Evansville, INDIANA – Jagoe Homes has announced Goldfinch Cove, a new community on Evansville’s Northeast side.
Goldfinch Cove will be an excellent place to call home, offering the luxury of tranquil living with a sense of suburban life in Northeast Evansville. Area schools include the North High School District, along with shopping, restaurants, and Evansville Regional Airport nearby.
Traveling North on I-69, take the Boonville-New Harmony Road exit. Turn left (west) onto Boonville-New Harmony Road and continue to Green River Road. Turn left (south) onto Green River Road, and Goldfinch Cove will be located on the east side of Green River Road, north of Huebner Lane.
Your dream home will be just minutes away, with quick access to I-69 and Hwy. 57. Nearby activities include Deaconess Sports Park, McCutchanville Park, Vanderburgh 4-H Center, and Blue Grass Fish & Wildlife Area.
Jagoe Homes prides itself on providing an atmosphere of worry-free living, creating more time for relaxation, family, and all the other important areas of your life. All new Jagoe Homes are built ENERGY SMART and TECH SMART and include a 2/10 Home Buyers Warranty.
Prospective Homebuyers and Realtors interested in this new community are encouraged to sign-up for the Jagoe Homes priority email list to inform you first of:
Updates on Community Progress
Floorplans and Options
Pricing
Available Home Sites
Sign up for the Jagoe Homes priority email list by visiting JagoeHomes.com.
Among them was a CD of John Mellencamp’s album, “Strictly a One-Eyed Jack,†which was just out.
We both had been fans of Mellencamp and Bruce Springsteen for decades. The two singer-songwriters had been linked for 40 years, with Mellencamp at times being dismissed as the Midwestern—and therefore lesser—answer to the bard from New Jersey.
“Strictly a One-Eyed Jack†featured something new, the first collaborations of the two artists. My brother had been eager to hear the album.
I offered to play it for him on my phone with a portable sound system.
My brother, though, was old school. He never cared much for streaming and preferred to listen to his music the way he always had. He asked me to leave the CD at his home so he could enjoy it when he got out of the hospital.
He never made it back home.
He died before he got to hear it.
After my brother’s death, I listened to “Strictly a One-Eyed Jack†over and over, in an almost endlessly looping rotation. Many of the songs dealt with themes of reflection, regret and remorse, all of which suited and spoke to my mood.
Mellencamp’s music at times became the voice of my grief. Listening to his album became one way I came to terms with losing my younger brother.
The songs Mellencamp did with Springsteen—“Wasted Days†and “Did You Say Such a Thing?â€â€”received the most attention.
And deservedly so.
Both songs were poignant explorations of the ways life and experience mark us, how we are shaped by the things we touch and that touch us and how life often slips past us while we’re worried about other things.
I really liked those songs, but the one on the album that haunted me was “Gone So Soonâ€:
“Getting back close to you
“I always thought I’d be close to you
“I never dreamed I’d see the day
“That you would go away
“And be gone so soon
“And be gone so soon.â€
When my brother and I first started listening to Mellencamp all those years ago, his voice was a raspy tenor. Time and years of smoking had coarsened and deepened it, turning it into an earthy growl—the perfect instrument for communicating hurt, befuddlement and rage.
I’d talked with my brother about how odd it was that an artist I didn’t know somehow managed to sing, through the years, something resembling my autobiography.
Mellencamp’s early work captured the sense of my early manhood. He summed up all the questing, the confusion, and the sheer hunger to see and experience life that accompanied coming of age in the Midwest.
As Mellencamp and I both grew older, his music began to delve into more mature themes. He struggled to make peace with notions of responsibility—marital, familial, social and moral—in a world where many people had begun to believe they owed nothing to each other.
Not surprisingly, as my brother battled the cancer that would kill him, autumnal themes preoccupied him. He told me once as we ate dinner together that he thought about death all the time. It troubled him that so few people seemed willing to discuss the end that awaits us all.
