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Adopt A Pet

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Moxie is a 3-year-old female black Lab mix. She is medium-sized and energetic but very social. Moxie loves all people and seems to be fine with other animals! She is heartworm-positive, but her treatment is included in her adoption fee. She also appears to be housetrained. Moxie’s adoption fee is $100 and includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 or adoptions@vhslifesaver.orgfor details.

Women’s golf to begin 2017-18 season on Monday

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Aces head to Ohio 

 The new season begins on Monday for the University of Evansville women’s golf team as they travel to the Roseann Schwartz Invitational at Mill Creek Park Golf Course in Boardman, Ohio.

The event will feature nine other schools including Wheeling Jesuit, Indiana State, Saint Francis (Pa.), Marshall, Dayton, Niagara, Akron, Youngstown State and Cleveland State. This will be the largest field of teams the event has ever featured.

Set to be played on Mill Creek Park’s North Course, the teams will play single rounds on Monday and Tuesday. Monday’s round is set to start at 10 a.m. with tee times going until 1 p.m. Tuesday’s tee times are scheduled from 8 to 9:30 a.m. The course will play 6,023 yards and par is 72.

Purple Aces mainstays Kayla Katterhenry and Maggie Camp have graduated and UE will now look to Maria Pickens, Giulia Mallmann, Madison Chaney and Lexie Sollman to take the helm of the squad.  Pickens is the highest returning player as she average 83.53 stroke per round last season.  Her top effort last year came at the Braun Invitational as she tied for 6th place.

Chaney averaged 84.25 strokes while Mallmann finished her junior campaign at 84.64 strokes.

UE also welcomes newcomers Minka Gill and Sophia Rohleder to the team.  Gill is a native of Kokomo, Ind. where she attended Western High School.  Rohleder is from Evansville and played at Mater Dei.

 

Eagles Lose Second Half And Match, 5-3

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The University of Southern Indiana women’s soccer team could not stop the University of Findlay in the second half and suffered a 5-3 defeat Saturday afternoon Findlay, Ohio. USI goes to 1-1 to start the season, while Findlay finishes the first weekend, 1-1.

The Screaming Eagles got off to a fast start and built a 2-1 lead by the intermission. Freshman midfielder Maggie Winter (St. Louis, Missouri) started the Eagles’ scoring at 13:00, her second goal of the weekend.

After Findlay got the equalizer less than a minute later at 13:27, USI freshman defender Madelyne Juenger (Columbia, Illinois) put the Eagles back on top, 2-1, at 14:47 with her first collegiate goal. Juenger was assisted on the play by sophomore midfielder Courtney Spicer (Loveland, Ohio). The Eagles would hold the 2-1 lead through the intermission.

The second half would belong to the Oilers as they started the final 45 minutes with three unanswered goals to take control. Finlay knotted the score at 2-2 just 1:07 past halftime and took the lead for good, 3-2, at 55:17 and 4-2 at 64:11.

USI would try to get back into the match in the final 15 minutes. Winter struck for her second goal of the afternoon at 77:00 to close the gap to 4-3 and hit the crossbar at 81:00, but that would be as close as the Eagles would come the rest of the match.

Findlay closed out the scoring with the match’s final goal at 88:56 to seal its victory.

The Eagles return to the tristate Tuesday when they visit Oakland City University for a 3 p.m. USI is not slated to play in front of the home crowd at Strassweg Field until September 22 when it hosts the University of Indianapolis for a 5 p.m. Great Lakes Valley Conference match-up.

HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE

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Appointment Setter
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Postal Worker
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Hospital Front Desk
$18.00 per hour – Evansville, IN
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Aug 23
Late Night Stocker
$18.00 per hour – Evansville, IN
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Aug 23
Early Morning Postal Worker
$62,640 per year – Evansville, IN
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Aug 23
Police Records Specialist
$50,400 per year – Evansville, IN
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Aug 23
Part Time Postal Worker
$23.52 per hour – Evansville, IN
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Aug 23
Greeter
$15.60 per hour – Evansville, IN
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Aug 23
Cashier
$15.00 per hour – Evansville, IN
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Aug 23
Personal Assistant
$18.00 per hour – Evansville, IN
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Aug 23
Part Time Packer
$18.00 per hour – Evansville, IN
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Aug 23
Senior Care Giver
$54,000 per year – Evansville, IN
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Aug 23
Answering Service
$16.80 per hour – Evansville, IN
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Aug 23
Bail Agent Trainee
$49,200 per year – Evansville, IN
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Aug 23
Airline Baggage Coordinator
$20.40 per hour – Evansville, IN
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Aug 23
Resort Host
$61,200 per year – Evansville, IN
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Aug 23
Online Typist
$50,400 per year – Evansville, IN
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Aug 23
Order Support Specialist
$24.00 per hour – Evansville, IN
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Aug 23
Front Desk Manager
$66,000 per year – Evansville, IN
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Office Clerk
$42,000 per year – Evansville, IN
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Aug 23
Full Service Shopper
$15.60 per hour – Evansville, IN
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Aug 23
Pet Care Assistant
$44,400 per year – Evansville, IN
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Scheduler
$66,000 per year – Evansville, IN
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Crime Scene Assistant
$62,400 per year – Evansville, IN
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Meter Reader
$33,600 per year – Evansville, IN
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Aug 23
At Home Assistant
$18.00 per hour – Evansville, IN
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Aug 23
Elderly Home Assistance
$48,000 per year – Evansville, IN
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Aug 23
Full Time Postal Worker
$63,000 per year – Evansville, IN
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Aug 23
School Health Assistant
$15.60 per hour – Evansville, IN
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Aug 23
Parks And Facilities Attendant
$14.40 per hour – Evansville, IN
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Aug 23
Companion Care Assistant
$18.60 per hour – Evansville, IN
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Aug 23
Front Desk Associate
$40,800 per year – Evansville, IN
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Aug 23

