http://www.vanderburghsheriff.com/recent-booking-records.aspx
IS IT TRUE MARCH 28, 2017
IS IT TRUE that there are those in this world who are obsessed with financial performance to the point that they do projections on a regular basis about the financial performance of public and private entities?…one such person that we shall refer to as Mole #7 has been looking at the financial performance for the Ford Center as it relates to the Thunderbolts hockey team and said “it may not be a pretty sight”? …in previous years the Evansville Icemen absorbed an average loss of roughly $600,000 per season (5 seasons) which included paying $11,000 per home (36 home games) game in rent to the Ford Center management?  …those rent checks have been reduced to $1,000 per home game for the Thunderbolts which is going to be a major financial blow of many hundred of thousand of dollars to the Ford Center annual budget?  …because of the poor home game attendance it is guesstimated by Mole #7 that the Thunderbolts concession (food and beverage) income at the Ford Center could be reduced around $400,000 to $500,000 over the previous year (Evansville IceMen last year at Ford Center)? …of course poor ticket sales isn’t helping the bottom line? …Mole #7 is also projecting that this year the Ford Center hockey income may be on the verge of losing between $1 million to $1 1/2 million dollars because of the Thunderbolts bad economics performance? …this projection doesn’t include the money that the Ford Center management pays to Vanderburgh-Evansville Building Authority for services rendered for hockey games?
IS IT TRUE only the music acts seem to bring in sufficient crowds to make the cash register ring at Ford Center?…hockey sure as heck isn’t working, the UE girls are leaving because of costs, circuses are reducing overall show date offerings, the local mega Church will not be holding future Easter services at the Ford Center and the UE men’s basketball team is not exactly filling the house either?…Country music stars and classic rock and roll are the only thing that seems to attract enough people to be worth unlocking the doors?…the real tragedy is that the losses of the Thunderbolts, the Aces, and the other things are being hidden by any successes in the music world?…to this day, the biggest crowds for sports, music, or even circuses happened in Roberts Stadium?
IS IT TRUE is this is the same Ford Center that was advertised by the best consultants that money can buy to be self sufficient in the third year? …we wonder just what could have been done better with $127 million borrowed dollars?
FOOTNOTES: Todays “READERS POLL” question is: Do you feel comfortable with the fact that the owners of VenueWorks now has 100% controlling interest of the Thunderbolt Hockey team?
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CHANNEL 44 NEWS: Priest Announces Leave of Absence for Evansville Catholic School
Priest Announces Leave of Absence for Evansville Catholic School
The priest at Holy Trinity Catholic School is taking a leave of absence. Father Gary Kaiser announced his leave to parents of students over the weekend, saying he plans to take care of his personal health and well being. Kaiser has also had…
HATFIELD: HOUSE GOP CONTINUES TO STAND AGAINST ELECTION REFORM
Indiana House Republicans have taken another stand against lasting election reform by rejecting a proposal from State Rep. Ryan Hatfield (D-Evansville) that would have helped remove politics from drawing new districts for the Indiana General Assembly and our state’s congressional delegation.
House Republicans refused to consider an amendment from Hatfield that would have prohibited the use of political data to draw districts for the Indiana House and Senate and our state’s members of Congress. The proposal, rejected on a party-line vote, was offered to Senate Bill 220.
“This amendment simply said that officials may not use data related to party registrations, voting histories, and election returns in drawing new legislative and congressional districts,†Hatfield said.
“Approval of this proposal would have sent a clear sign that the Indiana General Assembly is in favor of a full, fair and completely impartial election system, rather than a system that leaves the people of Indiana feeling that our elections are rigged,†he added. “Right now, our legislative and congressional districts are drawn through an overtly political  system that maximizes every opportunity for the party in power to maintain its control over state government. This amendment answers Hoosiers’ calls to take politics out of our redistricting process.â€
Hatfield and other Indiana House Democrats have made several attempts to raise election reform as an issue worthy of consideration during the 2017 legislative session, only to be rebuffed by House Republicans at every opportunity.
“There was a bill that would have paved the way for an independent, nonpartisan commission to handle redistricting, but the chairman of the House Elections and Apportionment Committee (State Rep. Milo Smith, R-Columbus) refused my call to vote on the bill in committee,†Hatfield noted. “Then his House Republican colleagues rejected attempts by myself and one of my colleagues to keep the idea of an independent commission alive this session.
“The House Republicans may not want to talk about election reform, but the people of Indiana do,†Hatfield said. “I will continue to talk about it in the weeks we have left in this 2017 session.â€
Evansville Police Department to Host FIRST STEP Advanced Student Threat Assessment & Intervention Response Program
On July 27th and 28th, the Evansville Police Department will host the FIRST STEP Advanced Student Threat Assessment and Intervention Response Program. FIRST STEP gives you the skills, materials, and confidence to quickly and effectively assess, intervene, and manage a student who has made a threat of violence.
This training is for Police Officers, School Resource Officer, Teachers, School Administrators, Counselors, Residential Life Coordinators as well as anyone else involved in the education and safety of students.
Every student who is planning to attack a school has stepped onto The Path to Violence. When this occurs, the best way to ensure the immediate and long term safety of your school community is to guide that student off The Path to Violence and back to the person he used to be and can be again.
FIRST STEP helps you to do just that–assess, intervene, and guide students back to a safe place–back to the FIRST STEP–the place they were before they began to travel down The Path to Violence.
