Governor Eric Holcomb directs flags to be flown at half-staff
INDIANAPOLIS – Governor Eric J. Holcomb is directing flags to be flown at half-staff in Spencer County in honor and remembrance of Rockport Mayor Donnie Winkler. Winkler was serving his first term as Mayor when he unexpectedly lost his life on Monday, April 17.
Flags should be flown at half-staff from sunrise until sunset in Spencer County on Saturday, April 22. Gov. Holcomb is asking businesses and residents in Spencer County to lower their flags as well.
Bicknell Couple Arrested for Neglect
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STATE STATUTE THAT REGULATES ALCOHOL AND TOBACCO COMMISSION VIOLATIONS
Over a month ago an official complaint was filed against a member of the local Vanderburgh County Alcohol Beverage Commission with the State Alcohol and Tobacco Commission.
One of the complaints alleges that Republican Mayoral candidate Natalie Rascher received illegal political campaign contributions from a bar owner while serving on the local board. The complaints are now in possession of the ATC prosecutor.
We feel that Natalie Rascher has been unfairly treated by the Indiana Alcohol and Tobacco Commission members because she hasn’t been granted a hearing in a timely manner so she can defend the complaints against her in order to resolve this issue. We are told that the complaint not being resolved in a timely manner could cost her votes in the upcoming Republican primary election for Mayor of Evansville.
Attached is the link to the Indiana State Statute governing the State Alcohol and Tobacco Commission activities. Â Please review the attached link to the State Alcohol and Tobacco Commission statute that regulates their activities.
We hope you can make any sense of this most bureaucratic State Statute concerning the alleged violations filed against local Alcohol and Tobacco Commission member Natalie Rascher and give us your opinions.
LINK Of IC 7.1-5-5 Chapter 5. Miscellaneous Crimes
FOOTNOTE: Â Please vote in today’s City County Observer “READER POLL.”
Attorney General Todd Rokita encourages Hoosiers to participate in spring cleaning on Drug Take Back DayÂ
Attorney General Todd Rokita encourages Hoosiers to participate in spring cleaning on Drug Take Back DayÂ
APRIL 21, 2023
Attorney General Todd Rokita is encouraging Hoosiers to drop off their expired, unused, and unnecessary medications to disposal sites across the state as part of National Drug Take Back Day on Saturday, April 22. Â
“It’s vital we do everything possible to protect Hoosier families,†Attorney General Rokita said. “Old medications lying around the house are a serious threat and create an avoidable risk to our children, friends, and family members. Please join us in cleaning out the medicine cabinet this week to join the fight against drug addiction and overdose.â€Â Â
Team members from the Office of the Attorney General are partnering with state and local law enforcement at collection sites around the state Friday, April 21, and Saturday, April 22. Â
Some of those sites include:Â Â Â
- April 21: Government Center North at Capitol Police Desk located at 100 N Senate Ave, Indianapolis, IN 46204 from 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. Â
- April 22: Valparaiso Police and Fire Departments located at 355 S Washington St., Valparaiso, IN from 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.  Â
Find a location near you at https://www.dea.gov/takebackday#collection-locator. Staff operating the drop-off sites will ensure the safe disposal of medications, including drugs in liquid and pill form. Â
Needles, new or used, WILL NOT be accepted for disposal. This service is free and anonymous with no questions asked. Â
USI to recognize two honorary degree recipients during Spring 2023 Commencement
4/20/2023
USI to recognize two honorary degree recipients during Spring 2023 Commencement
Image copyright: USI Photography and Multimedia and Richard Hunt, provided
Two University of Southern Indiana honorary degree recipients will be celebrated at Spring 2023 Commencement during the 5 p.m. Friday, May 5 School of Graduate Studies Ceremony in the Screaming Eagles Arena.
Honorary degree recipients are celebrated in the USI community for their continued dedication to higher education. The recipients are credited for actively shaping their respective communities and have made significant contributions to the arts and sciences at USI and beyond.
Dr. Marlene Shaw will receive an honorary Doctor of Science degree, and Richard Hunt will receive an honorary Doctor of Fine Arts degree.
