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“READERS FORUM” FEBRUARY 17, 2018

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WHATS ON YOUR MIND TODAY?

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?
Todays “Readers Poll” question is: If the Republican primary for the 8th District Congressional race was held today who would you vote for?
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

IU Qualifies 21 for Final Night of Finals at Big Ten Championships

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IU Qualifies 21 for Final Night of Finals at Big Ten Championships

 COLUMBUS, Ohio – The No. 9-ranked Indiana University women’s swimming and diving team will bring back 21 finalists on Saturday for the final night of the 2018 Women’s Big Ten Championships at the McCorkle Aquatic Center in Columbus, Ohio.

Of the 21 finalists, five compete in Championship Finals, eight in B Finals and five in C Finals. Those numbers don’t include the 1,650 freestyle, which IU will have three swimmers participating. Entering the final night, IU is in second place with a total of 787 points.

200 Backstroke

Five Hoosiers qualified for the evening finals of the 200 backstroke, with senior Kennedy Goss leading the way. Goss will be the No. 2 seed for the Championship Final with an NCAA B cut of 1:52.12

Three IU swimmers earned spots in the B Final with an NCAA B cut times. Rachel Matsumura (1:55.34), Marie Chamberlain (1:55.45) and Camryn Forbes (1:55.81) qualified 11-13 for Indiana. Forbes’ mark was a personal-best for the freshman.

Fellow freshman Bailey Kovac will swim in the C Final after coming in with a personal-best and NCAA B cut of 1:57.54, cutting nearly five seconds off her previous PR.

100 Freestyle

Five IU swimmers qualified for the evening finals of the 100 freestyle with NCAA B cut times. Holly Spears (49.24), Delaney Barnard (49.52) and Maria Paula Heitmann (49.54) will all swim in the B Final. Both Barnard’s and Heitmann’s times were personal-bests.

Freshman Grace Haskett (49.71) and senior Ali Rockett (49.84) will swim in the C Final. Rockett’s mark is a personal-best.

200 Breaststroke

Two-time defending champion Lilly King will be the top seed in the Championship Final of the 200 breaststroke on Saturday night after touching the wall with an NCAA A cut of 2:06.38. King’s time is the sixth-best of her career and ranks as the seventh-best time in school history.

Joining King in the A Final will be Laura Morley, who qualified seventh overall with a personal-best and NCAA B cut time of 2:11.35.

Freshman Abby Kirkpatrick will swim in the B Final after posting a PR and B cut of 2:13.34, while Mackenzie Atencio swam a PR and B cut of 2:13.79 to qualify for the C Final.

200 Butterfly

Shelby Koontz continued her great swimming this week, earning a spot in the Championship Final of the 200 butterfly, qualifying seventh overall with a personal-best and NCAA B cut time of 1:56.89.

Reagan Cook qualified for the B Final with a time of 1:57.97, while Christine Jensen earned a place in the C Final with a mark of 1:59.34. Both times are NCAA B cuts.

Platform Dive

Jessica Parratto will make her third Championship Final appearance of the week after qualifying second overall with an NCAA Zones qualifying score of 340.45. Parratto, who won the title last year in the event, had two scores of 80 points or higher in prelims.

The freshmen duo of Mya Kraeger and Taylor Carter both scored points for the Hoosiers, with each recording personal-best and NCAA Zones qualifying scores. Kraeger finished 17th overall with a total of 257.45, while Carter was 21st with a score of 242.75.

The No. 9 Hoosiers will conclude the 2018 Big Ten Championships on Saturday evening with the finals of the 200 backstroke, 100 freestyle, 200 breaststrokes, 200 butterflies, 1,650 freestyle, platform dive and 400 freestyle relay.

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, Facebook, and Instagram.

