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USI gets over .500 in the GLVC with 1-0 win

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University of Southern Indiana Men’s Soccer pushed its record over the .500 mark in the GLVC with a 1-0 victory over Lewis University Sunday afternoon at Strassweg Field. The Screaming Eagles see their record go to 5-5-3 overall and 5-4-2 in the GLVC, while Lewis goes to 7-5-2, 4-5-2 GLVC.

USI won a rough and tumble first half when senior forward Eric Ramirez converted a penalty kick at the 17:31 mark. Both teams had four shots, one on-goal, and four fouls each. The goal was his team-best fifth of the season.

In the second half, the Eagles’ defense took over and finished off the shutout victory. USI junior goalkeeper Justin Faas completed a weekend shutout sweep by making three saves after facing eight shots.

The GLVC weekend sweep moves the Eagles from 11th to sixth in the league standings, percentage points out of fifth with four matches to play in the 2019 regular season.

USI hits the road next week for its final road trip of the regular season with visits to Truman State University Friday at noon in Kirksville, Missouri, and Quincy University October 29 at 2:30 p.m. in Quincy, Illinois.

The Eagles have a chance to reach the .500 mark against Truman State University (5-6-2, 4-5-2 GLVC), trailing the all-time series, 9-8-3, after the 0-0 double overtime tie last year in Kirksville. USI has had the advantage over the last six years, going undefeated at 4-0-2.

Quincy (7-6-0, 5-5-0 GLVC), also leads the all-time series with USI, 17-7-2, but the Eagles have had the upper hand over the last five years, going 4-0-1 versus the Hawks. USI won at Quincy last fall, 2-0, on goals by senior midfielder Sean Rickey and Ramirez.

USI falls 6-1 in dual against Charleston

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University of Southern Indiana Women’s Tennis suffered a 6-1 loss to the University of Charleston (West Virginia) Sunday evening at the Charleston Racquet Club.

Senior Lauren Hambrock (Terre Haute, Indiana) fell in the first set of her singles match 6-2. She fought back taking the next set 6-4 before eventually falling 6-0 in the third set.

The bright spot for the Eagles was Junior Lauryn Thompson (Evansville, Indiana). Thompson dropped the first set of her singles match 6-4 but came roaring back with 7-5 and 6-3 set victories in the second and third respectively.

Freshman Chole Isaac (Fairview Heights, Illinois) and Thompson picked up another victory for USI 6-2 in the doubles.

Up Next, USI will travel to Martin, Tennessee for a dual against the Skyhawks of UT-Martin on Oct. 25-26.

 

Eagles and Flyers fight to 1-1 draw

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University of Southern Indiana Women’s Soccer and Lewis University battled to a 1-1 double overtime draw in the annual Kick for the Cure Match Sunday afternoon at Strassweg Field. The Eagles go to 9-3-1 overall and are 7-3-1 GLVC, while Lewis is 6-5-3 overall, 4-4-3 GLVC.

USI trailed at the end of the first 45 minutes, 1-0, after allowing a goal at 15:16. A very close first half saw the Flyers lead in shots, 6-5, and shots on-goal, 3-1.

In the second half, USI dominated the match by outshooting Lewis, 9-2, and evened the score, 1-1, at 56:39 when USI junior forward Maggie Winter scored. Winter posted her team-high sixth of the season on a cross by sophomore forward Katlyn Andres. The score would remain 1-1 through the end of regulation.

The over-time saw Lewis control the chances, posting a 5-0 advantage in shots, but the Eagles’ freshman goalkeeper Maya Etienne stymied the Flyers with a pair of saves. Etienne was credited with her first career tie after making five saves and allowing one goal in 110 minutes of action.

USI hits the road next week for its final road trip of the regular season with visits to Truman State University Friday at 2:30 p.m. in Kirksville, Missouri, and Quincy University October 29 at noon in Quincy, Illinois.

The Eagles trail in the all-time series with Truman State, 7-3-1, after the Bulldogs won last fall’s meeting, 2-0, in Kirksville. The Bulldogs, who are 6-6-1 overall and 6-5-0 in the GLVC at the conclusion of this weekend, have won five of the last six meetings with the Eagles.

