Home Blog Page 4845

Salukis defeat UE softball 1-0 in 10 innings

0

 Purple Aces sophomore threw a career-high 9 1/3 masterful innings in the circle, but a late hit saw Southern Illinois edge the University of Evansville softball team, 1-0, on Tuesday at Charlotte West Stadium.

Florey struck out seven Saluki (26-21, 13-7 MVC) batters in the effort, which was her longest start at UE (20-27, 11-10 MVC).  She gave up just six hits in the game.  Brianna Jones threw ten innings of shutout ball, giving up seven hits while striking out 11.

“That was a great game featuring two of the best pitchers in the league just battling,” Aces head coach Mat Mundell said.  “Both defenses made some great plays.  I thought we did a great job of getting girls on base but were not able to execute and get them in.”

Evansville’s offense was held to one hit in the first three innings and just three through the first six frames.  That changed in the seventh when Hayli Scott hit a leadoff single and Michal Luckett followed that up with another single to put two on with no outs.  Susan Norris bunted them to second and third with one out, but SIU was able to escape with no damage being done.

Southern Illinois was held to just three hits through seven innings, but in the 10th, they were finally able to get on the board.  With one out, Sydney Jones singled.  Katelyn Massa came to the plate and delivered the game-winning double to finish off the game.

UE wraps up its home schedule this weekend with a 3-game set against conference-leading Illinois State.  Action begins with a doubleheader on Saturday at noon.  Fans are also reminded of the Purple Aces Club Ballpark Cookout, which features free food for fans in their Aces gear at 1:30 p.m. in between the baseball and soccer stadiums.

Eagles defeat cross-river rival, 7-3

0

The University of Southern Indiana baseball team completed the five-game road swing with a 7-3 victory over Kentucky Wesleyan College Tuesday afternoon in Owensboro, Kentucky. USI watched its record go to 25-16 overall, while KWC goes to 20-21 this spring.

The Screaming Eagles’ offense got going in the opening frame when senior shortstop Sam Griggs (Evansville, Indiana) hit a two-blast to put USI up 2-0. The home run was Griggs’ second of the year.

Junior righfielder Nick Gobert (Jasper, Indiana) increased the Eagles lead to 3-0 in the third with an RBI-single. Gobert would drive in his second run of the game in the fifth with a sacrifice fly, re-extending the USI lead to two runs, 4-2, after the Panther had cut the Eagles margin to 3-2 with a pair of tallies in the bottom of the third.

After KWC pulled to within one run, 4-3, for a second time with a run in the bottom of the fifth, the Eagles sealed the victory with a three-run outburst in the top of the sixth. Junior first baseman Nathan Kuester(Rockport, Indiana) got the rally started by scoring on a passed ball before junior third baseman Angel Torres (Puerto Rico) added the sixth run with a RBI-double and senior designated hitter Jaylen Quarles(Indianapolis, Indiana) concluding the scoring with an RBI-single for eventual 7-3 final.

Overall at the plate, USI was led sophomore second baseman Jacob Fleming (Evansville, Indiana), who had three hits and scored three times in the win. Griggs and Gobert, both, finished the game with a team-high two RBIs each.

USI sophomore left-hander Chase Partain (Evansville, Indiana) picked up his first win of the season on the bump. Partain (1-2) allowed three runs, two earned, on six hits and one walk in eight innings of work. He also tied a season-high by striking out four batters.

The Eagles return to the friendly surroundings of the USI Baseball Field Saturday and Sunday when they host the University of Indianapolis for a four-game series. The USI-UIndy doubleheader on Sunday is Senior Day for the Eagles.

IS IT TRUE APRIL 26,2017

23

IS IT TRUE at Monday night City Council meeting the  General Manager of the Ford Center, Scott Schoenike stated “that his purpose was not to lose or make money, but to break even, and to bring economic development to downtown Evansville”?  …Schoenike also stated, “If we can break even as a hockey team, the Ford Center is still doing well. But to break even is not what you are in business for, and that is not what most people understand. We are set up to break even in order to bring economic development.”  …the Mayor was so impressed with VenuWorks mission statement  on how to make the Ford Center profitable he just renew their contract to manage the Ford Center for an additional 5 years?

