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HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE

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Dog Caregiver
It Takes a Village Canine Rescue – Evansville, IN
Part time receptionist
Michael Klein Salon and Spa – Evansville, IN
$9 an hour
Certification Clerk
AmeriQual Foods  20 reviews – Evansville, IN
Cycle Counter
AmeriQual Foods  20 reviews – Evansville, IN
Help Wanted
Chuckles  6 reviews – Evansville, IN
Property Management Professionals Needed!
Bluestone Properties  16 reviews – Evansville, IN
Automotive Parts Counter Person
Town and Country Ford  13 reviews – Evansville, IN
Administrative Assistant – Real Estate
HR Solutions, Inc.  20 reviews – Evansville, IN
$13 – $14 an hour
Cash Management Specialist
OneMain  671 reviews – Evansville, IN
Assistant, Clinic / SMMG Nephrology / FT Days / 80 hours Bi-Weekly
St Mary’s  11 reviews – Evansville, IN
Customer Service / Administrative Analyst
DealerStrong – Evansville, IN
Clean Up Team Member- 2nd Shift
Expressway Dodge – Evansville, IN
$8 – $9 an hour
Cheerleading Sponsor – High School (2 positions)
Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation  10 reviews – Evansville, IN
Information Specialist Clarity
Deaconess Health System  25 reviews – Evansville, IN
Customer Service Representative
U-Haul  1,822 reviews – Evansville, IN
Storage Facility Housekeeper
U-Haul  1,822 reviews – Evansville, IN
Civil Technician – Drafter
Three i Design – Evansville, IN
Specialist-Data / St. Vincent Medical Group / FT Days
St. Vincent Health  56 reviews – Evansville, IN
Corporate Auditor I
Vectren  6 reviews – Evansville, IN
Graphic Designer
Healthy Spaces – Evansville, IN
$9 – $12 an hour
Sales & Support Generalist-Eastland
Victoria’s Secret  4,378 reviews – Evansville, IN
Inventory Control – Part – time
Bed Bath and Beyond  2,607 reviews – Evansville, IN
Cashier
Tequilas Mexican Restaurant  4 reviews – Mount Vernon, IN
Administration Specialist
OneMain  671 reviews – Evansville, IN
Office Manager – Hospice Branch
Kindred At Home  69 reviews – Evansville, IN
Associate
MotoMart | FKG Oil Company – Evansville, IN
Landscape Technician
Autumn Glory Landscaping – Evansville, IN
$10 – $14 an hour
adidas Golf Merchandise Coordinator -Evansville, IN
Winston Retail  51 reviews – Evansville, IN
Housekeeing
Cardon & Associates  30 reviews – Evansville, IN
HOUSEKEEPER (FULL-TIME) Job
Compass Group  1,510 reviews – Boonville, IN

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: SEAN SELBY CHARGES THAT COMMISSIONER SHOULDERS LACKS TRANSPARENCY AND ACCOUNTABILITY

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SEAN SELBY CHARGES THAT COMMISSIONER SHOULDERS LACKS TRANSPARENCY AND ACCOUNTABILITY

“Like everyone else in Vanderburgh County, I was especially caught off-guard by the news of this week’s vote at the county commissioner meeting by Ben Shoulders to place his campaign chairman as the new director of Burdette Park. Numerous residents and media outlets who were also surprised with the news have asked for a public comment, however none of us expected so quickly for the vindication of our campaign’s consistent clarion call regarding concerns over numerous conflicts of interest surrounding Shoulders.

In fact, the Courier&Press sounded like it borrowed a line from the Selby for Commissioner campaign in Thursday’s editorial when they stated “Shoulders should have recused himself from the vote”. It remains to be seen whether this will be enough for the Courier&Press to retract their endorsement of Mr. Shoulders, but it may cause them to reconsider whether he qualifies as the “positive influence on the community and as the best choice for District One” when they endorsed him on October 26 of last year. It also might make a good portion of the Vanderburgh County residents who helped Shoulders achieve the slim 51% win in the election wary of their choice.

This is especially the case when considering transparency and accountability do not seem to be a high priority to Mr. Shoulders, as the Courier&Press even pointed out that there was no opportunity for public comment, let alone was the replacement director even on the agenda. My experience with Burdette Director Murphy was always very positive on the campaign trail and with Vanderburgh Council President Montrastelle’s recent praise that he saved taxpayers 11% last year alone, many are further confused.

