The Myriad taproom opens to the public on Friday, November 16th from 4-11pm!
We will debut with a lineup of 12 guest taps, wines, and liquors.
We are honored to officially be a part of the Downtown Evansville Indiana family and cannot wait to meet each one of you.
Myriad Brewery Company Opens November 16th! Downtown Evansville
Aces volleyball set for Senior Weekend
UE to recognize six seniors on Saturday
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The regular season comes to a close for the University of Evansville volleyball team this weekend when the Purple Aces take on UNI and Drake inside Meeks Family Fieldhouse. UE welcomes the Panthers on Friday before taking on the Bulldogs on Senior Night on Saturday; both matches begin at 7 p.m.
Prior to Saturday’s contest versus Drake, the Aces will honor seniors Mildrelis Rodriguez, Rocio Fortuny, Elizabeth Giller, Gabriela dos Santos, Olivia Goldstein and Joselyn Coronel.
Evansville found itself in an 0-2 hole at Indiana State, but rallied back to force a fifth game before the Sycamores clinched the match with a 15-11 win. Rachel Tam had one of her best all-around matches, posting 21 kills, 16 digs and 3 block assists. Alondra Vazquez added 14 kills and a career-high 21 digs while Mildrelis Rodriguez recorded 13 kills and 14 digs. Five Aces finished the match with 14 or more digs. Allana McInnis added 49 assists and Kerra Cornist anchored the defense with five block assists.
It was just another day at the office for Rachel Tam as she recorded 21 kills and 16 digs at Indiana State on Friday. Her 16 digs marked a season high and was just three off of her career mark of 19, set at Jacksonville State in 2016. She also added three block assists, her top mark since recording four against Loyola in September. She remains second in the MVC with 4.28 kills per set; her tally is 26th in the nation. Tam’s 458 total kills is 13th in the country while her 497.0 total points is 16th.
Senior Mildrelis Rodriguez continues to impact her team on the offensive and defensive sides of the net. For the season, she is second on the team in kills (3.10/set) and third in digs (2.78/set). She recorded 13 kills and 14 digs at Indiana State.
UNI comes to Meeks Family Fieldhouse with a 21-8 mark while going 15-1 through 16 MVC contests. Karlie Taylor paces the MVC with 4.69 kills per set while Rachel Koop leads the league with 11.76 assists. Koop’s assist average is 5th in the NCAA while her total of 1,235 helpers is also fifth. Taylor’s kill average ranks 10th in the nation while her total of 455 kills is 15th.
Drake is battling for a spot in the MVC Tournament coming into the last weekend of the regular season. The Bulldogs begin play with an 18-13 overall mark and stand at 6-10 in the Valley. Cathryn Cheek is fourth in the league and leads the Bulldogs with 3.75 kills per set. Elle Tubbs has notched 0.29 service aces per set, tops in the conference.
No. 2/13 Hoosiers Win Three Events on Day One of IU Invitational
The No. 2/13-ranked Indiana University men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams got off to a fast start on Thursday at the 2018 IU Invitational at the Counsilman Billingsley Aquatic Center in Bloomington, Ind., winning three individual events during evening finals.
TEAM STANDINGS (Day One)
Men
- No. 2 Indiana – 542
- No. 3 N.C. State – 413.5
- No. 17 Arizona State – 304
- No. 9 Louisville – 298.5
Women
- No. 8 Louisville – 436
- No. 7 N.C. State – 428.5
- No. 13 Indiana – 420
- Arizona State – 211
- No. 17 Purdue – 126.5
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HOOSIER WINNERS
MEN
James Connor – 1-Meter Dive (421.20)
WOMEN
Bailey Andison – 200 IM (1:55.70)
Cassy Jernberg – 500 Freestyle (4:39.96)
NOTABLES
- A total of 54 Hoosier swimmers and divers qualified for finals on Thursday night, including
26 in A Finals.
- IU’s James Connor remains unbeaten this season, as the redshirt senior has won all six diving events he’s entered.
NCAA CUTS
A: Women’s 400 Medley Relay (Haskett, King, Jensen, Eiber), Men’s 400 Medley Relay (Fantoni, Finnerty, Lanza, Apple).