IS IT TRUE that Mr. Schoenike’s less-than-convincing presentation caused Council Vice President,  Justin Elpers to interrupt him”  … Mr. Elpers stated “he just want to have a meaningful discussion about the future of hockey at the Ford Center”?  …at the end of the day Mr. Elpers didn’t get a meaningful discussion from Mr. Schoenjke?

IS IT TRUE that a person watching Mr. Schoenike’s presentation  to Council commented, “How are we supposed to believe that one man who owns 10%  of a business is responsible for 100% of the financial losses”?   …the legal agreement between the City and VenuWorks for Professional Management Services states “that all operating expenses of the Franchise shall be deemed an expense of the Facility”? … What does this mean? …it mean that the “Facility” is the City of Evansville?  …according to the agreement It looks like the Evansville taxpayers are responsible for all the operating expenses and losses incurred during the 2016/2017 hockey season?

IS IT TRUE the attorney for former Evansville IceMen owner Ron Geary will be submitting a written request to Council President Missy Mosby asking her to allow Mr. Geary to make a formal presentation to City Council concerning Ice Hockey at the Ford Center?  …we bet Councilmen Jonathan Weaver wont make any snidely remarks towards Mr. Geary during the presentation?  … Scott Danks is the attorney for both Mr. Geary and Mr. Weaver alike?

IS IT TRUE that Covance Clinical Development Services has announced plans to close its Evansville laboratory?…the closing is slated to begin with layoffs on approximately July 24th?…There will be more than 100 local people who will be losing their jobs as a result of this shut down?…that is just the beginning because there were many more than 100 people who supplemented their income by participating in the paid studies conducted by Covance?…several people derived their entire income by volunteering for the paid human trials at Covance with some individuals claiming to earn over $40,000 per year?…it is unknown to the CCO whether or not the stipends paid for volunteering were taxable or not?…at any rate it was possible to be a human test specimen and earn more by doing so than the average Evansville employee earns from working a job?…Covance did not state a reason for the closure and made it clear that the affected employees do not have any bumping rights and there is no collective bargaining agreement in place?…the Covance website says the Evansville lab is a clinical research facility and conducts medical research studies on healthy people and those with chronic conditions, including cholesterol, diabetes, and obesity?…one would think that such a place would prosper in Evansville as there are a multitude of people in town who would qualify under these requirements?

IS IT TRUE the multi-use area known as The Promenade has recently brought a couple of businesses into its park?…after many news releases about medical facilities, upscale residential properties, and even a Nordstrom’s, the couple of businesses to actually locate there is a Burger King and Zaxby’s?  … the Promenade is located on prime real estate  development property located on the progressive Eastside of Evansville?

IS IT TRUE one upscale store that will not be coming to The Promenade or anywhere else in Evansville will be the latest casualty of the retail meltdown?…that is the upscale “Bebe’ which just announced that all of their stores will be closed?…the dead retail list just keeps expanding and the last place that anyone should be putting their 401k today is into a mall development?

IS IT TRUE another local leader of things which seek success at the Ford Center has tendered his resignation and is heading out of town.?…Evansville Sports Corporation Executive Director Jason Sands has left his job in Evansville and headed deep in the heart of Fort Worth, Texas for a similar position?…Bob Warren and the staff at the Evansville Convention and Visitors Bureau will manage the position until a new director is hired?…according to Warren they are about to get busy to hire a replacement?…in all fairness Mr. Sands must have been pretty darn good to get the NCAA Division 2 Basketball Elite Eight to sign a four year deal with a location that can’t get 1,000 people to a conference tournament with a home town team in the tourney?

FOOTNOTE: Todays “Readers Poll” question is:  Are you pleased that City Councilman Justin Elpers requested that the Manager of the Ford Center update Council on the current status of the Thunderbolt hockey team?

CHANNEL 44 NEWS: The Moratorium on The University Parkway Under Advisement

0
The Moratorium on The University Parkway Under Advisement

The Vanderburgh County Commissioner vote to take the moratorium on The University Parkway under advisement for 30 days, despite passing the moratorium in February. Due to the installation of a sewer along the parkway during the next year,.

“St. Vincent Evansville Foundation” New Name, Same Mission

0
April 2017

St. Mary’s Health Foundation transitioned our name to St. Vincent Evansville Foundation on April 20, 2017. St. Mary’s Health and St.Vincent began the work in 2012 to create one statewide, clinically integrated system of care. Our naming transition follows five years of focused work to provide a better healthcare system for those we are so privileged to serve. Please know our name may have changed, but your investment in our Mission will continue to stay local and support our local Healing Ministry right here in the Tri-State.

