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Gardner powers Otters past Boomers

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The Evansville Otters slugged their way past the Schaumburg Boomers on Friday night winning the first game of the series 11-6 at Bosse Field in front of 2,306 fans.

Schaumburg got two runs across in the first inning thanks to three Otters errors. Ty Moore brought home the first run of the game with a sacrifice fly. Then a throwing error from shortstop J.J Gould allowed a second run to score in the frame.

Evansville responded with three runs in the bottom of the first. Brant Whiting got the Otters on the board with an RBI single and then with the bases loaded, Austin Bush plated two with a base hit to put the Otters ahead 3-2.

Moore tallied his second RBI of the game in the third with a run-scoring double to tie the game. Then a throwing error from Ryan Long allowed Moore to score on a Kenny Towns grounder and put Schaumburg back in front.

The Otters took the lead back and then some in the fourth. Gould tied the game with an RBI double and he was then brought home on a Long RBI two-bagger. Jeff Gardner capped the inning off with a grand slam, his eighth homer of the season, to put Evansville ahead 9-4.

Gardner then followed up his grand slam with a two-run homer in the sixth, his ninth on the season and his second of the contest, to put the Otters ahead 11-4.

Schaumburg plated one in the seventh on a Towns sacrifice fly and added another in the ninth on a Sean Godfrey solo homer but Evansville would clinch the 11-6 victory with a game-ending double play.

Gardner led the way for the Otters offense, piling up two home runs as while as six RBIs in the three-hit performance.

Tyler Beardsley earns his fourth win of the season for the Otters. Beardsley worked six innings allowing four runs, one earned, while giving up six hits and striking out two.

Payton Lobdell is hung with the loss for Schaumburg. Lobdell went just 3.1 innings giving up five runs on six hits while walking three.

Matt Chavarria earned his first save with the Otters by throwing the final three innings of the game.

Evansville and Schaumburg will continue their series tomorrow evening at 6:35 p.m. at Bosse Field, which will be St. Vincent’s Night.

“READERS FORUM” AUGUST 4, 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 Government shouldn’t do for people what they should do for themselves?

Please take time and read our articles entitled “STATEHOUSE Files, CHANNEL 44 NEWS, LAW ENFORCEMENT, READERS POLL, BIRTHDAYS, HOT JOBS” and “LOCAL SPORTS”.  You now are able to subscribe to get the CCO daily.

If you would like to advertise on the CCO please contact us City-CountyObserver@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.

City Council to Make Final Decision on LST Location Change

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City Council to Make Final Decision on LST Location Change

In two weeks the Evansville City Council will make a final decision on moving the LST 325 to the Old Tropicana Riverboat location. Right now the ship sits at Marina Pointe when it’s not touring.

Officials with the USS LST Ship Memorial Organization want to move it to downtown so more people can visit the museum and learn about the history of the warships.

The council will vote at their next council meeting. The meeting starts at 5:30 p.m. on August 13th at the Civic Center.

LST organizers want anyone who supports the move to attend the meeting.

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HOOSIERS AND SLAVE AUCTIONS By Jim Redwine

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GAVEL GAMUT By Jim Redwine

HOOSIERS AND SLAVE AUCTIONS

Gentle Reader, you will, of course, remember the Gavel Gamut column of December 05, 2005 where one of Posey County, Indiana’s most infamous brawlers was mentioned. One Tom Miller was fond of drink and when drinking was fond of fighting. In the years just before the Civil War old Tom would get liquored up and lick whoever had the misfortune to run into him on the streets of Mt. Vernon, Indiana. As described by John Leffel in the Western Star newspaper Miller would, “Pace the streets of Mt. Vernon with his coat off, sleeves rolled up, his shaggy breast exposed and his suspenders about his waist.” According to the editor, Tom always bellowed the same challenge, “I’m a mean man, a bad man and I orter to be whipped, I know, but whar’s the man to do it?”

Tom Miller was only one small part of our Posey County and new state of Indiana’s reputation for tumultuous living. The sobriquet, “Hoop Pool Township”, was fairly earned by Posey County brawlers who drove visiting boatmen away. And as for frontier justice in Indiana, some experts assert our Hoosier nickname came about from the proclivity of Indiana rowdies to bite off ears and spit them out onto barroom floors.

