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This Week at USI

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Below is a list of events and activities happening in and around the USI community in the coming weeks:

University closed Tuesday, December 24 – Wednesday, January 1; Classes resume Monday, January 13
USI winter recess and start of spring 2020 semester

The University of Southern Indiana will be closed for winter recess from Tuesday, December 24 through Wednesday, January 1. University offices will reopen on Thursday, January 2. The first day of classes for the spring 2020 semester is Monday, January 13.

STUDENT EVENTS

A collection of events on campus and in the community sponsored by USI student organizations

can be found on the USI events calendar by clicking here.

 IN CASE YOU MISSED IT

Event at 11:30 a.m. Monday, January 20
White House reporter, author April Ryan to keynote 2020 USI Martin Luther King, Jr. Luncheon
April Ryan, journalist, political correspondent and award-winning author, will provide the keynote address at the University of Southern Indiana’s annual Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Luncheon at 11:30 a.m. Monday, January 20, 2020 in Carter Hall located in University Center West on the USI campus. Read More

Event starts at 2 p.m.; Keynote starts at 6 p.m. Wednesday, February 5
Angela Davis to deliver 2020 Nelson Mandela Social Justice Day keynote at USI
The University of Southern Indiana will host Dr. Angela Davis, a distinguished professor, activist and social justice advocate, as the keynote speaker for its 2020 Nelson Mandela Social Justice Day at 6 p.m. Wednesday, February 5 in Carter Hall. Davis’ presentation, “Democracy and Civil Engagement,” will be free and open to the public as space allows. An activism fair featuring USI and community organizations will be held in the Carter Hall concourse beginning at 2 p.m. prior to the keynote address. Read More

 

EPD REPORT

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EPD REPORT

VANDERBURGH COUNTY SHERIFF  WARRANTS

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VANDERBURGH COUNTY SHERIFF  WARRANTS

CourierWarrants

ADOPT A PET

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Lorna is the VHS’ 2nd longest-resident cat! She came to VHS with her kittens, and spent a few months in foster care raising them. But now she’s ready for a home of her own. She is currently adoptable at River Kitty Cat Café in downtown Evansville. Her adoption fee is $40 and includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!

Fatal Light Aircraft Crash at Camp Reveal Update

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Fatal Light Aircraft Crash at Camp Reveal Update

UPDATE (12/24/2019 8:38 AM)

The National Transportation Safety Board, Federal Aviation Administration, and the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office continue to gather information concerning the recent plane crash at Camp Reveal in northern Vanderburgh County. Some information previously reported by our Office has been updated.

On Saturday, December 21, 2019, at 3:14 PM a 1971 Piper Cherokee fixed-wing aircraft crashed into an open field at Camp Reveal off E. Boonville New Harmony Road in Evansville, Indiana. The aircraft is owned by the X-Cell Aviation of Evansville. The Vanderburgh County Coroner’s Office identified the pilot as 56-year-old Phillip M. Burke of Newburgh, Indiana.

The aircraft was fueled at Tri-State Aero at the Evansville Airport before departing at approximately 2:20 PM Saturday. The aircraft traveled north before returning south to the Evansville area. The aircraft had been in contact with the Evansville tower prior to the crash, but no mayday or emergency transmission was received.

The aircraft crashed into a grassy field approximately 30 feet north of 1000-block of East Boonville-New Harmony Road. The Coroner’s Office indicated the pilot suffered multiple blunt force trauma.

Investigators from the Federal Aviation Administration were at the scene Saturday night and were joined by a National Transportation Safety Board investigator on Sunday. A representative of Piper Aircraft was also on-scene to assist in the investigation.

Pictured above: Crash scene at Camp Reveal. 

PREVIOUSLY:

A small light aircraft has crashed on the grounds of Camp Reveal off East Boonville-New Harmony Road, killing the sole pilot.

At 3:14 PM on December 21, 2019, the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office, McCutchanville Fire Department, and the Scott Township Fire Department responded to Camp Reveal upon a report of an aircraft crash.

A small Cessna light aircraft had attempted an emergency landing east of the main entrance to the camp. The pilot, who was able to maneuver the aircraft into an open field and avoid striking any buildings, was killed during the crash. The aircraft had departed from Tri-State Aero but began losing altitude and crash-landed while traveling north.

The name of the pilot will be released by the Vanderburgh County Coroner’s Office once all family notifications have been made.

As is standard procedure for all aircraft crashes, the Indiana State Police (ISP), the National Transportation Safety Bureau (NTSB), the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) have been notified.

