Home Blog Page 784

Hooks shines in debut as Lady Blazers fall to No. 13 Three Rivers

0

VINCENNES, Ind. – The Vincennes University Lady Trailblazers hit the court Wednesday night for their first game after the Thanksgiving break and faced a tough challenge in No. 13-ranked Three Rivers College.

VU was led by freshman Destinee Hooks (Indianapolis, Ind.) who made her Vincennes debut Wednesday night after an injury kept her out of the first seven games of the season.

Hooks finished with 17 points, eight rebounds and four assists but the Lady Trailblazers ultimately fell to the Lady Raiders by the final score of 70-52.

The game got off to a very slow start for both teams offensively, with Three Rivers finally breaking through with a 12-2 scoring run to close out the first quarter and take a 12-4 lead after the first 10 minutes of play.

The Lady Raiders continued to roll into the second quarter and looked to potentially put the game away early with a 12-0 scoring run to start the second period and later take a 35-10 lead.

Vincennes would get some shots to fall from three-point range before half, outscoring Three Rivers 10-2 to cut the deficit to 37-20 at the break.

VU took their game to another level in the third quarter and looked to be making a big second half comeback, cutting the Three Rivers lead down to single digits at 44-35 and later using a 9-1 scoring run to cut the lead down to 50-46.

The Lady Raiders would get the final basket of the quarter and head into the fourth holding a 52-46 advantage over the Lady Blazers.

Three Rivers looked to take control back in the fourth, scoring the first six points of the quarter and using a 10-0 scoring run to grow the lead back to 18 at 68-50.

The Lady Raiders would hold the ball to run some clock in the final few minutes and take advantage of some timely offensive rebounds as the Lady Blazers just ran out of time and fell 70-52 to Three Rivers.

Vincennes was led offensively by Destinee Hooks who finished with a game-high 17 points, eight rebounds and four assists for the Lady Blazers.

Freshman Makyla Tucker (Indianapolis, Ind.) was the only other VU scorer in double-figures, coming off the bench Hooks, to finish with 10 points, including hitting a perfect two of two from three-point range.

Sophomore Maycee Lange (Vincennes, Ind.) finished her night with nine points and four rebounds, while freshman Taylor Guess (Indianapolis, Ind.) matched the nine points and four rebounds while also adding a pair of blocks on the game.

Sophomore Katrina Litte (Valmiera, Latvia) came away with five points to go along with a team-high five assists, two steals and three rebounds.

The Lady Trailblazers will look to bounce back this Saturday, Dec. 2 when VU hosts Moberly Area Community College into the Physical Education Complex. Tip-off time Saturday is set for 3 p.m. eastern.

This will be the third meeting this season between the Lady Blazers and the Lady Greyhounds, with Vincennes taking the first game of the season 86-80 at Moberly, before Moberly evened the score with an 84-65 win at Three Rivers College in Poplar Bluff, Mo.

 

Chuck Bailey III scores 27 points in MVC opener

0

Aces drop 90-78 decision

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. – Freshman Chuck Bailey III scored a career-high 27 points in Wednesday’s Missouri Valley Conference opener as the University of Evansville men’s basketball team dropped a 90-78 decision at JQH Arena.

Bailey recorded 22 of his 27 points in the second half while helping the Purple Aces stage a late comeback.  Ben Humrichous scored 14 points while Kenny Strawbridge Jr. finished the evening with nine.  Yacine Toumi led the way with 8 rebounds while Tanner Cuff had an excellent all-around performance with 8 assists, 7 points and 7 boards.

“Missouri State had a good game plan; they came right out and punched us in the mouth,” UE head coach David Ragland said.  “We responded the right way and never gave up tonight.  This league is just so physical and it was a good experience for our guys to get a taste of that.”

Cam Haffner opened the game with a 3-pointer, but Missouri State hit their first of seven first-half triples on the other end to tie the game.  UE took a 5-3 lead on an Antonio Thomas basket before going up 7-5 on a Kenny Strawbridge Jr. jumper at the 17:49 mark.

Missouri State responded with a 7-0 run to take a 12-7 edge before Ben Humrichous knocked down an outside shot to make it a one-possession game.  On the strength of five offensive rebounds in the opening five minutes, MSU pushed its lead to 19-12.  Evansville stepped up its defense, holding the Bears scoreless for a 4-minute stretch as they forced five missed shots and a turnover.  Chuck Bailey III connected on a triple while Joshua Hughes added his first basket to make it a 19-17 game at the midway point of the half.

