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Funeral Services Set For Father Eugene Heerdink

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Funeral Services Set For Father Eugene Heerdink

Funeral service have been set for a priest credited for pioneering the Evansville Catholic Diocese’s ministry to the Latino community. Father Eugene Heerdink has died at age 92.

Visitation will be held on April 16th from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. EST at St. Joseph Church in Jasper. Vigil service will be held at 7 p.m. EST the same day at St. Joseph Parish.

Visitation will continue on April 17th from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. Central at St. Benedict Cathedral in Evansville. Interment will follow in the Priests’ Circle at St. Joseph Cemetery.

Fr. Heerdink was born on January 23, 1926 in Evansville. He attended St. Meinrad Seminary in St. Meinrad.

On May 19, 1951, Bishop Henry Grimmelsman ordained him a priest of the Diocese of Evansville.

Heerdink’s priestly assisgnments included Assistant, St Joseph Parish, Evansville, 1951; Assistant St. John the Baptist Parish, Vincennes, 1952; assistant, St. Anthony of Padua Parish, Evansville, 1957; administrator, then assistant, Holy Redeemer Parish, 1958; administrator, St. Martin Parish, Whitfield, 1959; pastor, Holy Name Parish, Bloomfield, 1959; Pastor, St. John the Evangelist Parish, Loogootee, 1964; and Pastor, St. Matthew Parish, Mount Vernon, 1969.

In 1979, Fr. Heerdink took a five-year leave from the diocese for mission service in South America. He retired from active ministry in June 2008.

Father Heerdink pioneered diocesan ministry to the Latino community. He served as coordinator of the Diocesan Apostolate to Spanish Speaking beginning in 1992, and as director of the Diocesan Ministry to Spanish Speaking beginning in 1999. He also played a significant role in bringing Catholic radio station WTJW 93.1 FM to Jasper in 2014.

Heerdink is survived by his brother, William, of Evansville, and his sister, Mary, of Washington.

‘ROSEANNE’ IS A LIBERAL TROJAN HORSE

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By Rick Jensen

Hey, “Roseanne” fans in Tulsa, Cincinnati, Kansas City, Pittsburgh, Oklahoma City and Indianapolis: don’t get too comfy with Roseanne-the-Trump-Voter… it looks like the writers are going to make her character into a new version of Archie Bunker, a likable character with horrible, hateful opinions designed to turn you against non-liberal political ideas.

Whitney Cummings, a successful liberal comic, writer and producer, is the show’s executive producer and co-showrunner (which is apparently a word, as though “producer, director or big boss lady” aren’t sufficiently descriptive).

Hollywood was shocked and stunned that Trump-voting Roseanne didn’t jut do well in the ratings debut -the show posted historically high ratings, including a 5.2 rating among young adults.

How can this BE? !!!!

The vast majority of scripted (including late-night) shows are pointedly liberal, defining anyone right-of-center as hatefully out of touch with the writers’ fictions.

“Roseanne” was billed as a “controversy” by Vox because, well, Roseanne Barr voted for Trump. Deadline Hollywood gasped, “‘Roseanne’ Revival’s Huge Debut Stuns Hollywood, Prompts Soul-Searching.”

No worries, Hollywood.This appears to be part of the plan.

It’s the hard-working people of middle America, not the liberal elites of Los Angeles or New York, who enjoyed the show. Viewers on both coasts largely ignored the show.

Trump voters loved it, which would certainly play right into Cummings’ agenda, which she described in a piece on Vulture.com.

Frustrated that her anti-Trump tweets were only reaching fellow travelers in her liberal echo chamber, Cummings looked toward producing and writing for “Roseanne” to reach conservatives, independents and all other non-liberals to convince them that they are wrong.

Cummings writes, “Since tweeting wasn’t working, maybe giving my brain to a show that touched the hearts and got the eyeballs of so many working-class people is how I could finally do my part to help us all make sense of the election.”

I guess she really doesn’t understand the millions of #NeverHillary voters and will continue to tilt at the windmills of her fantabulous brain.

