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ADOPT A PET

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Gerry is an adorable 5-month-old male kitten! He tested positive for FIV (feline immunodeficiency virus) which is like HIV in people. But that’s no biggie… it’s only transmitted through deep-tissue bite wounds. Since he gets along with other cats – no worries! It will not affect his overall health or lifespan in a home environment. Gerry was found as a stray by one of VHS’ long-time volunteers, and no one ever came forward to claim him. He’s neutered & ready to go home today for only $60. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!

Orange Out set for Saturday when UE hosts Murray State

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Aces and Racers meet up at 6 p.m. inside Ford Center

 An Orange Out is set for Saturday evening in the Ford Center when the University of Evansville men’s basketball team welcomes Murray State for a 6 p.m. game.  Fans are encouraged to wear their orange in what will be an excellent gameday atmosphere inside the Ford Center.

 Setting the Scene

– In what is always an exciting atmosphere, the Aces and Murray State meet for the 39th time overall and the 8th time since 2011

– MSU holds a 26-12 edge in the series and have won 12 out of 20 contests played in Evansville

– In the last game at the Ford Center, the Aces earned the most lopsided win either team has enjoyed in the series, taking a 78-46 win on Dec. 10, 2016

– Evansville looks to finish its non-conference slate on a high note before beginning Missouri Valley Conference play on Dec. 31 at Missouri State

Last Time Out

– A 5-game win streak came to an end on Monday evening when UE fell at Jacksonville State by a final of 85-59

– Sam Cunliffe was the lone player in double figures for UE, scoring 11 points

– DeAndre Williams, Artur Labinowicz, K.J. Riley, Evan Kuhlman, Jawaun Newton and Thomasi Gilgeous-Alexander registered six points apiece

– The Gamecocks shot 54.8% in the game and were 11-of-22 from outside

Up-Tempo Sophomore

– Sophomore Shamar Givance continues to lead the Missouri Valley Conference in assist-to-turnover ratio with a tally of 3.4

– He has 24 assists against just 7 turnovers in his 232 minutes on the floor

– In the triple overtime thriller against Morgan State, he set his career scoring mark with 15 points while going a perfect 2-2 from outside and 4-7 from the field

Pin Point Accuracy

– Entering the Jacksonville State game, John Hall converted 61.9% of his field goal attempts and 61.5% of his lone range tries over the prior three games while averaging 11.3 PPG over that span

– Over the first eight games this season, Hall stood at just 5.8 points, but has upped his season average to 6.9 points

– He was 4-for-6 from long distance against Miami Ohio – by comparison – he took a total of just six 3-point shots in his first season with the program

– Hall added 12 points on 5-of-9 shooting at Green Bay

– The Philadelphia native has been a starter in ten games this year and poured in his top effort of the season against IU Kokomo, posting 16 points while converting three triples

Scouting the Opponent

– Murray State comes into Saturday’s game with a 6-4 record and have won their last two games, defeating Middle Tennessee State and Kennesaw State

– Tevin Brown has gotten off to an excellent start for the Racers, posting team-highs in points (14.6 PPG) and steals (11)

– KJ Williams has a team-high 6.8 rebounds per game and is second in scoring with 12.2 PPG

– Sitting at 9.9 points is Jaiveon Eaves; Eaves played for the Purple Aces during the 2016-17 season and played in 24 games as a freshman

– The Racers are 23rd in the nation in rebounding margin, finishing with an advantage of 8.2 boards per game

 

