UE hosts final two home matches of 2023 next weekendÂ
CEDAR FALLS, Iowa – Extended runs in each set proved to be the difference with Northern Iowa picking up a 3-0 win over the University of Evansville volleyball team on Saturday evening at the McLeod Center.
Giulia Cardona and Melanie Feliciano recorded 9 and 7 kills, respectively, to lead the Purple Aces. Kora Ruff tallied 16 assists while Ainoah Cruz picked up 11 digs. Kira Fallert was the top performer for the Panthers, finishing with 14 kills.
Game 1 – UNI 25, UE 12
Chloe Cline picked up a kill for the first point of the night and the Aces took a 2-0 lead. Northern Iowa countered with a 7-0 run to take their first advantage of the night at 7-2. Melanie Feliciano pitched in a kill with UE picking up the next two tallies.
Evansville stayed within a handful of points with a Giulia Cardona kill cutting the Evansville deficit to 15-11. The Panthers responded with a 9-0 run to go up 24-11 before picking up the set win.
Game 2 – UNI 25, UE 13
Once again, things were close in the early moments. Madisyn Steele and Kora Ruff combined on a block as part of a 3-0 run to open the set. UNI came back to take a 6-4 lead before a Cardona ace tie the score at 8-8. Evansville retook the lead at 9-8 on a Panther error.
Another big run by Northern Iowa saw them take control. Scoring eight in a row, the Panthers went up 16-10. Following a point by UE, UNI pulled away even more as they took a 2-0 match lead with a 25-13 win.
Game 3 – UNI 25, UE 13
Cardona registered an early kill with the Aces taking a 3-2 advantage. Four in a row for the Panthers gave them a 6-3 edge before Cardona put a temporary halt to the run with her second kill of the frame. Northern Iowa got right back to business, adding six in a row to extend the lead to 12-4.
From there, the Panthers clinched the match with a 25-13 victory. UE returns to Meeks Family Fieldhouse next weekend for its final two home matches of 2023 against Murray State and Belmont.
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.
EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Southern Indiana Volleyball (10-15, 6-8 OVC) honored its four seniors after a tough loss to Tennessee Tech University (10-16, 6-9 OVC) at Screaming Eagles Arena on Saturday afternoon, 3-1 (25-22, 26-24, 25-21, 25-19). The Screaming Eagles recognized their four seniors: outside/right side hitter Evie Duncan (Evansville, Indiana), libero/defensive specialist Audrey Crowder (Avon, Indiana), outside/right side hitter Abby Bednar (Chagrin Falls, Ohio), and outside hitter Leah Anderson (Bloomington, Illinois).  USI was held off by the Golden Eagles in the first set, 25-22. The Screaming Eagles got the scoring started with back-to-back kills from Leah Anderson and junior middle blocker Paris Downing (Avon, Indiana) before jumping out to an early 4-1 lead. TTU recovered well and later took the lead after a big 5-1 surge to make it 10-8. Downing and Leah Anderson teamed up to knot it up at 10 apiece before both sides started trading blows. USI was able to get the jump on TTU after an ace from junior outside hitter Abby Weber (Fishers, Indiana) then repeated kills from Downing and sophomore middle hitter Bianca Anderson (Chicago Heights, Illinois) to take the 17-16 advantage. However, the Golden Eagles caught fire and went on a crucial 5-0 run that proved to be too much to come back from for the Screaming Eagles. TTU had a hot start in the match, posting 17 kills and a 0.318 hitting percentage along with four blocks. USI produced 14 kills but had seven costly errors.  USI rallied behind 16 kills and three aces to sneak past TTU in the second, 26-24. Trailing 5-4, the Screaming Eagles gained an early lead after a 4-0 surge off a pair of aces from sophomore libero/defensive specialist Keira Moore (Newburgh, Indiana). TTU returned the favor with a 5-0 stint and then continued to pour it on and ultimately led 18-13. USI would be relentless and go on a big 5-0 run to knot it up at 18 each. During the stint, Leah Anderson got the run going with a kill then junior setter Carly Sobieralski (Indianapolis, Indiana) kept it going with a skip set kill with the surge ending with an ace from Moore. After back-and-forth play, USI scored four of the last five points to steal the victory and tie the match at 1-1. Leah Anderson was the source of big plays as she tacked on six kills to lead the Screaming Eagles.  An early deficit and rocky start for USI cost the Screaming Eagles in the third game, 25-21. TTU kicked off the frame with a 4-0 run then doubled up on USI with a 10-5 lead. It went from bad to worse for the Screaming Eagles as the Golden Eagles piled on and went into the media timeout with a 15-7 advantage. USI could only muster three kills in the front portion of the set but woke up and tallied five quick kills to close the gap to 18-15. Bednar was quick to cut the deficit even more by recording a kill and an ace in back-to-back rallies to make it 19-17. Even after the retaliation, USI could not finish the job as TTU took the 2-1 match lead. The Golden Eagles nabbed 18 kills in the frame compared to USI’s 10 kills while both sides produced three blocks apiece. TTU went on a long