It’s also revealing that she believes writing “progressive,” i.e. “liberal,” scripts equals “truth”:

“… the, Roseanne, writers have a commitment to the truth that I have not seen on other network shows,” Cummings wrote. “There’s no agenda, no judgment of the characters, just a deep devotion to the Conners’ fiscal and emotional reality. That, and a bravery around incendiary, progressive-themed stories.”

Nope. No agenda here, just “progressive” themes as opposed to “conservative” or “libertarian” themes.

The revelations continue.

If you’re going to create a character like Archie Bunker, which is my own theory based upon Cummings’s article, you have to create a character who is likable while he or she articulates opinions written in such a way as to be repulsive to most Americans.

Cummings observes, “After working with some of the show’s original writers, I’ve concluded that their quest to honor reality and avoid worrying about if you ‘like’ the characters is actually what ended up making you love the characters.”

“Likability” solved.

Now, how to use Roseanne to cause blue collar white Americans who voted for Trump to question their beliefs, become self-loathing and vote for Democrats?

Cummings explains that she hopes “… the show will make you feel like you’re going home to visit relatives who you may not always align with politically or philosophically, that you may have anger toward, but that you still respect and love because they’re smart, self-aware, and always make you laugh. Maybe since the Conners are not actually your relatives, you can listen long enough to face some of your own prejudices and think, ‘I guess I never thought of it that way,’ or ‘I don’t agree with what this person believes, but I can now understand why they believe it.’”

So, who would be the one expressing such horrible, contrived prejudices?

Who could best carry this Trojan horse message, one in which the one delivering the outwardly bigoted or subtle, dog-whistle prejudiced lines while being ever-so-likable with their working class humor?

Roseanne.

But, does Roseanne know that Cummings and her team seem to be setting her up to be one of the most despised characters in broadcast history?

FOOTNOTE: The City County Observer posted this article without opinon, bias or editing.

U of E Men’s Basketball Finalizes Coaching Staff

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Todd Lickliter And Matt Graves Join Purple Aces Staff

 The first coaching staff is now complete as University of Evansville head men’s basketball coach Walter McCarty has announced the hiring of Todd Lickliter and Matthew Graves as assistant coaches.

“Our program is very blessed and fortunate to add two assistants with head coaching experience,” McCarty said.  “Todd and Matthew are both great teachers of the game and will do a great job of helping our guys grow on and off the court.  The success of your program is all about surrounding yourself with great people and we have done just that with Todd and Matthew, as well as Terrence Commodore and Logan Baumann.”

Todd Lickliter is a coach who is synonymous with basketball in Indiana.  A 1979 graduate of Butler University, Lickliter began his college coaching career with the Bulldogs as an assistant in 1988 before rejoining the staff in 1999.  He was promoted to the head coach at Butler in 2001 and enjoyed immediate success.

In his first season at the helm, he directed the Bulldogs to a then-school record of 26 victories and its third Horizon League regular season championship in a row.  His squad also reached the Associated Press Top 25 for the first time in 53 years.  Lickliter’s success only got better as he led Butler to a pair of Sweet 16 appearance in 2003 and 2007.

His top honor came in 2007 as he was named the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC) National Coach of the Year.  He left the program with the top three single-season win totals in school history.  Lickliter became the head coach at the University of Iowa in 2007 and also led the program at Marian University in 2012.  In his second season with the Knights, he led them to the most conference wins in school history along with the #1 scoring defense in NAIA Division II.  After leaving Marian, he joined the Boston Celtics as a scout.

“The opportunity to have someone with the experience of Todd Lickliter next to me in my first season as a head coach is very exciting,” McCarty said.  “With all of the experience he has had as a head coach, he will be invaluable to myself and our team.  He has a great basketball mind and is a wonderful teacher of the game.”

Matthew Graves joins the Purple Aces staff after a 5-year stint as the head coach at the University of South Alabama.  In his stint with the Jaguars, he changed the culture of the program, resulting in the best GPA for the program in five years in just his first season as head coach.  Over his first three campaigns at USA, Graves saw them improve their win total each season.

Graves directed Augustine Rubit to the school and Sun Belt Conference records in rebounding while becoming the first USA player to earn All-Sun Belt recognition on four occasions.  His second season saw the program earn its first conference tournament win in three seasons.

