Senator Braun visits 19 counties in one week on sixth annual 92 County Tour
“This is the best part of the job: visiting Hoosiers where they live and hearing about what they really have on their mind. Every county has its unique challenges and opportunities, and I can’t tell you how many people come up to me to say how excited they are to see someone who represents them in their hometown.I take what I hear on my 92 County Tour with me to D.C. to stand up for Hoosiers and get results.”
— Senator Mike Braun
Here are a few highlights:
In Dearborn County, Senator Braun stopped by Lischgke Motors: a third-generation family-owned Hoosier small business. Senator Braun recognized their 100th anniversary with an official Senate letter and discussed the challenges they’ve faced with inflation and supply chain issues.
In Union County, Senator Braun sat down with local farmers in an Indiana Farm Bureau event. He heard from farmers about their concerns with heavy-handed mandates coming from D.C. and the upcoming Farm Bill, negotiated by the Senate Agriculture Committee.
In Jennings County, Senator Braun spoke with Sheriff Kenny Freeman and his deputies and presented Jail Commander Nichole Angelicchio with an American flag and discussed supporting law enforcement while they protect and serve our communities.
In Owen County, Senator Braun met with Owen County Economic Development CEO Marce King to hear an update on Owen County’s workforce development plans, as well as touring new housing developments.
Senator Braun visited a Centerstone location in Connersville to learn more about the services they provide for Hoosiers experiencing mental health crises and addiction.
Senator Braun hosted community conversations with local elected officials, small business leaders, and members of the community in Vevay, Nashville, Brookville, Linton, and Rising Sun.
Rep. McNamara encourages Posey County residents to report tornado damage
Rep. McNamara encourages Posey County
residents to report tornado damage
STATEHOUSE (July 12, 2024) – State Rep. Wendy McNamara (R-Evansville) encourages residents of Posey County to report tornado damage that occurred on July 9 by contacting Indiana 211.
In order to establish a comprehensive assessment of damage, Posey County residents can call 866-211-9966 or visit in211.communityos.org and click on the “Damage Reporting” tab at the top of the home page to identify and locate damage. Gathering damage assessments allows the Indiana Department of Homeland Security to determine damage estimates and develop the next course of action in the disaster recovery process such as repairs and cleanup.
“The damage caused by the strong winds, heavy rain and lightning severely impacted our area,” McNamara said. “In order for our community to rebuild and efficiently clean up from the tornado, I encourage any affected residents to report damage to Indiana 211.”
Presently, only residents in Posey County should utilize Indiana 211 for July 9 damage reports. Other counties should reach out to their local emergency manager.
Agricultural damage should be reported to Purdue Extension at 812-838-1331.
USI Board of Trustees approves budget, names Chair for presidential search
At its regular meeting on Thursday, July 11, the University of Southern Indiana Board of Trustees approved a $130.3 million annual operating budget for the 2024-25 fiscal year. University income is derived from two primary sources, tuition and fee revenues and state appropriations. In addition, the Board approved miscellaneous fees and reviewed the schedule of student fees and other mandatory fees for 2024-25.
The Board also named Trustee Christina Ryan to Chair the USI Presidential Search to select USI’s fifth president, set to begin this Fall. Ryan also serves as First Vice Chair of the Board.
In additional business, the Board of Trustees approved the disbursement of financial aid awards for the 2024-25 academic year and received an update on current campus construction projects.
Early runs are not enough as the Otters fall in the opener
Early runs are not enough as the Otters fall in the opener
JULY 13, 2024
by MATTHEW WILL
AVON, Ohio – The Evansville Otters had an early lead before the bats fell quiet against the Lake Erie Crushers on Friday night, dropping the series opener 7-3 at Crushers Stadium.
The Otters (21-34) jumped ahead in the first inning, plating two runs to take an early lead. Dakota Phillips singled to left-center driving in one. On the play, the ball was thrown home, and Phillips moved to second. The Crusher’s (35-20) defense then threw the ball into center field, and another man came in to score.
Lake Erie answered with a run in the home first, before Evansville added more in the second.
Delvin Zinn singled with two outs to reach base. One batter later, Giovanni DiGiacomo singled and on a diving attempt from the Crushers’ right fielder, Zinn went from first to home as the ball kicked over to center field. That was the last run of the game for Evansville.
The turning point tonight came in the fifth frame. Lake Erie led off the inning with six base hits, five of which scored to make it a 6-3 game. They added another in the sixth to finalize the scoring.
The Crushers pitching staff recorded 19 outs in a row to finish the game. Evansville was out-hit 9-5 in the game.
Terance Marin (0-3) took the loss after giving up all seven runs, four earned, on nine hits. The righty struck out three and walked two. Pedro Echemendia (2-1) tossed in seven innings as the Lake Erie starter and took home the win.
