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WEEKLY DEVASTATION’S
MONDAY
“For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God,â€
Romans 3:23 NKJV
TUESDAY
“ For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.”
Romans 6:7, 17, 23 NKJV
WEDNESDAY
“But God be thanked that though you were slaves of sin, yet you obeyed from the
“the heart that forms of doctrine to which you were delivered.â€
Romans 6:7, 17 NKJV
THURSDAY
“For he who has died has been freed from sin.â€
Romans 6:7 NKJV
FRIDAY
“But God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were still
sinners, Christ died for us.â€
Romans 5:8 NKJV
SATURDAY
“And we know that all things work together for good to those who love God, to
those who are the called according to His purpose.â€
Romans 8:28 NKJV
SUNDAY
“that if you confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus and believe in your heart that
God has raised Him from the dead, you will be saved.â€
Romans 10:9 NKJV
Submitted by Karen Seltzer
Two arrests made in Monday morning shooting
Evansville Police have made two arrests in the shooting that injured a man on Monday morning. Police were called to the area 920 W Columbia around 9:50am for a report of a person who had been shot. Officers arrived and found 34 year old Joseph Brown in an alley. Brown had been shot once. Brown told investigators he met two men in an alley to sell them a fake Gucci watch. During the transaction, Brown was shot and robbed by a white male who then fled in a car being driven by a black. Brown recognized the black male and identified him as MICHAEL HINES. Police located HINES and the car around 2:15pm near Riverside and Lodge. He was taken into custody without incident.
Based on statements from Brown and HINES, investigators determined the shooter was 18 year old GAGE SLOAN. SLOAN was located around 11:00pm. He was known to frequent the area of 7th/ Fountain and was spotted by officers as he entered 1511 Fountain Ave. SLOAN was taken into custody after a brief standoff .
SLOAN was arrested for:
Robbery with Serious Bodily Injury L2 Felony
Aggravated Battery with a Firearm L3 Felony
Theft L6 Felony
HINES was arrested for:
Robbery with Serious Bodily Injury L2 Felony
Possession of K2 CL A Misdemeanor
Women’s Golf earns seventh-place finish in final regular season tourname
In its last tournament of the regular season, the University of Evansville women’s golf team captured a seventh-place finish at the Indiana State Spring Invitational at Country Club of Terre Haute in Terre Haute, Ind.
Evansville carded a final-round 332 to place the Purple Aces in seventh in the 10-team field with a team score of 655 (323 – 332). Loyola captured the team title at the invitational, recording a 304 on the final day to total a two-round score of 614 (310 – 304), edging UNI by a single-stroke.
Junior Madison Chaney paced Evansville in the invitational, concluding the tournament with a two-day total of 159. After opening the tournament with a first-round 78, Chaney tallied an 81 on the final day to finish in a tie for 19th.
Following Chaney was freshman Sophia Rohleder, who finished in a tie for 36th with a two-round total of 165 (81-84). Just one stroke back of Rohleder was senior Giulia Mallmann, who remained consistent throughout the invitational with back-to-back rounds of 83 for a two-round total of 166.
Improving on our her opening round, sophomore Lexie Sollman notched an 84 in the final round to place her in a tie for 44th with a two-day totat of 170 (86 – 84). Finishing in 52nd was freshman Minka Gill who completed the tournament with a second-day 92 for a invitational total of 173 (81 – 92).
Evansville opens the postseason on Sunday, April 15 through Tuesday, April 17 at the MVC Championship in Newton, Kan.
Eagles use long ball to ground Hawks
University of Southern Indiana Softball hit a combined six home runs Monday afternoon to sweep a Great Lakes Valley Conference doubleheader from host Quincy University.
Sophomore outfielder Allison Schubert (Nicholasville, Kentucky) went deep twice in the opener as the Eagles took game one, 7-5; while junior second baseman Claire Johnson (Pittsboro, Indiana) hit a grand slam in USI’s 8-5, game two victory.
The Screaming Eagles (19-16, 8-8 GLVC) return to action Saturday at noon when they host Rockhurst University in a GLVC twinbill at the USI Softball Field.
Game 1: USI 7, Quincy 5 (Box Score)
USI used back-to-back home runs on two occasions to rally from a 2-0 deficit and earn the 7-5 victory in the opener.
After spotting Quincy a pair of runs in the bottom of the third inning, the Eagles tied the game as Schubert and senior third baseman Mena Fulton (Bloomington, Indiana) hit solo home runs in back-to-back plate appearances in the top of the fourth frame.
Junior outfielder Caitlyn Bradley (Forest, Indiana) had an RBI-single in the fifth frame to give USI a brief 3-2 lead; but Quincy answered with a solo home run of its own off the bat of Kay Bettendorf in the last half of the fifth to tie the score at 3-3.
Bradley, who was 2-for-4 with four RBIs in the opener, hit a three-run home run in the seventh to put the Eagles on top, 6-3; while Schubert hit her second home run and team-leading 10th of the year in the ensuing at-bat to give USI a four-run cushion.
Quincy (13-21, 3-13 GLVC) got a two-out, two-run home run from Remi Ferguson in the bottom of the seventh inning; but that was as close as the Hawks would get as sophomore pitcher Jennifer Leonhardt (Louisville, Kentucky) closed the door on the home team.
Leonhardt (9-8) was dominate in the circle in 4 2/3 innings of relief work. Despite giving up three runs off four hits and three walks, Leonhardt set down 10 batters on strikeouts. The first eight outs the Eagles recorded with Leonhardt in the circle were strikeouts.