run to ice USI and stole the final set, 25-19. The Screaming Eagles captured an early 8-5 lead after kills from Bednar, Leah Anderson, and Bianca Anderson. The Golden Eagles struck gold and scored eight of the next nine points to regain the lead, 13-9. USI bounced back with a trio of points to close the gap but TTU returned fire with a 5-0 run to make it 18-12 in favor of the Golden Eagles. Despite trailing by as many as seven, USI was able to make up some ground with a 5-1 stint that found the Screaming Eagles within the grasp of a lead, 23-19. Leading the run was Bianca Anderson who tallied a pair of kills while Weber capped off the surge with a kill. Despite putting the Golden Eagles on their heels, USI could not come back from the large hole as TTU came away with the win and handed USI its third-straight loss. The Screaming Eagles could only get eight kills in the frame while TTU pounded the offensive game with a match-high 20 kills.  On her Senior Day, Leah Anderson produced her fifth straight and 10th total double-double with 15 kills and 15 digs. Bianca Anderson also nabbed double-digit kills with 11 while Moore led the group with 17 digs and three aces. Downing had a big night at the net with seven blocks to pair with seven kills as Sobieralski posted 44 assists for her fifth straight 40+ assist performance.  As a team, the Screaming Eagles totaled 48 kills, 46 assists, and five aces to pair with 67 digs and eight blocks. The Golden Eagles nabbed 70 kills, 65 assists, and four aces with 73 digs and 12 blocks.  NEXT UP FOR THE EAGLES: The Eagles hit the road one last time next week when USI faces former NCAA DII and GLVC foe, Lindenwood University, on Thursday at 6 p.m. and Friday at 5 p.m. in St. Charles, Missouri. The Eagles split last year’s series with the Lions and are 5-1 against the Lindenwood since they became conference rivals in 2019.
The former vice president to Donald Trump and onetime Indiana governor had little choice but to leave the race for the White House. His fundraising had dried up. His standing in the polls, even in those states where he campaigned hard, remained small, even diminutive.
There was a decent chance that Pence wouldn’t even have qualified for the next Republican presidential debate, a fresh humiliation to be visited on a man who had known so many of them in his political career.
So, he quit.
That must have been hard.
He has wanted to be and worked to be president for so long—some sources say since high school, some say even before—that giving up after coming so close must have been painful.
I feel for him.
Even though Mike Pence and I disagree on many, many things, I always have liked the guy.
I know there are people reading this who think this isn’t—or shouldn’t be—possible. They believe that disagreements about politics or public policy make it impossible for people to like or respect each other.
That’s not the way it works for me.
Never has been and, I hope, never will.
What I have liked about Mike Pence is his courtesy. He knows that I don’t agree with him on a lot of issues—many of them big ones, several of great importance to him—but he’s never been anything other than polite and respectful in our interactions.
When he raised a point of contention between us, he always did so in a way that made discussion possible. He could listen as well as talk.
He also had the capacity to admire those with whom he did not agree. I remember once moderating an event in which he talked following a speech by the late former U.S. Rep. Andy Jacobs, D-Indiana.
Pence devoted the opening of his own address to paying tribute to Jacobs’ character and the contributions he had made to Indiana and the United States.
Pence didn’t do that because he thought he could persuade some of Jacobs’ supporters to vote for him. Pence was savvy enough to know that wouldn’t happen.
He did it because he liked and admired Andy Jacobs—and wanted to say so publicly.
There were times as he climbed the political ladder that Pence seemed to lose touch with that side of himself. He seemed to forget that his inherent likability was his greatest asset.
Maybe that’s because the time in which he rose to power became more and more partisan.
More and more bitter.
More and more angry.
This was particularly true on the right, which craved standard-bearers who find it easier to snarl than smile. Conservatives’ hunger for—and devotion to—happy warriors seemed to die with Ronald Reagan.
That left Pence in a quandary. He is not by nature an angry man.
When he tried to be, he never could sell the idea that he was seething with barely contained resentments. He never could make either friends or foes believe his rage was something to fear.
Worse, his attempts to move in the conservative cauldron of constant grievance made him seem disingenuous and inauthentic in an age that attracted to screaming incompetence, so long as it was genuinely practiced.
Enter Donald Trump.
I doubt Pence ever realized that signing on as Trump’s running mate doomed whatever chance he had of making it to the Oval Office himself. Pence cleansed and blessed Trump’s bid with the religious right, which gave Trump the narrow margin needed to secure the presidency.