B: Men’s 200 Freestyle Relay (Apple, Blaskovic, Lanza, Samy), Cassy Jernberg (500 Free), Noelle Peplowski (500 Free), Christin Rockway (500 Free), Maria Paula Heitmann (500 Free), Michael Brinegar (500 Free), Mikey Calvillo (500 Free), Adam Destrampe (500 Free), Jakub Karl (500 Free), Christine Jensen (200 IM), Lilly King (200 IM), Bailey Andison (200 IM), Mackenzie Looze (200 IM), Bailey Kovac (200 IM), Abby Kirkpatrick (200 IM), Josie Grote (200 IM), Shelby Koontz (200 IM), Mohamed Samy (200 IM), Vini Lanza (200 IM), Van Mathias (200 IM), Thomas Vanderbrook (200 IM), Ian Finnerty (200 IM), Griffin Eiber (200 IM), Ileah Doctor (50 Free), Laurel Eiber (50 Free), Bruno Blaskovic (50 Free), Zach Apple (50 Free), Mohamed Samy (50 Free), Gabriel Fantoni (50 Free), Brandon Hamblin (50 Free).
NCAA ZONES QUALIFYING SCORES
Men’s 1-Meter: James Connor, Andrew Capobianco, Mory Gould.
Women’s 3-Meter: Taylor Carter.
UP NEXT
- The No. 2/13 Indiana University men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams will continue competition at the 2018 IU Invitational on Friday. Prelims get underway at 9:00 a.m. ET at the Counsilman Billingsley Aquatic Center, with finals at 5:00 p.m. ET.
@IndianaSwimDive
- Be sure to keep up with all the latest news on the Indiana men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams on social media – Twitter, Facebookand Instagram.
Women’s 200 Freestyle Relay
- Laurel Eiber, Ileah Doctor, Grace Haskett, Christine Jensen – 1:29.89
- Shelby Koontz, Bailey Andison, Lilly King, Julia Wolf – 1:30.71
Men’s 200 Freestyle Relay
- Zach Apple, Bruno Blaskovic, Vini Lanza, Mohamed Samy – 1:17.37
- Griffin Eiber, Gabriel Fantoni, Jack Franzman, Josh Romany – 1:19.10
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Women’s 500 Freestyle
- Cassy Jernberg – 4:39.96 (Prelims 4:41.95)
- Noelle Peplowski – 4:42.10 (Prelims 4:42.22)
- Christin Rockway – 4:44.47 (Prelims 4:46.27)
- Maria Paula Heitmann – 4:43.64 (Prelims 4:46.60)
- Anne Rouleau – 4:54.40 (Prelims 4:56.63)
- Ashleigh Lechner – 5:00.66
Men’s 500 Freestyle
- Michael Brinegar – 4:19.10 (Prelims 4:21.54)
- Jakub Karl – 4:21.18 (Prelims 4:22.74)
- Mikey Calvillo – 4:20.99 (Prelims 4:23.79)
- Adam Destrampe – 4:22.20 (Prelims 4:23.79)
- Ben McDade – 4:24.32 (Prelims 4:25.80)
- Trey Hubbuch – 4:25.49 (Prelims 4:27.40)
- Spencer Lehman – 4:25.93 (Prelims 4:27.27)
- Gage Hamill – 4:28.31 (Prelims 4:29.43)
- Michael Draves – 4:31.43
- Corey Gambardella – 4:39.82
Women’s 200 IM
- Bailey Andison – 1:55.70 (Prelims 1:57.55)
- Christine Jensen – 1:56.92 (Prelims 1:56.99)
- Mackenzie Looze – 1:56.96 (Prelims 1:57.57)
- Bailey Kovac – 1:57.67 (Prelims 1:58.66)
- Abby Kirkpatrick – 1:59.81 (Prelims 1:59.38)
- Josie Grote –2:03.80 (Prelims 1:59.83)
- Shelby Koontz – 1:58.89 (Prelims 2:00.54)
- Laura Morley – 2:00.06 (Prelims 2:00.56)
- Hope Hayward – 2:04.76
Lilly King – Scratched Final (Prelims 1:57.20 – A Final)
Men’s 200 IM
- Mohamed Samy – 1:44.10 (Prelims 1:44.68)
- Vini Lanza – 1:44.42 (Prelims 1:45.40)
- Thomas Vanderbrook – 1:45.89 (Prelims 1:47.27)
- Van Mathias – 1:46.67 (Prelims 1:46.34)
- Ian Finnerty – 1:45.85 (Prelims 1:47.80)
- Griffin Eiber – 1:46.41 (Prelims 1:47.33)
- Wilson Beckman – 1:46.59 (Prelims 1:47.65)
- Jacob Steele – 1:47.46 (Prelims 1:47.96)
- Gary Kostbade – 1:49.15 (Prelims 1:47.66)
- Matt Jerden – 1:48.03 (Prelims 1:49.78)
- Wyeth Brock – 1:50.44 (Prelims 1:50.08)
- Brock Brown – 1:51.73
Women’s 50 Freestyle
- Laurel Eiber – 22.76 (Prelims 22.75)
- Grace Haskett – 22.78 (Prelims 22.77)
- Ileah Doctor – 22.85 (Prelims 22.66)
- Julia Wolf – 23.24
- Lauren Miller – 23.82
- Savanna Spears – 24.25
Men’s 50 Freestyle
- Zach Apple – 19.47 (Prelims 19.57)
- Bruno Blaskovic – 19.50 (Prelims 19.39)
- Mohamed Samy – 20.05 (Prelims 19.68)
- Josh Romany – 20.03 (Prelims 20.00)
- Gabriel Fantoni – 20.04 (Prelims 19.92)
- Jack Franzman – 20.10 (Prelims 19.99)
- Brandon Hamblin – 19.89 (Prelims 20.18)
- Andrew Couchon – 20.46 (Prelims 20.33)
- Tucker Brock – 21.60
Women’s 3-Meter Dive
- Taylor Carter – 317.85 (Prelims 257.40)
- Kallie Higgins – 231.75 (Prelims 243.35)
