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OFFICIAL NOTICE OF MEETING IVY TECH COMMUNITY COLLEGE EVANSVILLE CAMPUS BOARD OF TRUSTEES

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Notice is hereby given that the

Campus Board of Trustees of Ivy Tech Community College

Evansvillewill conduct the following meeting:

Tuesday, June 16, 2020

 

3:30 p.m.          Executive Session—(private meeting) The Campus Board of Trustees will meet in Executive Session, through Zoom as permitted under IC 5-14-1.5-6.1

 

To discuss strategy with respect to collective bargaining, initiation of litigation,  implementation of security systems, or the purchase or lease of real estat(2) (B)            Initiation of litigation that is either pending or has been threatened specifically in writing;

(2)(D)             The purchase or lease of real property by the governing body up to the time a contract or option to purchase or lease is executed by the parties;

(5)  To receive information about and interview prospective employees;

(6)(A)            With respect to any individual over whom the governing body has jurisdiction, to receive information concerning the individual’s alleged misconduct;

(7)  For discussion of records classified as confidential by state or federal statute;

(9)  To discuss job performance evaluations of individual employees. This subdivision does not apply to a discussion of the salary, compensation, or benefits of employees during a budget process.

 

4:00 p.m.                       Campus Board of Trustees meeting

                                          The Campus Board of Trustees will conduct a regular meeting through Zoom.

 

To Join the Zoom Meeting

Go to:  https://ivytech.zoom.us/j/2778355052

 

Meeting ID: 277 835 5052

 

 

EVSC Receives Full Service Community Schools Grant

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The Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation (EVSC) has been awarded the Full Service Community Schools (FSCS) Grant through the U.S. Department of Education. The five year grant will be used to fund wraparound services for students and families as they transition from early education to postsecondary success.

“This grant couldn’t come at a better time,” said Kim McWilliams, chief officer of family, school, and community partnerships. “We applied for the grant more than a year ago and to hear now that we have received it means we can do even more to help our students and families, especially during these uncommon times.”

The goals of the FSCS Grant are to increase school adjustment and physical, mental, and emotional health of students and families. The grant also will establish an infrastructure of support for schools and agencies to support children and families.

Over the next five years, the EVSC will work to:

 

  • Increase students’ academic performance and school readiness

  • Decrease student absences and disruptive behaviors

  • Increase the number of students who graduate from high school and are prepared for post-secondary pathways

  • Improve school environments supporting nutrition and physical health of students

  • Increase the number of students, families and community members targeted and receiving services

  • Increase student and family engagement

  • Increase student/family protective factors and reduce risk factors of school maladjustment

“The grant will allow the district to strengthen and build upon its comprehensive approach to student success,” McWilliams said.  “Numerous EVSC offices and community partners are included in the grant which will ensure we are providing the best practices possible in all areas of our students’ lives to ensure they can be successful in school and beyond.”

The EVSC last received a Full Service Community Schools grant in 2010.

VILLAGE PEOPLE COMING TO THE VICTORY THEATRE ON 40TH ANNIVERSARY TOUR

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Village People will be coming to celebrate their 40th anniversary at the Victory Theatre on October 9, 2020. Village People is the greatest disco group in the world. Their music is part of the international songbook. The debut album, released in 1977, featured the hit singles “San Francisco (You Got Me)” and “In Hollywood (Everybody’s A Star).”

Village People at that time however was simply Victor Willis with use of session singers. Eventually a group of guys were assembled around him to perform on American Bandstand. Thus began the creation of Village People. The guys were soon an international phenomenon with release of the second album titled Macho Man, once again recorded by Victor Willis with use of session singers. Auditions were held for performers to join Victor however prior to the release of the Macho Man album and many answered the call. Village People were finally a bona fide group.

Next was the five-time platinum album Cruisin which featured the blockbuster hit “Y.M.C.A.” After that was the Go West album, and finally Live and Sleazy. Victor Willis then exited the group but not before leaving them with such smash hits as “Y.M.C.A” “Macho Man” “Go West” “In the Navy” “Magic Night” and “Milk Shake.” With Victor’s departure, the hit era of Village People was over, and so was the disco genre in general. The group soon disbanded.