At a minimum I continue to applaud Commissioner President Bruce Ungethiem, while out of town for this particular vote, has taken a sensible approach to county government and unlike other recent commissioners has avoided making hyper-political decisions. Hopefully, this revelation will result in county residents keeping a closer watch on our commissioners and better assessing candidates in the future.”

EDITORS NOTE; Sean Selby ran an extremely competitive race against Mr. Shoulders in the most recent Countywide election.  Mr. Selby Letter To The Editor was posted without opinion, bias or without editing.

House Passes Bill To Help Teens In Foster Care Obtain Licenses

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STATEHOUSE (March 20, 2017) — The Indiana House of Representatives last week passed a bill sponsored by State Rep. Holli Sullivan (R-Evansville) that would make it easier for a teenager under the care of the Department of Child Services to obtain a driver’s license.

“The state of Indiana is the guardian of about 55 youth between the ages of 16 and 18 who are currently unable to receive their driver’s licenses without facing a great number of hurdles,” Sullivan said. “Making the process easier for these teenagers to receive their driver’s licenses will help them to be engaged and connect with their community, participate in school and extracurricular activities and seek out job opportunities.”

According to Sullivan, teens in foster care find it difficult to obtain a driver’s license because they often do not know an adult who is able to sign the BMV application forms and provide liability insurance. They also do not have the means to pay for the process. This bill would enable foster children to apply for and receive learner’s permits and driver’s licenses free of charge, obtain liability insurance coverage, and complete driving practice with individuals approved by DCS.

The legislation would require a juvenile court to review each teen to ensure that he or she is ready to drive before they can obtain their license. According to Sullivan, similar programs have been successful in other states such as Florida and Louisiana.

“A driver’s license is an important tool to enable these strong and resilient youth to enjoy and benefit from normal, teenage experiences and to be better prepared to become educated, capable, self-sufficient adults,” said Sharon Pierce, president and CEO of the Villages of Indiana, the state’s largest not-for-profit child and family services agency. “The Villages of Indiana, and the youth we are so privileged to serve, are grateful to each and every legislator supporting this vital bill.”

After being amended, Senate Bill 366 will be returned to the Senate. If approved, the bill could be signed by the governor. For more information, visit iga.in.gov.

Katterhenry Moves To Second In Day Two

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Katterhenry Moves To Second In Day Two

Aces sit in 5th place

SEVIERVILLE, Tenn. – Senior Kayla Katterhenry carded another 73 on Monday to move to second on the leaderboard as the University of Evansville women’s golf team finished up the second round of the Bobby Nichols Intercollegiate at Sevierville Golf Club.

Katterhenry’s two rounds of 73 give her a total of 146 through two rounds, just two off the lead.  Elizabeth England of Carson-Newman had consecutive rounds of 72 and sits on top of the individual leaderboard with a 144 heading into Tuesday’s final rounds.

Next up for UE is Giulia Mallmann.  She carded an 81 on Monday and is tied for 22nd place with a 162.  Maggie Camp posted an 85 in round two and is in 28thplace with a 164.

Madison Chaney improved by five strokes as her 82 moved her into a tie for 33rd with a score of 169.  Lexie Sollman sits three strokes behind Chaney with a 2-round total of 172.

Lee University continues to lead the team standings with a 601.  They had a lead of eight shots over Tennessee Tech (609).  Belmont (613), Carson-Newman (628) and Evansville (639) finish off the top five.

One more round of play is set for Tuesday morning.

Trump: Look, Obamacare is ‘Dead’ and I’m ‘100 Percent’ Behind Our Replacement Plan

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Trump: Look, Obamacare is ‘Dead’ and I’m ‘100 Percent’ Behind Our Replacement Plan
Guy Benson Guy Benson 

Up first, a key nugget of news: Now that the Trump/Ryan healthcare bill narrowly cleared another hurdle in the budget committee this week (more on that in a moment), it has been sent over to the rules committee — the final stage before a full floor vote. House leadership is apparently sufficiently confident that this final committee obstacle will be overcome that they’ve slated a floor vote for late next week. As it approaches, expect a furious debate with the Democrats, and an intense whip count effort within the GOP conference to round up the requisite votes for ultimate passage. Here we go:

Will Paul Ryan have the votes? He and his team have repeatedly insisted that this “repeal and replace” roadmap has been charted with major buy-in from the House GOP rank-and-file, who’ve been kept in the loop every step of the way. But in recent weeks, the party’s right flank has blanched at the framework of the legislation (dubbing it “Obamacare-lite” and too generous), while centrists have sounded the alarm over the Congressional Budget Office’s score of the bill. Are these differences reconcilable? We’ll likely find out in a matter of days. It’s worth noting that in this week’s budget committee squeaker (19-17 passage), three members of the House Freedom Caucus joined Democrats in voting no, nearly waylaying the process. One additional lost vote, and the American Health Care Act would have been tied up in committee.

