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Men’s basketball drops road contest at UIC

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Aces set for final two home games

 EVANSVILLE, Ind. – Ben Humrichous scored 20 while Kenny Strawbridge Jr. added 14 on Wednesday as the University of Evansville men’s basketball team dropped an 88-79 game to UIC inside Credit Union 1 Arena.

Humrichous was 7-of-12 from the field and connected on all four free throw tries.  He added six assists, six rebounds and two steals.  Strawbridge added four assists and two steals.  Chuck Bailey III recorded 13 points as he converted six of his nine attempts.  Hitting all four 3-point tries, Gage Bobe tallied 12 points.  UIC was led by Isaiah Rivera’s 25 points.

Gage Bobe got things started with a three before Ben Humrichous connected from outside to put UE on top by a score of 8-5.  UE slowly added to its lead as Cam Haffner posted a pair of field goals to help the Aces take their largest lead of the half at 17-9 at the 13:35 mark.

UIC rallied back with seven in a row before Haffner put an end to it with a triple that was made possible by a Humrichous offensive board.  The Flames rallied to tie it up at 20-20 before Evansville regained control.  Inside the 5-minute mark, Bobe knocked down his second triple to solidify a 31-25 lead.  Chuck Bailey III converted a 3-point play just over a minute later to reestablish a 6-point advantage at 36-30.

Over the final 3:26 of the period, UIC made its way back, scoring the final six points to tie the game at halftime.  Their defense clamped down, holding UE to 0-for-3 while forcing four turnovers in the final moments of the period.

On its first possession of the second half, UIC took its first lead of the evening at 38-36.  Kenny Strawbridge Jr. quickly put the Purple Aces back in front, countering with a triple on the other side of the floor.  Strawbridge recorded UE’s first nine points of the half to give his team a 45-43 edge.  Multiple lead changes ensued before Evansville was able to take a 2-possession edge.

With the Aces down 54-53, Humrichous hit two free throws to put his team back on top.  His layup with 8:05 remaining pushed the lead to five at 61-56.  Evansville remained up five when a turnaround jumper by Humrichous made it a 63-58 score.  The Flames used the next two minutes to go on an 12-4 run to retake a 70-67 lead with 4:37 remaining.  UIC converted four triples in less than two minutes.

UIC’s run continued as they extended the lead to a game-high nine points (78-69) with less than two minutes left.  During their run, the Flames hit eight out of ten field goal tries.  Entering the final minute, Bobe nailed his fourth triple in as many attempts to chop the deficit to six.  That would be as close as UE would get in the final seconds as the Flames clinched the 88-79 win.

Both teams shot exceptionally well with UE finishing at 52.5% while the Flames shot 51.9%.  UIC picked up a 30-27 rebounding nod.  Evansville will be back inside the Ford Center to welcome Southern Illinois on Sunday at 1 p.m.

Baseyila’s double-double propels Lady Blazers to win on Play 4 Kay Night

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VINCENNES, Ind. – The Vincennes University Lady Trailblazers partnered again with the Kay Yow Cancer Fund Wednesday night to host the annual Play 4 Kay game at Vincennes University.

The Lady Blazers were boosted by a big double-double by sophomore Elikya Baseyila (Paris, France) who’s 16 points and 16 rebounds pushed the Lady Blazers to a big 101-76 victory over Southwestern Illinois College.

Vincennes got off to a good start Wednesday night, quickly building a 16-10 advantage over the Lady Blue Storm before SWIC battled back to even the game at 19-19.

The score would remain tied until the Lady Blazers closed out the first quarter of play on an 8-2 scoring run to take a 29-23 lead after the first 10 minutes of play.

VU continued to add on in the second quarter, outscoring the Lady Blue Storm 14-2 to increase the lead to double digits and later using another 7-0 scoring run to build the largest lead of the half at 55-35.

SWIC would answer back before half but were only able to cut three points off the Vincennes lead before the break, with VU leading 55-38 at halftime.

Vincennes looked to fully take control of the game in the second half, using six straight points to grow their lead to 69-43 midway through the third quarter and holding a 76-53 lead heading into the fourth after a SWIC basket at the buzzer.

The two teams traded baskets for most of the fourth quarter with SWIC unable to put together a big scoring run to shrink the VU lead.