Over the years, various renditions of Village People (for purposes of live performances) have consistently toured the world since the mid-l 980s with use of various replacement lead singers, and characters.

As the 40th anniversary of the group’s founding neared, Victor Willis who was Village People before Village People even existed returned with a fresh re-boot of the group. His powerful and distinctive voice is known the world-over on all the group’s hits. Now, the group (along with their live band) once again stage world class Village People performances.

Village People are: Victor Willis (original lead singer, co-founder and writer of all the biggest hits); Angel Morales (Native American); Chad Freeman (Cowboy); James Lee (G.I.); Jeffrey “J.J.” Lippold (Leatherman); and James Kwong (Construction Worker).

Tickets go onsale June 19 and prices start at $39. Tickets will be available at the Ford Center ticket office and Ticketmaster.com. Please note that temporarily, the Ford Center ticket office is only open Monday, Wednesday and Friday from noon – 5pm.

Tropicana Evansville Is Now Opened

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Tropicana Evansville has reopened their Casino and The Deli restaurant at today 10:00 AM CDT.

Tropicana Evansville has implemented new safety protocols and social distancing measures to be in compliance with Eldorado Resorts Health & Safety Guidelines.

Upon arrival, guests will follow directional signs and enter the Casino from the main Tropicana Hotel-side entrance.

Exits will also be clearly marked to aid in social distancing.

All guests will be asked to answer a few screening questions, show a valid I.D., and have their temperature taken.

Hand sanitizer will be available in several locations throughout the Casino.

Guests are encouraged to wear masks but masks are not mandatory, with the exception of Table Game players.

The Tropicana Evansville Hotel and The Brew Brothers Tap House will open on Thursday, June 18.

An opening announcement for Cavanaugh’s On The River will follow in the near future.

Le Merigot Hotel and the Le Merigot Hotel Casino entrance remain temporarily closed.

For additional information, visit TropEvansville.com.

 

University of Evansville Ranked Among the Top 50 Best Affordable Colleges for Music Therapy

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U E

The University of Evansville has been ranked among the top 50 best affordable colleges for music therapy degree programs. The ranking comes from Affordable Schools and was published on the organization’s website in January.

The compilation and ranking of schools was created by using the National Center for Education Statistics’ College Navigator database. Affordable Schools considered programs based on tuition costs, student-to-faculty ratio, and educational outcomes. Points were assigned for each of the categories to build the final list of 50 schools from across the nation.

“This recognition for our music therapy program demonstrates the University’s commitment to both academic excellence and affordability,” said Kenneth Steinsultz, co-chair of the Department of Music at UE. “This program provides great value to students, as they can experience small class sizes, hands-on learning, and a high-quality education, all while maintaining affordability.”

The Bachelor of Music in Music Therapy degree at the University of Evansville trains students to use music therapy methodology and interventions to address an individual’s physical, emotional, spiritual, and cognitive needs. This profession is a growing field in the healthcare industry that has been proven to help patients regain speech, improve motor function, develop communication capabilities, and more.

Students in UE’s music therapy program will prepare for a career through behavioral and music courses, as well as music therapy-specific classes that include Psychology of Music and Introduction to Improvisational Methods. Before graduating, students will complete a six-month internship to apply classroom knowledge to real-life scenarios. A music therapy and music education double major is also available, and this route is for students interested in combining their skills and talents to be a therapist and teacher. Visit evansville.edu/majors/music to learn more.

“Becoming a music therapist is a transformative experience for students,” said Demian Kogutek, director of music therapy at UE. “Music therapy majors not only learn about the music therapy process, but also about the clients with whom we work and the overall importance of music in the community.”

Affordable Schools is an online resource guide that highlights the best, high quality, affordable online and traditional colleges and degree programs. As a leading higher education resource, Affordable Schools provides profiles of a large number of public and private institutions with solid academic reputations. You can read the full article about music therapy programs online.

Students at the University of Evansville shape powerful and enduring change. UE is the first in Indiana to be designated as an Ashoka U Changemaker Campus, and its changemaking culture empowers students to improve the world around them as UE Changemakers. With over 80 majors in the arts and sciences and pre-professional programs, UE’s diverse student body represents 44 states and 52 countries. U.S. News & World Report recognizes UE as the #6 Best College in the Midwest among private schools. For more information, please visit www.evansville.edu.