He thought about the course of his life and talked with me about the choices he’d made, the twists and turns his path had taken.
After he died, among the myriad things I wished he’d lived long enough to experience was that of listening to Mellencamp’s album. The singer’s sometimes wry, sometimes rueful long view would have spoken to my brother.
But my brother didn’t have a chance to listen to it.
One thing I’ve realized in the aftermath of his passing is that those who survive owe a duty to the dead—a duty to remember, to reflect and at times just to experience.
John Mellencamp has a new album out. It’s called “Orpheus Descendingâ€â€”a reference to the poet in Greek mythology who almost rescues his departed wife from Hades through the enticing power of his art.
My brother won’t be able to hear that one, either.
I’ll do the listening for both of us.
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.
Evansville, Ind. – The Evansville Otters quieted the Gateway Grizzlies to just four hits and one run in a 4-1 rubber match victory Sunday evening at Bosse Field.
Parker Brahms earned his first win of the season, holding Gateway to just one run on three hits over six innings.
Kevin Davis and Jon Beymer continued the pitching dominance, closing out the series win.
Davis worked an inning and a third scoreless. Beymer found the last out of the eighth before earning his first professional save in the ninth.
Offensively, the Otters used the long ball. George Callil hit his second home run of the season in the third inning to give Evansville a 1-0 lead.
After a fourth inning Gateway homer, the Otters’ Ethan Skender responded with a solo blast off the second row of billboards in left field to retake the lead.
Evansville found insurance in the sixth on a Jomar Reyes RBI double down the left field line. The Otters added one more in the eighth as Kona Quiggle knocked a triple that bounced off the Grizzlies right fielders’ glove. Quiggle scored the Otters final run on a passed ball.
Evansville held Gateway, the top scoring offense in the Frontier League, to a season low six total runs over the three game series.
Reyes’ double extended his hit streak to 11 games, tied for the second longest streak of any Otter this season. Jeffrey Baez had his team leading 11th multi-hit game of the season.
After a scheduled Monday off day, Evansville continues the homestand opening up a three-game series against the Frontier League East first place Sussex County Miners on Tuesday as part of Fifth Third Bank Family Night.
Families of four can receive four general admission tickets, four hot dogs, four bags of chips and four drinks all for $40 ($55 value). First pitch is slated for 6:35 PM CT.
The Shield, the University of Southern Indiana’s student-run newspaper, was awarded multiple honors by the Indiana Collegiate Press Association (ICPA) as part of its 2023 Spring Contest. Â
Overall publication awards were determined by the results of individual award winners from each participating organization.Â
“The students of The Shield staff represent some of the hardest working, passionate and determined among us, and these awards speak to the fruits of that labor,†says Ben Luttrull, Student Publication Manager/Advisor and Instructor in Journalism. “Not only is this a celebration of their effort, it confirms the USI community benefits from high-quality, professional journalism and a robust, strong student press. I’m extremely proud of the entire staff and am thrilled to see them build on this for years to come.”Â
Listed below are Online, DII Newspaper and Advertising awards. Please note, ICPA does not use NCAA divisions for its awards. For the purpose of the Newspaper category, awards are based on enrollment. The Non-Newspaper categories (Online and Advertising) are not separated by division. All institutions compete in these categories. Â
OnlineÂ
Use of Social Media: Second PlaceÂ
Special Presentation, USI to go Division I: Second PlaceÂ
Online Publication of the Year: Third PlaceÂ
Online Publication of the Year: Third PlaceÂ
Email Newsletter: First and Third PlaceÂ
DII NewspaperÂ
Feature Page Design, Maliah White: First PlaceÂ
Sports Page Design, Maliah White: First PlaceÂ
Informational Graphic, Maliah White: First PlaceÂ
Cover Design, Maliah White and Quinton Watt: Second PlaceÂ
Overall Design, Maliah White: Second PlaceÂ
Feature Reporting, Tegan Ruhl: Third PlaceÂ
Staff Editorial, Shelby Clark: Third PlaceÂ
Editorial Cartoon, Elizabeth Harris: Third PlaceÂ