HOT JOB IN EVANSVILLE

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Front Desk Receptionist
EyeCare Consultants – Evansville, IN
Responsive employer
Eyecare Consultants has an opening for front desk receptionist. This position facilitates the patient registration and check-in process of the medical office…
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Administrative Assistant
Stella-Jones 2.9/5 rating   12 reviews  – Evansville, IN
Paid sick hours and personal hours. O 401k plan with a company match of 150% on the first 4% deferred. Ability to work flexible hours as necessary.
Dec 18
Medical Office Assistant
Deaconess Health System 3.7/5 rating   448 reviews  – Evansville, IN
Maintains positive patient oriented services in the provision of medical office services to the patient, family members, visitors and physicians in the office…
Dec 17
Administrative Assistant – Real Estate
The Dauby Team of Keller Williams Capital Realty – Evansville, IN
$12 – $16 an hour
Communicate regularly with the clients to send reminders, check in, answer questions, and let them know what to expect in each step of the closing process.
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Dec 16
Part-time Office Assistant
Happe and Sons Construction, Inc. – Evansville, IN
The hours are 11 am – 4 pm Monday through Friday. Happe & Sons Construction is looking for a part time office assistant.
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Dec 17
Administrative Assistant
Carter Lumber 3.1/5 rating   245 reviews  – Evansville, IN
Performs various administration functions including reporting, filing, faxing and shredding. Processes purchase orders by entering in the system, matching with…
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Dec 17
Administrative Coordinator
Southwest Indiana Chamber – Evansville, IN
$35,000 – $40,000 a year
Assists Community Development team with grant administrationduties, fund tracking in Excel and paperwork organizing. Flexible in work schedule and job task(s).
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Dec 16
Office Manager
America’s Car-Mart 3.6/5 rating   396 reviews  – Evansville, IN
$12 an hour
401(k) Retirement Savings Plan with Company match. Or equivalent combination of education and experienced. A job for which military experienced candidates are…
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Dec 18
Administrative Assistant
Trans Ash, Inc. – Newburgh, IN
Assist site project supervision w/project administration. Enter payroll hours and cost code equipment and labor on time cards. 2+ years of relevant experience.
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Dec 17
Medical Front Desk Receptionist
Virtual Consult MD – Evansville, IN
$10 – $12 an hour
Is seeking a motived and energetic Front Desk Receptionist with customer service experience for our busy Evansville, Indiana office.
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Dec 16
Medical Front Desk Receptionist (TSOS WEST)
Tri-State Orthopaedic Surgeons – Evansville, IN
Flexibility to work between the hours of 6:30am and 6:30pm, as well as some Saturdays. Front Desk Receptionist Job Description Form 10.32.
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Front Desk Receptionist
Confidential – Evansville, IN
FT Front Deck Receptionist. Medical office. Fast paced office. Communication and teamwork a must. Able to multi-task. Prefer medical office experience x 1 year…
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Ameriprise – Mount Vernon, IN
Microsoft Word, Excel, Outlook, Box, online document management. Experience in banking, accounting or legal offices.
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Part-time Office Assistant
La-Z-Boy Midwest 4.3/5 rating   25 reviews  – Evansville, IN
$11 an hour
Our La-Z-Boy Furniture Galleries store in Evansville, IN needs a reliable, organized Office Assistant to manage our front office on some nights and weekends.
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OMB Director Cris Johnston Statement on the State Revenue F

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Indiana Office of Management and Budget Director Cris Johnston offered the following statement regarding the revenue forecast discussed at today’s State Budget Committee meeting:

“We are grateful for the work of the revenue forecasting committee. With this updated information, the state of Indiana can continue its strong fiscal position, protect our AAA credit ratings, fund our priorities, maintain the necessary reserves, and plan responsibly for the future.”

 

EPD REPORT

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EPD REPORT

Commentary: Donald Trump Diminishes Everything He Touches

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Commentary: Donald Trump Diminishes Everything He Touches

 

By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com 

INDIANAPOLIS – If there was any doubt that we now live in strange, sad times, these last days have dispelled it.

On the day before he was to become only the third president in American history to be impeached, Donald Trump sent House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-California, a six-page letter. The kindest word one can use to describe the letter is “unhinged.”

John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com

The letter rambled. It railed. It dropped the f-bomb, decorously clad with asterisks. It sprinkled in other obscenities, uncloaked and naked to the eye. It scattered lies and distortions across its pages with the careless regard of a small child kicking pebbles on a gravel road. It delivered vague, impotent threats.

In all ways, it was a temper tantrum, settled into incoherent prose and printed on the letterhead of the greatest elected office of the greatest nation in the world.

In just about any other circumstance, if someone sent such a missive to a colleague or even a competitor, the result would be dismissal or legal action.

But this is not any other circumstance.

