White House Overdue To Declassify Lab Leak Intel As Blinken Meets With Xi
Vanderburgh County Health Department and NAACP Evansville Branch Announce Community Lead Screening
(Evansville, Indiana) The Vanderburgh County Health Department and NAACP Evansville Branch, #3048-B announce our joint community health initiative, “Get the Lead Out,†an opportunity for families with at-risk children to become more informed about lead exposure and its consequences, to be screened for lead, and to receive essential information for following up on results.
Many in the community know of the risks from lead through exposure to paint chips or dust in houses built before 1978. But there are other ways families have been exposed. Lead poisoning has had devastating effects on children and families in Flint, Michigan, for instance, as a result of poor decision-making and systemic biases. Locally many in the Jacobsville area of Evansville have seen the Superfund effort to remove contaminated soil from yards and lots over the past decade, again a result of decisions made not by those living in those homes but by business and civic leadership decades ago. We at NAACP Evansville Branch and the Vanderburgh County Health Department take seriously our charge to elevate health equity and environmental justice.
Lead is a heavy metal used for centuries for a number of purposes, including plumbing, and in the past century as a fuel-additive. Lead is relatively easy to extract and use for industrial purposes. But lead is not easy on the human body. Lead plays NO role in normal human metabolism and is, in fact, toxic. Acute lead poisoning can result in muscle pain, weakness, difficulty concentrating, abdominal pain, constipation, anemia, and seizures. Lead exposure is potentially devastating, especially for young children, whose brain development can be critically harmed by the metal. It was only in the late 20th century that compelling evidence on lead’s harmful effects finally resulted into policy change. Communities are still dealing with the legacy of lead contamination across much of the environment.
Why does screening for lead matter? Â There are several risk factors in addition to the age of the home in which a family presently resides. Despite the various symptoms some may show from lead exposure, many children with elevated lead levels may look and act healthy. Identifying those cases and taking corrective steps may prevent long-term health consequences. While lead screening is recommended for all children under 7 years of age and while Medicaid requires screening for all participating children at 1 and 2 years, there are still families who may have not had updated testing.
We recognize some families may have not had the chance for well-child visits lately for many reasons, including the pandemic. This community screening event sponsored by VCHD and Evansville Branch NAACP and hosted by Zion Missionary Baptist Church is the opportunity for all families to be checked.
This free event will be 6 pm on JUNE 15 2023 at Zion Missionary Baptist Church. Advanced registration/parental consent is encouraged. Vanderburgh County Health Department staff will be there to answer additional questions you may have about potential lead exposure. On-site testing will be provided for eligible children and results will go to the parent/caregiver within minutes.
The health department will notify doctors’ offices of test results and coordinate with families on follow-up for any abnormal results. NAACP Evansville Branch Health Committee will also be there to hear the family’s additional concerns and connect them with the advocacy work of the NAACP.
Families interested in having their child tested at the event should complete the online consent form –
USDA FOOD INSPECTION RECALL
BCI Foods Inc. Recalls Chicken Noodle Soup Products Produced without Benefit of Import Reinspection
BCI Foods Inc., the importer of record located in Saint-Hyacinthe, Quebec, Canada, is recalling approximately 13,561 pounds of chicken noodle soup products that were not presented for import reinspection into the United States.
Distribuidora El Paisano Import, LLC, a distributor and the importer of record located in Providence, R.I., is recalling approximately 1,715 pounds of imported ready-to-eat pork rind product that was imported from Guatemala, a country ineligible to export meat products to the United States.
CRAIG FERGUSON RETURNS TO VICTORY THEATRE
CRAIG FERGUSON RETURNS TO VICTORY THEATRE ON NOV 9THÂ
TICKETS GO ON SALE FRIDAY, JUNE 23 @10AM
Evansville, IN– Craig Ferguson returns to the Victory Theatre with his “The Fancy Rascal Tour†on Nov 9th! Tickets are on sale Friday, June 23 @ 10 AM! Craig Ferguson (born 17 May 1962) is a Scottish-American comedian, actor, writer, and television host. He is best known for hosting the CBS late-night talk show The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson (2005–2014), for which he won a Peabody Award in 2009 for his interview with South African archbishop Desmond Tutu that year. He also hosted the syndicated game show Celebrity Name Game (2014–2017), for which he won two Daytime Emmy Awards, and Join or Die with Craig Ferguson (2016) on History. In 2017 he released a six-episode web show with his wife, Megan Wallace Cunningham, titled Couple Thinkers.