200 Backstroke

Kennedy Goss – 1:52.12 (Championship Final – NCAA B Cut)

Rachel Matsumura – 1:55.34 (B Final – NCAA B Cut)

Marie Chamberlain – 1:55.45 (B Final – NCAA B Cut)

Camryn Forbes – 1:55.81 (B Final – Personal Best, NCAA B Cut)

Bailey Kovac – 1:57.54 (C Final – Personal Best, NCAA B Cut)

  1. Katie Keller – 1:59.88

100 Freestyle

Holly Spears – 49.24 (B Final – NCAA B Cut)

Delaney Barnard – 49.52 (B Final – Personal Best, NCAA B Cut)

Maria Paula Heitmann – 49.54 (B Final – Personal Best, NCAA B Cut)

Grace Haskett – 49.71 (C Final – NCAA B Cut)

Ali Rockett – 49.84 (C Final – Personal Best, NCAA B Cut)

Laurel Eiber – 50.84

200 Breaststroke

Lilly King – 2:06.38 (Championship Final – NCAA A Cut)

Laura Morley – 2:11.35 (Championship Final – Personal Best, NCAA B Cut)

Abby Kirkpatrick – 2:13.34 (B Final – Personal Best, NCAA B Cut)

Mackenzie Atencio – 2:13.79 (C Final – Personal Best, NCAA B Cut)

Hope Hayward – 2:15.72 (Personal Best, NCAA B Cut)

200 Butterfly

Shelby Koontz – 1:56.89 (Championship Final – Personal Best, NCAA B Cut)

Reagan Cook – 1:57.97 (B Final – NCAA B Cut)

Christine Jensen – 1:59. 34 (C Final – NCAA B Cut)

Sam Lisy – 2:00.66

Platform Dive

Jessica Parratto – 340.45 (NCAA Zones Qualifying Score)

Mya Kraeger – 257.45 (Personal Best, NCAA Zones Qualifying Score)

Taylor Carter – 242.75 (Personal Best, NCAA Zones Qualifying Score)

 

A WEE MOUSIE’S REVENGE By Jim Redwine

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GAVEL GAMUT By Jim Redwine

A WEE MOUSIE’S REVENGE

I can’t relate in a family newspaper my very first thought as I slipped on that icy stoop at JPeg Ranch and crashed precipitously into the large stone behind it. As I felt my left kidney complain about the cruel blow, my mind was in the pure reaction mode. Contemplation of the irony involved arose only after I realized I was not dead. Peg later said I must have actually landed on my head as there appeared to be no lasting damage.

But as the Good Book says, “In the beginning …” Last Friday morning’s near rendezvous with mortality began about 5:00 a.m. when I was shaving and heard Peg shriek, “Jim, get down here!” As I had experienced that tone for years I went ahead shaving thinking she probably had some task in mind for me that might be able to be avoided if I feigned deafness.

Peg stormed into the bathroom with the same attitude I remembered my drill sergeant had in basic training. “There’s a mouse in the sticky trap behind the commode in the laundry room!” I figured this was not going away but held out a glimmer of hope the mouse may have managed to escape and, therefore, so could I. I made no reply.

“You (why me?) need to get that thing out of here right now! And take it out to the burn pile. Do not even try to just throw it in the trash until the trash men come next week.” She is always at least one bad decision ahead of me.

Gentle Reader, you may recall that last Friday we still had the frozen remnants of ice and sleet from Mother Nature’s assault. Most of it was melted but some had re-frozen. Unfortunately for me the clear, invisible ice still covered the path out to the burn pile and most importantly the deck and steps leading to the path. Hold that thought.

Resigning myself to my spousal fate I checked behind the commode and found one fairly normal sized mouse looking at me with what appeared to be a respectful appeal for clemency. I picked up the trap and mouse with my left hand and headed out the three-season porch to the deck. Everything looked okay to me so I stepped down off the deck onto the large white stone step which also looked clear. Well, it was clear, clear ice.

Faster than the falling stock market I ended up crashing on my left kidney into the stoop and wishing I’d pass out. I didn’t. I first processed the similarity between the excruciating pain I was currently feeling and the only slightly more exhilarating level brought on when I broke my leg skiing. Once I finished cursing the darkness I began to contemplate why I had not just released the mouse and let it slip on the ice. Instead, the mouse pulled away from the now crumpled trap and as I helplessly watched it looked back over its shoulder with an expression that appeared to me both sardonic and sarcastic. It did not hang around to offer aid or comfort.