To learn more about our branding change please visit stvincent.org/newname.
Ziemer Society to unveil signature philanthropic project on May 18th
The Ted & Clare Ziemer Society has exciting news to share! Join us on Thursday, May 18th from 5:30 – 7:00 p.m. at the home of Dr. Mark and Donna Logan to learn about the Society’s most significant philanthropy effort to date, which will once again benefit pediatric patients at St. Vincent Evansville.
Spots are limited, so please RSVP today.
37th Annual Heritage Open will support the most vulnerable in our community
Grab your golf clubs and join us on Monday, June 12th for our 37th Annual Heritage Open Golf Tournament at the Evansville Country Club. The net proceeds will benefit
St. Vincent Evansville Foundation’s Care of the Poor Fund, which provides healthcare for our most vulnerable patients.
Associate gifts change lives
and give hope 
Generous associates from St. Vincent Evansville and St. Vincent Warrick have contributed over $145,000 to our recent associate giving campaign, called the Foundation’s Annual Campaign for Excellence.
  Franklin and Jackson Meece
St. Vincent Northside Crossing
is now open

The newest addition to the St. Vincent family of services, St. Vincent Northside Crossing is a 35,000 square foot healthcare destination. This new location provides the Evansville’s Northside and surrounding communities with easy and convenient access to services.

 

Suit Takes Aim At Indiana Religious Charter Schools

0

Suit Takes Aim At Indiana Religious Charter Schools

Dave Stafford for www.theindianalawyer.com

A Monroe County nonprofit organization has sued the state and a charter school, seeking to block its funding because the group argues that taking tax dollars from public schools for the benefit of private religious institutions violates the Establishment Clause of the U.S. Constitution.

The Indiana Coalition for Public Education of Monroe County and South Central Indiana Inc. on Tuesday sued state education officials and the Seven Oaks Classical School. The K-8 school in Ellettsville opened in 2016 under a charter issued to Grace College in Winona Lake. But while the suit targets Seven Oaks, it also argues more broadly that religious institutions should be restricted from chartering schools that receive public money.

ICPE includes Monroe County public schoolteachers and employees who will be harmed by the diversion of tax dollars to public schools, according to the complaint filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana.  The complaint “challenges the constitutionality of portions of the Indiana Charter Schools Act on their face and as applied to the authorization of a charter for Seven Oaks Classical School by Grace College and Seminary.”

The suit asserts funding for the charter school, part of which is received by Grace College, violates not just the Establishment Clause but also the Indiana Constitution’s prohibition in Article 1, Section 6 against drawing money from the treasury for the benefit of a religious institution. The suit seeks declaratory judgments that sections of the Charter School Act are unconstitutional; that the charter issued to Seven Oaks is invalid; and an injunction blocking state money from being distributed to the school.

Terry English, an attorney member of the board of directors of Seven Oaks, said Tuesday the school had not yet been served with a copy of the suit and would not immediately comment. But English said the school believes it’s on sound legal footing.

“Seven Oaks has followed Indiana law,” he said. “Grace College is an authorizer under Indiana law, and we believe we followed the law in its entirety.”

“Our chief concern is that Indiana law permits religious institutions like Grace College to decide whether to authorize charter schools,” Cathy Fuentes-Rohwer, chair of ICPE–Monroe County, said in a statement announcing the suit. “Charter schools are taxpayer-supported and take money away from our school corporations, so only state and local officials answerable to the public should be able to authorize them.”

ICPE said Grace College and Seminary describes itself as an evangelical Christian institution that applies biblical values to its educational mission, emphasizes a biblical worldview, and teaches students to recognize scripture as the inerrant and inspired word of God.

The complaint also challenges a provision in state law that gives up to 3 percent of a charter school’s public funds to the authorizer — in this case, Grace College and Seminary. “That would seem to violate the Indiana Constitution, which says flatly that no money may be drawn from the treasury for the benefit of any religious institution,” lead attorney Alex Tanford, professor emeritus at Indiana University Maurer School of Law, said in the statement.

The suit alleges three counts: that delegating the decision to authorize a charter school to a religious institution violates the Establishment Clause; that providing tax dollars to religious institutions for authorizing charter schools violates the Establishment Clause; and that giving public money to religious institutions violates the Indiana Constitution.

