EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Southern Indiana Women’s Tennis has announced the addition of Rylie Wilkison to the 2024-25 tennis roster. Wilkison is the first early signee for the Screaming Eagles.
“I am super excited to have Rylie join out team next fall,” says USI Tennis Head Coach, Chris Crawford. “Rylie is a constant worker on and off the court. She will have an immediate impact on the court and in the classroom and will be a great addition to the team. I am really excited to coach her next season.”
Rylie Wilkison | 5’5″ | Whiteland, Indiana
Wilkison joins USI after a successful stint at Franklin Community High School. During her time as a Grizzly Cub, Wilkison collected two All-State first-team honors, two All-District awards, and an All-State second-team accolade along with being named to the All-Mid-State Conference team twice. The two-time Johnson County Player of the Year posted a 24-1 number one singles record in 2022 that led her to a semi-state crown. Wilkison was able to collect a 62-9 number one singles record in her three-year career and led FCHS to two team sectional and regional championships along with one semi-state title.
The Eagles enter the spring schedule after going 4-15 overall and 0-5 in the conference last season. USI’s 2024 spring schedule will be announced at a later date.
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.
The meetings confused me, but my mother insisted I come along with her.
This was in the early 1960s. My folks were still together, and I was a toddler. We had moved from the housing project in Cleveland, Ohio, where I’d been born, to the working-class neighborhood of World War II duplexes built for families of women working in the city’s booming factories while their husbands fought overseas.
Before she married my father, Mom had been an active supporter of the League of Women Voters and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. My birth placed a pause on her activism.
Once I learned to walk, though, Mom decided it was time to begin again—and to bring her young son along with her.
The reason, she said, was that she had no one to care for me if she went to a civil rights meeting. But there were other times I was left in the care of a babysitter or another neighborhood mother while Mom ran errands.
No, she brought me to those meetings because she wanted me there. She wanted me to see what she cared about. She wanted me to learn.
When we were on our way home from the meetings, Mom talked with me. She told me it was important to treat everyone fairly, that it was wrong to deny people respect or dignity based on the color of their skin or some other circumstance of birth.
Even before Martin Luther King Jr. immortalized the phrase, my mother was instructing her son to judge people always on the content of their character.
Dignity mattered a great deal to her.
When I was very little and someone referred to me as “Johnny,†Mom always issued a firm correction.
“His name is John,†she said with steel in her voice.
Once, I asked her about it. This was in an era when TV and movie cowboys, pop stars, sports titans and comic book heroes went by the name Johnny, so I wouldn’t have minded being called that.
“It’s a diminutive,†she said.
At that age, I had no idea what a diminutive was, but I knew from the tone of her voice that it wasn’t good.
She could see I was confused.
“Unless it’s a family member or a good friend who does that, they’re trying to make you feel small when they call you that,†she said.
Later I came to understand why respect mattered so much to her. A woman of rare intellectual capacities who came from the hill country of Southern Indiana, she often found her gifts and her aspirations ignored or even dismissed.
That infuriated her. She was determined the same thing would not happen to her children.
The lesson took.
In the 1970s, when I was not yet old enough to drive, my parents divorced. Smalltown Indiana was not enlightened or emancipated in those days.
There were local businessmen who refused to deal directly with my mother and instead would insist on speaking through me, her oldest son.
At those times, I could see the fires of anger and humiliation raging in her. Watching her, the same flames burned in me, too.
They were trying to make us feel small.
Over the years, people have often asked me about my penchant for wandering into the middle of the most intense political and cultural battles, generally on the side that is outnumbered, outgunned and frequently in danger of being overwhelmed.
My public answer to those questions aims at sounding high-flown and principled. I will talk about the importance of making sure that all voices are heard, because that is the way a self-governing society is supposed to operate. I will speak of the moral imperative to stick up for the disenfranchised, the dispossessed and the disparaged.
That is some of the truth.
The full truth is much simpler.
I do it because that is what my mother taught me to do.
Mom died this past summer. I was at her bedside when she left this life.
Her last years brought her much sorrow, but her fires burned until the end. She raged against injustice and indignity right up to the moment she took her last breath.
My mother’s birthday is this week, my first without her.
If you can’t tell I miss her, you haven’t been reading closely.
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’S SENATORS HONOR COACH KNIGHT’S LIFE AND LEGACY WITH SENATE RESOLUTION
NOVEMBER 29, 2023
WASHINGTON – A Senate resolution honoring the life and achievements of Indiana basketball coach Robert Montgomery Knight passed the Senate last night. Sponsored by Indiana’s U.S. Senators Todd Young and Mike Braun, the resolution celebrates Coach Knight’s achievements during 29 years at Indiana University, including coaching 11 Big Ten Conference Championship teams, 24 teams to the NCAA tournament, and the last team to go undefeated and win the NCAA tournament during the 1975-76 season.
“Some of my best memories growing up in an IU family were watching games with my Dad, from IU-Purdue nailbiters to Big Ten and NCAA title runs. Bob Knight was a basketball genius who made a tremendous impact on the players he coached, the IU community, and the entire state of Indiana. I’m proud to join with Senator Braun to pay tribute to the life and legacy of The General, who will be remembered on and off the court for generations to come,â€Â said Senator Young.
“Coach Knight embodied so many Hoosier values: perseverance, accountability, and above all hard work. Coach Knight will always be remembered by Hoosiers, and it was an honor to be able to commemorate his life and success with this Senate resolution with Senator Young,â€Â said Senator Braun.