After the Bears wrestled away a 27-21 advantage, Tanner Cuff took matters into his own hands.  Scoring five in a row, Cuff got his squad within one point with 6:33 remaining in the period.  MSU quickly responded, embarking on a 16-2 run to take their largest lead of 44-28 in the final minute.  Strawbridge hit a jumper in the final Aces’ possession to make it a 44-30 contest at the break.

In the opening moments of the second half, SMS pushed its lead to 18 points, but UE kept up the pressure.  Gage Bobe connected from long range while Bailey added a field goal to cut the deficit to 50-36 with 15:38 showing on the clock.  The Bears countered with an 11-2 rally to go up 61-38 inside of the 12-minute mark.  Evansville continued to show its fight as Bailey registered 22 of his 27 points in the final half to get the Aces back within 10 points.

Unfortunately, the comeback fell just short as UE fell by a final of 90-78. The defense for the Aces stepped up in the second half, forcing 10 turnovers as the worked to overcome the deficit.

UE returns home on Saturday to face Northern Iowa at 1 p.m.

UE women’s basketball suffers 64-58 loss to Bellarmine

0

The Purple Aces outrebounded their opponents for the second straight game and third time all season

EVANSVILLE, Ind. – A cold fourth quarter doomed the University of Evansville women’s basketball team in a 64-58 loss to the Bellarmine Knights.

After leading for most of the game, the Purple Aces couldn’t find their offense in the fourth quarter to prevent a Bellarmine comeback. Only two players reached double-figures for UE sisters Alana Striverson and Kynidi Mason Striverson. Graduate center Barbora Tomancova also had a strong night for Evansville, leading the team with 12 rebounds while adding nine points and a steal.

“It’s super disappointing,” said Head Coach Robyn Scherr-Wells following the loss. “We played three really solid quarters and saved the worst one for last. It’s tough, we had a nine-point lead opening the fourth quarter with the ball. And two turnovers led to two scores and we gave up a bunch of offensive boards in the fourth quarter. We just didn’t finish the game and it’s a tough pill to swallow,”.

The first two minutes of the game were controlled by the Knights but the Aces quickly responded midway through the first quarter. A nine-point run gave UE the lead, which they would hold onto for over 30 minutes. Evansville saw its lead grow to seven in the final 20 seconds of the frame as a free throw from forward Tameshia Dozier made it a 20-13 game.

Unlike the dominant runs of the first quarter, the second was a bucket-for-bucket marathon. The two teams matched each other shot for shot outside of a brief four-point run for the Knights. Neither offense could find a basket in the final two minutes of the first half as the Aces headed into the locker room with a 31-26 lead.

UE opened scoring in the third quarter with a three-pointer from Striverson on the left wing. While the junior guard found the first points, it was again mostly a back-and-forth battle early in the third. Evansville put together a four-point run at the 6:46 mark to go back up by nine. Bellarmine tried to chip away at the lead but the Aces continued to string together shots and grew their lead to 10 in the final 30 seconds. A last-second layup from the Knights made it an eight-point game with a quarter to go.

Bellarmine quickly cut into UE’s lead in the fourth with a seven-point run to make it only a one-point game. Evansville wouldn’t make its first basket until over two minutes in as forward Maggie Hartwig had a second chance layup. The game bounced back and forth between a three-point lead and a one-point lead for the Aces. But a six-point run for the Knights with four minutes to go sealed UE’s fate as they lost to Bellarmine 64-58.

For the second game in a row, Evansville outrebounded its opponent with 50 boards. The Aces also accumulated more second-chance points and bench points than the Knights through 40 minutes.

UE travels to Martin, Tennessee for their first Saturday game of the season against the UT Martin Skyhawks. Tip-off from the Kathleen and Tom Elam Center is set for 1 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 2.

ROKITA RESPONDS: Indiana attorney general’s office releases statement about second disciplinary investigation

2

ROKITA RESPONDS: Indiana attorney general’s office releases statement about second disciplinary investigation

 

(Editor’s note: this story has been updated to include an additional comment from the attorney general’s office.)

By Marilyn Odendahl

The Indiana Citizen

November 29, 2023

In response to the Indiana Supreme Court Disciplinary Commission opening another investigation into allegations of misconduct, Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita’s office issued a statement Tuesday evening, saying, in part, “he has learned from the situation and – like everyone – can always do better.”