HEALTH DEPARTMENT UPDATES STATEWIDE COVID-19 CASE COUNTS

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The Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH) today announced that 533 additional Hoosiers have been diagnosed with COVID-19 through testing at ISDH, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and private laboratories. That brings to 40,430 the total number of Indiana residents known to have the novel coronavirus following corrections to the previous day’s total.

Intensive care unit and ventilator capacity remain steady. As of today, more than 41 percent of ICU beds and more than 83 percent of ventilators are available.

A total of 2,251 Hoosiers are confirmed to have died from COVID-19, an increase of 11 over the previous day. Another 182 probable deaths have been reported based on clinical diagnoses in patients for whom no positive test is on record. Deaths are reported based on when data are received by ISDH and occurred over multiple days.

To date, 355,829 tests have been reported to ISDH, up from 348,391 on Sunday.

Effective today, any Hoosier seeking COVID-testing can obtain it through one of the state-sponsored OptumServe sites, regardless of whether they are at high risk or have symptoms. To find testing locations around the state, visit www.coronavirus.in.gov and click on the COVID-19 testing information link. More than 200 locations are available around the state.

 

Breaking News: Two Accident Victims Were Shot Multiple Times. 

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  On June 13, just before 11:00 p.m., the Evansville Police Department was called to the area of U.S. Hwy 41 and Covert Ave. for a motor vehicle accident. The person who called dispatch also advised that someone in the accident had been shot multiple times. 

  The first responding officers discovered an overturned vehicle on the north side of the roadway on Covert Ave. They discovered there were two gunshot victims that were inside the vehicle at the time of the accident. Both victims suffered gunshot wounds to their lower extremities. 

  Officers immediately rendered aid to the victims by applying tourniquets until an ambulance could arrive and give further medical assistance. The victims were then transported to the hospital where they are expected to survive their injuries. 

  After tracking down several leads, the detective office was able to obtain an arrest warrant for Paje Capone Diaz (22) for attempted murder in this case.  The Evansville Viper Unit served the warrant on Diaz on June 14. He is currently placed at the Vanderburgh County Correction Center.   

