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Eagles record win on Friday, finish non-conference season at .500

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Southern Indiana Women’s Basketball finished the non-conference season with an 86-37 victory against Brescia University (KY) on Friday afternoon at Screaming Eagles Arena.

With the win, USI finished the non-conference slate with a .500 record of 5-5, preceding the start of Ohio Valley Conference play.

The Screaming Eagles came out of the gate with an 18-0 lead in the first quarter. Senior forward Meredith Raley (Haubstadt, Indiana) led the early charge, which included a triple and a three-point play. Raley scored double figures in the opening period. Southern Indiana’s defense was also stifling, forcing the Bearcats into multiple turnovers in the backcourt. USI’s first-quarter play featured a balanced attack, shooting over 64 percent overall with six made threes, which led to a 35-7 advantage through 10 minutes of action.
 
Southern Indiana continued to spread the ball around in the first half, as nine Screaming Eagles found the scoring column before halftime. Late in the second quarter, graduate guard Tori Handley (Jeffersonville, Indiana) and junior guard Vanessa Shafford (Linton, Indiana) combined for a stretch of scoring that put both with 10 points in the first half. USI led 56-18 at the break.
 
Early in the third quarter, Raley converted her second basket-and-foul opportunity of the game, crossing over the 20-point plateau for the contest and giving USI a 63-20 lead. The balance of post-play and outside shooting continued for Southern Indiana in the second half. During the middle portion of the game, redshirt senior guard Addy Blackwell (Bloomington, Indiana) surpassed 100 made three-pointers in her career. The Screaming Eagles carried a 74-27 lead into the fourth period.
 
As offenses cooled off a bit in the fourth quarter, USI freshman forward Chloe Gannon (Manchester, Tennessee) also joined the double-digit club in the fourth, connecting on a pair of baskets. With a three-point play in the period, Gannon matched a career-best 13 points, which she set in the last game against the University of Cincinnati.
 
Southern Indiana shot over 57 percent for the game with 30 makes on 52 attempts, 11-of-22 from beyond the arc, and over 88 percent (15-17) from the foul line. USI outrebounded Brescia 38-23. Raley led all scorers with 22 points on 7-of-8 shooting and 6-of-6 at the free-throw line. Gannon finished with 13 points, Shafford had 12 points, and Handley tallied 10 points.
 
Brescia was 12-of-49 for 24.5 percent from the floor with four triples and nine made free throws. Freshman guard Genesis Ghide-Bryan led the Bearcats with 13 points.
 
Following a short holiday break, the Screaming Eagles will prepare to open the Ohio Valley Conference season next week on the road at Southeast Missouri State University and Lindenwood University.

CONGRATULATIONS  DECEMBER 2023 WINNERS OF EVANSVILLE CATHOLIC SCHOOLS LOTTERY

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Scholarship available to future Hoosier educators

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Indiana’s top-performing high school seniors and college students planning to pursue careers as teachers are encouraged to apply for a Next Generation Hoosier Educators Scholarship before the Jan. 31 deadline. 
[Visit scholartrack.che.in.gov to apply before Jan. 31.]

Scholarships will be awarded to high-achieving high school seniors, and college freshmen and sophomores, who graduated or will graduate from an Indiana accredited high school or non-accredited nonpublic high school by June 30, 2024. Click here for information on the academic requirements that students must meet to qualify for the scholarship. 

The Indiana Commission for Higher Education will notify applicants of their scholarship status via email by April 2024. 

Thanks to a new law I co-authored during the 2023 legislative session, the annual Next Generation Hoosier Educators Scholarship award amount increased from $7,500 to $10,000, and the 200-recipient annual cap was removed. As a result, nearly 400 scholarships were awarded in June.

As a lifelong educator, I believe there is great value in becoming a teacher and I’m excited to see so many students take advantage of this scholarship and join our field. Click here to learn more and apply for Next Generation Hoosier Educators Scholarship today. 

Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Records

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Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Records

Booked Last 24 Hours-Public – 2023-12-22

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

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EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

FOOTNOTE:  EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.

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SENATOR MIKE BRAUN, COLLEAGUES INTRODUCE BILL TO HOLD ATF ACCOUNTABLE, GIVE CERTAINTY TO GUN OWNERS AND MANUFACTURERS

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braun

WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Mike Braun reintroduced the ATF Accountability Act to provide transparency to gun owners across America on rules made by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF). The ATF engages in a secretive classification review process where the agency makes decisions about whether a particular firearm is regulated by the National Firearms Act. Decisions and justification for decisions are often only made available to manufacturers in private correspondence. This causes a lot of uncertainty for both gun-owning Americans and firearm manufacturers, especially in combination with the ATF’s refusal to make final public rules regarding classification.

