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USI Women’s Golf earns first-place finish

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Junior Taylor Howerton (Evansville, Indiana) and senior Allison Koester (Wadesville, Indiana) posted top-five finishes Sunday as the University of Southern Indiana women’s golf team finished first out of 10 teams at the Maryville Fall Invitational at Annbriar Golf Course

Howerton finished second in the 63-player field with a four-over par 148, including a one-over 73 in Sunday’s closing round. Koester was nine-over for the tournament after shooting 77 in the first 18 holes Saturday and 76 Sunday. University of Illinois Springfield senior Jocelyn Matsen was the tournament medalist with a one-under 143.

As a team, the Screaming Eagles shot 310 in both the first and second rounds as they earned their first win of the year with their two-day score of 620. Lindenwood University was second with a two-day tally of 621.

The Eagles return to action October 17-18 when they compete at the Big Apple Lady Invitational in White Plains, New York. USI concludes the fall season October 24-25 with the Trevecca Women’s Fall Invitational in Hickory, Tennessee.

Univ. of Southern Indiana Women’s Golf Results

10/8-9/2016 — Maryville Fall Invitational

Annbriar Golf Course — Waterloo, IL

Par 72, 5882 yards — 10 teams, 63 players

 

Southern Indiana………….. 310 310   620   +44      1st

Howerton, Taylor…………..  75  73   148    +4      2nd

Koester, Allison…………..  77  76   153    +9   t- 4th

Davis, Grace………………  80  81   161   +17   t-21st

Leighty, Abbey…………….  78  83   161   +17   t-21st

Jacobsen, Kori#……………  80  84   164   +20   t-26th

Ellerbusch, Paige………….  85  80   165   +21   t-29th

Zehner, Abbey#…………….  83  89   172   +28   t-45th

Bumpus, Holly#…………….  88  89   177   +33   t-53rd

 

 

Beer & Wine Wesselman Woods

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The 2016 Wandering Owl Beer & Wine Trail will take place on Saturday, October 15, from 3:00-6:00 p.m. at Wesselman Woods. Enjoy live music from Salt The Earth while sampling a variety of beer, wine & food from local vendors.

We are only 6 days away from this year’s event and we want to make sure that you don’t miss out on reserving your tickets!  Your attendance at the event will help support our docent animals and our educational programming.

Will you join us for an afternoon under the beautiful fall foliage with fabulous food, drinks and entertainment to support our mission?

Reserve Tickets Now

Adopt A Pet

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 Meadow is a 1-year-old female black cat. She’s already spayed, up-to-date on shots, and ready to go home today! Meadow is also already used to wearing a collar. Her $30 adoption fee also includes her registered microchip and a bag of food! Contact the Vanderburgh Humane Society at (812) 426-2563 or www.vhslifesaver.org for details!

Fortuny notches 16 kills against Sycamores

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Aces fall by 3-2 final on Saturday evening

 EVANSVILLE, Ind. – Rocio Fortuny put on an offensive show, notching 16 kills in a 5-set match that saw Indiana State defeat the University of Evansville volleyball team on Saturday evening by a 3-2 final at the Carson Center.

Fortuny led all players with her kill tally and also hit a team-best .310.  She was also one of five Purple Aces (4-16, 0-7 MVC) to finish in double figures in digs, posting 10.  Olivia Goldstein led the way in that category, totaling 17 digs.  Mildrelis Rodriguez had a solid night with 10 kills and 16 digs.  Rachel Tam added 9 kills and 15 digs.  Joselyn Coronel registered a team-best 23 assists.

Bree Spangler led the Sycamores (8-10, 2-4 MVC) with 14 kills while Kynedi Nalls posted 13.

Indiana State opened the evening with a 25-18 victory.  After taking a 6-1 advantage early on, the Sycamores extended their lead to 11 at 16-5.  Evansville never gave up and battled to the end.  They cut the deficit to five at 23-18 as Rocio Fortuny notched two kills, but the Sycamores were able to record the final two points to take the set.

Another early run saw the Sycamores score the first five points of the second game, but UE quickly fought back.  Erlicia Griffith notched a kill before a pair of block assists helped the Aces tie it up at 9-9.  Evansville grabbed its first lead at 12-11 on an Olivia Goldstein service ace.

