Schedule of Public Meetings for the Board of Park Commissioners for the City of Evansville for 2023.
The Board of Park Commissioners will conduct Monthly meetings in Kevin Winternheimer Chambers, Room 301, Civic Center Complex, 100 NW Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd, Evansville, IN 47708, on the first and third Wednesdays of each month at 12:00 Noon, unless otherwise notified. Â
A table listing the dates for each Board Meeting is furnished below:
January 4, 2023
January 18, 2023
February 1, 2023
February 15, 2023
March 1, 2023Â
March 15, 2023
April 5, 2023
April 19, 2023
May 3, 2023
May 17, 2023
June 7, 2023
June 21, 2023
July 5, 2023
July 19, 2023
August 2, 2023Â
August 16, 2023Â (307)
September 6, 2023Â (307)
September 20, 2023
October 4, 2023 Â (307)
October 18, 2023
November 1, 2023
November 15, 2023
December 6, 2023
December 20, 2023
The public is welcome to attend all Board Meetings. If any group or individual wishes to address the Board on a special issue, please contact me and I will schedule you for a future meeting.
If you have any questions, please call 812-435-6141.
Veterans are eligible to apply to participate in a one-hour phone or zoom interview about your post-service health and fitness experience and how technology supports your journey. A limited selection of participants who complete the interview will receive a $100 gift card for their participation.
Free Career Training Benefits Transitioning Military, Veterans
Transitioning service members, Veterans and military spouses can receive free career training and professional certification from Onward to Opportunity (O2O). Visit the Onward to Opportunity website to learn more or to apply for one of the 40+ professional pathways.
The Year May be Winding Down, but VA’s Commitment to Veterans Will Never Cease
VA’s new report, “Serving America’s Veterans,†highlights the work and major accomplishments of VA’s public servants in 2022, as VA continues its mission of serving Veterans and their families, caregivers and survivors.
Camp Lejeune Lawsuits: Understand Your Rights, and Options for Health care, Benefits
The Camp Lejeune Justice Act of 2022 allows people exposed to contaminated water at Camp Lejeune to file new lawsuits. Veterans and family members who believe they were exposed to contaminated water at Camp Lejeune between August 1, 1953, and December 31, 1987, should contact VA to understand their options for health care and benefits.
“Talk About It Tuesday” turned in another banner year in 2022, with another full year of broadcasts that provide tips, advice and information on VA career opportunities. These broadcasts are streamed live on LinkedIn and other platforms.
Veteran Found Path to Healing Through Youth Mentorship with Travis Manion Foundation
Read the story of Derrick, a Veteran who credits the Travis Manion Foundation (TMF), his fellow members and the youth he serves with helping him find a path to healing. Learn how you can join TMF’s mission of strengthening and building our communities through youth mentorship.
 Around 10:35 a.m. officers were dispatched to the 1300-block of N. Third Avenue for a 911 hang-up. A male called Central Dispatch saying ‘they are killing people’ and refused to answer further questions from the dispatchers. An EPD officer arrived and spoke with a female at the door about the condition of the caller.
When the officer entered the residence, he located the male in a bedroom. The male had a knife in his hand and refused to put it down after the officer gave him numerous commands to do so. The male then went into an adjacent room and sat down on a chair with the blanket covering the knife in his hand. The officer continued to tell the male to put the knife down; the male refused to put the weapon down and appeared to be in a state of distress. An assisting officer arrived on the scene at that time. After refusing to put his knife down the male lunged toward the officers. One officer deployed his taser at that time in an attempt to subdue the subject but the taser was unsuccessful. The subject then advanced at one of the officers with the knife still in his hand. A second EPD officer fired his duty-issued handgun at least one time, striking the male.Â
Officers attempted life-saving measures, prior to AMR’s arrival but were unsuccessful. The male was pronounced deceased at the scene. The officer who fired his duty weapon has been placed on administrative leave pending further investigation, which is standard protocol following an officer-involved shooting. The officers involved in this run were not physically injured.
The name of the decedent will be released by the Vanderburgh County Coroner’s Office pending an autopsy.Â
 EVANSVILLE, Ind. – It is back to Missouri Valley Conference action for the University of Evansville men’s basketball team when the Purple Aces travel to Indiana State on Thursday.  The tip is set for 7 p.m. CT with the Purple Aces Radio Network and ESPN+ having the coverage.
