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Adopt A Pet

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Garfield is a longhaired male orange cat. Generally speaking, he’s very laid-back & sweet. He gets along with most other cats but may not be too terribly willing to share his home with dogs. He is up for adoption at the new River Kitty Cat Café in downtown Evansville! Visit him there with a reservation Wednesday-Sunday at www.riverkittycatcafe.com. For adoption details, contact the Vanderburgh Humane Society at (812) 426-2563 or adoptions@vhslifesaver.org!

 

Adopt A Pet

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Lucy is a 2 ½-month-old female buff tabby kitten. She got along great with the other three adult cats and young 2-year-old child in her foster home! She is very playful, will need lots of toys, and uses her litterbox consistently. Her adoption fee is $50 and includes her spay, microchip, first vaccines, and more. Contact the Vanderburgh Humane Society at (812) 426-2563 or adoptions@vhslifesaver.org for adoption details.

 

BANNON BUSTER

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Rennie Dazzles On The Mound As Otters Beat Cornbelters

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Luc Rennie pitched eight scoreless innings as the Evansville Otters beat the Normal Cornbelters 7-0 Wednesday in front of 1,151 at Bosse Field.

In his outing, Rennie struck out four and gave up just four hits and two walks. For Rennie, it’s his second consecutive win and seventh overall on the season.

Offensively, both teams had a slow start through the first two innings but the Otters broke through in the third when Ryan Long scored on a Dane Phillips RBI double.

Evansville made it 2-0 in the fourth on a Christopher Riopedre sacrifice fly, which allowed John Schultz to score.

The Otters put the game away in the seventh with a four-run inning.

Long scored his second run of the game after an RBI single from Jeff Gardner. Later in the inning, Alejandro Segovia hit an RBI single that scored Phillips.

Gardner would score on an RBI single by Brandon Soat and a misplay by Normal’s Jesus Solorzano in left field also allowed Segovia to score, making the score 6-0.

In the eighth, Josh Allen pinch hit and made it 7-0 with an RBI ground out.

Charlie Gillies took the loss for Normal, allowing four runs in 6 1/3 innings. He struck out six and walked three.

Connor Little pitched the ninth for Evansville, striking out two.

The Otters go for the series win against the Cornbelters at Bosse Field on Thursday with first pitch scheduled for 6:35 p.m.

On Thursday, it’s Chipotle College Night and students will receive a discounted $4 ticket for general admission seating. There will also be college fight song music played over the sound system and the Otters invite all fans to wear their favorite college team or school apparel.

Evansville Otters-themed koozies will be given to the first 500 fans through the gates and fans will also have the opportunity to win special prizes. Plus, a limited number of BBQ wings will be sold at concessions.

Fans can listen live to the game on 91.5 FM WUEV and watch on the Otters Digital Network. Lucas Corley (play-by-play) and Bill McKeon (analysis) will provide coverage.

Tickets for Thursday are still available by going to evansvilleotters.com or calling 812-435-8686.

Decorated NYPD 9/11 Hero to speak at today’s Public Safety Appreciation Ceremony

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The public is invited to the Public Safety Appreciation Ceremony being held this afternoon at the Veteran’s Memorial Coliseum. The ceremony begins at 4:00pm and will recognize the work being done by area first responders.
The key note speaker will be NYPD Deputy Chief Theresa Tobin. Deputy Chief Tobin responded to the 9/11 attacks as a press officer. She quickly found herself involved in the rescue of numerous people. The events that unfolded that day left her with multiple injuries. Despite suffering a broken ankle and a head injury, Deputy Chief Tobin is credited with saving dozens of lives during the rescue and evacuation efforts.
Today’s ceremony will be held on the front steps of the Coliseum and will include comments from local community leaders.

Otters claim 1,000th win in franchise history in doubleheader split

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The Evansville Otters became the first Frontier League franchise to win 1,000 games after a 6-5 victory over the Normal Cornbelters Tuesday at Bosse Field.

The milestone win came in game one of a doubleheader, forced by the suspension of a game between Evansville and Normal Aug. 3 at The Corn Crib.

Play resumed in the top of the second inning with the Cornbelters leading 3-0 and the Normal offense picked up where it left off with a sacrifice fly and an RBI single in the inning.