- Alyssa Wang – 221.30 (Prelims 230.65)
- Kayla Luarde – 216.85 (Prelims 234.50)
Men’s 1-Meter Dive
- James Connor – 421.20 (Prelims 375.35)
- Andrew Capobianco – 340.70 (Prelims 331.05)
- Mory Gould – 309.00 (Prelims 290.20)
- Seamus Scotty – 276.90 (Prelims 264.25)
- Clark Carter – 255.35 (Prelims 253.20)
- Cole VanDevender – 248.60 (Prelims 282.50)
- Logan Brown – 244.45
Women’s 400 Medley Relay
- Grace Haskett, Lilly King, Christine Jensen, Laurel Eiber – 3:31.65
- Bailey Kovac, Noelle Peplowski, Shelby Koontz, Bialey Andison – 3:37.51
Men’s 400 Medley Relay
- Gabriel Fantoni, Ian Finnerty, Vini Lanza, Zach Apple – 3:05.72
- Mohamed Samy, Gary Kostbade, Van Mathias, Bruno Blaskovic – 3:10.24
IS IT TRUE NOVEMBER 16, 2018
We hope that today’s “IS IT TRUEâ€Â 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?Â
IS IT TRUE that we would like to thank area road crews for doing an outstanding job in keeping our roads clean and safe during yesterdays winter storm?  …we are also very pleased that our first responders were really to handle any unforeseen emergency during the impending winter storm?  …we give five (5) cheers to our area road crews and first responders for a job well done?
IS IT TRUEÂ that a couple days ago Channel 25 TV did an investigative piece on the McCurdy? …according to Channel 25 TV report that owner of the McCurdy have problems with the elevators, pest control issues, allowing free access to anyone wanting to enter the building because the main entrance doors are not locked, trash is allowed to accumulate in lobby and stairwells, deferred maintenance issues, they are defendants in over 60 plus lawsuits, allegedly not handling rental deposit refunds properly? …if the issues raised in the Chanel 25 investigative report are true it looks like the McCurdy may have City Codes, Vanderburgh County Board of Health Department and OSHA violations that need to be addressed?
IS IT TRUE that starting in January 2019 the Vanderburgh County School Board will have two well qualified and independent thinking School Board members?  …they are Ann Ennis and  David Hollingsworth?  …we expect that Ennis and Hollinsworth will encourage the EVSC Superintendent of Schools to be more transparent? … we don’t expect that the school board will be any making decisions behind closed doors?  …it may be even possible that the new School Board could even adopt a policy ending the practice of “nepotism”?
IS IT TRUE starting in January 2018 a new era in local county politics will begin? Â …the Vanderburgh County Commision will have a banker, successful businessman and knowledgeable person in of how government works? Â …we expect that County Commissioners Cheryl Musgrave, Ben Shoulders, and Jeff Hatfield will do great things for the citizens of Vanderburgh County starting January 2019?
IS IT TRUE Â it been reported that a Congressional sub-committee heard testimony from Department of Veterans Affairs officials concerning computer problems that have caused GI Bill benefit payments covering education and housing to be delayed for months or never be delivered? …because of this unacceptable bureaucratic mistake that many veterans are facing serious debt problems or even homelessness because of this issue? Â …that the Veterans Affairs official that caused this unacceptable problem was demoted instead of being fired?
IS IT TRUE that Kathryn Martin retained her position for the third time as Knight Township trustee in the recent mid-term election? Â …that Democrat Martin crushed her opponent by a margin of 8 percent? …Ms. Martin beat her challenger, Johnny Kincaid, by 1,671 votes? …we congratulate Kathryn Martin for getting elected to a third term? Â Â …we commended Mr. Kincaid desire to serve the public in an elected office? Â …that Mr. Kincaid has run for several political offices in the past and always fell short of being elected? Â …feel that Mr. Kincaid should approach the mover and shakers of his party and ask them to appoint him to a meaningful board or commission because we feel he has the talent and desire to serve us well?