As the “repeal and replace” push began in earnest earlier this month, may political observers said that a key factors in the process would be presidential leadership. Despite the problematic (but likely overstated) CBO challenge and other intense pressure points — and despite theorizing that certain elements within the White House were setting up the House to fail — President Trump’s steadfast support for GOPCare has remained unwavering. Having recently hosted Obamacare victims at the White House, Trump made an additional statement in the Oval Office today, flanked by members who were leaning ‘no.’ He explained that the failing status quo demonstrates that the current law is “dead,” (the latest enrollment numbers are poor, a consequence of unaffordable costs) voicing “100 percent support” for the Republican alternative designed by his HHS Secretary and House leaders. This is a full-throated endorsement:

Trump again repeats the smart talking point that Obamacare is collapsing on its own, but that sitting back and allowing that to happen would be irresponsible governance because people are suffering. This framing reinforces the public’s belief that the current law is failing, a reality that even a majority of respondents in this week’s brutal Fox News poll agreed with. As for vote-gathering, according to Politico’s Tim Alberta, there’s a specific strategy afoot:

What this suggests to me is that the plan is to muscle the bill through and get it over to the Senate in its current form, at which point amendments will probably make some significant alterations. Trump’s campaign posture was vowing as much coverage for as many people as possible, so it would follow that he’d be likely to support changes that make the bill more generous (and expensive) when push comes to shove. As it stands, moderates would likely kill this iteration of the bill, so stand by for changes in the upper chamber. But it also looks like Trump is willing to do the political work of launching a private charm offensive with reluctant conservatives (adopting previously-discussed policy changes in the opposite direction, too, which led to the photo op embedded above), then taking his show on the road — with a goal of keeping the heat up on Republican members who may be tempted to torpedo his bill. I’ll leave you with a clip from Ryan chatting with National Review’s Rich Lowry about this process, as well as a surreal quote from Nancy Pelosi attacking Republicans for forcing their members to “walk the plank” in support of a harmful healthcare bill. This coming from a woman who did precisely that, without a public mandate developed over four election cycles, and who proceeded to lose 63 seats in the next election:

YESTERYEAR: Helfrich Park by Pat Sides

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YESTERYEAR: Helfrich Park by Pat Sides

At the urging of the West Side Nut Club, the city purchased a large tract of land for recreational purposes from Michael Helfrich, civic leader and businessman. The park, formally opened in 1924, was designed by Tom Bendelow, a nationally renowned golf course architect. To promote public use, it featured numerous tennis courts, football and baseball fields, as well as an 18-hole golf course; a swimming pool and shelter house were added later. These young athletes gathered at Helfrich Park’s baseball diamond in April 1952 to begin practice for the new season. The street in the background is St. Joseph Avenue, just north of West Maryland Street.

IU’s King, Looze Earn Yearly Big Ten Women’s Swimming Honors

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CHICAGO – For the second-straight season, Indiana University’s Lilly King was named Big Ten Swimmer of the Year, while IU head swimming coach Ray Looze was named Big Ten Women’s Swimming Coach of the Year, the league office announced on Monday.

King’s honor is the eighth in program history and the sophomore becomes the first Hoosier to earn the award twice since Kate Fesenko in 2009-10. The Big Ten Women’s Swimming Coach of the Year honor for Looze is the fifth of his career and his seventh total Big Ten Coach of the Year accolade.

At the NCAA Championships last week, King continued her dominance of the breaststroke events, repeating as NCAA Champion in both the 100 and 200 breast. In the 200 breast, King set the American, NCAA, NCAA Meet, U.S. Open, IU Natatorium and IU school record with the best time in the history of the event – 2:03.18.

At the Big Ten Championships in February, King was named Swimmer of the Championships after winning individual titles in the 100 breast, 200 breast and 200 IM. The Evansville, Ind. native also won a gold medal with the 400 medley relay and a silver medal with the 200 medley relay.