Down 5-0, Evansville began a rally in the fifth. A Josh Allen RBI single scored Kolten Yamaguchi and Allen would later score on a Jeff Gardner RBI double.

In the sixth, Evansville added two more runs. Following a single by Christopher Riopedre and Yamaguchi getting hit by a pitch, Ryan Long hit a two-run RBI triple to make the score 5-4.

Evansville would cap the comeback in the ninth. With the bases loaded and nobody out, John Schultz grounded into a double play, scoring Nick Walker to tie the game at 5-5.

Alejandro Segovia hit the go-ahead RBI single that scored Dane Phillips.

Brandon Cook picked up the win for Evansville as he tossed two scoreless innings in relief. Randy McCurry pitched a scoreless ninth to earn his 15th save of the season.

Evansville will celebrate the 1,000th victory in a special ceremony Aug. 31 on Fan Appreciation Night at the ballpark. Pam Miller, the first Assistant General Manager of the Otters, will be in attendance along with Evansville’s first signee in 1995, Jeff Leystra.

Leystra played for the Otters from 1995-98 and served as the pitching coach under former manager Greg Tagert from 1997-00. He was a Frontier League All-Star selection and later was a pitching coach at his alma mater, the University of Evansville.

Frontier League Deputy Commissioner Steve Tahsler will also be in attendance.

In the regularly scheduled game, Normal beat Evansville 3-2.

After a scoreless first, a Diego Cedeno RBI ground out made it 1-0 and a wild pitch later in the inning doubled the advantage to 2-0 in the second.

Zach Welz hit his first home run with Evansville in the bottom half of the inning, a two-run shot that tied the game at 2-2.

The Cornbelters reclaimed the lead for good in the fifth as Diego Cedeno scored on an RBI single from Yeixon Ruiz.

Edgar De La Rosa was awarded the win and Evansville’s Ryan Etsell took the loss. Etsell allowed three runs-two earned-off four hits while accumulating five strikeouts in six innings.

The Otters and Cornbelters continue the series from Bosse Field on Wednesday with first pitch scheduled for 6:35 p.m.

On Wednesday, it’s First Responders Night at Bosse Field. The game also includes a 1910s and 2010s poster giveaway for early arriving fans in attendance. The posters are part of a season-long series of poster giveaways that highlight the history of Bosse Field.

Fans can listen live to the game on 91.5 FM WUEV and watch on the Otters Digital Network. Lucas Corley (play-by-play) and Bill McKeon (analysis) will provide coverage.

Tickets for Wednesday are still available by going to evansvilleotters.com or calling 812-435-8686.

The Vanderburgh County Public Safety Foundation Event That Honors Our First Responders Will Be Held Todays At Veterans Memorial Coliseum At 4:00 PM

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Todays Event Will Be Held At the Veterans Memorial Coliseum At 4:00 PM
Meet The Event Keynote Speaker 9-11 HERO DR. TERRI TOBIN OF THE NYPD
 ALBANY, N.Y.  As a first responder on 9/11, Theresa C. Tobin was literally blown out ofher shoes. She suffered serious injuries, as well as a setback to her doctoral studies. Tobin, a deputy inspector in the New York City Police Department, never gave up, and this past May graduated from the University at Albany with a doctorate in criminal justice.

UAlbany alumna Terri Tobin’s resilient attitude helped her recover from injuries sustained on 9/11, and persevere until she earned a doctorate in criminal justice.

“Terri is amazing,” said Distinguished Research Professor David Bayley, Tobin’s dissertation adviser and an expert on community policing. “It took 20 years to attain her Ph.D. while working fulltime as a New York police officer, being steadily promoted, up to her current rank of deputy inspector.  Her dissertation was interrupted by 9/11, in which she was seriously wounded and won a medal for her bravery.  Her perseverance is off the charts.”

Since 2001, Tobin has had surgery each year and had two-thirds of her teeth replaced. At one point, she joked with her oral surgeon: “I didn’t know we were going to be in a long-term relationship.” She sees herself as one of the lucky survivors of 9/11, noting that many have suffered more, especially burn victims. Her resilient attitude helps her cope. “I didn’t want 9/11 to be the defining moment of my life,” she said. “It helped me appreciate that life can change on a dime.”