Quincy, which is 5-8-0 overall and 4-7-0 in the GLVC, also leads the all-time series with USI, 16-6-1, and have won the last seven matches versus the Eagles after posting a 2-1 win at Quincy last fall. USI senior midfielder Emilie Blomenkamp had the Eagles’ lone goal versus the Hawks in the loss.

EPD REPORT

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EPD REPORT

Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Records

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https://www.vanderburghsheriff.com/jail-recent-booking-records.aspx

“IS IT TRUE” OCTOBER 21, 2019

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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?

IS IT TRUE all we are hearing from the good people at the Evansville Convention and Vistors Bureau are crickets?  … it’s the best-known secret that three (3) Vanderburgh County Council members would like to be the next Executive Director of this organization? …we are told that two (2) current employees of this group are also interested in being hired as the leader of this organization?  …we are also not surprised to hear that several employees working in responsible positions within Evansville/Vanderburgh County Government would also like to be the next Executive Director of the Evansville Convention and Vistors Bureau?

IS IT TRUE that the Executive Director of the Evansville Convention and Vistors Bureau is paid a whopping $125,000 a year salary (not including salary and perks)? …that over the past 20 plus years the Executive Director has come from outside Vanderburgh County? …many people feel that its time for someone from this area is hired to head this worthy organization? …we agree with that assessment?

IS IT TRUE we are told by reliable sources that business tycoon Ron Geary will be in town this week to meet a group of well-heeled business people to discuss a possible multi-million venture capital opportunity in Evansville proper?

IS IT TRUE that book author Joe “Jack” Wallace is flying in from California this week to attend our “Annual Awards Luncheon” at Tropicana-Evansville on Friday? …that Joe “Jack” Wallace will be signing his book entitled “Working Outside The Box” at this event? …that  Holly K. Dunn will also have autograph copies of “Sole Survivor”?  …”Uncommon Heart” authored by Olympian Anne Audain will also be available to those in attendance?…it looks like its book signing time in ole Evansville

IS IT TRUE  we are told that it’s extremely important that Mayor Winnecke hand-picked City Council candidates win? …if they don’t he will be facing a less than a cooperative City Council during the next four years?

IS IT TRUE that Ward One (1) an Ward Two (2) are the two City Council races to watch?

IS IT TRUE that the City-County Observer is seriously considering endorsing one (1) candidate in the Evansville City Council race?

IS IT TRUE that we are told that there may be several surprises in the upcoming City election?  …that the yard signs that have been illegally placed on city right-a-ways will take a back seat to door-to-door politicking?

IS IT TRUE that the former Vice President of Communications for Vectren Energy  Corp. Chase Kelly was professional, open and candid? …anytime we had concerns about rate changes or proposed State or Federal legislation concerning extremely technical information she always was able to break it down in simple laymen terms? …she always kept up in the loop and informed about by sending us current news releases?

IS IT TRUE that from 1972-1974 Curt John was Vanderburgh County Chief Deputy Auditor?  …from 1975-1980 he was Auditor of Vanderburgh County?  …from1982-1984 he served as the Assistant City Attorney for the City of Evansville?  …he also served as the Vanderburgh County Attorney?  …Curt served on the Evansville City Council Evansville from 1996 to 2011?  …was well known for being a caring person, conservative and fair-minded?  …that the Evansville City Council needs another Curt John?

IS IT TRUE that Alfonso Vidal is an extremely well-respected community leader?  …that Alfonso is considered to be a main mover and shaker of the Latino community of our region?  …that Alfonso is one of a very few Latinos who are openly Republican?  …we give five (5) cheers to Alfonso Vidal for helping to improve the quality of life of the Latino people of our region?

IS IT THAT we just learned that super attorney Neil Chapman has leaped from one tall downtown bank building to another?  …this move is something that Superman would do?

Today’s “Reader Poll” question is: If the election was held today for City Council Ward Two (2) who would you vote for?

FOOTNOTES: This year’s awards luncheon will be held at Tropicana-Evansville Walnut rooms A and B. The registration begins at 11:30 am, the event officially starts at 12 noon on October 25, 2019.  The Keynote speaker will be announced later this week.