King, who was also named First-Team All-Big Ten, was the fifth Hoosier to be named Swimmer of the Championships and the first since Allysa Varva in 2012.

For the third-straight season, Looze led the Hoosiers as the top Big Ten team at the NCAA Championships, as IU placed eighth overall with a total of 185 points. The finish and point total are both the second-best in program history – second only to last season’s seventh place finish with 228 points.

IU was the top Big Ten finisher at the NCAA Championships for the third-straight year, as
the Hoosiers posted back-to-back top-10 finishes at the NCAA Championships for the first time since accomplishing the feat three times-in-a-row from 2008-10. The top-10 finish is the eighth in school history.

At the NCAA Championships, the Hoosiers had eight individuals earn a total of 24 All-America honors, marking the sixth time in the last nine seasons that Indiana has had 20 or more All-America accolades.

In February, IU earned a runner-up finish at the Big Ten Championships with a total score of 1125 points. Over the course of the meet, IU won a total of nine medals – eight gold and one silver.

Indiana has placed first or second at the Big Ten Championships in each of the last nine years, winning the title three-straight times from 2009 to 2011. The Hoosiers have finished second the last six seasons.

Over the course of the Big Ten Championships, the Hoosiers posted some impressive accolades. The Hoosiers broke four school records, four Big Ten records, six Big Ten meet records, six Boilermaker Aquatic Center pool records, one NCAA record and one American record. IU also amassed nine NCAA A cut times and had 42 personal-best swims.

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.

 

This Week at USI – March 20, 2017

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Uber co-founder and serial entrepreneur, Oscar Salazar, to present at USI’s Romain College of Business speaker series

The University of Southern Indiana will present “Innovation in Legacy Industries,” a talk by Dr. Oscar Salazar, early architect and founding Chief Technology Officer of Uber, the popular rideshare technology platform. The program will kick off at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 21 at the Physical Activities Center on the USI campus. Mr. Salazar’s campus visit is hosted by the USI Romain College of Business and made possible through private gifts to the USI Foundation. Read More

7 p.m. Wednesday, March 22

Dr. Martin Blaser to present annual Shaw Biology Lecture

The University of Southern Indiana will host “Missing Microbes: Antibiotic Overuse Fuels Modern Plagues”, the 2017 Shaw Biology Lecture by Dr. Martin J. Blaser on 7 p.m. Wednesday, March 22 in Mitchell Auditorium. Blaser is a professor of medicine and microbiology at New York University and director of the Human Microbiome Program at NYU Langone Medical Center. The lecture is free and open to the public, and is underwritten through the USI Foundation. Read More

7 p.m. Monday, March 27

Immigration, refugees are topics of USI’s continued series on civility

Dr. David W. Haines, professor emeritus of sociology and anthropology at George Mason University, will present “Refuge in America,” at 7p.m. Monday, March 27 in Carter Hall in University Center West. This presentation is part of the University of Southern Indiana speaker series related to civility. Previous speakers in the series included author and social critic Os Guinness and Senator Richard Lugar and Congressman Lee Hamilton. The event is free and open to the public. Read More

Now through April 8

New Harmony Gallery to host Print Invitational inspired by 1800’s publication

The New Harmony Gallery of Contemporary Art is hosting the exhibition, The Disseminator of Useful Knowledge Print Invitational and Exchange now through April 8. Works in the exhibition were inspired from the 1800’s New Harmony publication, The Disseminator of Useful Knowledge. A closing reception for the exhibition will be held at the gallery from 4 to 7 p.m. on Saturday, April 8. The Disseminator of Useful Knowledge Print Invitational and Exchange is free and open to the public. Read More

COA Orders New Attempted Murder Trial

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COA Orders New Attempted Murder Trial

Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com

The Indiana Court of Appeals has ordered a new trial in a Greene County attempted murder case after finding the trial court incorrectly applied the standard of a “knowing” mens rea, rather than a “specific intent to kill.”

In August 2014, Jeremy Kohn and Kylee Bateman were sitting on the front porch of Kohn’s house laughing at a story when they saw Michael Miller and waved at him. Miller believed the couple was laughing at him, so he approached Kohn and cut his throat with a pocketknife.

Kohn recovered with 40 stitches. Miller was arrested the next day, told officers that he knew why he was being arrested and conducted a police interview after waiving his Miranda rights.

