EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT
Gibson County – Wednesday night, August 31, at approximately 11:30 p.m., Trooper Vennekotter was patrolling US 41 near County Road 550 South when he observed a vehicle passing other vehicles southbound at a high rate of speed. Trooper Vennekotter utilized his radar and clocked the 2011 Hyundai Sonata at 100 mph. The vehicle was eventually stopped on Coalmine Road at US 41. The driver was identified as Haley Goodmon, 18, of Evansville. Trooper Vennekotter detected an odor of an alcoholic beverage inside the vehicle. The driver displayed signs of impairment and failed field sobriety tests. Further investigation revealed Goodmon had consumed alcohol and smoked marijuana prior to the traffic stop. Goodmon refused to submit to a chemical test. She was arrested and taken to the Gibson County Jail where she is currently being held on bond.
Arrested and Charges:
Arresting Officer: Trooper Vennekotter, Indiana State Police
Assisting Officer: Trooper Hurley, Indiana
The Trailblazers had to battle early on against the Warriors, holding a narrow 14-11 lead midway through the opening set.
Vincennes would grow their lead and pick up the set one win 25-18.
The VU momentum continued in the second set, with the Blazers opening a 10-point lead at 15-5.
Wabash Valley traded points with Vincennes to close out the set as the Trailblazers came away with set two 25-14.
The Warriors looked to avoid the sweep in set three, jumping out to an early 7-3 lead, before VU would rally back with a pair of 4-0 scoring runs to take a 17-11 lead.
Wabash Valley cut the deficit to two points late in the third set, but the Blazers held on to pick up set three and complete the sweep 25-21.
“We went into this game knowing there was going to be a very active crowd,†VUVB Head Coach Gary Sien said. “We wanted to come out and play well, just so we could take the crowd out of it, so they are not a factor. There were a few times where Wabash Valley went on runs where the crowd got back into it.â€
“Credit our team for playing very consistently,†Sien added. “That way the crowd was never really that big of a factor.â€
Vincennes was led offensively by freshman Paige Parlanti (Las Vegas, Nev.) who recorded her third career double-double, finishing with 16 kills and 11 digs, while also adding two aces and a block assist.
Freshman Audrey Buis (Franklin, Ind.) ended her night with nine kills and a block assist.
Freshman Alexis Chrappa (Effingham, Ill.) just missed a double-double of her own with seven kills and nine digs.
Freshmen Kennedy Sowell (Effingham, Ill.) and Tuana Turhan (Ankara, Turkey) each finished with five kills, with Sowell also adding two block assists and Turhan adding one.
Sophomores Hannah Graber (Montgomery, Ind.) and Malgorzata Banasiak (Gdynia, Poland rounded out the VU hitting with four kills each.
Graber added 17 set assists and five digs to her totals and Banasiak finished with a block assist and a dig.
Freshman Maecy Johnson (Chrisman, Ill.) led the Blazers from the setter position with 19 set assists, with one dig.
Freshman Morgan Netcott (Montague, Mich.) led the Blazers with 17 digs defensively and one set assist and sophomore Lara Gomes de Castro (Sao Paulo, Brazil) finished with five digs and one ace.
“We had a couple of rotations with six freshmen on the floor tonight,†Sien said. “But much like the Chicago White Sox back in the day, ‘The kids can play’.â€
“We have full confidence in Maecy,†Sien added about his freshman setter. “She played a great game. It was her first college start and she comes away with 19 set assists. She ran a really nice offense and made some good choices. It’s tough being the backup setter. She is playing behind two sophomore setters, but she listened. Anybody else in that situation could have just gone through the motions, but she kept at it and listened when we were coaching the other setters and she didn’t miss a beat tonight.â€
Vincennes will be on the road again this weekend as the Blazers travel to Perrysburg, Ohio to take part in the Owens CC Tournament Friday, Sept. 2 and Saturday, Sept. 3.
VU will take on Richard Bland College at 3:30 p.m. eastern and Muskegon CC at 5 p.m. eastern to begin the tournament on Friday.
The tournament will conclude on Saturday with VU facing the College of Lake County at 10 a.m. eastern and Glen Oaks Community College at 2:30 p.m. eastern.
“Tonight’s match begins a long stretch of away games in September,†Sien said. “We only play at home three times in the entire month of September, so we just have to get used to it.â€
“The nice thing about this weekend is that we are going to a very large tournament,†Sien added. “There will be five different courts going at once, with schools from all around the country. It’s really one of the largest NJCAA volleyball tournaments in the nation. I think it’s a really nice place to showcase our players and allow them to display their talents in another part of the country. We schedule tournaments like this one to get experience playing different teams and continue to get the word out about us.â€
SALSTROM CHARGES Â THAT INDIANA IS UNDERPERFORMING
Newspapers across the state published James Briggs’ article from the Indianapolis Star “Indiana is a college degree desert and the economy is wilting†in which Briggs cites three recent reports: “Brookings, American Affairs, and Ball State University have each published deep dives with similar findings: Indiana is underperforming the nation by most metrics…â€
This article could not have been better timed for Jason Salstrom, ED D who launched his campaign this week for State Representative District 78. “The root cause of our state falling behind the nation in education, productivity, earnings, wages, etc., is the Statehouse,†said Salstrom. “Their top-down ideology, with power and resources concentrated in Indy, is the problem and preeminent obstacle to Hoosier prosperity in the 21st century.â€
David Ricks, CEO of Eli Lilly, speaking before the Economic Club of Indiana on April 21, contradicted the Governor and Statehouse’s refrain about the strength of the Hoosier economy. The fact that Eli Lilly is investing billions of dollars in other states, such as Massachusetts and North Carolina, is perhaps the strongest condemnation of the Statehouse’s economic policy.
Salstrom has been warning of these trends for years, formulating solutions, and that is why he says he is running for office. “Economic competition has changed in the last 50 years, but the Statehouse does not understand that,†said Salstrom. “If you think that Intel disregarded Indiana and took their $100 billion economic impacts to Ohio because of incentive packages, you are wrong.â€
According to Brookings’ Indiana GPS Project report “State of Renewalâ€, advanced industries, which include 50 industries, including Hoosier automobile manufacturing, aerospace, medical devices, pharmaceuticals, oil and gas extraction, electric power generation, software, and telecommunications, are “languishing†behind the nation in “competitivenessâ€, falling nearly 40% behind the national average.
“The Statehouse ideology of trying to bribe industry to rescue Indiana with jobs will continue to drive our state into crisis,†said Salstrom. “Changing course effectively and efficiently requires institutionalized regional economic development infrastructure, working for and accountable to the region, coupled with the local control, not Indy control, giving local elected officials the power to respond to challenges and seize opportunities.â€
Salstrom launches his campaign on May 12, 5-7 pm at Plaid and Timber Axe Throwing Company. Visit the campaign website for details www.hoosiersforlocalcontrol.com.
The Updated Facility Will Consolidate Services With Emphasis On Student Wellness
SEPTEMBER 1, 2022
The University of Southern Indiana has begun an estimated $12 million renovation of its Recreation, Fitness, and Wellness Center (RFWC) including a 31,000-square-foot expansion, 10,000 square feet of renovated space, and a renewed focus on student wellness that will consolidate office space for several departments across campus into one building. Work on the project, funded through a 2019 legislative appropriation, is already underway and expected to be completed in early 2024.
“The project centralizes critical University services into one location and creates the ideal wellness center for today’s student,†says Steve Bridges, USI Vice President for Finance and Administration. “Increasing the visibility of these services by moving them under one roof, near the center of campus, will also make them more convenient and accessible for the entire University community.â€
In addition to the current recreation and fitness facilities already in place, the project will include renovated and added wellness-centric space for six departments, including Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS); Public Safety; Religious Life; the Student Wellness Office (currently housed in the RFWC); the University Health Center (UHC); and University Strategic Communication.
Some of the features of the renovated facility will include an expanded footprint for the UHC, with added provider rooms, additional clinical exam spaces, separate waiting rooms for USI employees and students and nurse stations in the exam rooms; a meditation room, and new office space for Religious Life; technology upgrades, bike storage and a storm-safe dispatch room for Public Safety; soundproof offices and expanded space for CAPS, a new photography studio with dedicated video editing and sound bays for University Strategic Communication; a Quiet Lounge, expanded game room and more. Two new entrances will be located at the north and south ends of the building and will better accommodate the natural flow of campus pedestrian traffic.
During construction a new entryway and temporary front desk have been put in place, however, construction is not affecting any offerings at the RFWC.
USI’s RFWC was constructed in 2001 and later expanded in 2009. The current facility offers diverse programming for students and employees and includes three multipurpose courts for basketball, volleyball, table tennis, and badminton; a strength and conditioning area with cardiovascular machines and free weight equipment; indoor walking/jogging track; a 33-foot-tall rock-climbing tower; group exercise rooms; showers and locker rooms; game room with billiards, table tennis, video games and foosball; and a lounge area with television.
Save Lives, Celebrate Lives, And Lead The Fight at
American Cancer Society Relay For Life of Evansville
Evansville, IN – Aug 26, 2022 – The American Cancer Society Relay For Life of Evansville invites the community to join the movement to honor and remember loved ones and fight back for lifesaving change on Saturday, September 17 at Bethel UCC, located at 3029 N. Green River Road in Evansville. Relay For Life is a community of survivors, caregivers, volunteers and participants who believe that the future can be free from cancer and own the power to make that change.Â
“We share a passion to save lives, celebrate lives, and lead the fight for a world without cancer,†said Patty Avery, Evansville Relay media chair and member of the Society’s Global Relay for Life Committee. “In 2022, almost 1.9 million new cases of cancer will be diagnosed in the United States. Thanks to that shared passion, the lifesaving mission of the American Cancer Society continues, ensuring we are here for everyone who needs us.â€Â
Relay For Life of Evansville will begin at 4:00 pm with registration. Opening ceremonies begin at 4:30, including the Relay’s first lap that honors cancer survivors. The event will conclude at 9:00 pm with a celebration lap.
A dinner for survivors and their caregivers is slated for 5:00 pm. Space for the dinner is limited to 80 participants. Survivors can RSVP by calling 812-777-8044 or by emailing gina.bitetti@cancer.org.
At 8:30 pm, a Luminaria service will honor friends and family who are cancer survivors and remember those whose lives were lost to cancer. Luminaria will be available for a donation at the event and can be purchased on the event website. Committee Members will also be selling Luminaria at the Old National Bank Henning Atrium from 7:30 am to 1:30 pm on Tuesday, August 30.
Further details are available at the Relay’s Facebook Event page.Â
There are many ways to get involved.
FOOTNOTE: Founded by Dr. Gordy Klatt in Tacoma, Washington, in 1985, the Relay For Life movement unites communities across the globe to celebrate people who have been touched by cancer, remember loved ones lost, and take action for lifesaving change. Â
For more than 35 years, Relay For Life has joined communities together to remember loved ones lost, honor survivors of all cancers, and raise money to help the American Cancer Society save lives from cancer. Dollars raised each year by over 500,000 Relay participants across the country help attack all cancers in countless ways – funding and conducting breakthrough research, providing education and advocating for the needs of cancer patients and their families, and providing essential services throughout their cancer journey.
To learn more about Relay For Life, visit RelayForLife.org.Â
Evansville, IN, August 31, 2022 – To celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month, Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library and the Centro Latino + Americano have partnered to host a Piñata Contest.Â
Any elementary, middle, or high school student enrolled in one of the Evansville, Newburgh, Huntingburg, Jasper, Dale, Washington, Henderson, KY, or Sebree, KY schools may participate.Â
“The Piñata Contest is a great opportunity for local students to learn more about Hispanic culture and traditions,†said EVPL CEO-Director Scott Kinney. “We can’t wait to see the creativity from students competing in this contest.â€Â
Here Is What You Need To Know:Â
• Piñatas should be registered between Tuesday, September 6, and Friday, September 23, at EVPL Central.Â
• Read the complete rules available on our website or any EVPL location.Â
• Piñatas will be hung throughout EVPL Central beginning Saturday, October 1 for library users to enjoy.Â
• The piñatas will be voted on by library users, online and in-person. The first place prize is a laptop, the second and third place prizes are tablets. There will also be special recognition for the 10 most outstanding piñatas.Â
• Voting will end at 5:00 pm on Sunday, October 9.Â
• The award ceremony will take place on Thursday, October 13, at 6:00 pm in the Browning Rooms of EVPL Central.Â
National Hispanic Heritage Month is celebrated annually between September 15 and October 15 in the United States to recognize the achievements and contributions that Hispanic Americans have made to build our country.Â
The Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library has served our community for more than a century. With eight locations throughout Vanderburgh County, immediate access to hundreds of thousands of digital resources, and a dedicated team of library professionals, EVPL strives to create opportunities for you to discover, explore, and connect with your library. For more information, visit evpl.org.Â