ADOPT A PET
Cherry – Cherry is a 4-month-old female Lionhead/New Zealand mix rabbit. She was part of an accidental litter from 2 pet store bunnies, so their owner surrendered them. THEN – her sister turned out to be pregnant, too – the family just kept multiplying! Well now Cherry is spayed, so definitely no babies for her. She would love to be someone’s indoor bunny for the next 8-10+ years. Her adoption fee is $40 and also includes her registered microchip. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!
Change the Play Camp returns to UE in June
Event set for June 26 on UE campus
 With the help of Indianapolis Colts Quarterback Andrew Luck, Riley Children’s Health is hosting several camps throughout Indiana this summer…including one at the University of Evansville on June 26!
Not only will kids be active, but they’ll also have fun and learn to make good choices when it comes to food, exercise, and their wellbeing.
THE RUNDOWN
â– One hour of high-energy fitness and nutrition stations alongside Andrew Luck
■Riley Children’s Health team member and local athlete volunteers
â– Designed for children ages 5 to 13
All camps are free of charge but are limited to 250 children per session.
Register at rileychildrens.org/evansvillecamp. Camp times are 10:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m.
Spots still available for Purple Aces Club Golf Classic
Openings are still available for the Purple Aces Club Golf Classic, which will be held on Monday, May 21 at Oak Meadow Country Club in Evansville.
Foursomes are available for $600 while individuals can register for $150. Your entry fee includes a boxed lunch, drinks, a polo shirt and post-golf hors d’oeuvres. Several sponsorship options are also available and include hole sponsor, longest drive sponsor, closes to the pin sponsor, cart sponsor, reception sponsor and event title sponsor.
Registration begins on Monday at 11 a.m. with lunch being served in your cart at that time. A shotgun start commences the golf tournament, which will go until approximately 5 p.m. The post-golf reception goes from 5-6 p.m. with the awards ceremony taking place at 5:30 p.m
USI Wins GLVC Commissioner’s Cup
Points are allocated for the Commissioner’s Cup based on the athletic department’s finish in the GLVC’s postseason tournaments in men’s soccer, women’s soccer, volleyball, men’s basketball, women’s basketball, softball and baseball. Each of the league’s members sponsors these sports at the intercollegiate level.
Under the guidance of Director of Athletics Jon Mark Hall, USI earned 72 points over the course of the academic year, besting runner-up University of Indianapolis (67) by five points. Bellarmine University (66), Drury University (59) and University of Illinois Springfield (58) rounded out the top five.
Just four points separated places sixth through 11th. Lewis University (53) was sixth overall, while University of Missouri-St. Louis (52) and Truman State University (52) tied for seventh. Rockhurst University (51), Maryville University (50) and McKendree University (49) finished ninth through 11th. Rounding out the conference contingent was Quincy University (41), William Jewell College (37) and Missouri S&T (28). The University of Wisconsin-Parkside was ineligible to earn points this season due to GLVC sanctions.
Although this season marks USI’s first Commissioner’s Cup victory in nearly 15 years, the Eagles netted 79 points and fell just three markers shy of taking the crown from Rockhurst University last year. USI was eighth in 2015-16 and seventh in 2014-15.
In conference play this year, USI made the GLVC Championship Tournament in six of the seven core sports, highlighted by a league title in softball and runner-up finishes in men’s soccer and women’s basketball. USI competed in the opening round of both the women’s soccer and men’s basketball tournaments, and fell just one win shy of the GLVC title game in baseball.
The Commissioner’s Cup, instituted prior to the 2002-03 season, has had five different institutions stake claim to the award. Prior to Rockhurst earning its first honor last year, UIndy picked up its second Cup in 2015-16 after the first came in 2013-14, which was bookended by other first-time winners Drury (2014-15) and Lewis (2012-13). Following the 2011-12 season, former GLVC member Northern Kentucky University took home its fifth-straight and eighth overall Cup over a 10-year span, while SIU Edwardsville, another former member, earned the Commissioner’s Cup in 2007.
The standings for the 2017-18 GLVC Commissioner’s Cup are as follows:
This Week at USI
Open through Friday, May 25
New Harmony Gallery opens new exhibition, Middle Ground
The New Harmony Gallery of Contemporary Art is hosting a new exhibition, Middle Ground, April 14 through May 25. The exhibition features the work of Kate Burnet, Amelia Volwiler-Stanley and Dan Woerner from Bloomington, Indiana. Dan Woerner and Kate Burnet construct narratives through their animated videos, drawings and installations by weaving together memories of the past with our prospects for the future from fragments of pop culture and other detritus. The exhibition is free and open to the public. Read More
Summer 2018
Summer camps and activities to be offered at USI
Registration is now open for a variety of camps offered this summer through the University of Southern Indiana. The camps each have a different focus, and range from engineering and other STEM-related themes to sports and general enrichment. Visit USI.edu/summer for the full listing of camps and registration information.