After about ten minutes of writing on the ice-covered ground and trying to figure out how I could parlay the situation into some advantage against Peg, I struggled my way back into the house seeking sympathy. Peg said, “I do not see any blood and, more importantly, where’s the mouse?” That was when the poem by Robert Burns, Ode to a Wee Mousie, came to mind. “The best-laid plans of mice and men often go astray”, or in my case, Peg’s best-laid plans for me.

Oh by the way, not only was Peg about as sympathetic as a traffic cop in Alabama when you have an Indiana license tag but when I went to see Dr. Lee he took one brief but professional look and said, “You are not dying, it’s only an ugly bruise. But if you want me to, I’ll call Peg and tell her you cannot do any chores until Spring.” Unfortunately, he was only kidding.

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

Mike Duckworth to Speak at Republican Breakfast


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Mike Duckworth, Candidate for Vanderburgh County Commission District 2, has been invited by the Vanderburgh County Republican Party to be the guest speaker at the February GOP Breakfast this Saturday.

The Vanderburgh County Republican Party holds a breakfast every month for the entire GOP County Committee including current office holders, candidates, precinct committeemen, and the Central Committee.  The event is used to update the county committee on current events, political happenings, and affords candidates an opportunity to engage directly with rank-and-file Republicans.

Mike will make the case that he is the best candidate to represent the citizens of Vanderburgh County.  Mike has a proven history of public service, both within government agencies and with non-profit organizations.  He will point to his experience as a Sheriff’s Deputy, member of the South West Indiana Mental Health Board of Directors, EVSC Board President, and as Superintendent of the County Highway Department, all of which has provided first-hand knowledge of how local government works and, also, how it can be improved.

The Committee to Elect Mike Duckworth is inviting the press to attend to hear Mike’s vision for Vanderburgh County and be updated on the current status of the campaign.

EVENT DETAILS:
GOP Breakfast, Saturday, Feb 17
C.K. Newsome Center, Rooms 118 A-B
7:30 am Doors Open
8am-9am Program

King Wins 11th Conference Title on Friday Night at Big Ten Championships

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The No. 9-ranked Indiana University women’s swimming and diving team won another title on Friday night at the 2018 Women’s Big Ten Championships at the McCorkle Aquatic Pavilion in Columbus, Ohio.

Headed in to the fourth and final day on Saturday, the Hoosiers sit in second place with a total of 787 points. Michigan lead with 926 points, while Minnesota is third with 742 points. Ohio State (725) and Wisconsin (514) round out the top-five.

For the third-straight season, Lilly King was dominant in the Championship Final of the 100 breaststroke, winning with a NCAA A cut time of 56.46. King’s time is the second-best of her career and broke the McCorkle Aquatic Pavilion pool record she set in the morning prelims.

The Big Ten title is the third this week for King, who was on the winning 200 and 400 medley relays. The Evansville, Ind. native has won 11 Big Ten championships so far in her career.

In the B Final, freshman Abby Kirkpatrick placed sixth to take 14th overall with a NCAA B cut of 1:01.55, while Laura Morley was 19th overall after placing third in the C Final with a NCAA B cut of 1:01.46.

Senior Ali Rockett was tremendous in the Championship Final of the 100 backstroke, winning silver with a NCAA B cut time of 51.41. Rockett’s time is the seventh-best time in Indiana school history.

Classmate Marie Chamberlain won the B Final for IU, finishing ninth overall with a NCAA B cut of 51.41. Freshman Grace Haskett was sixth in the B Final to place 14th overall with a B cut of 53.55.

Senior Rachel Matsumura had a great swim in the C Final, touching the wall first and tying her personal-best time with a B cut of 53.51.

Christine Jensen continued her great showing this week at the conference championships, winning the bronze in the Championship Final of the 100 butterfly with a personal-best and NCAA B cut time of 51.28. Jensen’s mark is the third-fastest time in Indiana history.

Shelby Koontz was right behind Jensen, taking fourth overall in the A Final with a PR and B cut of 52.28. Koontz ranks has the third-best performer in the event with her time. Holly Spears finished seventh in the B Final to place 15th overall with a B cut of 53.78.

Kennedy Goss took fourth overall for the Hoosiers in the Championship Final of the 200 freestyle, touching the wall with a NCAA B cut time of 1:44.16. In the B Final, Maria Paula Heitmann was third to finish 11th overall with a B cut of 1:45.84. Delaney Barnard was fourth to take 12th place overall with a B cut of 1:46.04.

