INA, Ill. – The Vincennes University Lady Trailblazers opened up Region 24 play Wednesday night on the road against Rend Lake College in Ina, Ill.
The Blazers fell behind early but were able to take the lead back for good with a big second quarter scoring run to pick up the 78-61 victory over the Lady Warriors.
Vincennes got off to a very slow start at Rend Lake, with the Lady Warriors scoring the first nine points of the game and quickly building a 12-2 lead.
VU would answer back with a 10-0 scoring run to even the score at 12-12 before Rend Lake hit a three before the buzzer to end the first quarter holding a 15-12 lead over the Trailblazers.
Vincennes looked to take control of the game to begin the second quarter, hitting three straight threes to use a 9-0 run to take a 21-15 lead.
The Lady Blazers would keep adding on, using some strong defensive pressure to outscore the Lady Warriors 17-1 and take a 40-21 lead.
Rend Lake would look to cut into the VU lead before halftime however, scoring the final even points of the opening half of play to cut the deficit to 44-31 at the break.
The Lady Warriors would look to continue this momentum into the second half, cutting the VU lead down to five points at 48-43 where it would hold for the rest of the third quarter.
Vincennes was left holding a 55-50 advantage over Rend Lake College heading into the final 10 minutes of action.
Rend Lake would continue to cut into the VU lead down to just three early in the fourth quarter at 58-55 before the Lady Blazers would take control of the game back by outscoring the Lady Warriors 17-2 to take a 75-57 lead.
The Lady Blazers would keep this lead and run the clock out as Vincennes finished off a 78-61 victory over Rend Lake to pick up the win in the Region 24 opener.
Vincennes was led offensively by a big double-double by freshman Taylor Guess (Indianapolis, Ind.) who came off the bench to pick up her first collegiate double-double with 16 points and 13 rebounds.
Freshman Destinee Hooks (Indianapolis, Ind.) finished off her night with 14 points and a team-high four steals, while freshman Makyla Tucker (Indianapolis, Ind.) came away with 14 points, three rebounds and three steals off the bench.
Freshman Karina Scott (Noblesville, Ind.) was the fourth VU scorer in double-figures Wednesday night ending with 12 points on four made three-pointers, while dishing out a team-high four assists.
Sophomore Johnai Wimbleduff (Indianapolis, Ind.) came off the bench to add eight points and five rebounds and sophomore Katrina Litte (Valmiera, Latvia) ended with six points on two made threes and dishing out four assists.
The Lady Trailblazers will look to keep this momentum going into the weekend when VU heads to Shawnee Community College in Ullin, Ill. Saturday, Dec. 16 for the first Region 24 basketball doubleheader of the season. Tip-off time for the Lady Blazers is set for 2 p.m. eastern.
Three-point goals: VU 8 (Scott 4, Litte 2, Hooks, Tucker). Rebounds: VU 41 (Guess 13). Assists: VU 16 (Scott 4, Litte 4). Steals: VU 13 (Hooks 4). Blocked Shots: VU 5 (Hooks 2, Scott 2). Turnovers: VU 14. Personal Fouls: VU 22. Fouled out: Wimbleduff.
LEXINGTON, Ky. – Giulia Cardona became the first player in University of Evansville volleyball history to earn All-America status as she garnered American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) Honorable Mention honors on Wednesday morning.
With the NCAA Final Four on the horizon this weekend, Cardona continues to be the national leader in kills per set (5.34), points per set (6.14) and attacks per set (15.00). Cardona became UE’s first honoree in the 42-year history of the AVCA All-America Teams at the NCAA Division I level. She was the MVC’s lone representative on this year’s list.
“I am happy to see Giulia being recognized on a national level,†Purple Aces head volleyball coach Fernando Morales said. “We were witnesses of what she did night in and night out, but to see those on a national scale realizing this is huge for Giulia and our program.â€
In total, 98 players were honored with 14 being named to first, second and third teams and 56 garnering honorable mention accolades. Earlier in the month, Cardona became Evansville’s first player to garner AVCA All-Region honors.
Cardona was UE’s first Missouri Valley Conference Player of the Year and was one of the top performers in the MVC and the entire nation. Cardona wrapped up the 2023 campaign with a total of 593 kills, breaking her own UE program mark, which she set in 2022.
She was named the AVCA GameChanger Division I National Player of the Week on October 17 becoming just the second player in league history to earn the accolade. Cardona was a 4-tie MVC Player of the Week and recorded two of the league’s four 20-kill, 20-dig performances in 2023.
