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Art Exhibit “Dawn Murtaugh: Fiber Art” Now on Display at UE

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EVANSVILLE, IN (11/01/2022) The University of Evansville (UE) presents “Dawn Murtaugh: Fiber Art,” an exhibit currently on display at the Krannert Gallery through December 10. The gallery is located inside the Krannert Hall of Art and Music, and it is open to the public from 8:00 a.m. until 8:00 p.m., Monday through Saturday; and noon until 8:00 p.m. on Sundays.

A public reception for artist Dawn Murtaugh will be held on Thursday, November 3, at 6:30 p.m. The reception will be held in the Krannert Gallery, and the public is invited to attend. The exhibit and reception are part of the Emerging Contemporary Artist Lecture Series, sponsored by the Efroymson Family Fund and the UE Department of Art.

Dawn Murtaugh received her bachelor’s degree from St. Xavior College, and she then continued her studies at the Art Institute of Chicago. As a self-taught textile artist, her fiber art has been exhibited in juried shows and invitational exhibitions throughout the Midwest, and her pieces grace many private collections. She is involved with the American Quilters Society, Studio Arts Quilt Associates, and Raintree Quilters Guild.

Murtaugh is passionately immersed in the production of textile wall hanging, celebrating color, nature, and recycled fabrics. Her artwork is based on the historical reference of traditional quilting, where small bits of both plain and fancy clothes were saved to reuse in serviceable clothing or bedding. Murtaugh uses this perspective as she takes remnants of the past in the form of trims, upholstery fabric, jeans, leather, and more.

Aces Set For Final Exhibition Contest

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UE Hosts Huntington On Wednesday Evening

 EVANSVILLE, Ind. – In the second and final exhibition game, the University of Evansville men’s basketball team faces Huntington University on Wednesday evening at the Ford Center.  The tip is set for 7 p.m.

Last Time Out

– UE opened its exhibition slate on Saturday with an 81-56 victory over Oakland City

– Antoine Smith Jr. recorded a game-high 17 points while Marvin Coleman II tallied 12 points and 8 rebounds

– Kenny Strawbridge Jr. and Blaise Beauchamp scored 10 points each while Strawbridge tied Coleman’s team high of 8 boards

– After starting the game 1-for-7 from the field, Evansville hit 31 of its final 61 attempts on the way to the win

– Defensively, the Purple Aces forced 19 turnovers while holding the Mighty Oaks to 34.6% shooting

Setting the Scene

– Saturday’s exhibition opener saw UE work out numerous rotations and lineups throughout the contest

– Wednesday’s contest will see the Aces utilize a similar approach as they prepare for the November 7 regular season opener

– UE welcomed a total of 3,461 fans in the first exhibition game; that would have been the third-highest attendance last season for a UE home game

Scouting the Opponent

– Huntington University posted a 23-11 record last season while going 10-8 in Crossroads play

– Members of the NAIA, the Foresters won their opening game of the 2022 National Tournament in March

Efficient Opener

– Hitting six of his seven attempts, Antoine Smith Jr. led the Aces with 17 points in the victory over Oakland City

– He was a perfect 4-for-4 form outside and added three rebounds

Immediate Impact

– Marvin Coleman II and Kenny Strawbridge Jr. were both in the starting lineup against Oakland City and made their presence known in a big way

– The duo combined for 22 points and 16 rebounds with Coleman posting 12 points and 8 boards and Strawbridge totaling 10 points and 8 caroms

– The Division I experience that both bring to the squad will be shown all season as they each played over 26 minutes

Depth at Forward

– Yacine Toumi and Sekou Kalle each made the start versus the Mighty Oaks and showed signs of what they are capable of

– Kalle knocked down four of his six attempts on his way to eight points while Toumi scored three points and had two steals…both had six rebounds

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Eagles Conclude Homestand With Senior Day

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Southern Indiana Volleyball (1-23, 1-12 OVC) will end the home schedule this weekend when the Screaming Eagles host Tennessee State University (12-15, 6-8 OVC) on Friday at 6 p.m. and Saturday at 2 p.m. at Screaming Eagles Arena. At the conclusion of Saturday’s match, USI will recognize junior outside/right side hitter/setter Katherine Koch (Belleville, Illinois) and manager Sabrina Yamashita (Evansville, Indiana) for their time at USI.
 
Game Coverage
Information about USI Volleyball, including live stats, video, and audio broadcasts, is available on USIScreamingEagles.com. 
 
Tickets
USI Volleyball tickets are on sale now, with adult tickets at $8, non-USI students at $5, and all USI students, staff, and faculty with a valid ID and any child 11-and-under are admitted free.
 
