The BG News May 4, 1967
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Federal Hill Commons Event Parking Request
TODAY’S WEATHER Saturday, June 17, 2017 Today: Partly sunny. Slight shower and storm chances, mainly in the afternoon. Sheridan, Noblesville, Cicero, Arcadia, Tonight: Increasing chances of showers and storms by late evening. Atlanta, Carmel, Fishers, Westfield LIKE & FOllOW US! HIGH: 88 LOW: 72 Federal Hill Commons event parking request The REPORTER The City of Noblesville and Nobles- ville Main Street are asking patrons to be mindful of where they park when at- tending events at Federal Hill Commons. Since the park’s grand opening on May 13, officials have noticed that nearby pri- vate parking lots are being used instead of larger public lots. “We want to encourage people to use the Riverview Health overflow lot direct- ly across from Federal Hill Commons so normal business operations can contin- ue in the private parking lots around the park. A police officer is stationed at the intersection of Conner Street and Indiana 19 to assist pedestrians in crossing,” said Noblesville Parks Director Brandon Ben- nett. “We appreciate our neighbors being understanding, but we want to make sure we are not intruding on their businesses during events because there is plenty of parking opportunities in public spaces.” To ensure patrons have the opportu- nity to park and shop at those businesses, “No Event Parking” signs will be placed at the entrances to the private parking lot north of Logan Street (which includes Kroger) starting today. “Demand for the Farmers Market has steadily increased each of the last three years. Seeing attendance at an all-time high, we’ve been monitoring traffic with staff from Noblesville Parks and the No- blesville Police Department,” said Chris Owens, chief executive officer of No- blesville Main Street. -
The Tipoff (Jan. 2012)
BASKETBALL TIMES Visit: www.usbwa.com January 2012 VOLUME 49, NO. 2 Time tells us that history will keep taking twists and turns RALEIGH, N.C. – In college basketball and sports- lar knockout in the conso- writing, you never know how things will turn out. lation game the next night. I certainly had no idea back in March 1966, before I Terry Holland remembers had a serious inkling about going into journalism or even fellow Davidson assistant a driver’s license. I caught a ride with an equally obsessed Warren Mitchell telling Dri- Lenox Rawlings friend and traveled to Reynolds Coliseum for the NCAA esell that he needed another East Regional, a Friday-Saturday whirlwind that propelled timeout. Lefty responded, Winston-Salem Journal Duke toward the Final Four. more or less: “Timeout, The regional unfolded on N.C. State’s gleaming heck. I’m so embarrassed I wood floor under an I-beam skeleton obscured by the fog would like to crawl under President of cigarette smoke. The smoke grew thicker by the hour, the floor. Let that clock run competing for sensory attention with popcorn smells from and let’s get our butts out of machines about 40 feet off the court. here.” Lefty Driesell, the flamboyant young Davidson coach, In the final, Duke coach Vic Bubas rode strong per- black starters, beat the all-white outfit nicknamed “Rupp’s stomped his big feet and flapped his jaws. The Saint Jo- formances from Bob Verga (the outstanding player with Runts.” Black players had decided several earlier champi- seph’s Hawk flapped its wings incessantly – such a tough 21 points on 10-for-13 shooting), Jack Marin, Mike Lewis onships, with Bill Russell and K.C. -
University of Denver Leadership Message