Reservations for this event may be obtained by calling Jim Knauff at 812-457-1017.  The deadline for registration is October 22, 2019. Last year’s event was a sellout.

If you would like to advertise on the CCO please contact us at City-County Observer@live.com

City-County Observer Comment Policy. Be kind to people. No personal attacks or harassment will not be tolerated and shall 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.

Any comments posted in this column do not represent the views or opinions of the City-County Observer or our advertisers

 

 

Commentary: The Harsh Beauty Of Truth

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By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – They appeared within days of each other, like flowers blooming just as a storm hit.

Three of America’s enduring novels – William Faulkner’s “The Sound and the Fury,” Ernest Hemingway’s “A Farewell to Arms” and Thomas Wolfe’s “Look Homeward, Angel” – were published in the autumn of 1929, just days before the stock market crashed and sent the nation into the most profound economic depression in its history.

Vastly different books written by vastly different men, the novels shared at least one thing in common. They were signs of something stirring in American culture, a willingness to peer beneath the surface and record without hesitation what one saw in the scurrying places down below.

Hemingway’s book came first. It was published on Sept. 27, 1929.

Taken often – particularly in the movies – as an aching tragic love story, “A Farewell to Arms” is much more than that. Hemingway is often – and with justice – criticized for his macho chest-thumping and seeming celebrations of combat, but his relationship with war was more complicated than his myth suggests.

In “Farewell,” his lovers flee a World War I in which rules and alliances seem to have been shattered. Comrades kill comrades and chaos reigns.

Hemingway wrote of the importance of exhibiting “grace under pressure” because he saw that the world often made no sense. It was crucial to maintain the presence of mind when reason itself seemed to have abdicated the throne.

Faulkner’s book appeared next, on Oct. 7. A tour de force, American letters hadn’t ever seen anything like “The Sound and the Fury.” In some ways, American literature still hasn’t.

It was an explosion of the modernist technique. A tale told by several voices, it is the story of a doomed Southern family. Each narrator carries wounds and each wound was inflicted by history.

In the course of the story, Faulkner probes and exposes all the sore points of the Southern heritage – race, incest, guilt, defeat, despair.

Before Faulkner, Southern literature celebrated regional notions of chivalrous conduct, mythology grounded more in wishful thinking than historical fact.

After Faulkner, such denials of Southern reality became harder, even impossible, to sustain. He’d torn away from the concealing curtain.

Wolfe’s book followed Faulkner’s less than two weeks later, on Oct. 18. Now often dismissed as a self-absorbed coming-of-age story, “Look Homeward, Angel” was more intricate than that. Wolfe, with a master’s degree from Harvard, was the best-educated of his literary contemporaries – and he likely was the best-read of them.

“Look Homeward, Angel” mingled elements of James Joyce, Sherwood Anderson, and Sinclair Lewis to take a penetrating look at the not so quietly desperate life of a Carolina mountain boom town. It slices away at one of the sustaining myths of American life, that small communities were temples of virtue and rectitude.

Six days after Wolfe’s book came out, “Black Thursday” happened and the stock market started its long, hard drive. Five days later, “Black Tuesday” – Oct. 29, 1929 – happened and the debacle was complete.

Over the next decade, as much as 25 percent of the American population – and in some parts of the country the number was closer to 40 percent – would be jobless. The stock market and the American economy wouldn’t return to the levels known before the crash until the early 1950s.

The despair Hemingway, Faulkner and Wolfe depicted became the national norm.

But they demonstrated a diamond-like resilience in the American character. However profound our devotion to illusion maybe, we Americans periodically do find the clear-eyed courage to peer into the darkness and not blink.

Hemingway, Faulkner, and Wolfe weren’t saints. Tortured men, they all drank too much and battled demons from their own experience and, often, of their own making.

Each writer came to a hard end. Hemingway, of course, committed suicide. Faulkner suffered a series of debilitating injuries and illnesses brought on by heavy drinking before he died. Wolfe succumbed to tuberculosis of the brain, brought on, one story has it because he shared a bottle of whiskey on a raw day with a sickly hobo.