Senators Barrasso, Cramer, Crapo, Daines, Hawley, Hoeven, Hyde-Smith, Lankford, Lummis, Marshall, Mullin, Risch, and R. Scott cosponsored the legislation.

“American gun owners and manufacturers have been left in the dark for far too long with closed-door rule changes by the ATF. Americans exercising their Second Amendment rights shouldn’t be the last to know the classification status of firearms, or what licenses or tax stamps they need to avoid running afoul of the law. The ATF needs accountability and transparency, which this bill accomplishes.” – Sen. Braun

“Every day, people in Wyoming responsibly use their Second Amendment rights to keep and bear arms. For far too long, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF) has had regulations that keep responsible gun owners and manufacturers in the dark. Any attempt to stop law-abiding citizens from appealing unfair rulings must be stopped dead in its tracks. I will continue to stand up against any policies that threaten our Second Amendment rights.”—Sen. Barrasso

“Ensuring fair administrative procedures is vital for law-abiding gun owners. The Biden administration’s use of crushing regulatory tactics, like the ATF’s secretive classification process, has deprived citizens’ constitutional right to bear arms and created uncertainty for manufacturers. We need to ensure transparency within the ATF, promote timely access to classification decisions, and fix the absence of an appeal process for manufacturers facing classification errors.”—Sen. Cramer

“Increasing transparent review and an appeals process for rulings and determinations made by the ATF would ensure that firearms manufacturers and lawful gun owners are not subject to unchecked bureaucratic rulings.  Burdening law-abiding citizens of this country with additional gun restrictions is not the answer to safeguarding the public.”—Sen. Crapo

“For too long unelected bureaucrats at the ATF in Washington, DC have been making decisions on the classification status of firearms behind closed doors. We need transparency and accountability at the ATF so law abiding Montana gun owners and gun manufacturers are never left in the dark.”—Sen. Daines

“The ATF owes nothing less than transparency to law-abiding gun owners exercising their Second Amendment rights and all Americans in general.  For the past few years, its secretive rule-making processes and lack of accountability have threatened those constitutional rights. Our bill would work to level the playing field for American gun owners, dealers, and manufacturers affected by these unacceptable ATF rules and determinations.”—Sen. Hyde-Smith

“Our legislation would better protect the 2nd Amendment rights of law-abiding Americans from federal overreach and provide an important check on the ATF’s classification process.”—Sen. Hoeven

“Oklahomans attempting to navigate the quagmire of federal regulations on firearm manufacturing are tired of getting uncertain and inconsistent decisions from the ATF because the Biden Administration does not want Americans to have guns. ATF needs to have clear guidance on firearm classifications so manufacturers and purchasers have the information they need when they need it. Our bill holds the ATF accountable for their unclear and inconsistent rulemaking and ensures we can bring transparency to the process.”—Sen. Lankford

“D.C. bureaucrats cannot be allowed to criminalize law-abiding gun owners with the stroke of a pen behind closed doors. Protecting the Second Amendment has never been more important after Senate Democrats attempted to jam through an assault weapons ban just last week. The ATF Accountability Act strengthens the people of Wyoming’s constitutional right to bear arms by creating a pathway to legally challenge any new restrictive regulations.”—Sen. Lummis

“Biden’s gun-grabbing ATF refuses to provide transparency on its secretive review process for firearms. This legislation is necessary to provide an appeals process for manufacturers and create transparency for law-abiding gun owners to know the legal status of their firearms. I’m proud to join Senator Braun in bringing this issue to light and fighting for American gun owners and manufacturers.”—Sen. Marshall

“The ATF’s ability to designate firearms behind closed doors puts law-abiding gun owners and firearms manufacturers in a difficult and sometimes impossible situation. The ATF Accountability Act will stop the agency’s secretive classification process, create accountability, and empower gun owners and manufacturers to appeal rulings.”—Sen. Risch

“The Biden administration and the far-left continue to push overreaching policies that infringe on our rights by placing more and more regulations and red tape on American businesses that support the 2nd Amendment. I’m proud to join my colleagues to push back on these efforts and hold the administration accountable with our ATF Accountability Act.”—Sen. Rick Scott

The ATF Accountability Act :

  • Creates an appeals process following a ruling by ATF with specific regular timeframes
  • Permits gun manufacturers to appeal the legal status or classification of any product by filing with the Director of Industry Operations with jurisdiction. After which, the appeal is directed to an administrative law judge

Not just a lame duck—Gov. Holcomb says he’s got plans

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Not just a lame duck—Gov. Holcomb says he’s got plans

  • As Republican Gov. Eric Holcomb winds down his final term as head of the Hoosier State, he reflected on his goals for the next year and his time after the Statehouse in a one-on-one interview with TheStatehouseFile.com.