UNIVERSITYUNIVERSITY OFOF DENVERDENVER LEADERSHIPLEADERSHIP MESSAGEMESSAGE OverOver the the past past century century and and a half,a half, DU DU has has established established a prouda proud history history of ofdedication dedication to toboth both academicacademic and and athletic athletic excellence. excellence. TheThe Pioneer’s Pioneers’ great great athletic athletic tradition tradition includes includes many many noteworthy noteworthy achievements, achievements, not not least least win win- - ningning the the Division Division I-AAA I-AAA Learfield Learfield Sports Sports Directors’ Directors’ Cup Cup in insix nineof the of lastthe lastseven 10 years.years. ThisThis recogrecogni- - nitiontion asas the the nation’s nation’s best best athletics athletics program program among among Division Division I schoolsI schools without without football football in in2014, 2017, 2013,2016, 2011, 2015, 2010, 2014, 2009 2013, and 2011, 2008 2010, is 2009a tremendous and 2008 accomplishment. is a tremendous Addingaccomplishment. 29 NCAA Adding Cham- 32 pionships,NCAA Championships,113 Individual NCAA 118 Individual Championships, NCAA Championships,152 NCAA Tournament 181 NCAA Appearances, Tournament 351 Appear All- - Americans,ances, 428 774 All-Americans, All-Conference 1,022 Honors, All-Conference 74 Conference Honors, Championships, 100 Conference 65 Championships, Conference Coaches 82 Con - of ferencethe Year, Coaches 4 National of the Coaches Year, 8 ofNational the Year Coaches and 58 ofOlympians the Year andshows 61 ourOlympians history toshows be one our filled history withto achievementbe one filled atwith an achievementelite level. at an elite level. TheThe University University is isequally equally proud proud of of the the tremendous accomplishments ofof itsits student-athletes student-athletes in in the theclassroom classroom and and of of our our academic academic standing standing among among fellow fellow NCAA NCAA institutions. -
Vance Hartke Attacks News Media
VOL. IV. No- 18THEServing theOBSERVER. Notre Dame and Saint Mary's College Community THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1969 Vance Hartke attacks news media by Mark Nelson In a news conference held traffic controllers are working before the speech, Hartke said under too much stress and Vance Hartke, Democratic he would vote against strain. U.S. Senator from Indiana, confirmation of Judge Clement T he larg est increase in spoke yesterday in the Memorial H a y n sw o rth to th e U.S. unemployment for one month Library Auditorium on the Supreme Court, joining Indiana’s since 1961 “is the bitter fruit of inadequacies of the news media. other Senator, Birch Bayh, who the Nixon Administration’s Senator Hartke, sponsored by has been leading the opposition misguided economic policies.” the Student Union Academic to the nomination. The Student Union Academic Commission, attacked the news Hartke told the news Commission has also scheduled media for its shallow coverage in conference that the nomination talks by Edward Teller and New reporting local and national is in serious danger and that he York Senator Charles Goodell in events. sees the controversy as a the near future. Hartke said, “Radio, non-partisan issue. Goodell will speak Friday at television, and newspaper The Indiana senator also said: 3:00 in the Stepan Center, and coverage treat breaking news There will be more in-flight Teller, developer of the events as one would view an air collisions such as the Sept. 9 hydrogen bomb, will speak iceberg: the underlying part of crash near Indianapolis which October 16 at 8:00 in the library the story, which is the most killed 83 persons. -
IUPUI (10-20) Nov
MBB Contact: Ed Holdaway Twitter: @EdHoldaway [email protected] 1000 Waterway Blvd. (O): 317-274-2725 Indianapolis, IN 46202 (C): 317-908-2645 www.IUPUIJags.com 2014-15 MEN’S BASKETBALL GAME NOTES SCHEDULE/RESULTS ‘03 ncaa tournament, 2010 CBI (10-20, 6-10 SUMMIT) Oral roberts (17-13) vs. Date Opponent Result/Time Nov. 5 # IU South Bend W, 80-60 Nov. 14 Indiana State L, 66-79 (ot) IUPUI (10-20) Nov. 16 at Purdue L, 57-77 Sunday, March 8 - 9:30 pm ET - Denny Sanford PREMIER Center (10,200) - Sioux Falls, S.D. Nov. 19 at Milwaukee W, 70-68 INSIDE THE GAME Nov. 22 Ball State W, 71-69 (ot) Nov. 25 at Drake L, 60-73 IUPUI Jaguars Oral Roberts Golden Eagles Nov. 29 Georgia State L, 63-66 Record: .......................................10-20, 6-10 Summit Record: .......................................17-13, 10-6 Summit Dec. 6 at Evansville L, 62-89 Last Game: .......................L, 80-87 (2ot) vs. Omaha