The Lady Blazers cruised down the final stretch of the game as VU picked up the 101-76 victory, surpassing the century mark for the seventh time this season.

Vincennes was led offensively by sophomore Elikya Baseyila who picked up a monster double-double, her ninth of the season and 21st of her VU career.

Baseyila ended the game with 16 points and 16 rebounds, as well as a team-high three blocks on the evening.

Freshman Destinee Hooks (Indianapolis, Ind.), who earned NJCAA Division I Player of the Week honors Wednesday morning, successfully defended this honor with another strong performance with 18 points, six rebounds and a team-high seven assists. Hooks also ended with three steals and a pair of blocks.

Freshman Giavonnie Belton (Indianapolis, Ind.) came off the bench to add 15 points and a pair of steals, while fellow freshman Karina Scott (Noblesville, Ind.) ended her night with 13 points, four assists and a team-high four steals.

Sophomore Najra Voloder (Konjic, Bosnia) had a big game off the bench for the Lady Blazers, scoring a season-high 11 points and just missing out on a double-double with eight rebounds.

Freshman Makyla Tucker (Indianapolis, Ind.) came off the bench to finish with nine points and six assists, while sophomores Brie Miller (Bainbridge, Ind.) and Katrina Litte (Valmiera, Latvia) each ended with eight points. Miller adding four rebounds, while Litte finished with four assists and three steals.

The Lady Trailblazers will return to the Physical Education Complex floor this weekend for the final time during the 2023-24 season when VU hosts Olney Central College Saturday, Feb. 24 at 5 p.m. eastern on Sophomore Night.

Vincennes defeated the Lady Blue Knights 83-73 earlier this season in Olney behind 20 points, nine rebounds and six steals by Destinee Hooks.

 

Hoosiers Rip Program Records on Opening Night of Big Ten Championships

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WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – No. 6-ranked Indiana swimming and diving set two program record as part of its second-straight 800-yard freestyle relay conference title Wednesday (Feb. 21) night at the 2024 Big Ten Women’s Swimming and Diving Championships. The Hoosiers earned two medals on the opening night of the conference meet.

Junior Anna Peplowski lead off Indiana’s 800 freestyle relay in 1:42.04, breaking her own 200-yard freestyle relay program record set during IU’s dual meet against Louisville and Wisconsin earlier this month. Senior Ella Ristic followed in 1:44.85, junior Ching Hwee Gan swam the third leg in 1:45.04 and sophomore Kristina Paegle closed in 1:43.52.

IU crushed the previous program standard (6:58.44) by just under three seconds, set at last year’s conference championships featuring three of the same athletes – Ristic replaced graduated Mackenzie Looze. The Hoosiers were also 5.63 seconds better than their midseason time of 7:01.08, the previous season best set by the same crew. Indiana also set the No. 4 time in the country this season.

“We had an awesome first night,” IU head swimming coach Ray Looze said. “Congratulations to our 800 freestyle relay. They got the win, destroyed the school record and almost got the pool record too. The good thing is everybody on that relay had the bare minimum of preparation. Most of our top swimmers just started to cut back either Saturday, if not Monday, of this week. So that’s nice to win a conference title like that.”

The Hoosiers went 2-for-2 on the medal table in Wednesday’s relays, picking up bronze in the 200-yard medley relay with a season-best 1:35.81. Juniors Kacey McKenna (23.70 split) and Brearna Crawford (27.12) led things off, giving way to sophomore Chiok Sze Yeo (23.68) and senior Ashley Turak (21.41). It marks the sixth-fastest 200 medley relay in program relay and IU’s quickest since 2019.

“I thought the medley relay, probably our best could have gotten second,” Looze said. “I think nerves were there, and that can happen in the first event. They’re into the meet now, so I’m looking forward to how all four of those ladies swim the rest of the meet.”

Through two events, Indiana leads the field with 118 points, followed by No. 8 Ohio State’s 116 and No. 16 Michigan’s 112.

The Big Ten trailed a team diving exhibition between the relays for a second-straight season. Three divers from each squad executed a total of six dives, two from each board.

“The team event was awesome today,” IU head diving coach Drew Johansen said. “It’s a new event that we hope to see scored as maybe a relay in the future. I thought our girls did great. We had our two freshmen in there really learning what it’s like to be in a Big Ten final and that energy and environment, and I know that they’re going to use that in the next three days when the points do matter. I was really pleased with the team event and hope to see it continue in the Big Ten.”

