South Central: West Texas A&M (29-4) – Tom Brown – Winona State (10th season)
(5) Southeast: North Georgia (28-6) – Dan Evans – Lawerence (5th season)
(2) South: Nova Southeastern (30-2) – Jim Crutchfield – West Liberty (5th season)
(7) East: Southern New Hampshire (24-10) – Jack Perri – Bentley (6th season)
(3) Atlantic: Gannon (32-2) – Jordan Fee – West Liberty (1st season)
(6) West: Cal State San Bernardino (26-7) – Gus Argenal – UC Davis (1st season)
A complete schedule of events can be found in the attached PDF.
EID Eclipse initiatives support Downtown businesses and drive economic development
ANNOUNCEMENT – March 25, 2024: The Total Solar Eclipse is Monday, April 8, 2024. In coordination with this once-in-a-lifetime event, the Downtown Evansville Economic Improvement District (EID) is organizing special Eclipse-focused initiatives and a free community viewing event:
Giant Eclipse Glasses Photo Opportunities
In partnership with Astound Broadband, the EID is hosting a photo opportunity with giant Eclipse glasses on Friday, March 29, from 11 AM – 1 PM in front of the Innovation Pointe building at 318 Main Street. The glasses measure 7-feet-long and will be on display for guests to interact with and capture photos. The EID will be selling Eclipse glasses at a discounted rate of $2 each. Visitors can pick up an Eclipse Explorer Passport. The oversized Eclipse glasses will also be available for photo opportunities on April 8 at the EID’s event on Riverside Drive.
Eclipse Explorer Passport
Consumers have an added incentive for shopping and dining Downtown with the Eclipse Explorer Passport. When shoppers visit any of the 9 participating locations (Emerald Design, Grateful Threads Fabric & Furnishings, Lic’s Deli & Ice Cream, Memo, Posh on Main, River City Coffee + Goods, River Kitty Cat Café, Sixth + Zero, and Your Brother’s Bookstore), they will receive a stamp on their passport from that business. An additional stamp can be secured for a purchase at the business. Each stamp is one entry to win a gift card to a Downtown business. The more stamps a shopper receives on their passport, the more entries they will have to win gift cards. Passports have been distributed to each business and should be returned to any of the participating locations by 5 PM on Tuesday, April 9.
Glasses
Viewing the eclipse safely requires certified safe lenses. To date, the EID has sold more than 2,000 Eclipse-certified safe glasses. The glasses are International Organization for Standardization (ISO) certified, which represents the gold standard in certification. Made in the USA and trusted by NASA and the American Astronomical Society, the glasses are sponsored by Evansville Eyecare Associates, located along Main Street since 1958. Glasses are $3 each online and can be purchased from the EID Shopify store and shipped directly to consumers: https://downtown-evansville.myshopify.com/products/solar-eclipse-glasses
Total Solar Eclipse along Riverside Drive
On Monday, April 8, the EID is organizing a free community viewing event beginning at 11 AM. The event will feature sponsor booths and 7 food trucks along Riverside Drive (from Court to Walnut Street). Food trucks will include: Bruce Li, JB’s Barnyard, JT’s American on the Fly, Kona Ice, Lashbrooke’s BBQ, Rock-A-Burger, and Uncle G’s Lemon Smashers. Free activities will be featured at Riverside & Main, including face painting for children, photo points, and yard games. The main event, the Total Solar Eclipse, will happen at approximately 2 PM for three minutes.
The event is sponsored by Astound Broadband and Townsquare Media.
“Evansville will not experience another Total Solar Eclipse for 600+ years, so we have a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to celebrate Downtown. Events like the Total Solar Eclipse drive consumer spending at businesses, activate our neighborhood, and create special memories for our visitors,” said Adam Trinkel, EID Executive Director.
“Our businesses have embraced the Eclipse with themed offerings like Eclipse soap and a Solar Eclipse Sundae,” added Laura Gobert, EID Marketing & Events Coordinator. Gobert added, “Support local and shop and dine Downtown during this historic occasion.”