Last Time Out
– Evansville outscored Bellarmine by a 23-10 margin to earn a 73-61 win on December 21 at the Ford Center
– With the Knights holding a 51-50 lead with 6:28 remaining, Evansville took control to pick up their fourth win of the season
– After being held scoreless in the first half, Kenny Strawbridge Jr. erupted for 22 in the second half to lead all players
– Yacine Toumi recorded his third double-double of the season with 15 points and 11 rebounds while Gage Bobe wrapped up the game with a career-best 12 points
Second Half Performance
– In the Dec. 21 game against Bellarmine, Kenny Strawbridge Jr. was held scoreless in the opening half but rebounded with 22 points in the final 20 minutes
– He converted three consecutive triples as the Aces wrapped up the game on a 23-10 run; he was 3-for-6 from outside in the win and ended a 3-for-22 streak from long range entering the contest
– Strawbridge is currently 8th in the league with his average of 16.2 points per game and has scored 20 or more points on six occasions
– His top-scoring output of the season saw him register 25 points on 11-of-18 shooting versus Fairfield
Career Game
– Knocking down four of his seven 3-point attempts against Bellarmine, Gage Bobe set his career mark with 12 points
– It surpassed his previous mark of nine points which came on two occasions prior to this season
– Aside from his point tally, Bobe also set his career highs with five rebounds and 35:46 minutes
– Bobe has made the start in all 13 games this season
Chalk up Another
– For the third time this season, Yacine Toumi recorded a double-double as he finished with 15 points and 11 rebounds against Bellarmine
– His 11 caroms was a new career high and was his third double digit rebound game this season and his average of 5.6 per game is second on the team and 15th in the Valley
– Toumi scored a career-high 18 points against Campbell and has registered at least 8 points in five straight games and 10 of his 12 games in 2022
– His first two double-doubles of the year came against Saint Louis (11 pts, 10 rbs) and SMU (14 pts, 10 rebs)
Scouting the Opponent
– Indiana State enters Thursday’s game with a 9-4 record while picking up wins in its first two MVC games
– The Sycamores defeated Drake and Southern Illinois to open their league slate
– Since the win over SIU, Indiana State has lost three in a row with their most recent game being a 67-57 loss to Northern Illinois
– Courvoisier McCauley paces ISU with 17.5 points per game while shooting 43.9% from the field and leading the squad with 42 triples
– Cameron Henry checks in with 11.8 points and a team-high 5.3 rebounds
I’d gone to school close to home at my late grandfather’s request. He said I needed to help my divorced mother and my younger sister and brother. He was right about that, as he was about most things.
I wondered, though, how choosing a small liberal arts college in rural America might affect the arc of my career. I was far from savvy, but I knew enough to understand that degrees from prestigious schools gave their possessors advantages in the marketplace.
I worried that I would spend years playing catch-up. Sometimes, I fretted that I never would be able to catch up.
Then I realized something.
I remember the moment. I was in my dorm room on an early winter evening, rereading Mark Twain’s “Adventures of Huckleberry Finn†for an English class. I was hoping to get through the assignment quickly so I could devote some time to read more of Thomas Wolfe’s “Of Time and the River†before I had to turn out the lights.
Wolfe was both a discovery and a passion for me in those days. His autobiographical tales of a haunted young man transforming himself into a writer and transcending the limitations of his upbringing spoke to me as no other books had. He gave voice to and underscored my own determination to write for a living.
Moments to read what I wanted were precious. I didn’t have much time to myself.
I was taking an overload of courses that semester. When I wasn’t in class or studying, I worked at a local bank, stacking up between 30 and 40 hours per week as a courier, mail clerk and teller. The money I made helped me stay in school and allowed me to help with the bills at home.
But, again, the frantic nature of my schedule fed my doubts.
Were the hours I spent transporting bank records and supplies from branch to branch going to cost me the chance to write I so much wanted? Were the students at the bigger, richer schools shooting ahead of me because they had access to much better books and the time to read them?
Rereading Twain that night was a revelation.
It came to me as I worked my way through Huck’s travels and travails on the raft that the words I was reading were no different than the one’s students at Harvard or Yale who were studying Twain encountered. It didn’t matter if I read a cheap paperback or an expensive leatherbound volume.
Huck Finn was Huck Finn.
Similarly, the rules of math didn’t vary from school to school. The same went for the law of gravity and other pillars of knowledge.
It seems simple in retrospect.
Until that night, though, I never had realized that knowledge wasn’t a barrier but a door—and books were the key.
After I finished the Huck Finn reading assignment, I stayed up most of the night reading Wolfe. I awoke the next morning to another day of classes stacked like bricks in a wall followed by a rush to work at the bank.
I was tired, but at peace.
I knew if I read enough, wrote enough and worked enough there was no ground I couldn’t make up.
I also came to a decision. I was going to treat myself to a Christmas present.
It was a bookcase made from cheap pressed wood, about as sturdy as a dandelion. But it provided a home for my collection of tattered, well-thumbed paperbacks.
I always looked at that bookcase when I sat down to write—always gave it a chance to tell me I was up to the task.
That was a long time ago.
That first bookcase became kindling 30 years ago.
Others, though, have followed,
The places where I do the most writing—my home and my office—are stuffed with bookcases and books.
When I prepare to write something, I look at the shelves. I think of where all those books have taken me.
Will take me.
And the words begin to flow.
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.