This is life in Donald Trump’s America, where the rule of law, the niceties of common courtesy and basic considerations of human decency have been discarded.

We now are free to be as nasty and disconnected from reality as the worst of us wish to be.

We see that here in Indiana.

At almost the same time the president of the United States was delivering his obscenity-laden letter to the speaker of the House, the Indiana Supreme Court Disciplinary Commission recommended that Indiana Attorney General Curtis Hill’s law license be suspended for two years.

The commission’s recommendation is the product of another disturbing, depressing saga. At a party marking the end of the 2018 legislative session, Hill – according to more than 20 witnesses – got drunk. He gripped and groped a series of women – including a state legislator – who complained.

Just about every political leader in Indiana called for Hill to resign.

Hill refused.

Investigations have followed, along with litigation. All have confirmed Hill’s boorish conduct – and in fact established that it began long before he became attorney general.

Hill’s defense throughout has been classically Trumpian.

Everyone else is lying.

Everyone else is wrong.

Everyone else is to blame.

At the heart of Hill’s argument is the contention that he’s entitled – that, in fact, he deserves – to be the face of Indiana law enforcement so long as he’s not behind bars.

There are many people who are angry about all of this, and no one should deny them the right to their anger.

But it leaves me with a sense of tremendous sadness.

That the president of the United States has elevated what therapists would call denial into a legal defense and chosen to use projection as a rallying cry is the stuff of tragedy.

Watching relatively low-level hacks such as Curtis Hill, as if infected by a communicable disease, transform the president’s approach into both playbook and Bible only deepens the sense of gloom.

We’re about to watch an impeachment process in which Republicans, to defend this president, say they don’t want witnesses. They don’t want documentation. They don’t want to know the truth.

They even boast that they don’t care about the truth.

This is the party of Lincoln. Of Theodore Roosevelt. Of Eisenhower. Of Reagan.

All were forces, powerful, directed men who approached the great office they inhabited with equally great dignity. They saw the presidency as a public trust, not an entitlement. They rarely, if ever, indulged in the kind of self-pity in which the current occupant of the Oval Office routinely engages.

It is impossible to imagine anyone of them sending a letter to anyone, much less the speaker of the House, like the one Donald Trump sent to Nancy Pelosi.

The commitment Republicans have made to defend this president at all costs now comes more and more to resemble a political suicide pact. The more the president revs up his base, the more he and other Republicans alienate moderates in the suburbs, where the next several elections will be fought and won.

He diminishes a great office and shrinks and demeans a great political party before our eyes, and everyone seems powerless to stop it from happening.

Strange days.

Sad days.

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.

 

AG Curtis Hill: Court Decision Means It’s Time To Move Past Obamacare

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This week, a federal appeals court struck down a key component of the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, by ruling that the federal government cannot require Americans to purchase health insurance. This decision comes after Indiana and several other states challenged the law’s constitutionality. In response to Wednesday’s court ruling, Attorney General Curtis Hill today released the following statement:

“This law’s incompatibility with the Constitution is the reason my office chose to challenge it. From the beginning, the Affordable Care Act amounted to federal overreach. Congress should never have imposed this one-size-fits-all mandate in the first place. Choice, freedom and the roles of the individual states must remain part of the health care equation in America.

“Beyond violating the Constitution, the Affordable Care Act also has failed on a practical level to achieve its stated aims. It has narrowed people’s health care options and driven up costs.

“At this point, Americans now must engage with the question of where U.S. policymakers should go from here. Congress, the Trump administration and the 50 state legislatures all have important parts to play. President Trump has expressed support for the latest court decision and pledged to keep working ‘to give the American people the best health care in the world.’

“All Americans — not just the 85 to 90 percent covered by their employers and/or Medicare/Medicaid — should have access to quality health care that they can afford. While remaining true to the Constitution, Congress and the individual states now must develop sound policies that safeguard the health care needs of all individuals, including those with pre-existing conditions.”

 

Angela Davis To Deliver 2020 Nelson Mandela Social Justice Day Keynote At USI

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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.