The attorney general’s office issued the statement to The Indiana Citizen after it reported Tuesday that a preliminary investigation by the disciplinary commission is underway. After the statement was published Wednesday, the attorney general’s office asked that an additional comment be included which defended Rokita as being the “only one who stepped up to protect a 10-year-old’s medical privacy.”

Rokita is being investigated for potentially violating two rules of professional conduct for the remarks he made after the state Supreme Court publicly reprimanded him on Nov. 2.

Rokita had been investigated, and then reprimanded, for his comment about Dr. Caitlin Bernard, an Indianapolis OB/GYN, on Fox News in July 2022. On the cable news station, Rokita referred to Bernard as an “abortion activist acting as a doctor – with a history of failing to report.”

A divided Indiana Supreme Court accepted the conditional agreement that had been negotiated between Rokita’s attorneys and the disciplinary commission. In a 3-2 vote, the majority noted the parties had agreed that Rokita’s comment violated Indiana Professional Conduct Rules 3.6(a) and 4.4(a), respectively, which prohibit lawyers from making statements that could prejudice an adjudicative proceeding and that have no purpose other than to embarrass, delay, or burden another person.

On Tuesday, a spokesperson from the attorney general’s office said Rokita had cooperated with the first investigation and admitted to two disciplinary charges.   

“We cannot comment on something we have not seen,” the spokesperson’s statement said in an email. “However we can say that Attorney General Todd Rokita cooperated with the investigation the entire time. He also took the rare action of admitting two of the charges in his initial court filing instead of making the usual perfunctory denials. He publicly stated that he has learned from the situation and – like everyone – can always do better. And he certainly didn’t lie about anything.”

The denial about lying refers to the current investigation by the disciplinary commission.

Rokita has been asked to provide a written response to the allegations that he violated professional conduct rules 3.3(a)(1) and 8.4(c). These two rules prohibit lawyers from knowingly making false statements to a tribunal (such as the Indiana Supreme Court) and from engaging in conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit or misrepresentation.

In his remarks soon after being reprimanded in the first disciplinary investigation, Rokita drew attention to the affidavit he signed to settle the case.

“Having evidence and explanation for everything I said, I could have fought over those 16 words but ending their campaign now will save a lot of taxpayer money and distraction, which is also very important to me,” Rokita said in his Nov. 2 statement. “In order to resolve this, I was required to sign an affidavit without any modifications.”

Rokita’s post-reprimand statements caused at least two attorneys to file new grievances with the disciplinary commission. Paula Cardoza-Jones and William Groth filed their grievances separately and independently.

Cardoza-Jones, who previously worked two years as a staff attorney with the disciplinary commission, asserted in her grievance that Rokita made false statements to the disciplinary commission and the Indiana Supreme Court. The attorney general’s comment about signing the affidavit to save taxpayers money, she said, “directly contradicted his sworn affidavit,” in which he would have admitted to the facts underlying the two charges against him and that he could not have successfully defended himself against them.

The statement issued by Rokita’s office Tuesday took a swipe at Cardoza-Jones and Groth. It also pointed out that Bernard had been disciplined by the Medical Licensing Board of Indiana.

Bernard became part of a media firestorm after The Indianapolis Star reported she had performed an abortion on a 10-year-old Ohio rape victim in the summer of 2022. The girl could not receive care in her home state, since Ohio had implemented severe restrictions on abortion in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, which overturned a woman’s right to an abortion.

Rokita’s office filed a complaint against Bernard, claiming she had violated patient privacy laws by speaking about the Ohio girl to the media and that she had failed to comply with reporting laws. After a day-long hearing, the medical licensing board unanimously found Bernard did not violate abuse reporting laws but the majority concluded she had not followed privacy laws. Bernard was subsequently reprimanded and fined $3,000.

The attorney general’s spokesperson said in the remainder of the Tuesday statement, “This one-way street of self-serving accusations made by attorneys with one-sided voting records and giving histories is now being built into a highway of oncoming baseless claims leading into an election year – all over a 16-word television response made after a doctor was found to be talking about her patient PUBLICLY at a political rally on the heels of the repeal of Roe v. Wade.”

In the additional statement, the attorney general’s spokesperson echoed Rokita’s post-reprimand remarks in which he had accused “liberal activists” of targeting him because “they hate the fact I stand up for liberty.”