TEAM SCORES
1. Indiana – 118

  1. Ohio State – 116
  2. Michigan – 112
  3. Wisconsin – 106
  4. Northwestern – 100
  5. Penn State – 96
  6. Nebraska – 88
  7. Purdue – 86
  8. Illinois – 78
  9. Iowa – 72
  10. Rutgers – 64
  11. Penn State – 34

    RESULTS
    200 MEDLEY RELAY
    3. Kacey McKenna, Brearna Crawford, Chiok Sze Yeo, Ashley Turak – 1:35.81 (NCAA A Cut)

    800 FREESTYLE RELAY
    1. Anna Peplowski, Ella Ristic, Ching Hwee Gan, Kristina Paegle – 6:55.45 (NCAA A Cut, Program Record)

    Hoosiers Rip Program Records on Opening Night of Big Ten Championships

     

    Hoosiers Rip Program Records on Opening Night of Big Ten Championships

     

Vanderburgh County Commissioners Opposes Centerpoint Rate Increase

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On behalf of the Board of Commissioners of Vanderburgh County, please find attached Vanderburgh County Resolution No. CO.R-02.24-003, unanimously adopted at the Commissioners’ meeting on February 20, 2024.  This Resolution voices opposition to the verified petition submitted by Southern Indiana Gas and Electric Company, d/b/a as CenterPoint Energy Indiana South (“CEI South”), for rate changes before the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission (IURC), Cause Number 45990.

This Resolution has been formally filed with the Indiana Office of Utility Consumer Counselor (OUCC) for inclusion in the case file.  Additionally, it has been shared will local and state elected officials, accompanied by a request for their support in opposing the proposed rate change.  Furthermore, a request has been respectfully submitted urging the Indiana General Assembly to consider waiving sales tax on utility payments to provide some financial relief for citizens and businesses.

Resolution No. CO.R-02-24-003 Resolution Opposing Verified Petition for Rate Changes Before the IURC

Fellowship Establishing a Southwest Indiana Chapter in Partnership with Evansville Regional Business Committee

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Program set to launch in fall of 2024, hosting 15-20 fellows in year one

INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (February 21, 2024)  –  Orr Fellowship, a premier two-year post-graduate program for entrepreneurial and business-minded young professionals, is putting down roots in the Evansville region.

Founded in 2001, Orr Fellowship recruits rising college seniors from across the nation and matches them with dynamic companies and executives for a two-year fellowship program. The program is focused on developing these high-potential graduates as the next generation of business leaders and entrepreneurs. To date, 550 aspiring business leaders have completed a fellowship since the organization’s inception, with 150 Fellows currently in the program.

In partnership with the Evansville Regional Business Committee (ERBC) and the Evansville Regional Economic Partnership (E-REP), Orr Fellowship has taken a significant step toward deepening its impact across the state of Indiana by expanding to the Evansville region.  This is the Orr Fellowship’s first expansion outside of central Indiana.

“We’re thrilled to be taking this next step in our organization’s growth and impact on the great state of Indiana. We’ve been focused on recruiting and developing the next generation of business leaders and entrepreneurs since 2001 and we now have the opportunity to broaden that impact, by starting our first chapter outside of the Indianapolis area. A chapter in the Evansville region never would have been possible without the great partnership of ERBC and E-REP,” said Steven Emch, President of Orr Fellowship.

“I know first-hand the tremendous impact that Orr Fellowship has had on attracting and developing early career talent in Central Indiana,” said James Ryan, Chairman and CEO, Old National Bank and Vice Chairman, Evansville Regional Business Committee. “Expanding Orr Fellowship to the Evansville Region will certainly help shape the future leaders of the region.”

“Orr Fellowship is the premier post undergraduate experience in the nation,” said Lloyd Winnecke, CEO, Evansville Regional Economic Partnership.  “It aligns perfectly with our Talent EVV goal to grow our young adult population.”

Orr Fellowship will begin accepting applications in both the Indianapolis and Evansville regions for Fellows and partner companies in the fall of 2024. The Evansville Region chapter will welcome its inaugural class in June of 2025.