Each, though, left his work as a kind of monument, an affirmation that there is harsh beauty in truth.

And a timeless reminder that we Americans can’t make dark times any lighter by ignoring that darkness.

FOOTNOTE: John Krull is the director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

What All Women Should Know About Mammograms

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What All Women Should Know About Mammograms

Janine Morris, MDRadiologist, Deaconess Breast Services10/09/2019

As a specialist in breast cancer detection, I know a lot about mammograms.I work full time in Deaconess Breast Services, reviewing mammograms and breast MRIs, performing biopsies, and working closely with staff to help women find breast cancer at its earliest, most treatable stages.

Breast cancer will develop in 1 in 8 American women in her lifetime, so it’s very important that women be informed about options and recommendations for early detection. Unfortunately, there is no guaranteed way to prevent breast cancer. However, if breast cancer is found early—before it spreads to other areas of the body– 98% of women will survive a breast cancer diagnosis.

Regular screening mammograms are still the best way to find breast cancer early, which means that mammograms are the best tool in the fight against breast cancer. I know that there is some confusion regarding mammogram recommendations, so I want to address that. I’m also going to explain what 3D mammography is, and why it’s the superior choice for women.

What is a mammogram and when should I have one?
A mammogram is an x-ray picture of the breast. Mammograms can be used to check for breast cancer in women who have no signs or symptoms of disease. This type of mammogram is called a screening mammogram, which typically includes 2 or more images of each breast. The x-ray images often make it possible to detect tumors that cannot be felt.

There are some organizations that have said women who are of average risk for developing breast cancer can delay screening mammograms until later in their 40s, or even to age 50.  I disagree with that.

I’m a member of the American College of Radiology (ACR), and the Society of Breast Imaging. Both of these professional, medical organizations recommend that women of average risk (more on that in a bit) should have an annual screening mammogram starting at age 40.

Unfortunately, I have seen many women diagnosed with breast cancer in their early 40s. If they would’ve waited until age 45 or even 50 for a screening mammogram, their cancers wouldn’t have been detected until a more advanced stage.  While it is true that the vast majority of breast cancers are diagnosed in women over 50, women who develop breast cancer at younger ages often have a more aggressive type of cancer, which is more dangerous because it spreads more quickly.

For reference, here are details of the official position of the ACR.

Are there specific reasons to have a mammogram before age 40?
Women who have a history of breast cancer in their family (mother, sister, grandmother, daughter) may be at an increased risk for breast cancer, especially if their relative was diagnosed at an early age (before 50), or if multiple blood relatives have had breast cancer.

If you have this kind of family history, talk with your primary care doctor and/or your OB/GYN about what screenings may be right for you. Sometimes a woman with a family history of breast cancer should begin annual screening mammograms at an age that is 10 years younger than when the family member was diagnosed. Some women may benefit from breast MRI screenings. Any screening outside the general guidelines will require a physician order, so your doctor is your partner in making this decision.

Additionally, women with dense breasts (as determined by their first mammogram) may also benefit from a modified screening plan, which should be discussed with their doctor.

Finally, any woman who notices something abnormal about her breasts (such as a lump, dimple/puckering, leaking from the nipple, etc.) should notify her doctor immediately. A diagnostic mammogram may be needed. A diagnostic mammogram is used to closely look at breast abnormalities and is not the same as a screening mammogram.

What are the risk factors for breast cancer?  
The list below from the CDC is a comprehensive list of risk factors for breast cancer.  Studies have shown that a woman’s risk for breast cancer is due to a combination of factors.

The main factors that influence your risk include being a woman and getting older, as most breast cancers are found in women who are age 50 or older. Some women will get breast cancer even without any known risk factors besides being a woman and over 50.

Having a risk factor does not mean you will get the disease, and not all risk factors have the same effect. Most women have some risk factors, but most women do not get breast cancer. If you have breast cancer risk factors, talk with your doctor about ways you can lower your risk and about screening for breast cancer.