The spokesperson said, in the added statement, that “the Left” was paying attention only because the issue is about abortion.

“If the rally and the patient’s condition concerned anything other than the politically charged issue of abortion, the Left would not be giving any of this a second self-interested thought,” the spokesperson said, referencing the reproductive rights rally where an Indianapolis Star reporter overheard and confirmed with Bernard the story about the 10-year-old rape victim. “Attorney General Rokita is the only one who stepped up to protect a 10-year old’s medical privacy after she was used by the very same kind of people who continue to complain about him now. He will not be deterred in his work.”

FOOTNOTE: 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. 

 

 

WESSELMAN PARK INFRASTRUCTURE GROUNDBREAKING YESTERDAY

5

WESSELMAN PARK INFRASTRUCTURE GROUNDBREAKING YESTERDAY

(November 30, 2023) – Evansville Mayor Lloyd Winnecke and Deputy Mayor / Interim Parks Director Steve Schaefer will break ground yesterday, Wednesday, November 29thon new infrastructure at Wesselman Park

As laid out in the Wesselman Park Master Plan, new infrastructure is critical to lay the foundation for future projects.

The groundbreaking will initiate work on the following:

  • The new main entrance to Wesselman Park off of Boeke Road
  • Connector Road linking Wesselman Park with the Roberts Festival Grounds
  • Extension of Division Street that will provide another entry point to the athletic fields behind the National Guard Armory

Deputy Mayor Schaefer will also provide an update on various projects included in the Wesselman Park Master Plan.

The ceremony will take place at 10:00 am in the grass area of the future Roberts Festival Grounds (site of the former Roberts Stadium).

The project is currently under contract with Deig Bros and is expected to be completed in August of 2024.

MAP OF WESSELMAN PARK CONNECTOR OVERLAY

Wesselman Park Boards_Connector Overlay

TODD ROKITA IS JUST A DIGGING FOOL

5

Todd Rokita is just a digging fool

Someone needs to save Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita from himself.

John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com

In the process, that someone also would save Hoosier taxpayers a fair bit of money. He’s used public funds to hire a Washington, D.C. law firm and local private counsel to help with his self-destructive excavation.

That’s because Rokita’s response when he finds he’s dug himself into a hole is to drop the shovel and scream for someone to bring him a backhoe. Then he goes about making that hole deeper and deeper … and deeper.

Some fine reporting by Marilyn Odendahl of The Indiana Citizen makes this abundantly clear.

In her latest coverage, Odendahl reveals that—yet again—Rokita is the subject of a preliminary investigation by the Indiana Supreme Court Disciplinary Commission. This investigation is—yet again—the result of his foolish campaign to persecute Dr. Caitlin Bernard.

The Indiana Supreme Court already has publicly reprimanded our attorney general once—with two of the five justices saying a wrist slap wasn’t punishment enough—and now he could be punished again.

He has no one to blame but himself.

Rokita’s troubles with the disciplinary commission began in the summer of 2022.

That’s when Bernard performed an abortion for a 10-year-old Ohio girl who had been raped. The girl’s mother authorized the abortion. Bernard complied with all appropriate laws in both Indiana and Ohio.

Rokita didn’t bother to find out about any of that before rushing before the cameras at Fox News to condemn Bernard in terms not in any way supported by fact. His statements were so outrageous that even Fox disavowed them.

If Rokita had shut up at that point—if he’d stopped his digging—he might have been all right, even though he’d already made the comments that prompted the Supreme Court to reprimand him.

But he didn’t.

He continued to malign Bernard, who sued him. Much legal wrangling followed, with Rokita—again, spending taxpayer money—desperately searching for a forum friendly to his fact-free arguments.

He found one in the Indiana Medical Licensing Board, where a couple members had made substantial financial contributions to his political campaigns and yet saw no reason to recuse themselves. The board reprimanded Bernard for violating patient confidentiality standards and fined her $3,000—a decision condemned by medial and legal ethics experts across the nation.

The medical licensing board’s action was pilloried nationally for at least two reasons.

One was that Bernard shared no information not routinely found in medical journal articles.

The second was that Rokita, who pressed the complaint—with expensive private counsel, again at taxpayer expense—revealed all the same information before a much wider audience.

Rokita’s heedless campaign to persecute Bernard prompted prominent attorneys in the state to file grievances against Rokita with the disciplinary commission.