UE went up 13-11, but the Sycamores made their way back to retake the lead at 19-18.  Evansville showed its resilience once again, recording the next four points before taking the 25-21 win as Fortuny notched six kills in the frame.

In the third game, ISU got off to a 4-0 start and never looked back, taking a 25-15 win.  Evansville had the upper hand to begin game four, jumping out to a 4-1 advantage.  After the Sycamores tied it up at 5-5, UE rattled off the next five tallies in a row and extended the lead to 18-11.  Up 23-17, the Aces were the victims of a pair of Sycamore service aces as they rallied back to get within three at 23-20, but Evansville finished off the game, winning 25-21

After falling behind 3-1 in the fifth set, the Aces took the lead at 4-3.  The Sycamores made their way back, taking an 8-6 advantage before UE had a run of its own, tying it up at 8 all.  Four in a row from ISU was the difference as they finished off the night with a 15-10 victory to clinch the match.

A trip to Missouri State awaits the Purple Aces on Monday night as they will face the Bears in a 7 p.m. match in Springfield.

 

OCTOBER 9, 2015 “READERS FORUM”

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WHATS ON YOUR MIND TODAY?

Todays READERS POLL question is: WHO DO YOU FEEL IS THE MOST EFFECTIVE MEMBER OF EVANSVILLE CITY COUNCIL?

Please take time and read our newest feature articles entitled “BIRTHDAYS, HOT JOBS” and “LOCAL SPORTS” posted in our sections.

If you would like to advertise in the CCO please contact us City-County Observer@live.com.

City County Observer has been serving our community for 15 years.

Copyright 2015 City County Observer. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistribute.

CHANNEL 44 NEWS

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 In Evansville, police are searching for the person responsible for holding-up the Lic’s Deli and Ice Cream shop on Lincoln Avenue Friday night.

According to police, employees say a masked man came in with a gun and demanded money.

They opened the safe and fled the building.

The amount of money stolen has not been released.

Don Mattingly will donate $25,000 to Evansville’s Challenger Baseball League Sunday

 Now that the Miami Marlins season has come to a close for the year, Evansville’s Don Mattingly has returned to his hometown to give back to the Tri-state community alongside Mattingly Charities, a non-profit he founded to support underprivileged youth providing equipment and funding for sports and other development activities.

Don and his wife, Lori, will present a $25,000 check on behalf of Mattingly Charities to Evansville’s Highland Challenger Baseball League at Challenger Field Sunday at 1 p.m. 44News will air coverage of the event Sunday at 9 and 10 p.m.


The second annual “An Intimate Evening with Friends” is scheduled for Nov. 30 at the Evansville Museum of Arts, History, and Science located on Riverside Drive. Baseball Hall of Famer and four-time World Champion, Joe Torre, will be the special guest for the fundraising event. Last year’s guests included Albert Pujols and Toby Keith.

Individual general tickets cost $150 per person. Individual VIP reception tickets cost $300 per person. VIP ticket purchasers will have time to take pictures with Don, Torre, and The Warren Brothers in a private setting. Ticket purchases are availablehere through Nov. 16.

Dozens Gather for March to Unity Police and the Community

                                                               OCTOBER 8TH, 2016

                                                        HEATHER GOOD KENTUCKY

 In Morganfield, police and civilians gather for a march to unite the police and community.

Organizers say the goal of the event is to combat racism on both sides in light of recent shootings. They say it is time to come together.

The march began at the Fifth Third Bank and ended at the Union County Courthouse with prayer.

Local ministers lead the service promoting peace, love and unity.

A few dozen people attended the event.

This is the first time for the march and organizers say they plan to do it each year and hope it continues to grow.

BREAKING NEWS: WINNECKE ANNOUNCES NEWLY AMENDED CITY EMPLOYEES SELF-FUNDED HEALTHCARE PLAN

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 Below Is An  E-Mail Message From Mayor Winnecke Regarding The Newly Amended 2017 City Employees Healthcare Plan Benefit Plan

As has been well publicized, the City of Evansville is working to address the rising costs of healthcare. Consequently, when we rolled out the proposed 2017 budget in August, we announced that there would be significant changes in the insurance plans for the new year with corresponding increases to employees.

These decisions have been among the toughest I’ve made since holding office. Since the initial announcement, I’ve received many employee emails, taken phone calls, spoken to several of you individually and have had multiple discussions with City Council leadership. I am grateful for the feedback, truly.