Vanderburgh County Board of Commissioners Meeting

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AGENDA

Vanderburgh County Board of Commissioners

September 5, 2017

3:00 pm, Room 301

  1. Call to Order
  2. Attendance
  3. Pledge of Allegiance
  4. Action Items
    1. First Reading and Permission to Advertise Notice of Public Hearing for CO.V-09-17-005
    2. First Reading and Permission to Advertise Notice of Public Hearing for CO.V-09-17-006
    3. Final Reading of Ordinance CO.09-17-019: Amending Section 15.36 of Building Code Licensing
    4. Request for Waiver of APC Subdivision Plat Condition- Application Filed by Saddle Creek Estates
  5. Department Head Reports
  6. New Business
  7. Old Business
  8. Public Comment
  9. Consent Items
    1. Contracts, Agreements and Leases
      1. County Health Department:
        1. Business Associate Contract with CRS Indiana
        2. Quote with CRS Indiana for Purchase of Cash Register for Vital Records
        3. Breastfeeding Peer Counselor Contracts with Abihail Hernandez, Laura Lousignont, Julie Reynolds and Brandi Lopez
      2. Indiana Economic Development Corporation: Industrial Development Grant Agreement
      3. County Commissioners:
        1. Jacobs Village 2017 Grant Agreement
        2. Termination of Airport Sheriff Command Post Lease Agreement
    2. Approval of August 22, 2017 Meeting Minutes
    3. Employment Changes
    4. County Commissioners:
      1. Corrective Quitclaim Deed:
        1. 867 E. Riverside Dr.
        2. 520 Jackson Ave.
        3. 209 E. Oregon St.
        4. 911 N. Main St.
        5. 628 E. Maryland St.
        6. 806 N. Third Ave.
        7. 1018 W. Virginia St.
        8. 702 N. Third Ave.
        9. 2120 W. Delaware St.
        10. 12 N. Tenth Ave.
        11. 409 N. Fourth Ave.
        12. 1006 S. Barker Ave.
        13. 1610 Fountain Ave.
      2. Keller Williams Capital Realty Office Policy
      3. Amendment to Listing Contract:
        1. Nurrenbern Rd.
        2. Tekoppel Ave.
        3. 1217 S. Lombard Ave.
    5. Road Closure Request: Bluegrass Church, Rise Up and Run 5K
    6. Arc of Evansville: May-July 2017 Monthly Report and Meeting Minutes
    1. Superintendent of County Buildings:
        1. Purchase Order for Coliseum North Elevation Masonry and Exterior Repairs
        2. Old Courthouse Wifi Installation Quotes
        3. Old Courthouse Chiller Repair Quote
        4. Permission to Obtain Quotes for Various Old Courthouse Concrete Repairs
    2. County Health Department: Travel Request Forms
    3. County Engineering:
        1. Department Head Report
        2. Pay Request #27 University Parkway T.I.F for the sum of $1,649.00
  1. Rezoning
    1. Final Reading of Rezoning Ordinance VC-7-2017

Petitioner: Centenary Baptist Church

Address: 14340 Old State Road

Requesting: to Change from Ag to C-1

  1. Adjournment

Channel 44News: Almanac For The Week Of September 3rd, 2017

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44News Almanac For The Week Of September 3rd, 2017

 

The people and events that shaped this week in history.

September 3rd
1895 – The first professional football game was played in Latrobe, PA. The Latrobe YMCA defeated the Jeannette Athletic Club 12-0.
1954 – “The Lone Ranger” was heard on radio for the final time after 2,956 episodes over a period of 21 years.
2013 – Hunters in Mississippi caught a 727-pound alligator.

September 4th
1967 – “Gilligan’s Island” aired for the last time on CBS-TV. It ran for 98 episodes.
1998 – Google was incorporated as a privately held company.
2003 – Keegan Reilly, 22, became the first parapalegic climber to reach the peak of Japan’s Mount Fuji.

September 5th
1836 – Sam Houston was elected as the first president of the Republic of Texas.
1901 – The National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues was formed in Chicago, IL. It was the first organized baseball league.
1960 – Cassius Clay of Louisville, KY, won the gold medal in light heavyweight boxing at the Olympic Games in Rome, Italy. Clay later changed his name to Muhammad Ali.