I am indebted to columnist Erik Deckers who set forth this theory of the origin of the word “Hoosier” in his article contained in the publication Here and Wow, Indianapolis! Vol.1, No. 1, 2018. At page 22 Deckers attributed this possibility to Indiana’s poet laureate James Whitcomb Riley (1849-1916) of When the Frost is on the Pumpkin fame who claimed that early Indiana folks would frequently gouge out eyes or bite off body parts which would litter a barroom floor and when the next day someone would kick the removed piece of fleck they’d ask, “Whose ear?”

If I had not dealt with so many cases in court where the behavior of the combatants resembled such activity I might look askance on such a theory. However, I can see some merit to Riley’s analysis.

Well, onto another topic as discussed in last week’s column. You do remember last week’s column, right? Okay, it involved military service and concentrated on my Great Great Grandfather, John Giggy who was a stone mason and farmer from La Grange, Indiana who fought all four years (1861-1865) in Company H of the famed Iron 44th Indiana Volunteer Infantry. 

Before being wounded at both Shiloh and Chickamauga and before he saw his first shot fired he and his outfit witnessed a sad spectacle in Henderson, Kentucky that helped them understand one of the main reasons they went to war. Kentucky did not secede, but it did have legal slavery until 1865. In fact, one reason Tom Lincoln, Abraham’s father, moved his family from Kentucky to Indiana was to avoid competing for work with slave labor. Slavery was part of the legal and social culture of Kentucky. The young Hoosier farm boys from northern Indiana who were used to doing their own labor had not had direct knowledge of The Peculiar Institution until they personally observed a slave auction in 1861 just across the Ohio River as they were making their way south:

“It was a strange pitiful sight that of women and little children standing upon the action block to be sold as human chattles. They came wringing their hands and with tears and sobs, lamenting their cruel fate. The soldiers stood near filled with pity and indignation but restrained by law and discipline. Slavery existed at this point in its mildest form. Here were a dozen or more large tobacco factories. The blacks were required as a daily task to strip 400 pounds under penalty of the rod. Children of ten years were given this task. Work hours extended from 4 a.m. to 8 p.m. In each room was an overseer whose presence was a threat. Some negroes were well dressed, others ragged. Attendance at church was allowed and many were Christians. They regarded the coming of the soldiers as the precursor of their liberty.”

As to the name Hoosier, Posey County’s most famous citizen, Major General Alvin P. Hovey, while in command at Shiloh came across a Union sentry on a dark night who asked for the password. Hovey was just getting his men to that position and had no idea what password was being used. When the sentry asked, “Who goes there?”, Hovey improvised what he hoped would be an acceptable password and responded, “Hoosiers”. The sentry said, “Welcome Hoosiers.” Apparently, we Hoosiers have been welcomed as such for a long time.

For more Gavel Gamut articles go to www.jamesmredwine.com

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WOMENS INSTITUTE GALLERY, DIANE KAHLOE ART EXHIBITION!

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WOMENS INSTITUTE GALLERY, DIANE KAHLOE ART EXHIBITION!

by: Dan Barton, Publisher of New Harmony Gazette

While I don’t consider myself an art critic by any stretch of the imagination, I have seen and purchased enough art in my life to know quality when I see it.

Lena Feiner runs and owns the “Womens Institute Gallery” at 916 Granary Street. Since I’ve known her, just shortly after I came to New Harmony in 2014, she’s always had top quality artists and art work on display and for sale in her gallery. I don’t know the total number of pieces I’ve purchased from Lena in past years, but because she has such an eye for abstract art, I’ve been lucky enough to find some good ones to take home.

Recently I paid a visit to her studio to view her latest show by Mexican/Ameican Artist Diane Kahloe, which will be on exhibit until Labor Day. Ms. Kahloe grew up in sunny California but currently lives in the Blue Grass State, Kentucky. If you are not familiar with the art that emanates from the Mexican/Mezo-American culture you are in for a treat. At first you may find the connection with death a little shocking, but when you realize it, Americans have always celebrated the passing of our ancestors in one form of memorial art or another. Take the Vietnam Veterans’ Memorial for instance, those names were inscribed so that we do not forget them and what they sacrificed in the name of our freedoms. Much the same phenomenon happened in NYC following the 9/11 Trade Center terrorist attacks. People would post pictures of their loved ones for months following the attack all over NYC asking if anyone had seen the person they loved and who had clearly perished. It’s a way of reuniting or bringing back our lost ones to us.