Prior to his time with the Jaguars, Graves spent 17 years at Butler University as a student-athlete and coach.  In 2001, he joined Todd Lickliter’s BU staff as coordinator of basketball operations.  After two seasons, he was promoted to an assistant coach before being named the associate head coach in 2010 by Brad Stevens.

With Graves on staff, the Bulldogs made a national tournament in each of his last eight seasons along with eight seasons in a row with 20+ victories.  His coaching career at Butler was highlighted by a pair of appearances in the NCAA Tournament Championship Game in 2010 and 2011.

As a student-athlete at Butler, Graves was a member of the 1997 team that made the NCAA Tournament for the first time in 35 years.  He was the team MVP as he led the Horizon League in free throw shooting while earning a nod on the All-Tournament Team with his 18-point performance in the championship game.  Off the court, he was named to the GTE Academic All-District V Team while garnering an academic all-league selection.

“Matthew is another coach who brings a lot of great things to our program; he will help us to do things the right way,” McCarty explained.  “He a good recruiter that will bring in guys that this community will be proud of.  Matthew is another guy who has spent a lot of time with Todd (Lickliter) and Brad (Stevens) and brings that same type of experience.”

 

UE Names Ying Shang as Dean of College of Engineering and Computer Science

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The University of Evansville has announced that Ying Shang, PhD, has been named as the University’s new dean of the College of Engineering and Computer Science. Shang is the first woman to serve as the dean of the CECS at UE and will begin her new duties in August. Currently, she is chair of computer science at Southern Illinois University in Edwardsville. 

“I am so impressed with the University’s dedication to excellence in education,” said Shang. “I look forward to leading and working collaboratively with UE faculty, staff, and students. I hope to bring extra energy and innovative ideas to the University’s College of Engineering and Computer Science. Together we will make UE an even better place in the future.”

Shang earned her PhD and MS degrees in electrical engineering from the University of Notre Dame, and her BS in control engineering from Shandong University. Her research areas include discrete-event systems, max-plus linear systems, and hybrid systems with applications in queueing networks, manufacturing systems, and transportation networks. 

“I am excited by the expertise and perspective that Dr. Shang will bring to the College of Engineering and Computer Science,” said Michael Austin, executive vice president for academic affairs at UE. “Her enthusiasm, vision, and keen insight will make her a great addition to the University.” 

Shang has published more than 25 papers in journals and conference proceedings and delivered numerous invited presentations. During a sabbatical leave, Shang was a visiting professor at the University of Angers in France working on high-throughput screening research in drug discovery.  

During Shang’s term as SIUE’s computer science department chair, she fostered faculty growth in teaching and research, improved communication, secured ABET accreditation, established industrial partnerships, and created a process of launching entrepreneurial incubator/accelerator for startups to help Southern Illinois. Shang also served as faculty advisor for SIUE’s Society of Women Engineers Student Chapter and led the organization in recruiting more female students. She served as a role model for female engineering students and initiated the first annual Introduce a Girl to Engineering event.

UE Volleyball Signs Three For Next Season

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Coach Concepcion Adds To Young Nucleus

University of Evansville head volleyball coach Manolo Concepcion has announced the signing of three student-athletes to National Letters of Intent to play for the Purple Aces starting next season.

Concepcion’s signing class consists of Cecilia Thon, Elaine Alondra Vazquez and Vernanderse Patricia Joseph.

Thon is a native of Puerto Rico and will be a setter at UE.  A multi-sport athlete, Thon was her team MVP in volleyball and softball three years in a row while also earning the accolade on one occasions in Track and Field.  Thon earned a spot on the All-Star Team in volleyball on four occasions and was a 3-time participant in softball.  She was an All-Star at the 2014 Jeep Volleyball Tournament and the 2017 Spring Challenge.

Coach Concepcion on Thon: Ceci is a dynamic player with an incredible volleyball IQ and ability to manage the game. One of those athletes that makes every repetition look like the most important one. Coming from parents that have been athletes at the highest level (her dad is a former MLB player and her mom a former volleyball pro player), as well as her siblings, have allowed her to develop an advanced understanding towards what it takes to commit to excellence. Plus, she is an exemplary student that brings in one of the best academic backgrounds that we have had.