September 6th
1620 – The Pilgrims left on the Mayflower from Plymouth, England to settle in the New World.
1941 – Jews in German-occupied areas were ordered to wear the Star of David with the word “Jew” inscribed. The order only applied to Jews over the age of 6.
1992 – A 35-year old man died ten weeks after receiving a transplanted baboon liver.

September 7th
1813 – The nickname “Uncle Sam” was first used as a symbolic reference to the United States. The reference appeared in an editorial in the New York’s Troy Post.
1915 – Johnny Gruelle received a patent for his Raggedy Ann doll (U.S. Patent D47789).
1966 – The final episode of the original “The Dick Van Dyke Show” was aired on CBS-TV.

September 8th
1866 – The first recorded birth of sextuplets took place in Chicago, IL. The parents were James and Jennie Bushnell.
1900 – A Category 4 hurricane rips through Galveston, Texas, killing an estimated 6,000 to 8,000 people. A 15-foot storm surge flooded the city, then situated at less than nine feet above sea level, and numerous homes and buildings were destroyed. The hurricane remains the worst weather-related disaster in U.S. history in terms of loss of life.
1986 – The Oprah Winfrey Show is broadcast nationally for the first time. A huge success, her daytime television talk show turns Winfrey into one of the most powerful, wealthy people in show business and, arguably, the most influential woman in America.

September 9th
490 B.C. – The Battle of Marathon took place between the invading Persian Army and the Athenian Army. The marathon race was derived from the events that occurred surrounding this battle.
1776 – The Continental Congress formally declares the name of the new nation to be the “United States” of America. This replaced the term “United Colonies,” which had been in general use.
1971 – Prisoners riot and seize control of the maximum-security Attica Correctional Facility near Buffalo, New York. Later that day, state police retook most of the prison, but 1,281 convicts occupied an exercise field called D Yard, where they held 39 prison guards and employees hostage for four days. After negotiations stalled, state police and prison officers launched a disastrous raid on September 13, in which 10 hostages and 29 inmates were killed in an indiscriminate hail of gunfire. 89 others were seriously injured.

TRUMP THE FUTURE DEMOCRAT

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TRUMP THE FUTURE DEMOCRAT

Making Sense by Michael Reagan

President Trump keeps making me look good.

Last week we repeated the sound advice we’ve frequently given him but which he regularly refuses to take – know when to shut up and listen to your staff.

This week he sabotaged himself yet again.

He totally wasted about 95 percent of the generally favorable media coverage and bipartisan huzzahs he got for his Afghanistan policy speech on Monday night.

He could have basked in the Afghan afterglow all week long and hit a few hundred balls on the practice range.

But instead by Tuesday night he was in Phoenix and up to his old dumb tricks, bashing Arizona’s Republican senators John McCain and Jeff Flake, rehashing what he said about Charlottesville and throwing old and new spitballs at the fake media.

It’s hopeless.

He just can’t stop himself.

He can’t let anything go.

He can’t quit campaigning for the job he’s already won.

And he can’t keep from bashing the Republicans in Congress he so desperately needs.

It seems he’s doing everything he can to get his base to vote Republicans out of power in 2018.

He wants to get rid of Flake. He certainly doesn’t like McCain.

He’s rough on Republican Congressional leaders Mitch McConnell and Paul Ryan – even though 70 pieces of legislation, some with bipartisan support and some especially pleasing to conservatives, have become law in the last seven months.

Like the media he hates, President Trump says virtually nothing about those many legislative accomplishments and almost nothing positive about the Republicans who got them passed.

But if he really wants to fix the tax system, get immigration reform or replace Obamacare some day, he’s going to need those Senate Republicans he’s been picking on.

The best way to get them to be a part of his team is not to hold a personal pro-Trump rally and use them as punching bags and punch lines.

Maybe the president is just trying to be a nice guy and doesn’t want to pick on the leaderless, rudderless, just-say-no-to-Trump Democrats when they’re so hapless, pathetic and confused.

Maybe he has a long-term secret plan to blow up the two-party system, or prove that Republicans and Democrats in Washington are so much alike ideologically that it doesn’t matter what party you join.

But if he keeps it up much longer,President Trump will have a Democrat-controlled Congress in 2018 and then we Republicans are going to be asking him not to sign legislation to help us, but to help us by vetoing it.

Meanwhile, if the president stumbles any farther down this road to Republican Party ruin we might see him change his party affiliation.

He has no ideology, no party principles to uphold. What’s it matter to him if he converts to a registered Democrat? It’s what he was most of his life anyway.

You never know with Trump. But even if he switched parties in 2020, it probably wouldn’t matter much.

The same forgotten Flyover Country people that put Hillary out to pasture and Donald into the White House would storm his huge rallies, cheer their Nascar hats off and later pull the Democrat lever for Trump with delight.

He’d easily win the Democrat nomination because they have no one to run against him. The Hate Trump media couldn’t stop him.

And he’d easily get reelected president in 2020 as a Democrat because he’d have spent four years destroying the Republican Party.

EDITOR’S FOOTNOTE:  Any comments posted in this column do not represent the views or opinions of the City County Observer or our advertisers.