Risk factors include

  • Getting older. The risk for breast cancer increases with age; most breast cancers are diagnosed after age 50.
  • Genetic mutations. Inherited changes (mutations) to certain genes, such as BRCA1 and BRCA2. Women who have inherited these genetic changes are at higher risk of breast and ovarian cancer.
  • Early menstrual period. Women who start their periods before age 12 are exposed to hormones longer, raising the risk for breast cancer by a small amount.
  • Late or no pregnancy. Having the first pregnancy after age 30 and never having a full-term pregnancy can raise breast cancer risk.
  • Starting menopause after age 55. Like starting one’s period early, being exposed to estrogen hormones for a longer time later in life also raises the risk of breast cancer.
  • Not being physically active. Women who are not physically active have a higher risk of getting breast cancer.
  • Being overweight or obese after menopause. Older women who are overweight or obese have a higher risk of getting breast cancer than those at a normal weight.
  • Having dense breasts. Dense breasts have more connective tissue than fatty tissue, which can sometimes make it hard to see tumors on a mammogram. Women with dense breasts are more likely to get breast cancer.
  • Using combination hormone therapy. Taking hormones to replace missing estrogen and progesterone in menopause for more than five years raises the risk for breast cancer. The hormones that have been shown to increase risk are estrogen and progestin when taken together.
  • Taking oral contraceptives (birth control pills). Certain forms of oral contraceptive pills have been found to raise breast cancer risk.
  • Personal history of breast cancer. Women who have had breast cancer are more likely to get breast cancer a second time.
  • Personal history of certain non-cancerous breast diseases. Some non-cancerous breast diseases such as atypical hyperplasia or lobular carcinoma in situ are associated with a higher risk of getting breast cancer.
  • Family history of breast cancer. A woman’s risk for breast cancer is higher if she has a mother, sister, or daughter (first-degree relative) or multiple family members on either her mother’s or father’s side of the family who have had breast cancer. Having a first-degree male relative with breast cancer also raises a woman’s risk.
  • Previous treatment using radiation therapy. Women who had radiation therapy to the chest or breasts (like for treatment of Hodgkin’s lymphoma) before age 30 have a higher risk of getting breast cancer later in life.
  • Women who took the drug diethylstilbestrol (DES), which was given to some pregnant women in the United States between 1940 and 1971 to prevent miscarriage, have a higher risk. Women whose mothers took DES while pregnant with them are also at risk.
  • Drinking alcohol. Studies show that a woman’s risk for breast cancer increases with the more alcohol she drinks.

Research suggests that other factors such as smoking, being exposed to chemicals that can cause cancer, and night shift work may also increase breast cancer risk.

We recommend an excellent self-assessment tool for determining your personal lifetime risk for breast cancer. We encourage you to take this test and discuss the results with your physician.

What is 3D mammography?
Mammography, and in particular, 3D digital mammography, is the gold standard in breast cancer screening.
In 2D imaging, cancerous tumors can be hidden behind normal breast structures. That’s because photos of the breast are taken looking all the way through the breast in one view.

3D mammography, also called tomosynthesis, helps radiologists see clearer, more detailed photos of the breasts. The mammography machine takes images of the breasts in layers, helping us see the breast in clearer, more precise views. Imagine a loaf of bread—a 2D image takes a photo of the whole loaf in one photo. A 3D image is like slices of the loaf, helping us see abnormalities much more easily.

In a 2D mammogram, if there appears to be an area of concern, the doctor may want to further investigate with another mammogram or a biopsy. Looking at the same breast tissue in visual “slices” from the 3D mammogram exam, the doctor can now determine if the tissue is in fact normal breast tissue creating the illusion of an abnormal area. This helps reduce call-backs and biopsies.

Have a look at the images below for comparison.

 In this image, there is a gathering of tissue or “thickening” on the 2D mammogram that isn’t completely clear. However, in the 3D image, a lump is clearly seen—a lump that is cancerous.

As you can see in the 2D image below, a bright mass appears to be present at the front of the breast, which would have likely resulted in the woman having additional imaging or possibly a biopsy. But as you can see in the 3D image slides, that bright spot was normal breast tissue that was “stacked,” making it look like there was something there that really wasn’t.