In doing so, Pence traded away his own base—evangelicals now prefer the philandering former president to the devout former vice president—without gaining any footing with Trump’s followers.
Worse, Pence spent four years abasing himself doing it, supplicating before a man he had to have known was neither a good president nor a good man.
A guy who could recognize and appreciate, as Pence did, the integrity of Andy Jacobs also would know when that integrity wasn’t present.
Now, after all the sacrifices, self-denial and self-discipline, Mike Pence’s dream has come crashing down.
There are those who take glee in his failure.
I’m not among them.
I didn’t want him to be president, but I can’t take satisfaction from a decent guy’s disappointment.
And he is a decent guy.
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.
Fourteen UE Students Selected for Prestigious Scholars Program
EVANSVILLE, IND. (11/03/2023) The University of Evansville (UE) proudly announces that fourteen of its students have been selected to join the prestigious Class of 2025 Indiana AHEC Scholars Program. This highly competitive program is part of a national initiative aimed at preparing the health care professionals of tomorrow to be leaders in interprofessional, transformative practice, dedicated to serving the underserved populations of Indiana.
The Indiana AHEC Scholars program is tailored to individuals with a resolute commitment to providing health care services in rural and medically underserved communities across the state of Indiana. These dedicated students will undergo a rigorous two-year program that combines didactic training opportunities with hands-on field experiences. These experiences are specially designed to focus on both rural and urban health care, with an emphasis on caring for underserved populations.
Throughout their journey in the Indiana AHEC Scholars program, these outstanding students will engage with and integrate eight core topics:
Behavioral Health Integration
Cultural Competency & Humility
Interprofessional Practice
Practice Transformation
Social Determinants of Health
Connecting Communities and Supporting Health Professionals
Virtual Learning and Telehealth
Current/Emerging Issues (Including topics such as COVID-19, the Opioid Epidemic, and Maternal-Child Health)
“UE extends our congratulations to the exceptional students comprising the new class of Indiana AHEC Scholars,” said Dr. Andy Lampkins, Interim Dean of the College of Education and Health Sciences. “These students represent the future of health care and have demonstrated their unwavering dedication to making a positive impact in communities that need it most.”
The Class of 2025 Indiana AHEC Scholars from the University of Evansville are as follows:
Katelyn Brown – Physician Assistant
Sydney Hirt – Physician Assistant
Aubrey Lankford – Physician Assistant
Heather Mathis – Nursing
Samantha Moore – Exercise Physiology
Hannah Myers – Physician Assistant
Hannah Rawhoof – Physical Therapy
Chastity Reising – Physician Assistant
Natalie Schimp – Physician Assistant
Carlie Schultheis – Physician Assistant
Yanyu Wei – Physician Assistant
Erika Will – Physician Assistant
Kathryn Williams – Physical Therapy
Keri Zumbahlen – Physical Therapy
About the Indiana AHEC Network: Indiana AHEC Network’s mission is to improve health by recruiting, educating and retaining health care professionals in underserved communities. We work to enhance access to quality health care, primary and preventive care, by improving the supply and distribution of health care professionals through community/academic educational partnerships.
The University of Evansville is a private, comprehensive university located in the southwestern region of Indiana. Established in 1854, UE is recognized across the globe for its rich tradition of innovative, academic excellence and vibrant campus community of changemakers.
Home of the Purple Aces, UE offers over 75 majors, 17 Division I sports, and a unique study abroad experience at Harlaxton, the University’s very own Victorian manor located in the countryside of England.For more information, please visit evansville.edu.
At its regular meeting on Thursday, November 2, the University of Southern Indiana Board of Trustees approved a new Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) in Art degree within the USI College of Liberal Arts.
The Art and Design Department, within the USI College of Liberal Arts, will offer the BFA in Art featuring concentrations in graphic design, illustration, interactive media design, photography and studio art, providing students with both in-depth artistic exploration and a broad understanding of the discipline.
According to data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the concentrations within the degree are anticipated to experience employment growth rates between 4% and 8% over the next decade. This program is particularly suited for aspiring art directors, special effects artists, interior designers, graphic designers and craft/fine artists.
The BFA in Art degree will next be reviewed by the Indiana Commission for Higher Education. It is scheduled to begin instruction in Fall 2024.
In other business, the Trustees approved the conferral of degrees to candidates for 2023 Fall Commencement Exercises and approved two honorary degree recipients. Tim Mahoney, Instructor Emeritus of Economics, will receive an honorary Doctor of Business degree, and Marjorie Labhart, Instructor Emerita of Mathematics, will receive an honorary Doctor of Mathematics degree.
Mahoney will be recognized for his unwavering dedication to teaching and advising and his continuous service to the University. Labhart will be recognized for her dedication and expertise in the field of mathematics and her long-standing support of USI.
The Board also heard reports on student financial assistance and campus construction projects.