“IS IT TRUE” JUNE 15, 2020

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We hope that today’s “IS IT TRUE” will provoke honest and open dialogue concerning issues that we, as responsible citizens of this community, need to address in a rational and responsible way?
City-County Observer Comment Policy. Be kind to people. No personal attacks or harassment will be tolerated and will be removed from our site.”
We understand that sometimes people don’t always agree and discussions may become a little heated.  The use of offensive language, insults against commenters will not be tolerated and will be removed from our site.
IS IT TRUE the Civic Center will be re-opening to the public today?…restaurants are also able to now be 75% occupied and will be back to full occupancy on July 4?
IS IT TRUE we were told about a recent event that happened at the Eastside Target store?  …that a group of around 8 vigilantes on motorcycles stood on guard in front of  Eastside Target store to protect it from potential looters?  …that these gun gun-toting vigilantes told our “MOLE” that they were there to protect Target from possible “ANTIFA” protesters?  …it turned out that the Facebook post that a busload of “ANTIFA” sponsored protesters was on their way to the Eastside Target was false? …after a while, these the vigilantes peacefully drone off in the sunset?
IS IT TRUE that  State Senator. Mark Stoops, a Democrat from Bloomington, is stepping down? …that former congressional candidate Shelli Yoder won the Democratic primary over State Democratic Party Chairman John Zody and Trent Feuerbach?  …all we can say about this is “it looks like being a political party chairman has its disadvantages?
IS IT TRUE that Democratic turnout in last weeks Georgia’s primaries skyrocketed — with three times as many votes cast in the Senate primary as in 2016?  …with 91 percent of the vote counted in the Georgia primary nearly 960,000 voters had cast ballots compared to 310,000 who voted in the Georgia primary in 2016?   …that several political prognosticators are telling the national democratic party leaders that the large voter’s turnout that happened in Georgia may be repeated in every state in America in the upcoming November 2020 election?
IS IT TRUE that CCO reader Mark Chandler posted the following comment last week?  …he posted “When guns are outlawed only Outlaws will have guns” and holds true if the Police are disbanded?
IS IT TRUE that this was the fourth weekend in a row for local protests?….we encourage those who are peacefully expressing their 1st Amendment rights to please wear a mask and practice social distancing?
IS IT TRUE that last Friday the Trump administration finalized its rollback of protections against gender identity discrimination in health care regulated by Obamacare? … the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said in a statement that it would recognize “sex discrimination according to the plain meaning of the word ‘sex’ as male or female and as determined by biology?”
IS IT TRUE that building projects that have been paid with public money it is a time-dishonored tradition for some of that money to go back to the politician’s re-election campaign coffers who made the contracts happen?
IS IT TRUE the North Main corridor master plan was designed to replace some street parking, provide an up-to-date bike trail, reduce crime and improve security in that area,  and bring economic development to that area? …it’s been about two years since this project was completed?  …we invite you to go to the North Main corridor area and see what kind of new retail businesses that this $14 million dollar public works project has attracted?  …we also invite you to tour the 500 to the 700 blocks of East Franklin and East Michigan streets and we bet that you will ask yourself why hasn’t the Department  Of Evansville Codes and Enforcement attempted to force the slum landlords to either bring these properties up to codes or demolish them?  …we also invite the officials from “KEEP EVANSVILLE  BEAUTIFUL” to take a tour of this area?  …we guarantee you that the officials from “KEEP EVANSVILLE BEAUTIFUL” will be appalled in what they see?
IS IT TRUE last year we posted that Deaconess Hospital-Evansville  and Henderson Community Methodist and Union County Hospitals formed a group called an “ACO?” …that “ACO” is where referrals are preferably kept within the group and only certain doctors at Deaconess and Methodist are invited to be a part of that group?  …during that time we wonder how the “ACO” referral agreement between Deaconess-Evansville and Henderson Community Methodist and Union County Hospital would work out? that Deaconess Hospital-Evansville is now advertising on local TV that Henderson Community Methodist and Union County Hospitals are now affiliated with Deaconess Hospital-Evansville? …it looks like things went as planned?

IS IT TRUE that the Evansville city employee’s hospitalization fund has been insufficiently funded over several years? …the city’s hospitalization fund, from which city employee medical claims are paid, has had a negative balance of several millions of dollars over the last several years?  …we are now hearing that the city’s hospitalization fund has a $3 million dollar deficit in this budget year?

IS IT TRUE we are proud of the success of the Ivy Tech LPN Nursing students for posting a 100% pass rates for their LPN State tests in 2019? …we would like to congratulate Ivy Tech-Evansville Admininastors and the faculty members for preparing the LPN Nursing student for passing this extremely challenging test?
IS IT TRUE that the EPA has allowed the City of Evansville to pussyfoot around with the lead contamination issue in the Jimtown and Jacobsville areas for over 20 years? …the real tragedy is that lead poisoning can be treated, but any damage caused by contaminated lead cannot be reversed?

IS IT TRUE that Vanderburgh County Commissioner Ben Shoulders (District 1) has volunteered his time and money to help with the “Feed Evansville” group?  …he also has personally sponsored several food trucks to provide food to the less fortunate and our front line heroes during the COVID-19 virus crisis?

IS IT TRUE that Vanderburgh County Coroner Steve Lockyear will be the only Democrat officeholder unopposed this fall?  …the reason why he’s unopposed is that he’s doing an excellent job as the Vanderburgh County Coroner?

IS IT TRUE to no one surprise Vanderburgh County Clerk Carla Hayden (R), Vanderburgh County Commissioner Cheryl Musgrave (R-District 3), and Vanderburgh County Deputy Treasurer Dottie Thomas (R) may all be running unopposed in the upcoming General election? …the local Democratic party has until the end of this month to find a candidate to run against Musgrave, Thomas, or Hayden?  …our prediction is that they won’t?
IS IT TRUE we are extremely impressed with how EPD Sgt. Nick Winsett himself with the media?
IS IT TRUE when the people fear the Government we have Tyranny!  When the Government fears the people we have Liberty?