Dr. Marlene Shaw to receive honorary Doctor of Science degree
Dr. Marlene Shaw, Professor Emerita of Biology, is receiving an honorary Doctor of Science degree for her commitment to teaching and continuous service to the University of Southern Indiana. Shaw served as a USI biology faculty member from 1973 to 2009, enriching the lives of countless students through her enthusiasm for science and continuous mentorship of students.
In addition to Shaw’s commitment to teaching, she created the Annual Shaw Biology Lecture in 2011, with support from the USI Foundation. The annual event exists to enhance the academic environment for students, faculty, and the community by hosting scholars whose work interfaces biology with areas such as medicine, ethics, law, agriculture, chemistry, public health and politics.
Throughout her teaching career, Shaw made it top priority to remain current in the field of biology, studying cutting-edge advances in genetics, cell and molecular biology. Former students credit her teaching as motivational, encouraging and influential, and many say she is the reason they have seen success in their respective professional paths.
Shaw served as Project Director for DNA: The Blueprint of Life, a 1983-84 exhibit developed for the Evansville Museum of Arts and Sciences. The exhibit was invited for tour by the American Association of Science and Technology Centers. Next, she worked as a visiting scholar at Vanderbilt University in 1983-84 and again for three summer terms in the 1990s. In 1991, she attended a National Science Foundation (NSF) Faculty Enhancement Program in biotechnology at Boston University, and the next year, received an NSF grant that funded the purchase of molecular biology equipment that provided new, hands-on opportunities for students in teaching labs and research at USI. Also in 1991, Shaw was selected as the USI Distinguished Professor, USI’s highest award given in recognition of significant achievement in teaching, scholarship and service.
During her career at USI, Shaw was selected to participate in several national research conferences, including Medical Genetics: 1987Â at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland; Short Course in Medical and Experimental Mammalian Genetics, presented by Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and the Jackson Laboratory at Bar Harbor, Maine; and Molecular Neurobiology of Human Disease, presented at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in New York.
During retirement, Shaw has expanded her knowledge of advances in genetics and microbiology and has been particularly interested in European and American history as it provides context for understanding the development of biology in the 1800s and 1900s. She has stayed active with the USI Biology Department and the Annual Shaw Biology Lecture. Shaw has researched family genealogy, visited family and friends and enjoyed world travels.
She received a bachelor’s degree in biology from Wittenberg University in 1964 and a doctorate in microbiology from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign in 1969. From 1969-71, she held a post-doctoral research position in biochemistry at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
Richard Hunt to receive honorary Doctor of Fine Arts degree
Richard Hunt, the world-renowned sculptor, is receiving an honorary Doctor of Fine Arts degree for his significant contributions to the world of art with over 150 public sculpture commissions gracing prominent locations in 24 states and Washington D.C., over 150 solo exhibitions displayed throughout the duration of his continual career and representation in more than 100 public museums across the globe.
In August 2014, USI commissioned Hunt for an outdoor sculpture to fittingly commemorate the 50th anniversary of the University’s founding. Richard Hunt’s “From Our Past Toward Our Future†is a stainless steel, abstract piece that is the generous gift of the late Dr. James A. Sanders, Director Emeritus of Corporate and Foundation Relations. Situated near the southeast side of the main lawn of The Quad, the eye-catching piece faces the Liberal Arts Center, allowing students, employees and visitors passing by to admire Hunt’s work.
Born in Chicago in 1935, Hunt developed an interest in art at an early age. From seventh grade on, he attended the Junior School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC). He went on to study there at the college level, receiving a bachelor’s degree in 1957.
While still a student at SAIC, Hunt began exhibiting his sculpture nationwide, and during his junior year, one of his pieces, “Arachne,†was purchased by the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York. In 1962, he was the youngest artist to exhibit at Seattle’s World Fair.
Hunt has received honors and recognition throughout his career and, in 1971, was the first African American sculptor to have a major solo exhibition at the MoMA in New York. His work can be found in numerous museums, as well as public and private collections, including the Art Institute of Chicago, the National Gallery and National Museum of American Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the MoMA.
In 1968, he was appointed by President Lyndon Johnson as one of the first artists to serve on the National Council on the Arts, the governing board of the National Endowment for the Arts. He has received many fellowships and holds memberships in the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the National Academy of Design.