The Hoosier 200 freestyle relay team of Grace Haskett, Ali Rockett, Holly Spears and Shelby Koontz placed fourth overall, touching in a NCAA B cut time of 1:29.08. The time is the second-best mark in program history.

Haskett had another great 50 free, leadoff leg for IU, going 22.43. Her time is the seventh-best in school history, giving the freshman six of the top-10 times in school history.

In the diving well, Jessica Parratto took sixth place in the Championship Final of the 3-meter dive, totaling a NCAA Zones qualifying score of 352.45. Parratto scored over 51 points on five her six dives, including an impressive 72.00 on her third attempt.

Freshman Taylor Carter earned a spot in her first B Final as a Hoosier, finishing 16th overall with a score of 251.05.

Sam Lisy placed eighth overall in the Championship Final of the 400 IM with a personal-best time and NCAA B cut of 4:10.55. In the B Final of the 400 IM, freshman Bailey Kovac led a trio of Hoosiers, placing third in the race to take 11th overall with a personal-best and NCAA B cut time of 4:14.17.

Reagan Cook (4:16.17) was 15th overall, while Josie Grote (4:17.60) took 16th. Both times are NCAA B cut marks.

The No. 9 Hoosiers will continue the 2018 Big Ten Championships on Friday evening with the finals of the 100 butterfly, 400 IM, 200 freestyle, 100 breaststroke, 100 backstroke, 3-meter dive and 200 freestyle relay.

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, Facebook and Instagram.

100 Butterfly

  1. Christine Jensen – 51.28 (Personal Best, NCAA B Cut)
  2. Shelby Koontz – 52.28 (Personal Best, NCAA B Cut)
  3. Holly Spears – 53.78 (NCAA B Cut)

400 IM

  1. Sam Lisy – 4:10.55 (Personal Best, NCAA B Cut)
  2. Bailey Kovac – 4:14.17 (Personal Best, NCAA B Cut)
  3. Reagan Cook – 4:16.17 (NCAA B Cut)
  4. Josie Grote – 4:17.60 (NCAA B Cut)

200 Freestyle

  1. Kennedy Goss – 1:44.16 (NCAA B Cut)
  2. Maria Paula Heitmann – 1:45.84 (NCAA B Cut)
  3. Delaney Barnard – 1:46.04 (NCAA B Cut)

100 Breaststroke

  1. Lilly King – 56.46 (NCAA A Cut, Pool Record)
  2. Abby Kirkpatrick – 1:01.55 (NCAA B Cut)
  3. Laura Morley – 1:01.46 (NCAA B Cut)

100 Backstroke

  1. Ali Rockett – 51.41 (NCAA B Cut)
  2. Marie Chamberlain – 52.48 (NCAA B Cut)
  3. Grace Haskett – 53.55 (NCAA B Cut)
  4. Rachel Matsumura – 53.51 (Personal Best, NCAA B Cut)

1-Meter Dive

  1. Jessica Parratto – 352.45 (NCAA Zones Qualifying Score)
  2. Taylor Carter – 251.05

400 Medley Relay

  1. Grace Haskett, Ali Rockett, Holly Spears, Shelby Koontz – 1:29.08 (NCAA B Cut)

 

Women Gather For Fifth Annual Go Red For Women Luncheon

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February is heart health month and Friday women across the Tri-State gathered for the Go Red For Women. Deaconess Hospital teamed up with the American Heart Association for the fifth annual Go Red For Woman luncheon. The event featured various fun activities about heart health as well as survivor recognition and the personalities auction.

There were more than 75 handbags filled with items reflecting the personalities of the donors this year, with some worth up to $2,000.

Heart defect survivor Lauren Nayler says, “You need to watch for the signs and the symptoms, it’s not a man’s disease. And so I am able to teach at school now from my heart because this has happened to me, and I feel very passionate about it, about getting the word out to people.”

This is the fifth annual Go Red For Women luncheon aimed at promoting awareness for heart disease against women.

