EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT
USI MAC/Pace Galleries displaying two exhibitions through October 21
Two exhibitions—New Perspectives: Art & Design Faculty Exhibition and Mary Beth Edelson: Natural Pleasures—are simultaneously on display in USI’s McCutchan Art Center/Pace Galleries during the 2022 Fall Semester.
2-5 p.m. Wednesday, September 21
Internship and Career Fair
USI students will have the chance to meet over 100 employers for part- and full-time job and internship opportunities.
4:30 p.m. Thursday, September 22
2022 Southern Indiana Reading Series returns with award-winning author Lydia Conklin
The Southern Indiana Reading Series will host a reading event with award-winning author Lydia Conklin at 4:30 p.m. Thursday, September 22 in the USI Performance Center. Conklin will read from their debut collection of short fiction, Rainbow Rainbow. A Q&A session and book signing will follow, and light refreshments will be provided. The event is free and open to the public.
7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Friday, September 23
Annual Pharmacology Update for Healthcare Professionals workshop returns in person, virtual September 23
The USI Center for Health Professions Lifelong Learning is hosting the annual Pharmacology Update for Healthcare Professionals, an all-day workshop on Friday, September 23, 2022, in the University Center on the USIÂ campus.
SAVE THE DATE
September 28
Inaugural Edward D. and Regina Rechnic Holocaust Series speaker set for September 28
Learn about the Rechnics of Evansville and their story of surviving the Holocaust during the inaugural Edward D. and Regina Rechnic Holocaust Series on September 28 in Carter Hall. Charles Berger, Esquire, will present, “They Survived the Holocaust: The Rechnics of Evansville and Their Family,” followed by a Q&A and reception.
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT
Released Monday, September 12
U.S. News ranks USI 14th for Top Public Schools in Midwest region
According to data released by U.S. News and World Report on Monday, September 12, USI has been ranked 14th for Top Public Schools – Regional Universities Midwest. USI also ranked 21st for Best Value in Regional Universities in the Midwest.
Released Tuesday, September 13
USI included in “America’s Best-in-State Employers 2022” rankings by Forbes and Statista
USI has been included in “America’s Best-in-State Employers” rankings. According to a nationwide survey conducted on behalf of Forbes by Statista, USI is ranked 62nd alongside national employers such as Berry Global, Lilly, Target and Starbucks.
Released Wednesday, September 14
USI Alumni Association recognizes award recipients at annual Founders’ Day Luncheon
The USI Alumni Association honored the founding figures of the institution and recognized its three highest award recipients at its annual Founders’ Day Luncheon on Wednesday, September 14 in Carter Hall on the USI campus.
The Tri-State Alliance is organizing a forum on the Reversal of Rights on Monday, Sept. 19 at the Central Library Browning Room, 200 SE Martin L. King Jr. Blvd., Downtown Evansville. Speakers include Indiana Democrat LGBTQ activist Dana Black, former ACLU of Indiana Executive Director Sheila Kennedy, Pam Locker of the League of Women’s Voters of Southwestern Indiana and attorney Katherine Rybak. Please attend to hear the discussion about the impact of the reversal of Roe vs. Wade.
MOREHEAD, Ky. – University of Southern Indiana Women’s Soccer made their Ohio Valley Conference debut Sunday afternoon, playing to a close 1-0 loss at Morehead State University.
The road matchup at the Morehead State Eagles opened up the 2022 OVC schedule not only for the Screaming Eagles but also for the league.
USI got off to solid start in the match, earning four set pieces within the first nine minutes. The momentum quickly switched to Morehead State, as senior forward Colleen Swift scored in the 12th minute. Swift took an initial shot that USI senior goalkeeper Maya Etienne (Midland, Michigan) saved and deflected, but the deflection went off the post and Swift followed the ball back into the net.
Southern Indiana’s defense battled the rest of the first half to keep the match a one-goal contest until halftime. After a single shot in the opening half, USI found a spark offensively in the second half to generate more looks at goal.
The first 20 minutes of the second half saw USI earn five more set pieces, including two corner kicks. Junior midfielder Avery Schone (Galena, Ohio) and senior defender Alyssa Wright (Sellersburg, Indiana) got involved in the attack, taking a shot each in the second half’s early minutes.
In the middle portion of the second half, Wright put another shot toward goal along with freshman forward Emma Thurston (Leawood, Kansas). Both were saved by Morehead State’s freshman goalkeeper Erin Gibbs.
USI orchestrated multiple chances in the last five minutes of the match with four more set pieces, attempting to find the back of the goal to even the match, but none were successful.
Sunday’s 1-0Â loss was the fourth one-goal match of the season for the Screaming Eagles.
Statistically, Southern Indiana took eight shots – three on goal, while Morehead State had 11 shots and seven on goal. USI earned five corner kicks to MSU’s three.
Wright and freshman midfielder Peyton Murphy (Bargersville, Indiana) led the Screaming Eagles with two shots each. Etienne finished with five saves in a full 90 minutes in goal for Southern Indiana.
The Screaming Eagles will return home to Strassweg Field Thursday evening at 5:30 for an OVC match against Tennessee Tech. Thursday’s home match has free admission thanks to The Women’s Hospital Deaconess.
“POSITION PAPER” BY JASON SALSTROM, CANDIDATE FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE, DISTRICT 78
September 19, 2022
We need to reboot Indiana. Why? Bad Indiana Code (legislation) created a dysfunctional system that has no respect for Hoosiers. I am a capitalist. Every day I work to grow Hoosier businesses and help Indiana compete.