IS IT TRUE In honor of men’s health month, St. Vincent wanted to share a story with you about St. Vincent pediatrician, Dr. Jon Voyles who suffered a heart attack earlier this year and found himself in St. Vincent’s emergency room? … Dr. Voyles is encouraging men to see their doctor regularly?  …St. Vincent has produced a video with Dr. Voyles sharing his story?  …if you are interested in seeing this video or would like to speak to Dr. Voyles and his cardiologist, Dr. Frizzell so you can learn more about this story please contact Tangela Floyd, Director of Public Relations at 812-485-4044 or e-mail her at mailto:tangela.floyd@ascension.org?
Todays“Readers Poll†question is: Do you feel that elected officials should be allowed to award no-bid contracts to people who give contributions to their political campaigns?
If you would like to advertise on the CCO please contact us City-CountyObserver@live.com
Indiana’s Schools Show Improvement in 2017-18
Indiana’s Schools Show Improvement in 2017-18
By James Polston
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS—Nearly one in four Indiana schools showed improvement in the 2017-18 academic year over the prior year, the Indiana Department of Education reported Wednesday.
IDOE released its school accountability grades that also showed nearly two out of three schools throughout the state scored an A or B letter grade on the department’s A-F scale.
“Our current accountability grades are an indication of the great education Indiana students are receiving,†said Superintendent of Public Instruction Jennifer McCormick in a press release after the grades were made public.
“Our work is paying off and as a Department, we will continue to partner with dedicated stakeholders to ensure every school and every student is successful.â€
The state’s first accountability system went into effect in 2001 after the Indiana General Assembly passed a law in 1999 to create a performance-based system of measuring schools.
In 2015, the State Board of Education established new metrics for Indiana’s student-centered accountability system that include measures for how much students improve year over year as well as the number who graduate within four years. Current metrics went into effect in the 2015-2016 school year.
About 9 percent of schools improved their letter grade to an A, with close to 29 percent of schools overall receiving an A for the 2017-18 school year.
The grades are a snapshot of the great teaching and learning going on in Indiana’s schools, said J.T. Coopman, executive director of the Indiana Association of Public School Superintendents.
“IAPSS wants to thank all Indiana public school teachers and administrators for the tremendous work they do on behalf of Indiana’s 1.1 million public school students in 289 public school districts in Indiana,†Coopman said.
The data show that nearly 56 percent of school grades were unchanged from the 2016-17 school year with about 21 percent of schools receiving a lower grade over the same period.
In the current year, 14.5 percent of schools received a D or F in school accountability grades, with 4.5 percent of schools receiving an F.
McCormick’s office also released federal accountability grades, which are based on different standards, for the 2017-18 school year.
Nearly 67 percent of public schools received the same letter grade for both state and federal accountability systems, with about 31 percent of schools receiving a higher letter grade on the state system.
Differences in performance metrics between the two systems were the main factor for discrepancies for 33 percent of school letter grades, according to the IDOE.
School accountability grades can be found on the IDOE website at this link.
FOOTNOTE:Â James Polston is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
COMMENTARY: New Chair Of Senate Education and Career Development Committee Will Make Changes
More Affordable Housing Coming to Evansville
More Affordable Housing Coming to Evansville
At today’s IHCDA Board of Directors Meeting, recommendations for the remaining 2018 RHTC Awards and the 2019 RHTC’s were presented.
USI 49th Annual Madrigal Feaste Leads Holiday Festivities With Renaissance Food And Music
The University of Southern Indiana Chamber Choir will present the 49th annual Madrigal Feaste from Thursday, November 29 through Sunday, December 2 in Carter Hall located in University Center West on the USI campus.
First performed in 1969 and USI’s most enduring musical tradition, the Madrigal Feaste is a festive dinner and concert set in Renaissance Ireland. Attendees witness the reenactment of a royal feast, with processionals and holiday music accompanying each item on the menu as performers and guests welcome the holiday season.
The USI Chamber Choir will entertain with selections of old English Madrigals, Irish traditional folk songs and carols, as well as stirring choral selections for the holiday season from a wide variety of European repertory. This year’s menu will include green tossed salad, hot wassail, soup of beef and barley, roasted chicken, holiday roasted potatoes, fresh steamed vegetables, bread pudding with rum sauce, tea and coffee.
Tickets are $28 for USI students and seniors (60+) and $34 for adults and non-USI students. Doors open at 7 p.m. Thursday through Saturday and 1:00 p.m. for the Sunday matinee. To purchase tickets, visit USI.edu/madrigals or call at 812-461-5237.
For more information, contact Dan Craig, associate professor of music, at 812-464-1736.