 

Pictured above: Crash scene at Camp Reveal.

 

Downtown Evansville  Economic Improvement District Priorities for 2020

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Downtown Evansville  Economic Improvement District Priorities for 2020

Their efforts are managed by a Board of Directors made up of multiple assessed property owners, Downtown businesses and non-profits, and Downtown residents. We created the fifth such district in Indiana, and there are over 1,000 similar districts across the US.
First funded in 2018, our efforts have included alley activation and beautification, litter cleanup, landscape enhancements, developer and business recruitment, investor development for Downtown projects, holiday décor, banners, support for large community-wide events, advertising, relaunching the farmers market, producing 20 Downtown
Evansville events annually, providing additional patrols by off-duty police officers, supporting efforts to increase the hours of services available at the United Caring Services homeless shelter, and supporting the City through maintaining amenities such as painting the arch or repairing electrical outlets on Riverside Drive.

They are seeking the input of our property owners and the broader community regarding our efforts in 2020. During this short survey, you can share how you feel our resources should be applied. This survey, with feedback from our board and the guidance of the Master Plan, will focus our 2020 goals and work plan. Our work generally occurs in an area bound by the Ohio River, Fulton, Martin Luther King Jr Blvd. and Walnut. Properties on Main Street are assessed at a higher level for the increased amount of benefit provided.

If you’d like more information, visit their website at www.DowntownEvansville.com or follow us on all social media platforms as “Downtown Evansville Indiana.”

EPD REPORT

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EPD REPORT

Commentary: An Evening’s Education In Paris

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Commentary: An Evening’s Education In Paris

By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com 

PARIS, France – The two young people settle into a table by the window of a café just across the Seine from Notre-Dame.

The man, an American, is the younger of the two. He has the determinedly unkempt look of the aspiring Bohemian. A wispy beard feathers his jawline. His button-down shirt is untucked beneath a light brown sweater.

John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com

The woman is French and three or four years older. Her hair and makeup have been done with a subtle and assured touch. Every now and then, a hint of her perfume, something spring-like, floats over to where I sit, one table over.

Across the café, another man of my vintage, gray-haired with a light blue sweater draped over his shoulders, reads a tattered book as he drinks a glass of white wine. Before each sip, in a practiced gesture, he flicks his wrist to give the wine a little swirl. His eyes never leave the pages.

At the table next to him, two Asian teenagers – a boy and a girl – sit focused on an open laptop computer. Plates once filled with crepes have been pushed to the edges of the table to make room for the computer. Occasionally, they point at the screen and discuss something they see on it, their voices and language a kind of melody from a world away.

What are they looking at? Is it work or play?

There is something so seductive about people-watching in one of the world’s great cities.

The man with the book and the elegant swish of the wine could have been a figure from a hundred years ago. But the Asian youngsters with the computer are characters of this present age, reminders of the way the globe has shrunk, and time has accelerated.

At the table next to me, an ageless dance unfolds.

The young American leans forward toward the French woman. He speaks excitedly, determinedly, in French. The woman’s smile as he talks is warm, gentle, reassuring. When it is time to order, she is the one who catches the waiter’s eye.

The young man talks to impress her. He does not know that it is not his assurance that allures her. It is his innocence. He has not yet learned how to be indifferent. She is charmed not by how much he knows, but how eager he is to learn.

Whether he knows it or not, in this relationship, she is the teacher, he the student.

I chuckle to myself. Many – perhaps even most – men have been where he is now. His education into the joys and mysteries of life is about to be enriched.

She orders more wine. He leans back in his chair. She leans forward. Her tone is soft, intimate, kindly without being condescending. The young man smiles. His pleasure in her company radiates.

The evening has begun to fade into the night.

The older man with the tattered book finishes his wine, settles up and steps out into the dark. Asian teenagers stay locked on their computers.

The French woman signals for the check. The young American man pays the bill. They look across the table at each other and smile, then walk to the door.

Just outside the café, she starts to slip her arm in his. He turns toward her. They kiss, then walk into the night, arm in arm.

This world is in a constant state of revolution. The new and the old joust for attention and space every moment of every day of every week of every year.

So many things change.

Some thank goodness, do not.

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.

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ADOPT A PET

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Quint is a gorgeous male American Staffordshire Terrier mix. He is 10 months old and loves belly rubs. He has recently gone on some Mutt’s Morning Out trips and done very well! He also was surrendered with another small dog, that he lived successfully with at home. Quint’s adoption fee is $110 and includes his neuter, microchip, vaccines, & more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!