Deaconess Breast Services is the only breast screening organization in the Tri-State to receive designation as a Breast Imaging Center of Excellence by the American College of Radiology (ACR).  We’re very proud of this designation, as it means that our breast imaging centers have earned accreditation in mammography, stereotactic breast biopsy, and breast ultrasound (including ultrasound-guided breast biopsy), and breast MRI.

We offer 3D mammography at all three of our screening locations, including:

  • Deaconess Breast Center at Deaconess Midtown
  • The Breast Center at The Women’s Hospital
  • The Mobile Breast Center

By ensuring that we are the highest-rated Breast Imaging Center in the tri-state, Deaconess Breast Services is doing everything we can to help win the fight against breast cancer.

There are additional Deaconess services related to breast cancer that we believe women should know about.  

Genetic counseling
If you have a family history of breast cancer, you may benefit from oncology genetic counseling.  The Women’s Cancer Center, located in the Chancellor Center for Oncology, offers the expertise of the only oncology genetic counselor in the entire region. 

Certain people may benefit from meeting with an oncology genetic counselor, such as those with a personal and/or family history of:

  • Early-onset cancers, usually diagnosed before age 50
  • Cancer in two or more first-degree relatives on the same side of the family (maternal or paternal history)
  • Multiple primary tumors (more than one type of cancer in one individual)
  • Bilateral tumors (affecting, for example, both breasts or both ovaries)
  • A relative who is a known carrier of an inherited cancer gene

Contact The Women’s Cancer Center to learn more.

Multidisciplinary Breast Cancer Clinic
When a woman is diagnosed with breast cancer, having a team of cancer experts can improve outcomes. The Multidisciplinary Breast Cancer Clinic involves multiple physicians and experts to create a personalized treatment plan for each patient.

Mobile Breast Center
We’re proud to have recently completed a full year of bringing 3D mammograms to women throughout the region via the Deaconess Mobile Breast Center. See where screening mammograms will be offered close to you.

Convenient mammogram scheduling
When you make the decision to have your annual screening mammogram, we can provide your screening and results the same day. You don’t need to wait for an appointment either!  Schedule your mammogram online–right now–or simply call 812-450-6266.

Learn more about the author

Janine Morris, MD
Specialty: Radiology

PRECAUTIONARY BOIL ADVISORY FOR WEST SIDE

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October 20, 2019 Contact: Boscoe Wilhite Phone: 1-812-421-2120 Email: bcwilhite@ewsu.com

Due to a main break on Mt. Vernon Rd. the Evansville Water Utility (IN5282002), is issuing a precautionary boil advisory.

The following areas are included per Boscoe Wilhite: 

Everything in the area north of the Ohio River, south of Mill Road, west of St. Joe Ave and east of the Posey County Line.

Sample locations: 10211 Broadway Ave. at blowoff

10001 S. Posey Co. Line Rd. at hydrant

9200 New Harmony Rd (Daughters-Charity) at hydrant

Magnolia Dr and Caren Dr at hydrant

While the potential for contamination of the drinking water is unlikely, the Evansville Water Utility is advising customers in the affected area to bring all cooking and drinking water to a complete boil for five (5) minutes before using.  Please continue to boil all cooking and drinking water until we notify you that it is no longer necessary.  

The Evansville Water Utility is implementing this precautionary boil advisory based upon information within the Water Supply Industry regarding additional precautionary steps that may safeguard the health of public water supply system customers.  The conditions regarding this issue and the magnitude of the affected area warrant these additional precautionary measures.  The boil advisory will remain in effect until the coliform analysis is completed. We will notify you when the precautionary boil advisory will be lifted.

EVSC Special Education Unified Game Days

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EVSC Students To Participate in Special Education Unified Game Days
Tuesday, October 22 – Elementary Game Day
Wednesday, October 23 – Middle School Game Day
9 a.m. to noon each day
Central High School Track, 5400 First Avenue

Students in the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation will participate next week in the Special Olympics Unified Champion School Program. Students in EVSC elementary and middle school life skills classes have been training for the program that combines athletes and their peer partners to practice sports skills together. The program fosters friendships and gives participants an awareness of their own worth, ability, courage, and capacity to learn and grow.

The elementary event will include various stations students will move through. The middle school event will function similar to a track and field meet.