Screaming Eagles Headlines:
Eagles Blanked by MSU. The Screaming Eagles struggled against Morehead State last weekend, dropping a pair of 3-0 matches. USI is searching for its first win since defeating Lindenwood on 9/30.
 
You Have To #OVCit. The Eagles’ final chance of making the Ohio Valley Conference Tournament is in the hands of Tennessee State. USI will face the Tigers Friday and Saturday as the final home matches of the season.
 
Senior Day. USI will host Senior Day on Saturday. Katherine Koch and Sabrina Yamashita will be recognized for their accomplishments as Eagles.
 
Season Leaders. Junior Leah Anderson leads the group with 274 kills and 20 aces as Koch holds a team-high 354 assists. On defense, freshman Keira Moore has received 263 digs while sophomore Paris Downing has earned 76 blocks.
 
OVC Leaders. There are five Eagles who sit atop the best in five different categories within the OVC individual standings. Anderson ranks fifth in points per set (3.70), sixth in kills per set (3.18), and 10th in digs per set (2.92). Sophomore Carly Sobieralski holds the ninth-most assists per set (5.50) while Koch has tallied the 10th most assists per set (5.45). Moore has recorded 3.87 digs per set, putting her at seventh, while Downing is sixth with 1.06 blocks per set.
 
Digging Out. The Eagles’ defense is third in the conference with 15.47 digs per set and eighth with 1,330 digs.
 
Keeping it 100. Three Eagles have reached the 100-kill club this season. Anderson leads the pack with 274, sophomore Abby Bednar has 186, and sophomore Abby Weber has 178.
 
Level 300. Sobieralski and Koch are the only pair to reach 300 assists this season for USI. Koch has 354 assists while Sobieralski is close behind with 330 assists.
 
Double-Doubles. There have been six Eagles who have reached the double-double mark this season. Anderson leads the team with 11 while Sobieralski has earned seven. Koch and Weber have tallied four each while Bednar has nabbed two and sophomore Evie Duncan has earned one.
 
History Has Been Made. Anderson has hit three milestones this season by becoming the 15th player to reach 1,000 kills, the 13th player to reach 1,000 digs, and the fifth player in program history to reach both feats. She has joined a historic group that includes Shannon Wells, Jamie Roth, Danielle Peter, and Leeanne Gross in the 1,000 kills/1,000 digs club.
 
About Tennessee State. The Tigers come into the weekend 12-15 overall and 6-8 in the OVC. TSU thrives off their defense, leading the league in opponent-hitting percentage (.180) and total blocks (234.0) while having the second-most blocks per set (2.29). The Tigers have also played the most sets in the conference with 102 total sets played. TSU has 11 upperclassmen on their roster with just four underclassmen.

Leading the Tigers. Junior Kennedy Davis leads the OVC in hitting percentage (.343) while senior Johanna Alcantara holds the third-most kills per set (3.65) and points per set (3.95). Graduate student Gina Rivera-Ortiz has been dynamic as the Tigers’ libero, nabbing a second-best 5.47 digs per set in the league. There have been four Tigers who have a combined 10 weekly honors this season. Rivera-Ortiz has totaled three Defensive Player of the Week while Alcantara is the reigning Offensive and Newcomer Player of the Week, accumulating a total of two Offensive Player of the Week titles and four Newcomer of the Week honors. Graduate student Login Williams has recorded one Setter of the Week award.
 
Record Book Watch. The Eagles have one player climbing up the USI Volleyball Record Book:
–Leah Anderson is fifth in service aces (159), eighth in kills (1,158), and 13th in digs (1,041) all-time.
 

Day one complete for men’s golf

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UE had two squads competing

 OWENS CROSSROADS, Ala. – In its final event of the fall season, the University of Evansville men’s golf team competed as two squads and one individual while wrapping up just over one round at RTJ at Hampton Cove.

Evansville’s teams were divided into the orange team (veteran players) that includes Henry Kiel, Nicholas Gushrowski, Isaac Rohleder, Caleb Wassmer and Carson Parker.  The purple team consisted of the younger team members Daniil Romashkin, Masatoyo Kato, Michael Ikejiani, Luke Schneider and Mason Taylor.  Eli Rohleder played as an individual.

Totaling 302 strokes, the orange team is in 6th place, just one shot out of the top five with Arkansas-Pine Bluff just ahead.  Kiel and Gushrowski are tied for 12th place, shooting 2-over rounds of 74.  Isaac Rohleder is tied for 23rd following a 4-over 76.  Wassmer and Parker registered scores of 78 in round one and are tied for 37th.