This marks just the second time that a Purple Aces female has garnered All-American honors at the Division I level. In 2000, Krista McKendree was named a National Soccer Coaches Association of America Third Team All-American.
FOOTNOTE: Â EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.
Rokita has engaged in a campaign to discourage doctors from providing proper medical care for 10-year-old rape victims. His vendetta against an Indiana obstetrician and gynecologist who performed an abortion for an Ohio girl who had become pregnant after being raped made national news, earned Rokita a public reprimand from the Indiana Supreme Court for violating ethics standards and wasted thousands upon thousands of taxpayer dollars.
The Indiana attorney general presented himself as the defender of the 10-year-old’s rights.
As far as anyone can tell, though, neither the little girl nor her mother ever asked for his help. Nor—again, as far as anyone can tell—did the girl or her mother ever complain about the care the doctor provided.
No, Todd Rokita just assumed he was in a better position to decide what care was best for a little girl who had been raped than the girl herself, her mother or her doctor.
Because he’s Todd Rokita—and they’re not.
It would be reassuring to think Rokita’s moral cluelessness is an isolated incident, but it isn’t.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has decided to go Indiana’s attorney general one better—or, actually, worse.
Rokita tried to discourage doctors from performing abortions for young rape victims, thus compounding the act of violation and forcing children to endure ordeal after ordeal.
Paxton has decided to force a 31-year-old Texas woman with a life-threatening pregnancy to carry the baby to term, even though the child is bound to die either way and continuing the pregnancy endangers the mother’s life.
Paxton did so after the pregnant woman went to court to seek an exemption from Texas’ draconian abortion ban. The court granted the exemption.
It was at that point Paxton opted to insert himself into the process.
He asked the Texas Supreme Court to intervene. The court halted the lower court’s order.
Paxton also sent letters to three hospitals, threatening lawsuits if they performed the abortion for the woman.
Because—just like Todd Rokita—Ken Paxton thinks he is in a better position to decide what medical care is right for this poor woman than she or her doctors are.
Because he’s Ken Paxton—and they’re not.
Perhaps the most amazing thing about all of this is that Rokita and Paxton think they have the standing to make moral decisions or issue moral lectures to anyone.
Rokita, of course, has been reprimanded once by the Indiana Supreme Court—and he may yet earn additional disciplinary action from the court. As part of the agreement that produced the reprimand, he acknowledged in an affidavit, under penalty of perjury, that he had violated rules of conduct for attorneys.
Then, in a statement released after the reprimand became public, he said he didn’t really mean it—which has begun another preliminary investigation into his conduct.
This came following another curious episode. The doctor who performed the young rape victim’s abortion sued Rokita, basically just to get him to leave her alone. The judge tossed the suit on technical grounds, but in doing so said Rokita violated confidentiality laws. Rokita responded by trying to overturn the ruling in a case he technically won because the judge hurt his feelings while pointing out an obvious truth.
Let’s also not forget the weird incident that started Rokita’s tenure as attorney general. He had a lucrative job in the private sector that he hoped to continue even after taking office, thus turning being attorney general into a side hustle. He asked the state’s ethics commission for an opinion.
When he received the opinion, he claimed it vindicated him—but he’s fought ever since to keep anyone else from seeing it.
For his part, Paxton has used one delaying tactic after another since 2015 to evade securities fraud charges. Earlier this year, he was impeached by the Texas House of Representatives on corruption charges with nearly three-quarters of his fellow Republicans in the chamber voting against him. He managed to avoid conviction and removal in the Senate, in part because the presence of his wife, a state senator, complicated the task of trying him.
These are the guys who think they have the stature to make moral and family-planning decisions for everyone.
Yeah.
Right.
FOOTNOTE: 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.
The City-County Observer posted this article without opinion, bias, or editing.
Indiana Supreme Court Law Library links past to present with rare book collection
By Marilyn Odendahl, The Indiana Citizen
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The Indiana Supreme Court Law Library has 230 rare books, the oldest of which was printed in 1565. Photo by Marilyn Odendahl, TheStatehouseFile.com.
Perhaps Indiana Justice Samuel Barnes Gookins, who served from 1854 to 1857, loved reading outdoors or, maybe, a relative wanted to preserve a special memory. Whatever the reason, a clover was pressed between the pages of his palm-sized Bible which dates from the 1800s.