In Ms. Kahloe’s art she is memorializing or immortalizing the unfortunate lost lives of young women who are forever missing or were brutally slain by predatory men, in and around Juarez, Mexico. In fact the display is called in Spanish, “Las Desaparecidas De Ciudad Juarez!” The Women’s Institute Gallery is calling it the “Wall of Memories!” In Spanish it simply means “The Missing Ones of the City of Juarez!” The Wall of Memories is a wall of small oil on canvas portraits, excellently done, of 150 of the women who fell victim to this unrevenged violence.

If you have a seat in front of the geometric gallery of portraits, over several minutes of concentration, it will have a mesmerizing effect. Each of the little portraits are for sale and for only $75, which I thought was a very reasonable price for the fine workmanship involved. On each framed portrait is the name of the young woman in the portrait.

Diane Kahloe writes, “ Throughout history, typically only those of wealthy or noble birth were immortalized through portraiture. I have chosen to paint the portraits in the form of a small Icon to memorialize the young women whose social and economic status would not typically be the subject of a painted portrait.”

There are also other much larger works on display by Diane Kahloe, works of geometric design, which are so intricate in their detail that for the average non-artist person such as myself, it baffles the mind how anyone could do them. She also has a life-size oil painting in the gallery of “Our Lady of Guadalupe,” Mexico’s Patron Saint. Life-Size and Life Like! A must see. A real masterpiece!

Be sure to stop by The Women’s Institute Gallery at 916 Granary Street! You won’t be disappointed! I wasn’t! It’s art at its best!

Trogdon Promoted To Mortgage Loan Officer

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OWENSBORO, KENTUCKY – Lindzey Trogdon has been promoted to the role of Mortgage Loan Officer in the Owensboro Region of First Security Bank. Trogdon will now be working with First Security customers and their home purchase, construction or refinancing needs. She will be based at the Downtown Owensboro banking center, located at 313 Frederica Street.

“Lindzey is an extremely dependable, enthusiastic employee. Her outgoing personality and willingness to work until she has found the best solution are some of her best qualities,” statedKrista Niehaus, Senior Vice President – Sales and Service Manager. “She has so much knowledge about the mortgage industry; I knew she was the perfect person for this position.”

Trogdon started at First Security Bank in July of 2015 in the role of Mortgage Loan Processor. In June of 2017, she was promoted to the Mortgage Loan Processing Supervisor.

Trogdon is ready to get started in her new position at First Security Bank. “After six years of being behind the scenes, I am very excited to start interacting with customers face-to-face, where I can make a difference in our community both in my personal life and at work! Being part of a community bank makes this new role even better and easier to do,” said Trogdon.

Trogdon received her Bachelor of Arts in Visual Studies from Western Kentucky University.

First Security Bank, with $600 million in assets and more than 120 employees, has 11 banking centers in four major markets including Lexington, Owensboro and Bowling Green, Kentucky and Evansville, Indiana.

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Rep. Messer Invites Local Job Seekers to Annual Job Fair in Lawrenceburg

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Rep. Luke Messer (IN-06) invites local job seekers to the 6th Congressional District Job Fair on Thursday, August 9, 2018, at Ivy Tech Community College in Lawrenceburg.

Local employers looking to hire will be at Ivy Tech’s Lawrenceburg campus from 1:30-4 p.m. All members of the public are invited to attend. U.S. military veterans are encouraged to come early at 1 p.m.

“This year’s job fair should be another great event, with many area employers recruiting workers for high quality, good-paying jobs,” Messer said. “We invite anyone looking for a job or new career to join us, and see what the Lawrenceburg community has to offer.”

Members of the public wishing to attend the job fair do not need to register in advance.

WHAT:

6th Congressional District Job Fair

WHEN:

Thursday, August 9, 2018, from 1:30 to 4 p.m. (1-1:30 is for veterans only)

WHERE:
Ivy Tech Community College
50 Walnut St.
Lawrenceburg, IN

ADMISSION:
Free to all members of the public