    He said he’s not just a lame duck biding his time—he has plans.

    ‘I don’t see myself as a lame duck’

    Gov. Eric Holcomb discusses the 2024 legislative session being his last in office during an interview with The Statehouse File. “I don’t see myself as a lame duck—I don’t think that’s delusional, I think that’s just my posture or my approach in life. I was hired for ultimately eight years. I’m going to do all the years, and I’m not going to downshift in a time when you need to do the opposite,” he said.

    “I don’t see myself as a lame duck—I don’t think that’s delusional. I think that’s just my posture or my approach in life …” Holcomb said. “I was hired for ultimately eight years. I’m going to do all the years, and I’m not going to downshift in a time when you need to do the opposite.”

    Holcomb said though he’s technically what some would call a lame duck—a politician who is winding down their time in office and consequently seeing a decline in their power—there’s an upside to the title.

    “I’m not seeking another office, which is also very liberating. No one is, like, talking to me in a transactional way,” he said. Aside from that, he’s still paddling away.

    “My to-do list is so—I always say, it’s multiple pages and small font,” he said. “My mother has teased me about being the kid that always had a checklist.”

    He continued: “The world doesn’t take a break because I’m in my eighth year. The competition is fiercer today than last year, so you must come to work every day early and stay late.”

    ‘You lose your anonymity’

    Gov. Eric Holcomb looks forward to life after office when he will no longer be as much of a public figure, he says during a one-on-one interview with TheStatehouseFile.com. “You kind of lose your anonymity in this job, which is good if you like people, I would say, and you are comfortable in your own skin,” said Holcomb.

    Holcomb said he’s excited about announcements he plans on making closer to the State of the State address—things “that just haven’t ever been done before in our state’s history”—but which he did not specify.

    Holcomb said over the next 12 months, his administration will focus on economic, workforce, and community development. He hopes to improve the state’s overall health and wellness status—including improving access to and awareness of programs tackling Indiana’s infant and maternal mortality rates—as well as maintain the historically low unemployment rate of 3.1%.

    “What I’ve learned here is no matter how hard the situation is, the sooner you take your medicine—it may taste bad going down, but the sooner you do it, the better you are, and the faster you get better. But it’s hard, and it takes some courage from others. It takes, certainly, intellect. It takes a lot of sacrifice.”

    Holcomb said he wished other government officials would learn this lesson too.

    “This is one of my biggest disappointments with our collective federal government—not to be all negative here, but it seems it’s just a political game show, and we’re not solving problems, and somebody’s gonna pay the bill.”

    People are already asking him what he’ll do when he leaves his Statehouse office and transitions back to “normalcy.” For one, he will enjoy being a regular citizen again.

    ‘The world doesn’t take a break’

    Hanover grad, Navy veteran and governor of Indiana since 2017, Gov. Eric Holcomb intends to finish his term strong, he said. “The world doesn’t take a break because I’m in my eighth year,” he said in an interview with The Statehouse File. “The competition is fiercer today than it was last year, so you must come to work every day early and stay late.”

    “You kind of lose your anonymity in this job, which is good if you like people, I would say, and you’re comfortable in your own skin,” Holcomb said. “So when I go to a buffet, and I do a lot, it’s not unusual for the owner of the place to say, ‘Could you take your tray and step aside for a second?’ because people will come up and [ask me questions].”

    Holcomb joked that he’s also had to learn to be mindful in restaurants of keeping his elbows off the table and chewing with his mouth closed, in fear that someone might sneak a photo.

    “There’s no going to CVS and buying Q-tips and not having a conversation, and somebody else, like five or six people going, ‘He’s buying Q-tips,’” he said. “And that will be all kind of welcomed back—people not caring so much.”

    Leaving other parts of the job will be bittersweet, he said, but he’s looking forward to continuing to serve in whatever way he can.

    “A lot of people, when they pose that question, it’s almost like it’s the Last Supper, like it’s the end—it’s not,” he said. “This is a chapter in life, and to me, it’s all about public service.”

    He said while the job has come with its challenges when he thinks of leaving behind his time as the 51st governor of the Hoosier State, it’s the people he’ll miss the most.

    “I used to be in the Navy, and I miss that camaraderie to this day—the friends that you’ve made, that you count on, that you’ve spent every day with and know everything about them, and they know everything about you,” Holcomb said.

    “Eight years here, and we’ve all grown up together, and some in different stages of their career. But everybody has grown.”

    FOOTNOTE: Sydney Byerly is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.Â