Eventually, the Supreme Court voted, 3-2, to accept a conditional agreement reprimanding Rokita. In that agreement, Rokita acknowledged, under penalty of perjury, in an affidavit that he’d violated professional rules of conduct.

Chief Justice Loretta Rush and Justice Christopher Goff were the two dissenters. They felt Rokita merited more serious penalties.

The three who voted in Rokita’s favor presented him with a sweetheart deal—a chance to walk away from an extended professional misconduct with only the lightest tap on the wrist.

Anyone with a lick of sense would have known enough to accept such a gift with gratitude—and silence.

Not Todd Rokita.

He immediately issued a statement that contradicted what he said—again, under penalty of perjury—in the affidavit.

His about-face led at least two lawyers, including one with much experience enforcing standards of professional conduct, to file fresh grievances.

Thus, the new preliminary investigation, which likely will determine when Rokita wasn’t telling the truth—when he was under oath or when he was speaking to the citizens of this state.

Rokita’s response to this latest investigation was more of the same. A statement issued by his office—but to which no one attached his or her name—blamed “the Left” for his troubles.

That is the first time anyone ever has accused Loretta Rush—a devotee of the late U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, perhaps the most conservative jurist ever to sit on the high bench—of being a liberal.

Now, the Indiana Supreme Court has another chance to take the shovel out of Todd Rokita’s hands.

Let us hope the justices do so.

All his digging is getting expensive.

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.

Indiana Philanthropy Award goes to Vincennes University alumnus Bernie Niehaus

0

VINCENNES, Ind., November 29, 2023 – Bernie Niehaus, an esteemed alumnus of Vincennes University, is honored with the prestigious Indiana Philanthropy Award – Outstanding Philanthropist for his immense contributions to philanthropy and community development.

The Association of Fundraising Professionals – Indiana Chapter honored Niehaus with the award.

The chairman and retired CEO of Niehaus Lumber believes in living a life of service. “I am sure that many of you, just as myself, have found the more you give, the more you receive,” he says.

He was nominated by the Vincennes University Foundation and Alumni Association due to fostering positive changes within the community. “His unwavering support and generosity have significantly impacted numerous charitable initiatives, embodying the spirit of altruism and service,” said Kristi Deetz, VU’s Executive Director of the Foundation.

Niehaus, an alumnus whose roots in Vincennes University run deep, has consistently demonstrated a profound dedication to enhancing the lives of others through his philanthropic endeavors. His leadership, vision, and unwavering support have played a pivotal role in advancing numerous charitable causes within the region.

Vincennes University President Dr. Chuck Johnson expressed gratitude for Niehaus’s achievements, stating, “Bernie Niehaus epitomizes the values and ethos we aim to instill in our alumni. His commitment to philanthropy and community development truly reflect the spirit of Vincennes University.”

His philanthropic impact includes serving as president of the VU Alumni Association in 1963-64. In 1969, he helped in the founding of the Construction Technology program. In 1970, Bernie joined the Board of Trustees and served for 24 years, including four years as its chair in the 1990s. He chaired VU’s Third Century Excellence Fund campaign in the early 2000s which raised more than $10 million dollars. He was bestowed an honorary doctorate from VU in 2007 and is currently a member of the VU Foundation Board of Directors, which he formally served as chairman. His endowed scholarship fund has played the essential role of changing numerous students’ lives and will continue to provide generations of students a

future of endless possibilities.

VU is just one of the many organizations whose mission has been advanced thanks to the philanthropy of Niehaus. Too many to list, but to name a few, Saint Meinrad Archabbey and Seminary, Indiana Military Museum, Knox County Community Development Corp., Red Skelton Museum of American Comedy, and participation in Relay for Life and Habitat for Humanity builds adds to this extensive list.

The Indiana Philanthropy Award, a testament to Niehaus’s contributions, stands as a symbol of recognition for his tireless efforts and commitment to making a meaningful difference in the lives of others.

Indiana Philanthropy Awards Overview: The Association of Fundraising Professionals – Indiana Chapter (AFP-IC) fosters the growth of development of philanthropy, the fundraising profession, the chapter, and its individual members. AFP-IC annually hosts the Indiana Philanthropy Awards to honor and recognize individuals, groups, organizations, and corporations in Indiana who have enhanced philanthropy and the community through their dedicated efforts, time, leadership, passion, and generosity. These awards are given in recognition to those whose lifetime or long-term achievements have made a significant impact on our state or a local community through one or more charitable organizations.