We have reduced premiums once since the initial rollout. That reduction was essentially “funded” by reducing our desired savings.

After further review and input, it is clear that shifting the cost of the salary increase for non-contractual employees to help lower health insurance premiums would be of greater financial value.

By taking this action, additional reductions in premiums can now be realized. The new monthly premiums, effective January 2017 on Plan 1 (the $1,000 individual deductible plan) are as follows:

Employee only: $65.43
Employee plus child: $124.33
Employee plus spouse: $137.41
Family $183.22

As always, my door is always open and I appreciate your service to our City.

Lloyd

FOOTNOTE: This message is intended for all employees enrolled in the City’s Self- Funded Healthcare Plan.

Federal Judge Dismisses Class-Action Lawsuit Against Carmel

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Federal Judge Dismisses Class-Action Lawsuit Against Carmel

Lindsey Erdody for www.theindianalawyer.com

A U.S. district court judge has dismissed a federal class-action lawsuit filed against the city of Carmel for its enforcement of a local traffic ordinance.

Attorney Edward Bielski, president of Bielski Law LLC and former partner of Stewart & Irwin PC filed the lawsuit against the city at the end of last year alleging the city knowingly enforced an illegal traffic ordinance and wrongly collected money from citations “to maximize city revenue.”

The lawsuit named 18 plaintiffs, of which only two were Carmel residents. All had been cited under Carmel’s local traffic ordinance, which was deemed invalid by the Indiana Court of Appeals in a separate lawsuit last year.

The plaintiffs claimed the illegal citations resulted in higher auto insurance rates and points on their driver’s licenses.

The complaint also said the motorists were given false information regarding their traffic infractions, so they couldn’t properly defend themselves. It also alleged city police had a policy of wrongly ticketing drivers on Interstate 465 and wrongly ticketing drivers for non-moving violations.

Carmel had requested the court dismiss the lawsuit and argued that the “harm” the plaintiffs described would have occurred regardless of how they were cited because all of them admitted to the traffic violations.

In the decision issued Thursday, U.S. District Court Judge Jane Magnus-Stinson agreed that the complaint did not tie the alleged harm to the Carmel defendants, which included Mayor Jim Brainard, Carmel City Council members from 2014 and 2015, Carmel City Court, Carmel City Judge Brian Poindexter, Carmel attorney Doug Haney and Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles superintendent Kent Abernathy.

“We are pleased with this decision that confirms our view that this case was frivolous and needed to be dismissed to preserve justice and the procedures used by many cities and towns across Indiana,” Brainard said in a statement sent to IBJ.

Since initially filing the lawsuit in December, Bielski amended the complaint several times and repeatedly stated that “discovery will show” the claims to be true.

Magnus-Stinson ruled that the claims were “too speculative.”

“… These allegations all turn wholly on what plaintiffs think they will learn through discovery, and not on what plaintiffs already know to be true,” Magnus-Stinson wrote.

The issue stems from the city’s previous traffic ordinance that was found to violate the state’s Home Rule act because it duplicated state law. The Indiana Court of Appeals decided that case Dec. 11, and the city later repealed the ordinance in question.

That lawsuit had been filed by Jason Maraman, who had been pulled over and cited for driving 30 mph in a construction zone with a 20 mph speed limit .

Maraman is still pursuing another federal lawsuit against the city in which he accuses a Carmel police officer of giving false testimony and targeting his vehicle for having an out-of-county license plate. He also accuses the officer of inappropriately attempting to speak with a judge during a recess in one of the previous hearings.

In her ruling, Magnus-Stinson accuses the plaintiffs in the class-action lawsuit of trying to “piggyback onto Mr. Maraman’s success,” but because the traffic ordinance wasn’t deemed invalid at the time they received their tickets, the issue doesn’t apply.

Carmel had also requested sanctions against Bielski and requested that he be ordered to pay all or at least a significant portion of the city’s legal fees.

The judge denied the request, saying sanctions weren’t warranted, but did note concerns with how the case was handled.

“The Court is disturbed by Plaintiffs’ scattershot approach to this litigation, as demonstrated by the fact that Plaintiffs amended their complaint three times in three months,” Magnus-Stinson wrote.