Elaine Alondra Vazquez also comes to Evansville from Puerto Rico.  She is in outside hitter.  Since 2017, Vazquez has been a member of the Puerto Rico Junior National Team.  In the High School National Championships last season, she earned the awards for best attacker and best passer.  Vazquez helped her team win the 2017 Jeep National Championship and earned MVP honors in the tournament.  Her squads won a pair of Junior High School National Championships (2014 and 2016) while earning a Club National Championship in 2015 and a High School National Championship in 2017.

Coach Concepcion on Vazquez: Alondra will add tremendous depth to the Outside Hitter position. Her ball control presents an interesting perspective for our program, as she will not only be an offensive weapon for us, but also someone that could play 6 rotations with effectiveness and efficiency. She is an all-around player that is capable of impacting the game in many areas. One of the most impressive aspects about her is that she has been a winner everywhere she has played at; so she brings the drive and competitiveness to do what it takes to get the job done.

Vernanderse Patricia Joseph makes her way to UE from Hutchinson Community College where she is a middle/right side.  She is a native of Haiti.  She has enjoyed an impressive career at the JUCO level as she was a National Qualifier in both track and volleyball.  Her team was a regional champion in 2017.  In high school, she won the Wendy’s Heisman Award in 2016 while earning numerous accolades in volleyball, track/field and basketball.

Coach Concepcion on Joseph: Patricia is an athletic player with a track and field background: a factor that has contributed with her explosive power, vertical leap, and range. She is someone that provide us with the opportunity to have a 3rd Middle in the Right Side, or use her as a pure middle. She is a fast-pace type of hitter, which will fit perfectly with the offense that Thon, Redmond, and McInnis will be in charge of running. Joseph also brings an intangible that we love for our locker room and on the court environment: high energy and passion.

Indiana’s Connor Concludes 2018 Gold Coast Commonwealth Games

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Indiana University diver James Connor had a terrific week at the 2018 Gold Coast Commonwealth Games in Australia this week.

The redshirt junior started his week by winning silver in the men’s 1-meter dive with a score of 412.45. The Melbourne, Australia native then followed that performance by winning bronze in the men’s 3-meter dive with a total of 438.50.

The two-time Olympian for Team Australia then capped his week by placing sixth in the 3-meter synchro with diving partner Kurtis Mathews. The pair finished with a score of 370.17.

This past season, Connor earned a pair of All-America honors at the NCAA Championships for the Hoosiers, placing third in the 1-meter dive and sixth in the 3-meter dive.

 

ADOPT A PET

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The name says it all with this one. This sweet girl is full of kisses, hugs, and snuggles! She’s a 2-year-old female American Staffordshire (or “pit bull”) mix. Her $110 adoption fee includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!

 

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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 Below are the felony cases to be filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office today.

Samantha Catherine Murphy: Domestic battery (Level 6 Felony)

Roy Glenn Wilson: Domestic battery (Level 6 Felony), Resisting law enforcement (Class A misdemeanor), Criminal mischief (Class B misdemeanor)

Tavern Keith Ford: Unlawful possession of a firearm by a serious violent felon (Level 4 Felony)

Aaron Jay Cartwright: Intimidation (Level 5 Felony)

Lonnie Joe Rowley: Possession of a synthetic drug or synthetic drug lookalike substance (Level 6 Felony), Public intoxication (Class B misdemeanor)

Levi Wayne Fryman: Theft (Level 6 Felony)

Michael Deangelo Hines: Aiding Robbery resulting in serious bodily injury (Level 2 Felony)

Gage Allen Sloan: Aiding Robbery resulting in serious bodily injury (Level 2 Felony), Aggravated battery (Level 3 Felony)

Signature waived right to jury trial, COA affirms

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A Clay County defendant waived her Sixth Amendment right to a jury trial when she signed a form acknowledging the deadline to demand a jury, then missed that deadline, the Indiana Court of Appeals ruled in an opinion upholding the denial of the defendant’s untimely jury trial demand.

In May 2016, Tarsha Cheesman’s employer, Page’s IGA grocery store in Brazil, agreed to give her a $50 cash advance from her next paycheck. However, surveillance footage later shows Cheesman stealing the $50 that had been set aside from her paycheck, and she never repaid the debt.