The Otters attempt to bounce back tomorrow with a 6:05 p.m. CT first pitch to even the series against the Crushers. Coverage is available on the Otters Digital Network and FloBaseball.
The Evansville Otters are the 2006 and 2016 Frontier League champions.
The Otters play all home games at historic Bosse Field, located at 23 Don Mattingly Way in Evansville, Ind. Stay up to date with the Evansville Otters by visiting evansvilleotters.com, or follow the Otters on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
For more information, visit evansvilleotters.com or call (812) 435-8686.
Twenty Olympians to Represent Indiana University in Paris
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – Twenty Indiana University athletes and coaches will participate in the 2024 Paris Olympics.
Indiana has tied its second-largest group of Olympians all-time, having produced 20 Olympians in 1976 and a record 23 in 1968. Hoosiers will represent nine different countries, marking a school record.
The 2024 Paris Games will officially kick off with the opening ceremony July 26 at 1:30 p.m. ET, with IU athletes competing the next day. NBC and Peacock will provide live video coverage throughout the Olympics. Stay tuned to IUHoosiers.com/Olympics for full coverage of IU athletes in Paris, including feature stories, recaps and athlete schedules.
IU is represented in five unique sports, including, for the first time ever, open water swimming. Within that, four different IU athletic programs produced Olympians – 17 from swimming and diving (13 swimming, four diving), two from water polo and one from track and field.
Ten Hoosiers will represent Team USA in France, Indiana’s largest contribution to the U.S. Olympic Team since Seoul 1988. All 10 Team USA Hoosiers emerge from the IU swimming and diving program – six swimmers, three divers and two coaches.
Indiana has produced a U.S. Olympic diver at every Summer Games since 1964. Tokyo 2020 medalists Andrew Capobianco and Jessica Parratto return for their second and third Olympics respectively. Reigning NCAA Champion Carson Tyler is set to make his Olympic debut in the 3-meter and 10-meter competitions as the first U.S. male diver since 2000 to qualify in both events.
The remaining 10 Hoosiers combine to represent eight more countries. For the first time ever, Indiana sends Olympians from the British Virgin Islands, Singapore, Lithuania and the Netherlands. IU athletes will also compete for Egypt, Germany, Israel and Canada.
In addition to the 20 individuals that currently train or coach at Indiana University, or have graduated from IU, three more Olympians have cream and crimson ties. Swimmers Matt King (United States) and Zalán Sárkány (Hungary) are set to transfer into the IU program following their summer in Paris.
U.S. Olympic Diving head coach Drew Johansen will be joined on deck by Jenny Johansen, named an assistant coach by USA Diving. Jenny Johansen is a two-time Olympian, coach at the Johansen Diving Academy at IU and Parratto’s personal coach. Together, the Johansens become the first married pair to coach U.S. diving together at an Olympic Games.
Eleven Hoosier Olympians have previous Olympic experience. Drew Johansen leads the way, coaching his fourth consecutive Summer Games. Five more Hoosiers will attend their third Olympics, including Lilly King, Ray Looze, Parratto, Blake Pieroni and Marwan Elkamash (all swimming and diving), who became the first Egyptian swimmer to qualify for three consecutive Olympics. King announced prior to U.S. Olympic Swim Trials that the Paris Games will be her final cycle.
Nine Hoosiers – Rikkoi Brathwaite (track and field), Cory Chitwood, Mariah Denigan, Ching Hwee Gan, Josh Matheny, Rafael Miroslaw, Anna Peplowski, Carson Tyler and Kai van Westering (swimming and diving) – will participate in their first Olympics.See the full list of Indiana University Olympians below.
Olympic History
Few universities, or even nations, can match Indiana University’s Olympic record. Indiana boasts 261 total Olympic berths, representing 30 countries. On 21 occasions, Olympic coaches have come from Indiana.
The Indiana University athlete medal count is at 121 including 60 gold, 23 silver and 38 bronze after the 2020 Tokyo Games. The Hoosiers have earned a medal at every Olympic Games they have competed in except 2004. IU’s most productive year was 1968, with 17 medals for IU competitors in Mexico City.