Last Game: ................................W, 60-57 vs. Denver Dec. 9 at Xavier L, 43-66 Head Coach: ....................................... Jason Gardner Head Coach: ...........................................Scott Sutton Dec. 13 Eastern Kentucky L, 64-73 Career Record: ...........................10-20 (1st season) Career Record: ...................304-206 (16th season) Dec. 15 ^ at Howard L, 47-57 IUPUI Record: .......................................................same ORU Record: ..........................................................same Dec. 20 ^ South Alabama W, 71-65 (ot) Last 5 / Last 10: ............................................ 2-3 / 3-7 Last 5 / Last 10: ............................................ 3-2 / 7-3 Top Scorer: ............Marcellus Barksdale (9.7 ppg) Top Scorer: ......................Obi Emegano (18.1 ppg) Dec. 23 ^ at Richmond L, 53-57 Top Rebounder: ........DavRon Williams (6.0 rpg) Top Rebounder: ..............Korey Billbury (7.4 rpg) Dec. -
The Cowl Tickets Providence Today I College
Subscriber's Address NIT THE COWL TICKETS PROVIDENCE TODAY I COLLEGE VOL. XXIX, No. 13 PROVIDENCE COLLEGE, PROVIDENCE, R. I., MARCH 8, 1967 EIGHT PAGES New Services Offered Controversial Election; By Counseling Center Congress Stand Upheld Controversy arose over the further recommended that the one of the candidates was on The Counseling Center has an• 7. Maintenance and transpor• eligibility of the Student Con• amendment make provision spe• "disciplinary probation" was not nounced that, in cooperation tation during treatment or train• gress president-elect, Monday, cifically for disciplinary proba• discovered at the time of the with the State of Rhode Island ing. when the fact came to light that tion, mental instability and a election. The Congress rules Department of Education Di• 8. Tools, equipment, licenses, Mr. Dunphy is presently on dis• criminal record as disqualifying concerning elections state that vision of Vocational Rehabilita• or initial stocks and supplies to ciplinary probation. factors for candidacy. a candidate must have a 2.0 in• tion, many services shall be start a client in a small business. The charge of ineligibility At the Student Congress meet• dex and a personal record ap• available to Providence College 9. Help in placement in a job was investigated by the acting ing the validity of the election proved by the Office of Student students who are legal residents commensurate with the indi• chairman of the Ways and was upheld unanimously on a Affairs. This has been tradition• of Rhode Island. vidual's physical and mental Means Committee and the Ex• voice vote. However, later in ally understood to mean a can• Any or all of the following capacities. -
Where Not to Shop in Stevens Point
------------------------------------------------ ....n • THE POINTER Mor~h 9, 1978 Vol. ii No.26 Ground Control to ·Major Tom: Giving free rein to a chancellor's flights of fancy _ By George Leopold Long after we students leave this institution of higher learning and go on to make our mark on the "real world, " our beloved alma mater will continue to evolve and grow in innumerable ways. Just exactly how and when these changes take place is the concern of a group of UWSP faculty and staff who are members ;::r-. of the Campus Master Plan Committee; or, as the man in the red vest calls it, "the university dream committee." The be sure, the recently · formed committee is made up of some of the finest "dreamers" that Chancellor Lee Dreyfus could assemble. Yet, after talking with several committee members, it seems clear that the whole idea of formulating a "master plan" to chart future physical development of the university is really a task for all of us. Indeed, one member advised that at this point, the "dream" committee "desperately needs ideas" from students and faculty, no matter how "off the -f wall." One can be reasonably certain that this ~----~t) no-holds-barred approach was what the chancellor had in mind when he suggested ' that development of a master plan for the university of the 1990's· and beyond "might involve looking at some aspects of places like Disneyland." Continued on ·p. 12 Page z March 9, 1978 ~POIMER UIEWPOIDT Housing code revisions jeopardize security deposits as its sole supporter. The shortage of available leased housing landlords and license revocation for habitual violators. -