Tyrone Morris

Web Producer

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The Evansville Civic Theatre’s Underground At The Arts Council Series Presents “KILLER JOE”

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The Evansville Civic Theatre’s
Underground At The Arts Council series presents
KILLER JOE
by Tracy Letts
Directed by Jakob Bilinski
CAST
Chris: Aaron Stofleth
Ansel: Joe Atkinson
Sharla: Devin McBride
Dottie: Jillian Weinzapfel
Joe: Kevin Roach
Stage Manager: Madison Scott
From the playwright of 2015’s wildly popular Underground show: BUG, and the hit play and film: AUGUST OSAGE COUNTY, comes a disturbing and darkly comic play, unlike anything you’ve seen onstage.
Chris Smith, a Texan low-life who finds himself in considerable debt to a loan-shark, decides the only solution is to murder his mother to collect the insurance money. Getting together with his father, Ansel, they decide to hire Joe Cooper, a contract killer who also happens to be a police detective. When they find they cannot pay Joe’s fee up front, they reach an unusual deal on how to retain his services, quite possibly endangering the lives of Chris, Ansel, his stepmother, Sharla, and his younger sister, Dottie.
*A NOTE ON THE CONTENT*
This play contains a significant amount of adult language and humor, violence, thematic material that may be uncomfortable for some, loud sound effects, and sexual depictions, including assault. Viewer discretion is strongly advised before seeing this production.
WHEN & WHERE:
February 15, 16, 17, 18*
Thurs, Fri, Sat at 7:30 pm.
Sun at 2:00 pm.
The Arts Council of Southwestern Indiana. 318 Main St #101, Evansville, IN 47708
TICKETS:
$10 in advance, $12 at the door.
General Admission
(No reserved seating. Ticket holders should arrive early to get a preferred seat.)

UE Baseball opens season with extra inning victory

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SPARTANBURG, S.C. – The 2018 campaign opened with a bang for the University of Evansville baseball team, as they outslugged Fordham 9-8 in ten innings at Wofford College in Spartanburg, South Carolina Friday afternoon. Freshman Pete Vaccaro drove in the game-winner in the top of the tenth on an RBI single to left.

“It was a marathon kind of a baseball game”, said University of Evansville head baseball coach Wes Carroll. “A real roller coaster ride of emotions. Obviously, getting a win is crucial. About a quarter of your games are going to be one-run games, and if you can put those into the win column, you’re set up for a good year.”

The Purple Aces’ youth movement got the ball rolling for UE (1-0) from the opening frame. A pair of errors allowed freshman lead-off hitter Sam Troyer to come across with the first run of the contest. Two batters later, another freshman, left fielder Evan Aders, launched a towering 2-run double to the center field fence off Rams starting pitcher Evan Knehr, scoring both Craig Shepherd and Kenton Crews and the Aces were up 3-0 before Fordham got to bat.

“That first at-bat, I was nervous, I won’t lie”, said Aders. “I was just concentrating on finding a my pitch. I saw the fast ball on the 3-2 and I bought into it, swinging at the fastball. And it was right there. We got a little bit of video on it. I knew it was going to run in on me a little bit, and I was able to bale it up.”

A pair of throwing errors in the bottom of the first allowed the Rams to get a run back. However, UE starting pitcher Austin Allinger put out the fire, as Evansville held a 2-run advantage over the next two innings.

Then in the 4th, the Evansville bats erupted again. After senior slugger Travis Tokarek got hit by a pitch, sophomore second baseman Troy Beilsmith crushed a 2-run over the left field fence off Fordham reliever Anthony DiMeglio, giving the Aces a 5-1 pad. Later in the inning, freshman Sam Troyer drove in the first RBI of his college career, knocking in Dylan Horstmeier, with an opposite field single. A Craig Shepherd sacrifice fly to center would tallyTroyer, giving UE a 7-1 lead.

Still, Fordham (0-1) proved to be ram tough, striking for three more runs in the bottom of the 4th, helped out be a pair of Evansville errors, cutting the Aces lead down to 7-4.

However, UE flashed its power at the plate again in the top of the 5th, as senior catcher Andrew Tanous launched a solo home run to left-center, and Evansville lead was back up to four, 8-4.