The state charged Cheesman with Class A misdemeanor theft, and at her initial hearing Cheesman signed an acknowledgement of rights that provided, among other things, that she must file a written demand for a jury trial within 10 days of her first scheduled trial date. Trial was initially set for Sept. 28, 2016, but was moved to Jan. 18 after a series of continuances. Cheesman moved for a jury trial on Jan. 6, but the Clay Circuit Court denied the motion as untimely.An additional series of continuances moved the trial to July 2017, when Cheesman was found guilty as charged.

She appealed in Tarsha Cheesman v. State of Indiana, 11A01-1708-CR-1939, arguing the trial court violated her rights by denying her request for a jury trial, but the Indiana Court of Appeals disagreed.

Judge Margret Robb initially in the Thursday opinion wrote that Cheesman’s jury demand was due by Sept. 19, 2016, but was not filed until almost four months later on Jan. 6. Further, Cheesman signed the form informing her of the deadline for demanding a jury trial, meaning she was advised her jury trial right, Robb said.

“To the extent Cheesman now argues that she never ‘expressly’ waived her Sixth Amendment trial by jury right, her argument leaves us unconvinced,” Robb wrote. “Although Cheesman explains the meaning of ‘express’ as ‘clearly and unmistakably stated,’ she fails to apply the standard to the facts presented here by explaining how exactly her actions were constitutionally inadequate, or what exactly is necessary to expressly waive her Sixth Amendment trial by jury right.”

“Moreover, we note that the specific language from (Patton v. United States, 281 U.S. 276, 299 (1930)) states that waiver requires the ‘express and intelligent consent of the defendant,’” Robb continued. “We view Cheesman’s signature on the Acknowledgement of Rights form and her subsequent failure to file a demand for a jury trial as reflecting her express and intelligent consent — especially considering that she now offers no argument to the contrary.”

Supreme Court Allows Legal Malpractice Claim To Continue

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Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com

A legal malpractice claim against a suspended northern Indiana attorney and his firm will continue after the Indiana Supreme Court found a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the plaintiff’s premises liability claim would have succeeded had the firm not failed to timely file her complaint.

While visiting her husband at St. Anthony Hospital in Crown Point, 85-year-old Elizabeth Roumbos walked around the foot of the hospital bed to a table on the other side of the bed, where a pitcher of water was located. After giving the water to her husband, Roumbos began to walk back to her seat on the other side of the bed, but tripped and fell on the way, resulting in a fractured femur. Roumbos claimed she tripped on cords and wires that were on the floor, but that she did not see them until after she fell.

The elderly woman hired now-suspended attorney Samuel Vazanellis and his firm, Thiros and Stracci, P.C., to represent her in her premises liability suit against the hospital. However, the firm failed to file Roumbos’ complaint within the applicable statute of limitations, so she sued for legal malpractice.

The Lake Superior Court initially entered summary judgment in favor of the firm, but the Indiana Court of Appeals reversed in February 2017, then reaffirmed its decision the following June. The case went to the Indiana Supreme Court in November, and in a Thursday opinion the justices determined the summary judgment ruling was improper.

Specifically, Justice Geoffrey Slaughter wrote there was a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the phone cords and wires that caused Roumbos’ fall were either a “known” or “obvious” danger. Looking first to whether the danger was “known,” Slaughter pointed to Roumbos’ testimony that she did not see the wires until after her fall to show it was not known. But turning to the question of an “obvious” danger, Slaughter said a jury could reasonably find the wires were not obvious to an ordinary person.

“For all we know the hospital bed and table obstructed the wires from view until Roumbos was right on top of them,” Slaughter wrote. “And by then it was too late.”

“The mere presence of a phone on the portable hospital table did not necessarily mean that a dangerous tripping threat existed on the floor that should have been obvious from Roumbos’ vantage point,” the justice continued. “Whether the wires generally, or the phone cord specifically, were obvious because they would have been apparent to a reasonable person under the circumstances is a disputed issue of material fact on this record that precludes summary judgment.”

Thus, the high court reversed the grant of summary judgment to the firm and remanded the case of Elizabeth Roumbos v. Samuel G. Vazanellis & Thiros and Stracci, P.C., 45S03-1710-CT-635, for further proceedings.

All justices concurred.