Era Record Fifth Cycle of GOP Dominance Stresses the Statehouse Process by BRIAN A
V26, N32 Thursday, April 15, 2021 Deep into the ‘Super Majority’ era Record fifth cycle of GOP dominance stresses the Statehouse process By BRIAN A. HOWEY INDIANAPOLIS – In the state’s 205th year, we are now in the “Super Majority Era” of governance. While there have been 20 Democratic House and Senate super majorities, and 49 for Republicans over the past two centuries, never have these decks been stacked like they are today with both chambers a deep House Speaker Todd Huston (left) and Senate President Pro Tem Rod Bray crimson red for the past four cycles. have had to lead super majority GOP caucuses since taking their helms. According to former speakers Brian 21 sine die, Huston and Bray are attempting to shepherd Bosma and John Gregg, current Speaker Todd Huston and their super majority caucuses (39 in the Senate, 71 in the Senate President Pro Tempore Rod Bray are working with House) on an array of issues that could alter the state’s fu- caucuses that are too big. As the General Assembly heads toward an April Continued on page 3 The book of Pence By JACK COLWELL SOUTH BEND – We know some things about the autobiography former Vice President Mike Pence is writing. We know the title won’t be one of those suggested by the late-night TV hosts or on Twitter. “There just seems to be no Some of those suggestions: “I Did It His Way.” “Lord of the Flies.” “Thank you, balance anymore in this build- Sir. Can I Have Another?” Nor will ing.” there be, as Jimmy Fallon sug- gests, a chapter on “how his boss - State Sen. -
The Cowl Providence I College
Subscriber's Address THE COWL PROVIDENCE I COLLEGE VOL. XXIX, No. 8 PROVIDENCE COLLEGE, PROVIDENCE, R. I., DECEMBER 7, 1966 TEN PAGES Mr. Robert M. Purich Appointed Seniors Named To Director of Admissions Post To Who's Who Mr. Robert M. Purich has better than anyone will be able to all concerned this past year Thirty-three Providence Col• large enough to give a well- been appointed Director of Ad• to." attempting to hold two offices, lege seniors were nominated last rounded representation of the missions at Providence College. Religious Superior and Director A great deal of Mr. Purich's week to be listed in the public• student body, small enough to He will replace Father Royal of Admissions. With a large time will be spent on the road ation "Who's Who Among Stu• confine nominations to an excep• J. Gardner, O.P., who will de• community of eighty-seven Do• speaking to various high school dents in American Universities tional group of students, and vote more of his time to his minicans, there are many du• groups. Father Halton, the and Colleges." based upon current enrollment. position as Prior of the Domini• Dean of Freshmen, will help ties which are definitely full can religious community. time responsibilities." Father "Who's Who Among Students" A "Who's Who" student will him to do this. is an annual directory of dis• Mr. Purich, who graduated Gardner explained. have his name and a sketch of Mr. Purich said that he hoped tinguished students selected from Providence College in his personal and college record to carry on the same procedures from colleges throughout Amer• listed in the annual publication as his two predecessors, Fa• ica. -
Basketball Teams Take Holiday Break Until Dec. 30