The Bible of Indiana’s 15th Supreme Court Justice Samuel Barnes Gookins still has a clover pressed between the pages.  Photo by Marilyn Odendahl, TheStatehouseFile.com.
The Bible, with the clover still inside but now tucked in an acid-free sleeve, is part of an eclectic collection of rare books in the Indiana Supreme Court Law Library in the Statehouse. Although the journey those tomes took to end up on the shelves of the library may remain a mystery, they are a valuable connection to the lessons of the past in this time of video chats and instant messaging.
“There’re so many things we can learn,†Cathrin Verano, Indiana Supreme Court Law Library special collection development librarian, said. “Not only the content, but what I’m personally interested in is the ownership history and how people have used these books over time.â€
With the help of a $4,500 grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the law library is taking steps to ensure the old and rare books are preserved.
Cathrin Verano, Indiana Supreme Court Law Library special collection development librarian, is spearheading the preservation efforts for the library’s rare books and historic documents. Photo by Marilyn Odendahl, The Indiana Citizen.
The Preservation Assistance Grant has been used to hire a rare-book conservator who evaluated the books in the collection for about three days in mid-October. She produced a “very detailed, item-level description†of the collection, Verano said, and made recommendations for the repair and care of the books.
Also, the grant will cover some of the costs for archival materials including those used to make the clamshells – boxes that will encase some of the especially fragile books. Verano is putting together an order for the archival supplies such as folders and boxes and plans to work with the conservator to find ways to maximize the remaining grant funds.
The rare book collection of 230 volumes is “just scratching the surface,†Verano said. The law library also has papers from former Indiana justices and records from the now-closed Marion County Law Library.
Key to the conservation project will be making sure the books and papers are accessible to the public.
Samuel von Pufendor’s “Of the Law of Nature and Nations†was a book that influenced Thomas Jefferson.  Photo by Marilyn Odendahl, TheStatehouseFile.com.
Underscoring the importance of allowing library patrons to handle the books, Verano pulled a large, heavy, thickly bound copy of Samuel von Pufendorf’s “Of the Law of Nature and Nations,†published in London in 1729. Thomas Jefferson had two copies of this book, one in English, the other in French, and was influenced by its ideas and insights.
“Being able to touch and look at it makes much more of an impact than if you read somewhere that Thomas Jefferson had “Of Law of Nature and Nations†in his library,†Verano said.
‘Context is the key’
When Judge Paul Mathias of the Court of Appeals of Indiana enters the law library followed by a trail of students, he will pull the firsthand account of the beheading of Marie Antoinette during the French Revolution.
Judge Paul Mathias of the Court of Appeals of Indiana. Â Photo provided.
He shows them the text, printed in 1794, and points out how some of the letters look different from modern-day script. Then he has some of the students read the words aloud, lending assistance as initially, they stumble over the stilted phrasing, but soon the story emerges.
The students are transported to the streets of Paris that were lit by torches as Marie Antoinette was taken to the scaffold on an ordinary cart. They learn she bounded up the steps to face her executioner and after the guillotine fell, her severed head was held aloft on all four corners of the platform. A loyalist then dipped his handkerchief in the queen’s blood.
Mathias uses the books to emphasize that “context is the key to almost anything in history.â€
He will open a book with the laws of the Indiana Territory and turn to the section on children and servants. Then he starts a conversation with the students about how children were valued in previous times.
A copy of Indiana statutes from the 1850s is written in German, likely a nod to the flow of German immigrants into the Hoosier state. Mathias will ask the students if a book with today’s state statutes should be printed in Spanish.
“I’ve watched it happen over and over again, that in order to fully understand what was going on at the time, the explanation and discussion about what was going on at the time is pretty sterile,†Mathias said. “It becomes real when a student is holding a book and turning pages, actually reading from sections from the books that we provide.â€
Mathias discovered the rare books in the Supreme Court’s law library about 20 years ago. His favorite is a book of Philadelphia laws that was printed in Benjamin Franklin’s shop.
An illustration by Isaac Cruikshank is included in a six-penny pamphlet about an actual trial in England. Â Photo by Marilyn Odendahl, TheStatehouseFile.com.
Other treasures in the rare book collection include:
A six-penny pamphlet about an actual trial in England, albeit likely a bit sensationalized to grab the general reader. The illustrations are by Isaac Cruikshank, the lesser-known brother of George Cruikshank, who drew the illustrations for Charles Dickens.