First, because of the outrage that I hear from Hoosiers over his recent votes, I need to briefly mention my opponent, Rep. Tim O’Brien. O’Brien not only voted to remove all exceptions for ending a pregnancy, knowing it would force a 10-year-old rape victim to bear the child, but also voted to deny women the freedom to get birth control directly from pharmacists, like women, have the freedom to do in many states, including Arizona, West Virginia, North Carolina, Idaho, etc.Â
Simply, “life†beginning at conception is a minority religious doctrine, and it is fundamentally anti-American to force religion on Americans (Indiana is not Afghanistan). Rep. O’Brien demonstrated that he does not represent our District, as well as his lack of respect for Hoosiers.
In less than a single two-year term in office, since a political caucus appointed Rep. O’Brien showed himself to be one of the most extreme examples of the self-serving Indianapolis insiders responsible for the decline of the Indiana economy, education, and the political toxicity harming all Hoosiers. In fact, a new bi-partisan organization, ReCenter Indiana, just launched to send home these extremists harming our state.
We need to replace top-down Indianapolis-driven government with bottom-up local control that serves Hoosiers, not politicians.Â
I am running to fix a structural problem in the \Indiana Code that will empower Hoosiers to solve the problems of:
All Hoosiers need to be aware that Indiana is racing down the wrong track. Three separate reports have detailed the decline of Indiana over the past 10-15 years. James Briggs’ summarizes the reports in a May 28, 2022 article from the Indianapolis Star:
“The state’s inability to educate children… is pushing Indiana toward an economic crisis… a reckoning is looming… the governor… and the Indiana General Assembly are going to have to act with urgency… Brookings, American Affairs, and Ball State University have each published deep dives with similar findings: Indiana is underperforming the nation by most metrics, it caters too much to low-paying jobs and does not do enough to educate citizens or attract new residents with college degrees.†– read the full quote at city-countyobserver.com
These reports explain why business margins and worker income are shrinking – “the most rapid decline in the state’s history†– why Hoosiers are struggling, and why Indiana companies, like Eli Lilly, are investing billions in states like Massachusetts and North Carolina, instead of Indiana. These reports contradict the fiction we hear from the politicians about how well Indiana is doing, especially the economy, including fiction my opponent spreads within these pages about delivering “wins for all Hoosiers†(while trying to buy your vote with tax cuts and checks).
The evidence proves that neither the supermajority nor the Governor (who I voted for) has a clue about how to get Indiana on the right track, which explains why the politicians distract Hoosiers from their failed leadership by manufacturing social fights. These concocted political fights are what create the toxic political culture that drives away graduates from our great universities and the corporations that need them.Â
Indiana government, based on the poorly written Indiana Code, exacerbates destructive parochialism and general economic dysfunction with top-down, ill-conceived, misdirected, poorly understood initiatives. This has created a competitive disadvantage for doing business in Indiana – ask Hoosier businesses.
Hoosier businesses are struggling in Indiana’s dysfunctional economic system, especially advanced industries (like manufacturing), which is why they are losing “competitivenessâ€, falling 40% below the national average in change in output since 2007 – 40% below average is failure – explaining our shrinking margins and why Indiana ranks 46th in wage growth (see Brookings’ report at IndianaGPSProject.com).
One employer explained it to me this way: “We’re busting our tales swinging hammers when the rest of the world has nail guns.â€
If we do not fix this, more Hoosier businesses will be forced to relocate to states with functional economic systems that enable them to compete with technology, infrastructure, and talent, and Hoosier families will face hard decisions to move to states where our children will have the opportunity to thrive.
FOOTNOTE: The City-County Observer posted Jason Salstrom’s (D) letter without opinion, bias, or editing. For questions or to learn more about Jason Salstrom’s positions or campaign, he can be reached at jason.salstrom@gmail.com or 812-483-0935 or visit the campaign website www.hoosiersforlocalcontrol.comÂ
The City-County invites Tim O’Brien (R) candidate for the District 78 State Representative seat by submitting his political platform article to the city-countyobserver@live.com Â
We will also publish his articles without basis, opinion, or editing. Â
INDIANAPOLIS — Governor Eric J. Holcomb today announced several appointments to various state boards and commissions.
Board of Firefighting Personnel Standards & Education
The governor made two new appointments to the board, who will serve until October 31, 2024:
Commission on Ports
The governor made one reappointment to the commission, who will serve until September 30, 2026:
The governor also made one new appointment to the commission, who will serve until September 30, 2026:
Emergency Medical Services Commission
The governor made six reappointments to the commission, who will serve until September 30, 2026:
The governor also made six new appointments to the commission, who will serve until September 30, 2026:
Indiana Arts Commission
The governor made one reappointment to the commission, who will serve until June 30, 2026:
The governor also made one new appointment to the commission, who will serve until June 30, 2024:
Indiana Housing & Community Development Authority Board of Directors
The governor made four reappointments to the board, who will serve until September 30, 2026:
Judicial Nominating Commission
The governor made one new appointment to the commission, who will serve until December 31, 2023 and fill the remainder of the term vacated by the resignation of Rudy Yakym III:
Law Enforcement Training Board
The governor made nine reappointments to the board, who will serve until July 31, 2026:
The governor also made eleven new appointments to the board, who will serve until July 31, 2026:
Midwestern Higher Education Commission
The governor made one new appointment to the commission, who will serve until February 28, 2024:
State Fair Commission
The governor made one reappointment to the commission, who will serve until September 30, 2026:
The governor also made one new appointment to the commission, who will serve until September 30, 2025:
State Historical Records Advisory Board
The governor made two reappointments to the board, who will serve until September 30, 2025:
The governor also made five new appointments to the board, who will serve until September 30, 2025:
State Police Board
The governor made one new appointment to the board, who will serve until September 30, 2026: