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USI Art and Design Department Hosts Fourth Annual Art and Design Career Day

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USI Art and Design Department Hosts Fourth Annual Art and Design Career Day

The University of Southern Indiana Art and Design Department is excited to present the fourth annual Art and Design Career Day for 2025 from 1 to 4 p.m. Friday, February 28 in Rice Library Room 0017. Hear from local designers about their experiences in the field and get tips from these professionals to put you ahead of the game.

Introductions will begin at 1 p.m. followed by a keynote address given by Kristen Tucker, Publisher and Editor at Tucker Publishing, and breakout sessions will be held from 2 to 3 p.m. with professionals from local businesses.

  • Mark Brendel, Senior Graphic Designer – Lochmueller Group, RL0005
  • Emily Gartner, Fashion Designer – Alt Threads Studio and Emily Gartner Designs, RL0008
  • Amanda Fehr, Graphic Designer – Gray Loon Marketing, RL0010
  • Chris Weatherly, Head Photographer – Plotline Media, RL0021

A Q&A session will follow these presentations from 3:15 to 4 p.m. This event is open to the public at no charge.

For more information, contact Dr. Gregory Blair, Assistant Professor of Art and Design, at gblair1@usi.edu.

Ivy Tech Plans Pancakes & Ivy Event for the Community March 1

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Ivy Tech Plans Pancakes & Ivy Event for the Community March 1 

Evansville, IN – Ivy Tech Community College Evansville has organized a community event that incorporates a free pancake breakfast, along with learning about Ivy Tech, and an opportunity to “try out” a sampling of free college classes. This family-friendly event – Pancakes & Ivy — is planned for Saturday, March 1, from 8:30 a.m.-noon, beginning in the Koch Student Center on campus.

Attendees will be able to take part in a pancake breakfast, generously provided by The Diner, by Mele’s, a mini job fair with local employers, and children under 10 can have fun in a bouncy house, coloring tables, and other assorted games. Tours of the building will be offered, and a sampling of several college classes.

Classes, representing a handful of the 42 programs at Ivy Tech Evansville, will be offered from 9:30-10:15 and again from 10:45-11:30. Participants may select two to attend:

Science: Biology – The Study of Life
Exploring Organisms

Early Childhood Education: New Kids on the Block
Do you enjoy building with blocks and are interested in supporting learning and development of our newest kids? Check out early childhood education and learn about the importance of block play in children birth to age 8 while building your own masterpiece! We will also show you how to create children’s building materials out of things you have at home.

Criminal Justice: How to Get Hired as a Police Officer
The hiring process in law enforcement

Human Services: The Heart of Human Services — Exploring Helping Professions and Community Impact
This session introduces the vital role of human services in supporting individuals and communities as well as how human services relates to other helping fields: social work and psychology. This session is ideal for anyone interested in learning how human services professionals make a difference in people’s lives every day.

Energy Technology Program: Power Up — The Electricity & Measurements
Learn to use various tools to measure voltage, current, resistance, and continuity. Essential skills for electricians, technicians, troubleshooters, and engineers.

Cyber Security & Information Assurance: Strenghtening Your Personal Security with Multi-Factor Authentication
Explain the importance of MFA and how it adds an extra layer of protection to their accounts.

Software Development: Game Development for Beginners
How to create your first simple game

Cloud Computing: The Importance of Cloud Computing in Everyday Business
Transforming Business Operations for Efficiency and Growth

Heating, Ventilation, &  Air Conditioning: Furnace Filters and HVAC Home Maintenance
Common HVAC home Maintenance for the average homeowner

Business, Logistics & Supply Chain: Building Business Success

A Strategy with a Homebuilding Twist

Non-Credit Programs: English as a Second Language
Ivy Tech’s ESL Program will offer a sample class showcasing what a normal ESL nightclass is like

“We know that there are many individuals who may not have ever been inside the Ivy Tech building, and we wanted to create a fun, welcoming atmosphere for people to feel comfortable to be able to learn about how Ivy Tech can be a way for them or their children to reach their goals,” said Ivy Tech Chancellor Daniela Vidal. “Our faculty are excited to showcase many of our programs.”

To RSVP and select classes go to: https://link.ivytech.edu/pancakes

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

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EPD

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

 

FOOTNOTE: EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.

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Nolan, Stanford pace USI men in Boston

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Nolan, Stanford pace USI men in Boston

BOSTON, Mass.—Sophomore Alex Nolan and junior Isaac Stanford each posted season-bests to lead University of Southern Indiana Men’s Track & Field at the Boston University David Hemery Valentine Invitational Friday.

Nolan matched the fastest time in the Ohio Valley Conference with his performance in the 5,000 meters. He finished the race in 14 minutes, 14.18 seconds, which is a personal-best and good enough for seventh on USI’s all-time indoor 5,000-meter record book.

Stanford churned out the second-fastest mile time in the OVC with his efforts Friday. The reigning co-OVC Track Athlete of the Week clocked a time of 4:06.44, which places him fourth on USI’s all-time indoor mile record book.

The Screaming Eagles also got season-bests in the mile from freshman Griffen Wheeler as well as sophomores Eli Mojonnier and Tyler Zimmerman. Wheeler ranks 10th in the OVC in the mile with his time of 4:12.15, while Mojonnier and Zimmerman are 12th and 14th, respectively, with times of 4:13.26 and 4:14.33.

Junior Brady Terry and freshman Layden Wagoner also posted season-best times in the 5,000 meters Friday. Terry now ranks seventh in the OVC in the 5,000 meters with his time of 14:45.16, while Wagoner is 16th in the OVC with his time of 15:15.16.

USI’s women compete at the David Hemery Valentine Invitational Saturday. The Eagles compete at the OVC Championships in Indianapolis, Indiana, February 25-26.

GILMOUR SCORES TWICE IN RETURN TO LEAD THUNDERBOLTS OVER STORM

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GILMOUR SCORES TWICE IN RETURN TO LEAD THUNDERBOLTS OVER STORM
 
Evansville, In.:  Back from ECHL call-up, Tyson Gilmour picked up two goals, including the game-winner with seven minutes remaining in the third period, to lead the Thunderbolts over Quad City 3-2 on Friday night at Ford Center.  The Thunderbolts’ next home game will be on Sunday, February 16th against the Peoria Rivermen at 12:00pm CT.
                The game remained scoreless through the first period and a half, until Gilmour opened the scoring for Evansville off a cross-ice feed from Scott Kirton at 12:40 of the second period, also assisted by Logan vande Meerakker.  On the power play and following a big save by Cole Ceci on a Storm shorthanded rush, Brady Lynn extended the lead to 2-0 at 16:01, assisted by Joey Berkopec and Isaac Chapman.  Quad City mounted a comeback however, starting with Tommy Tsicos’ goal at 18:17 to make it a 2-1 game going into the second intermission.  2:58 into the third period, Tsicos scored once again off a turnover to tie the game.  With the next lead up for grabs, Gilmour scored his second goal of the game, on the rush at 12:55 from Vande Meerakker to give Evansville the 3-2 lead, which stuck after one more successful penalty kill and a late 6-on-5 push by the Storm for a big 4-point swing to propel Evansville back over Quad City in the league standings.
Gilmour scored two goals on the night, Lynn scored Evansville’s power play goal, and Vande Meerakker tallied a pair of assists.  In net, Cole Ceci finished with 29 saves on 31 shots for his 10th win of the season.  The Thunderbolts and Storm meet again on Friday, February 28th at Ford Center.

Flood Watch issued until February 16 at 6:00AM

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Flood Watch issued February 14 at 12:51PM CST until February 16 at 6:00AM CST by NWS Paducah KY

Description

Rainfall is expected to begin before dawn Saturday increasing in intensity through the day. Thunderstorms are then expected to form in the late morning and persist through the evening. A large area of 4+ inches of rain is forecast. The region should prepare for an unusually dangerous and impactful flood event. * WHAT…Significant and widespread flash flooding caused by excessive rainfall continues to be possible. This is a particularly dangerous situation. * WHERE…Alexander, Gallatin, Hamilton, Johnson, Pulaski, Saline, Union, White and Williamson Counties in Southern Illinois. All of western Kentucky, All of southwest Indiana, Butler, Mississippi, Ripley, Scott and Stoddard Counties in southeast Missouri. * WHEN…From midnight CST /1 AM EST/ tonight through late Saturday night. * IMPACTS…Excessive runoff may result in flooding of rivers, creeks, streams, and other low-lying and flood-prone locations. Storm drains and ditches may become clogged with debris. Extensive street flooding and flooding of creeks and rivers are possible. * ADDITIONAL DETAILS… – Widespread rainfall amounts of 3 to 5 inches are forecast. Localized areas of 6 inches or more are possible somewhere in the watch area. This would lead to significant and widespread flash flooding with impacts in locations not normally subject to flooding. – http://www.weather.gov/safety/flood

Instruction

Those in the watch area should take precautions for flood conditions. Remove debris from storm drains and clear flood prone locations. You should monitor later forecasts and be prepared to take action should Flash Flood Warnings be issued.

Editorial: Local Officials Use Fearmongering to Kill SB 01

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By Johnny Kincaid

Citizens are still struggling with the rise in property values last year that led to increased property tax bills, even with no change in the tax rate. Given that most complaints about taxes last year centered on these property tax bills, candidate Mike Braun pledged to provide tax relief to property owners, particularly farmers who faced higher appraisals for every acre they owned.

Now, as governor, Braun is advocating for property tax reductions via Senate Bill 01, causing local government entities to cry foul. Property taxes constitute a substantial portion of the revenues for cities, counties, and school corporations. Reducing property taxes diminishes local income without affecting state tax revenues.

Evansville and Vanderburgh County officials held a press conference earlier this week to draw attention to the impact that SB 01 will have on local revenue. The press conference was an exercise in hyperbole and worst-case scenarios. The fearmongering by the mayor, the school superintendent, and a county commissioner was hard to believe.

First, it was stated that the first year reduction in revenue for the city would amount to 12% of the property tax revenues collected, roughly about $7.6 million. This is not 12% of total city revenue; they chose to state it this way to make it seem more “devasting.” We asked a representative of the mayor what percentage of the total income this figure reflected and have not received an answer.

At the press conference, it was implied that the city and county would have to cut essential services; the police chief, fire chief, and sheriff were on hand to add to the fear that emergency response would suffer. If the first cuts will be police and fire protection, then the priorities are all wrong. In a budget of hundreds of millions of dollars, aren’t there some other places where we can make cuts before impacting safety? In a worst-case scenario, couldn’t we tap into the $2.5 million in interest from the American Rescue Act funds to cover essentials instead of a new city website?

Everyone knew this tax plan was coming. Braun talked about it on the campaign trail and made it one of his first priorities as governor. Our leaders could have worked on some proactive belt tightening instead of reactive hand-wringing.

Perhaps our community leaders should examine the city’s current debt level and halt future high-ticket projects that will cost us money for generations to come.

FOOTNOTE:  This article was posted by the CCO without bias, opinion, or editing.

Jim Redwine Gavel Gamut: Honor

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GAVEL GAMUT
By Jim Redwine
www.jamesmredwine.com

HONOR

Gentle Reader, I was recently invited to address a group of high school honor students. I
prepared the following remarks and hope they and you find them worthy of your interest. The theme given for the ceremony for the honor students was, “Write your own story”. I designed my remarks around that theme.

“Honor Students, as you write your life’s story you really only need to keep in mind a
few elemental rules.

First, remember you are fortunate to have your American birthright to always guide you.
When our son, Jim, first went to the old Soviet Union in 1992 he found complete strangers
would pick him and his fellow Americans out and ask them if they were Americans. Jim decided the Americans stood out because they were the ones always smiling.
Then, when I taught judges in Kiev, Ukraine and Volgograd, Russia and the country of
Georgia that had once been in the Soviet Union, people would stop my wife, Peg, and me on the street and ask us about America. We simply stood out from those around us. The reason was we were happy and smiling, but most of the natives were dour and stern. What we decided was that we were happy because we Americans had options; our freedom of choice was the difference.

So, Honor Students, as you write your life’s story never lose sight of the essence of being
an American, that is your freedom to choose your own path. Of course, your freedom of choice has always been part of your lives. You have learned it at home and in school.
While I learned countless lessons of immense value in high school, I will share just three
with you. The first involved the United States Constitution. Now you might think someone who had been to several colleges and even law school might know the Constitution through those schools. However, my most indelible lesson in the U.S. Constitution came from my high school American history teacher.

One cold autumn day our teacher came to class without his regular plaid sport coat. He
was wearing a short-sleeved shirt and a flowery tie. He asked us in the class, “Why do I have the right to wear this short-sleeved shirt?” Naturally, none of us had a clue. He called on me, “Redwine! You should know the answer. The 2 nd Amendment, you know, the right to bare/bear arms”. And I never forgot the 2 nd Amendment after that.

Then there was our principal who taught me a lesson in sentencing. As a judge for more
than 40 years I have been called on to devise many sentences that are fair, follow the law and do good, not harm.

I have many times remembered the wisdom of my high school principal who devised a
“sentence” that perfectly fit the crime, that is, the football players including me who got into an out-of-control snowball fight during a lunch hour.

Our principal had us line up outside his office and ordered us not to move or talk while
we waited for him to deal with us one by one. We stood in line dreading our punishment for 2 hours until he came out of his office and said, “Alright boys, no more brawls, now go to
practice”. I have often thought back on this fair and imaginative “sentence” when I have had to make a sentence comply with the law but show mercy too.

Another lesson that helped guide me through several difficult sociological dilemmas
involving the fair and equal treatment of people who came before me in court, was taught to me by my two high school football coaches when we played a game against another high school in a nearby town.

After the game our coaches put us on the bus and we drove to a restaurant in that
downtown. Now, I realize to you Honor Students today, segregation is like something from a foreign country and a by-gone age. I assure you it was real.

I did not go to school with African American kids until after Brown vs. The Topeka,
Kansas Board of Education in 1954 when the U.S. Supreme Court declared “separate but equal” in U.S. education may have been separate, but it was not equal and it was unconstitutional even though it was written to be the law.

My high school integrated my freshman year in 1957 and we had 3 black players, called
coloreds back then, on our football team. So, when we stopped at that restaurant after the game our whole team went in, but the restaurant owner refused to serve our black players. Our coaches said, “If you won’t serve our whole team, none of us will stay”. So, we all returned to the bus.

This lesson in choosing the harder right over the easier wrong made a life-time
impression on me as to what choices really matter. This experience made a better judge, and better person of me. It also helped me to recognize the major difference between American judges and the many foreign judges I have observed and taught. Foreign judges often refuse to devise a way around an unjust written law, but American judges will choose the harder right over the easier wrong and apply a legally acceptable but fair alternative to a tough case.

So, Honor Students, please write your own story knowing you have the right to choose
where you go and what you do, what you believe and what you find invalid.
As Professor Joseph Campbell who taught at Sarah Lawrence College said, there is only
one unpardonable sin, “To be unaware”. Therefore, pay attention as you write your story, do notn let your life pass you by.

Also, Socrates told the Honor Students of Athens 2,500 years ago, “The unexamined life
is not worth living”. In other words, be curious, challenge the status quo. As Alexander Pope cautioned in his poem, A Little Learning, “Drink deep, or taste not the Pierian Spring”. That is, do not be fooled by too little knowledge or those who espouse it.

The poet Robert Frost advised us to take the road less traveled, or as that great
philosopher Yogi Berra said, “When you come to a fork in the road, take it”.
Honor Students, remember the sage advice of your mothers and “If you can’t say
something nice, say nothing at all”. And most importantly, as you write your own story, always “Choose the harder right over the easier wrong” and your life story will have a happy ending! If you follow these guideposts, I predict each of your life’s stories will be of great satisfaction to you and of great benefit to everyone else.

As Henry Wadsworth Longfellow said in his poem, A Psalm of Life, “Lives of great
[people] all remind us, we can make our lives sublime and departing leave behind us, footprints on the sands of time”. Honor Students, write your own story your own way and keep smiling!”

For more Gavel Gamut articles go to www.jamesmredwine.com