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Rebecca is an 8-month-old female tortoiseshell cat. She was found in Garvin Park & never reclaimed. Her $30 adoption fee includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact the Vanderburgh Humane Society at (812) 426-2563 or adoptions@vhslifesaver.org to inquire!
UE to face Austin peay
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EVANSVILLE, Ind. – Fresh off of a perfect 5-0 home stand, the University of Evansville men’s basketball team heads south to take on Austin Peay on Saturday evening at 7 p.m.
The Ohio Valley Conference Digital Network will have the broadcast while you can listen live at 91.5 WUEV or www.WUEV.org.
Ryan Taylor and Jaylon Brown combined to score 56 of the Aces’ 85 points in an 85-66 win over Norfolk State on Wednesday. Taylor drained 13 shots on his way to a career-best 38 points while Brown finished with 18. The Aces owned the boards against the Spartans, finishing with their top rebounding advantage of the year (38-24). Nine rebounds by Christian Benzon moved him into the team lead with 4.9 per game. UE has one more non-conference home game left as they face Mount St. Joseph on Thursday, Dec. 22.
Taylor scored 16 points in the first 8 minutes of play en route to a career-best 38 tallies against Norfolk State. He connected on 13 of his 21 attempts and was 6/10 from outside in the contest. The game marked his sixth double digit effort in the last seven games and pushed his season average up to 16.9 points per game, ranking fourth in the MVC.
For the first time since the 2001-02 campaign, UE has had two players record 30 or more points. Jaylon Brown had 39 against Toledo while Ryan Taylor scored 38 versus Norfolk State; the last duo to do so was Dan Lytle and Tobias Brinkley. Lytle scored 31 on 12/22/01 against Green Bay while Brinkley notched 30 in a game versus Wichita State on 2/23/02. It is the first time the Aces have had two 38-point efforts in the same season since 2011-12 when Colt Ryan had 43 against Creighton and 39 in a win over Bradley. The last time two different players registered 38 points or more came in 1988-89 when Dan Godfread scored 43 at Loyola (2/25/89) just seven days after Scott Haffner’s record-breaking effort of 65 against Dayton, which took place on Feb. 18, 1989.
Earning more playing time as a senior, Christian Benzon has taken full advantage of the opportunity. Benzon leads the Aces with 4.9 rebounds per game and has also notched 4.5 points while seeing 22.2 minutes of work per game. In the win over Norfolk State, Benzon hauled in a career-high 9 boards to move into the team lead.
Austin Peay comes into Saturday’s game with a 4-6 record following a 96-77 loss at Wofford on Thursday night. The Governors have fallen in their last four contests, a tough stretch that included a home-and-home at Fort Wayne and trips to Arkansas and Wofford. Jose Robinson is the top scorer for APSU, checking in at 20.4 points per game. Robinson poured in 28 points last time out versus the Terriers. Behind him is Kenny Jones, who checks in with 14.7 PPG.
On Wednesday, December 14, 2016 at 11:30pm, a deputy with the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office made a traffic stop that resulted in the seizure of a large quantity of illegal narcotics.
A Black 2001 Ford Mustang being operated by Tiffani Colschen was stopped near the intersection of Walnut St. and Vann Ave. for a traffic infraction.
A search of the vehicle resulted in the seizure of over 226 grams methamphetamine, 30 grams of heroin, and 2.36 grams of cocaine with an approximate street value of $27,500.
Tiffani Colschen and a passenger in the vehicle, Kevin Carter, were both arrested and booked into the Vanderburgh County Jail on the charges listed below.
Arrested:
Tiffani Colschen, W/F, Age 28, Evansville, IN
Kevin Carter, W/M, Age 39, Evansville, IN
Charges:
Dealing Methamphetamine, Level 2 Felony, Dealing Cocaine, Level 2 Felony,
and Possession of Cocaine, Level 5 Felony.
Bosse High School Track In Need of Repair
The Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation is weighing in on the concerns. In a Facebook Post, the EVSC thanks the public for giving feedback about the problem. The track at Bosse is falling apart and school officials are working on a plan to repair it.