Austin Allinger’s day came to an end in the bottom of the frame, as an error and a single put a pair aboard with on out. The junior hurler allowed four runs, 3 unearned on three hits, 2 walks in 4 1/3 innings, while striking out four batters. Senior reliever Ryan Brady came in to put down the uprising with a pair of fly outs, keeping it 8-4 Aces lead.

Brady would got the next two frames giving up a single run on a solo homer by Billy Godrick, cutting the Evansville pad to 8-5.

Fordham had one more rally in them. In the 8th, freshman Jake MacKenzie, with two aboard, tagged Brady for a game-tying 3-run home run, knotting the game at 8 and ending the senior reliever’s day. Sophomore Adam Lukas took over from there, tossing a scoreless two innings to force extra frames.

“With such a thin in the bullpen, especially on opening weekend, we were trying to squeeze another out out of Ryan Brady”, said Carroll. “Of course, a freshman nine-hole hitter goes up top and gets us to tie the ball game.”

In the 10th, Pete Vaccaro picked the right time for his first college hit, lifting a flare to left that fell in between a pair of Fordham fielders, allowing Troy Beilsmith to score from second with the go-ahead tally.

“I fell a little behind, got down with two strikes”, said Vaccaro. “I just tried to battle, got a hold of something, and just got lucky that it fell.”

Fordham would threaten in the bottom of the inning, putting a pair in scoring position with two outs. However, Lukas ended the nearly four hour contest, striking out Justin Bardwell looking to close out the 9-8 victory.

“Giving up that 3-run shot in the 8th, our guys responded”, said Carroll. “Adam Lukas really came in and threw well. We had some scrappy at-bats in the tenth inning to get the go-head run. I’m proud of this team’s overall effort, attitude and energy today.”

The Aces are back in action tomorrow morning against Dayton at Wofford College’s Russell C. King Field. First pitch is at 11 a.m. central time.

Twelve Selected For 2018 USI Community Leadership Program

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Twelve southern Indiana residents have been selected to participate in the University of Southern Indiana’s 2018 Connect with Southern Indiana program. Now in its 12th year, Connect with Southern Indiana is focused on promoting active citizenship for individuals across a nine-county region in southwest Indiana.

The program is in its sixth year of partnering with the Romain College of Business Entrepreneurship Initiative for course content. Participants will attend 10 full-day sessions focusing on divergent and analytical thinking, idea generation, communication and strategic entrepreneurship from a community development perspective. They will develop and pitch collaborative projects aimed at improving the region.

In 2017, Connect with Southern Indiana participants worked with New Harmony Conversations to develop five health care projects aimed at increasing the use of advance directives in the region. Participants presented the projects at the inaugural Advance Care Planning in the State of Indiana Conference. This year’s Connect with Southern Indiana class will work with the Vanderburgh County Health Department to develop innovative solutions for health care problems impacting southwest Indiana.

The Connect with Southern Indiana program is open to current USI students, faculty and staff, and Indiana residents living in Dubois, Gibson, Knox, Perry, Pike, Posey, Spencer, Vanderburgh or Warrick counties who would like to improve the quality of life in their communities.

The 2018 class includes:

Dubois County:    

  • Jenelle Himsel, Personal Lines Service Manager, German American Insurance

Gibson County:

  • Laura Anderson, Technical Training Supervisor, Vectren

Posey County:

  • Amber Wells, Program Management Senior Analyst, Vectren

Spencer County:

  • Kristi Brown, Administrative Officer, Lincoln Boyhood National Memorial

Vanderburgh County:

  • Jalessa Eskridge, Development Associate, Carver Community Organization
  • Gena Garrett, Curator of Educator, Wesselman Nature Society
  • Katie Heilman, Senior Chemist, AstraZeneca Pharmaceutical
  • Laura O’Leary, Administrative Coordinator, EVSC Foundation, Inc.
  • Brushell Solorzano, Graduate Assistant, USI Undergraduate Admissions
  • DeAndre Wilson, Cook, Tropicana & Owner, TurnTable, LLC

Warrick County:

  • Lori Barnett, Executive Assistant, Optimal Rhythms Music Therapy
  • Ryan Bixler-Rigg, Community Development Manager, American Cancer Society

For more information on the Connect with Southern Indiana program visit USI.edu/connect or contact Leslie Townsend, director of Community Engagement, at ltownsen@usi.edu.