Game 2: USI 8, Quincy 5 (Box Score)
Highlighted by Johnson’s grand slam, USI scored six times in the top of the second inning to build a 6-0 lead. USI also got RBI’s from senior outfielder Olivia Clark-Kittleson (Carbondale, Illinois) and Fulton as it took a 6-0 lead into the last half of the second inning.
USI added another tally in the top of the fifth to take a 7-0 lead with an RBI-single by sophomore shortstop Taylor Ricketts (Georgetown, Kentucky); while Quincy got on the scoreboard with a tally in the last half of the fifth.
Schubert’s third home run of the day gave USI an 8-1 lead in the sixth; but Quincy responded with four runs in the bottom of the seventh inning to make things interesting.
The Hawks brought the tying run to the plate in Ferguson, who had hit a two-run home run off Leonhardt in the seventh inning of game one. Leonhardt, who came into the game to face Ferguson with two outs and runners at first and second, was up to the task as she induced a fly ball out to earn her second save of the year.
Junior pitcher Haylee Smith (Florence, Kentucky) earned the win after giving up five runs, four earned, off nine hits in 6 2/3 innings of work. Smith (3-3) had one strikeout while issuing just one walk.
IS IT TRUE APRIL 10, 2018
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Vanderburgh County Commissioners to Present “The State of Our Countyâ€
Vanderburgh County Commissioners Bruce Ungethiem, Cheryl Musgrave and Ben Shoulders will present the annual “State of Our County†speech followed by a question and answer session at the Evansville Rotary Club’s weekly luncheon Tuesday April 10.Â
The Commissioners will present updates on a variety of topics on county departments, infrastructure and economic development.Â
Lunch begins at 11:30 a.m. followed by the presentation at noon in the Walnut Room of the Tropicana Executive Conference Center, located at 421 NW Riverside Drive in downtown Evansville.
The public and members of the media are invited to attend. Those who would like to attend that ar
Some County Republican Chairman Give Unfair Advantage to Congressman Larry BucshonÂ
BUCSHON SHOULD DEFEND HIS RECORD AND ALLOW HIS PRIMARY OPPONENT TO SPEAKÂ
By Richard Moss, MD, Candidate for 8th Congressional District in Republican Primary
Jasper, IN
I attended a Lincoln Day Dinner in Washington Indiana, Daviess County, a community I know well for having a surgical practice there for more than 20 years. I later attended another Lincoln Day Dinner at Greene County where a similar pattern unfolded. At the Daviess County event, I had read on the Facebook page that candidates would be given a few minutes to speak. Congressman Larry Bucshon was the featured guest and keynote speaker, but at least I would have a few minutes to get my message out however briefly. As it turned out no one other than Bucshon spoke. In a contested race with a primary, it seemed reasonable that while the Congressman would be expected to speak and even be the featured speaker, his primary opponent should also be allowed at least a few minutes to make his case. Â
Bucshon took some 40 minutes to deliver what was, in effect, a paid political campaign speech, while I was silenced. Â Bucshon droned on about his many achievements and even mentioned that he had sent his yearly check in from his campaign coffers to the local county GOP party; he added that as a Congressman he could attract a lot of money from contributors and that he was doing his bit to help local county parties throughout the 8th district by sending them money, engaging in a bit of political patronage, a kind of bribe, if you will, and probably not something to air publicly, but the Congressman thought this fair game and indeed received some applause for this. Â
What was not mentioned by the Congressman, and what I would have said but was not allowed to, was that the Congressman is now a native of Washington DC not Indiana’s 8th district. He has also dodged his one televised debate with me on May 2 to go to a dinner, ducking the one opportunity for him to have to defend his record. He neglected to mention that he has a Heritage Action Conservative score of 52%, an F. He tiptoed around his recent vote for the disastrous Omnibus bill, the 2300 page $1.3 trillion monster that funded sanctuary cities, DACA, amnesty, importing more Syrian Muslim refugees, and Planned Parenthood, tacking on a trillion dollars to our national debt, while doing nothing to build a wall and secure our southern border. Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer praised the bill. Yes, our congressman stood with Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer to fund Democrat priorities but did not have to defend his vote because county GOP parties protected him.Â
As a candidate for Congress in Indiana’s 8th district, this is an infringement of first amendment rights. It is an endorsement of the Congressman in the midst of a primary by allowing him unlimited time as keynote speaker to give a self-serving campaign speech. If a sitting Congressman is involved in a primary then the county parties should allow both candidates to speak. I’m on the ballot. I should get equal time or at least some time. My many supporters at the dinner and throughout the county were insulted and disrespected by this. It is a form of censorship. It is political cronyism – the GOP establishment at the local level protecting their preferred candidate, their useful foot soldier Larry Bucshon while silencing his opponent in the midst of a primary. But we don’t need political favoritism, we need patriotism, an open system for all candidates to express their views and allow the voters to decide – including at Lincoln Day Dinners in front of the GOP faithful.  All candidates need equal time before the voters.
FOOTNOTE: Dr. Richard Moss is a board certified head and neck cancer surgeon and was a candidate for Congress in 2016. He graduated from the Indiana University School of Medicine and has been in practice in Jasper and Washington, IN for over 20 years. He is married with four children. Â For more information visit RMoss4Congress.com. Contact us at hq@rmoss4congress.com. Find Moss For Congress on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
The City-County Observer posted this article without opinion, bias or editing.