This two-day advanced professional development course gives you 12 new skills to stop a school attack, change students’ lives, as well as to increase your personal growth and enhance your professional worth.
1. Implement effective and realistic techniques to save lives
2. Distinguish normal from threatening behaviors
3. Identify indicators of imminent or impending danger
4. Assess (read) student behaviors and determine their true risk level
5. Predict type & intensity of future student behaviors & calculate potential risk
6. Utilize proactive and effective (included) intervention plans to lower the risk level
7. Administer effective discipline after a student has made a threat of violence
8. Integrate suspended and expelled students safely back into the school
9. Prevent stigmatizing students and alienating parents
10. Positively change the lives of students
11. Enhance your quality of life and raise your school’s total climate
12. Protect your school and yourself against civil liability
FIRST STEP can be used as a stand-alone program or to supplement your existing procedures!
Those who have these skills are invaluable members of their community and profession!
For more INFORMATION & to REGISTER online go to http://peoplearetheprize.com/_pages/classes/first-step-student-threat-assessment-program.html or visit People are the Prize at www.peoplearetheprize.com.
MARCH 2019 BIRTHDAYS
RONALD RIECKEN
Angie Bullock
Tommy Stillwell
Randy Vaughn
Fred Hunt
Tim Alford
Mick Arrick
Cindy Lucy Riedford
Tim Carter
Dennis Duffy
Krista Burdette Polk
Shelly Phillips Cullum
Julie Davis
Laura Wasson
Thomas Ferguson
Dennis Schnell
Rob Nieters
Javier Lugo
Gretchen Gerling
Michelle Johnson
Sandy Williams Morris
Kelly Gilbert
Sherry Wright
Buster Grayson
Linda Whitehouse Thompson
Heather McAfee Ricketts
Keith Gander
Bob Fuchs
Melinda Fischell Mackey
Becky Bateman-McDaniel
Carrie Shetler
Cindy Buttram Massey Dreshfield
Paul Hoskins
Joey Kiefer
Kelle Grimm Ruedlinger
Jeff Long
Beth Dodson Kemper
Katie Beitler
Diana Bell Britton
Lisa Sikes
Curtis Zirkelbach
Kurt McBride
Daniel Kisner
Shane Sabel
Randy Craig
Carol Shourds
Maureen O’Daniel
Pam Rickenbaugh
Andrew Grammer
Michael Sandefur
Beverly Kempf-Robb
Steve Robinson
Sonya Burkhart
Mark Neff
Adopt A Pet
Edith is a 1 ½-year-old female black cat. She’s energetic and clever! She will need an indoor-only home with plenty of toys and mental stimulation, as she likes to dart out the door of the Cageless Cat Lounge to go looking for adventure in the lobby. Her $30 adoption fee includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more! Contact the Vanderburgh Humane Society at (812) 426-2563 or adoptions@vhslifesaver.org for details!
Adopt A Pet
Jessie is a 7-year-old female cat. She came to the VHS as part of the 21 cats from the Hillview hoarding case. She is one of the most outgoing & friendly of the bunch! Her adoption fee has been reduced to $15. She’s ready to go home TODAY spayed, microchipped, vaccinated, and up-to-date on vaccines. Contact the Vanderburgh Humane Society at (812) 426-2563 or adoptions@vhslifesaver.org for details!
Vanderburgh County Democratic Party Calendar of Events
Wednesday, April 26th |
Meeting | 6:00 PM | Vanderburgh County Democrat Club Meeting/Membership Blitz
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Wednesday, May 3rd |
Fundraiser | TBD | Organized Labor Steak Night Fundraiser
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Wednesday, May 31st | Meeting | 6:00 PM | Vanderburgh County Democrat Club Meeting
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Saturday, June 10th |
Golf Scramble | 9:00 AM | Posey County Democrats Golf Scramble
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Wednesday, June 28th |
Meeting | 6:00 PM | Vanderburgh County Democrat Club Meeting
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Wednesday, July 12th |
Golf Scramble | 11:00 AM EST | 8th District Democratic Committee Golf Scramble
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Wednesday, July 26th |
Meeting | 6:00 PM | Vanderburgh County Democrat Club Meeting
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Wednesday, August 30th |
Meeting | 6:00 PM | Vanderburgh County Democrat Club Meeting
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Wednesday, September 27th |
Meeting | 6:00 PM | Vanderburgh County Democrat Club Meeting
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Wednesday, October 25th |
Meeting | 6:00 PM | Vanderburgh County Democrat Club Meeting
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Wednesday, November 29th |
Meeting | 6:00 PM | Vanderburgh County Democrat Club Meeting
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Wednesday, December 27th |
Meeting | 6:00 PM | Vanderburgh County Democrat Club Meeting
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YESTERYEAR: Evansville Red Cross Chapter by Pat Sides
YESTERYEAR: Evansville Red Cross Chapter by Pat Sides
In 1952, the Evansville Red Cross chapter organized an emergency committee of civic leaders to oversee a drive to replenish blood supplies in military hospitals, bringing in a bloodmobile from Indianapolis to visit local industrial plants. The United States was at war with Korea, which prompted a critical shortage in the country’s blood bank. Briggs Indiana Corporation on East Columbia Street, which manufactured automobile bodies for the Chrysler Corporation, was one of the sites visited by the bloodmobile. This image shows Red Cross staff busily preparing Briggs employees to donate their blood, as “Evansville continued to break one record right after another,†according to the local Red Cross chairman.