They are working with an architect on a design and timetable. They plan to announce those details after the first of the year.
Indiana Conservation Officers are reporting that a twelve year old girl and a twleve year old boy have died after falling through the ice.
An Indiana Conservation Officer Public Safety Diver was able to rescue both victims. The first victim was rescued within twenty minutes upon arrival and the second victim was rescued within forty minutes of arrival.
It was estimated both subjects had been under water at least half an hour before being rescued. Both were taken to Memorial Hospital in Jasper for treatment where they died of their injures.
The accident happened in southern Pike County and was dispatched at around 5:15 pm. The reason for being on the ice is unknown at this time and is still under investigation.
Responding agencies included the Pike County Sheriffs Department, Petersburg City Police Department, Lockhart Township Fire Department, Patoka Township Fire Department, Spurgeon Fire Department, Pike County EMS and Indiana Conservation Officers.
Names are being withheld until family has all been notified. This press release will be updated tomorrow morning. Autopsies are scheduled for Saturday December 17th 2016. No foul play is expected.
It is recommended to have at least four inches of ice to support the weight of a person and to always wear a life jacket. No ice should be considered safe ice. For more information on ice safety please visit the link below:
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AG-Elect Says Drug Offenders Need To Be Held Accountable
Marilyn Odendahlfor www.theindianalawyer.com
Since the Legislature revised the state’s criminal code to provide drug treatment and recovery services to low-level drug offenders, Indiana has been brutalized by an opioid epidemic that has led to a resurgence of HIV along with needle exchange programs in eight counties and counting.
Indiana Attorney General-elect Curtis Hill agrees that jails and prisons are good places for offering addiction programs but maintains that offenders still need to be held accountable for their crimes.
“I want to make sure that while we’re addressing the addictive nature of someone’s being that we don’t lose sight of the fact that have an accountability standard that addresses the person who has committed multiple acts of criminal behavior,†Hill said.
The incoming attorney general discussed his views during and after a panel discussion Wednesday at the Bingham Greenebaum Doll LLP Legislative Conference in Indianapolis. He was joined by Sen. Jim Merritt, R-Indianapolis, University of Illinois at Chicago economist Frank Chaloupka, along with physicians Timothy Kelly, medical director of addiction treatment services at Community Hospital Behavioral Care Services and Jennifer Walthall, deputy state health commission and director for health outcomes with the Indiana State Department of Health.
The session on health infrastructure, the opioid crisis, and the tobacco tax took a broad look at what the state can do to curb drug dependency.
Merritt described addiction as an illness that “we can’t arrest our way out of.†He said he wants Indiana to kick its heroin habit in five years and he is planning to introduce a bill in the upcoming legislative session that offers a comprehensive approach to the drug problem.
The panel discussion took place a day after Washington passed the bipartisan 21st Century Cures Act, which includes $1 billion over the next two years to fight the opioid and heroin epidemics. Merritt said he is unsure how much of that money will come to Indiana so he is basing his approach on not getting any federal assistance.
A representative from Sen. Joe Donnelly’s office told the panel that while the amount is unclear, Indiana should expect to receive funds from the new federal initiative. The money will be funneled through the Division of Mental Health and Addiction of the Indiana Family and Social Services Administration.
Hill said he wants to change the perception that the county jails and state prisons are filled with violent and nonviolent offenders. Instead the incarceration system is comprised of violent criminals and chronic offenders. He defined the latter group as individuals who break the law multiple times and even though the infractions might be minor, the only accountability mechanism available is incarceration.
“Our jails are filled with users,†Hill said. “That’s not why we’re putting them there. We’re putting them there to hold them accountable for bad behavior and if we don’t address that accountability, they’re going to continue to re-offend and re-offend and re-offend regardless of whether they’re substance abusers or not.â€
In 2013, the Indiana General Assembly overhauled the state’s criminal code to revamp penalties and mandate low-risk offenders serve their sentences in county jails rather than being sent to the Indiana Department of Correction. The Legislature then appropriated $55 million to help communities across the state bolster services and programs aimed at helping low-risk offenders quit the cycle of recidivism.