Davis is the author of nine books and has lectured throughout the United States as well as in Europe, Africa, Asia, Australia and South America. In recent years, a persistent theme of her work has been the range of social problems associated with incarceration and the generalized criminalization of those communities that are most affected by poverty and racial discrimination. She draws upon her own experiences in the early seventies as a person who spent eighteen months in jail and on trial, after being placed on the FBI’s “Ten Most Wanted List.” Davis has also conducted extensive research on numerous issues related to race, gender and imprisonment. Her most recent book is Freedom is a Constant Struggle: Ferguson, Palestine, and the Foundations of a Movement.

Davis’ teaching career has taken her to San Francisco State University, Mills College and the University of California, Berkeley. She also has taught at UCLA, Vassar, the Claremont Colleges and Stanford University. She spent the last fifteen years at the University of California, Santa Cruz where she serves as Distinguished Professor Emerita of History of Consciousness, an interdisciplinary Ph.D program, and of Feminist Studies. She holds a bachelor’s degree in French and philosophy from Brandeis University, a master’s degree in philosophy from the University of California, San Diego and a doctorate in philosophy from Humboldt University in Berlin, Germany.

The University of Southern Indiana has sponsored the Nelson Mandela Social Justice Day and Speaker Series since 2014.  The goal of these events is to raise dialogue at USI around current issues of human and civil rights, public service, and activism through diverse, dynamic, nationally, and internationally known public intellectuals and academics. Previous speakers include authors Tim Wise and Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, community organizer Tia Oso and activist and academic Dr. Cornel West.

For more information, visit the Mandela Social Justice Day website at USI.edu/liberal-arts/special-programs/mandela-social-justice-day/ or contact Dr. Sakina Hughes, associate professor of history and chair of the Mandela Social Justice Commemoration Committee, at shughes1@usi.edu.

Indiana Medicaid Awarded $5.2 million CMS Grant Addressing Maternal Opioid Use

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Indiana Medicaid Awarded $5.2 million CMS Grant Addressing Maternal Opioid Use

INDIANAPOLIS – The Indiana Family and Social Services Administration today announced it is receiving $5.2 million in grant dollars to improve the coordination of clinical care and the integration of other services that are critical for maternal and child health, well-being and sustained recovery. The grant is part of the Maternal Opioid Misuse Indiana initiative, which is a cooperative agreement between FSSA and the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services that address opioid use disorder in pregnancy. Today CMS announced Indiana as one of ten states selected to receive funding under the Maternal Opioid Misuse model.

“There are many difficulties that pregnant women with substance use disorders face. The goal of this grant is to make sure that navigating health care is not one of them,” said Dan Rusyniak, M.D., FSSA chief medical officer.

FSSA has partnered with its four Medicaid managed care programs (Anthem, CareSource, MDwise and MHS) on a four-pronged approach:

  1. Cooperative care coordination— Care coordinators from the managed care entities will work with FSSA to develop collaborative problem-solving, shared best practices and innovative strategies to address challenges facing pregnant women with opioid use disorder. The MOMII team will also work closely with care coordinators from various community health systems to ensure timely and coordinated obstetric, addiction, and pediatric care. 
  2. Increased provider education— in partnership with Indiana University’s Project ECHO, the MOMII project will create three new educational tracks. These will focus on the obstetrical care of pregnant women with opioid use disorder, evidence-based practices on the management of neonatal abstinence syndrome, and care coordination best practices for pregnant women with substance use disorders. 
  3. Addressing social determinants of health— this program will screen participants for social determinants of health and make community-based referrals for identified social needs. In addition, the MOMII project will use trauma-informed practices in coordinating these services. 
  4. Extending Medicaid coverage— Women who qualify for this program will be eligible for full Medicaid coverage up to one year postpartum.

“Through this novel program we will address two critical initiatives in this administration: lowering infant mortality and attacking the drug epidemic,” said Jennifer Sullivan, M.D., M.P.H., FSSA secretary. “This exciting project highlights Indiana’s emphasis on cross-agency and community partnerships to address our most pressing public health issues. Through collaborations like the MOMII project, Indiana continues to be a national leader in health care reform.”

FSSA will work closely with the Indiana State Department of Health and the OB Navigator program to coordinate services for those women who qualify for both programs.Â