Tobin is the highest ranking female ever to receive the NYPD Medal of Valor. In addition, she was honored for her heroism with a Special Congressional Recognition, the National Press Photographers Association’s Public Information Officer’s Award, and the Liberty Award from the National Organization for Women.

That Fateful Day

On the day of the attacks, she was a lieutenant assigned to the public information office. She had just escorted a news photographer from the South Tower and was heading out to the car to grab her sneakers. Suddenly, the South Tower pancaked down. She was literally blown out of her shoes, up and over a concrete barrier from the force of the implosion, and carried across the street.

“I know there is no logical reason I should be alive now – given my location when the first tower imploded,” she wrote of her experience.

Buried in concrete debris up to her waist, her Kevlar helmet split in half, she had concrete embedded in her skull. Tobin managed to extricate herself, and later evacuated about 100 people from a nearby apartment building. Finally another emergency worker noticed she had a large shard of glass sticking out of her back, between her shoulder blades, and Tobin was sent by police boat to Ellis Island, and then transferred to a hospital.

At the hospital, the surgeon told her the good news was that they would operate right away. The bad news: She had blunt force trauma to her head, and they couldn’t give her anesthesia.

Tobin has written about that day in a chapter “A Terrorist Attack: Response and Reflection” in the book Perspectives on 9/11. “One of the lessons I have learned as a result of September 11 is that we are all connected,” she wrote. “Not one of us suffers without all of us suffering.” She lost a 33-year-old cousin, a firefighter, in the attack.

Committed to Law Enforcement

Tobin’s father was a police officer, and four of the five children in the family are in law enforcement, including her late brother-in-law. “The joke in my family is that my father forgave my sister for not being a police officer, because she married one,” said Tobin. Her brother-in-law survived a shooting on the job, but passed away in 2005 from complications that resulted from his injuries.

A 28-year veteran of the NYPD, Tobin is devoted to a career in policing. Since her graduation from UAlbany, she continues as an adjunct instructor at Molloy College, where she has taught for a dozen years. Tobin earned a master’s degree from the School of Criminal Justice in 1988, has a master’s in social work from Fordham, and a bachelor’s in sociology from Marist. She graduated from the FBI National Academy at Quantico, Va., and the Police Management Institute at the Columbia University Graduate School of Business. Tobin gave the keynote address at the School of Criminal Justice undergraduate recognition ceremony in 2002.

Reflecting on the death of Osama bin Laden, she said, “For the family and friends of those who perished on September 11, 2001, the death of Osama bin Laden has allowed them to feel that justice has prevailed. It also sends a strong message to terrorists that the United States will be unwavering in its commitment to root out those responsible for causing harm to innocent people, no matter how long it takes. As a law enforcement officer, I believe our vigilance needs to remain critical and am very proud of the NYPD’s efforts in helping to thwart 12 plots of terrorism since 9/11.”

Of her UAlbany education, Tobin said, “I studied at UAlbany because of the School of Criminal Justice’s national standing and the quality of its faculty. I truly believe they are top-notch and they have been so supportive of me. They have the best faculty, bar none.” The School is ranked No. 2 in the nation by U.S. News & World Report.

Editor’s Footnote: Theresa Tobin’s story was featured in CNN’s “Beyond Bravery: The Women of 9/11” on Sunday, Sept. 11 at 9:00 p.m. ET/PT.

 

CHANNEL 44 NEWS: EDMD Revamps Loan Program to Create Jobs in Evansville Promise Zone

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EDMD Revamps Loan Program to Create Jobs in Evansville Promise Zone
 A revamped revolving loan program is taking aim to provide jobs and economic growth to areas that need it most. City leaders in Evansville are hoping existing businesses, new business and startups will tap into the available funds.

More than $850,000 are currently available through the program that provides financial capital to entrepreneurs unable to get conventional financing. Evansville Department of Metropolitan Development says the focus and priority for business loans will be in Evansville’s Promise Zone another federally funded program with similar goals.

“It all goes hand in hand, clearing blight to build new houses to put new people living in neighborhoods, you need services a drug store, a grocery store, entertainment, all of those things we don’t have one targeted retail, one targeted commercial enterprise in mind. The idea is to create as many jobs as possible in areas where people can walk to work,” said Kelley Coures, Executive Director of Metro Development.

The Obama Administration designated Evansville a Promise Zone just over a year ago. The two programs share common goals of job creation and increased economic activity.