Three different camps will be offered throughout the summer
 EVANSVILLE, Ind. – Over the coming months, the University of Evansville men’s basketball program and head coach David Ragland will be hosting three summer camps. Camp opportunities being offered include a Kids Camp, High School Camp and Elite Camp.
KIDS CAMP – MAY 30-JUNE 2
First on the summer schedule is the Kids Camp. Running from May 30 through June 2, the camp runs from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. each day with registration taking place on Tuesday, May 30 at 8:30 a.m. inside the Fifth Third basketball Practice Facility.
Campers will have the opportunity to work with the UE coaching staff while meeting members of the Purple Aces men’s basketball team. Lunch will be provided each day while each participant will receive a t-shirt. The Kids Camp includes a variety of activities, contests and competitions. Cost is $210 per camper and is open to any and all in grades 3-8 (as of the fall of 2023).
HIGH SCHOOL CAMP – June 26 OR June 27
High School Camp includes two dates – June 26 and June 27. Camp cost is $300 per team with a $100 discount being given when registering two teams for the same date in the SAME transaction while a $200 discount will be applied when registering three teams for the same date within the SAME transaction.
Daily admission for spectators is $5 for adults (15+) and $2 for ages 14 and under. Concessions will be available to attendees. Teams are responsible for their own lunches as well as any overnight arrangements that are needed.
ELITE CAMP – JULY 31
The third and final camp for the summer will be the Elite Camp. Set for July 31, 2023, the camp is open to grades 9-12. Cost is $80 and a concession stand will be available.
For more information about any of the camps, please contact Roosevelt Jones at 812-488-2297 or rj110@evansville.edu. To register, click here.
Internal Safety: respond to requests for unlocks and securing of doors, providing escort and pickup of deposits to the hospital morgue, provide a backup to the…
Some duties may include rooming patients, taking vitals, managing medication refill requests, patient registration, appointment scheduling, and taking office…
Within the Deaconess Laundry department, we strive to help our staff be successful and confident with any position they hold. Must be able to read and write.
FOOTNOTE: EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORTÂ information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.
His wife, far-right political activist Virginia “Ginni†Thomas, has given him a great deal of help in his campaign to demolish the reputation of the once-revered U.S. Supreme Court.
The latest sledgehammer blows the power couple delivered to the nation’s high bench have been revealed by the nonprofit, nonpartisan news outlet ProPublica.
A few days ago, ProPublica published a meticulously reported story detailing 20 years of gift trips the justice and his wife had accepted, without declaring them, from a conservative billionaire who long has campaigned to move the entire judicial branch to the right.
Just one of the trips Thomas took on Republican megadonor Harlan Crow’s dime would have cost the justice more than $500,000 if he had paid for it himself.
But Thomas didn’t pay for it himself.
Nor did he disclose it.
He just took whatever goodies that were offered to him and said nothing.
This is not typical judicial conduct.
While I’ve never palled around with any Supreme Court justices, I’ve known a few judges in my time. Regardless of whether they’re considered liberal or conservative, they have one thing in common—a reverence for the law and the courts that interpret that law.
All the ones I have known could have made more money—much more money—practicing law. They chose to sit on the bench because they have a deep commitment to the notion that a free society cannot function if justice is not impartially administered.
For that reason, the judges I have known go to great lengths to avoid even the perception of a conflict of interest or that the legal system to which they were devoted could be compromised in any way.
One judge I knew wouldn’t even let me buy him a friendly cup of coffee once when we were shooting the breeze about baseball.
Such scruples clearly do not trouble Clarence Thomas.
If there is a freebie available for the taking, he will scoop it up.
Nor is that the only Grand Canyon-sized ethical breach with which Justice Thomas seems comfortable.
Rulings on two affirmative action cases are expected some time soon from the Supreme Court. One of the cases involves Harvard University.
One of Thomas’ bench mates, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, recused herself from the case because she once had served on Harvard’s board. Like most judges, she wanted to discourage the perception that her judgment was tainted in any way.
Thomas, though, has continued to rule on cases involving the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection and the attempts to overturn the 2020 presidential election. He’s done this even though a mountain of evidence has demonstrated his wife was involved up to her eyebrows in the efforts to illegally keep former President Donald Trump in the White House.
The notion that Thomas could be an impartial arbiter of anything political in nature, given his wife’s extreme activities, is beyond absurd.
But that’s the stand Thomas has taken.
So far, he’s gotten away with it because, by and large, Supreme Court justices have been left to police themselves. Unless they get caught accepting a direct quid-pro-quo payment for rendering a verdict or committing some equally egregious legal transgression, they have been free to chart their own ethical courses, even when their moral compasses are as badly warped as Clarence Thomas’s is.
Thanks to Thomas, though, that likely will and should change.
Lawmakers have sent Chief Justice John Roberts a message saying that he should establish rules of conduct for Supreme Court justices or Congress will have to. If Roberts is smart, he will take the opportunity to do so.
Doubtless, this may strike some justices and judges who have taken their duties to the bench and their ethical obligations seriously as an intrusion, a situation in which the worst among them establishes burdens the worthy also must bear.
That often is the way it is, as James Madison, the father of the Bill Rights, observed in “The Federalist.â€
“If men were angels, no government would be necessary. If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal controls on government would be necessary.â€
Clearly, neither Clarence Thomas nor his wife is an angel.
That’s why controls on the justice’s conduct are necessary
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, IN – Richard Barnes III has pleaded guilty to dealing in a controlled substance resulting in death, a Level 1 felony, after an extensive investigation connected him to the death of Zeke Biggs from a drug overdose due to fentanyl.
On March 5, 2022, deputies with the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office were dispatched to the residence of Biggs, where he was pronounced dead from a suspected drug overdose. An autopsy and toxicology results determined that the cause of death was fentanyl intoxication. Prosecutor
Moers thanks Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office Detective Juncker and Special Agent Brandt for their extensive work and investigation in this case which led to a plea of guilty by the Defendant. “Drug dealers in Vanderburgh County should be aware that they will be held responsible thanks to the Indiana law that allows us to prosecute and obtain substantial sentences for people who deal drugs resulting in death; I can assure you, dealing drugs in Vanderburgh County is not worth the price you will pay,†stated Prosecutor Moers. “I want the public to be aware that fentanyl is appearing in Vanderburgh County in everything from black market prescription pills to illicit drugs. Even an extremely small dose can be deadly.â€
Barnes agreed to a sentencing recommendation of twenty years in the Indiana Department of Correction. The sentencing hearing is set for May 8, 2023, in front of Magistrate Ryan C. Reed of the Vanderburgh Circuit Court.
Senate Republicans unveiled our proposed state budget this week. I’m pleased to report our budget proposal is balanced and includes historic funding for K-12 education.
Our budget also delivers on our caucus agenda items of increasing salaries for Indiana State Police and paying down our long-term pension obligations.
Budget highlights include the following:
$3.1 billion to the Pre-1996 Teachers’ Retirement Fund, which, when fully funded, will free up $2 billion in the state’s biennial budget
$2.5 billion in new money for K-12 education, including $1.1 billion in new tuition support and eliminating textbook fees for all families
$95 million to increase pay for State Police, conservation and excise officers
$500 million to help local communities with capital projects
$225 million to create an optional local public health grant that counties can use to improve public health services, and $35 million to expand the state’s mental health infrastructure and support
$75 million to help local communities invest in housing development
To learn more about our budget proposal, click here.