Romashkin led the purple team with a 2-over 74 and is tied with three of his teammates for the 12th spot.  Included in that group is Eli Rohleder, who leads all individuals.  Kato carded a 77 in the first 18 holes to stand in a 30th-place tie while Ikejiani is one behind him with a 78.  Scores of 79 by Schneider and Taylor have them tied for 44th.

Lehigh University holds a commanding 13-shot lead following the first round.  With a score of 277, Lehigh leads Alabama A&M (290) and Alabama State (291).  Felipe Gomez Lopez of AAMU sits atop the individual leaderboard with a 6-under 66.  He leads the field by six strokes.

PROPERTY TAX BILLS DUE THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10TH, 2022 

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civic center

VANDERBURGH COUNTY TREASURER PROPERTY TAX BILLS ARE DUE THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10TH, 2022 

Fall payment due on or before November 10th, 2022. For information about your property or taxes, our website is engage.xsoftinc.com/Vanderburgh OR vanderburghcounty82.us

Ways To Pay Your Bill 

  • Pay at the Treasurer’s drop box in front of the Civic Center @ 1 NW MLK Jr Blvd. Evansville, IN 47708
  • Mail to – Vanderburgh County Treasurer    PO Box 77     Evansville, IN 47701
  • Any tri-state Old National Bank location (with your bill)
  • Website – engage.xsoftinc.com/Vanderburgh  
  • Call 1-877-690-2436. Enter jurisdiction code 2436, option 1 for real estate or option 2 for personal property/mobile home
  • Pay in the Treasurer’s Office located @ 1 NW MLK Jr. Blvd, Evansville, IN. Room 210 of the Civic Center

CONTACT INFORMATION:

DOTTIE THOMAS – VANDERBURGH COUNTY TREASURER     812-435-5257   dthomas@vanderburghgov.org

Letter To The Editor: This Is How Patriots Vote

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This Is How Patriots Vote

 by Jason Salstrom, Ph.D.

There are no ballots where the best candidates for every race are all Ds or Rs, therefore, to vote straight-ticket, D or R, is to put party before country, which no Patriot would do. It is why I voted for Governor Holcomb in 2020.

Since Tim O’Brien was AWOL all 4 times the public called on him to face me (June 8 at EVPL, Sep 22 at CK Newsome, Oct 13 at EVPL, and Oct 26 at WNIN), voters were denied the opportunity to compare O’Brien’s motivation, experience, and solutions to mine. So, this is for the voters to consider. 

MOTIVATION

Salstrom: 21st-century prosperity of Hoosiers will require us to modernize Indiana government by moving power and resources away from Indianapolis – distributed governance – which starts by amending (or competently enforcing) Indiana Code 5-28-6-1-1-A, then amending IC 36-1-3 to remove several constraints to Home Rule. See more below and at HoosiersforLocalControl.com for details. 

O’Brien: per his January 12 press release, “provide leadership on important issues that affect our community, such as the rising cost of health care, infrastructure needs, small business growth, and protecting individual rights.”  

EXPERIENCE

Salstrom: works every day to grow businesses in Indiana, from helping launch dozens of high-tech startups to attracting large Defense contractors to support Naval Surface Warfare Center Crane, build new buildings, and work with great Indiana universities; works at every level of government and across jurisdictions; testified to the State Senate on the ROI to the economy for investing in Hoosiers. Previously, I worked for the U.S. Army Infantry, Airborne, Air Assault, etc.; military contractor, including armed support of Federal Law Enforcement; 10 years in Russia and the Middle East, from Track II negotiations on NATO expansion to studying Israeli border security; Ph.D. in terrorism; helped launch Evansville’s Promise Zone; worked to improve access to food and health care. 

O’Brien: sells houses for a living; Member of Indiana Association of Realtors Board of Directors, City of Evansville Land Bank Corporation Board of Directors, Heritage Federal Credit Union Board of Directors (per indianahouserepublicans.com). No military service.

SOLUTIONS

SOLUTION FOR INDIANA BEING A BOTTOM-RANKED STATE for income, health costs, 4-year degrees, STEM degrees, new business, alternative energy (see Indiana Chamber of Commerce), wage growth, advanced industry productivity (see Central Indiana Corporate Partnership), child care costs, early child education, air pollution, childhood anxiety and depression, infant mortality, maternal mortality, etc. (see America’s Health Rankings citing Trump administration’s DHHS).