When asked during the police interview if he wanted to kill Kohn, Miller said he did not care. The state charged Miller with one count of Level 1 felony attempted murder and one count of Level 5 felony aggravated battery.

Miller’s attorney filed a notice of defense of mental disease or defect, and a court-appointed psychologist reported to the Greene Circuit Court that he believed Miller suffered from “Delusional Disorder, Paranoid Type” and further testified there was reason to doubt his sanity at the time of the crime and his competency to stand trial.

The trial court ultimately found Miller incompetent to stand trial and committed him to the Division of Mental Health Addictions. After treatment for schizophrenia, the hospital certified that Miller was competent to stand trial.

Miller then moved for a speedy trial, and the state filed a motion to compel him to submit to a psychiatrist’s examination. After the court granted the motion, the state then moved to continue to give the psychiatrist additional time for his review. Miller objected to the continuance, but the trial court overruled and re-scheduled the trial for January 2016, outside of the original 70-day speedy trial window.

After a bench trial, the Greene Circuit Court entered findings discrediting Miller’s expert witnesses and rejected his defense of mental disease or defect. The court then found that Miller, beyond a reasonable doubt, “did knowingly or intentionally attempt to commit the crime of Murder, to-wit: to knowingly kill Jeremy Kohn… .” Miller was conviction of Level 1 felony attempted murder and sentenced to 30 years, with 20 executed and 10 suspended to probation.

On appeal in Michael Miller v. State of Indiana, 28A04-1603-CR-634, Miller first argued that his rights under Indiana Criminal Rule 4(B) were violated when his trial was not held within the 70-day window. However, Judge Michael Barnes, writing for the Indiana Court of Appeals, said Friday that under Criminal Rule 4(D), the trial court was within its discretion to grant the continuance to give a psychiatrist more time to examine Miller.

The appellate panel also affirmed the trial court’s decision to reject Miller’s insanity defense, noting that one of the psychiatrists who testified on his behalf said that Miller was aware of the wrongfulness of his actions but could not resist the impulse to cut Kohn’s throat, a contradiction to other expert testimony that said he was not aware that his actions were wrong. Additionally, evidence of Miller’s demeanor during and after the attack supports the testimony that he understood the wrongfulness of the attack, Barnes said.

However, the appellate panel rejected the “knowing” mens rea used to convict Miller, specifically the trial court’s finding that he knowingly attempted to kill Kohn, the same language included in the charging information against him.

“Both the charging information and the trial court’s findings refer to the long-discredited notion that a ‘knowing’ mens rea was sufficient to convict Miller of attempted murder. It was not,” Barnes wrote. “Moreover, Miller’s intent was a central issue in this case.”

The case was, thus, remanded for a new trial applying the “specific intent to kill” mens rea, rather than a “knowing” mens rea.

USI’s Leonhardt collects another GLVC Softball honor

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EVANSVILLE, Ind.—University of Southern Indiana freshman pitcher Jennifer Leonhardt (Louisville, Kentucky) has been named the Great Lakes Valley Conference Pitcher of the Week for softball following her efforts in leading the No. 10 Screaming Eagles to a 2-2 mark in league play this weekend.

Leohnardt, who earns her second GLVC Pitcher of the Week award this year, recorded a pair of complete-game shutouts and 0.43 ERA in four appearances on the weekend. Leonhardt went 2-0 on the week with a .161 opponent batting average and did not allow a run in her two starts.

Additionally, Leonhardt had 15 strikeouts and just four walks on the weekend. Offensively, Leonhardt had a double and three RBIs to aid the Eagles.

The award marks the fourth time this year that the Eagles have been recognized with a GLVC weekly honor. In addition to Leonhardt’s Pitcher of the Week accolades, sophomore second baseman Claire Johnson (Pittsboro, Indiana) and senior shortstop Lexi Reese (Lebanon, Indiana) have been recognized with GLVC Player of the Week honors.

USI (19-5, 2-2 GLVC) returns to action Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. when it travels to Nashville, Tennessee, to take on Midwest Region foe Trevecca Nazarene University in a doubleheader. The Eagles resume GLVC play Saturday at noon when they take on Drury University in a doubleheader in Springfield, Missouri. They finish their six-game road trip Sunday at noon with when they visit Missouri University of Science & Technology in Rolla, Missouri.

Live stats for all six games, as well as video for Wednesday’s doubleheader, can be accessed at GoUSIEagles.com.