Evansville, Ind. – The Evansville Otters mounted eight hits but the comeback fizzled short in a 4-3 loss to the Gateway Grizzlies Saturday night.
Gateway jumped on Evansville early with two solo home runs in the first inning. A walk followed by a stolen base and base hit made it a three-run first for the Grizzlies.
Evansville fought back with two runs in the bottom of the first. After Noah Myers led off with a double, Dakota Phillips notched an RBI base hit while a fielder’s choice brought in one more run.
The Otters tied the game in the bottom of the fifth as Myers keyed the inning with another leadoff double. A groundout and flyout moved him around to knot the game at three.
Gateway would respond right away in the sixth, scoring the game winning run. Two base hits and a fielders’ choice were enough to score the go-ahead run.
Evansville had runners in scoring position in seven innings but stranded eight total runners with five in scoring position.
Justin Watland worked his longest outing of the season with seven innings pitched but suffered the loss allowing four runs on seven hits.
Leoni de La Cruz and Jon Beymer both worked scoreless innings, improving the Otters bullpen to a 2.36 ERA with just 24 earned runs allowed in 91.1 innings pitched.
Reyes had a base hit to move his hit streak to 10 games. Bryan Rosario notched a two-hit night along with his league leading 26th stolen base. Phillips had a second straight multi-hit night.
Evansville and Gateway face off in a series decider Sunday evening at Bosse Field. First pitch is slated for 6:35 PM CT on a Dog Days of Summer Sunday with fans encouraged to bring their dog and enjoy discounted hot dogs.
All home and road Otters games this season are televised on FloSports with audio-only coverage available for free on the Evansville Otters YouTube page.
June 19, 1978Â Created by Jim Davis of Marion, the Garfield comic strip first appears.
June 19, 1881   Henry Smith Lane died in Crawfordsville. He served in the Indiana House and Senate and the U.S. House of Representatives. In 1860, he was elected Governor of Indiana. He was Governor for two days before being sent back to Washington to serve in the U.S. Senate.
June 19, 1914   The Indiana University School of Nursing opened its doors to students. Five graduates participated in the first commencement ceremony in 1917.
June 23, 1980Â David Letterman of Indianapolis was given his own morning show on NBC, The David Letterman Show.
Our Where in Indiana from last week was a photo of the George Rogers Clark statue located on the Circle in Indianapolis.
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INDIANAPOLIS – The Indiana Department of Environmental Management (IDEM) has issued an Air Quality Action Day (AQAD) and is forecasting high ozone levels for Sunday, June 18, 2023, in the following regions:
West Central Indiana, including the cities of: Terre Haute, Lafayette, Fowler, Monticello, Delphi, Crawfordsville, Greencastle, Spencer, Sullivan, Newport, Covington
Central/East Central Indiana, including the cities of: Indianapolis, Bloomington, Kokomo, Muncie, Richmond, Brookville, Greensburg, Columbus, Martinsville, Lebanon, Frankfort
Southeast Indiana including the cities of: Jeffersonville, New Albany, Corydon, Salem, Brownstown, Versailles, Madison
Southwest Indiana, including the cities of: Evansville, Vincennes, Huntingburg, Bloomfield, Bedford, Paoli, Tell City, Rockport, Mount Vernon, Princeton
A state map including regions and affected counties is available at SmogWatch.IN.gov.Â
For today and Sunday June 18, a dry and sunny weather pattern with light and variable winds in the forecast will allow ozone to build to the level Unhealthy for Sensitive Groups (USG).
Note:Â IDEM’s AQAD forecast is based on data from ozone air quality monitors located throughout the state. IDEM encourages residents of counties within or bordering the AQAD region(s) to heed the forecast.
IDEM encourages everyone to help reduce ozone by making changes to daily habits. You can:
Drive less: carpool, use public transportation, walk, bike, or work from home when possible
Combine errands into one trip
Avoid refueling your vehicle or using gasoline-powered lawn equipment until after 7 p.m.
Keep your engine tuned, and don’t let your engine idle (e.g., at a bank or restaurant drive-thru)
Conserve energy by turning off lights and setting the thermostat to 75 degrees or above
Air Quality Action Days are in effect from midnight to 11:59 p.m. on the specified date. Anyone sensitive to changes in air quality may be affected when ozone levels are high. Children, the elderly, and anyone with heart or lung conditions should reduce or avoid exertion and heavy work outdoors.