After starting his career in the UK with music, comedy, and theatre, Ferguson moved to the US, where he appeared in the role of Nigel Wick on the ABC sitcom The Drew Carey Show (1996–2004). Ferguson has written three books: Between the Bridge and the River, a novel; American on Purpose, a memoir; and Riding the Elephant: A Memoir of Altercations, Humiliations, Hallucinations & Observations. He holds both British and American citizenship.
He has written and starred in three films, directing one of them, and has appeared in several others. In animated films, he provided the voices of Gobber in the How to Train Your Dragon film series (2010–2019), Owl in Winnie the Pooh (2011), and Lord Macintosh in Brave (2012).
Tickets may be purchased at Ford Center Ticket Office or www.Ticketmaster.com
For more information about the Victory Theatre, visit:
www.victorytheatre.com www.facebook.com/VictoryTheatre www.twitter.com/Victory_Theatre
Miners edge out Otters in extras
Sussex County used back-to-back base hits and an error, all with two outs to score the tying run in the ninth inning.
A hit batter and base hit nearly gave the Otters a walk-off win in the ninth but an inning ending double play ended the threat.
The Miners scored two in the tenth as a base hit scored the ghost runner at second and the second run scored on two stolen bases and an error.
A hit Otters’ batter put the tying runner on base in the bottom of the tenth but a flyout ended the game.
The loss spoiled an excellent outing by Zach Smith. The starter struck out a season high eight batters in seven innings of work allowing just two runs and five hits.
Noah Myers appeared to have the game winning hit in the sixth, a two-out two RBI double broke a 1-1 tie.
The Miners got one run back on a solo homer in the seventh before tying things in the ninth.
Jomar Reyes’ had a base hit to reach a 12 game hitting streak, tied for the longest of any Otter this season. George Callil notched three hits on Tuesday, including a double and a run.
Evansville and Sussex County quickly return to action Wednesday afternoon with a 12:05 p.m. first pitch in the middle game of the series. The game is a Senior Connection Wednesday with discounted senior (55 and older) GA tickets.
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.
USI Women’s Soccer Unveils 2023 Schedule
EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Southern Indiana Women’s Soccer has released its schedule for the 2023 championship season, which officially kicks off Saturday, August 17 when the Screaming Eagles open at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI).
“We are extremely excited to announce our 2023 schedule,” USI Women’s Soccer Head Coach Eric Schoenstein said. “We will be playing an all-Division I slate, featuring a balanced schedule with 10 home games and 10 away games.”
Prior to the season opener, USI will compete in a pair of exhibitions in early August, traveling to Middle Tennessee State University on August 8 before hosting an exhibition against Murray State University on August 12 from Strassweg Field.
Following the season opener at IUPUI, USI will open its home slate against the University of North Alabama on August 20. The Screaming Eagles will also host Purdue University Fort Wayne on August 27 and have a three-match homestand against the University of North Dakota (September 3), Austin Peay State University (September 7), and Northern Illinois University (September 10) during the non-conference season.
The remaining non-conference road schedule includes stops at Wright State University on August 24, Miami University (Ohio) on August 31, and the University of Missouri-Kansas City on September 14 as USI’s final tune-up match before the start of the conference season.
Southern Indiana will kick off the Ohio Valley Conference season with a pair of road matches, traveling to the University of Arkansas Little Rock on September 21 and visiting the 2022 OVC regular-season champion Tennessee Tech University on September 24. USI will then return to Strassweg Field to take on Morehead State University (October 1) before traveling a few days later for a road matchup against the newest OVC member in Western Illinois University on October 5. The Screaming Eagles will host a pair of home OVC matches against Lindenwood University (October 8) and reigning OVC tournament champion Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (October 12). The matchup against Lindenwood on October 8 will be Senior Day and Alumni Day.
The final week of the 2023 regular season will include a road match at the University of Tennessee at Martin (October 15), a home match against Southeast Missouri State University (October 19), and a road match at Eastern Illinois University (October 22).
The OVC Championship Tournament will take place from October 27 through November 5.
“Our OVC schedule will be very challenging with several key matches on the road and the addition of Western Illinois to the OVC,” Schoenstein added. “We are looking forward to an exciting second season at Division I.”
USI Women’s Soccer heads into its second season as an NCAA Division I program in 2023, coming off an inaugural D-I campaign that saw Southern Indiana go 5-8-4 and earn a postseason in the Ohio Valley Conference Championship Tournament.