 

REGIONAL SOLAR ECLIPSE TASK FORCE TO MEET THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2024

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Evansville, IN – February 21, 2024 – The 2024 Solar Eclipse Task Force invites stakeholders and the media to the Regional Stakeholder Meeting on Thursday, February 22, 2024, at 10 AM.  The event will be held at Bally’s Evansville Casino and Hotel in Walnut Rooms A & B.

The Regional Stakeholder Meeting will provide updates on various planning aspects for the 2024 Total Solar Eclipse.  Dr. Kent Scheller from the University of Southern Indiana will present on eclipse science and safety, including an update on Solarpalooza preparations.  Meteorologist Arden Gregory will report on cloud cover and severe weather probabilities.  Other topics will include regional event updates and best practices, public safety, hotel occupancy and available accommodations, as well as current eclipse marketing and promotions.

The 2024 Great American Solar Eclipse will pass over the Evansville Region on Monday, April 8, 2024, at 2:20 PM CDT.  It is currently forecasted that over 500,000 people will travel to Indiana to experience this phenomenon with nearly 80,000 visitors expected in the Evansville Region alone.

What:  2024 Solar Eclipse Task Force Regional Stakeholder Meeting

When: Thursday, February 22, 2024, 10 AM – 11 AM

Where: Bally’s Evansville Casino and Hotel, Walnut Rooms A & B (421 NW Riverside Drive, Evansville, IN  47708)

USI College of Liberal Arts to host first annual CLA Summer Academy for local high school students

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The University of Southern Indiana College of Liberal Arts will host a day camp, CLA Summer Academy, Monday, June 3 through Friday, June 7. The Academy includes classes in creative writing, psychology, art and design, languages and cultures, leadership development and much more to introduce high schoolers to the world of the liberal arts.

Build a birdhouse, make a vase, cook Hispanic cuisine, learn to be a leader, get psyched about psychology, write ghost stories and much more during this week of fun and learning. “We want to provide a fun and meaningful enrichment opportunity for young people who are thinking about their future and exploring college,” said Dr. Del Doughty, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts.

Registration is $150 for the week and includes activities, materials, food, drink and snacks. Children of USI faculty and staff will receive a $25 discount on registration, and full scholarships are available to all participants based upon need. Drop off will be 7:30 to 8 a.m. and pick up will be 4:30 to 5 p.m. at the MAC/Pace Galleries, located in the lower level of the Liberal Arts Building.

To learn more about CLA Summer Academy or to register, visit the College of Liberal Arts website. For questions, contact Julie Minnette, Senior Administrative Associate, at jminnette1@usi.edu. 

Hoosiers’ connections to community might boost voter participation

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  • To improve Indiana’s voter participation, Hoosiers might first have to get to know their neighbors better.

    The recently released 2023 Indiana Civic Health Index highlighted Indiana’s lackluster voter registration and turnout numbers and ignited a renewed push to encourage people – particularly those who just turned 18 – to register so they can vote in the 2024 election. But Ellen Szarleta, one of the principal authors of the index, notes the apathy toward voting might be a symptom of Hoosiers having too few connections with their neighbors and communities.

    Szarleta, director of the Center for Urban and Regional Excellence at Indiana University – Northwest, cautioned that more research must be done on Indiana, specifically, but, in general, the data indicates that in regards to civic health, low social connectedness is linked to lower levels of civic participation. In other words, people who have strong relationships with other people and organizations in the community are more likely to go to the polls on Election Day.

     “I think this is something that we have to take a close look at specifically in the state of Indiana and if we are staying home, if we’re lacking that connection to others, not seeing what we call our place in the community or having a sense of community,” Szarleta said. “The research is showing that that’s going to make us less likely to participate in those activities that are formal civic activities like registration and voting.”

    The 2023 index reported that Indiana’s voter turnout ranking sank from 41st in 2016 to 46th in 2020 among all states, plus the District of Columbia. In the 2020 November election, 61% of Hoosiers, when questioned through the U.S. Census Current Population Survey Voting Registration Supplement project, said they voted. This compares to the turnout average of 75.2% in the top 10 states with the highest voter participation.

    Conversely, Indiana’s rankings on social connectedness and civic awareness are much better. Stats, cited in the 2023 index, show the Hoosier state’s ranking improved in membership to a group of any kind from 17th in 2020 to 16th in 2022 and in attending a public meeting from 37th in 2020 to 35th in 2022. During that same period, the state’s rank for volunteering dipped from 18th to 21st.