IS IT TRUE our “READERS POLLS” are non-scientific but trendy?

Today’s “Readers Poll” question is: If the election for the President Of The United States were held today who would you vote for?
Please take time and read our articles entitled “STATEHOUSE FILES, LAW ENFORCEMENT, “READERS POLL”, BIRTHDAYS, HOT JOBS”, EDUCATION, OBITUARIES and “LOCAL SPORTS”.
You now are able to subscribe to get the CCO daily.
If you would like to advertise on the CCO please contact us at City-County Observer@live.com

 

Commentary: America’s Original Sin And Enduring Challenge

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Commentary: America’s Original Sin And Enduring Challenge

By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – America’s greatest writer said it best.

“The past is never dead,” the great Mississippi-born novelist William Faulkner wrote. “It isn’t even past.”

John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com

We Americans now are having a painful national discussion about our history. We are face to face, once again, with the reality that the past is every bit as fundamental to this country’s life as the air we breathe and the ground upon which we walk.

This is particularly true of our great national catastrophe, the Civil War, which remains the bloodiest such conflict in human history.

It is a cliché to say that the Civil War never ended.

Clichés, though, often become clichés because they have truth to them.

The last shots in the declared Civil War may have been fired more than 150 years ago, but the fighting continued long after that.

Reconstruction.

Jim Crow.

Separate but equal.

Lynching.

Poll taxes.

Bus boycotts.

Sit-ins.

Freedom Rides.

Black Lives Matter.

We Americans struggle to come to terms with this history because this part of our past is not flattering. We are a nation founded on a shared, seeming proposition – that all human beings have an equal right to freedom and the pursuit of happiness – but we have betrayed that core conviction.

Again.

And again.

And again.

We argue now about the Confederate flag, Confederate monuments, and Confederate memorials.

NASCAR has dispensed with displaying the Confederate flag. Confederate monuments in Indianapolis and elsewhere have come down – some by official act and others because activists have torn them down.

A vigorous debate rages about whether military installations – Fort Bragg, etc. – should continue to be named after Confederate generals. The president of the United States says yes. Increasingly, though, the nation’s military leaders, senators, and representatives say no.

This is not an argument empty of meaning.

The dwindling band of the flag’s defenders says it is a symbol of the courage with which Confederate soldiers fought. That is worthy of tribute, they say.

Perhaps the Confederate troops fought bravely, but they did so in the service of the rankest and worst of causes. They styled themselves as sentinels of liberty, but the reason they made war on their own nation was to preserve the “right” to own and oppress other human beings.

It is important not just to understand that but also to acknowledge it.

Sanitizing that history – denying the great wrong the Confederacy represented – gives fresh life to enduring evils.

The most pernicious of these, of course, deals with the question of race. It is no wonder that slavery has been called America’s original sin, the offense that has marked and afflicted us throughout our often-tortured history. The most savage conflicts we Americans have had with each other have come over the issue of pigment.

Until we in some way atone for this nation’s original sin – until we begin, to use Martin Luther King’s elegant phrase, to judge people by “the content of their character” and not the color of their skin – we never will honor and fulfill our country’s great promise.

This refusal to see the Confederacy for what it was also has cost us in other ways.

Slavery was a crime against humanity but taking up arms against the duly elected and established the U.S. government was a crime against the nation.

It was treason.

That it was committed by many men – including those who have been honored with statues and other relics – who took sacred oaths to defend this nation, its Constitution and its people only compound the offense.

This notion that traitors somehow could consider themselves and be considered by others as patriots linger to this day, in destructive ways. It contributes to the odd belief that we Americans are somehow separate from the government that we established and that draws its authority from us.

And it has given rise to the childish notion that we do not have to abide by any law or electoral outcome with which we do not agree.

All these tensions have endured for the life of this nation and afflicted Americans of our grandparents’ grandparents’ grandparents’ generation – and even before.

They likely will continue to do so until we see our history, clear-eyed, and without sentimentality.

Because Faulkner was right.

The past is never past.

It isn’t even past.

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 City-County Observer posted this article without bias, opinion, or editing.

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