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Eagles navigate Storm for fifth straight win

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Nine different players scored at least five points for the Screaming Eagles and all 12 players scored University of Southern Indiana Women’s Basketball cruised to an 80-38 Midwest Region victory over Lake Erie College on the first day of the USI Thanksgiving Classic Saturday afternoon at the Physical Activities Center.

USI (5-1) trailed early in the contest, but used a 34-14 first-half run to take a commanding 36-18 advantage with just under two minutes to play in the half.

Lake Erie (2-1), which trailed 36-20 at the intermission, went on a 5-0 run to begin the third period, but the Eagles outscored the Storm 44-13 throughout the final 18 minutes of the game to secure their fifth straight win.

Senior center Kacy Eschweiler (St. Charles, Missouri) led all scorers with 13 points, while senior forward/center Mikayla Rowan (Brazil, Indiana) had 10 points and a game-high seven rebounds for the Eagles, who picked up their 25th straight home win. Senior guard Alex Davidson (Salem, Indiana) added 10 points and five assists, while junior guard/forward Morgan Sherwood (Charleston, Illinois) chipped in 10 points.

The Eagles, who forced Lake Erie into 27 turnovers, return to action Sunday at 2:30 p.m. when they take on Michigan Tech University. The Huskies (3-2) fell to Bellarmine University, 73-60, in the opening game of the USI Thanksgiving Classic Saturday afternoon.

“READERS FORUM” NOVEMBER 25, 2018

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We hope that today’s “READERS FORUM” 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? 

WHATS ON YOUR MIND TODAY?

Todays“Readers Poll” question is: Do you feel that City Council shouldn’t release any funds to ECHO Housing Corp. until they are given a copy of the Forensic Audit report of that agency?

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

Footnote: 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.

A BREAK FROM THE POLITICAL GRIND, ONE ALBUM AT A TIME

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A BREAK FROM THE POLITICAL GRIND, ONE ALBUM AT A TIME

by John L. Micek, November 21, 2018

A friend who works in campaigns recently joked that there ought to be a mandatory, two-week respite from any kind of political talk immediately after Election Day.

Fighting a bad cold and exhausted from what had turned out to be 20 days straight of galloping around the state behind candidates and their campaigns, the idea of a blackout on any sort of political talk had an undeniable appeal.

Above my desk here at PennLive, we have a carousel of TVs tuned to cable news, guaranteeing that my work day is filled with fresh outrages and lower-third crawls trumpeting the latest in not-really-breaking news.

A day or so after Election Day, my cell phone started vibrating nonstop with updates and news about leadership elections in the state House and Senate. I started getting the push alerts about the debate over a Pelosi speakership; the Florida and Georgia recounts, and the emerging contours of the Democratic Blue Wave on Nov. 6.

There comes a point where even the most dedicated news junkie has to put down the remote, put the iPhone on vibrate, and hop off the endless campaign merry-go-round.

So I did. And for two days last week, my world didn’t extend much further than a Crosley combination turntable that my wife got me for Christmas about 10 years ago.

My vinyl collection, assembled over 30 dedicated years or so of collecting, takes up a huge shelving unit in my home office. Cassettes and CDs are packed away in huge plastic storage tub with little or no organization. The choices, theoretically, were endless.

But for my two-day holiday from politics, I decided to set some rules for myself: I’d only listen to albums. And they had to cut across genres and generations and decades.

I found myself digging out a Dylan’s greatest hits compilation, “This Ain’t No Outer Spaceship,” by the first-generation Athens, Ga. band Love Tractor, Sinatra’s “In the Wee, Small Hours” and others.

You don’t have to look far to find essays waxing rhapsodic about the ‘warmth’ of vinyl, compared to the sterile, digital bits and bytes of the compact disc. News stories about records being the savior of a dying music industry (or not) are equally abundant. And I’m eternally amused by my friends telling me how their kids, unironically, exclusively listen to records (although there is a preponderance of evidence to support the conclusion that aging GenXers like me still remain a core constituency).

For me, though, the biggest difference between vinyl and other recorded media is that it’s an active – not a passive listening, experience.

While you can stream an endless playlist to keep you company while you make dinner or putter around the house, you have to get up to turn the record over when it hits the end of the side. That mere physical difference keeps you more engaged in the music. You have to listen. You have to pay attention – even as you pore over the liner notes (its own reward) or get the odd piece of work done.

The records turn into sonic roadmaps as well. Putting on the Dylan compilation prompted me to remember how I’d come by it (yard sale, maybe?). The Love Tractor LP (picked up on a buying spree in grad school in Chicago) reminded me of how how much I loved the first wave of Athens bands.

So I found myself listening to The Method Actors, Pylon, and, of course, R.E.M. (their debut “Chronic Town” EP and a live bootleg of a performance in Durham, N.C, called “Heavenly Time,” that I’m pretty sure I bought out of the back of a music magazine sometime in 1984 or 1985).