AdvertisingÂ
Display Ad, Kyla Dagaton: First PlaceÂ
Electronic House Ad, staff: Second PlaceÂ
General Media Kit/Marketing Package, The Shield Business Team and Shelby Clark: Second PlaceÂ
House Ad, staff: Third PlaceÂ
“The student staff at The Shield is so honored and proud to represent the University of Southern Indiana. Our mission, as The Shield, is to serve the students and the campus community with factual information, entertaining content and a forum for discussions that reflect their unique interests and ideas,†says Shelby Clark, Editor-in-Chief of The Shield. “As the University’s independent student publication, The Shield is completely student-led and operated. These awards are the direct result of student vision, labor and dedication to excellence and servitude. We are humbled and honored to serve the campus community.â€Â
For a full list of 2023 ICPA Spring Contest results, visit ICPAconnect.org.Â
###
Founded in 1965, the University of Southern Indiana enrolls nearly 9,200 dual credit, undergraduate, graduate and doctoral students in more than 130 areas of study. A public higher education institution, located on a beautiful 1,400-acre campus in Evansville, Indiana, USI offers programs through the College of Liberal Arts, Romain College of Business, College of Nursing and Health Professions, and the Pott College of Science, Engineering, and Education. The University offers study-abroad opportunities in more than 60 countries and hosts international students from around the globe. USI is a Carnegie Foundation Community Engaged University and offers continuing education and special programs to more than 15,000 participants annually through Outreach and Engagement. USI is online at USI.edu.Â
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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.
Father’s Day is dedicated not only to fathers but also to father figures who shape our minds and play a vital role in giving wings to our dreams.
Fathers are our first love, the last hero of our life, who teaches strength in silence and since the value of a loving father has no price, it is commemorated in most parts of the world on the third Sunday of June as Father’s Day.
This year, Father’s Day will be celebrated on June 18, 2023. This day is dedicated to all the fathers around the world. Father’s Day is celebrated to express one’s respect and love for fathers and to cherish the father figures in one’s life.
Father’s Day Date in India and the World
The celebration of Father’s Day varies from country to country. In about 70 countries, including India, the day is celebrated on the third Sunday of June and this Father’s Day celebrating on June 18. Many other countries have different dates to celebrate Father’s Day for different reasons. Check out some of them below:
In Portugal, Italy and Spain, Father’s Day is celebrated on March 19 when the Catholic Church celebrates Saint Joseph’s Day.
In Taiwan, Father’s Day is celebrated on August 8, as the pronunciation of the date in their dialect is similar to the word daddy.
Father’s Day Date in India and the World
The celebration of Father’s Day varies from country to country. In about 70 countries, including India, the day is celebrated on the third Sunday of June and this Father’s Day celebrating on June 18. Many other countries have different dates to celebrate Father’s Day for different reasons. Check out some of them below:
In Portugal, Italy and Spain, Father’s Day is celebrated on March 19 when the Catholic Church celebrates Saint Joseph’s Day.
In Taiwan, Father’s Day is celebrated on August 8, as the pronunciation of the date in their dialect is similar to the word daddy.
At the initiative of President Lyndon Johnson, starting in 1966, Father’s Day was celebrated on the third Sunday of June. In 1972, President Richard Nixon signed a presidential proclamation to officially declare the third Sunday of June as Father’s Day and over the years it started being celebrated in other countries too.
Father’s Day 2023: Significance and Celebration
As we welcome this wonderful event on June 18 this year, a small act of love from your side can please him beyond comparison. Father’s Day is all about showing respect to the Father, his love, and his sacrifice. It is to celebrate a father’s contribution to the upbringing of a child, which is often overlooked.
So, what are you waiting for? Go ahead and remind your dad how grateful you are for having him.