WESSELMAN PARK INFRASTRUCTURE GROUNDBREAKING YESTERDAY
(November 28, 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.
“I’m sorry you lost the election. I’m glad you ran.â€
That is an appropriate thing to say to someone who just lost a municipal election. Please don’t say, “Hey, you can run again!â€
Every election cycle, some people are elected to public office. That means other people find themselves as new members of club they never wanted to join. This club has only one requirement: You lost an election for public office. I’ve been a member of that club. I’ve talked to several other members in different communities, and from different political affiliations. We all agree. It’s not a fun club.
As the election fades, our communities start to focus on settling into a new or returning administration and council. Life goes on and our communities will be facing new challenges and opportunities. We selected officeholders to help us meet those challenges and opportunities.
Before we get too far into the celebrations of the new officeholders, please take a moment to consider the candidates who return to being regular citizens. The unsuccessful candidates spent a huge amount of time and effort campaigning for office. They had dreams and aspirations for making their communities better. They may have worked just as hard as the winning candidates. They spent months, possibly years, on their campaign. But as of 6 p.m. on election night the ballots were cast and they learned were not successful.
A frequent sentiment of people outside the political arena is, “I could never run for office.†Technically, it is very easy to file the paperwork to become a candidate. The age and residency requirements are pretty straightforward. Realistically, running a campaign is much more challenging. Running for office, even a local office, is very time-consuming and expensive.
Keep in mind that the losing candidate also raised money, planned advertising and promotions, and attended public events, happily. In other words, they did everything they could to make sure the community knew they were running for office. Then, they were not chosen by a majority of you. If they met their goals of letting the community know they were a candidate, now that same community knows they lost.
The day after the election, they still visit the same grocery stores, coffee shops, and restaurants. Yesterday, they were smiling, shaking hands, and asking for your vote. Today, they know that you know they are the one who lost. They can only guess if you voted for them or against them. Even worse, due to low public participation and a lack of knowledge of local elections, they may have to explain to you that the election was yesterday and that they lost. If you are a person who didn’t know the election just happened, please don’t say, “Gosh. I would have voted for you.†(That happens.)
Unfortunately, a candidate may have been the target of a negative campaign. These efforts may be effective, but they are negative, and they hurt. Now the unsuccessful candidate is wondering whether friends and neighbors believed the advertising and have a different opinion of them.
Some of the logistics for a successful campaign become burdens for an unsuccessful campaign. A visible example is the campaign yard sign. For months, candidates tried to get yard signs in prominent locations. Now, each of those signs is a painful, public reminder. In my first unsuccessful campaign, I couldn’t bear to look at them. So, my wife and I tried to collect all the signs election night. Other candidates I spoke with told the property owners to throw away the signs after the election. But what if the property owner doesn’t throw away the signs and you drive by that yard every day? What if you purchased a billboard that will continue to be in place for the rest of November, or even longer if the billboard is not sold to someone else?
With presidential elections and congressional elections, you probably don’t personally know the candidate. Even elections for the state legislature involve larger districts, meaning you may not know the candidates. With municipal elections, outside the larger cities, you probably personally know the candidates for mayor, clerk-treasurer, and town or city council. How do they feel today?
In my book, I spoke with Tina Weldy, a licensed mental health counselor. She said has worked with losing candidates. She describes the candidates’ feelings of grief and profound disappointment. If the candidate is having trouble letting go, she recommends mental exercises to help the candidate realize they are not a “loser.†Realize, instead, that a lot of people voted for them and thought they would be great.
“You put a lot of energy into this and I noticed you didn’t win. I’ve been thinking about you and wondered how you are doing since the election,†Weldy suggested.
“I’m really sorry you lost,†is a comment I appreciated after my defeats.
Though losing candidates don’t want to hear that they should run again, and may vow to never run again, it is interesting how many re-enter the campaign fray some time down the road. I think it is because this club they just joined – the ones who lost – is a group of people who thought they could improve the community and were willing to put themselves out there in public contests.
The public starts thinking about them, not as unsuccessful candidates, but as public servants. If we are lucky, they will heal, and be back to make the community better.
FOOTNOTE:  Kyle Hannon is the author of The One Who Lost: When Your Campaign Doesn’t Work and other books. He lost an election for state representative and a Republican caucus election for city council. Several years later, he won an election for an At-Large City Council seat in Elkhart. Currently, he lives in Bloomington, where he is the president of Filibuster Press, LLC and works in community improvement and trail development. www.filibusterpress.com
Evansville Day School’s 4th-grade students will be unveiling their creative and philanthropic endeavors as part of the Giving Project Presentations on Thursday, November 30th, from 9:00 am to 10:00 am in the EDS atrium.
The Giving Project, an initiative supported by Legence Bank, empowered these young entrepreneurs with a $10 business loan each, challenging them to turn their seed money into something meaningful. Over the past weeks, students have harnessed their creativity, innovation, and teamwork to create their own businesses with the ultimate goal of raising funds for selected nonprofit organizations.
During the event, students will showcase their projects, detailing how they utilized their $10 investment to develop and run their businesses. Several students will also present the funds they have raised directly to representatives from their chosen nonprofits during the event.
The Giving Project not only fosters entrepreneurial skills but also instills a sense of social responsibility in these young minds. Members of the media are invited to attend this heartwarming event.