Salstrom: see my Motivation above for the legislation. The problem is systemic, rooted in Indiana’s weak Home Rule (i.e. Indy micromanages the state) which means, for example, Mayor Winnecke does not have the power and resources mayors have in other states to solve our problems and seize our opportunities. Instead, we have self-serving legislators, whom we can’t look in the eye and hold accountable, handcuffing our local leaders and sticking their noses in our business to serve their political ambitions, without regard for the wellbeing of Hoosiers, as the above facts make clear. (See HoosiersforLocalControl.com for solution details)

O’Brien: no answers could be found, except HB 1119, which he authored to provide a state income tax deduction for recent graduates with income up to $50K. However, O’Brien’s fellow Republicans apparently recognized (correctly) that his bill would have a negative impact, so it appears to have died in his own committee on the day of its first reading on 01/04/2022 (per iga.in.gov)

SOLUTION FOR HIGH ENERGY PRICES

Salstrom: (1) for decisions impacting our region, we need local representation, that we nominate and can hold accountable, on both the IURC (the Indianapolis-based committee that decides our rates) and the OUCC (the Indianapolis-based counsel that represents consumer interests). (2) we need billing transparency (e.g. tracker details) so that regional OUCC, media, etc., can ensure accountability. (3) Indiana needs a long-term water and energy strategy informed by an empirically defined vision and measured in incremental milestones toward advancing the mission of thriving Hoosier communities. (4) revive Mitch Daniels’ Energizing Indiana (updated to 2.0), advancing Hoosiers’ energy efficiency, security, and independence.

O’Brien: No Answers.

REPRODUCTIVE FREEDOM

Salstrom: Roe versus Wade was a fair compromise, protecting access early in pregnancy while allowing states to restrict or ban late-term abortions. Contraception should be as easy to access as possible to prevent unintended pregnancy in the first place. Forcing minority religious doctrine on Hoosiers is anti-American.

O’Brien: voted to remove all exceptions for ending a pregnancy, knowing it would force a 10-year-old rape victim to bear the child, and voted to deny women the freedom to get birth control directly from pharmacists (see votes at iga.in.gov), like women have the freedom to do in many states, including Arizona, West Virginia, North Carolina, Idaho, etc.

THE CHOICE

Salstrom: Indiana should be a top-ranked state, not a bottom-ranked state. 

O’Brien: AWOL.

Voters decide the future.

FOOTNOTE:  If State Representative Tim O’Brien would like to respond to Dr. Jason Salstrom, Ph.D. letter to the City-County Observer editor we shall publish it without bias, opinion, or editing.

Todd Rokita Partners With Sammy Terry To Return Unclaimed Property

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attorney general

This Halloween, Attorney General Todd Rokita is partnering with the longest-running TV Horror Host in the World, Sammy Terry, to treat Hoosiers with more than candy. 

“Returning unclaimed property to hardworking Hoosiers is an important part of our mission,” Attorney General Rokita said. “That’s why I’m proud to have Indiana icons like Sammy Terry reminding Hoosiers on this ghoulish holiday to search indianaunclaimed.gov and put more treats than tricks in their wallets this year.” 

In 2021, Attorney General Rokita’s Office returned over $50 million in unclaimed property to their rightful owners. This year alone, the Office has returned over $48 million. Recovering your unclaimed property is safe, secure, and simple. Search for your name at the IndianaUnclaimed.gov database — which, by the way, includes Hoosiers with spooktacular names such as Halloween, Spooky, Witch, and Coffin. 

It’s time to boogie and follow these tips to keep track of your assets:  

  • Keep a record of all bank accounts.  
  • Indicate your interest in and awareness of all accounts by contacting the holder at least once every three years.  
  • Record all stock certificates and be sure to cash all dividends received.  
  • Record all utility deposits, including telephone, cable, and electricity deposits.  
  • Cash all checks promptly — no matter how small.  
  • Update your address with all businesses when you move.  
  • Talk to loved ones about any safe deposit boxes you own. 

Attorney General Rokita’s Office works tirelessly to locate the rightful owners or heirs of unclaimed property. We are thankful to Sammy Terry for helping in those efforts this year.    

Individuals and/or businesses have 25 years to claim money once it is reported to the Unclaimed Property Division. Over $700 million remains to be claimed, so it’s time to lift your spirits and find what you may be missing at IndianaUnclaimed.gov or text SAMMY to 46220 to search your name, family, or business. 

You can also contact the Unclaimed Property Division at 1-866-462-5246 or updmail@atg.in.gov.  

You may also like and/or follow the Unclaimed Property Division on Facebook. Make sure you keep an eye out for Sammy Terry’s reminders today. Even he knows it’s wise to search for unclaimed property.  

Halloween is going to be great—we can feel it in our bones!Â