ST. CHARLES, Mo. – The University of Southern Indiana Women’s Tennis (5-8) won in a thriller in St. Charles, Missouri against Lindenwood University (5-11), 4-3. The win marks the second consecutive Ohio Valley Conference victory improving the Screaming Eagles conference record to 2-0. Doubles The Eagles fell behind winning one of the three doubles matches to start afternoon. The dynamic duo of freshman Antonia Ferrarini (Caxias do Sul, Brazil) and junior Madison Windham (Clarksville, Tennessee) was locked in winning the doubles three matchup. Ferrarini and Windham are now 4-1 together as a doubles pair. Singles The Eagles took four out of six singles matches to clinch the thrilling victory. Senior Lauren Rowe (Terre Haute, Indiana) got the comeback started with a 6-3, 6-2 victory. Rowe passed the baton to Ferrarini who won her match 6-4, 3-6, 6-3. Freshman Anais Negrail (Maisons-Alfort, France) also took care of business winning 2-6, 6-4, 6-3. Then, freshman Sofia Davidoff (Lagny-sur-Marne, France) dominated winning her match 6-2, 6-1.
USI and UE to co-host Ancient Aliens: A Joke That Really Isn’t Very Funny
The USI World Languages and Cultures Department and the University of Evansville Department of Archaeology will co-host a lecture, Ancient Aliens: A Joke That Really Isn’t Very Funny, by Andrew White, PhD, from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Thursday, March 28 at the Stone Family Center for Health Sciences in the Smythe Auditorium. This presentation is open to the public at no charge.
7 p.m. Monday, March 28
Screaming Eagles to host Wisconsin in second round of WNIT
USI Women’s Basketball extended its winning streak to a season-best 11 games in dramatic fashion last week at the Screaming Eagles Arena, capturing the program’s first-ever Division I victory in a national postseason tournament with a 69-64 win against the University of Illinois Chicago in the first round of the 2024 Women’s National Invitation Tournament (WNIT).
The team will face off against the University of Wisconsin in the second round of the WNIT at 7 p.m. tonight, Monday, March 25, in the Screaming Eagles Arena.
April 3
USI Nursing Leadership Conference happening April 3
Steve Gutzler, President of Leadership Quest, a Seattle-based Leadership Development company, will be the presenter at USI’s 21st annual Nursing Leadership Conference on April 3. His most recent book, Lead with No Fear, provides practical and thought-provoking strategies for exceptional leadership and growing leaders at every level.
April 7-8
Solarpalooza
USI is excited to announce a free and open to the public multi-day event, Solarpalooza, culminating with the Total Solar Eclipse on April 8, 2024. The event will begin at 7 p.m. Sunday, April 7 with a talk by trailblazing electrical engineer and retired NASA astronaut Joan Higginbotham in the Screaming Eagles Arena as part of the Romain College of Business Innovative Speaker Series, followed by a full day of experiential learning and engagement on Monday, April 8—the day of the eclipse.
April 10
USI Center for Communal Studies to present Pocket Neighborhoods by Ross Chapin
The USI Center for Communal Studies will host Ross Chapin, an architect, community planner and author from Seattle, Washington, virtually at noon on Wednesday, April 10. Chapin will present on Pocket Neighborhoods, sharing their origins, key design principles and examples across many locales.
April 17
USI conference focuses on healthcare research, evidence-based practice
A former member of the USI Nursing faculty will be the keynote speaker at the 28th annual USI Research, Evidence-Based Practice and Performance Improvement in Healthcare Conference, slated for Wednesday, April 17 in Carter Hall, located in University Center West.
April 24-26
USI to present 40th annual Historic New Harmony Heritage Artisans Days
USI is excited to present Historic New Harmony’s 40th annual Heritage Artisans Days, happening Wednesday through Friday, April 24-26. Artisans will demonstrate their professions and roles as they were in the 19th century. Students from the Tri-state area will hear and see how these artisans lived and worked in the early days of New Harmony.
June 28-30 and June 24 through August 30
USI to partner with Evansville African American Museum to present Black Art Workshop Weekend and Exhibition
The USI Art and Design Department will partner with the Evansville African American Museum to present the Black Art Workshop and Exhibition in the McCutchan Art Center/Pace Galleries, located in the lower level of the Liberal Arts Center. The workshop event is set for Friday, June 28 through Sunday, June 30, and the exhibition will run Monday, June 24 to Friday, August 30.