Hill said he wants to provide assistance to make sure everyone is talking the same language and all understand the problem of substance abuse.
“We all want to have less people locked up, less people addicted and more people being productive,†he said. “So if we start from that standpoint, we should be able to work together to find solutions.â€
Trump Encourages Conservatives With Appointments Demonstrating That People Are Policy
Peter Ferrara for TownHall
During the Reagan years, when I served the president in the White House Office of Policy Development, the conservative maxim was “People are policy.†What was meant by that was that if you want conservative policies, you need to appoint conservative people to office.
President-Elect Donald Trump is already demonstrating that he is following exactly that maxim through his first rate conservative appointments so far. That was already transparent in Mr. Trump’s very first pick – Indiana Governor Mike Pence for Vice-President, who many conservatives had favored for president for years.
Trump heightened the role of Pence in his Administration by turning over the transition to him when that first sputtered. Pence’s transition team has served up one gold standard conservative after another.
Congressman Tom Price (R-GA) was an inspired pick to run the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). Price has long taken the lead in developing the Republican alternative to repeal and replace Obamacare, as reflected in his role in developing the excellent, comprehensive, final report last summer of Speaker Paul Ryan’s Health Reform Task Force.
Also truly excellent, conservative picks have been General Michael Flynn as National Security Adviser, Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-AL) for Attorney General, Marine General James Mattis for Secretary of Defense, Ben Carson for Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt for EPA, Betsy DeVos for Education Secretary, and the fact that Trump has NOT chosen Mitt Romney for Secretary of State. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin understands booming economic growth, and the role of tax reform in producing it.
A critical remaining Cabinet slot is Director of the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB). The ideal person for that office would be Mike Pence’s former House colleague, Congressman Mick Mulvaney (R-SC).
Mulvaney is perfectly suited in that office to shepherd through all the components of Reagan’s economic recovery program to restore booming economic growth, already supported by President-Elect Trump. That includes Trump’s tax reform plan to sharply reduce tax rates, especially the critical corporate tax rate.
OMB includes OIRA, the White House office that oversees all regulatory changes, which under President Trump will mean deregulatory changes. OMB also prepares the president’s annual budget proposal, which means setting spending levels for all federal agencies. Mulvaney knows how to implement spending restraint across the entire federal government to balance the budget before Trump leaves office.
That can be done while still accommodating the need to fulfill President Trump’s pledge to modernize America’s lagging national defenses, and Trump the builder’s proposal to leave a legacy of renewed, modernized, national infrastructure.
Watch for Trump the builder, working with Carson, to show how to renew, revitalize and rebuild America’s inner cities. That will require also Trump the Liberator, showing how liberty is the foundation to prosperity, even more so in America’s inner cities. Liberty from poverty requires liberation from dependency on welfare, with work, family and education.
One key way the federal budget can be balanced while serving all of these goals is to expand the enormously successful, 1996 block grant reforms of just one federal welfare program, the old AFDC program, to all federal, means-tested welfare programs, which was originally Reagan’s vision. Another innovative path to balancing the budget is to maximize leases and permits for maximum American energy production on federal lands and waters, generating lease and permit fee revenues, along with growing tax revenues from the increased production, which can be trillions over the next 10 years given America’s modern energy bounties.
Further trillions in revenues over the next 10 years can be raised by orderly auctioning off of non-environmentally sensitive, excess federal land and properties in the western states, where the federal government anachronistically holds far too much land in what are supposed to be sovereign, self-governing states.
The remaining component of President Reagan’s plan for booming growth is restrained monetary policy for a strong and stable dollar. That and other pro-growth roles can be served by further conservatives who still can be appointment, such as Newt Gingrich, Art Laffer, Larry Kudlow, David Malpass, Steve Moore, and many others.