Hoosiers at the 2024 Paris Games
Name | No. of Olympics | Nation | Sport | Event |
Rikkoi Brathwaite | 1 | British Virgin Islands | Track & Field | 100-meter |
Andrew Capobianco | 2 | United States | Diving | 3-meter |
Cory Chitwood | 1 | United States | Open Water Swimming | Assistant Coach |
Mariah Denigan | 1 | United States | Open Water Swimming | 10K |
Marwan Elkamash | 3 | Egypt | Swimming | 1,500-meter freestyle |
Tomer Frankel | 2 | Israel | Swimming | 100-meter freestyle, 100-meter butterfly, 4×100-meter freestyle, 4×200-meter freestyle |
Ching Hwee Gan | 1 | Singapore | Swimming | 800-meter freestyle, 1,500-meter freestyle, 4×100-meter medley |
Jessica Gaudreault | 2 | Canada | Water Polo | |
Drew Johansen | 4 | United States | Diving | Head Coach |
Lilly King | 3 | United States | Swimming | 100-meter breaststroke, 200-meter breaststroke |
Shae La Roche | 2 | Canada | Water Polo | |
Ray Looze | 3 | Lithuania | Swimming | Assistant Coach |
Josh Matheny | 1 | United States | Swimming | 200-meter breaststroke |
Rafael Miroslaw | 1 | Germany | Swimming | 200-meter freestyle |
Jessica Parratto | 3 | United States | Diving | Synchronized 10-meter |
Anna Peplowski | 1 | United States | Swimming | 4×200-meter freestyle |
Blake Pieroni | 3 | United States | Swimming | 4×200-meter freestyle |
Kotryna Teterevkova | 2 | Lithuania | Swimming | 100-meter breaststroke, 200-meter breaststroke |
Carson Tyler | 1 | United States | Diving | 3-meter, 10-meter |
Kai van Westering | 1 | Netherlands | Swimming | 100-meter backstroke, 200-meter backstroke, 4×100-meter medley |
Additional Olympians with Indiana University Ties
Name | No. of Olympics | Nation | Sport | Event | IU Affiliation |
Jenny Johansen | 3 | United States | Diving | Assistant Coach | Coaching Jessica Parratto, Coach at Johansen Diving Academy |
Matt King | 1 | United States | Swimming | 4×100-meter freestyle | 2024-25 Transfer |
Zalán Sárkány | 1 | Hungary | Swimming | 800-meter freestyle, 1,500-meter freestyle | 2024-25 Transfer |
INDEPENDENCE DAY JEOPARDY
INDEPENDENCE DAY JEOPARDY
GAVEL GAMUT
By Jim Redwine
July 13, 2024
John Adams, our second president, and Thomas Jefferson, our third president, were great friends who became estranged for years but reconciled before they both died on July 4, 1826. Each was an attorney who championed individual liberty and civil rights. Adams believed the date of America’s birth was July 2, 1776, the date the Continental Congress voted for independence. Jefferson thought our birthday was July 4, 1776, the date the Declaration of Independence was signed. Both Founding Fathers declared we should celebrate our founding with special activities.
Jefferson was the first president to host a July 4 commemoration at the White House. Jefferson wrote about Independence Day, “For ourselves, let the annual return of this day forever refresh our recollections of these rights and an undiminished devotion to them.”
Adams sent a letter to his wife Abigail on July 3, 1776 in which he declaimed:
“I am apt to believe that it (July 2, 1776) will be celebrated, by succeeding Generations, as the great anniversary Festival.…
It ought to be solemnized with Pomp and Parade, with Shews (shows), Games, Sports, Guns, Bells, Bonfires and Illumination from one End of this Continent to the other from this Time forward forever more.”
My family, and most likely yours too Gentle Reader, have carried out these patriotic demands for as long as we have been fortunate enough to do so. For more than the past twenty years my family has gathered around July 4 and reveled in the wonder of the United States of America by engaging in a hotly contested Independence Jeopardy game.
This year our son Jim portrayed Benjamin Franklin, my nephews Dennis and David Redwine, donned the colonial frocks of Uncle Sam and George Washington and teams of relatives vied to earn the Independence Day Jeopardy championship. The competition was fierce and only barbeque and copious desserts could assuage those who came in out of first.
It is always good to get our large and close-knit family together, especially over a hotly contested game of colonial history. It is of special meaning in our current atmosphere of political upheaval to remind ourselves what truly matters. So, happy birthday to all of us whether you agree with Adams or Jefferson or choose some other special time around our founding in the first week of July, 1776.
For more Gavel Gamut articles go to www.jamesmredwine.com
Vincennes University Design and Innovation Training Studio Ribbon-Cutting Ceremony
VU is excited to announce the launch of the first-ever Design and Innovation Training Studio in collaboration with Purdue IN-MaC and Toyota Motor Manufacturing, Inc. in Region 11. The training studio will provide K-12 students, college students, educators, and community partners in Southern Indiana’s Region 11 exceptional access to technologies, activities, and lessons preparing the future workforce for emerging careers in Industry 4.0 such as advanced manufacturing, robotics, and AI.
According to data from educational research studies and reports focused on early STEM education, STEM careers are expected to grow twice as quickly as other occupations, however, research shows 92 percent of boys and 97 percent of girls will lose interest in STEM if they are not immersed in these subjects before fifth grade.
The VU Design and Innovation Training Studio will provide earlier access for educators to advocate for Industry 4.0 careers and for students to explore STEM pathways.
WHO:
VU President Dr. Chuck Johnson and other speakers
WHEN:
9-10 a.m. (ET)
Tuesday, July 23
WHERE:
Vincennes University
Summers Center, 3rd floor
EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT
FOOTNOTE: EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.