Along with Seven Oaks, the suit names Indiana Superintendent of Public Instruction Jennifer McCormick, who chairs the State Board of Education, as well as James Bentley, executive director of the Indiana Charter School Board. The case is before Chief Judge Jane Magnus-Stinson.

City of Evansville, Vectren Partner For First Universal Solar Project Bringing Renewable Energy To Residents

1

City of Evansville, Vectren Partner For First Universal Solar Project Bringing Renewable Energy To Residents

City of Evansville, Vectren partner for first universal solar project bringing renewable energy to residents

Evansville, Ind. – Today the City of Evansville (City) announced a joint partnership with Vectren Energy Delivery (Vectren), to construct a two megawatt (MW) solar array on property owned by the City. The $5.5 million dollar project will be located near Oak Hill Cemetery on East Morgan Ave., just east of U.S. 41.

“This is a very exciting time for the City of Evansville and its residents who will benefit from universal solar energy for the first time in the city’s history,” said Evansville Mayor Lloyd Winnecke. “Partnering with Vectren is allowing both entities to respond positively to the public’s interest in local solar energy production, and we are thrilled to host the solar array within our city limits.”

Vectren will own and operate the solar project to be constructed on approximately 15 acres of land the energy company will lease from the City. Assuming the project receives necessary approval from the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission (IURC), the project should be operational in 2018.

“Embarking on this partnership is among Vectren’s first steps toward diversifying our electric generation portfolio,” said Carl Chapman, Vectren’s chairman, president and CEO. “We are grateful for the opportunity to join the City of Evansville in bringing universal solar energy to our customers.”

This solar farm will consist of approximately 8,000 ground-mounted fixed-tilt solar panels. The facility will be interconnected to Vectren’s electric distribution system, which powers about 144,000 residential electric customers in Southwest Indiana. This is one of two universal solar projects the utility currently has before the IURC for approval. Vectren South estimates that each 2 MW solar project will generate enough power to supply approximately 300 homes each year.

About Vectren
Vectren Corporation (NYSE: VVC) is an energy holding company headquartered in Evansville, Ind.  Vectren’s energy delivery subsidiaries provide gas and/or electricity to more than 1 million customers in adjoining service territories that cover nearly two-thirds of Indiana and about 20 percent of Ohio, primarily in the west-central area. Vectren’s nonutility subsidiaries and affiliates currently offer energy-related products and services to customers throughout the U.S. These include infrastructure services and energy services. To learn more about Vectren, visit www.vectren.com<http://www.vectren.com>.

Air Quality Forecast Vanderburgh County

0

Air quality forecasts for Evansville and Vanderburgh County are provided as a public service.  They are best estimates of predicted pollution levels that can be used as a guide so people can modify their activities and reduce their exposure to air quality conditions that may affect their health.  The forecasts are routinely made available at least a day in advance, and are posted by 10:30 AM Evansville time on Monday (for Tuesday through Thursday) and Thursday (for Friday through Monday).  When atmospheric conditions are uncertain or favor pollution levels above the National Ambient Air Quality Standards, forecasts are made on a daily basis.

Ozone forecasts are available from mid-April through September 30th.  Fine particulate (PM2.5) forecasts are available year round.

Monday
April 24
Tuesday
April 25
Wednesday
April 26
Thursday
April 27
Friday
April 28
Fine Particulate
(0-23 CST avg)
Air Quality Index
good good good good good
Ozone
Air Quality Index
moderate moderate good good good
Ozone
(peak 8-hr avg)
(expected)
NA* NA* NA* NA* NA*

* Not Available and/or Conditions Uncertain.

Air Quality Action Days

Ozone Alerts are issued by the Evansville EPA when maximum ozone readings averaged over a period of eight hours are forecasted to reach 71 parts per billion (ppb), or unhealthy for sensitive groups on the USEPA Air Quality Index scale.

Particulate Alerts are issued by the Evansville EPA when PM2.5 readings averaged over the period of midnight to midnight are forecasted to reach 35 micrograms per meter cubed (µg/m3).

Current conditions of OZONE and FINE PARTICULATE MATTER are available in near real-time on the Indiana Department of Environment Management’s website.

National and regional maps of current conditions are available through USEPA AIRNow.