Holly’s House Awarded Grant from AT&T
Holly’s House, a non-profit child and adult advocacy center, will host a brief ceremony and check presentation on Wednesday, May 16, 2018 at 10:00 am EST at the Petersburg Elementary School, 1415 Alford Road, Petersburg, Indiana 47567, to acknowledge a grant award from AT&T made in support of the “Think First & Stay Safe†child abuse prevention program. Holly’s House offers the “Think First & Stay Safeâ€Â personal safety and child abuse prevention program at no charge to elementary schools in five counties in Southwest Indiana. This program utilizes the curriculum developed by Child Lures Prevention and focuses on helping children understand the lures or tricks that are used by people who might want to hurt them. The program also focuses on bullying, internet and general safety lessons including emphasizing the importance of telling a trusted adult if they feel scared or unsafe. Since first offering the program in the spring of 2010, over 35,000 elementary school students have been taught how to “Think First & Stay Safe.†As the demand for the program has increased, the “Think First & Stay Safe†staff has grown to include one full-time and two part-time prevention educators.
Sidney Hardgrave, Holly’s House Executive Director, said, “This gift supports the growth of this critical program. The “Think First & Stay Safe†program utilizes age-appropriate lesson plans to teach safety tools children may use for the rest of their lives. To receive this award with our partners from law enforcement, prosecution, and school administration present makes it even more meaningful. It is wonderful to know that AT&T joins Holly’s House in our commitment to prevent child abuse.â€
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HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE
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New attorneys take oaths, told to be civil and kind
Marilyn Odendahl for www.theindianalawyer.com
During the Indiana Supreme Court Admission Ceremony Tuesday in downtown Indianapolis, the state’s newest attorneys were reminded that how they conduct themselves as human beings will be just as important in their careers as their knowledge of the law.
The morning ceremony in the Indiana Roof Ballroom welcomed 137 new attorneys who took the oaths of the Indiana Supreme Court as well as the U.S. District Courts for the Northern and Southern districts of Indiana. Several family and friends sitting behind the admittees raised their phones to take photos and video as the oaths were administered.
Judges from the Indiana Court of Appeals along with the five Indiana Supreme Court Justices and the judge of the Indiana Tax Court attended the formal celebration. They congratulated the new lawyers on their accomplishment and welcomed them to the profession.
Many times, the attorneys were reminded to show their appreciation for all the support they received from their loved ones.
“Please be sure to take the time to thank those who helped you get here — the mothers, fathers, wives, husbands and others who believed in you, encouraged you and perhaps even sacrificed so that you could be here this morning,†said Judge William Lawrence of the Southern Indiana District Court. “I hope that none of you forget to show your appreciation for those who made this long journey possible.â€
The ceremony also became a time for judges who will be coming to end of their careers to offer their pieces of advice and for the newest Indiana Supreme Court Justice to provide his insight into all that is required to be an attorney.
Indiana Court of Appeals Chief Judge Nancy Vaidik deferred her remarks to Judge Michael Barnes, who will be stepping down June 1 after 18 years on the appellate bench. Vaidik said if she had to choose one word to described Barnes, it would be “honest.â€
Barnes told the new attorneys to be truthful and act with integrity and compassion. “These qualities are especially important for any person but acutely and keenly so for a lawyer,†he said.
Lawrence, who will be taking senior status July 1, told the new attorneys while their journey to this point followed a predictable series of steps that included completing an undergraduate degree, making good grades, finishing law school and successfully conquering the bar exam, their lives going forward would measure accomplishments differently.
“From now on, people will judge you not by your achievements but rather by how you are in your heart,†Lawrence said. “You will be remembered for your generosity, thoughtfulness, courtesy and kindness. People will not talk of your grade point average but of your loyalty, your devotion to your family and your passion about those things that are important to you.â€
Indiana Justice Christopher Goff, who joined the Supreme Court July 24, 2017, echoed the advice of Barnes and Lawrence.
“Beginning today, you are the face of justice in Indiana,†Goff said. “In the years to come, you will serve hundreds and perhaps thousands of clients. Your face, your words, your attitudes are what will shape their feelings toward the justice system. Treat them with dignity and respect, give their case your best efforts, be a model of civility, take care of yourself because people are depending on you; take care of yourself because you are worth it.â€