Listening to Simple Minds brought me to Big Country. The Sinatra records, from my Dad, led me to Basie and to Louis Prima – which was blasting in my living room in the same way it used to echo through my Nonna’s house when I was a kid. Over the course of couple of days, I worked my way through a dozen or more LPs.

No cable news. No push alerts.

The campaign stuff and the politics gossip? It was no shock to find that it was all pretty much right where I’d left it, effectively unchanged from the beginning of my self-imposed sabbatical. For a minute, I wondered if I’d missed out on anything crucial.

Then I put another record on.

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CMOE Presents A Twist To A Classic Christmas Tale

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CMOE Presents A Twist To A Classic Christmas Tale

Giant puppets were a hit Saturday afternoon at the Children’s Museum of Evansville as the Madcap Puppets performed a kid-friendly version of the Charles Dickens classic “A Christmas Carol.”

Madcap Puppets is based out of Cincinnati that travels around performing various puppet shows. The group is known for educational programs that include performances, workshops, and residencies.

The show was made possible, with support from the Indiana Arts Commission, Vanderburgh Community Foundation, and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.

“We’re trying to bring in some new and innovative performances here to the museum all the time,” said Kali Anthony, Education Coordinator for CMOE. “We want to give kids an opportunity that maybe they wouldn’t get normally.

“We have had other puppet performers here before but this is the first time we’ve had Madcap here and I think we’d be happy to have them back.”

Kids were given the opportunity to interact with the performance during the show and ask questions about their favorite puppets afterward.

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Memorial Falls in State Championship Shootout 47-42

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Memorial Falls in State Championship Shootout 47-42

The Memorial Tigers bid for back-to-back IHSAA 3A state championships came to an end Saturday after losing a close game to West Lafayette.

The Red Devils took an early 14-0 lead, but the Tigers responded with two touchdowns to bring it within 14-12 in the first quarter.

Both teams went back and forth the rest of the game, which led to West Lafayette holding a slim 47-42 lead with under a minute to play.

Memorial drove down the field to set up one play on fourth down to potentially win the game with six seconds left.

Tigers quarterback Michael Lindauer scrambled to his left, created several seconds of extra time to throw, but the coverage was too tight on the Memorial receivers and the pass fell incomplete.

The 47-42 loss is the first for the Tigers in over 13 months.

Memorial’s season ends with a 14-1 record and a state runner-up ribbon.

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USI Brings Holiday Jazz Bash Brings Holiday Sounds And Spirit To Town

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The University of Southern Indiana Jazz Ensemble will perform at 7 p.m. Sunday, December 2 at the USI Performance Center on the USI campus. The event is free and open to the public, USI employees, and students. No ticket necessary.

The night will be led by Tom Drury, instructor in music, and local vocalist Gina Moore featuring traditional and modern jazz by Wayne Shorter, Miles Davis, Thelonious Monk, as well as jazz pieces from Drury.

The USI Jazz Ensemble was created in 2001 to represent the University through outstanding performances of jazz and contemporary instrumental music. This group has provided music to specific venues on campus and continues to offer students from several areas of study the opportunity to develop their performance skills. Future plans for the ensemble include recordings and performances throughout the University community and the Tri-state area.

For more information about the USI Jazz Ensemble and booking them for an event, contact Tom Drury at twdrury@usi.edu or 812-492-7502.

Old City Hall and Police Department By Pat Sides

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Old City Hall and Police Department By Pat Sides

This view shows Third Street near its intersection with Walnut Street, looking northwest towards downtown, in the 1950s. The center building with a clock tower is City Hall, which was located across the street from the Evansville Police Department (right).

Built in 1887, City Hall sported an even taller tower before much of it was removed in the 1920s. The police station was dedicated in 1917, one of the many civic projects undertaken by Mayor Benjamin Bosse to modernize the city, as well as the police department.

The mid-century urban renewal movement wrought many architectural changes downtown; when the Civic Center opened in the late 1960s, the Third Street buildings were vacated in 1969 and razed two years later.

MEET JO JO GENTY SPORTS DIRECTOR OF 44 NEWS

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JoJo Gentry is a native of Anderson, Indiana and is the Sports Director for 44News.

A graduate of Butler University, JoJo competed on the Butler Women’s Golf Team while pursuing a Bachelor’s Degree in Journalism. During her time at Butler, she spent four years covering sports in local and national media markets with the U.S. Basketball Writers Association and National Sports Journalism Center. She was also a reporting intern at WTHR-TV and WISH-TV in Indianapolis.

JoJo says “It’s an honor to do what I love in my home state! Indiana is a great place to live and work, where people are surrounded by Hoosier hospitality and community engagement.”