Ground-level ozone is formed when sunlight and hot weather combine with vehicle exhaust, factory emissions, and gasoline vapors. Ozone in the upper atmosphere blocks ultraviolet radiation, but ozone near the ground is a lung irritant that can cause coughing and breathing difficulties for sensitive populations.
IDEM examines weather patterns and current ozone readings to make daily air quality forecasts. Air Quality Action Days generally occur when weather conditions such as light winds, hot and dry air, stagnant conditions, and lower atmospheric inversions trap pollutants close to the ground.
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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.
Not long after police arrested Indiana Rep. Jim Lucas, R-Seymour, on charges of driving drunk and fleeing the scene of an accident, some of his supporters started talking on social media.
Those supporters were responding to criticisms of Lucas—criticisms that included requests and demand that he resign his office. Lucas’ fans replied by saying that, should the people upset by the lawmaker’s conduct get their way and he left the legislature, they would elect someone even more extreme and irresponsible in his place.
They’re likely right about that.
Lucas, like so many Hoosier lawmakers, is the beneficiary of gerrymandering. Gerrymandering is the dark science of drawing maps of legislative districts so one political party or the other has victory all but assured.
Gerrymandering is the source of many evils. Because it runs the voters’ voice through a filter, it mutes the messages citizens send.
Over the long haul, it erodes the social contract that holds free people together.
But that’s the view from on high.
Closer to the ground, the big problem with gerrymandering is that it gives us legislators like Jim Lucas.
Long before he decided to get behind the wheel while impaired, Lucas had been a problematic presence in the public square.
From the beginning, he never made a pretense of serving or even listening to constituents who might disagree with his extremist takes on, for example, guns.
Most legislators sign their correspondence with the number of the district they represent.
Lucas signed his by proclaiming that he was a life member of the National Rifle Association, making clear from the get-go his priorities and his ultimate loyalty. He emphasized that point by belittling and berating anyone who questioned his laissez-faire attitudes toward both gun laws and the responsible use of firearms.
Then there was his social media presence.
Lord knows how many hours that man spent searching the web for racist, misogynist and antisemitic memes to post. When he posted photos of Black men being lynched, women being locked into car trunks or other inflammatory images, Lucas saw the attendant outrage as an opportunity to feel sorry for himself. Every time people complained that this was no way for a legislator—a lawmaker—to behave, Lucas whined that he was the real victim.
People were being mean to him.
And that just wasn’t fair.
If that sounds like an early adolescent take on life, well, there’s a reason for that.
Jim Lucas always has seen holding public office—and maybe living life in general—as a kind of adolescent fantasy, one in which he could exercise authority that was unencumbered by accountability or responsibility.
During the 2022 campaign, someone sent me—anonymously, of course—the records dealing with Lucas’ divorce. Those records showed that Lucas invoked the Fifth Amendment—the one offering protection against self-incrimination—multiple times during the divorce proceedings.
I checked to see if the records were genuine. They were.
Then I called several divorce lawyers I know to see if it was common for someone to invoke protections against criminal prosecution in a divorce, which is a civil proceeding.
I’ll save you from having to do the legwork: It isn’t common at all.
Having a lawmaker do it just adds to the oddity.
That’s why this latest Lucas episode isn’t surprising.
On May 31, Lucas lost control of his truck while driving on Indiana Highway 11. He careened down an embankment onto I-65, taking out a couple of guardrails in the process, and then drove the wrong way on the interstate entrance ramp to get back to the state highway.
He coaxed his vehicle three miles with only one functioning tire—two were down to the rims and the other was flat—and then parked it behind a commercial building. When the police found him walking not far from where he’d ditched his truck, he smelled of alcohol. He told the officers he’d parked his ride there not to hide it but to prevent the business from losing customers.
What a considerate fellow.
His blood alcohol level, by the way, was nearly 25% over the legal limit.
Lucas received a slap on the wrist for this offense, which, while saying he won’t resign, he called “a hiccup.â€
He’s probably right about that.
Thanks to the dubious kindnesses of gerrymandering, Lucas likely will remain in the legislature, a lawmaker with little regard for the law or the responsibilities associated with leadership.
Ain’t God good to Indiana?
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