A two-volume legal abridgment that was an early attempt to standardize early English law into something attorneys could reference, similar to a case reporter. It is written in law French, or what Verano described as “Latinized French,†which was the working language of attorneys until about the 17th
The 1894 book, “Acts and Resolutions of the Creek National Council,†is described as “parallel printed†because it presents the same text in two different languages. The front half is in English while the back half is in Creek, the language of the Muskogee Creek Indian Tribe.
A book of verdicts and judgments was published in 1596 by Jane Yetsweirt, one of the first women law printers in England. She gained ownership of the print shop after the death of her husband, Charles, and for a brief period in the 1590s, she held the patent letters that allowed her to print legal texts in Elizabethan England. She printed 13 titles before gender discrimination caught up and the letters were taken from her.
Handwritten notes from the past
Like the clover in Gookin’s Bible, many of the books contain hints of their past. Handwritten names and dates, underlined passages of text and words scrawled in the margins illuminate what a judge, lawyer, or leader from a previous generation was thinking.
Inside the cover of the “Corpus Juris Civilis,†a volume of 6th century Byzantine laws that was published in 1663, is a list of presumably the owners’ names, addresses and the year they each took possession of the book. The dates move chronologically from 1717 to 1875.
The “Acts and Resolutions of the Creek National Council†is printed in both English and Creek, the language of the Muskogee Creek Indian Tribe.  Photo by Marilyn Odendahl, TheStatehouseFile.com.
“Anytime I see an inscription, I Google that person, and oftentimes it’s been someone who is prominent enough to at least have a Wikipedia page,†Verano said, explaining the first steps she takes when she begins sleuthing into a book’s background. “There’s a lot of research to be done in terms of ownership and, like I say, I hope that will reveal some answer about how some of these items arrived here.â€
Gookins’ Bible was donated to the law library along with a portrait of the justice by a Gookins family member in summer 2021. Actually, Verano said, the book is a common 19th century Bible, but it is valuable in Indiana because it belonged to the 15th justice. He resigned from the bench due to ill health and low pay.
A book about the trial of Katharine Nairn and Patrick Ogilvie is a treasure for more than the printed text describing when the pair was tried in August 1765 in England for the crimes of incest and murder. In the Supreme Court library’s copy, someone at some point had sewn extra pages into the back of the book and then made a “painstakingly handwritten†addendum, copying from another source the rest of the story including Nairn’s escape to America after the trial.
Verano, an art history major who completed her undergraduate degree at Indiana University Bloomington and did graduate studies in England, is aware of the weight of history that accompanies rare books. At one time, tales of 18th century trials might have been gobbled up by the public, and legal reference books published in the 16th century probably had a place on many lawyers’ desks. Their material dated, they now spend more time on a shelf but, Verano said, the books still have value from a historical and scholarly perspective.
“People are interested in them. They get people in the door,†Verano said. “It’s just something that we’re really proud of. We don’t know the ins and outs of how they got to be here, but we’ve been entrusted with these things. It’s kind of our responsibility to steward them properly.â€
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.
FOOTNOTE: 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.
EVANSVILLE, IN — December 14, 2023 — The Vanderburgh County Commissioners will hold a ribbon-cutting ceremony for Burdette Park’s new Play Park on Thursday, December 14, 2023.
Designed for children ages 2 through 12, Burdette Park’s new Play Park features an ADA-accessible Lincoln Lookout tower, a Poseidon’s Hideout climber, and a 3-wheel overhead swing ladder. Additionally, canopied swings will allow for extended playtime outside while remaining shaded from the sun.
Strategically located, the Play Park offers an additional nearby source of entertainment for campers planning a stay at the Burdette Park Campground, which features 18 full hook-up sites and 10 electric-only sites. Also conveniently situated near the USI-Burdette Trail and the BMX track, a full day of entertainment is all within a brief stroll. Those organizing events at Shelter 18 or the Discovery Lodge can also find the Play Park within a short walking distance.
Event Information:
What: Ribbon Cutting Ceremony for Burdette Park’s Play Park
When: December 14, 2023
Where: Burdette Park – 5301 Nurrenbern Rd., Evansville, IN 47712
Time: 12:00 p.m.
About Burdette Park:
Burdette Park, situated in Evansville, Indiana, is a recreational haven offering a variety of outdoor activities, including an Aquatic Center, the event center O’Day Discovery Lodge, a recreational vehicle campground, a 3-mile hiking and bicycling trail, and more. With its commitment to excellence and community engagement, Burdette Park has become a beloved destination for those seeking year-round enjoyment and relaxation.