VOLUME XVIII, NO. 20 KINGSVILLE, TEXAS 78363 DEC. 20, 2017 Basketball Teams Take Holiday Break Until Dec. 30 The Texas A&M-Kingsville (Eisenhower), leads the team men’s and women’s basketball rebounding with 5.4 pulldowns a teams are on a break for the game. holidays and won’t return to Angelica Wilson, 6-1 senior action until Dec. 30. forward from San Diego, Calif., is The Javelina men were 9-2 the statistical leader for the Javelina overall going into a Tuesday night women, scoring 7.9 points a game game with St. Mary’s in the and getting 8.4 rebounds. Steinke Center. Tatyana McFarland, 5-11 The squad is 2-0 in the Lone junior guard from Riverside, Calif., Star Conference standings. averages 7.5 rebounds an outing. The Javelina women were 3-7 The Javelina men return to overall and 0-3 in the LSC going into a the court Dec. 30 in an LSC Tuesday night league matchup with contest with Midwestern State. Midwestern State in the SPEC. The women will be hosting St. Trey Sumpter, 6-6 junior guard/ Edward’s in a non-conference forward from Birmingham, Ala., matchup when they resume play leads the Javelinas in scoring with a on Dec. 30. Honor Graduate 12.2 average and he is second in Mariah Noyola, track and field rebounding with a 5.2 average. athlete from Harlingen (South), was graduated summa cum Jacolby Harris, 6-2 junior laude, with highest honor, last guard from Delray, Fla., is weekend. She received a bach- averaging 9.7 points a game. -
Blau Illa Ttrijf Fitf R Leutuinn Iu Rra U I Make Today
IfV • , Y’. • ‘ A PAGE TWENTY-EIGHT - MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. Manchester. Conn.. Fri., Dec. 8,1872 The Weather ABOUT service project. All area Pi Congregational Church, will be participation in the 11 a.m. United Methodist Chnrdi will Phis are invited to attend. OB radio station worship service at Center meet at the church. Days Rain likely tonight and TOWN WPOP 8 Sunday morning Congregational Church. TH illattrIjFfitFr lEuTuinn iUrraUi Sunday with some fog. Low The Executive Board of the program “ Sunday ’Through the tonight in the 30s - high Sunday Manchester Newcomers Club Valley” this w eerThe M e e tin g s at Center Christmas! in the 30s. The Manchester Area Alumni wUl meet Monday at 8 p.m. at program is broadcast from 7 to Second Congregational Congregational Church on Mon Club of P i Beta Phi will boM its the home of Mrs. Frank 7:30 a.m. The Rev. Mr. Church will hold a chapel day include the Mothers Club, 8 MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 9, ,1972 VOL. XCII, No. 59 MANCHESTER — A City of Village Chcrm Christmas meeting on Monday Livingston, 217 Ralph Rd., Simpson will also appear on prayer meeting Monday at 9:30 p.m. in the Robbins Room; the at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Manchester. Channel 3 at 9 - 9:80 a.m. a.m. " Loyal ( ^ l e , 6:30 p.m. in the Austin Morris, 11 Madison Rd., Sunday on an interview Federation Room; and the Enfield. The program will The Rev. Clifford Slifpson, program entitled “ Santa Claus On Monday at 7 p.m. -
11-12-16 (Grand Canyon).Indd
2016-17 Game Notes #1/1 Duke (1-0, 0-0) vs. Grand Canyon (0-0, 0-0) 2 Saturday, November 12, 2016 // 5:30 p.m. ET // RSN Durham, N.C. // Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314) 2016-17 SCHEDULE DUKE INFORMATION THE OPENING TIP BASKETBALL HALL OF FAME TIP-OFF Duke (CAMERON INDOOR STADIUM - DURHAM, N.C.) • Duke faces Grand Canyon on Saturday, less than N11 [1/-] MARIST (ACCN EXTRA) W, 94-49 Blue Devils 24 hours after posting a 94-49 win over Marist N12 [1/-] GRAND CANYON (RSN) 5:30 P.M. ET to open the season. Record 1-0 (0-0 ACC) State Farm Champions Classic Rankings (AP/Coaches) 1/1 • Duke held Marist to .231 shooting from the fl oor (Madison Square Garden - New York, N.Y.) Last Game W, 94-49 vs. Marist (11/11/16) and .120 from the arc, while outrebounding the N15 [-/-] vs. Kansas (ESPN) 9:30 p.m. ET Red Foxes by 23, on Friday night. Head Coach Mike Krzyzewski (Army, ‘69) Basketball Hall of Fame Tip-Off Career Record 1,044-321/42nd Season • Duke ranks fourth in NCAA history in both (Mohegan Sun Arena - Uncasville, Conn.) Duke Record 971-262/37th Season wins (2,088) and winning percentage (.707). N19 [-/-] vs. Penn State (ACCN Extra) 12:30 p.m. ET N20 [-/-] vs. Cincinnati/Rhode Island (TBD) TBD • Duke is ranked No. 1 in both the preseason OPPONENT INFORMATION AP and USA Today Coaches polls. It marks N23 [-/-] WILLIAM & MARY (ESPNU) 7 P.M. ET the eighth time in program history that the N26 [-/-] APPALACHIAN STATE (RSN) 12:00 P.M.