In 2009, Hunt was awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award by the International Sculpture Center. In 2015, he received the Lifetime Achievement Award from Partners for Livable Communities in Washington, D.C. In 2022, President Barack Obama commissioned Hunt as the first artist to create a work for the Obama Presidential Center on the South Side of Chicago.
Hunt, one of our country’s greatest living artists, currently resides in Chicago where he works from his studio in the Lincoln Park neighborhood.
For more information on Spring 2023 Commencement Ceremonies, visit the Commencement webpage.
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FOOTNOTE: 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
Kate Petrova is the Missouri Valley Conference Champion!
WATERLOO, Ill. – In one of the most exciting finishes in Missouri Valley Conference history, University of Evansville freshman Kate Petrova won a 2-hole playoff to become the third individual in Purple Aces program history to win the conference championship.
Weekend series in Chicago on tap for UE softball
Aces and Flames to meet up for three games
EVANSVILLE, Ind. – With the regular season entering its final weeks, another Missouri Valley Conference road series is on the slate with the University of Evansville softball team traveling to UIC. Action runs from Friday through Sunday with ESPN3 and ESPN+ having coverage of the three games.
Looking at the Match-up
– For the first time as fellow members of the MVC, the Purple Aces and Flames will meet up on the diamond
– It will mark the first meeting between the program since March 9, 2018 when UIC finished with a 1-0 victory in eight innings to open the Racer Classic in Murray, Ky.
– A scheduled meeting between the squads earlier in 2018 at the Louisiana Classic was canceled due to weather
Last Time Out
– SIU Edwardsville took a 6-3 victory over UE on Tuesday evening inside Tri-State Orthopaedics Field at James and Dorothy Cooper Stadium
– The Cougars scored three runs in both the first and fourth innings to take a 6-0 lead before the Aces scored a run in the fourth
– In the bottom of the 7th, Evansville rallied as Syndey Kalonihea hit a 2-run home run, the first of her collegiate career, to make it a 6-3 final
Grand Slam
– Last Friday’s game at Murray State saw Alexa Davis hit a grand slam while setting her career mark with six runs batted in
– On April 11 at Indiana State, Davis hit the game-winning 2-RBI double in a 2-0 shutout victory
– Davis continues to rank in the top five in the MVC in triples (T-3rd), stolen bases (3rd) and walks (T-3rd)
– Over the last 17 games, Davis has seen her average dip from .347 to .273 after going 8-for-49 at the plate
On a Roll
– Over the last five games, Marah Wood has started to find her swing as she is batting .500 (8-for-16)
– She has accumulated three multi-hit performances in the last five contests
– Wood is hitting .254 on the season with three homers, 18 RBI and 16 runs
– In the April 1 opener against Belmont, she went 3-4 with two RBI and two doubles while adding a walk, run and steal
– She followed that up with her second home run of the season and two more RBI in the second game of the series
First Home Run
– Freshman Sydney Kalonihea recorded the first home run of her collegiate career on April 18 versus SIU Edwardsville
– Her 2-run shot in the 7th inning cut into what was a 5-run deficit against the Cougars
– Over the last three games, Kalonihea has gone 3-for-10 at the plate, which put a halt to a 1-of-37 stretch that went from Feb. 19 through April 14
University of Evansville Students Organize 4th Annual Barn Blitz in partnership with Habitat for Humanity
EVANSVILLE, IND. (04/20/2023)
WHO:Â The University of Evansville Habitat for Humanity Club, Habitat for Humanity of Evansville, and additional volunteers from several UE student organizations.
WHAT:Â 4th Annual Barn Blitz Event.
WHEN:Â 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. CDT on Saturday, April 22, 2023.
WHERE:Â The parking lot behind the Habitat for Humanity of Evansville office (off Negley Ave.), which is located at 560 East Diamond Ave., in Evansville, Indiana.
DETAILS:Â 17 teams of six to eight UE student volunteers each will construct yard barns for residents of the community who have received Habitat homes. Barn Blitz aims to construct 20 barns for these residents in collaboration with Habitat for Humanity of Evansville.
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 College, a Victorian manor located in the countryside of the United Kingdom. For more information, please visit evansville.edu.