    However, Szarleta pointed out the higher rankings are not indicative of better participation. Despite Indiana’s rise in some rankings, the percentage of Hoosiers belonging to a group or attending a public meeting actually fell from 2020 to 2022. Group membership dropped from 32.7% to 29.4%, while attending a meeting fell from 9.6% to 8.1%.

    Even the numbers behind the slip in the volunteer ranking show a steep decline of nearly 7 percentage points, decreasing from 34% in 2020 to 27.6% in 2022.

    Moreover, neighborliness dropped in the past decade. The percentage of Hoosiers talking to or spending time with their neighbors plunged from 34.8% in 2012 to 26.4% in 2022, while doing favors for neighbors sank from 13.5% to 9.5% during the same time period.

    “The bigger question is, is that satisfactory?” Szarleta asked. “Is that really where we want to be? Forget that we’re doing better than some of the states.”

    Participation leads to positive outcomes

    Standing in the Indiana Statehouse recently, Lana Bose, of Charlestown, was nervous about having to talk to lawmakers, but she was motived by her own battle with cancer and her desire to help others.

    “I’m very nervous,” Bose said. “I’m nervous because I’ve never done this before.”

    Previously, Bose had not been very civically engaged. She is a member of Southeast Christian Church and connects with neighbors on Facebook. However, she had driven to the Statehouse on a rainy, foggy morning to tell her story of a protracted fight against stage 4 colon cancer that culminated in June of 2016 with a doctor’s prognosis that she would die before the end of that year. What enabled her to reverse course and become a five-year cancer survivor, she said, was biomarker testing.

    Bose, a member of the American Cancer Society, was in Indianapolis with other cancer survivors to advocate for Senate Bill 273. Authored by Sen. Ed Charbonneau, R-Valparaiso, the bill requires health care plans to provide coverage for biomarker testing.

    Bose and the other members of the group began their day at the Indiana General Assembly by listening to remarks of encouragement and advice from a handful of legislators and advocates. Then they gathered for a group photo and enjoyed a box lunch, before attending a legislative committee hearing on SB 273.

    “I think that everybody needs to have the ability to have this testing, so that they do have a quality of life, so they do live full lives,” Bose said. “So coming up here, I was excited to be part of it, where I never thought that I would be in this place or even be here. So my story, I hope, makes a difference.”

    SB 273 has picked up bipartisan support and passed through the Indiana Senate on a 47-to-1 vote. The bill is now progressing through the lower chamber, passing the House Insurance Committee on Wednesday and moving on to the House Ways and Means Committee.

    Although the degree of participation in Indiana is not at high levels, Szarleta said Hoosiers are willing to be engaged in their communities. They understand the importance of being socially connected, she said, but, to get more people to advocate like Bose, Indiana should take a deeper look at the opportunities and the barriers to increasing civic engagement.

    The benefit of more social connectedness would be improved civic health, Szarleta said. This would, in turn, she said, result in higher levels of educational attainment, better health, lower crime rates, and other positive outcomes.

    Szarleta reiterated that voting participation is intertwined with civic participation. Voters, she said, should not see voting as a means to get what they want politically, but, rather, as part of their responsibility as members of a democracy.

    “It’s not just voting and voter registration,” Szarleta said. “We can’t separate those out from civic awareness, which is that knowledge which gives you the ability to participate, and social connectedness, which gives you the intent, the motivation, that willingness to be part of the whole. When you don’t see those coming together, that’s, I think, how we get to the result that we have right now with voting and voter registration being at 50 and 40 in our rank.”

    This article was published by TheStatehouseFile.com through a partnership with The Indiana Citizen, a nonpartisan, nonprofit platform dedicated to increasing the number of informed, engaged Hoosier citizens.

    Indiana Citizen Editor Marilyn Odendahl has spent her journalism career writing for newspapers and magazines in Indiana and Kentucky. She has focused her reporting on business, the law and poverty issues.

    Dwight Adams, a freelance editor and writer based in Indianapolis, edited this article. He is a former content editor, copy editor and digital producer at The Indianapolis Star and IndyStar.com, and worked as a planner for other newspapers, including the Louisville Courier Journal.